ሕጂ፡ “Gendered Frontlines: Feminist Readings of Militarization in Sudan, South Sudan, and Eritrea” ዝብል ሪፖርት ብትግርኛ ነቕርቦ ኣለና፣ እዚ ምርምር እዚ ነቶም ብውትህድርና፣ ምምዝባልን መወዳእታ ዘይብሉ ሃገራዊ ኣገልግሎትን ብቐጥታ ዝተጸልዉን ዝተቐርጹን ተዛረብቲ ትግርኛ ዝያዳ ተበጻሒ ንምግባር ዝዓለመ እዩ። We are now sharing the Tigrinya version of “Gendered Frontlines: Feminist Readings of Militarization in Sudan, South Sudan, and Eritrea,” making this research more accessible to Tigrinya-speaking audiences and communities directly affected and shaped by militarization, displacement, and indefinite national service.
In this second piece of *Art, Grief, Space and Everything in Between*, Rebecca Khamala reflects on the role of rest, self-compassion, and healing during her residency at 32° East. Through an exploration of fellow artist Birungi Kawooya’s installation *Rest in Time and Space*, the article considers how art, cultural materials, and creative spaces can help us process trauma, reconnect with ourselves, and reimagine rest as an essential act of care.
By Alaa Gamal
Since the outbreak of war in 2023, takayas (community kitchens) have emerged as vital grassroots responses to growing food insecurity and humanitarian collapse. Supported by volunteers, local communities, and diaspora networks, they provide essential food assistance in areas affected by conflict.
By Mweha Msemo
This article explores the growing presence of women in Tanzania’s safari and tourism industry, highlighting how figures like Agape Mrema are challenging long-standing gender norms in a male-dominated field. Once discouraged from such careers, women are increasingly becoming safari guides, entrepreneurs, and mentors, despite cultural, financial, and structural barriers.
This article explores the rise of digital violence against Sudanese women after the April 15, 2023 war, based on a 2025 survey and testimonies. It highlights how social media has become a major space for harassment and defamation, alongside significant psychological impacts such as anxiety and social withdrawal. The report also points to weak legal protections in Sudan and calls for stronger cybercrime laws, platform accountability, and improved digital safety measures for women.