Sudan’s wars formed my understanding of the world. I grew up in Kenya and Sudan. My parents work as linguists in Southern Sudanese Languages. At twelve years old, we left the continent for the US. With the transition, I was haunted by the gross difference between the levels of stochastic bloodshed in Sudan versus America. As a result, I have spent my life floundering to the realization that the unjust might of Khartoum, which has cost millions of lives, will continue until a framework exists that allows the international community to intervene. The international community emerged in the early modern period. Thus in order to understand the trajectory of the current state, I need to isolate the emergence of the nation state in Sudan, which begins in the Ottoman Early-Modern era.
In the summer of 2006, I returned to East Africa for the first time in five years. I went to record Sudanese refugees’ songs. The Sudanese community composed these songs to stabilize the community during the North-South war. The authors had lost their lands, friends, fortunes, families, and therefore their positions in life. In the ensuing confusion, the music provided a social rallying point. In two weeks, we recorded five hundred Dinka
songs to serve as a digital record.
After recording, I took a charter plane a thousand kilometers into Sudan to the Nuba Mountains. I took the plane for two reasons: first, in Kenya, a Nubian Islamic scholar told me about wrecked Iraqi tanks, which had fought for the North at the battle of Tulushi Mountain in the Nubian Mountains in 1992. So I went to take pictures. Second, to speak with Nubians about the progress of the 2005 peace treaty.
Though unsure the scholar’s report was true, I had to check on the tanks. Photographs of Iraqi weapons in Sudan would evince the link between President Hussein’s Iraq and Bashir’s Sudan. Unfortunately, when I arrived all the roads from the airport in Qauda to Tulushi were impassible due to rain.
So while I was waiting the three weeks for the next plane out of Sudan, I undertook my second objective. I talked to Southern administrators about the South’s political position since the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was signed. It became clear that Khartoum state continued to block all access to reconstruction materials. In other words, hoarding oil revenue and deploying troops, they continued to dominate the South. Because the Khartoum state maintained participating in national politics required all other groups to submit to Islam as purported by Khartoum, Sudan continued to fracture. It was nauseating to see a religion used to destroy the social fabric of the largest nation in Africa. My disgust with this misuse of Islam made me swear to recontextualize this history, to show Khartoum’s dearth of credibility and ensure the injunction its activities demand. This oath drove my research in my Junior and Senior years at Bard College, and pushed me to organize my theory in order to confront my life-long confusion at how to reframe these conflicts and end Sudan’s atrocious wars.
The cessation of Sudan’s genocidal politics, I knew from earlier Africana studies, had to be undertaken by a legitimate authority. Western powers cannot impinge on the sovereignty of African states. This caveat means that my research could not only focus on the fact of Khartoum’s atrocities, but must also encourage the positive creation of an African authority responsible for the punishment of the misdeeds of an African government.
As a result of these two directives, when I returned to Bard I undertook to investigate the colonial actions of a non-western state, the Ottoman Empire, in Africa. The empire built the foundation of Egyptian state, which – under British dominion –positioned Khartoum as nationally prominent. So, I sought to investigate the Ottoman Empire in Africa as one of Khartoum’s historical antecedents. As can happen with research, the topic became too vast. I found the need to explain the Ottoman Empire, before I could begin to write about its role in colonizing Africa. When I undertook to understand the Ottoman Empire, I ran into a language barrier. The English secondary sources focused on Ottoman administration in Anatolia and Eastern Europe, and Arabic primary sources were not accessible at Bard. This left me with a limited subject – and the need to more fully understand it – before I could speak about the Ottoman African expansion.
This compromise in my research objectives was driven by my need for further study. I found that the Ottoman Empire was a centralized state, controlling a federation of provinces with differing degrees of autonomy. The state exploited this periphery, on account of its economic and military advantage. It legitimized exploitation by divine authority under God and tradition. Similarly, in Sudan, Khartoum extends its economic advantage to extract slaves and resources from a much larger provincial zone. This exploitative aristocracy, however, fashions itself the sovereign of the Sudanese Nation. Sovereign states were designed after Westphalia to separate ideologically opposed groups. Whereas, Sudan uses sovereignty as means to maintain its suzerainty. As a result of the guise of a nation state, Khartoum enjoys the privileges of sovereignty – lack of interference – without exercising the responsibilities to the citizenry of the entire claimed Nation. The blending of the privileges of nation states with autocratic power results in a heinous hybrid. Untangling the motivating substratum of the Republic of Sudan could provide the solution to Khartoum’s exploitative expansion. To discover this link, I need access to Ottoman archives provided through Turkish historiography and language study.
Thus, I work to increase my theoretical framework in order to confront the conflict in Sudan with rigorous knowledge. I am confident that the research materials that I need: journal subscriptions, Arabic and Ottoman primary sources, and, most importantly, people specializing in my fields of interest can be found. These resources contain a possible solution to my life long question. For resolution, I am impelled to continue researching.

