Sudan Solidarity Hub

A curated resource center to support, learn, and take action for Sudan's liberation and humanitarian crisis.

Organizations to Get Involved With & Donate To

Sudanese Red Crescent Society

The Sudanese Red Crescent Society, a leading humanitarian organization since 1956, delivers life-saving aid across Sudan's 18 state branches. With over 12,000 volunteers, SRCS provides emergency first aid, food, water, shelter, and family reunification services to millions affected by conflict. As a trusted partner of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, SRCS builds resilient communities through sustainable relief efforts. Your support helps SRCS reach

  • Focus: Building resilient communities through humanitarian aid
  • Activity: First aid, food, water, shelter, family reunification

Sudanese American Physicians Association

Founded in 2019, the Sudanese American Physicians Association unites Sudanese healthcare professionals in the U.S. to deliver vital medical care and humanitarian aid in Sudan. SAPA provides malnutrition treatment, meals, medication, and mental health support to displaced communities and refugees. By advancing medical education and crisis response, SAPA empowers Sudan's healthcare system. Your donation fuels their mission to ensure equitable healthcare access for those impacted by the conflict.

  • Focus: Healthcare access for conflict-affected communities
  • Activity: Medical care, malnutrition treatment, mental health support

Sadagaat Charity Organization

Sadagaat-USA is a non-profit dedicated to uplifting Sudan's marginalized communities through sustainable development and emergency relief. By providing food, healthcare, and education, Sadagaat addresses poverty and social injustice worsened by the ongoing conflict. With a focus on transparency and community-driven solutions, they foster lasting change. Support Sadagaat to help empower Sudanese families with the resources they need to thrive amidst crisis.

  • Focus: Sustainable development and emergency relief
  • Activity: Food, healthcare, education, poverty alleviation

Khartoum State Emergency Response Rooms

Khartoum State Emergency Response Rooms are grassroots, volunteer-driven initiatives rooted in Sudanese community solidarity. With over 4,000 volunteers, including 1,400 medical professionals, ERRs operate 42 clinics and communal kitchens, delivering food, medical care, and shelter across seven districts. By sustaining basic services like water and electricity, they support millions in war-torn Khartoum. Your contribution strengthens this vital mutual aid network, helping civilians survive the conflict.

  • Focus: Grassroots community support in Khartoum
  • Activity: 42 clinics, communal kitchens, basic services, 4,000+ volunteers

Sudan Solidarity Collective

The Sudan Solidarity Collective, formed by Sudanese diaspora, channels direct financial aid to civilian-led groups like emergency response rooms and resistance committees in Sudan's war-torn regions. Beyond relief, they foster community healing, political education, and advocacy for Sudanese refugees. With a non-hierarchical, anti-war approach, the Collective builds solidarity and resilience. Your support empowers grassroots efforts, ensuring aid reaches those hardest hit by Sudan's conflict.

  • Focus: Supporting civilian-led relief and diaspora solidarity
  • Activity: Funding emergency rooms, advocacy, political education

Sudanese Diaspora Foundation

The Sudanese Diaspora Foundation (SDF) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to fostering a fair and just future for Sudan by addressing critical socio-economic challenges. Through fundraising and strategic project financing, SDF supports initiatives in education, health, youth services, technology, energy, and entrepreneurship, prioritizing high-impact solutions that empower vulnerable communities, smallholder farmers, and entrepreneurs to drive sustainable development and resilience amidst Sudan's ongoing conflict and crises.

  • Focus: Socio-economic empowerment through high-impact solutions
  • Activity: Education, health, tech, youth services, energy, entrepreneurship

Darfur Women Action Group

The Darfur Women Action Group (DWAG) is a women-led, anti-atrocities nonprofit founded by a Darfuri genocide survivor in 2009. It empowers survivors of the Darfur genocide—both in Sudan and the diaspora—through education, trauma counseling, skills training, and grassroots leadership development, while also advocating for justice, civilian protection, and sustained global attention to ongoing atrocities. DWAG uniquely combines survivor support with international advocacy to end impunity and prevent future genocides.

  • Focus: Justice for genocide survivors, especially women
  • Activity: Education, trauma counseling, civil society capacity building

Social Media Pages

Additional Information to Continue Educating Yourself

Link Tree Information SuRF

This document from the Sudanese Resistance Front provides details on contacts, recommended readings, donation services, healing spaces, organizations involved in the liberation of the Sudanese people, resources specific to the African diaspora, and Black and Black Muslim organizations and professionals.

Workshops4Sudan

Workshops4Sudan, is a new fundraising initiative created by the Sudan Solidarity Collective. It's a volunteer-led effort by Sudanese diaspora members in Toronto who are raising funds through educational workshops. All donations go directly to civilian-led groups on the ground in Sudan—like resistance committees and mutual aid networks—who are providing essential, life-saving support during this crisis. They're inspired by Workshops4Gaza, and rooted in a vision of shared liberation—from Sudan to Palestine, from Congo to Turtle Island. If you can't attend a workshop but want to donate or support, reach out to sudansolidaritycollective@gmail.com. Please help spread the word. (Virtual, May 5, 12-2 PM EST)

On Sudan and the Interminable Catastrophe: A Conversation with Bedour Alagraa

In "On Sudan and the Interminable Catastrophe: A Conversation with Bedour Alagraa," Black studies scholar Bedour Alagraa explores Sudan's ongoing war through her family's diasporic lens, tracing the Ottoman slave trade's role in shaping racial hierarchies and genocidal ethnonationalism. She critiques simplistic Black-Arab binaries, examines the complicity of both the Sudanese Armed Forces and Rapid Support Forces in violence, and highlights the revolutionary potential of nonviolent resistance. Alagraa's concept of the “interminable catastrophe” frames Sudan's cyclical violence, urging a radical break from entrenched anti-Blackness. This article is vital for understanding Sudan's historical and political complexities, offering nuanced insights into colonial legacies, racial dynamics, and grassroots resistance for those seeking deeper context.

Now is the Time: Black Struggle from Sudan to the US

The article "Lessons from the Sudanese Revolution: A Reflection on Global Black Struggles" examines the 2018-2019 Sudanese uprising, sparked by economic hardship and culminating in the ousting of Omar Al Bashir, as a lens to understand global Black liberation movements. It highlights the revolution's broad coalition, creative tactics like the Qiyada sit-in, and its demands for systemic change, including de-Arabization and reparations, while acknowledging internal tensions around class, gender, and regional disparities. Drawing parallels with the George Floyd protests, it emphasizes the interconnectedness of Black struggles, advocating for broad coalitions, political education, general strikes, and alternative democratic structures. This article is crucial for understanding Sudan's historical and political context, offering insights into how grassroots movements challenge ethnonationalism and global systems of oppression, inspiring transnational solidarity and radical strategies for liberation.

The Interminable Catastrophe

n "The Interminable Catastrophe," Bedour Alagraa redefines catastrophe as a structural condition and way of life rooted in colonial modernity, particularly through the lens of racial slavery and plantation systems. Drawing on thinkers like Kamau Brathwaite and Sylvia Wynter, she critiques liberal scientific and Anthropocene frameworks for their failure to address catastrophe's conceptual history, proposing instead a framework of "cruel mathematics" (quantifying Black life) and "fatal liberalisms" (sovereign power and governmentality) as its core elements. Alagraa argues that catastrophe is not a singular event but a repeating, narrative condemnation that can be interrupted through Black radical interventions. This article is essential for understanding Sudan's historical and political context, as it provides a theoretical lens to analyze how colonial legacies and anti-Blackness perpetuate ongoing crises, urging readers to rethink global ecological and social predicaments through a decolonial, Black radical perspective.

UChicago's Role in Investment in the Darfur Conflict