Thank you expats – expats, God willing, the day of thanks will not come ✍️ Dear Al-Khair
The war has brought out many noble humanitarian positions… We are in a period of difficult attempts to emerge from successive crises.
The Sudanese people are suffering from the harshness of difficult times.
There is not a single Sudanese who does not suffer, his family, his friends, his neighbors, his acquaintances, or even the population of his homeland, Sudan, does not suffer from the scourges, destructions and devastations of war…
Everyone is hurting, everyone is stressed, and everyone is working hard to share food with those in need.
The Sudanese people are known to be a people whose majority live as daily wage earners or employees waiting for wages, while a handful of them practice various activities and a number of others and large families live on the support and remittances from expatriates…
Suddenly, overnight, everything stopped, everything collapsed and millions of people were left without jobs, without employment, without wages. More than 15 million Sudanese were displaced inside and outside Sudan.
During this past period, which lasts for more than a year and a half, the greatest supporters and main supporters of the Sudanese, after God Almighty, have become the expatriates, yes, the expatriates who assume their responsibility with all chivalry, humanity and patriotism. all pride, dignity and magnificence. It is now the expatriates who spend for more than 15 million Sudanese. The expatriates have appeared and emerged. Their love for their country and their people are humanitarian positions that deserve to be studied and recorded in the world. dictionary of humanity.
Expatriates have been and are still facing worries and difficulties, even though most of them are suffering in exile, but none of them cares, rolled up their sleeves and took a stand without announcement, without hope or request. with everyone, and the situations have been unforgettable and indescribable inside and outside Sudan. Yes, there are slippages, but they exist… This means nothing in the face of this great human tide.
Expats set an example of loyalty, trust, determination and a strong, authentic position…
I do not want to thank them, because it is my duty, and God willing, the day of thanking you will not come. You have wiped away the tears of the oppressed, the poor and the weak, and you have saved lives. of the thirsty, the sick and the destitute. Your position has been and continues to be a symbol of loyalty to this nation, which has been able to implant in you the love of God and the nation, and the love of helping your family members in need. Friends, neighbors, acquaintances and the needy in the camps and shelters. Despite the cruelty of this damned war, you have sown hope in a proud and noble Sudan, a Sudan of pride and nobility.
We are proud of every Sudanese man or woman who separated, immigrated and suffered the cruelty, deprivation, estrangement and estrangement that they suffered. We tell them that what you have given to the people of the country during this period relieves us. and you, from all the years of estrangement, estrangement, separation, sorrow and remorse. The hard years of exile became easier for you after each of you rolled up your sleeves, took courage, stood firm and stood with strength and wonderful strength. , and a great position that was a source of pride and a set of proverbs and stories from the long stories of history…
O Sudanese expatriates who are far from your homeland, it was God's will to make you a support and a support in these days. Now every expatriate knows the secret of his alienation and the reason for his estrangement from his family. he is the refuge, the only refuge, the refuge for food. He is the healing balm.
Expatriates, my greetings and respect to you all… Thank you very much for your duty… I wish I could shake your hands and speak to you one by one to express to each of you my thanks and appreciation for these noble humanitarian positions…
Yahoo is Sudan, and they are welcome with their generosity and magnanimity, I greet you one by one.
Sudanese in appearance, sentimental, Bredo