News

How a Sudanese refugee in Uganda is keeping his homeland alive through food

A group of men sits in a semicircle outside El-Frazdug Khalfallah Alian Assoul’s small restaurant, sipping ginger-infused coffee from glass cups. 

The ritual carries them home, to Sudan. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Sudan’s civil war has forced more than 11 million people to flee their homes. In a refugee camp in Uganda, one restaurant owner is trying to resurrect his homeland with food.

Since civil war broke out there in April 2023, more than 11 million people have been forced to flee their homes. Bringing only what they could carry on their backs, tens of thousands have made their way to this refugee settlement in central Uganda. 

Here even the simplest daily routines are inflected with loss. Mr. Assoul knows that the men who gather at his restaurant each day would rather be somewhere else. Still, as he serves their meals and mingles beneath a feather-white tarpaulin propped up by reeds, he hopes in a small way to resurrect the home they left behind. 

“If you eat alone, you must find someone and tell him to come to share with you. That is the habit of Sudanese people,” Mr. Assoul says. “When we share food, we are sharing our news and emotions.” 

This is the fourth article in a series from Sudan that we are publishing this week, highlighting that country’s travails and citizens’ efforts to overcome them. Read the first three articles herehere, and here.

A group of men sits in a semicircle outside El-Frazdug Khalfallah Alian Assoul’s small restaurant, sipping ginger-infused coffee from glass cups. They gossip in Arabic, pausing only to call for another cup of coffee, before continuing their chatter, seemingly impervious to the heat of a cloudless sky.

The ritual carries them home, to Sudan.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Sudan’s civil war has forced more than 11 million people to flee their homes. In a refugee camp in Uganda, one restaurant owner is trying to resurrect his homeland with food.

Since civil war broke out there in April 2023, more than 11 million people have been forced to flee their homes. Bringing only what they could carry on their backs, tens of thousands have made their way to this refugee settlement in central Uganda.

Here even the simplest daily routines are inflected with loss. Mr. Assoul knows that the men who gather at his restaurant each day would rather be somewhere else. Still, as he serves their meals and mingles beneath a feather-white tarpaulin propped up by reeds, he hopes in a small way to resurrect the home they left behind.

“If you eat alone, you must find someone and tell him to come to share with you. That is the habit of Sudanese people,” Mr. Assoul says. “When we share food, we are sharing our news and emotions.”

Sophie Neiman

El-Frazdug Khalfallah Alian Assoul opened a restaurant in Uganda’s Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement four months ago.

Inherited recipes

Food has long been an important part of Mr. Assoul’s life. When he was growing up in the city of Omdurman, just across the Nile from the capital, Khartoum, residents greeted new neighbors with steaming plates of bamia mafrooka, a green okra soup, and kisra, a paper-thin sorghum flatbread.

Previous ArticleNext Article