
There is a soft, persistent hum inside the Rohingya refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar, a sound stitched together from monsoon winds, human breathing, and the dull throb of waiting. Waiting is its own weather system there, heavy and humid, impossible to escape. More than a million people, an entire nation without a nation, have lived inside the world’s largest refugee encampment for years, long enough for children to grow into teenagers who have never seen the land their parents still call home.
And yet the world treats this place as a paused story, a tragic footnote with no plot progression. The headlines have thinned. The promises have thinned further. And now the aid is thinning too.
When funding shrinks in a place where everything depends on it, food, water, medicine, dignity, the consequences unfold slowly at first and then all at once. Shelters that once at least pretended to be sturdier than the storms are no longer provided to new arrivals. Families step off trucks or trudge across flooded paths only to discover there is no space for them, not even a tarpaulin or bamboo frame to call their own. It is difficult to imagine something more humiliating than being stateless, but being stateless and shelterless may come close.
The international community, that elusive chorus of well-meaning voices, often speaks of compassion in the abstract. But compassion, to the Rohingya, has become an increasingly unreliable currency. It evaporates when politics blow hot. It disappears when donors look elsewhere. The Rohingya the forgotten people, the displaced, the unwelcome, have learned that abandonment happens not with shouts but with silences. Long, bureaucratic, politely phrased silences.
The camps were never intended to last this long. They were meant to be temporary, a humanitarian bridge until Myanmar’s government faced its own reflection and allowed the Rohingya to return home safely. But home is now an idea more than a geography. Half-destroyed villages, scorched earth, and political inertia make return not only unrealistic but dangerous. And so the camp grows into something resembling a city, though a city without rights, without permanence, without the basic infrastructure that transforms a cluster of shelters into a place where human beings can imagine a future.
There are informal schools where volunteer teachers try to convince restless children that learning still matters. There are makeshift clinics where doctors must play a daily game of triage because they simply do not have enough supplies. There are markets, tiny ones, where bartering serves as the closest thing to an economy. The Rohingya have done what all displaced people eventually do: they’ve built a life inside the ruins of what was taken from them.
It is fashionable in some circles to speak of “compassion fatigue,” as though empathy is a natural resource prone to depletion. But fatigue is a luxury the Rohingya do not have. Nor is it a luxury afforded to the Bangladeshi communities hosting them, who shoulder the environmental strain, the political complications, and the economic frustrations of absorbing a population larger than many countries’ capitals. Host nations often receive praise for their “generosity,” but praise does not rebuild eroding hillsides or fund schools or address the simmering tensions that arise whenever resources grow scarce.
To walk through the camps is to feel the contradiction that defines the Rohingya condition: they are both hyper-visible and utterly unseen. The scale of their displacement is enormous, undeniable, impossible to ignore and yet the world has managed to look away. There is no powerful lobby advocating for them, no geopolitical advantage in championing their cause. They drift in the margins of global concern, a crisis that refuses to end but also refuses to excite the urgency needed to solve it.
What does it mean, then, to insist on hope? In many Rohingya households, hope has become a quiet act of rebellion. Mothers teach their children stories from a homeland the kids have never touched. Men gather to discuss community leadership, imagining systems of order inside disorder. Teenagers, who should be flirting, dreaming, discovering, gather in cramped rooms to learn English or Burmese, preparing for a future that has not been offered to them. It is astonishing, almost unreasonable, the human instinct to imagine a tomorrow even when today collapses around you.
An opinion column is supposed to offer a point of view, a prescription, maybe even a solution. But the Rohingya crisis resists quick solutions. It asks instead for endurance, for the mundane work of sustained attention. It requires the international community to resist the temptation of distraction. To remember that a million displaced people do not simply disappear because our focus shifts to another crisis.
The truth is that moral responsibility doesn’t expire. It doesn’t diminish because the news cycle moved on. The Rohingya are still there, in the tarpaulin-and-bamboo labyrinth of Cox’s Bazar, still listening to the monsoon winds and the bureaucratic silences. They are still waiting.
And perhaps the most radical thing we can do, the most human thing, is to stop pretending that waiting is an acceptable substitute for a future.









