(RNS) — Ten-year-old Waleed ran for days to escape the fighting after men with guns came to his town. He lost track of the grandmother who had been caring for him and traveled with strangers, sleeping wherever he could.
When he finally reached a camp for displaced people, he had no idea where his family was. He was hungry, scared — and yet still found the courage to keep going alone.
This is what the crisis in Sudan looks like for children right now.
Sudan’s war is displacing more people than any other crisis in the world. As violence escalates, families are uprooted again and again — often with little warning and nowhere safe to go. In the chaos, children get separated from their families and are left alone.
In one recent surge of violence in Darfur, our teams reported that more than 22,600 people were newly displaced. Nearly two-thirds of them were children. As families flooded into displacement centers, World Vision staff noticed a deeply troubling pattern: more children arriving alone, without a parent or caregiver. In just one camp, staff recorded nearly 200 children who had arrived by themselves.
And that is only one location.
Across the country, the scale of suffering is staggering. More than 5 million Sudanese children have been displaced by the conflict. Nearly 4 million children under the age of 5 are acutely malnourished. More than 13 million children are out of school. United Nations agencies warn that in parts of North Darfur, more than half of all children are acutely malnourished, as severe food insecurity and hunger spread and a collapsing health system turns treatable illnesses into deadly threats.
World Vision teams in Sudan and neighboring countries are helping. Since launching our scaled response in 2023, we’ve reached more than 5 million people — most of them women and children — with lifesaving support, including food assistance, health and nutrition services, clean water, sanitation and child protection.
For us as Christians, these numbers carry an even deeper weight — because behind every statistic is a child who is precious in God’s sight.
Scripture is unambiguous about how God sees children and how central they are to God’s kingdom. Jesus said in Matthew 19:14, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.”
And yet, when we look at suffering like this through a biblical lens, it can feel as though children are being hindered at every turn. Instead of experiencing fullness of life, the full weight of the sins of the world — power, greed, hatred and selfishness — has fallen squarely on their shoulders. They are suffering the consequences of a war they had no part in creating. And many are bearing the brunt of it alone.
But God’s Word declares a different story. The full weight of the sins of the world has already been borne — by Jesus himself. On the cross, Jesus took on every sin, every injustice, every burden, so that brokenness would not have the final word.
Children should not bear the brunt of the world’s sins, and in Christ, they do not have to.
That truth is what compels us at World Vision to keep going. It is why we work to end extreme poverty, serving as the hands and feet of Jesus where it’s hard to be a child.
Because the work Jesus finished on the cross frees us to join him in restoring hope, dignity and opportunity for every child. World Vision has served vulnerable children for over 75 years, and that history matters — because while crises change, the call does not.
Across decades and disasters, we have leaned on a consistent truth: Our work is rooted in our faith. Jesus’ love powers everything we do at World Vision. That is not rhetoric. It is our operational reality.
Long before we provide food for malnourished children or create child-friendly spaces, we begin with a conviction: We must see children through the eyes of Jesus. When we use this lens, both their suffering and their God-given potential are visible to us.
At the camp, Waleed saw other children playing soccer and approached them. They led him to a woman who was caring for children who had lost their parents. She welcomed him, gave him food and offered him a place to sleep alongside her own children. Eventually, she helped reunite him with an uncle who had also made it to the camp.
Sudan’s children are resilient. But they should not bear the brunt of war alone.
When we look at the numbers, the complexity and the needs — around the world and here at home — it is easy to feel powerless. But there are simple, meaningful ways we can respond.
We can pray with specificity: for protection, for peace, for access, for those serving on the ground and for children separated from their families.
We can give generously, because lifesaving work requires resources, especially as needs escalate and systems strain.
We can get our churches involved, because churches and organizations working together can sustain a presence in families’ lives, strengthen local capacity and care for children in both body and spirit.
And we can refuse to look away, because we know Jesus sees these children, loves them and calls us to do the same.
Sudan’s crisis is a moment when Christians are called to see clearly, to pray boldly and to act faithfully — so that the world might see the promise Jesus offers to all.
Edgar A. Sandoval Sr. is the CEO and president of World Vision. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.
BEIRUT (AP) — The Lebanese militant group Hezbollah will not abide by any agreements that may result from the direct Lebanon-Israel talks in the United States, negotiations it firmly opposes, a senior Hezbollah official said Monday.
Wafiq Safa, a high-ranking member of Hezbollah’s political council, spoke on the eve of the talks expected in Washington between Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors to the U.S. It will be the first time in decades that envoys from Lebanon and Israel, which do not have diplomatic relations, meet face-to-face in direct talks.
“As for the outcomes of this negotiation between Lebanon and the Israeli enemy, we are not interested in or concerned with them at all,” Safa told The Associated Press.
“We are not bound by what they agree to,” he added in a rare interview with international media. He spoke next to a cemetery as an Israeli drone buzzed overhead.
Historic negotiations at a sensitive time
Lebanese officials are looking to broker a ceasefire in the Israel-Hezbollah war in the U.S. talks.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, has said the goal is Hezbollah’s disarmament and a potential peace agreement between Lebanon and Israel. Shosh Bedrosian, a spokesperson for Netanyahu said Monday that there will be no ceasefire with Hezbollah.
Separately, in U.S.-Iran peace talks held last weekend in Pakistan, Iran has sought to include Lebanon in any ceasefire deal of its own with the U.S. Israel and the U.S. have insisted Lebanon would not be a part of it.
Hours after Tehran and Washington announced a truce last Wednesday, Israel launched more than 100 strikes across Lebanon, including in densely packed residential and commercial areas of central Beirut.
And though the U.S.-Iran talks broke up without an agreement, Safa said Hezbollah has been informed that Iran “was able to obtain a cessation of attacks” in the entire administrative region of Beirut, Lebanon’s capital, including Beirut’s southern suburbs — a Hezbollah-strong area known as Dahiyeh.
Israeli strikes on Beirut and its southern suburbs have halted since Wednesday but intense fighting has continued in southern Lebanon.
Hezbollah’s entry into the war
Israel and Hezbollah have fought multiple wars since the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group was formed in the 1980s as a guerrilla force fighting against Israel’s occupation of southern Lebanon at the time.
The latest round began on March 2, two days after Israel and the U.S. launched a war on Iran. Hezbollah entered the fray, firing missiles across the border into Israel. Israel responded with aerial bombardment and a ground invasion.
Since then, the war has displaced more than 1 million people in Lebanon and killed more than 2,000, including more than 500 women, children and medical workers. Many Lebanese have blamed Hezbollah for pulling Lebanon into the war, accusing it of acting on behalf of its patron, Iran.
Safa said Hezbollah’s actions were preemptive because its leaders believed “Israel was preparing for a second battle with Lebanon” with the aim of destroying Hezbollah.
It was “an appropriate moment for Hezbollah … to rebuild a new equation” and restore deterrence against Israel, he said, denying any prior deals with Tehran that Hezbollah would enter the war if Iran was attacked.
After a U.S.-brokered ceasefire halted the last Israel-Hezbollah war in November 2024, Israel continued to carry out near-daily strikes in Lebanon that it said aimed to stop the group from rebuilding. Hezbollah wants to avoid a return to that status quo, Safa said.
‘Black Wednesday’
Israel has claimed that its strikes on Lebanon last Wednesday killed more than 250 Hezbollah militants. More than 100 women and children were among the over 350 people killed, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.
That would mean that, according to Israel’s assertion, every adult male killed that day was a Hezbollah member.
“None of our officials or cadres was killed in Beirut,” Safa said. ”Those who died in Beirut are 100% civilians.” He did not deny that members of the group were killed outside of the Lebanese capital.
Israel claimed to have killed Hezbollah leader Naim Kassem’s secretary who was also his nephew, Ali Yusuf Harshi, as well as some high-level commanders.
Safa said Kassem’s secretary was not killed, although “maybe a relative of his was.”
He also confirmed for the first time that he was wounded during the earlier, 2024 Israel-Hezbollah war, after being targeted by two Israeli strikes in Beirut, “but God granted me survival.”
Later Monday in a televised address, Kassem himself urged Lebanon to pull out of direct talks with Israel, calling the negotiations a “free concession” to Israel and the U.S.
Souring relations with the government
Relations between the Lebanese government and Hezbollah — which is not just a militant group but also a political party with a parliamentary bloc — have grown increasingly tense.
The government last year approved a plan to remove all weapons that are not property of the state — its security forces or military — and later said it had largely completed the task south of the Litani River, where Hezbollah militants are now fighting with Israeli forces.
After March 2, the government went further, declaring Hezbollah’s armed wing illegal.
Safa said Hezbollah is currently not directly speaking with President Joseph Aoun or Prime Minister Nawaf Salam but that all its communications are going through Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, the head of the Hezbollah-allied Amal party.
Safa said that if there is a ceasefire and a withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon, Hezbollah — which calls itself a “resistance” movement against archenemy Israel — is ready to negotiate with the Lebanese government about the fate of its weapons.
“The issue of resistance weapons is a Lebanese matter that has nothing to do with Israel or the United States,” he said.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lebanon and Israel held their first direct diplomatic talks in decades on Tuesday in Washington following more than a month of war between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group, with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio calling it a “historic opportunity” but making clear that no breakthrough agreement would happen right away.
In a statement after the two-hour session ended, the State Department praised the two sides for what it called “productive discussions on steps toward launching direct negotiations between Israel and Lebanon.” Hezbollah opposed the direct talks and was not represented, appearing to step up its fire on northern Israel as the discussions began.
“The United States affirmed that any agreement to cease hostilities must be reached between the two governments, brokered by the United States, and not through any separate track,” the State Department said.
Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter hailed what he called a convergence of opinion about removing Hezbollah’s influence from Lebanon, saying he was encouraged by a “wonderful exchange.”
“The Lebanese government made it very clear that they will no longer be occupied by Hezbollah,” he said. “Iran has been weakened. Hezbollah is dramatically weakened. This is an opportunity.”
Lebanese Ambassador to the U.S. Nada Hamadeh Moawad “reaffirmed the urgent need” for an end to the Israel-Hezbollah conflict, “underscoring the principles of territorial integrity and full state sovereignty.” She also called for a ceasefire, the return of displaced people to their homes, and “concrete measures to address and alleviate the severe humanitarian crisis” resulting from the conflict.
Despite Hezbollah’s outright rejection, the talks are a major step for two countries with no diplomatic relations that have been officially at war since Israel’s inception in 1948. The latest round of fighting was sparked by Hezbollah firing rockets into northern Israel on March 2, days after the United States and Israel attacked Iran, Hezbollah’s key ally and patron.
Hezbollah pushes back as Lebanese government hopes for end to war
As the talks began, Rubio said the Trump administration was “very happy” to facilitate but noted that “we understand we’re working against decades of history and complexities” that will not be quickly resolved.
“But we can begin to move forward with a framework where something can happen — something very positive, something very permanent — so that the people of Lebanon can have the kind of future they deserve, and so that the people of Israel can live without fear,” Rubio said.
The Lebanese government hopes the talks will help pave the way to an end to the war. While Iran has set ending the wars in Lebanon and the region as a condition for talks with the U.S., Lebanon insists on representing itself.
Hezbollah and other critics say Lebanon’s government lacks leverage and that it should back Iran’s position. Wafiq Safa, a high-ranking member of the militant group’s political council, told The Associated Press that the group will not abide by any agreements made during the talks.
On the day of the discussions, incoming fire triggered nonstop drone and rocket alert sirens in Israeli communities near the Lebanese border. Hezbollah, so far on Tuesday, has claimed 24 attacks on northern Israel and on Israeli troops in southern Lebanon.
At least 2,124 people have been killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon, the Health Ministry said, including hundreds of women and children. More than 1 million people are displaced. The deadliest day of the war took place last week, when Israel launched 100 airstrikes across Lebanon in 10 minutes, including in the heart of the capital, killing over 350 people.
The Israeli military has invaded southern Lebanon, a move some Israeli officials have said aims to create a “security zone” from the border to the Litani River, some 30 kilometers (20 miles) to the north.
Israel’s defense minister says hundreds of thousands of people uprooted from southern Lebanon will not be allowed to return home until the area is demilitarized and Israel believes its northern communities are safe. Hezbollah, though weakened in its last war with Israel that ended in November 2024, still fires drones, rockets and artillery daily into northern Israel and on ground troops inside Lebanon.
Hezbollah enjoys wide influence in Beirut’s southern suburbs, as well as large swaths of the country’s southern and eastern provinces. Hezbollah-allied politicians hold two Cabinet minister positions, though the group’s ties have soured with Lebanon’s top political authorities, who have been critical of Hezbollah’s decision to enter the war last month and who have since criminalized the group’s military activities in the country.
First Israel-Lebanon talks in more than 30 years
The talks are the first between Israel and Lebanon since 1993. Both countries have relied on indirect communication, often brokered by the United States or UNIFIL, the United Nations peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon.
Lebanon’s top political authorities, critical of Hezbollah’s decision to fire rockets toward Israel on March 2 in solidarity with Iran, quickly proposed direct talks in a bid to stop the escalation, hoping that Israel would not launch its ground invasion.
Israel did not respond positively until last week, after its deadly bombardment hit several crowded commercial and residential areas in Beirut, sparking an international outcry and triggering threats by Iran that it would end the ceasefire with the United States and Israel.
Lebanese officials have pushed for a truce, which Israel has ruled out. Israel has, however, halted strikes on Lebanon’s capital following the bombardment.
“Israel’s destruction of Lebanese territories is not the solution, nor will it yield any results,” Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said Monday. He came to power vowing to disarm non-state groups, including Hezbollah. “Diplomatic solutions have consistently proven to be the most effective means of resolving armed conflicts globally.”
Foreign Minister Gideon Saar on Tuesday denied having disputes with Lebanon and said, “The problem is Hezbollah.”
Hezbollah wants a return to the 2024 agreement under which talks were conducted indirectly with the U.S., France and UNIFIL as mediators.
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Chehayeb reported from Beirut. Associated Press writers Farnoush Amiri at the United Nations and Toqa Ezzidin in Cairo contributed to this report.

“Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom.” ~Soren Kierkegaard
Let’s be clear:
This isn’t an article about positive thinking.
This isn’t an article about how silver linings make everything okay.
This isn’t an article about how your perspective on anxiety is all wrong.
The kids call those things “toxic positivity.”
No toxic positivity here.
This is an article about my lifelong relationship with anxiety and what I’ve learned from something that won’t go away. At times the anxiety spikes and feels almost crippling. I have a hard time appreciating the learning at those times, but it’s still there.
That is what …