Navigated to Aung Ya Mie: Women's Struggle & Internationalism In The Free Chin Hills W/ AIF's Rachel Ram Len Mawi

Aung Ya Mie: Women's Struggle & Internationalism In The Free Chin Hills W/ AIF's Rachel Ram Len Mawi

November 2
1h 2m

View Transcript

Episode Description

In this conversation, we sit down with an organizer and fighter from the internationalist front in Myanmar to explore the lived realities of the Spring Revolution and the autonomous women’s struggle rising from within it. Moving from poetry to political analysis, we discuss what it means to take up internationalism in practice, not as an idea, but as a commitment carved through shared danger, discipline, and deep love for the people.

We trace the formation of the AIF (Anti-Fascist Internationalist Front), the roots of women’s autonomous power in the hills, and the political and cultural contradictions that shape collective life under war. We talk about comradeship, grief, and joy as the emotional infrastructure of revolution, the role of art and memory, and how different cultural understandings of gender and liberation collide, transform, and re-form through struggle.

This episode is a meditation on building political consciousness in motion, forging international solidarity without romanticization, and creating structures capable of holding not only power, but freedom itself

-----------------------------------------

01:33 Intro

02:24 Poem

05:59 What does being an internationalist mean to you?

08:42 What is context did the AIF come from within the Spring Revolution?

15:15 Context cont. Spring Revolution

17:22 Context cont. AIF

18:22 Q: What is the context of the Women's Revolution as you've been able to participate?

24:01 Q: How does the AIF participate in this Women's struggle

27:29 Q: How does cultural differences within the Internationalist bring their own patriarchal tensions around collective development

30:29 Q: What kind of autonomous structure are you coming into contact with or seeing created?

32:16 Q: Organization's in Myanmar with positions on Women and Queer struggle

34:25 Q: Are there any intentional spaces or structures for political development, education and knowledge sharing?

38:28 Q: What does building comradery look like for you?

41:44 Q: How does the struggle in Myanmar teach you to navigate cultures of choosing commitment to struggle or to your comrades?

47:07 Q: How is grief addressed in the struggle? How does grief influence the martyr culture and vice versa

54:02 Q: What audience did you have in mind when writing Lessons From The Hills

56:15 Q: Are there lots of artist in the revolution? How does that influence the culture?

50:01 Q: Were there any lesson you left out of the text

59:57 How to Support and last thoughts

-----------------------------------

Support The AIF

https://aifmyanmar.noblogs.org/

https://ko-fi.com/aifmyanmar

Instagram

@AIFMyanmar

@RachelRamLenMawi

@Azad_afa

—---------------------------------------------

Stay connected with The Dugout! Follow us for updates, exclusive content, and more:

🔗OUR WEBSITE: https://www.thedugoutpodcast.com/

🔗 Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/dugoutpodcast/⁠

🔗 Substack:https://tdugout.substack.com/⁠

 🔗YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@thedugoutpod⁠

🔗 Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/TheDugoutPod⁠

🔗 OUR LINKS:https://bio.site/thedugoutpodcast⁠

🔗 Watch Prince Shakur  on Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMMgrSHWLLU4U_FnJ1u10Ug

See all episodes

Never lose your place, on any device

Create a free account to sync, back up, and get personal recommendations.