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Traditional Leaders Profiles
Aly Verjee, London, November 2007


Introduction

In the summer of 2006 I was asked to join a delegation of Sudanese traditional leaders from 6 of the 10 states of Southern Sudan, as well as representatives from the Nuba Mountains, on a study visit on traditional authority, visiting South Africa, Botswana, and Ghana. Beginning in Nairobi, ending in Juba, the group travelled widely and met a large number of dignitaries, officials, and other traditional leaders.

The formal elements of the trip, and of the arguments and examples presented during it, have been summarized in the comprehensive report prepared by the delegation’s leader, Dr. K. K. Prah.

In this work, commissioned by Gurtong and the Swiss Department of Foreign Affairs, the focus is instead on the life stories, thoughts and feelings of each traditional authority leader, as recounted to me in formal interviews and ordinary conversations conducted throughout this lengthy trip – we saw 2 oceans, 3 nations, 4 kingdoms and several thousand kilometres of air and road travel! In these three weeks I was honoured to come to know each of these individuals, and I hope I have done justice to their lives and work with these portraits.

As a whole, the delegation found the trip, as they themselves describe, a useful and positive experience. Many friendships were formed and seeds of new ideas sown. This is not to say that opportunities were not lost – the chance to learn from the experience of Southern Africa leaders on HIV/AIDS is a particularly striking example.

I have tried, in so far as possible, to have the lives of this extraordinary group portrayed through their own words, rather than becoming overly preoccupied with my own analysis. As such, each portrait varies in its form and content, dependent on the nature our conversations took. For the sake of clarity, I have also refrained from getting myself and the reader lost by delving too deeply into the anthropology and ethnography of each individual leader.

All quotations are direct attributions, conducted through original interviews in English, or in Arabic with the aid of translation. I have not edited or sanitized any contributions, except to add context or clarify the speaker’s intent, where necessary. Any errors in interpretation or transcription are my own.

I hope one day to again meet this remarkable group and witness how their lives and aspirations have unfolded and evolved since our first meeting.

Aly Verjee
London, November 2007


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