Abdel Rahman Sule
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Abdel Rahman Sule is a South Sudanese politician who was one of the founders of the Liberal Party, officially registered as the "Southern Party" in 1953, the main party in Southern Sudan in the years immediately before and after independence in 1956. Abdel Rahman Sule belonged to the Bari people. He has been described as a farmer and as a trader. Sule was the son of a village chief. Speaking of his childhood, he said: "The effendi who came around our village to kill elephants were Muslims. I used to see what these people were doing. That is how I became a Muslim. In 1927, I was caught with arms from Ethiopia. By then I was already a Muslim. But I was very aware of my African-ness. When I was a kid, if I was woken late in the morning by my father, he would say 'if it had been in the days of the Ansars you would have been taken'. My father always woke me up early so that in his words I am not taken by the Ansars". Sule was at the forefront of pro-federalist politics in the 1940s and 1950s. Sule,
Stanislaus Paysama Stanislaus Paysama (died 1985) was one of the founders of the Liberal Party in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan a few years before Sudan gained independence in 1956. Early years According to his autobiography ''How a Slave Became a Minister'', Stanislaus was ...
and
Buth Diu Buth Diu\Böth Diew(d. c. 1972) was a politician who was one of the leaders of the Liberal Party in Sudan in the years before and after independence in 1956. His party represented the interests of the southerners. Although in favor of a federal s ...
founded the Southern Sudanese Political Movement in 1951, with the goals of achieving full independence for Sudan, with special treatment for southern Sudan. The southerners were excluded from the Political Parties agreement with the British colonial authorities, but in 1953 registered the Southern Party, later renamed the Liberal Party. The party was supported by almost all southern intellectuals and by the majority of southern people. Although also open to northerners, none joined. The new party was led by
Benjamin Lwoki Benjamin Lwoki was a politician from South Sudan who was an early activist in the movement for autonomy or independence from Sudan. He was also a former minister of public works-( Sudan), the first South Sudanese politician in the Sudanese cabinet. ...
and funded by Abdel Rahman Sule and Fahal Ukanda, both Muslims. Sule was known as "The Patron" of the party. Sule's Juba branch of the Southern Party was particularly active in recruiting future southern politicians. After the military crack-down in 1960, Sule went into exile and helped lead the south Sudan resistance movement from abroad.


References

{{reflist , 30em, refs= {{cite book , page=166 , title=African Affairs , volume= 72 , author =Royal African Society , publisher=Oxford University Press , year=1973 {{cite book , title=Southern Sudan: colonialism, resistance, and autonomy , author =Lam Akol , publisher=The Red Sea Press, Inc. , year=2007 , ISBN=1-56902-264-X {{cite book , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1xxzGh74bOUC&pg=PA67 , page=67 , title=The Politics of Two Sudans: the south and the north, 18211–969 , author =Deng D. Akol Ruay , publisher=Nordic Africa Institute , year=1994 , ISBN=91-7106-344-7 Liberal Party (Sudan) politicians Sudanese Muslims