หลงทางในประเทศของตัวเอง / Lost in Homeland by Rossanee Nurfarida

Thai poet Rossanee Nurfarida recites her poem about the plight of Rohingya refugees in a video by German-American filmmaker Ryan Anderson for the OXLAEY multimedia project. Anderson’s English translation appears as text on screen.

Lost in Homeland was featured last week in Atticus Review‘s Mixed Media section, which is edited by videopoet Matt Mullins. Here’s how Anderson described the video there:

LOST IN HOMELAND is a video poem read by the author Ms. Rossanee Nurfarida while stranded on a boat perched at the top of a four-story, urban house. Ms. Nurfarida’s current collection of poetry, Far Away From Our Own Homes, is a Finalist for the 2016 South East Asian Writers Award. Lost in Homeland was written in 2015 during the Rohingya refugee crisis when thousands of stateless Rohingya from Myanmar set out on old fishing boats seeking a better future. The video’s visual references to Islam extend the poem’s metaphor, commenting on southern Thailand’s Muslim minority as a people stranded in the country of their birth.

Click through for more about the OXLAEY project and for bios of Nurfarida and Anderson. Additional credits are given in the YouTube description.

5 Comments

  1. Reply
    OXLAEY 22 January, 2017

    Thank you so much for the post! (The spelling of OXLAEY above is a little off. ‘OXLAEY’ :)

    • Reply
      Dave Bonta 24 January, 2017

      Sorry about that! Corrected.

      • Reply
        OXLAEY 31 January, 2017

        sorry to bother… there’s one more misspelled :)

        • Reply
          Dave Bonta 1 February, 2017

          Ah, so there was. Well, at least I was consistent in my error. :)

  2. Reply

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