South Sudan’s instability is usually explained through politics: weak institutions, competition over oil wealth, and rivalries among elites. Yet beneath these political struggles lie powerful cultural expressions that shape how communities interpret conflict and leadership. Two phrases— “wanathin” in Nuer political vocabulary and “kon koch” (also rendered “kong koc”) in Dinka moral discourse—symbolize contrasting cultural attitudes toward action and restraint. Examining these expressions offers insight into how cultural psychology interacts with political power in the world’s youngest state.
To ask which phrase is responsible for instability, however, is to ask the wrong question. Neither phrase causes war. Instead, each represents a worldview that can either inflame conflict or support peace depending on how leaders and communities interpret it.
The Meaning of Wanathin: A Call to Advance
Among the Nuer people, the phrase wanathin literally means “let us go forward.” In military or confrontational contexts, it functions as an exhortation to advance and never retreat from the enemy. Historically, such a phrase reflects the Nuer’s pastoral and decentralized social structure. Nuer society traditionally valued courage, mobility, and collective defense of cattle herds and territory. In a landscape where cattle raids and territorial competition were common, the cultural ideal was not submission but determined advance.
This ethos helped shape the mobilization of Nuer fighters during modern conflicts. During the South Sudanese civil wars, militias such as the Nuer White Army emerged partly from youth groups originally organized to defend cattle and communities. Within that context, the rallying cry of forward movement—wanathin—became politically symbolic. It represented defiance, resistance, and the willingness to confront perceived injustice. For supporters, it meant courage and dignity. For critics, it symbolized escalation and refusal to compromise.
Kon Koch: The Philosophy of Restraint
In contrast, the phrase kon koch in Dinka discourse refers to restraint, self-control, and the ability to hold back destructive impulses. According to researchers documenting local perspectives, some South Sudanese observers argue that the country’s crisis partly reflects the absence of this cultural spirit of restraint. In traditional community settings, restraint is a crucial element of social harmony. Dinka and other Nilotic societies historically relied on elders, mediation, and compensation rituals to prevent conflicts from spiraling into cycles of revenge. Kon koch represents the moral capacity to step back before violence escalates. When this restraint weakens—whether through militarization, political manipulation, or generational breakdown—conflict becomes easier to ignite.
Cultural Symbols and the Politics of War
The rivalry between the two phrases often mirrors the broader tension between South Sudan’s two largest communities, the Nuer and the Dinka. Both belong to closely related Nilotic cultures and share many social traditions, yet political competition between leaders from the two groups has repeatedly mobilized ethnic loyalties. Political actors have sometimes exploited cultural narratives to justify mobilization. War cries, heroic songs, and ethnic slogans become tools of mass mobilization in times of crisis. What might once have been expressions of communal identity are transformed into political symbols of confrontation. This dynamic became especially visible after the outbreak of the South Sudanese civil war in 2013, when elite rivalries quickly translated into ethnic mobilization. Cultural language—whether invoking courage or restraint—became part of the political battlefield.
Which Phrase Drives Instability?
Neither wanathin nor kon koch alone explains South Sudan’s instability. Wars are not caused by words but by political decisions, institutional failures, and competition over power. However, the symbolic meaning of these phrases reveals two psychological tendencies that shape the country’s conflict dynamics. Wanathin embodies mobilization and resistance. It can inspire communities to defend themselves against oppression, but it can also encourage escalation when negotiation is necessary. In the hands of militant actors, the spirit of constant advance can feed cycles of retaliation. Kon koch, by contrast, embodies restraint and self-limitation. When practiced, it can prevent violence from spiraling into war. But restraint alone cannot resolve structural injustice or political exclusion. Thus, the problem is not the existence of these philosophies but their imbalance.
Which Phrase Should Guide Peace?
If South Sudan is searching for a cultural language of peace, kon koch offers the moreconstructive foundation. Peace processes require patience, compromise, and restraint—qualities embedded in that philosophy. Yet peace will not succeed if restraint is interpreted as weakness. In a deeply divided political environment, communities must feel that restraint does not mean surrendering dignity or security. The real challenge is therefore synthesis rather than replacement. South Sudan needs wanathin in development and nation-building—the determination to move forward as a unified country. At the same time, it needs kon koch in politics and conflict resolution—the wisdom to pause before violence erupts.
Toward a New National Ethic
The tragedy of South Sudan is not that its cultures promote war. Nilotic traditions contain deep resources for reconciliation: elder mediation, compensation rituals, and community dialogue. What the country lacks is not culture but political leadership capable of translating cultural wisdom into national governance. If wanathin is reinterpreted as collective progress rather than military advance, and if kon koch becomes the guiding ethic of political conduct, the two phrases could together form a new national philosophy. Forward movement with restraint. In that balance lies the possibility that South Sudan’s cultural heritage—often blamed for conflict—might instead become the foundation for peace.
The writer, John Bith Aliap is a South Sudanese political analyst and commentator on governance, leadership, and state-building in post-conflict societies. He can be reached @ johnaliap2021@hotmail.com.
The views expressed in ‘opinion’ articles published by Radio Tamazuj are solely those of the writer. The veracity of any claims made is the responsibility of the author, not Radio Tamazuj.



