
Ali Abd al-Latif
Sudanese nationalist organizer, former army officer, and leader of the White Flag League
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
75/100
Raw Score
64/85
Confidence
75%
Evidence
Medium
About
Ali Abd al-Latif helped launch modern Sudanese anti-colonial politics through the United Tribes Society and White Flag League, and he paid heavily for it through prison, exile, and long confinement in Cairo.
The observable record is strongly positive on courage, freedom-seeking, and resilience under repression. The main limits are thinner evidence on direct household-level charity, family obligations, and routine private worship compared with the unusually visible political side of his life.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Abd al-Latif scores highest on belief, worship, integrity, and resilience because the public record presents a Muslim nationalist who kept pressing his commitments through prison and exile. The overall profile remains below the top bands because his surviving evidence is far richer on liberation politics than on repeated direct charity, family obligations, or everyday devotional detail.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Public sources identify him as a Muslim Dinka and nothing in the record contradicts core theistic belief.
No contrary evidence appears; historical evidence of Muslim identity supports a strong accountability baseline.
No contrary evidence appears; the record fits a strong Muslim belief baseline.
No contrary evidence appears; the record fits a strong Muslim belief baseline.
No contrary evidence appears; the record fits a strong Muslim belief baseline.
Contribution to Others
Surviving public evidence says little about family-specific support.
The record is political rather than youth-service focused.
His anti-colonial organizing aimed at wider civic dignity for subordinated Sudanese communities.
Cross-tribal organizing widened inclusion, but direct service evidence is limited.
Direct case-by-case aid is not well documented in the surviving record.
Freedom from colonial subordination is the clearest and strongest social-care signal in his public life.
Personal Discipline
Public identification as Muslim supports an assumption-of-best baseline absent contrary evidence.
Public identification as Muslim supports an assumption-of-best baseline absent contrary evidence.
Reliability
He stayed aligned with his public anti-colonial commitments even when imprisonment followed.
Stability Under Pressure
Material hardship is plausible but not richly documented.
He endured imprisonment, exile, and years of confinement without a record of capitulation.
The 1924 crackdown is the strongest evidence of steadiness under fear and conflict.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Founded the United Tribes Society around a shared Sudanese political identity
Historical accounts describe Abd al-Latif forming the United Tribes Society in 1921 and arguing for an independent Sudan in which tribal and religious leaders shared authority.
→ Created an early cross-tribal platform that widened Sudanese nationalist politics beyond elite notables.
highAccepted imprisonment after pressing for Sudanese self-determination
After writing the nationalist article often translated as "Claim of the Sudanese Nation," Abd al-Latif was arrested and sentenced to a year in prison, but the trial increased his public standing.
→ Demonstrated willingness to bear personal cost rather than soften his public commitments.
highOrganized the White Flag League into a more radical anti-colonial movement
By 1924 Abd al-Latif had become the central public face of the White Flag League, which pushed more openly against British rule and mobilized demonstrations in Khartoum.
→ Turned nationalist sentiment into a more disciplined public movement with recognizable symbols and mass action.
highFaced arrest as White Flag League protests were suppressed
The 1924 Khartoum demonstrations and wider revolt were met with repression; Abd al-Latif was arrested again as colonial authorities moved to crush the movement.
→ Confirmed a public pattern of endurance under fear and conflict rather than retreat at the first serious cost.
highHis exile to Egypt became a nationalist rallying point
After the revolt, Abd al-Latif was sentenced for his role and transferred to Egypt; later summaries note that his arrest and exile helped spark a Sudanese battalion mutiny even as the movement itself was crippled.
→ His personal suffering did not stop his symbolic influence, but the crackdown sharply weakened organized resistance in the short term.
highDied in Cairo after years of confinement in a mental hospital
Accounts of his later life agree that he was not restored to ordinary public life after his sentence, but spent years confined in Cairo before dying there in 1948.
→ His public career was cut short, but the long punishment reinforced his standing as a sacrificed pioneer rather than a short-term agitator.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Sedition case after nationalist writing
1922He was arrested and sentenced after pressing publicly for Sudanese self-determination.
Response: The imprisonment raised rather than broke his public profile.
positiveSuppression of the White Flag League
1924Colonial authorities arrested him again while shutting down demonstrations and the wider revolt.
Response: He remained the central symbolic figure of the movement even as it was violently weakened.
positiveTransfer to Egypt and long confinement
1924After sentencing he was removed from Sudan and never meaningfully restored to public life, later dying in confinement in Cairo.
Response: The record shows endurance and sacrifice, but also the tragic limit of what one organizer could achieve against colonial repression.
mixedProgression
crisis years
The 1924 crackdown tested his resilience and turned him from organizer into symbol of sacrifice.
upcurrent stage
His direct public activity was cut short, but later historians still treat him as an early architect of Sudanese nationalism.
stableearly years
Military schooling and early service gave him access to urban and officer networks that later became politically useful.
upgrowth years
His politics broadened from early nationalist writing into cross-tribal organizing through the United Tribes Society and White Flag League.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeatedly framed politics in broader Sudanese rather than narrow tribal terms.
- • Accepted prison and exile instead of retreating from anti-colonial commitments.
- • Built symbolic and organizational vehicles that outlived his own freedom.
Concerns
- • Direct evidence for household-level charity and routine family care is thin.
- • The movement's pro-union posture toward Egypt complicates simple readings of its political end-state.
Evidence Quality
4
Strong
5
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: medium
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.