They had to survive Africa’s harsh environment, which has plenty of lions, poisonous snakes, and enemy soldiers. They traveled over a hundred miles to Ethiopia, back to Sudan and then to Kenya. They had to remember all of their good times they had to keep that will to live; they also had to make the journey for the friends that they made, and for the ones that they lost. These kids were not the only people that experienced this, but rather plenty of people experienced this during the ongoing Sudanese civil war. This book truly showed the horrors of this war, or any war for that matter and the amount of determination you must have just to survive. This war has displaced many Sudanese people throughout the country. Soldiers would destroy people and their homes and forcing many from the lands that they called home. They had nowhere to go or to run to, so they just ran to safety. That is the reason they are referred as “The Lost Boys.” This war is very horrific and has many casualties; many of which were innocent people just trying to live their life. It could also be said that these series of tribal wars displace the trust of the Sudanese people, let alone the Africans. These wars pit each countryman versus fellow countryman, serving…
Imagine a daunting journey, through hostile environments. There is a war over religion splitting up Sudan. Rebel soldiers are fighting the government, and people are being displaced from the homes and families. This describes the experience of Salva, a 12 year old boy from the novel A Long Walk to Water written by Linda Sue park. In this novel individuals have to face challenging terrain and dangerous routes against the odds of survival. Main character, Salva Dut, was able to survive through an extremely challenging journey because of his support of family, and friends, and his self determination. Salva’s survival of the journey was unlikely, but against the odds, he survived.…
* Najaf describes his and other refugee’s desperate plight and risks they took when they fled their countries. He recounts the harrowing escape the refugees had over land and sea, each step of the way, risking capture or death.…
In the beginning of the chapter “The Gilo”, Benson describes what they had to do when the EPLA took over the camp. In the summer of 1991 the Ethiopian government was overthrown by some guerrilla fighters. The war once again reached them. They had to face the same problems they had. To survive, they must leave. Benson states, “The Sudan war had grown worse and spread farther. I longed to go home, but not like this-not running again, not back into battles. My beautiful homeland wasn’t a home in wartime. But to avoid conflict we agreed to leave their land and our lovely crops behind us.” This demonstrates that they were in serious danger. No matter where they went more problems caught up to them. They were lucky to get help. In order for them to survive they had to get rid and abandon there…
Many adversities came upon the lost boys on strive for success for their family and friends left behind in Sudan and Kenya. For example in 1983, civil war broke out in Sudan between the Arab north and Christian, Animist south that engulfed the entire country causing thousands to flee. Of the thousands that fled were over 86,000 boys between the ages of 5-10 years old. Majority of these boys no longer had any family of any sort. The boys walked thousands of miles from Sudan to Ethiopia and on to Kenya to escape their government’s slaughter of the people. The goal of the civil war was to punish the half of the country that was not of Muslim faith. In 1987, the Sudanese government announced that all men of the south should be killed or sterilized in order to end the spread of their so called treacherous ideals of Christianity and freedom.…
The main reason the genocide started is because in 2003, two Darfuri rebel movements were created. The Sudan Liberation Army and the Justice and Equality Movement were created to inform the Sudanese government about the marginalization (to put or keep someone in a powerless or unimportant position within a society) of the area and the failure to protect sedentary people from attacks by nomads. This angered the Sudanese government who soon unleashed Arab militias known as Janjaweed, or “devils on horseback”. These militias attacked hundreds of villages throughout Darfur with help from the Sudanese army.. Over 400 villages were completely destroyed and millions of civilians were forced to abandon their homes. All of the thousands of lives taken by the Janjaweed are mostly to be blamed on the Sudanese government.…
2. The thesis of the article is that Sudan has been politically unstable over the period of its two long civil wars. The south did not identify with the Arab led Sudanese society and created a referendum on southern independence. The two halves of the nation fight in an imminent war killing millions while trying to resolve the issues.…
All that changed the night the government-armed Murahiliin began attacking their villages. Amid the chaos, screams, conflagration, and gunfire, five-year-old Benson and seven-year-old Benjamin fled into the dark night. Two years later, Alepho, age seven, was forced to do the same. Between 1987 and 1989, thousands of other young Sudanese boys did likewise, joining this stream of child refugees that became known as the Lost Boys. Their journey would take them over one thousand miles across a war-ravaged country, through landmine-sown paths, crocodile-infested waters, and grotesque extremes of hunger, thirst, and disease. The refugee camps they eventually filtered through offered little respite from the brutality they were fleeing.…
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Along the way, John meets up with tens of thousands of other Lost Boys and Girls, the name given to all children of sudan who had lost their families in the civil war of sudan. Along their tiring journey, they face deadly threats every day such as disease, famine, rape, northern Government troops, hostile tribes, and…
Genocide in Uganda has been going on since its independence in 1962, and is still going on today. Because it is such a poor country and the government is abusing its power it is difficult for Uganda to combat genocide. Uganda has suffered many violations to human rights, some of these violations have been government sponsored. The country has experienced forced exile, imprisonment without trial and murders against certain ethnic groups. Milton Obote, Idi Amin and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), led by Joseph Kony, contribute to a large part of the genocide in Uganda. The Genocide in Uganda is a result of misused authority, and a hunger for power, the only way it will be resolved is if people take action and if the government changes it…
According to the article, “Darfur Genocide,” this genocidal campaign results in the deaths of 300,000 people and the displacement of 3 million others. Further, the rebels and the government tried talking peace and “signed a ceasefire agreement and began long-term peace talks (Darfur Genocide).” However, since 2011 no additional progress has been made and violence has only grown more according to the article, “Darfur Genocide.” The indifference in the Sudan government and their allies Janjaweed has become destructive and…
Firstly, the lost children of Sudan were in a deadly environment, consequently many of them died. In a matter of a few years, roughly 20,000 children fled Sudan to try and make the 1,000 mile journey into Ethiopia to safety. They had spent four years trekking through war zones where thousands died of dehydration, starvation, sheer exhaustion, attacks from wildlife…
The Darfur Genocide began in February 2003 and is continuing to this day. It began when Sudan Liberation Movement and Justice and Equality Movement revolutionary gatherings started battling the Sudanese government, which they blamed for abusing Darfur's non-Arab populace. The administration reacted to assaults via doing a battle of ethnic purging against Darfur's non-Arabs. This brought about the passing of a huge number of civilians. One side of the contention was made predominantly out of Sudanese military and police and the Janjaweed, a Sudanese state army gathering selected for the most part among Arabized indigenous Africans and a little number of Bedouin of the northern Rizeigat; the dominant part of other Arab bunches in…
Genocide is a terrible thing and the Darfur War is no exception. The darfur war started in 2003 and has increased to at least 480,000 people killed, 2.8 million people displaced and made refugees.…