BERWICK STAR NEWS
Home » Nuer school spreads the word

Nuer school spreads the word

The Nuer Language School (NLS) is a non-for-profit program founded from growing concerns that the younger generation is out of touch with its cultural roots.

South Sudanese elders are addressing this by promoting their native language through the literacy school.

The NLS, a non-for-profit program designed for South Sudanese youth in Melbourne’s south-east, offers teachings in one of the most common languages in South Sudan.

Thok Naath, commonly known as Nuer, translates into “the people’s language”.

Nuer has two million speakers in South Sudan and the western Ethiopian region of Gambella, with one-and-a-half million speakers.

NLS president David Tut Kuiy, a former treasurer of the Sudanese Community Council which was founded in 1988, also undertakes several committee roles.

He is NLS’s lead tutor, chairperson and secretary.

Mr Kuiy spent most of his childhood in Itang Refugee Camp in Gambella, Ethiopia.

He arrived in Australia in the 1980s and was one of the first South Sudanese people to settle in Australia and obtain Australian citizenship.

“There has always been a demand for the Nuer Language School from the community elders,” Mr Kuiy said.

“There was a lot of disengagement by the youth and a program like this enables us to unify our community.”

When Mr Kuiy first started the program, 60 students had registered but only two had showed up.

Despite his challenges, Mr Kuiy has always been determined to continue NLS. He restarted the program in January this year.

The program not only assists youth in reconnecting with their roots but also offers adult classes where they aim to improve their literacy skills, so they can read their mother tongue.

NLS operates across three campuses in Cranbourne, Dandenong and Doveton.

There are roughly 25 children and 10 adults that are consistent attendees every week.

“I am doing this so we can preserve the Nuer language because once you learn your language, it gives you an identity,” Mr Kuiy said.

Bichok Gony Guandong, a NLS volunteer tutor, echoed Mr Kuiy’s message.

Mr Guandong’s involvement in the program stems from his motivation to give young people the impetus to stay connected to their cultural roots.

This includes his own children who are all raised in Australia and have not visited his family overseas.

“One day, I want my children to be able to visit their relatives back home and have the ability to communicate with them — even if they struggle, I want them to at least be able to understand their language,” Mr Guandong said.

All academic staff at NLS believe that the program empowers the broader South Sudanese community.

Pal Deng Pur, a volunteer tutor at the Cranbourne campus, believes that expanding the program creates opportunities for others to learn the Nuer Language outside their tribal diaspora.

Mr Deng Pur is from the Gaatjaak clan of the Nuer tribe.

He was forced to flee his village as a teenager to Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya after the Civil War. He resettled again to Australia in 2003 on a humanitarian visa.

“We are doing volunteer work on weekends,” Mr Deng Pur said.

“The funding we get from the government only covers the renting of the buildings, but we are still struggling for school materials such as textbooks and stationery.”

As the program expands, NLS plans to purchase a bus to encourage students throughout Melbourne’s south-east to attend, particularly if they struggle with transport.

Mr Deng Pur said he aspired to see the program’s future growth.

“We would like to expand in the future, and open more centres because Nuer speakers are not just in Melbourne’s south-east but regional Victoria, including South Gippsland, Geelong and Ballarat,” he said.

All tutors emphasise the importance of maintaining cultural lineage through this program.

“At the end of the day, your language is the epitome of your identity. If you do not revive it then it will be lost forever,” said Mr Kuiy.

● Nyibol Gatluak is a student journalist at Monash University

Digital Editions


More News

  • Calls for closer blood donation centre in Casey

    Calls for closer blood donation centre in Casey

    Sukhjiwan Grewal from Berwick has been an avid donator of plasma for years. He’s contributed more than 130 plasma donations over the past 10 years and with altruism as his…

  • Wonderful Wills does it again

    Wonderful Wills does it again

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 512659 There were some remarkable individual performances across the Dandenong District Cricket Association (DDCA) Turf 1 competition on the weekend. Dandenong West’s Shaun Weir…

  • Magpies fly into top two

    Magpies fly into top two

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 527666 Narre Warren is up into second place on the DDCA Turf 2 ladder after another narrow win; this time against Cranbourne as the…

  • Dandenong factory fire deemed suspicious

    Dandenong factory fire deemed suspicious

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 528279 A Dandenong factory caught up in flames is deemed suspicious by Victoria Police and Fire Rescue Victoria. Emergency services responded to multiple Triple…

  • Casey home values outpace Greater Melbourne in strongest growth since 2021

    Casey home values outpace Greater Melbourne in strongest growth since 2021

    The Casey region recorded stronger home-value growth than Greater Melbourne in 2025, according to figures by Cotality. Over the 2025 calendar year, Casey had a 6.2 per cent increase in…

  • New $12.7M catholic school in Clyde to open in 2027

    New $12.7M catholic school in Clyde to open in 2027

    Construction on a new $12.7 million Catholic Primary School in Clyde, is set to begin and is planning to open in 2027. The first sod at the new site of…

  • Aussie double at Southern

    Aussie double at Southern

    Southern Golf Club in Keysborough provided the perfect canvas for the nation’s number-one ranked amateur event last week with the 2026 Australian Master of the Amateurs attracting some quality young…

  • Panthers and Swans register strong victories

    Panthers and Swans register strong victories

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 383174 An unbeaten century from Dandenong’s Dhanusha Gamage led the side to its third win of the season in the Victorian Premier Cricket Firsts,…

  • Big switch on arrival for Metro Tunnel timetable

    Big switch on arrival for Metro Tunnel timetable

    The Metro Tunnel’s Big Switch timetable has been released which will integrate the new tunnel into Victoria’s train network. Minister for Public and Active Transport Gabrielle Williams released the new…

  • Clyde Road Upgrade starts 2026 strongly

    Clyde Road Upgrade starts 2026 strongly

    Major road and freeway closures will impact motorists travelling through Cranbourne and Berwick later this month, as crews push ahead with critical works on the Clyde Road Upgrade. The Princes…