South Sudan’s ‘Women of
Courage’
Loreto Sr Orla Treacy and some of the girls at the Rumbeck boarding school she runs |
Loreto Sister Orla Treacy, the recipient of a 2019 “Woman of
Courage” Award, talks about her work in a remote area in South Sudan where she
runs a boarding school for girls offering them protection, education, and the
hope that one day, they too, will be included in the building of their country.
By Linda Bordoni
Loreto Sister Orla Treacy is a remarkable woman.
Thanks to her work to protect and to empower some of the
most fragile and vulnerable people in the world, she was chosen this year to
receive an International Women of Courage Award at the State
Department in Washington.
The award honours “women around the world who have
demonstrated exceptional courage, strength, and leadership in acting to bring
positive change to their societies, often at great personal risk and
sacrifice.”
Originally from Ireland, Sr Orla was in Rome in October to
participate in a Symposium hosted by the US Embassy to the
Holy See demonstrating how governments, civil society and individuals can be
more effective in fragile communities and regions by partnering with women
religious working on the frontiers.
She came to Vatican Radio to tell us about the secondary
boarding school for girls that she has set up in one of the most dangerous
places for girls on earth: South Sudan.
The world’s youngest nation erupted in civil war just 2
years after winning independence in 2011. Almost 400,000 people have been
killed in the violence, millions have been displaced and the oil-rich country’s
economy has been shattered.
When I met Sr Orla she had just come from the “Women on the
Frontlines” Symposium during which she shared her experience with a woman
religious from India and another from Nigeria.
Frontiers and peripheries, she said, are not only
geographical places, but internal places as well, but for the three sisters it
was very much talking about physical places, places that are vulnerable and
fragile.
“South Sudan has become one of those countries that are
vulnerable and fragile, and sadly a dangerous place and a challenging place for
many to live in,” she said.
So deeply does Sr Orla identify with the South Sudanese
girls who attend her boarding school in the town of Rumbeck, that when I asked
her about the “Woman of Courage” Award, she said she thinks of it as “a
collective award for us as a school”.
“We were very privileged and honoured to get the nomination
from the American Embassy to the Holy See, there were 10 awardees from all over
the world; we travelled to Washington and I received the Award on behalf of the
many Women of Courage that I work with,” she said.
The School in Rumbeck
Sr Orla told me that as Loreto sisters in Ireland, they
received a very clear invitation to begin a girl’s boarding secondary school, a
project that came to life in February 2006, in a town where girls are not
educated.
“When we arrived in a town of 30,000 people, there were
about 10 girls in secondary school,” she said.
Since then the school has developed and grown. From the 35
girls attending in 2008, today there are 291, and 90% of them are going
on to university and graduating from there.
How the country has changed in the past 13 years
Sr Orla explained that when the sisters first went to
Rumbeck in 2006, it was part of Southern Sudan. It was the second year of the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement between north and south, and it led to the 2010
referendum in which 99% of southerners voted for independence.
“It was an incredible experience: that sense of parents
waiting for a baby to be born would parallel. There really was a sense of a new
baby being welcomed,” she said, adding that it was a time of great joy.
The most illiterate country in the world
Part of the new nation’s challenge is the fact that South
Sudan is the most illiterate country in the world, Sr Orla said, and perhaps
many “were blinded to the road ahead”.
Pointing out that the country has oil and that there are
many countries that are interested in the oil, she expressed her opinion that
perhaps the structures were not in place to help support the new country, and
after only two years, disagreements between the President and Vice President
led the country back into a new civil war.
She described it as a painful journey, “from hope and peace
and joy and expectation into the reality of today” where “In a country the size
of Italy, we are 11 million people, 4 million are displaced and nearly 7
million are hungry”.
Fortunately, she said, “our mission is with young people and
I think whenever you work with young people you always taste hope and that has
kept us very focused.”
These young women want to be the change in their country
Sr Orla says the school in Rumbeck has “become a mission of
hope and these young women want to be the change in their country”.
She explained the school is much more than just a school;
for the girls in remote Rumbeck it is also a women’s refuge: “These girls are
able to escape the pressures of forced and early marriage, and sadly that is on
the increase as the war continues and as poverty and hunger have crept more and
more into their lives.”
She revealed that in South Sudan, statistics would show that
only 1 % of girls are able to finish school and she pointed out that most of
the girls at the Rumbeck boarding school are the first girl in their family to
be graduated.
She pointed out that the school is also bringing about a
change of mentality as the girls are seeing their peers who graduated from the
school getting jobs, getting paid positions and contributing back to their
families, who are also beginning to see the value of education and beginning to
believe “that girls can contribute to the building of the family”.
“And for young people coming to our school today there is
great hope expectation that they can do great things for their community as
well,” she said.
While Sr Orla admitted there is much concern for her
students whose life, outside the boarding school, is rife with danger, she said
that there is also the sense of “having the privilege to witness these
remarkable young women who want to push the boundaries and want to make a
change”.
Helping pave the way to peace
South Sudan is an overwhelmingly Christian nation, but its
inhabitants are ethnically divided.
“South Sudan has 64 different tribal groups. We do try to
unite them [the students] to give them more of a sense of national identity
rather than of tribal identity. We try to get them from different areas of the
country and bring them together,” she said, which is another way to pave the
way to peace.
“The girls learn one another’s cultures, one another’s
dances, identifying and understanding. We have girls who come from different
feuds, their brothers are killing one another, yet at school they can be best
friends, and that gives me hope for the future of South Sudan,” she said.
‘Women of Courage’
Sr Orla, who is as tall and striking as the Dinka women she
lives and works with, said that it is her dream that one day she will sit in
the hall in Washington and watch one of the graduates take the prize of Woman
of Courage.
She noted that the government, in its peace agreement has
given 35% of positions to women, but sadly only 19% of women in the country are
educated: “So my dream and my hope is to see more and more young women
take their place in society, contribute to the development of their families,
to peace-building in the communities and also to take positions of leadership
in the country”.
Pope Francis
Recalling the historic meeting Pope Francis hosted in the
Vatican last April with the leaders of the nation, Sr Orla described his
decision to kiss their feet as an extraordinary act.
“In South Sudan a big man, a leader, cannot bend low in
front of another. A woman can, but a man cannot. So to see the Pope do that in
front of the many leaders of South Sudan was huge for the girls,” she said.
Noting that part of their education is learning other
values, and the Christian values of forgiveness and love, mercy and peace,
“What he did that day,” she concluded, “spoke more words than I could say in a
year”.
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