St. John's News

Simon Aban Deng, Refugee and Former Child Slave, Inspires Crowd at Social Justice Conference at St. John’s University

October 16, 2007

As Mary Ann Dantuono, Associate Director of the Vincentian Center for Church and Society at St. John’s University, stated “we have saved for last our discussion of human freedom as the critical foundation of a just and moral society.” Dantuono was referring to the final speaker of the biennial Vincentian Chair of Social Justice Conference, Simon Aban Deng (Sudanese refugee and child slave who is the founder of the “Sudan Freedom Walk”). His emotional speech about his plight and captivity poignantly closed a thought-provoking day of workshops, speakers and moderators discussing social justice and poverty facing our society today. The full-day conference was held this past Saturday at the University’s Queens Campus.

The growing problems of devastation in the Sudan have worsened recently Deng noted, as the high rate of rape, people being taken into slavery (most of which are young children) and villages being burned and destroyed rises at an alarming rate.

“By inviting me here today you have given me a chance to be the voice of the voiceless,” said Deng, opening his speech before a crowd of more than 250 at the University’s Bent Hall Auditorium. “There are tragedies being committed to this day in the Sudan and other parts of Africa.”

Deng was kidnapped as a nine-year old child by Arab troops and given to a family as a gift. He was separated from his family and had no where to turn for the better part of three years. It was that time of reflection and inner-strength that drove him to never give up hope although he faced insurmountable odds. “I had no friends and no one to talk to. My friends were my patience and hope,” noted Deng.

Deng’s escape would happen due to a chance reunion with a fellow Sudanese from his tribe, while out one day with the family that enslaved him. That friend would go out of his way to help free him from the burden of slavery and eventually reunited him with his loved ones. Yet his heart was empty and he couldn’t live in denial by remaining quiet and forsaking those who continue to suffer in his homeland.
 
“I’ve come forward to tell my story, even though it’s been difficult, so that this atrocity would have the attention it deserves. I ask you, my fellow human beings, to get involved and be the voice, because the actions that you take today will be the actions that save a life tomorrow,” noted Deng.

Today, Deng travels the country, inspiring audiences with his passionate plea for action on behalf of the hundreds of thousands of victims of Sudanese slavery and genocide. He has established an organization called “I Abolish” which chronicles him and his colleague’s mission and their tagline “slavery is not history.” The organization’s web site can be found on the Internet at www.iabolish.com.

Deng has addressed students at Harvard, Yale, Columbia and St. John’s University and has met with President Bush and Southern Sudanese president Salva Kiir. In March 2006, Deng also embarked on the Sudan Freedom Walk, a 300-mile trek from NY to DC to call for an end to slavery and genocide in Sudan.

For more information contact Dominic Scianna, Director of Media Relations at St. John’s University by calling (718) 990-6185 or e-mail inquiries to sciannad@stjohns.edu. For information on the Vincentian Center for Church and Society call (718) 990-1612.