The instinct to destroy, to be in control, to exploit, derives from imperialism and supremacy. Destruction of the Anyuak kingdom ended 400 years of its independence. It brought suffering to the Anyuak people in East Africa. The British and Ethiopian empires ruined the kingdom by dividing it into two countries. Those invaders brought the powerful kingdom to ashes. While they are profiting from division and occupation, natives of the land are in pain. Evil empires will be brought to justice in the twenty-first century. Removing boundaries created by Anglo-Ethiopian is the key to achieving freedom. After 121 years of exploitation, Anyuaks demand sovereignty and independence.
About the book
Destruction of the Anyuak Kingdom
Unsung Giants:Who Fought to Keep Africa Free
1880, The Anuaks knew it was an exigency, they either reverse the siege by arming themselves with their enemy's firearms, or they would up decimated and displaced.
Africa's pride and independence would be lost.
King Akway Cham confronted the might of the British Empire to defend the Anuaks from colonial servitude.
But how long could his forces last. The Battle of Juom would have the answer. Unsung Giants an engrossing history of the Anuak people who laid the foundations for Western civilization then defended them from imperial colonialization. It revives the lost voice and pride of the African people of Paanywaa in Southern Sudan and Ethiopia where Anuaks now dwell. Revealing the political and cultural institutions of the Anuak people and how they influenced the Anuak relationship with their geographical neighbors in Southern Sudan and Ethiopia, and their resistance to the devastating cultural imperialism of the West.