Our people have no drinking water, education or healthcare.
I do not mean that we do not have government provided/subsidized drinking
water, education or healthcare – I mean it does not exist in Sudan. Does not exist by virtue of the fact that the majority of Sudan has no access to them.
I studied in private schools during an era where private
schools were a necessity for some (in my case, having English as a mother
tongue). In this catholic school, I met my lifelong friend whose mother had
sent her there, to create structure and discipline in the absence of her
father, a national legend, who had passed away. Others came for other reasons.
When we were growing up (in the 80s), Sudanese perceived
private schools as the place where students went after flunking out of public
schools. I will show you here what some of our “public schools” look like now.
Public Healthcare? You may ask. Well, that would require
public hospitals, one would assume. If your fate lands you in a public
hospital, be prepared to bring your own gauze, cotton, injections, the works.
You will require a relative to “donate” blood, although there is no guarantee
that you will receive blood if required. (True story: Friend’s mom needed
blood. Her daughter donated. Afterwards, blood bank stated that mom’s blood
type unavailable. Daughter was universal donor, so just asked for her own
blood. Blood bank refused as it hadn’t been subjected to mandatory testing. Daughter
no blood, Momma no blood. Happens all the time. Welcome to Sudan.)
Services? Electricity is pre-paid in Sudan. One would assume
that one could expect uninterrupted service since it was already paid for. In
full. One assumes wrong. Speaking of prepaid power and public hospitals, recently, a
public hospital went three days without power because there was no money to
“buy electricity”. (While the Private Hospital owned by the Minister of Health
had all the power it needed. Thanks for asking)
There is no standby generator in public hospitals, so if you
are unlucky enough to be in the middle of an operation when the power goes out,
we will pray for you in heaven, and know that you are in a better place.
Water? In the land of the Nile, those of us fortunate enough
to have access to the outdated water supply network, are very often left high
and dry. The day after giving birth, I was forced to drive to my parents’ home
because there was no water in the house. (You will understand the ramifications
and magnitude of this drive if you are Sudanese, and I bet one or two of you
gasped).
Ironically, if there is no water in the house, there is a
very large possibility that within a certain radius, there is an artificial
lake gushing out on to the streets, rivaling Lake Volta.
So, what happens if you do not fall within water coverage?
(This refers to almost everybody in Sudan, since networks only cover cities,
and by no means is this coverage complete) You buy water, that’s what you do.
You wait for someone in a donkey-driven cart, equipped with a rusty
blue-painted barrel, and you contract him to fill your plastic jerry cans and
tin buckets. The quality of the water is indescribable. Suffice to say that the
source of the water is broken water network pipes or irrigation channels.
Bottoms up.
So, I sit in my site office, building towers and watch workers
walking in with shoes wired together. Because it is part of my job, I tell them
that they cannot work without proper shoes. I tell them it is for their safety,
for their protection – they tell me I am taking food out of their children’s
mouths.
In a perfect world, their employers would make sure that
they were fitted out, but in Sudan, the employers defect on their commitment
and only those with shoes can work that day. I go make a scene, urging the
contractor to do what’s right by his people, and he laughs, “They got to you?
Melted your heart and you come talking to me.” Hitting people is bad. We frown
upon it. Move on.
The joy when the workers get their shoes is heart breaking.
They come to thank me for being their advocate. What breaks my heart is that
they shouldn’t need advocates. They shouldn’t miss work because they were not
given the proper tools. And, in this, lies the story of my country. We have
reached a point where no one has rights. Everything is treated like some sort
of gratuity.
You are SUPPOSED to make sure your people have food to eat.
You are SUPPOSED to give people access to clean water. You are SUPPOSED to
provide basic healthcare for your people. You are SUPPOSED to provide jobs for
people with various skills (not mock college graduates as recent reports quoted
the President stating that college graduates were unskilled and unhireable –
translation: useless parasites).
Before this government, some people say our fathers’
generation was spoiled – primed with a sense of entitlement. They got the best
education and healthcare for free. Truth is, the haves and the have nots were
in the same quarters, lived the same lives. The differences were superficial
and superfluous.
In the Sudan of today, the haves have food. The have nots
have nothing.
I am a professional with umpteen years of experience under
my belt. I walked away from a job in Dubai because I wanted to be part of
building my country. I deserve to have a few bottles of perfume and the
occasional facial. I deserve a vacation and the option to splurge on an
“impulse buy”. My children deserve the occasional treat for being left alone
while we seek the means to make school payments, rent and groceries. Disposable
income. That quaint term. Wonder what that’s like.
However, since I live in Sudan, I see too much. I see the
anemic look in the malnourished people on the streets, I see the people that
have cracked under the unbearable pressure. I see the struggle of children
working to feed families and women working desperately to subsidize their
income, selling bed sheets and thermos flasks. I see the suffering, I see the
pain and harden my heart so it does not break in two.
I will try to buy treats for my children, and turn off the
AC in my car (taking advice from A Tree Grows In Brooklyn). I will not
buy an anniversary present for my husband, so I can pay for the exam I need to
take abroad. I will not go to the doctor this month because maybe the pain will
go away on its own. I will give the money to the sick mother who needs to get
well to take care of her children. I will have a basic breakfast, so the little
girl in the ICU can get the heart scan she needs. I will not get a facial so I
can pay for the kids’ school bus and give my husband one less thing to worry
about.
I will do what I have to do. Our family will do all it can.
But I wonder. When do I tell my children that the struggle I put them through
was optional - not how it's supposed to be? When do I make the decision that as my country suffers, my family
may have a shot at a better life? When do I close my eyes and heart to the hurt
that is Sudan and become another refugee, a guest in a more accommodating land
that may provide me with that most elusive of dreams, a disposable income?
This is my land. This is my home. This is my country. These
are my people.
Cry, beloved country.
2 comments:
MashAllah Tagreed, i stumbled on your blog and i found myself reading article after article your writing is simply captivating, your style is peculiar and your tone is so colloquial it feels like your conversing..
I'm tempted to start my own blog now you think you can give me a few tips and pointers? :-)
I'm glad you liked it. Allah maa dharaak :)
When I write, I follow my heart and meandering thoughts. If I were more professional, I would advise the writing to be more structured. Good luck!
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