PANPET // Wearing a stack of bronze neck coils, a sign of beauty for her Kayan tribe, Mu Par dreams of a time when all “long-necked” women can return to Myanmar from Thailand where they are a tourist attraction.
For years, Kayan women and girls have been driven across the border by poverty and conflict to earn money posing in holidaymakers’ pictures in purpose-built Thai villages which are decried by campaigners as “human zoos”.
Several have returned to their remote native Panpet area in Kayah state, Myanmar, with an entrepreneurial plan to reverse the flow of departures.
Mu Par went home a few months ago, having saved enough money after 14 years working in Thailand.
She runs one of a dozen neat little shacks selling locally-made wooden dolls, scarves and individual bronze neck rings – giving tourists a more ethical window into their unique culture.
Lining up a neat row of handmade “long-neck dolls” at a new craft market, Mu Par hoped to entice tourists to her eastern Myanmar homeland, and provide for her four children, aged between four and 15.
“In Myanmar, my children can attend school and also I am happy to be among my relatives,” the 33-year-old said, as a handful of tourists milled through the area.
Once the preserve of intrepid travellers as it languished under junta rule, Myanmar is now a tourist draw.
Arrivals have doubled in the past five years and numbers were expected to surge under a new government led by Aung San Suu Kyi’s pro-democracy party.
Much of tiny Kayah state was off limits to foreigners until recently.
Authorities hoped the region’s emerald hills and waterways will become the country’s next top travel destination.
Mu Par and her neighbours from Panpet’s cluster of five hamlets grouped together to build the market.
They share the profits from the 5,000 kyat (Dh15.60) visitor entrance fee.
“If we can get many tourists here, we want all the Kayan girls in Thailand to come back,” she said.
From as young as five years old, Kayan girls are given up to 10 neck rings to wear, they then add a new one approximately every year until adulthood.
The practice, which gives them a giraffe-like appearance, painfully compresses their shoulders and collarbones, rather than stretching their necks.
A grown woman can wear as many as 25 rings, weighing a total of five kilos.
One legend suggested that women began wearing the rings to protect themselves against tigers, which once roamed the region in large numbers and bite the necks of their prey.
Men in the village used to wear face-shaped masks on the backs of their heads in a bid to ward off tiger ambushes, according to local people, although the practice has died out.
Fewer women now wear the coils, which force them to keep looking straight ahead.
Families often cannot afford the costly, handcrafted rings, while many young girls feel they are an impediment to getting a job outside of their region.
The women can remove their rings with the help of a specialist and their shoulders and collarbones can eventually return to normal, depending on the age at which they are taken off.
Several dozen women and girls still wear the traditional bands, including those at the new handicraft market in Panpet.
Until recently, they spent much of the year in Thailand, earning around 3,000 baht a month in the tourist attraction villages, where most of the money goes to Thai tour agents.
“Asking them to pose for photographs for money is acting like they are in a human zoo,” said Phyoe Wai Yar Zar a Myanmar tourism official.
“Instead [in their home villages] people can buy their products like food, handmade crafts and souvenirs to support them.”
* Agence France-Presse