Finding light in Sudan’s dark night

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John Ashworth

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Dec 26, 2025, 7:39:17 AM (14 days ago) 12/26/25
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Finding light in Sudan’s dark night

Don Cheadle and John Prendergast
The Hill
12/26/25

As the horrors continue to mount in Sudan’s genocidal war, most of
what we hear about is man’s inhumanity towards his fellow humans. But
beneath that reality is a spark of humanity, whereby thousands of
Sudanese are standing up at great cost to themselves to save their
neighbors.

Doctor Jamal Eltaeb, head of traumatology at a hospital near Sudan’s
shattered capital city, Khartoum, is one of those heroes. One morning
at the height of the war, two children, Tagwa and Faris, went to the
market for their mother when a missile struck, critically injuring
both. Neighbors immediately brought them to Eltaeb’s hospital. He
amputated Tagwa’s leg and Faris’ leg and arm, despite lacking
anesthesia.

“Their mother arrived three hours later,” Eltaeb noted, “expecting to
find them dead. When she saw them alive, her relief and gratitude were
overwhelming.”

Eltaeb was recently awarded the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity,
which recognizes individuals who risk their lives to save others, for
his unwavering commitment to serving the Sudanese people amid the
country’s devastating civil war. Despite the near-total collapse of
the country’s health system, Eltaeb has kept Al Nao Hospital in
Omdurman operating as one of the last functioning referral hospitals
in greater Khartoum, parts of which the Sudan war has reduced to
rubble. His dedication has saved hundreds of lives under difficult
conditions: he often works without electricity, dwindling supplies of
anesthesia, and a constant risk of attack.

Noubar Afeyan, Co-Founder of the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative said,
“In a world where the ‘inhumanitarians’ too often dominate the
headlines, Eltaeb reminds us that the humanitarian spirit endures—and
that each of us has a responsibility to keep it alive.”

The numbers of suffering Sudanese are mind-boggling. The
International Rescue Committee noted recently, Sudan “represents the
largest recorded and fastest displacement crisis in the world. It is
also the largest humanitarian crisis ever recorded.” When you see that
30 million people need aid to survive, remember that a Sudanese mother
right now is watching her child starve to death. When you see that 12
million people are homeless, picture armed men torching a family’s
home, forcing that family to hide in an abandoned, bombed-out
building.

Eltaeb is not alone in standing with his people in the midst of war.
Local communities throughout Sudan have organized emergency response
rooms — voluntary associations that provide food and medicine as well
as evacuate vulnerable neighbors.

They were nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize this year. With just
droplets of international aid, they still manage somehow to provide
food and services to three million of the most vulnerable Sudanese.
Women lead the bulk of the emergency response rooms. These local
groups are the only game in town, as the warring parties have
systematically denied access to the U.N. and other international
relief organizations. Emergency response rooms are the most
cost-effective aid providers we have ever seen, with an estimated 95
percent of donations reaching the needy. Sudanese analyst Kholood
Khair says, “In many ways, they are the state now.”

People like Eltaeb and the courageous Sudanese who staff and run the
emergency response rooms represent a hopeful future for Sudan and
deserve much more international recognition and support. But the aid
organization Islamic Relief issued a report that says the emergency
response room network of community food kitchens is on the precipice
of collapsing due to the pressures of ongoing war and lack of funding.

The U.S. foreign aid agency, USAID, had been the biggest donor. When
the Trump administration shuttered the agency earlier this year, it
felt, according to one volunteer, “like someone cut a rope we were
holding on to.”

Another emergency response room volunteer near Eltaeb’s hospital says
there are times when they run out of food without being able to serve
everyone in line. Recently the volunteer had to tell a mother there
was nothing left for her two children. “I went home and I couldn’t
even speak to my own family that night. The shame of having food in
my stomach when the children did not, it is a heavy feeling for me.”

From outside Sudan, we can demand that the external supporters of the
war like the United Arab Emirates stop throwing gasoline on Sudan’s
fire. At a December 11 House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing, Rep.
Chris Smith (R-N.J.) said, “We cannot turn a blind eye to the UAE’s
role in supplying weapons that kill innocent Sudanese civilians.”

With the U.S. and other donors reducing support, and with no end to
the conflict in sight, the strength and determination of the Sudanese
people are signs of hope. They are pressing for peace, fighting for
basic rights and dignity, and doing everything they can to sustain
themselves through this devastating war. And we can aid the Sudanese
people’s efforts to make a difference by donating to the emergency
response rooms and Eltaeb’s hospital, as well as spreading the word
that the lives of children like Tagwa and Faris can be saved.

https://thehill.com/opinion/international/5656482-finding-light-in-sudans-dark-night/

END
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