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Thursday, 21 July 2011 12:30

South Sudan – Free At Last

Written by John Chol Daau

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  • Address City One
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Thursday, 21 July 2011 12:24

Environmental Efforts Consolidated in South Sudan

Written by John Chol Daau

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  • Address City One
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Friday, 30 July 2010 12:31

From Lost Boy to Bishop

Written by John Chol Daau

Source Living CHURCH POSTED on:July 21, 2010

The Episcopal Church of Sudan’s Diocese of Aweil has consecrated the Rt. Rev. Abraham Yel Nhial as its first bishop. He was elected on July 16 and consecrated two days later.

The election had been postponed from the spring because of Sudan’s historic national elections. The new diocese covers the entire Southern Sudan state of Northern Bahr el Ghazal, and is divided into seven archdeaconries. The other candidates in the election were the Rev. Angelo Yuet Aguer and the Rev. Mathew Garang Chimiir.

Born in Wun Lang village, Aweil District, in 1978, he was forced to flee in 1987 when troops sent by the National Islamic Front regime in Khartoum attacked his village, killing everyone except those taken as slaves.

Like most of the other “Lost Boys of Sudan,” Nhial survived only because he was not home during the attack. Nine-year-old Nhial was one of 35,000 boys who fled toward Ethiopia. After a four-year sojourn when Ethiopia’s civil war forced them to flee again, he was one of fewer than 16,000 to survive and grow up in Kenya’s Kakuma Refugee Camp.

The new bishop was one of the Lost Boys chosen to come to the United States in January 2001, an event documented by 60 Minutes.Living in Atlanta, Ga., Nhial first earned a G.E.D. and then a bachelor’s degree from Atlanta Christian College before joining other Sudanese priests at Trinity School for Ministry. Nhial completed a master’s degree in May.

He married Daruka Aloung Bior, his sweetheart from Kakuma, in June 2003, and they have three children.

Broadman & Holman published his autobiography, Lost Boy No More: A True Story of Survival and Salvation, written with DiAnn Mills, in 2004.

Even in Kakuma Refugee Camp Nhial was an evangelist. His ministry is marked by his forgiveness and mercy toward his former persecutors. The Rev. John Chol Daau, another former Lost Boy, says Nhial has a vision “to share the gospel beyond Aweil” and a desire to see all of Sudan’s marginalized and oppressed peoples, Christian and Muslim alike, receive justice.

Faith J.H. McDonnell

  

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Tuesday, 22 June 2010 23:50

ZIMBABWE: Anglicans pray outside as Mugabe bishop holds property

Written by Garang Deng

Source: Ecumenical News International, Harare

February 03, 2009

The head of Zimbabwe's Anglican Diocese of Harare, Bishop Sebastian Bakare, says his congregation is looking to divine intervention as renegade former bishop Nolbert Kunonga and a small breakaway faction deny worshippers access to church property.

"We have exhausted all channels," Bakare said in an interview quoted in the privately-owned Standard newspaper on February 1.

Kunonga is a staunch supporter of the leader of Zimbabwe's Zanu-PF Party, Robert Mugabe, who still clings to the presidency in his country despite international calls for him to step down.

In 2008, Kunonga was excommunicated from the Anglican church after he decided to break away from the denomination's central African region over what he said was its sympathy to homosexuals.

As its new head, the church appointed Bakare, who has criticized Mugabe for denying his people human rights and religious freedom.

Kunonga, however, later formed his own self-styled Anglican Province of Zimbabwe with a handful of followers and claimed ownership of all church properties. Late in 2008 Kunonga appointed priests for his church.

Despite several orders including a high court ruling that the Anglican church majority led by Bakare be allowed to share the properties with Kunonga's group, pending a final legal judgment, gangs of youths supporting Kunonga have barricaded church buildings denying access to worshippers.

Some of the faithful resorted to holding church services in the open air, or in buildings offered by other denominations.

"We will only fight through God as he knows what is best for his church and he is the one who can correctly distinguish between good and evil," Bakare was quoted as saying.

"They are conniving with some rogue members of the police force and working in unison to violate the high court judgment," Bakare said of the breakaway Anglican group. "We are not going to fight them. Prayer is the only solution.

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