In a steaming hot tent in South Sudan’s capital, papers that have survived rats, termites and almost five decades of civil war burst out of overstuffed sacks and litter the floor between mountains of files that contain a new nation’s entire history.
Archivist Yusef Fulgensio Onyalla heads a team tasked with turning these documents and shards of paper into archives. They cover everything from maps and constitutions to cases of suspected witchcraft and the magazine subscriptions of former British rulers.
He is determined to preserve the history of South Sudan. The country split from the north last July after almost 50 years of civil war that killed some two million people and forced the population to fight or flee.
“These documents are very important for us to write South Sudan’s history. Before the war, we were taught all Sudan’s history, but there is nothing specific about South Sudan,” said Onayalla.
In 2007, two years after a peace deal ended the war, Onyalla led a team to rescue hidden documents found in places like dank basements and damaged by bats, cockroaches and rain.
What was salvageable is now housed in a large white tent -- donated by the U.S government -- and sitting next to one of the capital Juba’s busiest streets. It was meant to be a temporary storage place, but these historical documents continue to suffer because of a lack of funding and the political will to go through them.
“A lot of deterioration happened like you can see here. There were some files here and some termites attacked them and then we brought the spray to kill the termites and we lost a lot of important documents,” Onyalla noted. "Where termites once munched, nesting rats are now shredding."
It is a race against time before creatures and climate swallow South Sudan’s past.
These papers are becoming increasingly important, as the new nation battles Sudan about unresolved issues of disputed territory and oil-rich borders that, in its first year of statehood, briefly took the new nation back to war.
Onyalla says that maps have been found this year that show the boundaries of southern districts -- documents that the government hopes might help it win its case about land claims at arbitration if talks with Khartoum don’t succeed.
Thomas Becu, who returned from Uganda in 2006 and started archiving, thinks that it is vital for the South Sudanese to learn about their own history to build a national identity from the rubble of bloodshed, poverty and separation.
"It is my hope to see that it's really well preserved and really well recovered. I think it will benefit not only the South Sudanese and the whole world to know, this new nation, where it belongs to, and what are their internal problems, maybe before independence," said Becu. "And after independence also."
Nicki Kindersley is one of three advanced history students from U.S. and British universities on a six-week project to try to clear the tent. She rifles through these forgotten, crumbling documents to discover history on a daily basis.
“This is an incredible chance to do a national archive project and it's just such a shame that it stops and starts, and you start seeing some of the fabulous info that’s in there, but then you worry that some of it will be lost,” Kindersley stated.
One of the aims of the project is also to try and encourage the fledgling government -- starting from scratch to create basic institutions and a legal framework -- to pass legislation on record keeping.
Kindersley says this would grant archivists access to military and local government records from the war and central government records from 2005 to make sure that South Sudan’s history does not disappear again. “Otherwise, we risk having the same problem as we did during the early 1980s where we have lots of different centers with papers, that if anything goes wrong will be firewood, basically,” she said.
Until then, archivists sweat it out for hours a day, digging through reams of history, scanning and boxing it to ensure that South Sudan can understand its past before dictating its future.
Newer articles:
- UN Mission Warns of Economic, Refugee Crises in South Sudan - Voice of America - 06/07/2012 01:20
- South Sudan: Step Up Urgent Human Rights Reforms - Tolerance - 05/07/2012 20:50
- On One-Year Anniversary, Analyst says South Sudan Can Do Better - Voice of America - 05/07/2012 20:44
- Sudan, South Sudan resume border security talks - AFP - 05/07/2012 20:20
- South Sudan Refugee Camp Under Water - Doctors Without Borders - 05/07/2012 17:57
Older news items
- South Sudan: “The worst living conditions I have ever seen” - Reuters AlertNet (blog) - 05/07/2012 15:55
- South Sudan: One year after independence, health sector faces difficulties - Reuters AlertNet - 05/07/2012 15:32
- South Sudan: Disaster unfolds in world's newest nation - Daily News Analysis - 05/07/2012 10:42
- Yida refugee camp flooded with North Sudanese - msnbc.com (blog) - 04/07/2012 22:45
- A Sad First Birthday for South Sudan - AlterNet - 04/07/2012 21:32
Latest news items (all categories):
- South Sudan sets 22 December for country's long-delayed first-ever election - 23/06/2026 15:44
- Ambassador Enarsson Backs Campaign to End Sexual Violence in Conflict at Juba Advocacy Event - 23/06/2026 15:41
- Rampant Junior Starlets crush South Sudan to clinch CECAFA bronze - 23/06/2026 15:26
- Validating Progress Towards Closing Immunity Gaps in South Sudan - 23/06/2026 15:23
- تحديد موعد أول انتخابات في تاريخ جنوب السودان - 23/06/2026 15:14
Random articles (all categories):
- South Sudan: Kith, Kin and Peace Agreements - 16/05/2014 12:54
- Sudan seeks Security Council support in reaching 'comprehensive' GERD deal before 'disastrous' 2nd filling - 18/04/2021 15:26
- South Sudan: on the edge of failed statehood - 01/02/2016 02:40
- Israeli arms ‘helping to fuel South Sudan war,’ says UN - 20/10/2016 11:13
- Uganda, South Sudan defence chiefs resolve on promoting regional peace, security and stability - 23/11/2020 07:41
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 146693 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27541 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24705 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 24037 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21915 times