Dear John, Last week my colleague Joshua wrote to tell you about Nafisa and Rayan, two refugee mothers we met in Maban, South Sudan. They were forced to flee ongoing war and violence across the border in Sudan, bringing absolutely nothing with them. Our colleagues were there to meet them; giving everyone arriving essential items like blankets and cooking pots. The team then helped relocate them to a nearby camp on a UNHCR bus. After Maban we travelled to a place called Bentiu, in Unity State. One of the most difficult and extreme places I have ever been to, 80% of Unity State is submerged in water. Across the state, hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to flee, finding safety in camps surrounded by dikes, just like the ones Alex and the team are building in Maban. On the other side of the dikes, dead trees stick out of endless still water, entire forests decimated by floods - it looks like a tree graveyard. There we met Nyariaka, who had been forced to flee her home because of flooding. “Before we were displaced by the floods, we had comfortable homes and I had a herd of more than 100 cattle and goats, but I lost them all after the flood.” |