Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Remembering Rwanda

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Remembering Rwanda

    REMEMBERING RWANDA
    Rachel Lob-Levyt

    Cherwell Online
    http://www.cherwell.org/content/8843
    May 28 2009

    Photo: CherwellAt least 250,000 victims of the Rwandan Genocide are
    buried within the grounds of the Kigali Memorial Centre. Set amongst
    well-kept gardens, the complex acts as both memorial and museum. Every
    year Rwandans come to visit the mass graves at the site to remember
    and grieve their friends and relatives who were lost during the
    1994 Genocide. And throughout the year tourists' first port of call
    will be the museum whose illuminating layout provides information
    on the causes of the genocide, including the culpable role of the
    international community. The last room before you leave the museum
    contains individual photographs of just a few of the children who were
    murdered during the Genocide. Their ages range between three and twelve
    years old. Underneath their photographs are plaques detailing their
    names and information about them: their favourite foods, hobbies and
    what they wanted to be when they grew up. This simple exhibition brings
    home the awful tragedy of a lost generation with overwhelming power.

    On the 6th of April 1994 the plane of the Rwandan President--Juvénal
    Habyarimana--was shot down. Only a few days later a wave of coordinated
    killing swept across Rwanda lasting three months and leaving nearly
    one million people dead.

    For a visitor, it is difficult to comprehend how Rwanda has been
    able to move on since 1994. A large portion of blame lies with the
    French, who openly supported the racist Habyariman regime, even going
    so far as to provide training and arms to the militia. 'Operation
    Amaryllis' which commenced on the 8th of April 1994 evacuated those
    Westerners still remaining in Rwanda but not those threatened by the
    genocidaires. It has been postulated that had the French troops that
    facilitated the evacuation remained in Rwanda, the Genocide could
    have been prevented.

    The more general responsibility of the international community
    lies in its detached attitude towards the realities of the Rwandan
    Genocide. While the majority of the member states (most significantly
    the US) were reluctant to donate troops to the UN peacekeeping mission
    (UNAMIR), the UN itself was caught up in its own bureaucracy. On
    the 11th of January 1994, Lieutenant General Romeo Dallaire, the
    Canadian head of UNAMIR sent a fax to Major General Maurice Baril and
    Kofi Annan (at the time, Under Secretary General for Peace Keeping
    Operations). This fax re-laid information obtained from an informant
    within the Hutu militia known only as 'Jean-Pierre'. Dallaire told
    Baril and Annan of his knowledge of the existence of Hutu militia arms
    caches, a list of the names and addresses of Tutsis to be murdered
    including several Tutsi politicians, and of a plot to assassinate ten
    Belgium soldiers with the aim of prompting a withdrawal of Belgium
    peace-keeping troops from Rwanda. On the 7th of April, the day
    after the President's plane was shot down, ten Belgian soldiers were
    captured, tortured and killed by the Presidential Guard. As predicted,
    the Belgians withdrew their troops and the UN Security Council voted
    to reduce UNAMIR to a token presence. No significant opposition to
    the imminent slaughter remained.

    One of the messages that resounds, not only in the Memorial
    Centre but throughout Rwanda, by way of road-side billboards and
    banners hanging above the entrances to mass graves, is the mantra:
    'Reconciliation'. After the horrors of the Genocide and the inevitable
    anger at the abandonment by the international community, it is
    difficult to see how this message could be realised. However, the
    way in which Rwandans have dealt the injustices of the Genocide is
    remarkable. In order to cope with the many thousands of genocidaires
    still living in Rwanda, the government has turned to the traditional
    'Gacaca' system--meaning 'Justice on the Grass'. These courts combine
    traditional local justice with modern jurisprudence, with an emphasis
    on reconciliation. The perpetrators of the Genocide stand trial before
    their community; those who admit to their crimes and show remorse are
    sentenced to continual community service but are allowed to return home
    in the evening; those who do not are sentenced to community service but
    spend their nights in prison. Throughout the country it is a common
    sight to see these convicted men and women working in the fields or
    on the roads, the former in dark blue overalls, the latter in pink.

    2009 marks the fifteen-year anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide, and
    when travelling through this beautiful country it is astonishing to
    see how much the country has advanced, socially and economically,
    despite it's past horrors and their continued effect. Along side
    the well terraced road leading into the north of the country I saw
    men and women digging long trenches, mostly by hand. I was told that
    they were laying trenches for Internet fibre-optic cables that would
    stretch across the country.

    The government is also implementing a program which will eventually
    see every school child with his or her own computer. Although limited
    monetary resources mean that teachers are not yet fully trained on
    how to instruct children in using the computers, President Kalama
    was told on a recent visit to a school implementing the program,
    that in fact the children's computer skills are leaps ahead those
    of their teachers. Walking through the capital, Kigali, you cannot
    turn a corner without seeing evidence of new building work, a sure
    sign of a growing metropolis. Much of this work - government building,
    maintenance of public spaces and roads, is contributed to by compulsory
    community service. Every second Saturday morning of each month, all
    members of Rwandan society gather to help rebuild and advance their
    country. Purportedly, even the President joins in this work. While
    it is clear that in Rwanda the Genocide will never be forgotten,
    the emphasis now seems to be on building a country whose significance
    extends far beyond the tragedy of 1994.

    Throughout the country signs are hung with an image of two clasping
    hands beneath the words 'Genocide Never Again'. One wing of the
    Kigali Memorial Museum explores the abominations of other Genocides
    perpetrated around the world: the Holocaust, the rule of the Khmer
    Rouge in Cambodia and the Armenian Genocide amongst others. This sends
    the message that what happened in Rwanda does not concern Rwandans
    alone, but is an example of an enduring and horrific fault in human
    society. However the role of the international community is essential
    in the prevention of such terrible slaughter. Rwanda seems to be taking
    this message seriously, and have contributed one of the largest numbers
    of troops to the Darfur peacekeeping mission. It remains to be seen
    whether the rest of the world will learn from their past mistakes as
    effectively and realise the full impact of their responsibility.
Working...
X