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Sudan Tribune

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BOOK : The Lost Boys of Sudan

The Lost Boys of Sudan An American Story of the Refugee Experience.
From genocide in Africa to a second chance in America.
By Mark Bixler

The Lost Boys of Sudan
In 2000 the United States began accepting 3,800 refugees from one of Africa’s longest civil wars. They were just some of the thousands of young men, known as “Lost Boys,” who had been orphaned or otherwise separated from their families in the chaos of a brutal conflict that has ravaged Sudan since 1983. The Lost Boys of Sudan focuses on four of these refugees. Theirs, however, is a typical story, one that repeated itself wherever the Lost Boys could be found across America. It is a story of the countless challenges of “making it” in a strange new place after years on the run in Sudan or in refugee camps in Kenya and Ethiopia.

Jacob Magot, Peter Anyang, Daniel Khoch, and Marko Ayii were among 150 or so Lost Boys who were resettled in Atlanta. Like most of their fellow refugees, they had never before turned on a light switch, used a kitchen appliance, or ridden in a car or subway train – much less held a job or balanced a checkbook. We relive their early excitement and disorientation, their growing despondency over fruitless job searches, adjustments they faced upon finally entering the workforce, their experiences of post-9/11 xenophobia, and their undying dreams of acquiring an education.

As we immerse ourselves in the Lost Boys’ daily lives, we also get to know the social services professionals and volunteers, celebrities, community leaders, and others who guided them – with occasional detours – toward self-sufficiency. Along the way author Mark Bixler looks closely at the ins and outs of U.S. refugee policy, the politics of international aid, the history of Sudan, and the radical Islamist underpinnings of its government. America is home to more foreign-born residents than ever before; the Lost Boys have repaid that gift in full through their example of unflagging resolve, hope, and faith.

Mark Bixler, a staff writer at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, has also been a reporter for the Winston-Salem Journal.

Learn more about the author at www.lostboysbook.com .

March 2005 288 pp. 6 x 9 in. 14 photos 1 map

ISBN 0-8203-2499-X cloth $24.95

CRITICS

Mark Bixler shows what the refugee experience is like for tribal, traditional, and traumatized people as they crash into modern America. While there are quite a few books on the Sudanese in America, this is the one that connects personal stories to history, foreign policy, and public policy. It’s erudite and readable, a rare combination.” – Mary Pipher, author of The Middle of Everywhere: Helping Refugees Enter the American Community

The journey of the ‘Lost Boys of Sudan’ is both heartbreaking and inspiring. It speaks to the strength of the human spirit to survive and grow under even the most abject circumstances. Their plight eloquently shows us the terrible consequences for children of war, and their personal triumphs over adversity symbolize a great hope for Africa and the global community.” – President Jimmy Carter

Mark Bixler’s fascinating narrative follows four young men coming of age as they navigate from a past that saw the slaughter of their families, the destruction of their communities, their flight to years of temporary asylum, their childhood denuded of adult assistance and supervision, in at best a fourth-world environment, to, suddenly, the most complex and competitive society on earth. Bixler also plumbs the strategic limits of American society; the rescue and resettlement of individual refugees such as these is tied to the principled oversoul of America. These young men will succeed here; as they do, we succeed too.” – Roger Winter, former director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement and executive director of the U.S. Committee for Refugees, 1981-2001

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