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From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 7 Apr 2017 08:56
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] South Sudanese youth - a different
perspective
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
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South Sudan’s youth come of age in the face of chaos: Living in limbo

With South Sudan descending back into civil war, a new generation of
returnees need to flee for the second time in their lives. But even in
exile, their message is clear: change only comes when you're willing
to fight – and music is a weapon.

Posted Thursday 6th April, 2017
Text by Siobhán O'Grady  - Huck Magazine

It’s late on a Saturday afternoon in May but the sun is still beating
down on the South Sudanese capital of Juba. A fleet of cars carrying
Annet Angaika and dozens of other young hip-hop singers, dancers and
DJs pulls up to a dock on the outskirts of town.

Annet, a 22-year-old vocalist better known in that circle by her stage
name, Neetah Baby, hops out, smooths her tight black skirt and
matching cropped tank top, runs her hands over her long brown weave
and poses for a selfie-stick while her friends clank glasses of warm
whiskey and pop bottles of champagne. Then they board a sunset cruise
down the White Nile River.

It’s been two-and-a-half years since bloody conflict broke out in the
same city, sparking chaos that immediately divided the world’s newest
nation along ethnic lines and eventually leaving more than 50,000
dead. But on this weekend afternoon, the mood in Juba is relatively
light.

Two weeks earlier, former vice president-turned-rebel leader Riek
Machar, who belongs to the Nuer ethnic group, returned to the capital
for the first time since the war began, bringing with him the promise
that he and his rival, President Salva Kiir, a Dinka, were willing to
work together to form a unity government.

On board the yacht, the party’s organiser, 26-year-old Sam Lupai,
stands at a DJ station on the top deck and calls out to his guests.
“There is only one rule on this boat,” the popular radio personality
shouts into the microphone. “And that is that there are no rules or
regulations. Now put your hands up for peace!”

A few miles away, tens of thousands of people are crowded into a
United Nations Protection of Civilians camp, in a seemingly
never-ending jumble of tents – one that has expanded since late 2013
to accommodate a growing number of people fleeing the country’s
merciless civil war.

The 20-somethings on board the yacht, decked out in ripped skinny
jeans, retro John Lennon-inspired sunglasses and metallic-toed Adidas
Superstar sneakers, offer a jarring contrast to the conditions of the
residents of that U.N. camp down the road. But it is only by chance
that they are not among those living there themselves.

The people sheltered there and in other U.N. sites around the country
are just a handful of the 1.7 million people internally displaced by
the conflict. Another million have fled the country as refugees,
running from mass rape and systemic murder at the hands of government
and rebel troops.

And despite the show of normalcy on board the rented yacht, the guests
who paid 1,000 South Sudanese pounds ($15) each for a ticket are no
strangers to the civil war that has unfolded around them over the past
three years.

The same goes for their relationship to the civil war immediately
before it, which lasted decades and killed some two million people
before paving the way for South Sudan to split from its northern
neighbour in 2011.

Instead they belong to a rapidly growing group in the country’s
intricately woven society: an aspiring class of young returnees,
displaced by the first conflict as children and disrupted by the
second as adults.

Today, they are doing whatever they can to forge their own identities
and come of age as their young nation collapses around them. And
that’s where music comes into play.

Neetah Baby didn’t step foot into South Sudan until she was 15. Born
in a refugee camp in northern Uganda, she never met her father, who
was killed in the conflict that forced her mother into exile.

Neetah spent her entire childhood in that camp, running out of hope
that she would ever see her mother’s homeland. Then, in 2008, when
sovereignty was within reach, she and her mother boarded a bus full of
refugees who finally had the chance to return.

At one point the driver pulled over so that the passengers could get
out to sing, dance and kiss the same ground that they hadn’t seen in
decades. “I thought maybe after staying for so long in the refugee
camp where I was born, I was finally going to be happy,” Neetah says.

But even for those who call it home, Juba remains a city permeated by
a constant, palpable anxiety – especially for young women. There’s
plenty more to fear in the capital than just war: military checkpoints
manned by drunk soldiers holding loaded AK- 47s, impunity for sexual
assault, and armed robbery make even the most trivial of daily tasks a
burden.

Lounging on the floor of her cousin’s small clothing boutique in
downtown Juba, on another sweltering day in May, Neetah describes her
routine. She shuttles between Uganda, where she’s studying procurement
and logistic management, and Juba, where she shares a bed with her mom
in a small dirt-floor home near the military barracks where the civil
war began.

Neetah helped pay for the house by working as a cleaner, but when she
decided to go back to school she needed to find a side-hustle that
still paid. She turned to singing, and her first hit, ‘Binia Wewe’
(‘Foreign Girl’) took off.

In a video for that track, Neetah and her girlfriends tell off
government soldiers and motorcycle taxis who both ask for their papers
and scold them for dressing in a style they see as too risqué for
South Sudan. The lyrics draw attention to the frustrations of a
generation raised abroad, who return home only to be told they don’t
belong on their own capital’s streets.

“This is my fashion, why you call me that? Everywhere I go, you wanna
pull me back,” she sings, wagging her finger at the camera. In the
video, Neetah exudes a feminist confidence that suggests she’s
comfortable talking back to men on Juba’s streets. But the reality on
the ground is different.

Once, a government soldier beat her up after he accused her of being a
paperless Ugandan. He didn’t believe her when she refused to pay a
bribe and insisted she was South Sudanese.

“I said to him, ‘You can go ahead and kill me because I’m not giving
you anything. I am willing to die in my country, so just go ahead and
kill me,’” she says. “Then a police officer who was watching said,
‘You see, only a South Sudanese would talk like that. Let her go.’”

Now, when she performs in a club, Neetah spends the entire night there
too, sometimes sleeping in a chair to avoid passing through
checkpoints before sunrise.

Still, those performances are what pay her tuition bills. When she’s
in South Sudan, she books as many gigs as she can, performing at Juba
hotspots like Vegas Club and sometimes traveling to smaller towns for
lower-profile shows.

The performances earn her at most 4,000 pounds a pop, which is only
around $55. What doesn’t go to her tuition goes to her mom, who hasn’t
been able to find work for more than a year. “Life is hard,” she says.
“But our country listens to so much music, so when you put something
in music, that’s when the youth come together.”

Establishing a space for young people like Neetah to express
themselves was top of Jok Madut Jok’s list when he served as
undersecretary of culture in the newly independent South Sudan.

In addition to a national archive intended to document the history of
the country’s 64 tribes, he proposed constructing a theatre that would
serve as a venue for South Sudanese musicians and artists, regardless
of skin colour or mother tongue. His colleagues soon wrote it off as
impossible.

“Many saw the art projects as a luxury in a country where you needed
to build a hospital, where you needed to pay the army to bring
stability, where you needed to create courts to build a justice system
so that there was accountability for the earlier wars,” Jok says.

“It became a question of choosing between feeding the people in their
bellies versus feeding the people in their souls and minds through the
arts, so obviously it wasn’t so much of a no-brainer which one you’re
going to do first.”

The lack of resources didn’t stop some from trying. Take 28-year-old
Okuta Ceasar Malis, one of South Sudan’s most famous hip-hop artists
who returned from Uganda ahead of independence with no money to his
name. He started writing songs to pass the time and, 10 years later,
just catching a glimpse of him is enough to make you want to know who
he is.

With a watch on each wrist, a ring on almost every finger, earrings in
both ears, and at least two chains around his neck at all times, he’s
the first to admit that he dresses to be noticed.

His choice of car has the same purpose: the yellow convertible
imported from Japan is one of the flashiest driven on Juba’s few miles
of paved road, and looks laughably out of place outside the small
mud-brick, one-room house he calls home.

Even the story behind his stage name, Silver X, signals his desire to
stand out: as a student in Uganda, he lied to his headmaster and said
he had to wear a silver earring because it was tradition at home and
to remove it would bring him bad luck. The headmaster bought it, and
the nickname stuck.

When we first meet in the summer of 2016, Silver is living back in
South Sudan. He sits under a mango tree near his house and breaks down
the story of his rise to fame.

In 2007, after he and a group of friends had written a few songs about
peace and homecoming, he visited a nearby government office to see if
he could sell the local secretariat on funding them to record an
album.

The bureaucrat working that day saw the lyrics as a potential avenue
to inspire the diaspora to return home and offered him a $1,000 grant
to offset the studio costs. “People came back from the other side with
a lot of trauma,” Silver says, recalling the inspiration for his first
tracks.

“A lot of the lyrics were just about encouraging people [to remember]
that it’s home. You can’t hang out in Uganda for the rest of your life
waiting for peace. If others can come, why don’t you?”

The New Sudan Superstars, as they came to be known, split up soon
after recording those songs, but Silver continued making music on his
own. His first solo hit ‘Looking for a Job’ lamented the difficulties
of finding work in a country that values a job applicant’s father’s
name more than the content of his or her CV. “It touched people’s
hearts, especially the youth,” he says. “And that’s how Silver X was
born.”

Okuta has since produced nine albums that have helped turn Silver X
into a household name in South Sudan. His 2014 song ‘Let’s Stand
Together’ called for an end to the war, earning him some small
international recognition. But even he isn’t protected from the toll
of the conflict.

Over Heineken and shisha at a bar in Kampala in January, Silver says
he was hanging out at a radio station studio in Juba last July when
violence unexpectedly broke out again between government and rebel
troops, throwing the earlier peace deal into limbo and leaving
hundreds dead.

It plummeted the country back into turmoil and prompted Machar, who
was serving as first vice president, to flee the country again. “We
did not know what they were cooking in the kitchen,” Silver X says
about the troops. “Just like a customer in a restaurant waiting for
food, sometimes when they serve you, you’re like ‘What? I didn’t order
this!’ We were shocked.”

Stuck in that studio for four days, he used the time to write ‘Belet
Jian’ (or ‘The Country is Hungry’), which reminded South Sudan’s most
privileged – himself included – that they have the ability to walk
away from conflict when everyone else has to stay.

Friends in national security almost immediately warned him that the
lyrics had infuriated government officials, putting his life at risk.
He paid $900 for a last-minute flight to Kampala, and has since
floated between Kenya and Uganda, recording a few new songs and
performing the occasional gig, but mainly wishing he could just return
home.

“I don’t want to live in a place where I feel like I’m home; I want to
live in a place where I know that I’m home,” he says. “It doesn’t
matter how bad it looks to anyone else; if it’s home, then it’s where
you’re supposed to be.”

Still, he finds some comfort in knowing that his words have inspired
those who didn’t have the luxury to flee. “They stopped it from the
radio stations, but they can’t stop it from the streets,” he says of
his latest song. “People have it on their cell phones. The radios
don’t play it but people know it, people have it, people love it.”

Neetah was three months pregnant by the time the fighting started
again. She spent the next few weeks under her bed, praying looters or
soldiers wouldn’t rape her. When the government started shutting down
radio stations and enforcing an early curfew, it became nearly
impossible to continue making music.

Neetah no longer saw a good enough reason to stay. But having less
money than Silver X, she also had fewer options. So she fled back
across the border into northern Uganda, to the camps she thought would
remain a part of her past. “People were shedding tears like hell,” she
says in a phone call from northern Uganda. “They give you some tarp,
some towels, and they want you to start a life.”

Back in the camps, Annet isn’t so much Neetah Baby as she is one of
more than 2,000 refugees taking that same route into Uganda each day.
Life isn’t much easier than it was in Juba, but even if her future
doesn’t feel more certain, at least her safety does. “I used to think,
‘I want to go to my country and do something better. I should be
remembered for something,’” she says. “Now all we want is peace.”

On New Year’s Day, Silver X pulls up to the northern Kenyan town of
Kakuma, where a refugee camp originally built to house South Sudanese
boys running from conflict in the 1990s now shelters 200,000 people
from around the region – including tens of thousands who ran from
South Sudan’s most recent war.

At his first show in the area, which he called Peace Concert, there’s
a good turnout: a huge crowd of people who’ve been waiting too long to
go home. But singing for them keeps him going. “I’m always optimistic.
Everything has its time and nothing lasts forever,” he says. “I still
feel like there’s a chance for peace. When is what we don’t know.”

http://www.huckmagazine.com/art-and-culture/south-sudan-
returned-civil-war-musicians-new-generation/

END
______________________
John Ashworth

[email protected]

+254 725 926 297 (Kenya mobile)
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Skype: jashworth1

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