Wednesday, May 26, 2010

A day for a Sudanese Woman

What is a day like for a Sudanese woman? Do they go to school or work in the office? What is her job or role? What keeps her busy?

The women have such hard life. She is up at dawn even though she is the last to sleep putting her kids to bed, clearing the dishes and finishing other things. To make a simple meal takes a lot of her energy and time. She goes to the bush to collect firewood. She pounds the sorghum or maize in a wood pounder and later grinds them on a smooth stone until the grain becomes soft and powdered (which usually takes hours). She makes tea for her family and visitors. In order to have a cup of coffee it takes a lot of her energy. She roasts the coffee on fire in a thin layer of pan. After the coffee seeds become fully black she pounds them in a pounder. She cooks the coffee on the fire in a coffee pot and it’s ready to serve. She goes to the river to wash clothes and bathe. She fetches water from the river or borehole. She carries unbelievable weight of things on her head. She is strong. Her strength never fails her even in sickness and in weakness. I have never seen such strong women in my entire life.

She is everything to everyone. She is the mother to her children, a wife to her husband, a maid to her visitors, a provider for her family, a helper in her community. She possessed incredible qualities and surpassed all other women in the whole world. She is the woman that Proverbs 31 describes. A perfect noble woman.

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