March 24, 2026
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Featured Article

How Clan Stories Preserve Identity in a Changing Africa

By Ngina Mualuko

This essay reflects on the role of clan stories and oral traditions in shaping identity in East Africa. Through the origin story of the Amũũnda clan and comparisons with the Luo Kakia narrative, it shows how memory, land, and lineage carry cultural values across generations.

Featured Article

The Nile River in Sudanese Culture: History, Rituals, Poetry, and National Identity

By Sarah Mohamed Mahgoub

This article explores the Nile River as a foundational pillar of Sudanese history, culture, and identity. From the rise of the Kingdom of Kush to contemporary artistic expression, the Nile has shaped Sudan’s social structures, rituals, folklore, and collective memory.

Featured Article

"Nu, Buna Tetu”: Sharing Coffee, Sharing Lives at Sele Enat Charitable Organization

By Yabsira Getchew

“Buna Tetu” is a monthly event by Sele Enat Charitable Organization in Addis Ababa that unites people through coffee, culture, and compassion to support vulnerable children. Founded in 2002 in response to the HIV/AIDS crisis, Sele Enat provides holistic care and inspires community-driven social change.

Featured Article

A Disabled Journalist in Exile: From Oppression to Establishing an Independent Platform

By Mohamed Wad Al-Sak

This story follows Sudanese journalist Murtada Ahmed, who turned exile into a space for independent journalism. After years of arrests and threats, he founded “Droobb” in Kampala to document war and human rights violations. Working voluntarily from a small room, he continues to resist silence and prove that journalism is an act of dignity and defiance.