TIME myanmar

Hope and Despair in a Divided Burma

Magnum photographer Chien-Chi Chang captures moments of introspection in Myanmar

When Taiwanese Magnum photographer Chien-Chi Chang visited Burma this past spring, he captured a country on the cusp of change. Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel laureate once imprisoned by a brutal military junta, had just been sworn in as the nation’s de facto leader. Her landslide win in a November election peacefully dismantled a dictatorship. No one knew what would happen next; moods oscillated between hope and fear among a people so battered by war and yet so persistent in their pursuit of freedom.

But for all of the uncertainty, Chang’s photographs show us moments of calm introspection. A displaced child on a plastic chair peers across the Bay of Bengal. A mother looks out the window of a dimly lit train car that ploughs slowly through the farmland surrounding Burma’s largest city and former capital, Rangoon.

Chang, who was awarded a Magnum Emergency Fund grant for his trip to Burma, enjoyed the freedom to move around the country that many of its people do not have. He shows us a lone man walking across an empty 20-lane highway in the capital Naypyidaw, then he takes us to the city of Sittwe on the western coast, where more than 100,000 stateless Rohingya Muslims have lived in displacement camps since a rash of deadly riots in 2012. In the country’s mountainous far north, a family of four is seen huddling inside their bamboo shelter, also having been displaced by conflict. They are Kachin, a mostly Christian minority still embroiled in a decades-long civil war with the Burmese army.

“We knew that there would be many challenges to overcome, and we are overcoming them,” Suu Kyi said in a recent interview with Singaporean broadcaster Channel News Asia, reflecting on her government’s rough rookie year. “Of course, one always wants to overcome them immediately, but we knew of course that this is a wish rather than a practical view of what might happen.”

It has been a tumultuous nine months since her party, the National League for Democracy, took office. The military still controls key levers of the government, and war continues in the country’s rugged borderlands. Ethnic and religious tensions are reaching fever-pitch in the western state of Arakan, where tens of thousands of Muslims are desperately trying to reach Bangladesh.

Despite—or perhaps because of—its complexities, Chang says that Burma, which is officially called Myanmar, is his favorite country in Southeast Asia.

“Myanmar was and has been in one of the rarest events in history, which was the peaceful transfer of power from a military dictatorship into the hands of a democratically elected civilian government,” Chang tells TIME’s international photo editor Alice Gabriner. “Even rarer than that is when the fate and reins of a country are placed in the hands of a leader that both the world and its own people revere.”

Much will change in the years ahead, but the people pictured here are suspended in time.

Chien-Chi Chang is a Magnum photographer based in Austria.

Alice Gabriner, who edited this photo essay, is TIME’s International Photo Editor.

Feliz Solomon is a writer at TIME, specializing on Southeast Asia. Follow her on Twitter @felizysolo.

MYANMAR. Myitkyina. May, 2016. MYANMAR. Yangon. May, 2016. MYANMAR. Yangon. May, 2016. MYANMAR. Yangon. May, 2016. MYANMAR. Naypyidaw. June, 2016. Aung San Suu Kyi, Minister of Foreign Affairs and State Counselor  of Myanmar (Burma) holds a press conference with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry. MYANMAR. May, 2016. MYANMAR. Myitkyina. May, 2016. An internally displaced people (IDP) camp of ethnic Kachin people. MYANMAR. Sittwe. June, 2016. Rohingya people in the Internally Displaced Person (IDP) camps in Sittwe. An estimated 140,000 Rohingya are placed in the IDP camps guarded by the armed police and military. MYANMAR. Sittwe. June, 2016. Rohingya people in the Internally Displaced Person (IDP) camps in Sittwe. An estimated 140,000 Rohingya are placed in the IDP camps guarded by the armed police and military. MYANMAR. Sittwe. May, 2016.  Internally Displaced People (IDP) camps for Rohingya. MYANMAR.  Sittwe. May, 2016. Medical clinic inside the Internally Displaced People (IDP) camps for Rohingya. MYANMAR. Sittwe. May, 2016. Medical clinic inside the Internally Displaced People (IDP) camps for Rohingya. MYANMAR. Sittwe. May, 2016.  Internally Displaced People (IDP) camps for Rohingya. MYANMAR. Sittwe. May, 2016. Internally Displaced People (IDP) camps for Rohingya. MYANMAR. Naypyidaw. May, 2016. MYANMAR. Sittwe. May, 2016. Bay of Bengal.

Your browser is out of date. Please update your browser at http://update.microsoft.com


YOU BROKE TIME.COM!

Dear TIME Reader,

As a regular visitor to TIME.com, we are sure you enjoy all the great journalism created by our editors and reporters. Great journalism has great value, and it costs money to make it. One of the main ways we cover our costs is through advertising.

The use of software that blocks ads limits our ability to provide you with the journalism you enjoy. Consider turning your Ad Blocker off so that we can continue to provide the world class journalism you have become accustomed to.

The TIME Team