Featured White Papers
- Aug. 13th: Saving Time, Money & the Environment with Web Conferencing (BNET)
- Enterprise PBX buyer's guide (VoIP-News)
- Engaging with business banking customers (Actuate Corporation)
The Real Roots of Darfur
Atlantic, The, April, 2007 by Stephan Faris
To truly understand the crisis in Darfur—and it has been profoundly misunderstood—you need to look back to the mid-1980s, before the violence between African and Arab began to simmer. Alex de Waal, now a program director at the Social Science Research Council, was there at that time, as a doctoral candidate doing anthropological fieldwork. Earlier this year, he told me a story that, he says, keeps coming back to him.
De Waal was traveling through the dry scrub of Darfur, studying indigenous reactions to the drought that gripped the region. In a herders’ camp near the desert’s border, he met with a bedridden and nearly blind Arab sheikh named Hilal Abdalla, who said he was noticing things he had never seen before: Sand blew into fertile land, and the rare rain washed away alluvial soil. Farmers who had once hosted his tribe and his camels ...