3.3.dl.4 nan wah wah aung - success story

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  • 8/11/2019 3.3.Dl.4 Nan Wah Wah Aung - Success Story

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    NAN WAH WAH AUNG: BUILDING A NETWORK OF FRIENDS

    Nan Wah Wah Aung was a student at Wide Horizons (WH) from 2008 to 2009 . WH gave me

    the confidence I need in my professional life, she says today. Serving as the deputy director of a

    medical organization that started as a small community based group and is today being cited in

    medical journals, she has every reason to be confident.

    Nan Wah Wah Aung grew up in Karen state in Eastern

    Myanmar, where her and her siblings attended

    primary school. Her sister suffered from tuberculosis,

    and their family could not afford the treatment. This

    family misfortune inspired her to pursue a career in

    the medical field. After finishing her education in

    Myanmar, she went to Mae Sot in Thailand to

    volunteer at Mae Tao Clinic, a local clinic that provides

    free healthcare for underprivileged migrants from

    Myanmar living in Thailand. Over the next three years,

    she gained a significant amount of knowledge and

    experience in the medical field, but she was frustrated

    that her English was not strong enough to communicate with foreign doctors and staff.

    Therefore, she applied to Wide Horizons (WH). The WH Program is a 10 month intensive study

    and field work course in community development followed by a one-year internship with a

    community based organization. The program brings in young adults from a wide variety of

    ethnicities to live and work together while learning the skills to build community services in a

    collaborative way. Since it was established in 2006, WH has trained hundreds of young adults

    who are now community workers and leaders.

    During her year at WH, her English improved rapidly.

    Moreover, she gained a lot of experience with the

    theoretical and practical elements of Community

    Development. However, the most important

    experience was, according to Nan Wah Wah Aung,

    working with people from a range of different

    backgrounds. Before I only worked with the health

    community, but at WH I opened my eyes to many

    different kinds of work. One friend came from an orphanage in Shan State [In Myanmar]and

    another from a womens organization in Sangkhlaburi [in Thailand]. We all had different

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    backgrounds and different point of view, so we had to be flexible to reach a goal together, she

    says. And working together also led to the forging of very close friendships If I travel to Chiang

    Mai in Thailand or to Shan and Mon State in Myanmar, I always meet with friends from WH. We

    use each other as a network to help each other she says.

    Today, Nan Wah Wah Aung is the Deputy Director of the Burma Medical Association (BMA), an

    organization that provides medical and first aid training to community health workers and

    mobile medical teams, and arranges community health education workshops and HIV

    prevention education. BMA is currently supporting over 30 clinics, serving approximately

    200,000 people across six states in Myanmar. Part of Nan Wah Wah Aungs job is to manage

    community health programs focusing on issues, such as malaria prevention and water and

    sanitation. Moreover, she is also directly responsible for training local field staff and reporting

    to international donors.

    Of all the skills she acquired at WH, the most important is, according to Nan Wah Wah Aung,

    time management. Currently she is working full time and is at the same time completing an 18-

    month TOEFL preparation course with We Women, a Chiang Mai based organization that

    supports female professionals from Myanmar,

    whom have been identified as role models. On

    top of working and studying, Nan Wah Wah

    Aung also has to make time for her 10-month

    old baby. But I have no stress, I use my time

    management skills, she says. And she has no

    plans to slow down. Once she finishes her

    course with We Women, she plans to enter a

    graduate program in Bangkok and earn a

    Masters Degree inPublic Health.

    Nan Wah Wah Aung hopes WH will be able to continue in the future and she would also like to

    see a similar program that can open students eyes to people around them on the other side of

    the border. In Burma, the organizations need to understand each other across language and

    ethnicity, because this reflects reality. To develop the whole country, we need to open our eyes,

    she says.

    For more information about Wide Horizons, contact:[email protected]

    or visit our page on Facebook (Wide Horizons, Community Development Program).

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]