Since their arrival in the new land, the Bari have been plagued by war and conflict, especially from slave raiders and Azande. Even before the 19th century, the Arabs and Turks involved in the ivory trade raided slaves from the Bari to supply the domestic needs of their home communities and to sell them in the markets of Northern Sudan and beyond. The second expedition to discover the source of the White Nile entered the Bari lands on 24 January 1841. However, with this progress in the quest for knowledge came undesirable invaders in the form of European and Turkish traders looking for slaves and ivory. This was the first time Bari encountered Europeans travellers. The Bari were lucky in this encounter, as the Turkish army assigned to protect the Nile explorers behaved, unlike the brutality they unleashed on the ethnic groups (
Mondari, Dinka,
Shilluk) to the north of the Bari,
Pojulu, Kakwa to the south and
Kuku to the south-east. However, subsequent expeditions were different. The third expedition (1841–42) to discover the source of the White Nile also discovered that ivory was abundant in the Bari area. The rush for ivory tusks in the White Nile valley then escalated. Initially, both European and Arab traders began sponsoring trips to Gondokoro for ivory. And for a decade the Bari freely sold ivory tusks and other artefacts to the traders without intimidation, and no incidents of slavery were reported by that point. In April 1854, the peaceful relationship between the traders/explorers and the Bari came to an end when a Turkish trader, without provocation, fired his guns into a crowd of Bari at
Gondokoro. Accordingly, the Bari mounted a counterattack that was devastating to both sides. Subsequent to this, the Bari became defensive and less friendly, and the traders (mostly Arabs and Turks) resorted to violent means to procure ivory tusks but also started taking people (young men and women) as slaves. Girls were raped or taken as wives by force. Some of the merchants even built fortified depots near Gondokoro where people were kept awaiting shipment down the White Nile. During this time, Chief Gubek lo Gore and his son, 'Doggale lo Gubek, of Rejaf East were killed by the Turks army. The Turks army had advanced to attack the village of Rejaf East to take the people as slaves. Chief Gubek was told of the impending attack. He advised his people to go and hide in the bushes. When the Turks army attacked at dawn, there was no one in the village, except Chief Gubek and his son, 'Doggale. The army asked Gubek as to where the people of his village were. Chief Gubek told them that he did not know. The Turks army continued upstream to the villages of Loggo, Nyongki, Sindiru, and Lo'bonok. On their way, creating havoc, raping women, killing those who resisted them and capturing others. They were told by some people that Chief Gubek had sent his people into hiding. When the Turks army returned, taking a huge number of captured people to Gondokoro to be shipped to Khartoum, they beheaded Gubek and his son, 'Doggale. Gubek was from the Dung Kaliri clan. After the death of Gubek lo Gore and his son, 'Doggale lo Gubek, Nyarsuk lo Gore, his brother, became the chief of Kolye. Presently, Philip Jada, also called Nyarsuk, is the chief, combining Loggo and Kolye. He is the great grandson of Nyarsuk lo Gore. Philip has his sons James Loro, Thomas Lodu Gubek, and others. In the family of Gubek lo Gore were 'Doggale who married Poni na Lugor of Sindiru. Their son was Yugusuk, also called Loro Gwetele. Yugusuk was the same age as Jada Belendeke of Kolye West. Yugusuk married Maryatha Wosuk na Jore, the daughter of Wani Wonggor, whose children were Mario Jada (Gubek), Alisandro Loku, Daniel Wani, Karlina Kiden, and Entilya Poni. Chief Philip Jada took over from Chief Alisandro Loku, whose sons include Jada Yengkopiong, also called Gubek and Mathias Wani, the sons of Bernadetta Juka, the granddaughter of Chief Jada Matat of Loggo. Diaries of European missionaries in the region indicate that in the market of Cairo (Egypt), the number of slaves to be sold to Europe from the White Nile area increased from 6,000 between 1858 and 1862, to approximately 12,000-15,000 per annum. These numbers reflected mostly Bari, Dinka and Mundari, but also included people of other ethnic groups neighboring the Bari, and beyond were hunting for elephant tusks was intense during that time. By 1863, when Sir
Samuel White Baker arrived at Gondokoro, also on an expedition to discover the sources of the Nile, boats of buccaneers (even one flying an American flag) were anchoring at Gondokoro with the sole purpose of picking up slaves to the New World. By 1865 about 3000 slaves at any one time could be found waiting at Gondokoro to be carried down the Nile. Baker returned in 1869 with the express purpose of stamping out the slave trade. By this time, the Bari people and land were already devastated. Bari folklore tells us of how long ago the land flanking the Nile was full of strings of villages spread out to the horizon, as far as the eye could see. Baker concurs, in his book "Ismailia" (1874), that this had been so when he first visited the area. However he describes how, by the time of his next expedition, the slave traders had reduced the Bari villages to a miserable few. Neither could he obtain co-operation from the Bari, who had been persuaded by Abou Saood, the chief slaver of Agad and Company, who had a government monopoly for trade and slaving, that it was in their best interests to help the slavers and hinder Baker. The Bari were further ravaged in their encounter with Baker and his team. Ever since then, recovery has been difficult, considering also the fact that the civil wars in 1955-1973 and 1983-2005 have further taken their toll on the Bari. ==Courtship and marriage==