Sudan

On the frontline in Sudan: how local peacebuilders are feeding thousands and keeping communities together

__wf_reserved_heredar
While the world looks away, youth-led organisation Adeela and Sudan's Emergency Response Rooms are doing what international agencies cannot.
__wf_reserved_heredar

Sudan is living through one of the worst humanitarian crises on earth. Since conflict erupted in April 2023, millions of people have been displaced, food systems have collapsed, and violence has torn communities apart. Yet Sudan has barely broken through the noise of global headlines.

Through this, Adeela remains committed to peace, social justice and human rights. Together with Elayam Centre and a network of community volunteers, Adeela helped establish Emergency Response Rooms (ERRs) - a grassroots initiative so significant it was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. The ERRs operate without the bureaucracy of formal donor systems or international agencies. They are fast, flexible and answerable to the communities they serve.

The scale of what they have achieved is extraordinary. In El Fasher, community kitchens run through the ERR network are feeding 12,000 people every single day. Four more kitchens are also running in Dilling, whilst another serves patients in hospitals in Kadugli. In eastern Sudan, where displaced people are living in severely overcrowded conditions the ERRs have become a lifeline.

Women-led ERRs have been at the heart of this effort. Coordinating kitchens, organising grassroots initiatives, and doing the quiet, ongoing work of keeping communities functioning.

What makes the ERR model different is not just what it does, but how. Traditional humanitarian responses too often arrive with pre-packaged solutions - food that doesn't reflect what people eat, aid that bypasses the people it's meant to serve. The ERRs do the opposite. Displaced and host communities alike are consulted at every stage, setting their own priorities and shaping their own response.

Sudan's ERRs are proof of something we have long known, that the people closest to a crisis are its most capable responders. When they are trusted and resourced to lead, they don't just survive. They build the foundations of peace.

← Projects
No items found.
Otros socios en 2023