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The Mabaan people speak Mabaan, and are mostly farmers and shepherds. Men and women work together to cultivate crops such as millet, sesame, and beans. The men also engage in hunting and fishing, while women collect fruits and grain. The women wear and make lingans (beads in the Mabaan language), for kids when the graduate or weddings.
The Maba, also called Bargo or Wadai people, are a Sunni Muslim ethnic group found primarily in the mountains of Wadai region in eastern Chad and southern Sudan. [3] Their population is estimated to be about 542,000. [2] Other estimates place the total number of Bargo people in Sudan to be about 28,000. [2]
Al Balabil (Arabic: البلابل, transl. The Nightingales) were a popular Sudanese vocal group of three sisters, mainly active from 1971 until 1988. Their popular songs and appearance as modern female performers on stage, as well as on Sudanese radio and television, earned them fame all over East Africa and beyond, and they were sometimes referred to as the "Sudanese Supremes". [1]
A Sudanese woman rallied protesters outside the military headquarters in Khartoum on April 8, social media users reported.The image of the woman was widely shared by social media users in Sudan ...
Exhausted, pregnant and weeping, Sudanese nurse Tafaul Omar sat under the scorching desert sun along with 14 other migrants who said they had been arrested by Tunisian authorities and dumped in ...
also: People: By gender: Women: By nationality: Sudanese This category exists only as a container for other categories of Sudanese women . Articles on individual women should not be added directly to this category, but may be added to an appropriate sub-category if it exists.
Shaigiya swords and lances were no match for Egyptian firearms, and the Egyptian troops continued their conquest of the Sudan. [4]However, as a heroine from Sudanese history, the example of Mihera Bint Abboud has been an inspiration to women participating in anti-colonial politics in the Sudan, [5] as well as in the 2019–2020 Sudanese protests.
Emma McCune (3 February 1964 – 24 November 1993 [1]) was a British foreign aid worker in Sudan who married then-guerrilla leader Riek Machar. She was killed when hit by a matatu in Kenya whilst expecting her first child.