Firstly, the lost children of Sudan were in a deadly environment, consequently many of them died. In a matter of a few years, roughly 20,000 children fled Sudan to try and make the 1,000 mile journey into Ethiopia to safety. They had spent four years trekking through war zones where thousands died of dehydration, starvation, sheer exhaustion, attacks from wildlife …show more content…
People may be willing to try and argue that they could pose a threat to national security but in reality that just isn’t true. Conflict in their country that caused them to leave was a civil war and therefore they harbor no ill-will to Americans. The only thing that those children wanted was to be free from the dangers of the civil war ravaging their war-torn country. They wanted to be able to live in a place where they could go to sleep without fearing for their lives or without having the thought in the back of their head that they could collapse from starvation any day. The prospect of them living in America posed no threat to people already living in the country and offered a place of refuge for the brave souls who risked their lives just be