Food aid in the Southern Sudan
John Wol and Gabriel Maluk are employed by WODRANS (Widows, Orphans, Disabled, Rehabilitation Association New Sudan) in Katamoto, Southern Sudan. They both lost a leg after stepping on a landmine. They receive work for food in order to teach widows seamstressing. There is no real long-term development in southern Sudan. Whole generations of people have gone without formal education, and because of the scarcity of food it is hard to provide education and development to peple. WODRANS uses work for food in order to allow capacity building in Katamoto, a stable region in Eastern Equatoria.

John Wol and Gabriel Maluk are employed by WODRANS (Widows, Orphans, Disabled, Rehabilitation Association New Sudan) in Katamoto, Southern Sudan. They both lost a leg after stepping on a landmine. They receive work for food in order to teach widows seamstressing. There is no real long-term development in southern Sudan. Whole generations of people have gone without formal education, and because of the scarcity of food it is hard to provide education and development to peple. WODRANS uses work for food in order to allow capacity building in Katamoto, a stable region in Eastern Equatoria.