Of all the humanitarian catastrophes unfolding today, none has been more savage — and more willfully ignored — than Sudan’s civil war. More than 150,000 people have been killed.

Twelve million displaced. Women raped in front of their families, children forced into militias and entire villages systematically erased. This is genocide by any honest legal or moral standard.

It is deliberate, identity-based extermination, articulated by its perpetrators and documented by international monitors. Yet across American politics, media and activist circles, it barely registers.

There are no student encampments demanding divestment from the warlords responsible. No faculty manifestos.

No urgent hearings or emergency resolutions. Sudan may briefly appear in headlines, but attention quickly shifts b

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