By Bidemi Adedire, Communications Manager – Africa Hub
Aweil’s Story from South Sudan
There are stories that feel like whispers of what the world could be—this is one of them. This remarkable feature deserves a million applauses and an endless standing ovation.
Everyone Brought Something to the Table
It’s an opportune moment to share this story, as we at the Africa hub continually learn about the inspiring and innovative ways leaders are solving challenges unique to their communities.
Earlier this year, GivingTuesday South Sudan demonstrated the powerful impact of collaboration and community-led generosity through a successful malaria testing and treatment outreach in Aweil, serving over 450 people in just two days.
Led by country leader William Deng, the initiative brought together everyday people, local government, health professionals, and neighbours, each offering what they had. Brother Deng bought medicine. The Governor mobilized doctors. Villagers cooked and carried supplies. Some simply showed up and gave their time.
They had hoped to serve 200 people. They served more than double.
But the real success wasn’t in the numbers; it was in the spirit. The shared ownership. The collective generosity. The bold belief in a solution crafted and led by the community itself.
The Future of Philanthropy is Already Happening
What makes this story worth telling is the model it offers. This is generosity in its truest form: rooted in proximity, trust, and shared responsibility. No bureaucracy. No permission needed. Just people seeing a problem and moving together. And this, I believe, is the future of philanthropy in Africa and around the world.
It’s easy to assume money is the most powerful currency for change. But what we saw in Aweil proves otherwise. What if the real currency were trust? Familiarity? Local leadership? What if the most effective solutions are those owned and led by the very people who live with the challenges? What if this story weren’t rare? What if this kind of action became our new normal?
As Catherine Mwendwa insightfully wrote in her article Integrating Individual Giving Into the Broader Development Agenda:
While institutional donors often take centre stage, everyday generosity is alive and thriving across the continent. People are constantly contributing—pooling resources in WhatsApp groups to pay school fees, countless alumni networks responding to community needs, professional networks building funds to support sustainable business ideas, citizens amplifying voices to champion better health policies, youth rallying online for justice, or showing up for neighbours in moments of crisis…
What we saw in Aweil is exactly that: leadership from within. This story is a glimpse of the kind of world GivingTuesday dreams of, where generosity is not seasonal or annual but daily. Not top-down but side-by-side. Not aid-dependent but community-grown.
At the Africa Hub, we learn every day from the bold, creative ways leaders are solving problems unique to their contexts. We hope that actions like this are replicated, adapted, and multiplied across communities far and wide. Because generosity is not budget-defined, it is people-defined.