Skip to product information
1 of 2

Other Websites

Prison Chief Thein Win - Prison and the Crisis

Prison Chief Thein Win - Prison and the Crisis

Regular price 0 Ks
Regular price Sale price 0 Ks
Sale Sold out
စာအုပ်အမျိုးအစား

:: Click on Buy it now to download the ebook . After placing your free order, the download link will be sent to the reader's email address used to log in to the mgyoe.com website.

:: The Ebook (Free) books on mgyoe.com are books that have been circulating on the internet for a long time.

:: It is just a compilation so that readers can easily find it when they want to read it.

:: If reprinted by libraries, the download links for these e-books will be removed.

------------------------------------

"Prison means"

The eight (8) levels of hell are located below the level of the `Great World' we live in. In particular, the Great Hell is said to be located at the lowest level.

The construction of the eight (8) floors of hell is only mentioned in the Naymi Jataka, but in reality it is truly amazing and wonderful.

`` The city walls of the eight-story hell are made of iron. The thickness of the walls is nine yuza. There are four gates on each side. The ground inside is also made of iron. The city is (yuza) long and wide. The flames will last until the end of the world.

The location and layout of the hell chambers is quite interesting. The structure of the hell chambers in the Naymi Jataka is very similar to that of a human prison. While the walls of the police station are made of iron, the walls of the human prisons are made of brick and mortar, and the inner chambers are made of iron, wood and mortar. Just as the walls of the prisons are made of square blocks, modern prisons are also made of square blocks.

Therefore, people often compare prison cells with hell. They depict the prisoners and the people in hell. They compare the events in hell with the events inside the prison. Is prison a copy of hell? Does a person who is not afraid of the police not fear prison? Why are modern prisons built in the same way as the hell in the Naimi Jataka? .

King Sridhamma Ashoka was a great missionary king. He was also a generous king. The good deeds of King Sridhamma Ashoka still exist today. King Nayami, due to his charity and virtue, visited the heavenly realm alive and well, and also visited the great land of Siddhi. Now King Sridhamma Ashoka, being a glorious king, looked around the various regions under his rule . He saw a hell that surrounded the two original mountains like a great wall made of iron, punishing the sinners. . . .

The Chinese Buddhist monk Fa Heng's book "The Journey of the Pilgrims to the Middle Lands" begins as follows. Here, between two mountains, the hell that King Sridharma Sokkaraja saw coincidentally resembles the prisons of today. Therefore, when the king asked the wise ministers, they said that it was a hell. The king said, "...

"If even the king of the Papamikasa dynasty can create a place to punish sinners, why can't I, the king of the people, create a place to punish the wicked in Thailand?" he said, and built a "worldly hell" in the human world, a 'prison' like Yama's hell. .

It is not boring to read the Burmese King's administrative documents and the great decree of the Bodaung Pagoda. The story is about the election of the great president. If there is no one to rule and no one to be ruled in the human world, there will be endless chaos. Only with the presence of the great president can the great president punish those who are guilty.

For those who commit evil deeds , they are always reminded of “prison” in this life and “hell” in the next life. Therefore, it is not easy to answer the question of whether prisons exist or not. In fact, prisons are “good and bad.” Although it is said that prisons are bad, there have been “prisons” in every country in the world throughout the ages.

It is easy to say that prison is bad. It is very difficult to completely abolish the prison system and prisons. In the current situation, neither capitalism nor socialism can completely abolish the prison system. And prison is a cycle. When one has power, prison is for others. When one is powerless, prison is for oneself. - Therefore, man and hell are inseparable, and "prison and humanity" are inseparable. Not to mention ordinary people, kings, queens, generals, doctors, rich people, and artists are also not immune to prison. For example, among the kings who went to prison, the story of King Bimbisara is the most tragic.

Due to the issue of the throne, other kings and princes were also imprisoned. King Bimbisara, after handing over the throne to his son Ajatasat, was imprisoned. When he was imprisoned, he did not fare well and was tortured by his own son again. Finally, he died in prison.

A prison cell is narrow and cramped. It is not the house where one lives, but the prison, especially the apartment, is filled with darkness. There is no fresh air and all kinds of bad smells. Therefore, while living in a small prison cell, only by taking the Buddha's teachings into your heart, practicing meditation and cultivating Vipassana meditation will you achieve peace of mind and body. For various reasons, workers and ordinary people have been imprisoned in every era.

Writers and journalists are also in prison. These events have been and will continue to be in every country. It is not a new phenomenon. In England, the death penalty was abolished a long time ago, but now, because of the crimes and murders that have killed so many people, we are in a situation where we have to think about whether to bring back the death penalty.

In Myanmar, the death penalty is carried out only by hanging, without the use of firing squad, poison gas, or electric chair. Writer Yan Aung Maung Maung's book "The Execution of the

In fact, although the execution is carried out as per the law, the relevant prison officials and staff are very disgusted by it. The writer Yan Aung Maung Maung has written extensively that it is truly shocking to see a person being killed in cold blood, even though the person being hanged and the person being hanged have no animosity or anger towards each other. The purpose of this article is to abolish the death penalty.

Another is the writer Min Thu Rein. He won the 1966 award for his collection of short stories, “Life Experiences.” Writer Min Thu Rein was also a prison officer, like writers Aung Daung Maung and Myaung Mya Maung Ko.

Regarding his book “Mirror of Life Experiences”, some crimes are also caused by the system. It is true that the workers and farmers are honest people by nature, but the created conditions have pushed them to the brink of prison. Similarly, there are two books written about prison that have won the Literature Award from the Literature Hall.

The author Dawei Kyaw Min’s “Three Hundred Prisons” is a personal account, and the other book is “Hell Rooms from Thar Thang Prison” by author Kyaw Mya Than. Both books are personal accounts of his experiences in prison. Dawei Kyaw Min was arrested as a leader of the Thakin under the British-era Peace and Order Act (26). First, he was transferred to his native Dawei Prison, then to Pathein Prison, and finally to the famous Shwebo Prison of that time.

The book is a personal account of the anger, misery, and suffering experienced in these three prisons during the British era. It won the Sapaya Beimaan Award in 1969. Writer Kyaw Mya Than’s book “The Hell Cells of Tharyawaddy Prison” is about Tharyawaddy Prison, which he personally experienced after independence. Tharyawaddy Prison is not as big as Insein Prison and Mandalay Prison, but its infamous reputation is just as great. ... .. . - Writer Kyaw Mya Than won the Sapaya Beimaan Award in 1950 for this book. The literary award selection committee noted that writer Kyaw Mya Than was in Tharyawaddy Prison, which was notorious for its torture of human beings.

View full details