It has been nearly a year without any travel for me since Covid broke out and during that time I have hardly left Nimule. This has left me with a great desire for a change and a rest. Travel to Uganda needs a Covid certificate and a $50 Ugandan visa, so I prefer not to go there until I am able to take the deaf children back to school.
Around five or six years ago I met a
very remarkable retired bishop called Bishop Paride Taban for the first
time. Even though he is over eighty
years old, it is not really true that he is retired. Instead he has been working for peace in South
Sudan by any means that he can find.
This includes arbitrating between rival army generals, the government
and outside agencies. His attempts sometimes
involve talking to some very violent and murderous characters, so he is a very
brave man.
His pet project has been the
establishment of a peace village in a very remote area of South Sudan called Holy Trinity Peace Village at Kuron, not far from the border with Ethiopia. It is an area virtually untouched
by outside influences. He established a
primary school and a clinic (which has saved many lives). A secondary school is under construction. There is a newly established vocational
training college run by the St Martin de Porres brothers, two of whom live in
the peace village. The Bishop lobbied outside
agencies for road construction, a bridge over a local river and an air strip so
that Kuron is becoming more accessible than previously, although at the moment
only privately chartered flights land there.
Agriculture is being taught to the
local tribe, the Toposa, for the first time.
Up until learning agricultural skills they totally lived off their
cattle herds. The Toposa are
traditionally semi-nomadic, following their cattle from place to place, but
with an upsurge in cattle raiding by other tribes, they are now sticking close
to home. Due to Bishop Paride’s
motivation for peace-building, a lot of work is being done to help the Toposa
to become a more peaceful tribe. There
is a whole department at the Peace Village devoted to this task.
Arrival at Kuron by light aircraft |
It is very different from Nimule,
where people have become pan-African in their dress, the women mostly wearing
beautiful African print long dresses and head scarves or elaborately braided
hair. Men in Nimule wear shirts or
t-shirts and trousers. I have been given
a Toposa name, Natabu, which means a shady place where people can gather. It is a tradition here to rename people
coming from outside in the Toposa language.
Toposa women |
The Toposa of the local area are pretty much untouched by all the wars and political problems that have beset most of the country. They did not become refugees, but have stayed behind, continuing their normal lives throughout. This makes it a far more stable area than many in the country. People do not have the same dependency on outside aid, which makes a refreshing change.
The local catechist speaks to the villagers. |
Children waiting for baptism by the light of a bonfire. |
The general atmosphere of joy and excitement over the baptism visit was palpable. It was a very happy occasion indeed.
Last week was final exam time for primary school leavers across South Sudan and the school in Kuron was no exception. There were twenty exam candidates, only three of whom are girls, because of traditional gender values. Hopefully, as the Toposa become more influenced from outside, they will allow their girls to attend school. Girls here are usually married at puberty to much older men. I feel very fortunate that we have a far more gender-balanced school in Nimule. The school here is a boarding school as it caters for a very wide area. Some pupils come from as much as 100 kilometres away.
For the past two days I have been
teaching the teachers the same literacy method that I have taught the teachers
at Cece Primary School, to enable them to improve their literacy teaching. As literacy is not part of the South Sudan
Curriculum, this will, I hope, be a good way to say thank you for my stay here
to everybody working here.
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