Natural disasters prompt South Sudan’s women to be vigilant and resilient for climate shocks

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Friday, May 6, 2022

“The last floods in 2008 were catastrophic and destructive, but this recent one took me by surprise”, shares Ator, 32-year-old, widow and mother of six. She said she was not prepared for an additional hardship in her life.

What Ator was referring to was the severe flooding that swept into her community on December 2021 and impacted more than 835,000 people in 33 out of 78 counties across South Sudan.

Ator, a native of Northern Bahr El Ghazal State, lost her husband to a disease in two years ago. “I had to recover and figure out how to start my life as a single mother,” she says.

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Ator with her children fled their community due to flooding. The displacement has caused uncertainty and hunger to thousands of families across the country.

 

World Vision, with support from Global Affairs Canada (GAC), through the Fortifying Equality and Economic Diversification for Resilience (FEED II) Project supported Ator and more than 3,200 other female and male farmers in the state.

The FEED II Project provided them with training on climate-smart farming practices, farm tools, and crop and vegetable seeds. The project campaigned to reduce inequalities between women and men as they manage resources to grow, consume and market their products.

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With support from World Vision and other organizations, she has gradually established their lives back.

 

It's project activities incorporated to educate women and men to work together to reduce risks that usually threaten agricultural business, including natural disasters and conflict.

Ator’s group of 25 farmers planted the sorghum in May last year after the start of the rainy season. They anticipated a good harvest. “Besides the group farm, I cultivated one feddan around my home. But the flooding started and all became a waste,” she adds.

Sadly, with the current climate change trends, it will be difficult to know when the next flood or drought will come.

Ator remembered how the rain poured hard and filled up the swamps around her community. She recalled that it continued for about four hours that night.  “At about 5:00 in the morning, my children shouted with fear as water spilled into the room. It only took minutes for our possessions to be swept away. The only thing that mattered was for me to take my children to a safe place,” she shares.

The project team responded to the affected people in the community with tarpaulins for temporary shelters, blankets and sleeping mats. “My children and I camped along the main road. World Vision came to support as I tried to do casual jobs to feed my children,” she says. 

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With hardwork, initiative and resourcefulness, Ator used her tools and seedlings to regain what she had lost from the flood.

 

Many farmers like Ator waited for the floodwaters to subside and use the livelihood tools provided for them. The fishermen received fishing gears allowing them to start working and earning. People returned to their homes in January 2022, to recover their livelihood and rebuild their community.

Kon Awet Awet, FEED II Project Manager shares, “The floods have not stopped the groups from trying to make a livelihood from farming.  Sadly, with the current climate change trends, it will be difficult to know when the next flood or drought will come.” 

He adds, “We have to keep our eyes open on natural disasters like floods and act as early as possible.  When families can farm, we also help them plan to store their harvests safely, and save money so they have their own emergency fund whenever it happens again.”

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Though still worried that another round of floods will come, it did not deter her from starting over.

 

Story and photos by Scovia Faida Charles Duku, Communications Coordinator