Photo: Shouqar Abdo
Nearly a year after Sudanese forces recaptured Khartoum from the Rapid Support Forces, the capital remains devastated with 60-70% of hospitals, schools, and residential areas damaged or destroyed. But as international aid evaporates and government promises remain unfulfilled, Khartoum’s residents have launched hundreds of grassroots initiatives rebuilding neighborhoods, universities and health facilities without institutional support. These methods offer a blueprint emerging across conflict zones: start with available resources, organize transparently, rotate labor, repurpose materials, claim ownership of recovery. Across at least 10 Khartoum neighborhoods, youth provide labor, elders offer expertise, women organize logistics and food preparation, and local businesses donate materials. Daily tasks are recorded in notebooks tracking progress and ensuring accountability. When professional skills are needed, local workers join voluntarily or for minimal pay supported by student contributions. WhatsApp groups coordinate schedules while word-of-mouth spreads information where internet remains unreliable.
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