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Re: Lily Akol.....ودرس حاد مثل السيف ...فى الوطنية واللاوطنية......!! (Re: AMNA MUKHTAR)
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أدناه مداخلة لليلى أكول فى بوستى ( الجنوبوفوبيا والغرابوفوبيا..أو الهروب من الثقب الأسود):
This is a very interesting and bold debate-----I wrote something to this effect and it was posted last week on the English forum
<a href="http://www.sudaneseonline.com/cgi-bin/esdb/2bb.cgi?seq=...rd=12&msg=1196180597" target="_blank">http://www.sudaneseonline.com/cgi-bin/esdb/2bb.cgi?seq=...rd=12&msg=1196180597
Below are excerpts from it----
Quote: When it comes to Arabism and Islamism, Northerners will, in a blink of an eye, sever ties with the South. This is the unspoken-about common knowledge that Southerners ignore in good faith to give peace a chance and to make “unity” attractive. Yes, it’s a well known secret that we ignore in good faith for it’s only the unwise who throw away a history as full of deceptions as ours; we are not.
The truth of the matter is, contrary to what they would want us to believe, the problem of Southern Sudan is not a problem between Khartoum and Juba - GONU and GOSS - NCP and SPLM - Bashir and Kiir, as much as it’s the problem of the North Mentality that is fostered by Arab culture and Islam which makes the non-Arab Abid (Slaves) and the non-Muslims Ahl El Zima (second class citizens who are never on equal footings with Muslims). Bashir, as Abboud, Nimeri, Dahab, and Mahdi before him, belongs to the same School of Thought so will his successors, and so will the problem of Southern Sudan continue to prevail.
It’s the establishment of this School of Thought that makes Northern citizens as guilty as their governments. They are the force that nurtures the Arab/Islam identity and mentality, and they are the environment that molds the personalities and believes of those who eventually make it to power in Sudan. Northern citizens play a great role in widening the gap between the North and the South by their intolerance and persistent rejection of everything that is Southern.
Ideally, we need to rethink our relationship with the North in its entirety – Government and people. As we condemn Bashir and his government, it is high time South Sudanese people rejected being called “brothers” by their Northern counterparts. It’s high time we analyzed their behaviors so that we can hold them accountable to their un-forgiven atrocities in the South (N. Government) as well as their mistreatment and segregation in the North (Northern Citizens). Brotherhood cannot define a relationship that is not built on love, mutual respect, and, most importantly, equality, transparency and honesty – the least that could be said about brotherhood.
We are not brothers! We are two different people, two different histories, two different cultures, two different experiences, two different pasts and, definitely, two different futures. We have nothing in common, not the languages we speak, not the gods we worship. The only thing we have in common so far is the country we both, in a very ironic way, belong to; this ‘one million square miles’ land called the Sudan. This is what we have in common.
That’s the North-South status quo that needs to be acknowledged and addressed before we talk about being brothers. Before we open the doors of who’s the eldest versus the younger brother? Different statuses, different roles! Who’s the legitimate son and who came carried on his mother’s shoulders? Different statuses and different roles! Who has the right to lead and who should follow? Again, different statuses and different roles! We cannot be brothers without defining the parameters of this brotherhood, without dissecting its nature and attributes. Without understanding why is it easy to call us brothers but seemingly impossible to treat us as such!
How can we be brothers? Under what context are we brothers? What does the North know about their brother, the South. What do Mohamed and Fatima know about the history and cultural heritage of Lado and Achol apart from the fact that they are Junubeen (including all the conations this word may carry)? What do they know about our connection to the Nile? What do they know about our struggle?
They know nothing about us. As we speak, there are Northern Sudanese who believe that Southerners live on trees and that they are cannibals, not exaggerating! They say in plain Arabic: Junubeen Byaklo EL Nas (Southerners eat human beings). They are ignorant about the basics of Southern Sudan, how can they know or understand “Muskilat El Junub” the problem of Southern Sudan that has been irking Southerners for decodes. How can they understand what do Southerners want?
If they treat us like dogs, shouldn’t we learn to bite back? Why do we welcome them with open arms when they say ‘Kulana Ikwan’ while they stand aloof when their governments open fire on their innocent brothers? They never questioned the legitimacy of Jihad but joined the Popular Defense in thousands and made (Fi Sahad El Fida) the most rated show in Sudan TV history despite the fact that it was hate propaganda against the people of Southern Sudan.
Northerners have always been living in disconnect to our issues, the only thing that they choose to know about us is what fits the Arab-Muslim presentation and depiction of what South Sudan is historically, geographically and even anthropologically. They should not call us brothers; brotherhood cannot define a relationship that’s built on deception.
Until the Arab-Muslim Northerners undergo a radical change in their ideology, they should not call us brothers. Until they thoroughly understand the multiculturalism that characterizes Sudan and acknowledge Southerners as equal citizens with equal rights and equal responsibilities, they should not be allowed to call us brothers. Until they admit that we are equal citizens not according to the Qur’an but according to what History says about us, Southerners, in the land of our ancestors, the Sudan! History that was there – that was written - long before Mohamed made it to Medina. Isn’t it even more ironic that Islam should define who we are and determine what we get as Sudanese? We should never allow them to call us brothers until they acknowledge that we, Junubeen, are nothing else but Sudanese! سودانيون احرار...سودانيون مثلنا مثلكم...لنا ما لكم وعلينا ما عليكم....ليسنا باهل الذمة...ليسنا باهل الكتاب...بل ننتمى إلى هذا الوطن اباً عن جد...
Only then will the likes of Bashir diminish and only then will we embrace each other like real brothers do. But until that impossible time comes, Northern citizens are as guilty as their governments in all the tragedies that befell Southern Sudanese; it’s high time we demanded an explanation to their passive stand.
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