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Late: Nyanyier Gach Biel |
Nyariek G. Biel live in Khartoum, Sudan, Nyagony G. Biel live in Gambella, Ethiopia, Deng G. Biel live in Sweden, Both G. Biel, Bol G. Biel, and Nyakhan G. Biel all in school in Addis Ababa. Both Nyanyier’s parents were born and raised around Nasir vicinity about 100 miles south of Malakal. Her father Gach Biel was a member of Anya-Anya I movement. Anya-Anya I was the first southern rebel to rebelled against the Arab subjugation. Nyanyier’s father was wounded in the chest during the Anya-Anya I uprising between mid 1950s and early 1970s. The bullet that hit him penetrated the body and stuck in the body. The bullet was left to heal in the body because of the lack of trained physicians and doctors to remove it.
As the result of the bullet stuck in his chest, the primary caused of his sudden death in 1981 while working as a Wild Life Officer in Unity State in South Sudan . Nyanyier’s mother Nyabiel unfortunately died after a long illness in May of 2003 in Nairobi , Kenya . Before her illness intensified where she lived in Ethiopia , Nyanyier and Komach together with their immediate family worked extremely hard to send her to Kenya for better medical treatment. With the hope that Kenyan medical care was better than the one of Ethiopia , Nyanyier and her husband did not hesitate to relocate their mother from Ethiopia to Nairobi , Kenya in search of a better care.
In 1992, Nyanyier left South, Sudan for Nairobi , Kenya . In Nairobi she lived with a family friend called Mariano Ajuet Akuei, and started here education from primary to junior high. Nyanyeir was among the few fortunate southern Sudanese females who were able to study from primary level to junior high in Africa. She engaged to Komah Deng soon after she moved to Ethiopia in 1997. Her marriage and the man who later became her husband were arranged in Ethiopia . In May 1998, she came to United States to unite with her husband. They were blessed with two sons five and six years of age. Nyanyier was not just a wife and a mother; she was a hard worker, passionate, and ambitious bright young women who have goals in life.
Nyanyier worked as a lay visiting nurse upon arriving in the United State , a position she obtained because of being fluent in verbal English. She worked for five consecutive years at First Data Company. Before her death in June 6, 2005, she and her husband had a business planned. Their plan boasted in January 2005 when the north-south war accord was signed. The peace signed by the two warring parties pledged to bring peace and stability in the country. For Nyanyier and Komach, the opportunity for their business was on the horizon.
The plan was to work a little harder here in States and safe money to open a business somewhere in Sudan . She advised Komach to apply for a citizenship status therefore, if time allows Komach could travel to Sudan to survey their business plan and possibly come up with a venue and a start date. If the plan would succeed, Nyanyier would have moved to Sudan and open a brewer business a side, a business her grand mother and her mother were talented at doing.
Ruot Chuol Biel Nyanyier brother came to United States for the first time. “I have left Nasir, south Sudan in 1982 when Nyanyier was only two and half-year old. I have not seen Nyanyier ever since. I had a plan to come to United States to see Nyanyier right after I moved to Windsor , Canada from Cairo , Egypt five years ago. However, because refugees in Canada are subject to wait three years before they could receive citizenship in order to travel outside Canada , I was unable to cross the border even when she was still in the hospital. I received my citizenship certificate the day she died June 6, 2005. I had planned to come to United State and see her but not to see her body and burry it. Though, I’m happy to see her children, I wish I could see her in person.
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1980-2005. Late Nyanyier Gach Biel |
Lupus desease: Nyanyier was admitted at the Creighton University Hospital for chest pain and later went to a coma for two and half months died on March 20, 2005 to June 6, 2005, Nyanyier Gach Biel of Omaha died from a complicated disease on her at Creighton Hospital bed while her husband Komach Deng was on her bed’s side. Nyanyier felt fatigue for several days before she was rushed to emergency when she was in a terrible chest pain coughing with blood in some occasions. When the doctor at Creighton University Hospital perused her situation, Nyanyier’s lungs were found near stop and she could not breathe normally.
When a further diagnosis was performed, she was found suffering from a rare disease called Lupus. Lupus is an autoimmune disease with no obvious symptoms. A body’s immune system is like an army with hundreds of soldiers. Lupus disease weakens the body immune system that job is to fight foreign substances such as germs and viruses in the body. Because she was in her third trimester, doctor’s ability was circumscribed to apply only innocuous drugs that help for treatment and her safe for the fetus from being harm. But the doctors plan to bypass a late abortion by giving her low doses for treatments were unsuccessful. The situation deteriorated from bad to worst and the doctors had no choice but to terminate the pregnancy in attempt to safe her life.
A female fetus later given the name Jiathloac was removing on April 13 2005. Yet, not even a glimpse of hope for mother survival could be seen. All these came to end on Monday June 6, 2005 when she was pronounced dead.
Job Success Story when she still a live: Nyanyier using this name at work "Nyachan Chuol Guandong" but is not original name biologically, Nyanyier was interviewed at work by First Data officer: One company, many faces. Nyanyier Gach Biel/Nyachan Guandong joined First Data in 2000 as a Zip Sort Operator. She received training on the zip sort machine and today helps train other employees who were born in Sudan from eastern Africa. Civil war in the Sudan has disrupted and in many cases destroyed life for thousands and thousands of the Sudanese. Many have sought asylum in the U.S. In fact, Omaha, Nebraska, has the largest population of Sudanese refugees in this country. Nyanyier Gach/Nyachan learned English while a student in Kenya. Her English is so good, she often translates between managers and workers at First Data, especially if there is a misunderstanding on one of the machines or there are important messages delivered during a shift meeting. Today she not only runs a zip sort machine for First Data, but also helps local refugee programs understand cultural differences. “First Data has good benefits and they respect employees,” Nyanyier/Nyachan said.
The Goals: February 14, 2003, she often thinks about family members including her mother who still live in Africa. If the War was to end tomorrow, she would go back, she said. But the likelihood of the world longest running civil war ending is’t good. In the meantime, she and her husband are glad to be able to work and raise their two young children in relative safety. Zip Sort Operator Nyachan Guandong evens out a stack of statements that have been Automatically sorted by zip code. Guandong, originally from Sudan, has been working at First Data in Omaha, Neb. for almost three years.
Thanks,
The end for lovely late wife or sister Nyanyier Gach Biel's biography