In the hidden war of Burma, where the jungle swallows armies and landmines outnumber crops, one humanitarian mission became a journey of faith, danger, and unexpected brotherhood.When former Air Force veteran David Burnell answered a call to enter the denied territories of Burma (Myanmar), he expected heat, hardship, and risk. What he did not expect was how deeply the people would carve themselves into his heart-the Karen tribe, fighting for survival against a half-million-man regime; warriors missing limbs who still stood watch on one leg; a British scout now reduced to begging; a pig named Herman who became a companion; and a small boy with a spinning top who became his shadow.This book is the accurate account of that mission.Alongside a Special Forces legend, a 40-year medic and Vietnam veteran, Burnell crossed the border with no sanction from any Government and no promise of rescue. Their task: complete the fourth phase of a covert combat-medic program for the Karen, a Christian people hunted since World War II.What followed was a week in the jungle that felt like a lifetime.Dragon boats through drug-running watersBooming monsoon storms over bamboo hooches used as classroomsLandmine belts, where every misplaced footstep could end a man's lifeNights on the hooch railing as John shared memories of Vietnam, including the first man he ever killedA beggar who once scouted for the British and offered what little he had-a boiled eggA child named No Do Tu, who said nothing, yet spoke straight to the soulThis is not a war story about fighting.It is a war story about showing up.About choosing compassion when fear is justified.About being willing to cross borders that other men won't.About believing that courage can belong to ordinary people.About faith, carrying you where training cannot.If we genuinely believe in love, what are we willing to do about it?In the Land of Broken Rivers is a firsthand account of service, sacrifice, and the quiet heroism of a forgotten people. It is a testimony of spiritual prompting, a meditation on what it costs to keep going, and a reminder that sometimes the smallest hands leave the deepest marks on a life.This story is real.This mission happened.And every step was worth it.