MyanmarNews

The marble ‘living Buddhas’ trapped by Myanmar’s civil war

One of the sculptors of Buddha statues whose work has been impacted by the war told Myanmar Now that the junta had arrested his suppliers on suspicion of sourcing marble from Madaya, which is now under resistance control

Sculptor Aung Naing Lin has spent decades carving Buddha statues to help guide Myanmar’s faithful—but getting the marble he needs from resistance-held quarries in the midst of civil war is now a perilous task.

Buddhist-majority Myanmar has been mired in bloody conflict since the military toppled the government of Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021, terminating a 10-year experiment with democracy and sparking a widespread armed uprising.

In recent months, opponents of the military have advanced with rocket and drone attacks on Mandalay—the country’s second-biggest city, with a population of 1.5 million.

The resistance have also seized the hillside quarries that have for generations provided the marble that adorns Mandalay’s palaces and monasteries, as well as the shrines in ordinary homes.

Now, moving the precious stone and roughly carved statues by truck across the divide of the civil war, from. . .

Subscribe for full access to

Get unlimited access to high-quality reporting from the frontlines and support independent journalism.

Subscribe Now

Related Articles

Back to top button