غرف طوارئ وتكايا وتطبيقات تحويل: كيف يعيش السودانيون الحرب المستمرة منذ أعوام؟

Amidst the ruins of Sudan's war, a constellation of grassroots heroes emerges, from Nobel-nominated emergency rooms to digital lifelines and communal kitchens.

Amidst the ruins of Sudan's war, a constellation of grassroots heroes emerges, from Nobel-nominated emergency rooms to digital lifelines and communal kitchens. | Contesto: cronaca

Punti chiave

  • غرف طوارئ وتكايا وتطبيقات تحويل: كيف يعيش السودانيون الحرب المستمرة منذ أعوام؟

Contesto

For over a year, Sudan has been engulfed in a devastating war between the national army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, a conflict that has killed thousands, displaced millions, and pushed the nation to the brink of famine. Yet, from the shadow of this catastrophe, a new constellation of heroes has emerged onto the front lines of survival. They are not generals or politicians, but the architects of grassroots networks—emergency rooms, communal kitchens known as 'takaaya,' and fintech innovators—who have built a parallel infrastructure of resilience where the state has collapsed. Among the most prominent are the Emergency Response Rooms (ERRs), decentralized local committees that have become the de facto first responders and civil authorities in besieged cities like Khartoum, Bahri, and Omdurman. Their work, coordinating everything from evacuating the wounded under fire to distributing food and water, has been so vital that the collective movement has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize twice. Operating in basements and abandoned buildings, these volunteers, often young professionals and students, use encrypted messaging apps to map shelling, share safe routes, and dispatch whatever aid they can scrape together, embodying a stark, citizen-led alternative to the warring factions. Parallel to the ERRs, the ancient tradition of the 'takaaya' has been resurrected and reinvented. Historically a Sufi institution offering food and shelter, the takaaya has transformed into a widespread network of communal kitchens. Funded by diaspora remittances and local donations, these kitchens provide the only daily meal for countless families trapped by the fighting or impoverished by the economic meltdown. They represent more than sustenance; they are hubs of social solidarity, preserving a sense of community and shared dignity in the face of systematic destruction and the world's largest internal displacement crisis. This grassroots ecosystem is digitally enabled, relying heavily on Sudan's vibrant, pre-war fintech sector. With the formal banking system in disarray and cash dangerously scarce, mobile money and peer-to-peer payment applications have become...

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Categoria: cronaca