Out of the Cyclone, Seeds of Change in Burma By Lev Weinstein Posted Aug 23, 2008 6:51 AM CDT Copied Khun Myint Tun, Member of Parliament Union of Burma who won a seat during the national elections in 1990 but not allowed to assume power, during a press conference Thursday, Aug. 7, 2008 (AP Photo/Pat Roque) In the wake of the ruling junta's efforts to waylay foreign aid following May's Cyclone Nargis, Burmese citizens—including former political prisoners—created a grass-roots relief effort to help the embattled populace. In doing so, writes George Packer in the New Yorker, they may have created the catalyst for long-awaited political change in a once-prosperous nation impoverished by its military rulers. “Regime change can happen in many ways besides mass revolution,” one dissident tells Packer. Despite the junta's crackdown on the humanitarian efforts of its own people, and its brutal quelling of last year's demonstrations led by monks, Burmese relief workers "have become a movement," says a local journalist. "They've become like activists." Adds another former political prisoner: "When I was younger I hoped for outside help to come to our country and liberate it. Now I realize that we have to rely on ourselves." Read These Next Trump: Mayor of Minneapolis is 'PLAYING WITH FIRE.' An Amazon email goof dropped the bad news early. UPS workers are taking another hit. Bari Weiss to CBS News staff: Without a pivot, 'we are toast.' Report an error