Rohingya artists create art in the world’s largest refugee camp to preserve a culture that Myanmar has long tried to silence.
Three Rohingya artists are defying cultural erasure in Cox’s Bazar, the largest refugee camp in the world. They preserve the memory of a people who has been languishing in Myanmar through painting, music, and photography. This Talk to Al Jazeera special examines the creative resistance of a stateless community beyond the news of displacement and genocide investigations. These artists are fighting back with color, sound, and story as Myanmar continues to deny them recognition and refuse to let their heritage go.
Source: Aljazeera
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