Nilotic
VIP
Not a good point lmao. Sudan is multi-ethnic, multi-linguistic, and multicultural. Somalia as a nation consists of one ethnicity, united by language and identity, only divisions by clan exist.
Your reasoning in trying to discredit her criticism of Somali anti-blackness by referencing the actions of Sudanese Arabs, a totally different and culturally divergent group, basically polar opposites in the spectrum of Sudanese cultures lmaois similar to trying to link Kenyan Somalis with Kenyan Bantu cultural flaws that bring crimes and injustices to all other Non-Bantu Kenyans and using that to shut down anytime a Kenyan Somali decides to speak about injustice in the Somali ethnic group or anywhere else on the continent.
I don't really know what you were trying to say with this but it sounded a lot like "Stfu, people you formerly shared nationality with are super anti-black, so that means you can't be accusing us of the same thing"?
A Dinka (who proudly attests to their blackness anywhere and everywhere) would be furious that you even try paint him as complacent with Sudanese Arabs who are plagued with Anti-blackness.
Southerners are well aware of the Anti-Blackness of Northerners. If you think these Sudo activists are letting Sudanese Arabs get a pass and coming for Somalis for the fun of it, you're delusional and have a main-character syndrome for Somalia because you've been conditioned to think it's all about y'all. I want to mention that a Southerner who even attempts to slightly soften or sugar-coat the severity of North Sudanese anti-blackness commits an act almost sacrilegious, that he himself is putting his wellbeing at risk. If my words sound harsh or possibly trying to induce some national conflict, I promise this isn't my goal, you just said some stuff that sounded like straight bull, I had to type this up.
I'm sure @Nilotic who doesn't shy away for his opposition to North Sudanese anti-blackness can comment on this. Better hear it from the actual people than me, an intermediary trying to speak on behalf of them.
South Sudanese certainly don't let Sudanese Arabs off the hook for the horrible things that transpired and the attitudes and ideologies that inspired those tragic events.
Our historically informed attitudes toward Sudanese Arabs are widely held, whereas anything negative (pertaining to other groups) is really not all that common -- barring isolated instances.