One brutal day in 2014, Lilian Dawa鈥檚 husband was taken from their home in the town of Yei, South Sudan. Weeks later, Lilian found his body tied to a tree. He had been shot in the chest.

Amid her grief, the 31-year-old social worker pressed on with her work aiding families like hers who were caught in South Sudan鈥檚 civil war. But as the fighting intensified, Lilian lost her job and feared that she might also lose her children.

Lilian fled to neighboring Uganda in September 2016 with her six-year-old son, Harmony, and three-year-old daughter, Destiny. She now lives in the Bidi Bidi refugee settlement鈥攈ome to some 270,000 South Sudanese refugees鈥攚here she helps other women as an 探花精选 community volunteer. 

Lilian Dawa at Bidi Bidi refugee settlement, Uganda
After losing her husband to the civil war in South Sudan, social worker Lilian Dawa fled with her two young children to a refugee settlement in Uganda where she helps other women as an 探花精选 community volunteer.
Photo: Adriane Ohanesian/探花精选

Lilian shares her story:

I saw so many things in South Sudan: massive killing, cold bloodshed, death without reason. I was scared for my children to go to school. Students would run from their classrooms if they heard gunshots. 

People were panicking. You could go to the market in the morning, but by midday people would disappear: If they saw someone dressed like a soldier, they would run away. People couldn鈥檛 sleep because of the gunshots. Life was a misery. 

My job as a social worker ended because the local nonprofit organization that employed me had to close as a result of the insecurity. I managed to earn some money doing manual labor鈥攄igging鈥攂ut as a widow with two children it was hard for me to raise enough for safe transportation to Uganda.

Women and their children arrive from Yei, South Sudan on foot, into the border town of Bosia,
Women and their children arrive on foot from Yei, South Sudan, into the border town of Bosia, where they will be bused to refugee settlements in Uganda. Many faced hunger and violence along the way.
Photo: Adriane Ohanesian/探花精选

 

As a result, we had to walk for ten days to reach the border, joining other people who were also fleeing. I brought water in my five-liter container and some boiled cassava for us to eat. 

There were many threats on the journey: If you left the road for a little distance to look for food, you were are attacked by the rebels and taken into the bush to be given 鈥渁wareness鈥 of their cause. If you came back to the roadside, you were questioned by government soldiers about who you met on the way.

It was also hard for us to find food: You didn鈥檛 see any markets. And many of the houses along the road were abandoned. Only if you could reach the home of a Samaritan, maybe that person would give you something small to eat. But we never dared to hope.

Lilian Dawa bends over to help 17-year-old Jane Noka sift maize outside her home in Bidi Bidi.
Lilian stops to help 17-year-old Jane Noka (center) sift maize outside her home in Bidi Bidi. "It鈥檚 the young generation that will change the future of South Sudan,鈥 she says.
Photo: Adriane Ohanesian/探花精选

 

One day, suddenly, we reached a place where the government soldiers collided with the rebels. My son went missing in the chaos. I was out of my senses because I didn鈥檛 know where my child was. I was thinking, 鈥淗e鈥檚 dead.鈥

I thought that was the end of my life. 

When I reached Uganda, I was still out of my senses missing my boy. My friends had to force me to go to the refugee settlement and register. I stayed in the camp for one month. It was later that I found my child (he鈥檇 joined another group of refugees and eventually ended up in the sprawling camp) and started to feel like myself again.

I saw to it that my son went back to school, because he is my future. But I myself was struggling. Not until I became a volunteer for the 探花精选, working with the women in the community, did my mind start to settle. 

I work with the 探花精选 team that protects women and girls from violence and abuse and educates people about ways to prevent violence. I love my work鈥攊t鈥檚 my talent.

Lilian Dawa stands before a church congregation in Bidi Bidi during an outdoor service.
Lilian stands before a church congregation in Bidi Bidi during a service. "I pray for peace in South Sudan," she says. "I pray that the next generation鈥攎y children鈥攚ill see peace."
Photo: Kellie Ryan/探花精选

The biggest challenge that women here face is self-doubt. Many of them are single, widowed or divorced and they don鈥檛 believe they can stand on their own without support. The women who come to the 探花精选 women鈥檚 center for counseling and to share their experiences tell us what they need to rebuild their lives鈥攕uch as literacy classes and ways to earn an income.

As for my family, I don鈥檛 know what the future will be. South Sudan is unsafe because what seems like a permanent hatred has developed between people: They feel like killing each other. And people are hungry: They are unable to farm due to the fighting and have to scavenge crops left behind by those who fled.

I thank the government of Uganda for the warm welcome, the tireless welcome, to us South Sudanese. And I pray for peace in South Sudan. I pray that the next generation鈥攎y children鈥攚ill see peace. I don鈥檛 wish them to see the life of a refugee again.

I want them to have a bright future.

Update September 30, 2020: Watch Lilian Dawa, 探花精选 president and CEO David Miliband, and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton discuss progress for gender equality at a recent event hosted by the Women鈥檚 Forum for the Economy & Society, the 探花精选 and The New York Times.