Unit before crying on the homeland – a national murmur – ✍️ Dr Tariq Ashary

By participating in a certain number of groups, he was disappointed with the reform, because the discussions are alienated.

Sudan in major crisis moments, the homeland becomes like the mother who seeks help from her children, all need it without exception, without quarrel and challenge, but unite and protect her from collapse. Sudan is held today at a crossroads; Either we raise ourselves with our conscience and put our differences behind our back, or we leave ourselves to ambitions and conflicts until we wake up a day on a homeland that we have lost with our hands.

The unit is not a secondary option, but rather an existential necessity. Enemies only aspire in a divided homeland, and gaps only develop when one of us moves away from each other. We have a history lesson; The people did not win until their words met and united their ranks, and was not defeated until they were occupied by their small differences at the expense of their major case.

The union does not mean canceling the difference, but rather means managing diversity in the spirit of national responsibility, where the first loyalty to Sudan is neither for the tribe, the party nor the individual. The challenges we face with the destruction of the war, the dispersion of the people and the collapse of the infrastructure are all resolved unless we unite and that we face them together.

The homeland is not only a plot of land that we live above, but rather a story, an identity and a common memory that carries us all. Sudan is bleeding today, and the voices of crying get up from each house, but cry alone does not restore the countries of origin and do not stop bleeding. What returns Sudan to its position is the union is to wake up from our negligence before becoming foreigners on our land.

History has learned that division is the shortest way to collapse and that fragmentation only opens the doors of ambitions. Who benefits from our weakness other than those who await our wealth and our unity? Who pays the price at the end, the simple citizen who lost safety, housing, food and medicine?

The union does not mean that we are similar, but rather to respect our differences and manage them rationally, to place the homeland on the tribe, above the party and above close personal interests. The homeland is larger than everyone, and only everyone will preserve it.

The blood of the martyrs, the patience of the displaced and the tears of mothers is a confidence in our neck, and this confidence will only be we unless we one. Whether our struggle is a fight for construction, for the Renaissance of Sudan, no chairs or personal ambitions.

O Sons of Sudan, if we are not united today, we will be forced tomorrow to cry on a lost country. Let us raise our high slogan

“Be united before crying on the homeland, because time is no longer waiting.” And to make Sudan after the war stronger and the most beautiful







Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button