Saving lives with community kitchens and digital tech in Sudan’s war (Photo Series)

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Since the start of nationwide war in Sudan, from April 2023, the community kitchens – or Takaya – have provided the main form of aid. International organisations, who used to provide the bulk of humanitarian aid in Sudan’s earlier crises, withdrew at the start of the war and even in 2026 do not have access to all those affected. Security, logistical and funding constraints limit the scale of their assistance. It has been left to Sudanese people themselves to provide aid.   

The takaya have re-emerged from the deeply rooted Sudanese tradition of solidarity and have provided crucial life-saving assistance. Takaya are sometimes organised by the now well-known and twice Nobel peace prize nominated Emergency Response Rooms (ERRs) but also by many other local community groups and organisations. This photo series, prepared by Tamer Abd Elkreem and Susanne Jaspars, sheds light on how they work, receiving digital financial donations from Sudanese (in and outside Sudan), by international organisations, and sporadic in-kind aid from local communities and charitable people.   

The takaya combine digital and physical aid.  Community groups raise funds through social media posts and receive funds via digital financial transfers using the banking app from the Bank of Khartoum (Bankak).  Digitally sharing pictures of food distributed provides a means of accountability and transparency.  The food itself, however, is provided physically, and so includes the many who are digitally excluded.  This is important because many of the poorest or marginalised populations do not have smartphones, bank accounts (or the ID documents needed to set these up) or access to the internet to receive individual financial transfers.  In this way, collective financial transactions can reach those most in need.   

Not all is positive, however.  The groups running the community kitchens work under extreme conditions.  Sudan’s army (Sudan Armed Forces) and militia (Rapid Support Forces), who now control different parts of the country, view them with suspicion because of earlier links to revolutionary resistance committees. As such takaya organisers are subjected to harassment and intimidation.  Distributing food, particularly in places under siege, is itself a political act.  In Alfashir, during the 18-month RSF siege, digital money transfers and the takaya were the only forms of aid in the city (see here).  When the city fell, on 26 October 2025, takaya organisers were among those killed or missing.  The photos in this series are a testament to their bravery.   

In applauding Sudanese civilians for organising aid and thinking how better to support local organisations, we also need to question whether they should in fact bear this disproportionate burden of responding to the effects of a war which is not their choice and in which involves many international actors.   

 *Click or hover over images to reveal the captions* 

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