The worlds most popular childrens authors including J.K. Rowling, Judy Blume, R.L. Stine, and Louis Sachar published an open letter Saturday demanding the world wake up to the crisis that Darfurian children endure due to the conflict in Sudan.
More than a dozen childrens authors from North America, Africa, Europe and the Arab world united on the eve of Global Day for Darfur to demand action from the international community on behalf of voiceless and powerless children.
Children barely old enough to walk, let alone run, have seen their homes burnt and razed to the ground, their mothers raped and their fathers killed, read the letter signed by the 14 prominent authors. Most are now holed up in sprawling camps, traumatized and living in fear.
Children in Darfur draw pictures of bombs and guns. It is all they have ever known, the letter continued. Childhood is under attack in Darfur.
Over two million Darfurians have been forced to flee their homes and villages due to violence, most seeking shelter and protection in refugee camps. Moreover, an estimated 200,000 people have been killed in the Darfur conflict since 2003.
The Arab-dominated Khartoum government is accused of backing Arab militias called janjaweed in attacks against ethnic African rebels, who rose up against the government complaining of decades of neglect and discrimination.
It is time to change the narrative. It is time to tell a different story, the authors urged. This April many children in Darfur will be reaching their fifth birthdays without ever having known peace. The world needs to wake up. For too long it has let these children suffer. Our politicians need to act on Darfur.
Political leaders were urged to demand immediate ceasefire, fully support the peacekeepers, and punish those that try to block deployment of peacekeeping troops.
They must also do more to support a peace process based on justice and human rights, so there can be hope of an end to the suffering, the letter read.
The letter was released the day before Global Day for Darfur on Sunday, a day of events aimed at raising awareness of the suffering in western Sudan. In particular this year, thousands of people in over 30 countries marked five years of war in Darfur by highlighting the more than one million Sudanese children who have been caught up in the regions bloodshed.
Protests worldwide marked five years of fighting in Darfur, including media advertisements featuring celebrities such as actors Matt Damon and Thandie Newton highlighting the suffering of Darfurian children.
In the United States, a group of 18 student protestors were arrested Sunday during a demonstration in front of the White House to call President Bush to end the humanitarian crisis in Darfur, according to CNN.
Protesters shouted, "Hey Bush, you can't hide! Help us end this genocide!" and "President Bush! No more excuses!"
Earlier this year, Bush who was the first world leader to label the Darfur violence a genocide urged all nations to step up effort to end once and for all the ethnic slaughter. However, actual progress in Darfur has remained unchanged if not worse, causing frustration among activists. Continue >>






Comments
What is generous for someone worth over 1 billion?
JasonJeffery: Where did it say how much JK Rowling gives? I didn't see that anywhere in the article. Also, JK Rowling is worth more than $1 billion. But from what I understand, she is very generous.
I confess I am not perfect, but what I can't understand is that people like J.K. Rowling which have a personal fortune of over $100 million dollars give very little of their wealth to supporting aid organisations and charities helping those less fortunate. All these authors should practice what they preach when it comes to speaking out on the conditions in Darfur. Imagine if the 50 million plus people instead of spening money on worthless fictional books (not to mention anti-Christian) like harry potter donated the money to solving the peoblems in Africa and Asia - giving little children and babies access to clean drinking water and food to survive, blankets to sleep on and clothes to wear. And imagine if all the supposedly 'Christians' who bought a harry potter book instead gave the money to support the printing of over 10 bibles per harry potter book, giving children a real reaosn for hope. God bless.