A customized memorial website built to gather the names of those lost in conflicts in South Sudan and preserve their legacy
This project is designed for one purpose: to honor the memory of each person who has died or gone missing during conflict in South Sudan. You can participate by submitting the name of someone who is lost or by offering a memorial tribute.
The Ushahidi team who worked with us were extremely thoughtful and engaged with the project team to make sure that the end product fit the needs unique to this undertaking. They brought strong expertise to carry out the technical aspects of the work and we deeply appreciated their thoughtful consideration of the challenges specific to this project
An unknown number of people have been killed in conflicts in South Sudan, the most recent of which started in December 2013. The lack of an official death toll makes it very difficult to ascertain the human impact of the violence, and impossible to honour the memory of each person who has died or gone missing.
A small group of civil society volunteers from South Sudan began compiling a list of victims, calling on civilians to send details of their lost friends and loved ones. Over 4000 names have been gathered so far.
With support from the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University, the volunteers sought to create a memorial website as a way to bring wider attention to the shared suffering, give additional meaning to cries for peace, and acknowledge South Sudan’s painful legacy and past. This recognition, a form of symbolic reparations, is intended to help survivors in their process of healing, and contributes to reconciliation amongst individuals and communities.
Ushahidi’s Solutions team built a customised memorialisation website on top of the Ushahidi data collection platform, and provided:
The list of names already collected was uploaded onto the site, and immediately became filterable by date of death or disappearance. The victims’ last known locations were also plotted on an interactive map, showing the spread and density of the violence.
Ushahidi also:
Ultimately the project aims to raise greater and greater awareness of the death toll over time. Reaching a wider audience through a more accessible, navigable, and visible database of victims and integrating multiple ways for citizens to send testimonials contribute to this goal, while reducing the overall time the volunteers need to spend managing and verifying names.