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Sudan & South Sudan

Matching Grant Will Double the Impact of Your Gift for South Sudan

matchinggrantblogphotoWe've written a lot about South Sudan in recent weeks -- for good reason: For decades, the nation has been wrestling with poverty and violence, but now there is a growing sense of hope that the worst is behind them.

Last month, we described the celebrations taking place on the eve of the country's formal declaration of independence from the Republic of Sudan. We wrote about the dynamic role that women are playing in battle against illiteracy, and we interviewed the bishop of the Episcopal church in the Wau Diocese about the church's role in the new South Sudan.

Now we're telling you about an incredible opportunity: Every financial gift that Five Talents receives from new donors for South Sudan will be matched!

Let's say you've got $50 that you want to put towards fighting poverty, creating jobs and transforming lives in South Sudan. A US foundation will throw in an additional $50 to match your gift.

Your generosity will be matched. Your impact will be doubled.

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Video: 'That Was My Greatest Day in Sudan'

Our latest video addresses the past and future roles of Five Talents in the nation of South Sudan.

In 2009, Five Talents and World Concern partnered to open the country's first community bank.

Since that time, scores of savings and loan associations have formed. While benefiting current micro-entrepreneurs, these groups are also indirectly contributing to the development and education of South Sudan's youngest generation.

 

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Bishop Says Church in South Sudan Will Fight Corruption

BishopMoses

On July 8, the eve of South Sudan's formal declaration of independence from the Republic of Sudan, we talked with The Rt. Rev. Moses Deng Bol, bishop of the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Wau. He said he had been awakened that morning by children dancing and singing in anticipation of the day's celebratory events. We then asked Bishop Moses, whose diocese partners with Five Talents, to discuss the church's role in the country going forward. What follows is an edited transcript of our conversation:

How has the church been active in South Sudan during the last few years?
During the [civil] war, the main role that was played by the church was to make peace between the southerners themselves. Because even though we had the bigger war between the north and the south, there were also small tribal conflicts within. The other role was to reach out to the international community and communicate the message of the war and the effect it has on the people of South Sudan.

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Women on Front Lines in South Sudan's Battle Against Illiteracy

cecilia

If South Sudan finds its footing as an independent nation in the coming decade, it will be, in part, because of young women like Cecilia Athieng.

The 23-year-old Sudanese student is a trainer with Five Talents partner Mothers Union, and she has taken it upon herself to help educate women so that they can contribute to the country's future.

According to a recent Wall Street Journal report, South Sudan's economy relies on oil for 98 percent of its revenue. If the nation has any hope of developing new industries, the government will need all hands on deck. As a result, women will have opportunities to play important roles.

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South Sudan's National Anthem: 'Uphold Us United'

flagDuring a Friday interview with The Rt. Rev. Moses Deng Bol of the Episcopal Diocese of Wau, the bishop joked that if you go out into the streets of South Sudan you will see everyone dancing -- only to different tunes.

Some are moving to the beats of traditional music. Others are dancing to Christian songs. Either way, of course, their actions reflect the overflow of joy coming out of South Sudan on the eve of the country's formal independence from the Republic of Sudan.

But, as Five Talents President and CEO Craig Cole wrote earlier this week, there is one song that just about everyone in South Sudan is singing: the national anthem.

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Can A Ringtone Help Unite A Nation?

Fresh off Fourth of July weekend, I'm now ready to celebrate the independence of another country: that of the new South Sudan. On July 9, the nation will formally declare its independence. As soon as a week later, South Sudan will become the 193rd member of the United Nations.

Our project manger in Sudan, Harun Matuma, e-mailed to tell us people are so excited there that many have made the new national anthem their cellphone ringtone! This made me think, can a ringtone help unite a country?

On days like July 4, we here in America unite around patriotic songs, the Flag and the Pledge of Allegiance. As July 9 approaches, it seems that people in South Sudan are uniting around their own flag and their own national anthem.

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Community-Led Banks Give South Sudanese Hope for Future

At last week's X-OUT Poverty Golf Classic, Director of Program Suzanne Schultz introduced Five Talents' Sudan program to the 70 or so sweaty golfers who had gathered for lunch after 18 holes of golf at 1757 Golf Club.

"It's hotter here today than it is in Sudan," quipped Schultz (pictured below), before describing the situation that South Sudan finds itself in as it prepares to declare its formal independence on July 9. In 2007, Five Talents, which partners in the country with World Concern, the Mother's Union and the Episcopal Church of Sudan, helped to set up the first-ever community-led bank in South Sudan.

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