
South Sudan marked a decade of independence in 2021, but the country remains wracked by violence. Hunger is growing, driven by conflict, natural disasters鈥攑articularly flooding鈥攁nd the economic impact of COVID-19.
As in any crisis, women and girls are often the ones who suffer the most. But in Jamjang, a remote area of northern South Sudan, women and men are working together for gender equality to help create a better life for everyone in their community. There, at a Women and Girls Safe Space run by the the 探花精选 (探花精选), women gather and talk about their concerns, staff offer support for those who want to report gender-based violence, and men take classes on how they can better treat the women in their lives.
Go inside this work and see how it has transformed the lives of both women and men in the community.
Photos by Adrienne Surprenant

Tabetha, 33, is an 探花精选 case manager at the Women and Girls Safe Space. Having once lived in a refugee camp in Kenya, she was inspired by her own trials to help her community in Jamjang.
鈥淢y past has been a struggle,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have endured hardship. But I don鈥檛 want anyone else to have to endure this hardship.鈥

Tabetha runs 鈥渃offee, tea and talk鈥 sessions where women gather at least once a week to talk about their concerns.
I want [women] to be aware of their rights.
鈥淚 want them to be aware of their rights,鈥 she says of the women who attend the sessions. 鈥淚 want them to know what they can do.鈥

Nyanibioch Arop, 42, is a participant in the program. She says that some of the problems women face include struggles to find food and the inability to have their voices heard.

Nyanibioch believes men and women need to have equal rights so that women don鈥檛 have to depend on men for their livelihoods. Her daughter, Nyaboj, has recently finished her studies in the capital city, Juba.
When you let a girl go to school 鈥here is a lot to be gained.
鈥淲hat I have realized is, when you let a girl go to school 鈥here is a lot to be gained,鈥 says Nyanibioch. 鈥淎 woman who perseveres, who works hard, can earn a little something for themselves. She can support her child alongside her husband, both contributing.鈥

Riak Thon, 39, has participated in 探花精选 sessions where he learned about women鈥檚 rights and why running a household isn鈥檛 solely 鈥渨omen鈥檚 work.鈥 He shares household duties with his wife, Nyathon.
Your life should involve you and your wife sharing tasks. It is a way of living in harmony.
鈥淚鈥檓 happy to embrace new things as a husband,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 will cook or fetch water. If I see that she鈥檚 tired doing housework, I鈥檒l take over. Your life should involve you and your wife sharing tasks. It is a way of living in harmony.鈥

The 探花精选 supports safe spaces throughout South Sudan. They all serve both the local community and more recent arrivals, women who have been displaced by violence in other parts of the country.
Muna, age 10, and her older sister Kumis fled their home in the Nuba mountains in 2016. Today, they attend the 探花精选鈥檚 classes on how to prevent gender-based violence, which tends to spike during times of crisis.
The important thing is to live together and help each other.
鈥淭he important thing is to live together and help each other,鈥 says Muna.

As in other parts of South Sudan, access to food and water remains a concern for many women who visit the Women and Girls Safe Space. Over 60 percent of the country鈥檚 population faced crisis or worse levels of food insecurity in 2021, and 100,000 faced catastrophic levels of hunger.
鈥淟ife here is tough and if you do not have people supporting you, it becomes unbearable,鈥 says Veronica, 31. She is pictured above with her mother, Amou Makuei, whom she credits with helping her survive.
If we are given hope, then we can sustain ourselves.
鈥淭here are so many difficulties for women, if a household is struggling, a girl like my daughter can be married off and go and live elsewhere. Women need something to empower us. If we are given hope, then we can sustain ourselves.鈥

With the help of the 探花精选, some of the women have supported their families through their own small businesses. Nyanlou, age 33, now sells food in the local market. Here she poses with her best friend, 31-year-old Akon.
The most important thing is women helping other women.
鈥淭he most important thing is women helping other women,鈥 Nyanlou says. 鈥淎 strong woman is an educated woman. I want my children鈥檚 lives to be different: for them to go and get training, that will change their lives.鈥

Many of both the women and men are hopeful the future will be brighter. Above, women dance to celebrate International Day of the Girl.
鈥淚f I have a daughter in the future,鈥 says Tabetha. 鈥淚 want her to grow up in a world in which equality is improved.鈥

鈥淚 have been motivated through my interaction with the women. My role models have been the ones with initiative,鈥 she continues. 鈥淐hange will be brought about not by me alone, but by all of them. It starts with me, then it spreads to them.鈥
The Women and Girls Safe Space in Jamjang is supported with funds from Global Affairs Canada.