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The Lost Boys of Sudan

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The Lost Boys of Sudan Enduring Understandings: Survival Your life is shaped by both internal and external influences of which you may or may not have control. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Lost Boys of Sudan


1
The Lost Boys of Sudan
2
Enduring Understandings Survival
  • Your life is shaped by both internal and external
    influences of which you may or may not have
    control.
  • In order to survive in your environment, you must
    continually adapt.
  • What does it take to adapt?
  • Survival requires resiliency, courage, and inner
    strength.
  • What does it take to survive?
  • Our lives are tested by society, by
    ourselves, by other people, and by nature.
  • Why do life forms need to adapt to survive?

3
The Lost Boys of Sudan
  • Much as been written about the Lost Boys of
    Sudanbut few have paid attention to it. Why?
    Perhaps because its a Civil War. Perhaps
    because it concerns Africa and we pay little
    attention to Africa as this continent has little
    impact on us economically or politically. And
    perhaps because we havent as yet figured out
    that what happens in the Sudan may have a large
    impact eventually on our war on terrorism. But
    this is the story of the Lost Boys of the
    Sudan. It is a true story of 3,800 boys who came
    here in 2001 to avoid certain death at home. Yet
    today, in many places in Sudan genocide
    continues, famine and disease are rampant, and
    the will to survive is continually begin tested.
    How did these boys adapt? Where did they get the
    resiliency, the courage, the will and the
    strength to survive? It is an amazing,
    heart-wrenching story of survival.

4
Sudan The 10th Largest Country in the World
  • Sudan, the 10th largest country by area in the
    world, has known little peace. Historically, the
    North of Sudan has had closer ties with Egypt and
    is predominantly Arab and Muslim while the South
    is predominantly black, with a mixture of
    Christianity and Animism.

5
Sudan A Land of Civil Wars
  • Sudan's independent history has been dominated by
    chronic, exceptionally cruel warfare that has
    divided the country on racial, religious, and
    regional grounds displaced an estimated four
    million people (of a total population of
    thirty-two million) and killed at least two
    million people. It has damaged Sudan's economy
    and led to food shortages, resulting in
    starvation and malnutrition.

6
Northern Sudan A Home to Muslin Jihadists
Terrorists
  • Sudan was once under British rule. With
    independence, though, came Civil Wars. South
    Sudan has always wanted to be free of Northern
    Sudan due to religious and racial differences.
    North Sudan is Muslin and Arab and Southern Sudan
    is black and Christian. Jihadists in the North
    continue to encourage war and these fanatics
    continue to rape, torture, main and kill those
    living in Darfur and other parts of Sudan despite
    peace agreements.

7
The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan
  • For 21 long years, the Civil War lasted in Sudan,
    ending by a peace agreement in 2005. During this
    time millions died, not only by fighting, but
    more by being displacedlosing their homes and
    their villages. Those who escaped the soldiers
    often died of the Black Death, malnutrition,
    malaria and starvation.

8
Who Are the Lost Boys of Sudan?
  • Actually, the Lost Boys of Sudan is an
    organization started to try to find homes for the
    1000s of boys in Sudan who were orphaned. These
    boys who escaped the fighting had to run for
    their lives and try to make it to a safe haven.

9
The Boys Alone
  • Why just boys? Girls in the villages were either
    killed, raped, or taken as slaves for the Arabs
    in the North. The boys escaped because they were
    either out tending herds when their villages were
    bombed or slaughtered by soldiers or they were
    near the rain forest and could escape there. So
    boys of all ages started a journey toward finding
    sanctuary in Ethiopia.

10
The Journey Lasted for Years
  • It was no small journey of days or weeksin many
    cases it took years. Thousands died trying to
    find asylum. They died of thirst, of hunger, of
    eating mud to get the water out of it. They died
    crossing rivers they could not swim. 100s were
    eaten by crocodiles. Some just sat down and died
    of weariness.

11
And After Ethiopia it was Kenya
  • Those who reached Ethiopia found refugee camps.
    But as the war progressed, Ethiopia closed their
    camps and again they were forced to seek safety
    .this time in Kenya.a journey of 1000 miles
    across harsh land,wide rivers, and wild animals.
    Again 1000s died thousands of boys from five
    to18.

12
And For Some the Last Journey From the Camps Was
to the United States
  • By 2001, the world was finally paying attention.
    The Lost Boys of Sudan organization was formed
    and 3,800 boys were brought to 100 cities in the
    US. Media attention was huge. Their stories were
    told and the United Nations began acting more
    responsibly. Pictured here are four of the
    boys in their apartment in Fargo, ND.

13
The Lost Boys in the US
  • These boys now look like typical Americans. But
    it has been very, very difficult for them. Those
    psychiatrists who treat children like these have
    said they are the most traumatized war children
    they have ever seen. But why not? Their families
    slaughtered, the sights they saw on their
    journey, the torture of the journey itself is
    worse than we can even imagine. One is pictured
    here being interviewed before coming here.

14
The Lost Boys in the US
  • The goal in bringing the boys was to provide them
    with education and the chance of a good life. But
    it has been very hard on them. They had to learn
    the language, the customs, and a whole new and
    very different world--- all the while feeling
    both glad to be here, guilty about other boys not
    so fortunate, and missing home.

15
Some of the Lost Boys Decide to Return home to
the Sudan
  • Salva Dut, attended college to study so that he
    could return home and teach villagers how to
    drill wells and provide them with water. A boy
    who nearly died of thirst and exhaustion wanted
    to ensure that others have a chance at a better
    life.

16
And He Kept His Promise
  • This is Salva Dut today. With courage, resiliency
    and great determination he became the founder of
    the Water for Sudan project. Here he poses beside
    a hand pump well he installed in Akok village in
    Tonj, Sudan in May, 2005.

17
And There Are Others, Too, Who Will Go Home
  • Meet Wol Bol Wol, studying medicine at Huntsville
    College in Alabama who plans to return home and
    serve the people in the camps and in Sudan.

18
And There Are Those Who Love Their New Home
  • Becoming an American citizen at a ceremony in
    Houston, here is shown one of the Lost Boys who
    has found peace and safety at last in America.

19
But It Is Not Over Yet
  • Sadly, after the peace agreement was signed in
    2005, militant muslins decided to practice more
    genocide and in the provide of Darfur continue to
    slaughter and kill.Over 200,000 more have died
    and the refugee camps are today overflowing.

20
The Refugee Camps Are Full of People Who Make It
There Near Death
  • It is the hardest on the children. The journey
    to the camps are long. Death is common there.
    Over 80 children die a day. Although more support
    is being given, it is not enough.For years the
    world has watched and let this happenand it
    continues to do the same. For blacks and
    Christians in Sudan, there is little real hope in
    the near future.

21
Sudan is Still A Land Where Those In Power Do Not
Value Human Rights or Life
  • Although Northern Sudans economy is good and
    life there looks as it would anywhere, the Muslin
    extremists do not want the Southern region to
    form their own countrywhich has been promised by
    2011. The world continues to wait and watch. The
    world needs to look at these camps--- like the
    picture here where a daughter sits next to the
    body of her mother who just died of malnutrition.

22
The Lost Boys of Sudan Will Never Be Free
Until Their Country is Free
  • What an amazing story of survival. Boys who
    walked more than a 1000 miles to survive. Boys
    who spent years trying to survive. Its hard to
    imagine that kind of determination to live. At
    least we have helped save a few and given them
    the promise of hope and a better life.

23
What This Unit Is About
  • For the next two weeks, you will be reading
    different articles about the Lost Boys of Sudan
    and others who have learned to survive. During
    this time, you will be learning new strategies to
    help you read more fluently and to help you
    better understand what you read. You will have
    multiple opportunities to work with others and to
    share what you have read. At the end of the unit
    you will be asked to use what you have read and
    write your new understanding of the will to
    survive.
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