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SUDANESE
REFUGEE EDUCATION FUND
www.sudaneseinkentucky.org
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NEWS ABOUT THE LOST
BOYS AND LOST GIRLS OF SUDAN
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Hundreds of people are now
drinking clean water in Southern Sudan because of the efforts of
Louisville-based Nadus Films and its partner organization, SEED.
Future trips to Sudan to
assist with water purification, medical needs, education, and
church development are being planned. Nadus is wrapping up
production of a feature-length documentary, "The New Sudan."
See the web blog and photos from the trip at
www.nadusfilms.com.
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Lopez
Lomong, a Sudanese refugee who
resettled in New York State as a teenager and last year
won the 1,500-meter title at the
NCAA Track & Field championship earned a trip to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, representing
the United States as a new citizen. Read
"Lomong's long trip from Sudan to
Beijing," a newspaper column that recounts his
thrilling, come-from-behind performance running on an injured
ankle. His dream would not be denied.
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The 20,000 to 25,000 Sudanese
boys who fled the destruction of their families and villages
in 1987 did not go alone,
Mapendo International
reminds us. "Many adults were in that stream of the
dispossessed and displaced. So were perhaps 2,000 to 3,000
parentless girls. And while the boys attracted the world's
attention (and have settled in America), the girls have been
concealed and silenced, often abused, kept as servants or
slaves in the United Nations' Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya,
or sold into forced marriages. They have fallen through the
cracks in this resettlement initiative and have been mostly
hidden from the UN Office of High Commissioner for Refugees
and the State Department's efforts.
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Sudanese refugees in Syracuse,
New York are reconnecting to their cultural traditions and
raising money for education through an art project initiated at
St. Vincent de Paul Church. See some of their work and hear from
community members at the Syracuse
Post-Standard's web
site. Also, hear about folklorist
Felicia McMahon's new book, Not Just Child's Play: Emerging
Traditions and the Lost Boys of Sudan.
Order the book directly
from the publisher, or find it online at www.amazon.com or
Barnes & Nobles (www.bn.com).
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Kennedy
Nakwa, Peter Nakwa,
and James Atem are among the
Sudanese soccer players featured in this article by Louisville
ESL teacher Scott Wade. Read Wade's account of the
"stolen moments" in LEO
weekly.
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"The Didinga Hills"
features a six-minute on-site video of a church-building project
based in Nagishot, Sudan. In addition to showing the lush and
beautiful forested region of the Didinga Hills, the video also
reflects the musical traditions of the Didinga people.
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Louisvillians Helping Save
Darfur and the Kentucky Interfaith
Task Force on Darfur have worked tirelessly to keep people
focused on finding solutions to the genocide in Sudan. The
group's Web site
(http://louisvilliansfordarfur.org)
also maintains a calendar of related events.
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Sudanese refugee
Ater Majok has exploded onto
the basketball recruiting scene in the United States. The
University of Kentucky is among the schools he is considering.
"It's good to get all of the attention," he said, "but then with
the attention comes responsibilities...When I get in the
classroom, I have to handle all of my business." See
"Ater Majok has come long way on, off
court" in The Courier-Journal.
"Desmond
Yengi remembers each day of the flight from southern Sudan
with the clarity of a film spooling endlessly through his head.
He was five. His father was dead...Finally, they escaped across
the border to Uganda, and lived again in the bush until they
were found by the UN." Desmond, a member of the Bari tribe,
currently attends Westminster College in Missouri.
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Ater Malath battled for
five years to reunite his family by bringing his orphaned
siblings from Uganda to Seattle, Washington. Soon all three of
his siblings will join Ater in college. See other articles and
photos at The Seattle Times.
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Former Lost Boy
Peter Gur recently returned home to
Sudan to open the first of several planned orphanages sponsored
by the
New Seed of Hope project. Gur
will be the field director at the orphanage in the village of
Lachatem in northern Bahr el Ghazal. Read about The New Seed
of Sudan, a documentary film project about former Lost Boys
who are returning to rebuild south Sudan, and the 127-Clubs, a
campaign to build locally maintained orphanages for the
estimated 1.7 million parentless children in south Sudan.
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The fragile peace process between
south Sudan and the northern Khartoum government is in jeopardy,
with fighting breaking out in Abyei and pushing Ngok Dinka
farmers farther south. "Here, two worlds collide and two
governments compete for territory inch by inch; under that
ground lies as much as half of Sudan's estimated five billions
of oil," The New York Times reports. Diplomat Roger
Winter has spent two decades fighting for peace in Sudan and
says, "The future of Abyei is the future of all Sudan." See
"The Man for a New Sudan" in The New York
Times Sunday magazine.
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Salva Dut, a Sudanese refugee
who came to the United States in 1996, has formed a nonprofit
organization,
Water for Sudan, Inc., to raise
money to drill new wells and provide fresh water to villages
throughout Southern Sudan. Currently, Sudanese villagers walk
miles daily to collect water, which is often contaminated with
parasites that cause pain, sickness, and death.
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"It was a flock of children and a
few adults. You sort of just joined the stream of people, and
the stream became a river, and the river became rivers of
people," said
Aduei Riak, describing her flight from Sudan in 1987. Read
the Associated Press story about Aduei, now a student at
Brandeis University in Massachusetts.
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Many people have asked, "Whatever
happened to the 'Lost Girls' of Sudan?" As the stories and
videos from Mapendo International's Web site
reveal, fewer than 100 female refugees from Sudan were admitted
to the United States with the approximately 4,000 young men. Many
Sudanese girls were placed with foster families in the Kakuma
refugee
camps, and those families usually forced the girls into arranged
marriages at age 15 in exchange for a dowry. Read
about some of the lucky ones who made it to
America. Go to
www.mapendo.org and click on Refugee Information/Sudanese
Women at Risk.
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BOOKS ABOUT THE LOST
BOYS
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Home of the Brave is
Katherine Applegate's young adult novel about Kek, a Sudanese
refugee who comes to America and struggles to make a new home.
Written as a free verse poem, it reflects the longing of a Lost
Boy. Published by Felwell and Friends, an imprint of Holtzbrinck
Publishers, in September 2007.
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They
Poured Fire on Us from the Sky: The True Story of Three Lost Boys
from Sudan, by Alephonsion Deng,
Benson Deng, Benjamin Ajak, and
Judy A. Bernstein. Read a
book review
by Holly Holland in the Louisville Courier-Journal.
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What Is the What,
written by Dave Eggers, is
the novelized autobiography of
Valentino Achak Deng, from his pre-war life in
southern Sudan to his resettlement in the United States. All
proceeds from What Is the What go to aiding the
Sudanese in America and Sudan. Valentino Deng started a
foundation in 2006 to raise
money to improve educational opportunities for refugees in
southern Sudan and the United States. See the
Speakers Bureau for more
information about Sudanese who are available to share their
stories with audiences around the United States. Read an article
in the
Louisville Eccentric Observer (LEO)
about What is the What and local reactions.
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Echoes of the Lost Boys of Sudan
(Echoes Joint Venture,
2004), a graphic novel series by Myk Friedman, tells the story of
several Lost Boys who have settled in Dallas, Texas, including
Matthew Mabek. Published in Dallas by James Disco.
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Lost Boy no More: A True Story of
Survival and Salvation, by Abraham Nhial and
DiAnn Mills.
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The
Lost Boys of Sudan: An American Story of the Refugee Experience,
by Mark Bixler. Read a
book review
by Holly Holland in the Louisville
Courier-Journal.
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I
Will Go the Distance: The Story of a Lost Sudanese Boy of the
'Sixties, by Jacob J. Akol (Kenya, Paulines Publications Africa,
2005).
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The Journey of the Lost Boys: A
Story of Courage, Faith and the Sheer Determination to Survive by a
Group of Young Boys Called "The Lost Boys of Sudan," by Joan
Hecht.
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Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan (Coretta
Scott King Illustrator Honor Books; Lee & Low Books, Inc., 2005), by
Mary Williams.
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The African
Refugee Artists Club is an organization of young artists,
founded by Atem Aleu, one of the Lost Boys of Sudan who attends Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. According to a recent
story in Seven Days, Aleu has been organizing art exhibitions around the
country. A self-taught artist who used United Nations' art books to
learn his craft, Aleu "showed so much talent that he was eventually
made an instructor of about 75 other young Sudanese" in the Kakuma
Refugee Camp in Kenya.
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The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of
Minnesota has an
exhibition of art from the Lost Boys of Sudan.
Web site is:
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The Gurtong Peace Project is an independent, not for profit,
community-based project that seeks to provide information about
South Sudan and a discussion forum for Sudanese refugees living
in other countries. According to Web site, the phrase "gurtong"
means "to blunt the spear" and refers to a traditional ceremony
in which two parties resolve a conflict. It symbolizes
forgiveness and reconciliation.
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FILMS ABOUT THE LOST BOYS
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The New Sudan, a short
documentary film produced by Nadus Films for the African
Leadership and Reconciliation Ministry (ALARM), is available on
DVD for limited distribution. The film was developed by
Louisville photographer Coury Deeb and filmmaker Lindsy Wallace.
For more information, contact Deeb by email at coury@nadusfilms.com
or by telephone at 502-558-1117.
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For information about Lost
Boys of Sudan, a documentary film by Megan Mylan and Jon Shenk,
go to
www.lostboysfilm.com.
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FRIENDS OF THE LOST BOYS
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Kentucky Refugee Ministries,
Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to providing
resettlement services to refugees through church- and
agency-based sponsorship.
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Catholic
Charities of Louisville, Inc., a member of Catholic
Charities USA, provides service for people in need, including
the world's refugees.
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