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Ex-ambassador speaks to UC Berkeley class about Rwandan genocide

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  • Ex-ambassador speaks to UC Berkeley class about Rwandan genocide

    University Wire
    October 25, 2007 Thursday


    Ex-ambassador speaks to UC Berkeley class about Rwandan genocide

    By Sonja Sharp, Daily Californian; SOURCE: UC-Berkeley

    BERKELEY, Calif.


    Speaking in Wheeler Hall on Wednesday night at the University of
    California at Berkeley, former Rwandan ambassador to the United
    States Theogene Rudasingwa described to students how, as a doctor by
    training, he was thrust into the role of diplomat by the 100 days of
    brutal ethnic violence that swept his country in 1994.

    Addressing a crowd of three dozen people in the "Perspectives on
    Genocide," Rudasingwa tried to evoke a panorama of the 100 years of
    history that led up to those 100 days 1994, when members of the
    country's Hutu majority killed one million ethnic Tutsis.

    "The problem of seeing Rwanda in snapshots is that we forget the long
    trajectory that led here," Rudasingwa said.

    Last night was Rudasingwa's second appearance as a guest speaker for
    a UC Berkeley class.

    The class provides an overview of global genocides from the Armenian
    genocide to the Holocaust to the current crisis in Darfur, spending
    two weeks each on Cambodia, the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, among
    other topics, said course facilitator Judy Taing.

    Rudasingwa said the events of 1994 were preceded by more than 40
    years of periodic ethnic violence, which had forced his family to
    flee the country shortly after he was born.

    "Even me, who is from Rwanda, would find it impossible to tell
    between a Hutu and a Tutsi," Rudasingwa said.

    "They had to go from village to village asking everyone if they were
    Hutus or Tutsis. They had drawn lists in every village, and handed
    out machetes. By July, the country was empty."

    Taing said she invited Rudasingwa after hearing him speak at a
    conference last year. The two are currently working to start a
    permanent UC Berkeley course about genocide.

    Rudasingwa said genocide is not Rwanda's problem alone, and that
    repercussions of the Rwandan genocide remain. While a genocide rages
    in the Darfur region of Sudan, he said Hutu militias who have fled
    Rwanda are roaming unchecked in the Democratic Republic of Congo
    along the shared border.

    For Taing, the issue of genocide is a personal one. Both her parents
    fled the killings in Cambodia in the early 1980s, eventually arriving
    in California as refugees. Though that genocide claimed more than 1.5
    million lives -- about a quarter of the Cambodian population -- in
    the late 1970s and early '80s, Taing said few students have heard of
    it.

    "When I first came to Berkeley, I was pretty shocked how there was no
    awareness about the Cambodian genocide," Taing said.

    Her desire to raise awareness grew after she and her family visited
    Cambodia in the summer of 2005. Taing said it was the first time her
    mother had returned home since losing half their family to Pol Pot's
    Khmer Rouge.

    Silence and fear are what allow genocides to go on, Rudasingwa said.

    "The first thing we have to do (to stop genocide) is shout, and shout
    at the top of our voices," Rudasingwa said. "The most important tool
    in the hands of those who perpetrate genocide is silence."
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