Using the above information from the Yearbook, I've been doing a bit of digging.
I typed the places mentioned into Google Earth, and was surprised to find the distance between the convention and the approximate location of the village is only 140 miles. (The place referred to as "Tahan" is actually Kalewa).
This led me to wonder why it took the family a round trip of four days to attend a convention so relatively close.
I checked on Google, and surprisingly it produced an estimate of the driving time...
The above information puts an entirely new light on the story for me.
Here we have a family so poor that a journey that apparently should have taken a morning or afternoon took them two days. If they'd had a car and fuel they could have made it to the convention and back again in three and a half days - instead they had to set aside double that time.
Such is the pressure exerted on Witnesses by the organization to attend ALL meetings and assemblies that a destitute family in Myanmar felt compelled to abandon their livestock and livelihood just to listen to three days of propaganda.
And the Governing Body praised them for it.
Cedars