Crisis in the Sudans: Action Needed to Save Lives

Tuesday, December 10 at 3:00 pm EST

Join us for a powerful digital workshop that delves into the ongoing crisis in Sudan and South Sudan, where devastating violence has claimed thousands of lives, displaced over 10 million people, and pushed millions more to the brink of starvation. As rival military factions battle for control, civilians bear the brunt of the conflict, facing unimaginable hardship and human rights abuses.

This timely conversation will feature Sudanese and American experts who will shed light on the roots of the conflict, the current humanitarian situation, and the path toward potential solutions. Panelists will explore how people of faith—including members of the Episcopal Church—and advocates of good will can take action to support peace, justice, and survival in the region.

In collaboration with the American Friends of the Episcopal Church in the Sudans (AFRECS), this webinar will also highlight the crucial work being done by Episcopal leaders in Sudan to offer hope amidst the crisis. Learn about AFRECS’s initiatives to amplify the church’s witness for peace and provide humanitarian aid to those in desperate need.

Why Attend?

This workshop provides a unique opportunity to hear directly from those on the frontlines of the conflict—faith leaders, humanitarian experts, and advocates working tirelessly to find pathways to peace.

Participants will:

  • Understand the complex dynamics driving violence in the Sudans
  • Hear first hand stories from Episcopal leaders in the region
  • Learn what advocacy, partnerships, and faith-based efforts can do to make a difference
  • Discover how you and your community can support the ongoing work of AFRECS and other initiatives

Now more than ever, action is needed to save lives and prevent further devastation. This conversation will equip you with the knowledge, tools, and resources to make a meaningful impact.

Register today and stand in solidarity with the people of Sudan and South Sudan. Together, we can support their journey toward peace, stability, and hope.

Panelists Include:

  • Niemat Ahmadi – Founder & President, Darfur Women’s Action Group; Washington, District of Columbia
  • Tom Staal – Former Counselor, USAID; Acting USAID Director, Sudan (Summer 2024); Board Member, AFRECS; Alexandria, Virginia
  • Anita Sanborn – President, AFRECS; Alexandria, Virginia
  • Tom Prichard – Executive Director, Sudan Sunrise; Fairfax, Virginia

Yay for Hundred-Year-Old Yambio

Samuel Enosa Peni, the 5th Bishop of Yambio and Archbishop of the Internal Province of Western Equatoria, ECSS, travelled to Washington, DC in early October for a meeting of the Anglican-Roman Catholic Consultation on Unity and Mission. He plans to celebrate on April 11, 2025 the 100th anniversary of the diocese of Yambio, whose cathedral is the oldest church building in the Sudans. Peni recently led a three-day revival, along with an evangelist from a Pentecostal church, challenging witchdoctors and those who continue to trust in them. 

New Primary School Completes its First Year in the Diocese of Wau

by Susan Virginia Mead

Photo: Students and staff celebrate the launch of their newly constructed primary school in the Diocese of Wau, part of the Internal Province of Northern Bahr al-Ghazal, in the Episcopal Church of South Sudan.

Launched in February 2024 through the efforts of Gabriel Turich Dak, a former South Sudanese refugee  educated in Kenya, the Kelly Hope Academy completed its first year November 8th. Beginning with 172 primary-level  students, Dak recruited teachers among other returnees from Uganda. Speaking at the Grand Launch was Dr. Clive Kelly, a physician from the U.K. and primary benefactor of the school, which is also supported by Grace Episcopal Church in Lexington,  Virginia.   More at wau.anglican.org

Sudan: the nation with the world’s largest population of internally displaced persons

by Thomas H. Staal

While heads of state, including General al-Burhan of Sudan, were in New York in late September attending the United Nations General Assembly,  U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield announced nearly $424 million in additional humanitarian assistance for people in need in Sudan and in neighboring refugee-hosting countries.

The war in Sudan has become the largest humanitarian disaster in the world. More people need food aid and stand on the brink of starvation in Sudan than in all other disasters in today’s world combined.  The Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWSNet) of USAID shows close to 25 million Sudanese in need of humanitarian assistance. A large proportion are classified in the two highest need categories: Famine and Emergency.  

The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine estimates that there have been 400,000 “excess deaths” per year due to the war in Sudan. Excess deaths are caused by direct war injuries, disease, and starvation.  That means that there have likely been 600,000 deaths due to the war since the outbreak of hostilities in April 2023.

The warring parties show no interest in halting the fighting. They dishonor ceasefire commitments they made in 2023, and not even agreed to attend ceasefire talks this year.  The two leaders — Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) leader Gen. al-Burhan and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) leader Hemedti — have no real incentive to stop fighting. They would likely be either jailed or assassinated if and when the fighting ends. So the war continues, with serious human rights abuses being committed across most of the country,  by both sides.

Sacks of sorghum flour await difficult delivery to hungry people Sudan.

Both warring parties actively and consistently disrupt and restrict humanitarian assistance to needy people.  Active fighting in many locations has caused all international organizations to withdraw  international staff from all but a few areas under the SAF control on the east side of the country.  Where local staff remain, of both local and international organizations, they face harassment, bureaucratic restrictions, and physical abuse, including death.  

 When aid is delivered, it is often looted, or stolen by the warring parties.  Some success has been achieved by providing financial transfers through Starlink to community-level groups, enabling them to purchase food or other supplies from the local market. Those supplies are very limited, and those groups are often harassed by the warring parties and their funds taxed or stolen.  

Tom Staal

Director’s Update: November 2024

Severe flooding has covered forty counties in South Sudan, affecting almost one million people. In Juba, President Salva Kiir signed into law a South Sudan Truth Commission and a Compensation & Reparation Authority, but he has not created the promised hybrid Criminal Court to investigate South Sudan war crimes.

War continues in Sudan — particularly severe in Gezira State since October, plus a seven-month siege of the city of  El Fasher in Darfur which could end at any time with the city falling to General Mohamed “Hemedti” Hamdan Dagalo’s Rapid Support Force. I am distressed by the report that in Khartoum the RSF has turned its guns on those staffing the  “emergency response rooms”, which have been providing one meal per day for starving people.  There are no indications of serious peace talks in the offing, as the Biden Administration winds down.

Scrolling down, you can read details of Sudan’s humanitarian disaster from my friend Thomas H. Staal, a retired Counselor in the U. S. Agency for International Development, who recently returned to the U.S. after three months in Nairobi directing relief efforts in Sudan.

A Report from the Episcopal Church of Sudan

AFRECS recently received via the Church Association of South Sudan and Sudan in the UK a report from Archbishop Ezekiel Kondo, Primate of the Episcopal Church of the Sudan.  We hasten to share this slightly edited version with you.  Even in a country torn apart by war between two military groups, where the number of displaced is the largest in the world, courageous Archbishop Ezekiel Kondo, the provincial staff, bishops, the Mothers Union, and parishioners are struggling to support the Christians and non-Christians they are able to reach.

Three factors affect the Sudanese people since the war started in April 2023: bullets, hunger, sickness.

Due to the generous financial help from our partners in the UK and other parts of the world, the Episcopal Church of Sudan with its people have survived and continue to operational even where the war is ongoing (Khartoum, Wad Medani, El Obeid, Darfur and Kadugli town).

Since July 2023 the Episcopal Church of Sudan has sent funds to its five Dioceses so that people are given relief food each month or each two months.

Below are the highlights of food distribution to the people January to June 2024.

Diocese of Khartoum

One of the 33 Parishes in the Diocese of Khartoum receiving small bag of food items

Thirty-three parishes of about four thousand people, including non-church goers, benefited from food distribution within the Diocese of Khartoum. The Diocese covers greater Khartoum

(Omdurman, Khartoum and Khartoum North), Northern Sudan (Dongula) and River Nile State (Atabra). Most of pastors are still with the people though few have left to safer parts of Sudan or neighbouring Countries.

 Stories from beneficiaries:

“Thank you, Archbishop and your team, for helping us to survive. Please pass on our appreciation to our friends abroad”, Pastor Abrahim Nugara in telephone call.

“We thank God for you for keeping us in your prayers and support”,  Randa, secretary to the Mothers Union.

Part of food distribution items in the Diocese of Khartoum

Diocese of Kadugli

There are 4 parishes functioning. Kadugli town has been under siege for many months now. Now nobody goes out or comes in, there is no food coming in. Many people have left the town to find something to eat. The area of the Nuba Mountains has been declared a “Hunger Zone” by the SPLA/N movement, which defends it, while the government claims otherwise. It has been reported people eat tree leaves in order to survive!

Diocese of El Obeid

The Diocese of El Obeid, which covers North Kordofan and greater Darfur, is one of the biggest in size. El Obeid town has been besieged just like Kadugli for several months, while Darfur has been bleeding since the war began mid-April 2023. There are 4 major Churches in the Diocese and church centres. Bishop Ismail and Muslim Imams have joined hands to support those who in need by distributing relief food. The people are so pleased to see co-existence between Christians and Muslims.

Diocese of Port Sudan

The Diocese covers three Government States of Eastern Sudan (Red Sea, Kassala and Gedaref).

There are 8 Parishes in this Diocese not counting the church centres. This Diocese, which now hosts the Provincial office, is considered to be the safest in Sudan. As a result it hosts many displaced people.

Diocese of Wad Medani

(pic) People & dishes

This Diocese covers 4 States (Gazira, Blue Nile, White Nile and Sinnar).  It consists of 13 main parishes beside many centres. December 2023 Gazira was taken over by the Rapid Support Forces, and most of the people fled from the area including the pastors and the bishop. Bishop Saman now has relocated to Damazin which is part of the Diocese.  He and his team are supporting the people with food distribution in Fao, Kosti and Damazin where majority of people took refuge.

Dioceses of Kadugli and Heiban (Nuba Mountains)

The two (2) Dioceses of Kadugli and Heiban in the Nuba Mountains have not been part of this food

distributions support due to their special locations. Recently, the SPLA/N authorities have declared the area “hunger Zone”. This is because of last year’s poor harvest due to inadequate rain fall. The Province is planning to include these two Dioceses with relief food support should extra funds are found.

Once again, I hope that our friends and partners will continue with the same spirit in supporting our efforts to alleviating the suffering of our people in the Sudan.

To God be the glory.

Province of the Episcopal Church of Sudan

September 2024

Communique from Church Association for Sudan and South Sudan

From: CASSS
To: Sudan Church Message Group
Subject: PRAY FOR SUDAN – month 17

It’s hard to imagine, but life in Sudan just gets worse, immersed in the tragedy of war and its endless sorrows.  Coptic Bishop Sarabamon of Omdurman and northern Sudan says the war in Sudan is “a story of pain, suffering and innocent blood shed every day.  Everyone suffers and wants an end to the war, but we do not have the tools to achieve it.”   A leader of Taqaddum, the Sudanese democratic people’s group seeking peace, has accused the two warring Generals of pursuing a zero-sum path to more destruction and suffering.  “You do not feel the people’s pain, but rather laugh above this rubble that you have created.” 

In many areas, people in Sudan are resorting to desperate measures like eating grass and wild leaves just to survive.  In one community near El Fashir, the situation is so bad that famine has been declared.  And it’s spreading.

International humanitarian law rests on the Fourth Geneva Convention, which requires that in warfare, “persons taking no active part in the hostilities … shall in all circumstances be treated humanely.”  That’s not happening in Sudan.  Mutual acknowledgement of the need to protect innocent life could open a door to solving what is one of the world’s gravest crises.  If the Generals would commit to respect and protect civilians, they couldn’t go on as they have, doing whatever they want.

The Economist magazine features serious, careful journalism and opinion.  The 31st August issue has three articles on Sudan, giving an in depth assessment.  They describe the human tragedy but also the geo-politics around the war, and how if not dealt with this war will have far reaching consequences.  “The world has responded to Sudan’s war with neglect and fatalism, showing how disorder is becoming normalised.”  “It is a grave mistake for the outside world to ignore Sudan, on grounds of both morality and self-interest.  And it is wrong to imagine that nothing can be done.”

What can we, little people, do?  We can be faithful in prayer, and we can give, and we can lobby the government to get engaged with the problem.  Our Church Association is not an aid organisation and cannot work at the scale the situation needs, but World Vision comments that our funding of what the Episcopal Church is doing is effective:  
Cash transfers are often the most cost-efficient way for delivering aid because it reduces logistical costs and waste, ensuring resources go directly to those in need when markets are functioning.  Cash assistance empowers families with a sense of dignity by allowing them to prioritise what they need most and helps stimulate local economies which is critical for long-term recovery.”

We can feel overwhelmed by the enormity of global suffering, but we know that “even a cup of cold water” has significance (Mt 10:42). Whether it is donating to relief efforts, advocating for policy change or simply praying fervently, each of us has a role to play in alleviating human suffering.  Let us act with compassion.  Let us enlarge our hearts and share our resources with those in need, demonstrating the love of Christ through our actions.

Attached is a new news sheet.  Please circulate it to anyone who will pray for Sudan and the church members caught up in dire circumstances.   Also attached a Prayer for Sudan that could be printed out and put out in pews in your church.

Also attached for wider reading, two of the articles from the Economist 31-08 edition.  On sale now in newsagents at £10, this issue has a black cover with the word SUDAN prominently featured.  The briefing article forecasts 2 million will die in Sudan this year from malnutrition.  2 million this year:  more next.  The third article (not attached) expands on the geo-politics that is touched on in the editorial.  

The Economist: Sudan Briefing

The Economist: Sudan Editorial

For those interested, I’ve also attached part of the interview with Juma Idris.

Main thing is – please stay committed to the Sudan church and use the news sheet if you can to get the interest of others.

Yours

John

AFRECS E-Blast: January/February 2024

Director’s Update

The Biden Administration has been struggling to move the devastating conflict in Sudan toward a cease-fire between the Sudan Armed Forces and the RSF and toward a civilian-led political transition.  Efforts are being made to dissuade the UAE from its armed support for the RSF, channeled through a secret base in Chad.  Both Vice President Harris and NSC Advisor Sullivan have made that point at the most senior levels.  Former Congressman Tom Pierrello, who served earlier under President Obama as Special Envoy for the African Great Lakes, has been designated Special Envoy for Sudan, but the scope of his responsibilities is still being worked out.  While there is deep concern at State and the White House about the direction in Sudan, Secretary of State Blinken already has his hands full with Israel/Palestine, Ukraine, Taiwan, and North Korea. As I write, he is making his fourth visit to the continent, but not to its northeast quadrant.

Meanwhile in 2024 AFRECS will be seeking to reinforce financial support for Archbishop Ezekiel Kondo, Primate of the Episcopal Church of Sudan, as he seeks to consolidate church leadership from Port Sudan, rather than a ravaged Khartoum, and to generate support for its few far-flung parishes in different parts of the country.

Dane Smith, Executive Director

Two Messages from the Sudans

  • January 14 from Bishop Michael Deng Bol of Abyei: “Many refugees and returnees from Sudan are coming into Abyei town on daily basis. Children and elderly people are lacking for food and shelters. Please kindly pray for them. Organizations are doing nothing to help them.” Contact through the Rev. Anderia Lual Arok in Phoenix, Arizona anderialual@yahoo.com.

AFRECS on Your Itinerary?

Please stop by our exhibit and say “Hello” if you will be attending:

  • Diocese of Southwestern Virginia annual convention, Roanoke VA Jan. 26-28
  • Episcopal Parish Network annual conference, Houston TX, March 7-9
  • General Convention of the Episcopal Church, Louisville KY, June 23-28

Who’s Who on the AFRECS Board

A lay preacher in the United Methodist Church, was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia, and 2011-12 in served as as Senior Advisor on Darfur for the U.S. Special Envoy to Sudan:  Executive Director Dane Smith

A retired lawyer in the homebuilding industry and attends Church of the Ascension in Denver, Colorado: Phil Darrow

Our President Anita Sanborn’s early career focused on community organizing, maternal and child health, and long-term care. As a lay leader in the Episcopal Church in Colorado, she became engaged with the Sudanese refugees arriving in the early 2000s.  Many trips to the Sudans followed and she has been a Board member of AFRECS for several terms, beginning in 2004.  She now resides in Indiana.

Our Treasurer Larry Duffee spent three years as a missionary of The Episcopal Church to the Episcopal Church of Sudan — initially intending to devote only four months helping the Provincial Secretary’s office in Juba develop improved methods of financial management.

A retired Senior Counsel at the international law firm Baker Botts LLP in Washington, DC , and non-resident Fellow at the Baker Institute’s Center for Energy Studies, Rice University, focusing on international and energy matters.  In 1992-94 he opened a law office in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia and served as outside counsel for the National U.S. Arab Chamber of Commerce for a decade: Steven Miles

Susan E. Bentley retired after serving 23 years as rector of St. James Episcopal Church in Roanoke, Virginia including 14 years as pastor to a “nesting” congregation of South Sudanese who share space with the English-speaking congregation. 

Ellen Davis teaches Bible and practical theology at Duke Divinity School and consults as a theologian in the Anglican Communion, especially East Africa.

Frederick Gilbert has consulted on Africa, especially economic development planning, program management, and evaluation, since he retired from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in 1994.

Frederick L. Houghton, a retired priest of Eastern Michigan, taught at St. Mary’s Theological School, Odibo, Namibia, and in 2000 spent six weeks at Kakuma refugee camp in Northern Kenya teaching in the Malek Bible School and briefly visiting with Bishop Nathaniel Garang in the Diocese of Bor.

James A. Hubbard is a priest living in Amherst, Virginia who has served Episcopal parishes in Tennessee, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Missouri, and New York. He has completed an East-West and a North-South bicycle trek across the U.S. and served as a host during summer sessions at Chatauqua, New York.

The author of How to Talk with your Muslim Neighbor (Forward Movement Publications, 2004), living in Alexandria, Virginia: RevRichard J. Jones

Thomas Staal retired in 2019 as Counselor/Senior Advisor after a career with USAID, starting as an Emergency Program Officer in Khartoum in the aftermath of the famine of the mid 80s, then as a Food for Peace officer covering Ethiopia, southern Sudan, Uganda, and Somalia.

The newest member of the AFRECS Board, The Rev. Shirley Smith-Graham, has served in ordained ministry for almost 20 years. After attending the Virginia Theological Seminary, Shirley worked with both The Church of the Epiphany, Washington, DC, as a pastoral presence to homeless persons, and with Historic Christ Church in Alexandria. She has served parishes in both the Diocese of Virginia and Southern Virginia and joined the Diocese of Virginia staff in 2022 as Interim Minister for Transition. 

Western Equatoria Builds Peace between Zande and Balanda, by Jack Mathias and Leslie Siegmund

Two local groups, Zande and Balanda, had recently experienced devastating mutual violence in Tambura, including the killing of over 200 people, hundreds of injuries, and large loss of property. In response, hundreds gathered during the last week of September 2023 to witness a soccer tournament among six teams and participate in a peace conference facilitated by Bishops Moses Zungo (Maridi), Richard Aquila (Nzara), and the host, Isaac Ephraim Bangisa (Ezo), with co-operation from Ezo County authorities. 

Organizers report greater trust and forgiveness among the people, as well as awareness of the dangers of violence, alcohol, drug abuse, witchcraft.

The gathering saw 12 marriages, 30 confirmations, and the ordination of several deacons and priests; training for Bible study and Mothers’ Union; and reaching out to those lost and traumatized. The conference was supported by the Internal Province of Western Equatoria as well as St. Francis Episcopal Church in Great Falls, Virginia.

The new Bishop Ruati Guesthouse in Ezo was put to good use by participants in the conference. 

Thank You!

AFRECS breathes because individuals like you care about the peacebuilding, educating, and empowering work of the Episcopal Church in the Sudans. Parishes and dioceses are also welcome supporters.  Please act on your concern by contributing here ­­­­­­­­­­­­­or send your check payable to AFRECS, Box 3327, Alexandria VA 22302. We are a 501(c)3 corporation, and your contributions are tax-deductible.

This issue of the E–Blast was compiled by Richard J. Jones and Anita Sanborn.  We welcome your news, comments, or concerns at anitasanborn@gmail.com.

AFRECS E-Blast: December 2, 2023

Director’s Update

A bit of good news from South Sudan.  President Salva Kiir has appointed a National Elections Commission, a Political Parties Council, and a National Constitutional Review Commission — all steps toward the 2024 election required by the 2018 Revitalized Agreement on Resolving the Conflict in South Sudan. Meanwhile 1000 “reunified” South Sudanese armed forces have been deployed to Upper Nile to assist with refugees flooding in from Sudan.  These are modest steps – necessary, but far from sufficient to give credibility to the election process.

The political news from Sudan goes from bad to worse.  A trusted expert told me this week that the RSF, a “family-owned transnational entity,” tied to Russia’s Wagner Group, is winning the war, but could not even make a pretense of governing. Further evidence of wanton destruction comes with the November 1 bombing and burning of the Church of the Savior in Omdurman, site of the Shukai Theological Institute and Episcopal church offices.

I have taken heart, however, from the delivery of some relief aid to all the churches in the four divisions of the Diocese of Khartoum – Khartoum, Omdurman West, Omdurman East, and Bahri (North Khartoum).  Much of this assistance has come through the Church Association for Sudan and South Sudan in the UK.  AFRECS is seeking to raise $25,000 from Giving Tuesday, tied to a matching grant of $10,000 to add to that assistance and help the Episcopal Church of South Sudan meet the needs of destitute refugees.

I hope you will contribute!

Dane Smith, Executive Director

The Peacemaking Life of Bishop Paride Taban, by Richard Jones

(Radio Tamazuj photo)

Roman Catholic Bishop of Torit, Paride Taban, died November 1st  leaving a Peace Village as his legacy.  We thank God for his life among us.

After retiring as Roman Catholic Bishop of Torit in 2004, Paride Taban continued to develop his home village of Kuron, in the southeasternmost corner of South Sudan, bordering Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda, as Holy Trinity Peace Village.

Born in 1936 in Katire, a sawmill town in the Imatong Mountains of Eastern Equatoria, Taban completed his Roman Catholic education at the Major Seminary in Tore in 1964, the year foreign missionaries were expelled from the southern region of Sudan. While civil war continued, he became a parish priest in Torit. After the 1972 Addis Ababa Peace Agreement, he served parishes in Palotaka and Loa, becoming Auxiliary Bishop of Juba in 1980, consecrated by Pope John Paul II in Kinshasa, Zaire, and in 1983 became the first Bishop of Torit. After serving through two decades of war, Taban escaped to Uganda in 1984, then to Kenya and Central African Republic, returning to South Sudan in 2004 when the Comprehensive Peace Agreement between the SPLM/SPLA and the Government of the Sudan was being reached in Naivasha, Kenya. That year he retired from the diocese of Torit.  In 2016, when conflict threatened within the government threatened the peace of the independent Republic of South Sudan, Taban was appointed Co-chair of a Steering Committee of National Dialogue.

Remembrances

“I met Paride Taban through the New Sudan Council of Churches [co-founded by Taban with Anglican bishop Nathaniel Garang of Bor in the liberated areas, predecessor of today’s South Sudan Council of Churches]. He was always an unassuming and humble presence, someone who did not seek notoriety but received it because of his immense practical wisdom and inspiring faith. He had, and I don’t say this lightly, a saintly presence.”

  • Ross Kane, Assoc. Prof. of Theology, Ethics, and Culture, Virginia Theological Seminary; former volunteer with Young Adult Service Corps

“Bishop Taban and our father, the late Ambassador Angelo Voga, were good friends and the Bishop knew my wife Suzy’s family well. One Sunday morning as we were walking to services at All Saints Cathedral in Juba, a passing car started hooting and pulled over. It was Bishop Taban, also on his way to Mass. He recognized Suzy and wanted to greet her. When he learned I am Suzy’s husband, he jokingly informed me that I owe him, as Suzy’s kinsman, an uncle’s goat. (I regret that was never able to pay that debt.) Although he was a South Sudanese, Bishop Taban was a world citizen who took to heart his calling to serve all God’s people.”

  • Larry Duffee, Treasurer of AFRECS, and Suzy Voga Duffee, Secretary of Ma’di Community Association in the U.S.

Anita Sanborn, AFRECS Board Member, interviewed Bishop Paride Taban at the Methodist Guest House in Nairobi, Kenya in 2009 or 2010.

“It was in 1989 that I first heard of Paride Taban. After refusing to allow the Sudan People’s Liberation Army to use the church’s vehicle, he was physically slapped by a general. Later I read his small book written in Jerusalem, where he had gone for healing and meditation and discovered a cooperative peace village called Neve Shalom where Christian, Muslim, and Jewish people lived together in harmony. Taban argued that the liberation movement is for the people and not the people for the movement.  I had the pleasure of hosting one meeting of the bishop with Southern Sudanese community members in Washington, D.C.”

  • Kwathi Akol Ajawin, Sudanese African Fellowship, Annandale, Virginia

“What a giant! He spoke truth to power and broadcast the plight of Sudanese during the Second Sudanese Civil War far beyond Sudan’s borders. While figures like Fr. Saturnino Lohure and Barnaba Deng occupy rather iconic places in South Sudanese liberation lore, I believe one cannot talk about the Sudanese Church and its prophetic/public role in conflict mediation without serious consideration of Paride Taban.”

  • Christopher Tounsel, University of Washington, Seattle

Public Recognition

2013 – United Nations Sergio Vieira de Mello award, for his involvement leading to an agreement between the government of South Sudan and the David Yau Yau armed Cobra faction signed in May 2014

2018 – United States government Freedom of Worship Award

November 9, 2023 – Opus Foundation million-dollar prize, by Villanova University, Philadelphia, USA, for the work of Holy Trinity Peace Village Kuron

More at:

Award of the Sergio Viera de Mello Peace Prize

Retired Bishop Paride Taban dies

Paride Taban: South Sudan’s ‘warrior for peace’ dies  (2-minute audio interview)

Even the Birds are Gone: Images from a War-Wracked Land

It is now over thirty weeks since war broke out in Khartoum between forces of the government of Sudan and the rival Rapid Support Forces of General Dagalo (Hemedti). Death continues to spread.

Bishop Ismail Gabriel Abudigin writes from of El Obeid in the west:

“In Nyala, South Darfur, there is just one deacon, with his family and a few Christians. Most people fled over the border to Chad. In Geneina, West Darfur, our school has been looted and destroyed.  El Fashir in North Darfur is under government control, and our pastor is still there.

Here in El Obeid we continue to hold a church service on Sundays, but when the fighting within the city is serious we pray under our beds. Government soldiers are in control up to now. Food is available in the city but some of it is very expensive. We have joined with mosques and other local churches, collecting clothes and delivering and distributing items together. There are approximately forty schools here, full of displaced people. Every day you hear about or see someone killed in front of you. “

As government military bases come under attack by the Rapid Support Forces, North Darfur markets like this one in the town of El Fashir are disrupted.

On November 1, an aerial bomb plus fire destroyed the eighty-old Anglican Church of Our Savior in Omdurman, while paramilitary looted diocesan offices, a residence, and three church schools in the compound. Fighting has destroyed most public properties in Khartoum, including a bridge connecting Omdurman to Khartoum North across the Nile. A woman caught in this urban battlefield writes, “The city is devoid of cats and dogs. Even the birds are gone because the air is polluted by the smoke of a city in flames.”

 

Before & After:  Church of Our Savior in Omdurman, (across the Nile from Khartoum) destroyed

Residents in the diocesan compound watched helplessly after a bomb sent flames and smoke from burning wooden benches and roof beams of Church of the Savior roaring into the sky.

Photos courtesy of John Poole.

Details at:  https://www.casss.org.uk

Praying for the Sudans in Palestinian Words

Lord, I am a refugee fleeing to you! I seek refuge in you.

Under the showers of missiles, you are my fortress that will not collapse.

When wicked people look at me, I can almost feel their hands strangling me;

but evil hands cannot reach you. You are my hope in whom I trust.

I take refuge in you daily; you have never failed in shepherding me.

Don’t reject me or forsake me, for I need you! My heart longs for you.

Grey has invaded my hair: every hair tells a story of your touch, which is

full of righteousness as well as kindness.

You have shown us many painful hardships, yet you return and restore our lives.

Despair cannot rule over us as long as our hearts are in your hands:

you restore and comfort us.

I praise you for I am in your hands today.

A Meditation on Psalm 71 by Yohanna Katanacho in ‘Praying through the Psalms’

Source: Church Association for Sudan and South Sudan, UK

Photo from Church Association for Sudan and South Sudan, UK

This issue of the E–Blast was compiled by Richard J. Jones and Anita Sanborn.  We welcome your news, comments, or concerns at anitasanborn@gmail.com.