Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rwanda's sad chapter remembered

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

  • Rwanda's sad chapter remembered

    Ottawa Citizen
    April 6, 2005 Wednesday
    Final Edition

    Rwanda's sad chapter remembered

    by Jennifer Campbell, The Ottawa Citizen


    It's been 11 years since the Rwandan genocide, and only now are the
    images of terror reaching wide audiences through films such as Hotel
    Rwanda and books such as Romeo Dallaire's Shake Hands with the Devil.

    Rwandan Ambassador Eugene Munyakayanza will be front and centre this
    week, as his embassy kicks off the 11th commemoration of the 1994
    genocide. Mr. Munyakayanza, who arrived in Ottawa in November, was an
    educator in Rwanda in 1994 when the militia group known as
    Interahamwe began a killing rampage that, in three months, left
    800,000 bodies in its wake. Mr. Munyakayanza said he was powerless
    during the genocide, adding that he, too, lost "many family members."


    "People were complete animals," he said. "People lost their friends,
    their brothers. It was a denial for human rights."

    Mr. Munyakayanza said the commemoration ceremony is important because
    humanity has told itself "never again" too many times. He pointed out
    that the phrase was uttered in 1915 after the Armenian genocide and
    again in 1945 after the Jewish Holocaust.

    "Those were followed by genocide in Rwanda," he said, adding that the
    international community must be made aware of the power of
    intervention, a message so frequently and fervently put forward by
    Canada's Lt.-Gen. Dallaire.

    "It is also important that the Canadian community be made aware of
    the needs of the victims of the genocide," Mr. Munyakayanza said,
    "but also the needs of Rwanda to heal the wounds of the genocide."

    The commemoration, called "Remembering and combatting genocide
    ideology in and outside Rwanda," starts tomorrow at noon with an
    opening ceremony at the Centennial Flame on Parliament Hill.
    Following bagpipes and a moment of silence, MP Don Boudria and the
    ambassador will give speeches. A representative from HUMURA, an
    organization that helps genocide survivors, will also speak.

    That evening, at Saint Paul University (6:30 in the amphitheatre, 223
    Main St.), Francoise Nduwimana, a human rights and international
    development lecturer at the Universite du Quebec in the Outaouais,
    will speak on the crimes committed against women, the "forgotten
    victims" of the genocide.

    Friday from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m., a traditional Rwandan mourning ceremony
    will be held at Pere Arthur Guertin Community Centre (16 Beriault St.
    in Gatineau). The event will pay tribute to the victims of the
    genocide through testimonies, songs and poems. Saturday's program (at
    Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington St.) is from 12:45 p.m.
    until 7 p.m. Lt.-Gen. Dallaire will speak at 3 p.m. The nine-day
    commemoration ends April 16 with a closing ceremony at the Maison du
    Citoyen (25 Laurier St., Gatineau). The former president of AVEGA,
    the Association of Genocide Widows Agahozo in Rwanda, will speak at 4
    p.m.
Working...
X