Truth & Historical Record
Truth is not a weapon — it is a responsibility. This page exists to preserve public memory responsibly, support prevention, and strengthen lawful accountability.
Historical context
Since 2013, South Sudan has experienced periods of severe violence that profoundly affected civilian populations. Numerous public reports, survivor accounts, and international observations describe widespread attacks on civilians, mass displacement, and serious human rights violations.
EquaNaath Vision focuses on ethical documentation: careful language, survivor consent, and a commitment to accuracy.
- We avoid sensationalism and graphic content.
- We use measured, evidence-minded wording.
- We reject ethnic hatred and collective blame.
Our standards are outlined in Ethics.
Documentation
We preserve testimonies and structured summaries to reduce denial and protect historical memory.
Protection
We center civilian dignity and survivor safety through consent, anonymity options, and trauma-aware practices.
Accountability
We support lawful, ethical pathways — grounded in evidence and human rights principles.
Why documentation matters
Without documentation, truth becomes vulnerable to denial, victims are erased from public memory, and accountability becomes harder to pursue. By preserving memory responsibly, we strengthen prevention and support a future where peace is built on acknowledgment — not amnesia.
Silence is not neutral
When history is not acknowledged, injustice is more likely to repeat. EquaNaath Vision amplifies voices responsibly to support truth, dignity, and accountability — while rejecting incitement, hate, and collective blame.