Archive for August, 2010

Grandiose & Greedy

Last Tuesday, at 9:30am, I took Br Denis to the Malakal airport to check in on a World Food Programme flight to Juba. We were gruffly told ‘no check in’ – go to the WFP office. We eventually ascertained that the Malakal Airport Manager, not following correct procedures, had tried to get on a WFP flight the day before but had been turned away. So in retaliation he declared the airport closed to all WFP flights on Tuesday. 

Meanwhile, Sr Luchita, returning from Colombia had been sitting in the Juba airport from just after 8:00am waiting for her flight to Malakal. If it were not my phone calls, she would have had no idea why her plane was delayed. By 12:30pm, the dispute had not been resolved and all intending passengers at both airports were finally told to go home. This is Sudan! 

You meet some wonderful people in Southern Sudan. In the recent August 30 edition of the USA National Catholic paper, America, a correspondent wrote of two Bishops visiting the USA:

‘You have to look up to the Sudanese bishops because they maintain their faith despite what they’ve been through. Witnesses to their country’s horrific civil war, they nevertheless have ready smiles and gentle humor….  Bishop Rudolf Deng Majak, president of the Sudanese bishops’ conference, and Bishop Daniel Adwok Kur, auxiliary bishop in Khartoum, retain hope for peace in Sudan despite the likelihood of war.’  

The Bishops exercise a leadership of service and preach peace. Unfortunately, too many people, choose instead to exercise a leadership of [...]

Angelo Asking

One of the difficulties in living in Southern Sudan is being confronted with so many very obvious needs. The circumstances in which many people live in simple tukuls, presently surrounded by mud and pools of murky water, is appalling – to my eyes. Many of the people, however, have never been elsewhere and thus do not make comparative judgements as readily as I do. One hopes that they are not as conscious as we ‘kawadjas’ (white people) of how far there is to go in attaining better living conditions and that they take encouragement from seeing some of the obvious improvements that are occurring. Perhaps the increasing prosperity of some who have employment provides the strongest motivation for a lasting peace.  

For the ‘kawadjas’, however, there is another related problem. Those in need see the resources of the expatriates and, specifically, what we are doing as part of Solidarity with Southern Sudan, and think we should be able to respond to their needs. Although we try to explain that we have to fund-raise ourselves for the high priority needs of better health services and delivering teacher education, the perception persists that we have a capacity to respond to other needs.  

One becomes accustomed, even if it remains a little unsettling, to meeting children in rags who plead ‘Kawadja, one pound, one pound.’ I am referring here, however, to more than this. As well as the obvious need for better homes, the Church is trying to address the need for better schools and churches and even [...]

The Quality Quandary

Long ago, Confucius warned: ‘Seek not every quality in one individual’. Wise advice. None of us is perfect. Quality is a real issue for us here in Southern Sudan. A couple of days ago as I drove around Malakal with Peter Stemp, from our Solidarity with Southern Sudan Rome office, he listed several economically poor countries he had visited and remarked of the muddy Malakal roads:  ‘These are the worst roads I have seen anywhere’. 

It is not just the quality of the roads, but also of goods, that is a problem here. The tap on our kitchen sink has already been replaced three times this year. Toilet seats disintegrate, the electrical cables, far from being systematically tested, as in developed countries, are often just two lengths of wire loosely joined together. Fortunately, we have a Syrian builder who is focussed on quality. He is bringing most electrical fittings from Europe. The switchboard for our new Teachers’ College was made in France.  

With clothing I find myself opting for lower quality because it is thinner, lighter, cooler and washable – never mind if the appearance is not so smart. Ironically, many of the Sudanese dress very smartly in suits with collars and tie while I appear quite casual by comparison. When I think it is pleasantly cooler than usual, they say it is cold!  

These things, of course, are only incidentals. The real issue is the quality one finds in the people. Many Sudanese speak at least three languages fluently – Arabic, English and their local [...]

The Gift of Peace

I have decided that I like the wet season. Yes, it brings slush and mud, slippery roads, paths under water and many roads, especially near the main markets, become quagmires; but the much cooler temperatures, the varied cloud cover, the lack of dust and even the sound of rain on our tin roof bring ebb and flow, light and shade to the pattern of our living. ‘Glory be to God for dappled things’ wrote Hopkins, in admiration and praise of variation and diversity in creation. 

At the recent blessing of the local Catholic radio station, after Sunday morning mass, the Apostolic Administrator of this Malakal Diocese, Monsignor Roko Taban, spoke of the diverse tribes of Southern Sudan. ‘There is difference here but be proud of who you are and what tribe you belong to but there is no place for violence. Beauty is not a competition’. 

He used the analogy of flowers in a garden. ‘The flowers are greatly varied but they do not need to fight one another. Each can be appreciated for its own beauty. There is no better or worse flower. They are all flowers and we are all people. Be proud of who you are but we are also Sudanese and there should be no violence between us. Some here come from other countries and also live and work peacefully among us.’ The approaching referendum (January 2011) is very much in the minds of the Church leaders who are using every possibility to urge continuing peace.  

A little earlier, at the end of [...]

Going in Gumboots

Last week I quoted some health statistics from a development report, based on research carried out in 2009, recently released by the European Commission in Brussels. In that same report, here are some comments about education. 

‘Education indicators in Southern Sudan are amongst the lowest in the world and the vast majority of children and youth from the south have not received any formal schooling. Less than 50% of all children receive 5 years of primary education and whilst 1.3 million are enrolled, it is estimated that only 1.9% will complete primary education… Decades of conflict and under-investment in education have left Southern Sudan with a lack of qualified and trained teachers and learning spaces. Whilst resilience in the sector was supported by the mobilisation of volunteer teachers and recruitment of demobilised soldiers into the teaching service, the legacy was such that in 2003, up to 90% of teachers had no formal teaching qualifications and had limited educational qualifications.’ 

A major focus of the work of Solidarity with Southern Sudan is the delivery of teacher training for primary school teachers. There is an urgent need, not only for more schools and more teachers, but for basic training of the current teachers. Our present focus has been on in-service but we are building facilities at both Yambio and Malakal that will enable us to begin pre-service education in 2012. 

The wet season has well and truly arrived but life and activity don’t stop in Southern Sudan. This is a country where one simply accepts there are difficulties and keeps [...]

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