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Myanmar’s Jewish Vote

Casting a ballot with Sammy Samuels, the leader of Yangon’s minuscule Jewish community

by
Joe Freeman
November 09, 2015
Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images
Crowds gather for the election result announcement in front of the National League for Democracy's headquarters after Myanmar's first free and fair election in Yangon, Myanmar, November 9, 2015. Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images
Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images
Crowds gather for the election result announcement in front of the National League for Democracy's headquarters after Myanmar's first free and fair election in Yangon, Myanmar, November 9, 2015. Lauren DeCicca/Getty Images

Sammy Samuels makes frequent appearances in stories about Myanmar’s small Jewish community. He is, after all, one of the last Jews here. Since his father died in May, he has taken full responsibility over the preservation of Yangon’s only synagogue, Musmeah Yeshua.

Since this is a story about Myanmar and Myanmar’s small Jewish community, allow me to introduce you to Aung Soe Lwin. This is Sammy Samuels’s Burmese name and it’s the title he used to vote in Myanmar’s historic democratic general elections on Sunday, the freest in a quarter century. It was the first time Samuels, 33, has ever been able to cast a ballot in his home country.

Sammy Samuels after voting in Myanmar’s elections on Sunday (Photo: Joe Freeman)
Sammy Samuels after voting in Myanmar’s elections on Sunday (Photo: Joe Freeman)

“I’ve been feeling so excited since last night,” he said. “[I] couldn’t even sleep.”

After he voted, the tip of his pinky finger was freshly stained with indelible purple ink. “I’m hoping for the positive outcome,” he said. “I think it will be a great chance for the country to move forward.”

Samuels was unable to vote in a 2012 by-election because his area had no candidates. In 2010, he didn’t bother because he thought the elections would be unfair. They were. The vote before that was in 1990, when he was too young to take part.

On Sunday, around 9:30 a.m., a few hours after voting started, Samuels was with his family at the polling station on 31st street. They are just part of a Jewish community that today numbers around 10.

Myanmar has more than 30 million eligible voters and a long list of seemingly intractable problems, such as accusations of voter fraud, and a parliament that allocates 25 percent of its seats to unelected members of the military. The election, though billed as the most credible in decades, has been deeply problematic, with voting being cancelled in areas where ethnic insurgencies simmer; Muslims face disenfranchisement and hostile Buddhist groups.

Size-wise, the “Jewish vote” in Myanmar doesn’t carry much weight, but it still matters: a vote says you belong.

“Even though we are the smallest minority in this country, being able to vote as a citizen… that is tremendous,” said Samuels. “We are very proud of that.”

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi travels in a motorcade ahead of a campaign rally for the National League for Democracy in Yangon, Myanmar, November 1, 2015. (Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images)
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi travels in a motorcade ahead of a campaign rally for the National League for Democracy in Yangon, Myanmar, November 1, 2015. (Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images)

And it will matter. Sammy, after all, voted for the National League for Democracy, the party of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. His support could help the NLD come to power—an outcome that looks likely, reportedly a landslide.

The Jewish community in what was then known as Burma flourished from the late 19th century through World War II, once boasting a population of about 2,500. In that time, some Jews embraced politics. Before it was called Yangon, Rangoon had a Jewish mayor, as did a town called Pathein.

As we talked, Samuels and I stood in a part of Yangon that is still diverse with various religions woven into its fabric. His synagogue is a few blocks to the west. A pagoda is two blocks in the opposite direction. Samuels’s father, Moses, used to walk these streets, where colonial and religious architecture abound. The polling station we were standing in front of had a date over the front of its entranceway: 1923.

His father, Moses, would have liked this. “His spirit will be watching us and enjoying what we are doing.”

Joe Freeman is a Southeast Asia-based journalist whose work has appeared in The Washington Post, Foreign Policy, The Guardian, The Christian Science Monitor, The Phnom Penh Post, and the Nikkei Asian Review.