This piece explores how food is more than a basic human need; it is a powerful expression of art, culture, history, and identity. Focusing on African cuisine, it highlights how local traditions, shared African influences, and outside cultural exchanges have shaped the continent’s diverse food heritage.
This article examines Khartoum’s recovery after the war and whether services are keeping pace with the return of residents. By early 2026, more than 3.5 million people had returned while basic services and markets have partially resumed. Despite some improvement, economic conditions remain fragile, leaving the city in a transitional phase between partial recovery and full reconstruction.
This essay explores the lived realities of single motherhood in Tanzania through how single mothers navigate economic pressure, workplace barriers, and social stigma while carrying the full weight of caregiving and financial responsibility. Despite societal judgment and systemic neglect, the piece argues that single mothers quietly sustain families and communities through resilience, sacrifice, and unwavering love.
This essay reflects on the role of clan stories and oral traditions in shaping identity in East Africa. Through the origin story of the Amũũnda clan and comparisons with the Luo Kakia narrative, it shows how memory, land, and lineage carry cultural values across generations.
This article explores the Nile River as a foundational pillar of Sudanese history, culture, and identity. From the rise of the Kingdom of Kush to contemporary artistic expression, the Nile has shaped Sudan’s social structures, rituals, folklore, and collective memory.