When the world hears about Sudan, it is most often about the violence in Darfur.
But the problems in Sudan - like so many of the countries we work in - are much more widespread. Most of Sudan’s nearly 40 million people have never known a time when their country was at peace.
From the time Sudan gained its independence from Britain in 1956 through 2005, the country was almost continuously embroiled in one of Africa’s longest running civil wars.
Throughout Sudan, women
are
in
desperate need. Women suffered horrible abuses during the decades-long wars, having been targeted for violence by armies on all sides. Two million women have been raped, four million uprooted and hundreds of thousands live in refugee camps.
In Southern Sudan, where Women for Women works, survivors tell stories of militias storming villages in the dead of night, setting homes on fire and shooting family and friends. Rebels commonly gang-rape women, kidnap boys to become soldiers and take girls as sex slaves. Today, a lucky few Sudanese women are able to return home, but the obstacles they face are daunting.
Most are illiterate, emotionally wounded and physically exhausted.
Women for Women International’s mission is to provide women survivors of war, civil strife and other conflicts with the tools they need to move from crisis and poverty to stability and self-sufficiency, thereby promoting viable civil societies.

Leadership training helps women embrace the fact that they do have rights, they can find their voice and they can protect themselves and their children from those who would do them harm. It also gives them the courage and information they need to vote for the first time and make their voices heard in the political arena.
Literacy is the key to their future
Once a woman learns to read, write and do simple addition in our program, she can take the next step to run her own business, join awoman’s cooperative and pass her literacy skills on to her children.
A woman's value in Sudan is based on the number of cows paid for her dowry.
To divorce, a woman must pay back those cows - a nearly impossible task.
The women who enroll in our Sudan program have next to nothing. Now they have hope.
A woman’s value in Sudan is based on
the number of cows paid for her dowry.
To divorce, a woman must pay back
those cows – a nearly impossible task.
In Sudan, a girl is more likely to die in childbirth than complete primary school. And yet, education in Sudan is desperately needed to break the cycle of poverty.

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