A “Lost Boy” returns, transforming lives in Southern Sudan
In 1985, Sudan was wracked by civil war.
Millions died. Millions more were displaced, fleeing for their lives to refugee camps in Ethiopia, Kenya, and other neighboring countries. Finally, in 2005, after over two decades of war, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed. A truce was declared and the semi-autonomous Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) was established for that region.
Among those who fled through barren, war-torn southern desert were thousands of children, mostly boys, some as young as five. They became known as “The Lost Boys of Sudan”.
Salva Dut was one of those boys. As an 11-year old Dinka from Tonj in southwest Sudan, Salva fled first to Ethiopia. Then later, as a teenager, he led 1500 "Lost Boys" hundreds of miles through the Southern Sudan desert to the Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya. That courage and heroic perseverance continue to this day. Relocated to the United States in 1996, he now leads Water for Sudan, Inc., the non-profit organization he founded in 2004.
An American citizen based in Rochester, New York, Salva spends half the year in Southern Sudan overseeing Water for Sudan’s drilling operations. During the rest of the year he continues his college studies in International Business while working as president of Water for Sudan, Inc., educating people about Southern Sudan and fund-raising for well-drilling.
Salva’s knowledge of local cultures, his contacts within GOSS and other non-governmental organizations enable Water for Sudan to operate effectively in ways that few development organizations can.
Download Salva's Bio. (PDF)




