Sudan: Ethar, the lemon tree, the meandering donkey and 70 years of war.
Manage episode 514616490 series 3493079
A sandstorm birth, a village donkey named Kajol, and a gun barrel to the head during the Khartoum Massacre—Ethar’s story pulls you straight into Sudan’s living history and insistently asks a hard question: 70 years of warfare has changed nothing, so where does real change begin?
We open with a clear, human overview of Sudan’s long arc of coups, civil wars, Darfur’s horrors, and the power struggle between the SAF and RSF, then step into a home where a Ministry of Justice mother and a communist father model how to disagree politically while being totally aligned morally and ethically. That paradox becomes a compass as Ethar learns to push back—against assumptions, about her religion, her beliefs, her capabilities and her country.
As Ethar, reminds us, the wars in Sudan were never for the people - but for power. And her stories in this episode have people at their core - her family, her neighbour who rescued her from a mob, her friend who saved her life. And Ethar herself, who insists that change only comes when ordinary people's daily lives are tangibly changed for the better. Village by village, town by town, person by person.
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Chapters
1. Setting The Stage: Sudan’s History (00:00:00)
2. Ethar’s Early Life And Family Risks (00:04:39)
3. Village Years In Jazeera (00:12:30)
4. Return To Khartoum And School Battles (00:19:40)
5. University Years And Politics At Arm’s Length (00:27:00)
6. South Sudan Secession And Identity (00:33:20)
7. Exploring Sudan Through Social Enterprise (00:41:00)
8. Ground-Up Change: Farmers And Solar Dryers (00:49:00)
9. The Sit-In And Khartoum Massacre (00:57:00)
10. Displacement, Borders, And Broken Systems (01:06:30)
11. Mutual Aid, Resolve, And Closing (01:14:20)
20 episodes