Dear Friends,

As the new school year begins, we want to thank you for your support for education and opportunity in my native village of Wunlang in southern Sudan.
Together we have helped the villagers build a primary school for boys and girls, and now they are putting the finishing touches on a village health clinic.
I hope you will support us again with a donation to our new village development projects:

Women's Multi-purpose Community Learning Center:
Most adults in remote villages have missed the opportunity of formal learning, and they need alternative forms of education. The Center will be a vibrant hub of community activity and service, bringing women and their families together for practical skills development, talent show-casing, and community literacy and knowledge sharing.

Public Health Presentation and Performance Team:
Drawing upon methods used in the refugee camp, Angelo will help train a team of village health workers to give public presentations in basic disease prevention, enabling villagers to make informed health choices and educate their peers.

Village Latrine and Sanitation Team:
Each school and clinic built or restored needs latrines and community sanitation education. The Latrine and Sanitation Team needs support to maintain latrines already in use, to build new latrines, and to continue their community education and outreach.
All of our programs and techniques are sustainable, and they can be repeated in other villages. Because we pay no salaries, virtually all the money donated to Village Help for South Sudan goes directly to the village projects we sponsor.
The results are amazing in Wunlang, and we want to do the same kind of work in other villages. If you want to support the work of villagers to do their own community development, make a donation today.
Thank you,
Franco Majok and the Board of Directors
Village Help for South Sudan, Inc.
- a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit charity

As the new school year begins, we want to thank you for your support for education and opportunity in my native village of Wunlang in southern Sudan.
Together we have helped the villagers build a primary school for boys and girls, and now they are putting the finishing touches on a village health clinic.
I hope you will support us again with a donation to our new village development projects:

Women's Multi-purpose Community Learning Center:
Most adults in remote villages have missed the opportunity of formal learning, and they need alternative forms of education. The Center will be a vibrant hub of community activity and service, bringing women and their families together for practical skills development, talent show-casing, and community literacy and knowledge sharing.

Public Health Presentation and Performance Team:
Drawing upon methods used in the refugee camp, Angelo will help train a team of village health workers to give public presentations in basic disease prevention, enabling villagers to make informed health choices and educate their peers.

Village Latrine and Sanitation Team:
Each school and clinic built or restored needs latrines and community sanitation education. The Latrine and Sanitation Team needs support to maintain latrines already in use, to build new latrines, and to continue their community education and outreach.
All of our programs and techniques are sustainable, and they can be repeated in other villages. Because we pay no salaries, virtually all the money donated to Village Help for South Sudan goes directly to the village projects we sponsor.
The results are amazing in Wunlang, and we want to do the same kind of work in other villages. If you want to support the work of villagers to do their own community development, make a donation today.
Thank you,
Franco Majok and the Board of Directors
Village Help for South Sudan, Inc.
- a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit charity
08/13: By Sudanese, For Sudanese
Whenever Angelo sends photos and information about the progress of Wunlang clinic, we always have lots of follow-up questions. When your this blogger was writing about the roof and doors for Wunlang Health Clinic, the questions were: who's painting the doors? Where we they made?

This morning's e-mail had the answers. Angelo reports that the doors were made in Aweil, the major city of Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal, our remote part of South Sudan. The doors, as noted before, were painted in Akuem, a town between Aweil and Wunlang. Angelo clarified that the Akuem workshop is one of several similar workshops in Aweil County operated by Southern Sudanese.
Our benefits to the local economy are getting to be pretty steady, as we continue to provide education and opportunity to this remote part of South Sudan.
This morning's e-mail had the answers. Angelo reports that the doors were made in Aweil, the major city of Northern Bahr-el-Ghazal, our remote part of South Sudan. The doors, as noted before, were painted in Akuem, a town between Aweil and Wunlang. Angelo clarified that the Akuem workshop is one of several similar workshops in Aweil County operated by Southern Sudanese.
Our benefits to the local economy are getting to be pretty steady, as we continue to provide education and opportunity to this remote part of South Sudan.
South Sudan and Village Help for South Sudan were prominent at the 1st African Festival of Boston yesterday at the Government Center's City Plaza. Philip, here for the summer break from USD, where he will be a senior in Electrical Engineering next year, spent the day greeting visitors and speaking on behalf of our organization and our work in his homeland.

Franco also worked the booth, speaking proudly of our work in southern Sudan.

The festival featured music, food, and crafts from many African countries, and we were happy to represent South Sudan in this extraordinary celebration of culture, diversity, and independence.

Franco also worked the booth, speaking proudly of our work in southern Sudan.

The festival featured music, food, and crafts from many African countries, and we were happy to represent South Sudan in this extraordinary celebration of culture, diversity, and independence.
It's our own Ron Moulton, who was at his alma mater's reunion weekend to accept the Distinguished Alumnus award for his work with Village Help for South Sudan.

Here are his remarks:
"Thank you! It is a great honor for me to be back on campus today. I am sincerely grateful and pleased to accept the Distinguished Alumnus Award.
"I would like to divert attention away from myself, however, and highlight the amazing accomplishments of the truly distinguished people I support. The organization I co-founded is called Village Help for South Sudan. Our mission is to provide grants and management support to indigenous groups in remote villages in southern Sudan. This enables them to implement community development projects that address their most urgent and serious problems. The villagers we support deserve our honor and recognition.
"The village of Wunlang is one of the poorest places on earth. There was none of the infrastructure we take for granted here in our homes. No electricity. No sanitation. No permanent structures. No roads, only footpaths. In fact, before Village Help for South Sudan and our donors began supporting them, there was not even clean drinking water.
"Since our work began in 2007, the village has organized a water and sanitation committee and installed deep-drilled bore holes and hand pumps for water and installed latrines. A village education committee organized a team to make bricks and constructed an 8-classroom primary school. A health committee is now constructing a village health center and will soon bring supplies and training to address the most urgent health issue: maternal and newborn mortality and suffering.
"By comparison to the hard work of the villagers we support, my job has been easy. I hope that students, faculty and alumni here will take an interest in participatory community development such as this. You can learn more by visiting our website: villagehelpforsouthsudan.org.
"Again, I deeply appreciate this award, and I am honored to be an Oneonta alumnus. Thank you!"

Here are his remarks:
"Thank you! It is a great honor for me to be back on campus today. I am sincerely grateful and pleased to accept the Distinguished Alumnus Award.
"I would like to divert attention away from myself, however, and highlight the amazing accomplishments of the truly distinguished people I support. The organization I co-founded is called Village Help for South Sudan. Our mission is to provide grants and management support to indigenous groups in remote villages in southern Sudan. This enables them to implement community development projects that address their most urgent and serious problems. The villagers we support deserve our honor and recognition.
"The village of Wunlang is one of the poorest places on earth. There was none of the infrastructure we take for granted here in our homes. No electricity. No sanitation. No permanent structures. No roads, only footpaths. In fact, before Village Help for South Sudan and our donors began supporting them, there was not even clean drinking water.
"Since our work began in 2007, the village has organized a water and sanitation committee and installed deep-drilled bore holes and hand pumps for water and installed latrines. A village education committee organized a team to make bricks and constructed an 8-classroom primary school. A health committee is now constructing a village health center and will soon bring supplies and training to address the most urgent health issue: maternal and newborn mortality and suffering.
"By comparison to the hard work of the villagers we support, my job has been easy. I hope that students, faculty and alumni here will take an interest in participatory community development such as this. You can learn more by visiting our website: villagehelpforsouthsudan.org.
"Again, I deeply appreciate this award, and I am honored to be an Oneonta alumnus. Thank you!"
In rural southern Sudan most babies are born on the ground in a tukul (traditional dwelling) without medical care and in unsanitary conditions.

For most deliveries, the only support available is what can be provided by a traditional birth attendant (TBA). These dedicated women rely on their past experience, not medical training, to assist with births.

Although the TBAs perform a vital service in remote villages, homes in these communities are too far from qualified medical care when complications occur during or after childbirth.
2010 has been declared as the Year of Maternal and Child Health in southern Sudan by its president, Salva Kiir Mayardit. “One in seven of our women who become pregnant will die from pregnancy-related causes,” he says. Although official birth records do not exist in remote villages, Wunlang has an average of 400 births a year, which means approximately 57 women will likely die each year from childbirth-related complications. Village Help for South Sudan aims to help reduce the number of maternal and newborn deaths through our program of basic support for TBAs.
When construction is complete in the next month or two, the Wunlang Village Health Clinic will be the place where babies are born in this village. At the core of our safe childbirth support program will be midwife kits and training for the TBAs. The kits will be assembled by St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church of Arlington.
Support from our donors and a partnership with Global Health Ministries, we hope, will cover transportation and training costs to get the midwife kits from Arlington to Wunlang and to ensure they are effectively used at every delivery.
What’s in a Midwife Kit?
- One bath towel
- One wash cloth
- One bar of Ivory soap
- One pair latex gloves
- One razor blade
- Heavy white cotton string (for tying cord)
- One 36” square muslin or sheeting
- One infant shirt
- One receiving blanket
- One infant hat
This Mother’s Day we ask for your help with this program to support mothers and newborns in southern Sudan.

For most deliveries, the only support available is what can be provided by a traditional birth attendant (TBA). These dedicated women rely on their past experience, not medical training, to assist with births.

Although the TBAs perform a vital service in remote villages, homes in these communities are too far from qualified medical care when complications occur during or after childbirth.
2010 has been declared as the Year of Maternal and Child Health in southern Sudan by its president, Salva Kiir Mayardit. “One in seven of our women who become pregnant will die from pregnancy-related causes,” he says. Although official birth records do not exist in remote villages, Wunlang has an average of 400 births a year, which means approximately 57 women will likely die each year from childbirth-related complications. Village Help for South Sudan aims to help reduce the number of maternal and newborn deaths through our program of basic support for TBAs.
When construction is complete in the next month or two, the Wunlang Village Health Clinic will be the place where babies are born in this village. At the core of our safe childbirth support program will be midwife kits and training for the TBAs. The kits will be assembled by St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church of Arlington.
Support from our donors and a partnership with Global Health Ministries, we hope, will cover transportation and training costs to get the midwife kits from Arlington to Wunlang and to ensure they are effectively used at every delivery.
What’s in a Midwife Kit?
- One bath towel
- One wash cloth
- One bar of Ivory soap
- One pair latex gloves
- One razor blade
- Heavy white cotton string (for tying cord)
- One 36” square muslin or sheeting
- One infant shirt
- One receiving blanket
- One infant hat
This Mother’s Day we ask for your help with this program to support mothers and newborns in southern Sudan.
It's one thing to open a school for girls and young women in Sudan. It's another thing to help them attend that school. Attitudes about educating girls are changing rapidly, and many older girls in Sudan, and Wunlang, are going to school for the first time.
But once a month, they may stay home.
Our newly-formed Health and Sanitation Advisory Committee has been thinking about this problem. And so we have a pattern and a sample of a reusable cloth sanitary pad that's easy to make -- it was made by committee member Liz Ging -- and has been field tested!

Our sample is made of recycled toweling (it's a barbecue towel, hence the pattern). We hear that terry toweling and flannel both work well.

Technically, the pad is made to go under the wrapper, and the wrapper wraps around the underwear. Liz used a velcro fastener, but a snap or a button would also work. Having a separate pad makes it easy to swap or to double up pads. (Ours does not have the plastic inner layer some patterns call for. Our field tester says no plastic means more comfort, especially in the heat, and isn't needed, even overnight.)
The pattern is really simple.

When board members Tara and Lisa next go to Sudan, they'll be carrying this and other samples with them. They'll be sitting with the women and girls to discuss how these can be used to help girls stay in school. As always, the community will decide the best way to implement this idea. It might be through an exisiting tailor -- or it might be a vocational enterprise project.
Providing education and opportunity to remote parts of Southern Sudan has led us down some interesting paths. We want our girls and young women to get all the education they deserve.
But once a month, they may stay home.
Our newly-formed Health and Sanitation Advisory Committee has been thinking about this problem. And so we have a pattern and a sample of a reusable cloth sanitary pad that's easy to make -- it was made by committee member Liz Ging -- and has been field tested!

Our sample is made of recycled toweling (it's a barbecue towel, hence the pattern). We hear that terry toweling and flannel both work well.

Technically, the pad is made to go under the wrapper, and the wrapper wraps around the underwear. Liz used a velcro fastener, but a snap or a button would also work. Having a separate pad makes it easy to swap or to double up pads. (Ours does not have the plastic inner layer some patterns call for. Our field tester says no plastic means more comfort, especially in the heat, and isn't needed, even overnight.)
The pattern is really simple.

When board members Tara and Lisa next go to Sudan, they'll be carrying this and other samples with them. They'll be sitting with the women and girls to discuss how these can be used to help girls stay in school. As always, the community will decide the best way to implement this idea. It might be through an exisiting tailor -- or it might be a vocational enterprise project.
Providing education and opportunity to remote parts of Southern Sudan has led us down some interesting paths. We want our girls and young women to get all the education they deserve.
04/07: From Texas to Wunlang
People are taking notice as Village Help for South Sudan continues to make progress. Here's a mention in Texas Christian University's alumni magazine, featuring director Lisa Deeley Smith, class of '77.
Many Lost Boys were settled in the Fort Worth area, and some attended TCU. The magazine was particularly interested in how Lisa went from helping one Lost Boy in particular to the homeland in general. We know throughout America that many volunteers have helped South Sudanese refugees adapt to life here. We offer a chance to help their homeland.
Many Lost Boys were settled in the Fort Worth area, and some attended TCU. The magazine was particularly interested in how Lisa went from helping one Lost Boy in particular to the homeland in general. We know throughout America that many volunteers have helped South Sudanese refugees adapt to life here. We offer a chance to help their homeland.
04/01: Welcome, Tara!

We're delighted to welcome Tara Rao to our board of directors. For some years she has been a volunteer helping Sudanese refugees in America. Now she will help those refugees give back to their homeland.
Tara is a data analyst at the Harvard School of Public Health for an HIV/AIDS treatment and care program in Nigeria. In her work, she's traveled to Nigeria. She is also an adjunct professor in the math department at Bunker Hill Community College.
And she's doubled the number of women on the board!
We missed the UN's celebration of World Water Day on March 22.
But we celebrated early in Machartit.

This is how Ron found villagers getting water in late January -- by lowering themselves into a pit to bring up buckets of dirty water.

This is Marchartit in mid-March -- jerrycans lined up to as villagers pump clean water from the well drilled by Village Help for South Sudan.
Happy World Water Day to them, and to all of you who made this possible.
But we celebrated early in Machartit.

This is how Ron found villagers getting water in late January -- by lowering themselves into a pit to bring up buckets of dirty water.
This is Marchartit in mid-March -- jerrycans lined up to as villagers pump clean water from the well drilled by Village Help for South Sudan.
Happy World Water Day to them, and to all of you who made this possible.
Our field director, Angelo Ngong Kiir, was one of several Lost Boys resettled in Syracuse, New York. Reporter Maureen Sieh traveled with Angelo and others from Syracuse to report on projects they have begun in different parts of South Sudan. Her report includes: a story with video (scroll down to see Angelo's profile) and photos.

Here's Angelo in a Wunlang School classroom.

And here are workers digging the foundation for our clinic. These photos are by Michelle Gabel.
This blogger is from central New York also, and knows the people of the Syracuse area have been very supportive of the efforts of the Lost Boys to give back to their homeland. We're so glad Village Help for South Sudan is able to make this happen.

Here's Angelo in a Wunlang School classroom.

And here are workers digging the foundation for our clinic. These photos are by Michelle Gabel.
This blogger is from central New York also, and knows the people of the Syracuse area have been very supportive of the efforts of the Lost Boys to give back to their homeland. We're so glad Village Help for South Sudan is able to make this happen.



