Apuk Padoc Media
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04/04/2026
The Land That Chose Silence
By Chol Machok Augustine Magak
Once, in a vast and fertile land between two rivers, there lived two communities, neighbors by geography, but strangers in spirit. The land was called Aduel, meaning “gift,” for it had fed generations with its rich soil, green pastures, and flowing streams. For years, the people of Aduel lived in quiet understanding. Children crossed paths without fear, cattle grazed freely, and the elders settled disputes with words, not weapons. But as time passed, something changed.
It began with whispers. “This land belongs to us,” one side claimed.
“No, it was our ancestors who first settled here,” the other argued.
What started as murmurs grew into meetings. Meetings turned into arguments. Arguments turned into anger. The elders tried to intervene, reminding both sides that "The land does not belong to us, we belong to the land." But their voices were drowned by pride.
Soon, boundaries were drawn where none had existed before. Trees were marked, rivers divided, and grazing paths blocked. Young men, once friends, began to see each other as enemies. They sharpened not only their spears, but their hatred.
One dry season, when water was scarce and cattle were weak, a fight broke out at the riverbank. No one remembers who threw the first stone. But everyone remembers what followed. Homes were burned. Cries filled the night. Blood soaked the same soil that once grew their food. Revenge followed revenge, and grief followed grief. Fathers buried sons. Mothers wailed for children. And still, no one stepped back.
The land of Aduel, once full of life, became a battlefield. Years passed.
The fighting did not bring victory. It only brought emptiness. The cattle died. The farms lay abandoned. The rivers ran quietly, no longer disturbed by laughter or life. The survivors, broken and tired, fled in different directions, seeking peace far from the land they had destroyed.
And so, Aduel remained.
1. Silent.
2. Unclaimed.
3. Unloved.
Grass grew over forgotten homes. Wind passed through empty compounds. The land, once fought over with such passion, now belonged to no one.
One day, a traveler passed through the area. Seeing the vast, untouched land, he asked an old man nearby:
“Who owns this place?” The old man sighed deeply and replied: “Once, many claimed it. Now, it claims no one.”
He paused, then added:
“They fought to own it… until it owned their graves.”
Conclusion
A Message to Apuk Padoc and Lou Paher communities
People of Apuk Padoc and Lou Paher, this story of Aduel is not far from us, it is a mirror. Let it teach us before it becomes our reality. The issue of the Meshra must not be allowed to grow into conflict. If it is not abandoned for the sake of peaceful coexistence, the same path of Aduel awaits, where land remains, but people disappear.
Learn this truth
1. No land is more valuable than life.
2. No boundary is worth the blood of brothers.
3. Choose dialogue over division.
4. Choose wisdom over pride.
5. Choose peace, while there is still something left to save.
Because once the land falls silent…
it may never speak life again.
24/02/2026
South Sudan Will Rise Again
By Chol Machok Augustine Magak -PublicHealth Advocate a.k.a Chol-Mangou Machok
In the heart of South Sudan, where the River Nile stretches like a ribbon of life across our land, there lives a story that refuses to die. It is not a story written in books alone. It is written in the dust of our villages, in the tears of our mothers, in the silence of graves, and in the courage of our youth.
It is the story of a people who have suffered, but have never surrendered.
We have seen war.
We have buried dreams.
We have watched brothers turn against brothers.
We have walked on roads that were once full of hope but later filled with fear.
Yet somehow, every morning, the sun still rises over Juba, over Wau, over Malakal, over Bentiu, over our villages in Warrap and Greater Tonj.
The sun rises as if to say: “This is not the end.”
The Tree That Refused to Die
There was once a farmer in a small village. During the years of conflict, his crops were burned, his cattle were raided, and his house was reduced to ashes. In the middle of his compound stood a mango tree. It had been cut, damaged, and scorched by fire. Everyone believed it was finished.
But when the rainy season came, something remarkable happened. Tiny green leaves began to appear from the blackened branches.
The farmer smiled and said,
“If this tree still believes in the rain, who am I to give up?”
South Sudan is that tree.
We have been cut.
We have been burned.
We have been shaken by storms.
But deep inside our roots is something stronger than conflict. It is faith. It is resilience. It is the belief that God did not bring us this far to abandon us.
Why We Must Still Believe?
We must believe because:
Our elders survived decades of struggle before independence.
Our mothers carried this nation in their wombs even when bombs were falling.
Our youth are still going to school under trees, still dreaming of becoming doctors, teachers, engineers, and leaders.
Our communities still gather to pray, even after losing everything.
Faith is not pretending that pain does not exist.
Faith is standing in the middle of the pain and declaring: “This will not define our future.”
The story of South Sudan did not begin in peace, but it will not end in chaos.
Change Is Slow, But It Is Possible
History teaches us something powerful: no nation remains broken forever.
Countries that once knew civil war now stand strong. Countries that once knew famine now feed the world. Countries that once knew dictatorship now celebrate democracy.
If change was possible for others, why not for South Sudan?
Change does not start in the State House.
Change starts in the heart.
It starts when:
A young man refuses to pick up a gun.
A leader chooses dialogue over revenge.
A teacher continues teaching despite unpaid salaries.
A civil servant works honestly even when corruption tempts him.
A community forgives instead of retaliating.
Real transformation begins quietly, like rain before a harvest.
The Courage Within Us
Courage is not the absence of fear.
Courage is staying hopeful when everything looks hopeless.
In Warrap State, in Lakes, in Upper Nile, in Equatoria, our people continue to trade, to farm, to build tukuls, to sing in churches, to celebrate weddings. That is resilience.
Resilience is rebuilding your house for the fifth time.
Resilience is sending your child to school after losing everything.
Resilience is praying for peace while surrounded by conflict.
We are not weak people.
We are a tested people.
And tested people become strong nations.
Faith: Our Greatest Weapon
The Bible says, “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.”
South Sudan has experienced a long night.
But morning does not fail to come.
When we pray for peace, we are not naïve. We are powerful.
When we believe in unity, we are not foolish. We are visionary.
When we forgive, we are not weak. We are building the foundation of a future nation.
For God sees the tears of South Sudan.
And no tear is wasted.
The Generation That Must Rise
There is a generation rising now; educated, exposed, connected, aware. A generation that understands data, governance, health systems, agriculture, and technology. A generation that wants development more than division.
This generation must refuse tribal hatred.
It must reject corruption.
It must value education over violence.
It must build institutions instead of destroying communities.
South Sudan will change not by accident, but by intentional citizens.
One Day
One day, our roads will be safe.
One day, our hospitals will function fully.
One day, our schools will produce innovators.
One day, investors will come not to exploit, but to partner.
One day, our children will read about conflict in history books, not in headlines.
And when that day comes, we will say:
“We did not give up.”
Final Message
To believe in South Sudan is not blindness.
It is bravery.
To hope for change is not weakness.
It is strength.
We are the tree that refused to die.
We are the nation that refuses to surrender.
We are the people who still pray, still build, still dream.
South Sudan will change.
Not because it is easy.
But because its people are stronger than its storms.
And storms never last forever. 🌅
14/01/2026
Apuk Padoc community Conference commences in Akop Payam. This signal a need for peace and community engagement on others insecurity related and development across Apuk land.
📷 Mayom Akoon Mayom
22/10/2025
Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Johnny Wek, Matthew Kuach Dhol
Funeral Prayers Announcement 📢
The Family of the Late Kuol Madhang Ayai invites family, friends of Apuk padoc community, greater Tonj and South Sudan at large for the funeral prayers of the late Spiritual leader Kuol madhang Ayai who passed on last month in Juba, the prayer will be held on 17th August 2025 at the Family house in Abyei-chok Gumbo
The organizing committee of the late’s prayers is inviting the general public to attend funeral prayers.
Date: 17-8-2025
Venue: Abyei-chok Gumbo
Time: 9:00am-6:00pm
Thanks
Information desks, organizing committee.
08/08/2025
Funeral Prayers Announcement 📢
The Family of the Late Kuol Madhang Ayai invites family, friends Apuk padoc community, greater Tonj and South Sudan at large for the funeral prayers of the late Spiritual leader Kuol madhang Ayai who passed on last month in Juba, the prayer will be held on 17th August 2025 at the Family house in Abyei-chok Gumbo
The organizing committee of the late’s prayers is inviting the the general public to attend funeral prayers.
Date: 17-8-2025
Venue: Abyei-chok Gumbo
Time: 9:00am-6:00pm
Thanks
Information desks, organizing committee.
06/06/2025
Apuk padoc community in Juba invites the general public to attend the fundraising event that is organized for the construction of Kiir Mayardit hospital in Apuk padoc
The event will take place this Sunday 8th of June 2025 at Nyakuron cultural center.
Date: 8-6-2025.
Venue: Nyakuron cultural center.
A message by Majok Dut Muorwel
My dear Comrades from Warrap State,
investigating the source of cholera outbreak from a conspiracy theory point of view may not provide a credible solution. While the first priority is to educate our communities on hygiene and sanitation plus drugs for treating the disease; the second priority must go to questioning ourselves as to where have the Jieng noble codes of conduct gone to?
In the recent past, a Jieng never used to beg for good or accept any gift from strangers. Food and other gifts were shared only between relatives, age mates who know each other or who are longtime friends. This noble trait and many other positive cultural practices of Jieng, from my own view point, are disappearing at an alarming rate. Have we accepted our positive Jieng traditions to disappear in favor of negative modern behaviors such as the reported acceptance of food distribution from strangers? If we allow our positive cultural practices to be replaced by negative modern ways of life, that will be the beginning of the disappearance of Jieng society.
Let us stand firm by preserving our positive cultural values and discard or reform negative practices while absorbing only what is positive from the modern ways of life and shun the negative practices.
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What are your thoughts on this message?
16/04/2025
Important Announcement!
May intake is ongoing
Dear public,
The Nileford Institute of Technology is by announcing that May intake is Open for the interested who are seeking to advance their education growth or careers. Waste no more times.
The opportunity is here for you, just grabs your form in Nileford Institute of Technology, Tonj South County and be among the professionals of your choice in just three years from now.
Tonj Times
15/04/2025
Announcement
Inviation for Funeral Prayers of late Sultan Fidel Majok Matik
On behalf of Organizing Committee and the information sub committee respectively, I would like to invite relatives, friends, in-laws, community elders , youths leaders & entire greater Tonj and Warrap state community and the general public to attend funeral prayers of late Sultan Fidel Majok Matik on Saturday 19th April 2025 at his son Ustaz Abraham Paduol Majok Residence in Abyei-Chok area along Juba-Bor high way.
Arrival and starting time will be 10 am to 4 pm respectively.
Late Sultan Fidel Majok Matik passed away on 11 April 2025 at his home village of Apuk Padoc in Tonj North County, Warrap State.
Your present to share this black day with us as Tonj community and Warrap state as a whole will be highly appreciated.
For more information, contact the following numbers ; 0987870555, 0923877777, 0980806166
Thanks,
Information Desk
Organizing Committee for Funeral Prayers
Cc Tonj Leads Media
Tonj Times
Dalwuot Media
Living Standard Media
Nation Prime Media
15/04/2025
Good News, Apuk Padoc Community!
We are thrilled to share a moment of great pride and joy as Michael Manyang Bol Madut, a proud son of Apuk Padoc, has achieved a remarkable milestone by ranking Number 10 nationally in the South Sudan Primary 8 National Examinations!
The entire Apuk Padoc community celebrates this outstanding achievement. We are deeply proud of you, Michael! Your hard work, dedication, and brilliance shine as a beacon of hope and inspiration for all young learners in our community. Surely, your late father, a Liberator, would be proud of the man you're becoming today.
Let us all come together to honor and celebrate this amazing son of Apuk Padoc.
Congratulations, Michael, the son of the Liberator!
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