Making Sudanese history – a national whisper – ✍️ Dr Tariq Ashiri

When we write with our national sense, we do not write letters on paper, but rather we put in the lines the pulse of the nation. We write with the sincerity of belonging, the pain of love, and an unwavering hope, no matter how strong the storms. Homeland is the dream that never dies, and it is the meaning that unites us, whatever the distance that separates us. When the pen is patriotic, each article becomes a message of loyalty, each word a step towards construction and each idea a call to conscience that Sudan deserves to live for itself and to rise again.
And when we write our national murmur, we write it with the depth of our love for this country. We address in each article a wound in which we try to heal the wounds and put the remedy to each dilemma. We draw with the pen a luminous picture of a country that needs us to paint the scene realistically, far from the embellishments and flourishes with which to decorate a reality that does not exist.
When we write with our national sense, we reformulate Sudanese history in a new spirit that knows no despair. We write to say that this country, despite the wounds, is still alive in us, and that its roots still extend to a land watered by the sweat of our ancestors and the blood of heroes. We write because words can be a bridge that restores confidence, or a stopper that lights up the darkness of the path.
Today’s Sudan, as it goes through the most difficult stages of its history, needs pens that carry the conscience of the nation, and not its interests. To those who write to build and not to destroy. And to those who believe that the nation is not protected by slogans, but by action and sincerity.
Writing with a patriotic sense is not a luxury, but a responsibility. It is a call for reflection, a renewal of values and an affirmation that Sudan is a country about which one can only write with love and honesty. Anyone who writes with a patriotic sense participates in the battle for awareness and puts a brick in the wall of the future.
Ultimately, national sense remains the compass that guides us towards the path of truth, even if our steps are lost. When we write patriotically, we give the homeland its voice, its values their meaning and their place of hope in hearts. Today’s Sudan does not need empty words, but rather honest pens that bleed with love and sincerity. Let us always write with our patriotic sense, because sincere words are capable of building a homeland when swords cannot protect it. Post-war Sudan is stronger and more beautiful.
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