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Welcome to Pan Africa Media

At Pan Africa Media, we celebrate the rich tapestry of Africa by sharing educational content, cultural insights, and vital social and economic information from every corner of Africa and beyond.

21/06/2026

Meet Thiel Ajak a student from ECSS.

21/06/2026

Honourable Diing Deng Lueth..the commissioner of Renk county with his wife.

A message every life south sudanse should know🇸🇸🇸🇸🇸🇸...As we are stepping to a new level in our nation and election with...
21/06/2026

A message every life south sudanse should know🇸🇸🇸🇸🇸🇸...
As we are stepping to a new level in our nation and election with democracy to vote🚮, let's remain humble and choose our leader according to effectiveness💯💯 not tribalism or ethnicity 👐and let's avoid any possible conflicts🖤 that may occur.

Because harmony, unity🤗 and growth🏗🏢🏣🏤🏥🏦🏨🌁🌉 are what peaceful nation have seen👀.....but in south sudan we have seen children😔😔 dying because of poverty😞😓, hatred between communities 💥👿and a denied just with abolished youth dreams💔💔 before they begins❗️.

We started since 19831️⃣9️⃣8️⃣3️⃣ before this generation was born, innocent souls😫😓 were lost and 2.5 millions people were perished😶😶 in the 22 years of war.....so we don't need blood shed and starvation anymore🚫🚫.
We have fertile🏕🏞 Land and our rivers are full🏞🏝🏖, and our agriculture💯💯👐 alone can create thousands of jobs to our youth forgetting about the resources⛰️🗺, governmental jobs and the oil🪨 we have everythingis right here in our land and hands❤️‍🩹❤️, the only thing hindering us is insecurities😟😟, conflicts⚔️🪤 plus our division as tribalism.

Let's draw inspiration from nations like Rwanda🎇🎆 in 1994 was having a tribal war and thousands of lives were been lost😞😔 but at the end the Rwandans chose unity and reconciliation, when they settled for genocide 💯❗️and reconciliation 🙌🤝today they stand as one nation nation and among African fast growing economical countries💯🏆🎖
So why not we?....south sudan wake up.

St.Matthew Cathedral Diocese of Renk Upper Nile Internal Province Episcopal church of South Sudan
18/06/2026

St.Matthew Cathedral
Diocese of Renk
Upper Nile Internal Province
Episcopal church of South Sudan

06/06/2026

Help Stephen Santino: Urgent Medical Fundraiser

Stephen Santino from Northern Bhar el Ghazal State, Aweil and a victim of the Sudan war, has recently been forcefully deported to South Sudan and is currently residing in the Transit Center in Renk. Tragically, he sustained a gunshot wound to his lower abdomen, leaving his intestines exposed. He urgently needs surgery to repair the damage and return his intestines inside his abdomen.

Total Cost for Surgery: 2,500,000 SSP (USD 450)

The operation is scheduled to take place at Renk Civil Hospital in Upper Nile. We are calling on community members, government officials in the States and Juba, community leaders, and generous donors locally and in the diaspora. Every contribution, no matter how small, can make a significant difference in Stephen's life.

How You Can Help:
- Donate: Any amount will help us reach our goal and provide Stephen with the medical attention he desperately needs.
- Spread the Word: Share this message within your networks to raise awareness about Stephen's situation.
- Support: If you're part of a community organization, consider organizing a fundraiser to assist.

Let’s come together to support Stephen in this critical time. Your kindness and generosity can truly change his life.

For donations or more information, please contact
The management of Pan Africa Media
WhatsApp & Tel: at

+211 (0) 912502776

Thank you for your support!

04/06/2026
The story holds memories of suffering in silence and the sorrounding world would watch the facts in the dark.Imagine bei...
02/06/2026

The story holds memories of suffering in silence and the sorrounding world would watch the facts in the dark.

Imagine being told you have smallpox. You don’t have symptoms. But you were near someone who coughed. The health department arrives. They take you to an island. You never see your family again. You are dead to the world.

Few people know the name Margaret “Maggie” O’Leary. She was a 28-year-old maid in New York City. In 1901, a smallpox outbreak killed 2,000 people. The city responded with terror. Anyone even suspected of exposure was sent to North Brother Island – a quarantine facility in the East River. It was called “the island of the dead.”

Maggie had no symptoms. But her employer’s son had a fever. The health department took her anyway. She spent three weeks in a barracks with 300 other “suspects.” No medicine. No clean sheets. Food was pushed through a slot.

Every morning, orderlies came to collect the dead. Maggie watched 47 people die. She decided she would not be number 48.

She befriended an orderly. His name was Francis. She paid him $5 – three months’ wages – to help her escape. The plan was simple: Francis would pronounce her dead. He would put her body in a burlap sack with the other corpses. The bodies were taken by boat to a potter’s field on another island. Maggie would jump off the boat before it docked and swim to the Bronx shore.

It worked. Francis marked Maggie’s name in the death ledger. “O’Leary, Margaret. Smallpox. Deceased March 12, 1901.” He put her in a sack. The boat left at dawn.

When the boat reached the middle of the river, Maggie cut the sack open with a small knife she had hidden. She slipped into the water. The current was strong. She almost drowned. But she made it to shore.

She walked to a cousin’s house in Brooklyn. She never left that house for six months. By then, her face had been in the newspapers. “Maid Dies on Island of the Dead.” Her family had held a funeral. Her grave was empty, but no one knew.

Maggie took her cousin’s name. She became Mary Sullivan. She moved to Boston. She worked in a textile factory. She married a widower named Thomas. She raised his three children. She never had her own. She never went to a doctor. She never got sick.

She died in 1941 of a heart attack. On her deathbed, she told her husband: “My name is not Mary. It’s Margaret. And I died once before.”

Her husband never told anyone until 1955, when he gave a deposition to a historian. The deposition is in the New York City archives. It ends with: “She said the island was not for the sick. It was for the poor. The rich never went there. The rich had private doctors. The rich stayed home.”

The smallpox death ledger from 1901 is still online. “Margaret O’Leary” is listed as deceased. Her grave has a headstone. It says: “Beloved Daughter.”

It is empty.

Would you have jumped into that freezing river – or stayed on the boat to the potter’s field?

30/05/2026

This is Layla, sharing why peace matters more than ever in south sudan.

Choose yours confidently 😎🩵🩷
30/05/2026

Choose yours confidently 😎🩵🩷

28/05/2026

Africa has spoken again.

Thank you so much African daughters and sisters(speakers)

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