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  1. The Lost Boys of Sudan were separated from their families by civil war and subsequently lived in three other countries—Ethiopia, Kenya, and the United States. In-depth interviews were conducted with 10 refugees about their experiences of separation from parents and ambiguous loss, and the coping strategies the youth used when they did not know if other members of their family were dead or alive.

  2. Brothers In Hope: The Story of The Lost Boys of Sudan. In this excerpt, Garang tells his story of how he became a lost boy when war destroyed his village. Walking with thousands of other orphaned boys, Garang travels thousands of dangerous miles from southern Sudan to a refugee camp in Ethiopia. by.

  3. Our Story. In 1983 the Sudan civil war produced a mass exodus of 20,000 children, mostly young boys. They fled on foot in small groups, walking for months while facing gunfire, wild animals and starvation, seeking refuge in Ethiopia and Kenya. These became known as the “lost boys of Sudan” and they spent most of their childhood in refugee ...

  4. 4 de abr. de 2011 · The Lost Boys is a nickname applied to as many as 27,000 boys who fled their villages in southern Sudan during that country's second civil war, which began in 1983 and lasted more than 20 years ...

  5. The boys (and some girls) walked more than 1,000 miles over three months without any support from adults. Many of the ‘Lost Boys of Sudan’ died from hunger, thirst, eating poisonous plants, and attacks from lions and soldiers shooting at them. Many drowned crossing the Gilo River into Ethiopia. The survivors sheltered in a refugee camp.

  6. 1 de abr. de 2009 · Abstract. The Lost Boys of Sudan were separated from their families by civil war and subsequently lived in three other countries-Ethiopia, Kenya, and the United States. In-depth interviews were ...

  7. 1 de oct. de 2008 · A well-known example is the journey of the 'The Lost Boys', a group of about 20,000 young boys who fled South Sudan via Ethiopia and walked for more than 1000 km, arriving in Kakuma Refugee Camp ...