Tuesday, May 12, 2026

WCC News: Hope for peace keeps Sudanese Anglican priest among his people

Every Sunday, Rev. Daramali Ismael Gabriel Abudigin leads a two-hour church service in Tawila, a small town in the Darfur region, western Sudan.
Rev. Daramali Ismael Gabriel Abudigin with internally displaced persons in Tawila, town in the Darfur region of the western Sudan. Photo: Courtesy of Rev. Daramali Ismael Gabriel Abudigin
12 May 2026

The Anglican priest is the only church pastor in the town, which recently absorbed thousands of internally displaced persons, fleeing war and famine in El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur State, and the Zam Zam Camp on its outskirts.

The 45-year-old priest arrived in the town from El-Fasher, together with a group of Christians—including children and women—after bomb, gun, and drone attacks forced the closure of his church.

The group had stayed with Abudigin in the city, where he was the last priest standing when all other clerics had fled. Like sheep and their shepherd, the Christians had walked along with their priest, as they sought a safe refuge in Tawila.

“We are living in peace, but it’s difficult to get food or a place to stay,” said the priest from Tawila. “I am the only priest here and I can feel the struggles of the people.”

Abudigin is now caring for 117 families, each comprising 5-7 people, or approximately 500-700 people in Tawila.

The priest’s actions underline the challenges to peace that clerics go through when their communities are caught in conflict.

A critical refuge

The families, drawn from different denominations, assemble for services on Sundays, under a large lalob tree–Arabic for “desert dates” or “soapberry”—in one of the camps. Here, the congregation prays for peace, as they encourage each other, amidst challenges with basic needs such as food, shelter, and medicines.

The priest said meeting under the lalob tree carries a special meaning, as the tree symbolizes peace, hope, and resilience in Sudan and South Sudan. The trees are common venues for peace discussions among the Sudanese communities.

“The people have suffered a lot. So, we need to end this war,” said Abudigin, while describing this as a daily prayer for the congregation and other Christians in Sudan. “The people need peace. They also need something to eat immediately.”

He is, however, concerned that the brutal war is not getting enough international attention, despite the magnitude of the displacement, death, and destruction.

Last year, his resolve to stay with his followers in El-Fasher was strained when a stray bullet killed Roman Catholic priest, Fr Luka Jomo, on 13 June 2025. Abudigin had taken the priest to the hospital after he was hit by a bullet during an attack by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

But while he should have left then, Abudigin instead kept his church open and assembled all Christians in one church to protect them from the random shooting, drone strikes, and bombings.

When an attack by the paramilitary killed two people within the church and injured several others, Abudigin also decided to leave, finally reaching Tawila.

The town became a critical refuge for internally displaced persons fleeing El-Fasher, as the war intensified in the city, triggering famine and disease.

The paramilitary had besieged El-Fasher for a brutal 18-month period starting in April 2024. The siege ended on 26 October 2025.

At the moment, 700,000 to 1 million people have found shelter in camps around Tawila, making it one of the world’s largest settlements for internally displaced persons.

The small town has remained peaceful in the three years of the Sudanese war. Now settled in town, Abudigin appeals: “Give the people food, help end the war. Everyone is tired of it.”

WCC member churches in Sudan

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa. 

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WCC News: Protecting children means accelerating climate solutions

As part of a series of speakers at Erfurt University in Germany, World Council of Churches (WCC) senior programme lead for Children and Climate Frédérique Seidel delivered a lecture entitled “Accelerating Climate Solutions: The Most Urgent Child Protection Measure of our Time.”
A woman carries a sign reading 'Our Children deserve a future', as tens of thousands of people - including environmental groups, children, youth, charities, climate activists, trade unionists and indigenous people - march through Glasgow city centre during the United Nations climate change conference COP26, 6 November 2021. Photo: Albin Hillert/Life on Earth
12 May 2026

She spoke on how churches can best use their influence to improve children’s lives, and outlined the WCC Churches’ Commitments to Children programme that began in 2015.  

“It was the children themselves who urged us to include climate justice as one of the three pillars of this programme,” explained Seidel. “In this commitment, the programme supports churches in 120 countries with tools and know-how to accelerate behavioural change towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions for and with children and young people.”

While the climate solutions empowerment part of the programme was progressing, many teenagers engaged in the WCC Churches’ Commitments to Children expressed dismay over banks and pension funds continuing to finance fossil fuels, which accelerate global warming. 

“Indeed, the 2025 Banking on Climate Chaos Report shows that fossil fuel financing from the world’s 60 largest banks has reached USD $7.9 trillion since the adoption of the Paris Agreement, with 2024 seeing a rise in financing for fossil fuel expansion to $429 billion,” said Seidel. 

Seidel pointed out that the money a church or a family puts aside – whether through workplace pensions, savings, or even just in day-to-day current accounts – is busily shaping the future. “Often our money is being used to fund activities we would never dream of supporting directly: for example, carbon bombs – new drilling for fossil fuels,” she said. “A carbon bomb is a fossil fuel extraction project, such as a coal mine, that can cause over a gigaton of CO2 emissions during its lifetime.”

Faith plays crucial role

There are 425 carbon bombs worldwide. “We need to reassure children that adults are doing all they can to halt the life-threatening increase of CO2 emissions,” said Seidel. “More and more churches are therefore asking their financial service providers for transparency on how their investments are managed.”

Seidel also noted that, in the current absence of effective legal frameworks prohibiting new carbon bombs, the most powerful alternative and source of hope for children’s future comes from asset owners. 

“The climate crisis is a children’s crisis,” she said. “And it is a fossil fuel crisis.”

This is why the WCC Churches’ Commitments to Children promotes the “Save Children’s Lives – Climate-Responsible Banking Survival Guide.” 

Seidel explained that, by engaging with our banks and pension funds, we can help billions of young people worldwide to lift a far too heavy burden from their shoulders. "We need to ensure that our assets are removed from investments into drilling for new fossil fuel projects and redirected into sectors accelerating climate solutions, such as renewable energies,” she said. “Every church, individual, institution, and business can help to defuse carbon bombs through their banking.”

Legal efforts are also needed to address the current impunity of disinformation on global warming, Seidel noted. “Your faith plays a crucial role to ensure that we meet the small window of time to halt CO2 emissions,” she said.

WCC publication "Hope for Children Through Climate Justice: Legal Tools to Hold Financiers Accountable"

Learn more about Churches’ Commitments to Children and Climate-Responsible Banking

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The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

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WCC News: Hope for peace keeps Sudanese Anglican priest among his people

Every Sunday, Rev. Daramali Ismael Gabriel Abudigin leads a two-hour church service in Tawila, a small town in the Darfur region, western Su...