In the heart of Palabek Settlement, within the humble boundaries of Zone 5A, Block 5A, lives a young girl whose story reflects both the deep wounds of conflict and the unbreakable strength of the human spirit.
She is 17 years old.
Her name — shared with us by one of our local mission pastors — is Winning Ibalú Mario.
And although life has marked her with a devastating injury, her presence radiates a quiet courage that calls us to act.
Winning fled South Sudan in the midst of the violence that has torn families away from their homes and futures. Like so many who journeyed toward safety, she climbed aboard a large transport vehicle — a lorry carrying frightened families toward Uganda, toward the unknown, toward hope.
But during that journey, tragedy struck.
As she stepped down from the vehicle, she slipped and suffered a severe facial injury — an accident that changed not only her appearance, but the way the world responds to her.
Today, Winning lives with the physical and emotional consequences of that moment.

She continues to go to school. She continues to try. She continues to hope.
But every day, she also carries wounds far deeper than the eye can see.
She told our pastor this:

“Life is very hard now… in school and in the community.
When I arrive, the other children run away from me.
Some insult me… they call me mad.”
No child — no one — should ever bear this kind of rejection, especially on top of the trauma of displacement and injury.
And this is where the mission of Amigos Internacionales becomes not just important, but essential.
In communities like Pawik Missionpoint, we stand with young people like Winning by offering medical connections, emotional support, dignity, and above all, the reassurance that their lives matter. Our calling is to see each person not through the lens of their wounds, but through the truth of their humanity.
Amigos Internacionales and you can make a difference...we need $3,000 for the corrective surgery needed.
Winning’s story reminds us why compassion cannot be passive.
Why health care must reach the forgotten.
Why love must cross borders, camps, and conflict lines.
And why we must continue showing up — again and again — for the people who need us most.
Today, Winning needs reconstructive medical evaluation.
She needs community acceptance.
She needs the world to see her not with fear, but with tenderness and solidarity.
And she needs advocates — people like you — who will not turn away.
Your support helps us bring healing to the places where trauma and hope meet.
It allows us to reach young people who have been overlooked, stigmatized, or left behind.
It turns stories like Winning’s from tragedy into transformation.
Stand with us.
Stand with her.
And together, let us continue building a world where every person — every child — is seen, welcomed, and loved.
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