Genocide survivors on why they commemorate wiped out families
…he already knew was coming. “We are coming to kill you with your family,” one of them said. It was on April 21, and it was a surprise that the… … Continue Reading »
…he already knew was coming. “We are coming to kill you with your family,” one of them said. It was on April 21, and it was a surprise that the… … Continue Reading »
…in silence, nursing a glass of whisky. Perhaps they were interned in a prisoner of war camp. Thirty years after they came home, they were still self-medicating, barely holding their life together…. … Continue Reading »
…the education and counselling needs of young people conceived through rape during and under circumstances directly related to the 1994 genocide committed against Tutsi in Rwanda. The challenge for the… … Continue Reading »
…easily, but this machine will help me to get honey on time. Honey is being used by many people and we have market everywhere to the extent [that] we cannot… … Continue Reading »
…addressing the education and counselling needs of young people conceived through rape during and under circumstances directly related to the 1994 genocide committed against Tutsi in Rwanda. The challenge for… … Continue Reading »
…the organisation’s members are unemployed, according to its leaders. The organisation is comprised of more than 3,000 members. The Fund, Gatari adds, will collaborate with the organisation’s career and healing… … Continue Reading »
…they try hard to crack the funniest jokes, but the painful marks of genocide do not completely vanish from their faces. I went on with my venting, and I said:… … Continue Reading »
…it comes to sharing happiness as well as sorrow as a family,” he says. Commemoration period Every year, the country observes an official mourning week, from April 7-13, in remembrance… … Continue Reading »
…ably demonstrated the way in which judicious interventions in a complex policy and political context can mobilise potential within a disadvantaged population that is otherwise easily written off. SIP is… … Continue Reading »
…way in which judicious interventions in a complex policy and political context can mobilise potential within a disadvantaged population that is otherwise easily written off. SIP is important, not so… … Continue Reading »