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How a Sudanese refugee in Uganda is keeping his homeland alive through food

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Sophie Neiman
Fayza Alsidig Hamad Yousif prepares a sauce called niaymia at El-Frazdug Khalfallah Alian Assoul鈥檚 restaurant in Kiryandongo.

This is the fourth article in a series from Sudan that we are publishing this week, highlighting that country鈥檚 travails and citizens鈥 efforts to overcome them.聽Read the first three articles聽here,听here, and here.

A group of men sits in a semicircle outside El-Frazdug Khalfallah Alian Assoul鈥檚 small restaurant, sipping ginger-infused coffee from glass cups. They gossip in Arabic, pausing only to call for another cup of coffee, before continuing their chatter, seemingly impervious to the heat of a cloudless sky.

The ritual carries them home, to Sudan.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Sudan鈥檚 civil war has forced more than 11 million people to flee their homes. In a refugee camp in Uganda, one restaurant owner is trying to resurrect his homeland with food.

Since civil war broke out there in April 2023, more than have been forced to flee their homes. Bringing only what they could carry on their backs, tens of thousands have made their way to this refugee settlement in central Uganda.

Here even the simplest daily routines are inflected with loss. Mr. Assoul knows that the men who gather at his restaurant each day would rather be somewhere else. Still, as he serves their meals and mingles beneath a feather-white tarpaulin propped up by reeds, he hopes in a small way to resurrect the home they left behind.

鈥淚f you eat alone, you must find someone and tell him to come to share with you. That is the habit of Sudanese people,鈥 Mr. Assoul says. 鈥淲hen we share food, we are sharing our news and emotions.鈥

Sophie Neiman
El-Frazdug Khalfallah Alian Assoul opened a restaurant in Uganda鈥檚 Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement four months ago.

Inherited recipes

Food has long been an important part of Mr. Assoul鈥檚 life. When he was growing up in the city of Omdurman, just across the Nile from the capital, Khartoum, residents greeted new neighbors with steaming plates of bamia mafrooka, a green okra soup, and kisra, a paper-thin sorghum flatbread.

When he went away to university in Khartoum, his mother taught him to cook over the phone, giving step-by-step instructions for how to soak lentils for soup and fry onions in oil until they were tender.

The first attempt was a disaster. 鈥淚 put it in the rubbish,鈥 Mr. Assoul says, laughing. But he continued to practice, memorizing his mother鈥檚 recipes. His favorite was kawara, a soup made from cow鈥檚 feet and vegetables.

He was living in Khartoum with his family when fighting began last April between the Sudanese army and a paramilitary group called the Rapid Support Forces. As water shortages gripped his neighborhood, Mr. Assoul watched as the jasmine and roses that grew in his window withered. Below, he saw smoke from explosions and heard pops of gunfire. Bodies of soldiers lay unclaimed on the street.

After a month, his parents and siblings fled to the southern Sudanese state of White Nile. Mr. Assoul did not join them, instead taking a winding path that eventually led here. 鈥淚 needed to discover my life,鈥 he says, hoping to make his own fortune and provide for the family.

Four months ago, he established his small restaurant on a dusty slope at the edge of Kiryandongo, where a length of dirty rope divides the settlement from the neighboring town of Bweyale.

Between 600 and 700 Sudanese arrive in Kiryandongo each week, according to local officials. Their first port of call is the settlement鈥檚 reception center, where they receive cards confirming their refugee status.

Sophie Neiman
Two women walk past open-air barbershops outside the refugee reception center in Kiryandongo Oct. 16, 2024.

Just outside its doors, a vibrant market hums. Women serve spicy Sudanese tea from rickety stands, and barbers cut hair at their open-air stalls, their services advertised in brightly colored Arabic script.

Mr. Assoul calls it 鈥淟ittle Khartoum,鈥 and his restaurant is here, too. He named it Malik el-Kawara or 鈥淜ing of Kawara,鈥 after the cow foot stew he made from his mother鈥檚 recipe.

Over plates of kawara and niaymia 鈥 a sauce of stewed tomatoes, dried okra, yogurt, and peanut butter, served with bread and scooped up by hand 鈥 his customers talk of family still in Sudan.

鈥淭here is a new community of Sudanese people here,鈥 Mr. Assoul says. 鈥淲e started that through food.鈥

Sharing love

Invariably, the conversation turns to ongoing war.

When it does, Khalid Hammad Salih, one of Mr. Assoul鈥檚 regulars, falls silent.

A pharmacist, he has not seen his family since the third day of clashes between the army and the Rapid Support Forces last year, when he sent his wife, children, and parents away to Egypt. Mr. Salih can no longer remember the last words they said to each other, only the terror he felt for them as he watched them go.

He stayed behind in Sudan, intending to supply medicine amid the fighting. In the meantime, the war taught him to cook. 鈥淵ou need to eat, so you have to learn,鈥 he says bluntly.

Still, more than anything, he longs for his mother鈥檚 gurusa, or wholemeal pancakes. Recalling how she always served them alongside chicken soup, Mr. Salih removes his sunglasses and quickly wipes tears from his eyes. He opens his mouth, but no words arrive.

He arrived in Uganda this June, and says he plans to bring his family from Egypt to join him. For now, however, Mr. Salih eats at Mr. Assoul鈥檚 restaurant three times a week, arriving mid-morning and staying until the sky begins to darken.

鈥淲hen we are sharing food, we are also sharing love,鈥 he says, his face finally splitting into a wide grin.

Sophie Neiman
Adam Sulieman Mustafa stands in the window of his bakery in Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement Oct. 15, 2024.

Remembering Sudan

Across a red dirt road from Mr. Assoul鈥檚 restaurant is Firdaus or 鈥淧aradise,鈥 a bakery operated by Adam Sulieman Mustafa. His sole product is a pitalike bread, prepared using a recipe taught to him by his uncle in Darfur.

When he recalls the fighting there, Mr. Mustafa speaks bluntly and simply, as if listing measurements in a recipe. 鈥淲e were not able to go out to bring food for our children,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e just stayed at home.鈥

He sold his house in Darfur to open his bakery in Uganda, and now rises each morning at 2 a.m. to begin work. Mixing flour, yeast, and salt and tenderly kneading the dough brings him back to a time before war.

鈥淢y bread lets people remember Sudan,鈥 he says.

Mr. Mustafa supplies Mr. Assoul, who also finds himself lost in a flood of memories whenever he eats food from home. Most often, the tastes bring him back to the last Ramadan he spent with his family before the war, quietly breaking their fast together.

Sudanese food sometimes tightens the knots of homesickness in his heart, and he cannot eat at all. For the same reason, he often avoids calling his mother.

When they do talk, however, they always speak of food. Last time, she shared her special trick for making kawara. He should add sweet potatoes to it, she said, the next time he cooks his own.

Asim Zurgan contributed reporting and translation from Kiryandongo.

Part 1: A journalist recounts his daughter鈥檚 miraculous birth in war-torn Sudan

Part 2: 鈥楾hey are our people鈥: How community kitchens are piecing Sudan back together

Part 3: She fled war in Sudan. Now she grapples with returning.

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