Jal, rapper, writer, philanthropist and former child soldier from Sudan, just completed a memoir and was interviewed and videotaped by S.P. Sullivan and Dinah Gorelik from the Daily Collegian at UMASS.
Emmanuel Jal, rapper, former child soldier, philanthropist and spokesperson has just finished his most recent project, “War Child“; a memoir of his early childhood, conscription into the Christian Sudanese Liberation Army and subsequent recovery after fighting for nearly ten years in Sudan’s civil war.
Jal is a spokesman for Amnesty International and Oxfam, and has supported Save the Children, UNICEF, World Food Programme and Christian Aid. In addition to his charitable work with those organizations, he has established his own foundation, Gua Africa, aiding former Sudanese child soldiers.
It was afternoon and I had left the village with my friend Biel to go fishing. We were walking back home when we heard the deep blast of a big bomb. It was close. We looked at each other quickly before running to the top of a slope. Below us was our village. There was smoke and fire, people running in different directions like frightened chickens. Government soldiers were attacking. The savanna grass crunched beneath our feet as we started running down the hill. As we neared the road into the village, we saw two SPLA soldiers lying on the ground ahead and stopped. Hiding ourselves in the long grass, we poked our heads high enough to see about twenty villagers gathered by the side of the road surrounded by soldiers pointing guns at them. Other troops were beating a family.
“You’re keeping rebels here, aren’t you?” they screamed. “You’re giving them food.” Children cried as they watched while the rest of the crowd-men and women, babies strapped to their mothers’ backs, and elders-looked on with fear in their eyes.
Check out Gua Africa, a foundation started by rapper Emmanuel Jal, that works to provide education for children of war, including former child soldiers.
GUA Africa has been granted 15 acres of land in Leer, West Upper Nile, by the government of South Sudan. Our goal is to build a high quality education centre for the whole community, which will also serve as a safe haven for children whose lives have been shattered by years of war and poverty. It is to be called the Emma Academy, as a legacy to Emma McCune who lies in rest in Leer.
Many former child soldiers have not found their way back into education [emphasis added], and traditionally only 1 in 5 Sudanese girls are supported to finish High School. GUA Africa aims to start addressing these issues in a small way by working in partnership with other NGOs as well as the government’s recently formed education department.
…soon to help former child soldiers and other child victims of war connect, communicate and heal.
Created jointly by six well-know former child soldiers and advocates, including Ishmael Beah (Sierra Leone), Kon Kelei (Sudan), Grace Akallo (Uganda), Emmanuel Jal (Sudan), Shena A. Gacu (Uganda), and Zlata Filipoviæ (Bosnia Herzegovina), the project is supported by the United Nations, including UNICEF and the Office of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, War Child Holland and the Permanent Mission of Italy to the UN.
Building on our own experiences, NYPAW seeks to speak up for the rights of all these children and to find concrete measures to prevent the use of children in war. We also hope to remind the world of how resilient children are, when given the right support. We are best-selling authors, renowned musicians, and youth advocates who hope to serve as role models to all those whose lives have been affected by violence.
A new film, “Johnny Mad Dog”, which won the Prize of Hope at Cannes film festival, was screened this past week at the United Nations – and sponsored by Radhika Coomaraswamy, special representative of the UN Secretary General for Children and Armed Conflict. Also attending were Special Court for Sierra Leone prosecutor Steven Rapp, France’s UN Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert, and advocate/rapper Emmanuel Jal.
two teens trying to survive civil war in an unnamed African country. In an interview with AFP, [director] Sauvaire conceded that his film was violent, but said that the gun-toting youngsters in the film, all war veterans, were not traumatized by the experience and rather found acting therapeutic.
Here’s a clip from YouTube.
And a review from Jonathan Romney of Screen Daily:
Cinema is forever inventing new ways to tell us that war is hell, but few recent films have explored the extremes of that hell as vividly or intrepidly as Jean-Stephane Sauvaire’s African drama Johnny Mad Dog. Shattering performances by unknowns, many of them actually former child soldiers, plus a confrontational directing style make this one of the most striking recent French fiction debuts.
Check out this 2005 interview on NPR with Emmanuel Dongala about his novel.
On Tuesday of this week, experts and advocates gathered at the United Nations to discuss the impact of the availability and proliferation of small arms on the continuing use of child soldiers throughout the world. United Nations envoy on children and armed conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy stated the following: (From the UN News Center).
It is argued by many that it is the proliferation of small arms contributing to their ready availability in the period 1970-2000, which has led to the phenomenon of child soldiers as we know it today.
For USD 5 one can find a serviceable weapon in most countries in the developing world.
She added that it takes a child an average only 40 minutes to master an AK-47, one of the most common weapons used around the world.
Former child soldier and international phenomenon in the music world Emmanuel Jal was also at the conference, where he described his experiences fighting as a child in southern Sudan for five years before being rescued and escaping to Kenya.