Sudan at the crossroads
Posted: 11 December 2009 04:23 PM   [ Ignore ]  
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Channel: The Guardian
Author: The Rt. Rev. Graham Kings

History leapt to life for me a couple of weeks ago, while I was sitting under a tree in Rumbek, southern Sudan. I was reading about the first black bishop of Sudan, Elinana Ngalamu, who was consecrated in 1974 and became archbishop two years later. The chapter on his life, by Samuel Kayanga, in Announcing the Light: Sudanese Witnesses to the Gospel, edited by Andrew Wheeler, related the retirement of the previous bishop, a missionary. It was widely believed that he thought he should be succeeded by another missionary, who was serving in South Africa, rather than by Ngalamu.

A group of three Sudanese clergy in exile from the civil war signed a document in protest: Sudan was ready for its own bishop. I said to my Sudanese neighbour under the tree, who had just arrived, “This must have been a pivotal moment in the history of Sudan — the writing and signing of that document.” He agreed and, after a pause, went on, “By the way, he did not want to bring him from South Africa but from Uganda.” I asked, “How do you know?” He replied, “I drafted the document.”

Cross-posted at Fulcrum.
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