|   | 
            
               CIVIL WARS IN THE SUDAN 
                 
                  ABSTRACT 
                   
                This essay spans the fifty years of the independent Sudan  (1956-2006) during which 
                the country was torn by five civil wars made  manifest by the historic marginalization of
                the Sudanese on the periphery by the powerful river  Sudanese living in the heartland
                along the Nile, the awlad al-bahr (people  of the river) and the deep cultural, ethnic,
                linguistic, and religious differences between those  of the center and he periphery that
                have produced four of the five civil wars. The longest,  most violent, and destructive were
                the two civil wars in the between the northern and  southern Sudanese, the Anya-Nya
                civil war, 1963-1972 and the second southern civil  war, 1983-2006. Moreover, the
                second southern civil war experienced from 1991 to  1996 its own internal civil war
                between the Dinka and Nuer that caused enormous  casualties and suffering before the
                Sudan People’s Liberation Army could establish its  supremacy. After the 30 June 1989
                military coup d’état and the subsequent Islamist revolution,  insurgencies erupted both in
                the East led by the Beja Congress in 1994 and in the  West in Darfur by the Sudan
                Liberation Movement and the Justice and Equality  Movement in 2003. The Beja
                insurgency was settled in 2006 but the disaster in Darfur continues after great loss of life. 
                 
                This presentation summarizeS each of these  insurgencies, interprets their ideology, and analyzes the deep tensions which  produced them.
                 
                 
                Robert O. Collins, 735 Calle De Los Amigos, Santa Barbara, CA,   93105;  
                Tel.  805-682-7789;  
                E-Mail: <collins@history.ucsb.edu>;   
                Professor of History Emeritus University of California Santa Barbara. 
               |