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Rwanda remembers the Holocaust

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  • Rwanda remembers the Holocaust

    BBC News, UK
    Jan 27 2005


    Rwanda remembers the Holocaust
    By Robert Walker
    BBC correspondent in Kigali


    As the liberation of the Nazi death camp Auschwitz is being
    remembered across the world, one place where this is particularly
    poignant is in Rwanda - a country still coming to terms with its own
    trauma.

    Mass graves at the memorial contain up to 250,000 people
    After World War II, when the full horror of the Jewish Holocaust was
    revealed, the world said: "Never again".

    But in 1994 an extremist Hutu government in Rwanda began the
    systematic slaughter of the minority Tutsis.

    It is estimated some 800,000 people were killed in 100 days as the
    rest of the world stood by.

    On a hill in the Rwandan capital Kigali a memorial stands to those
    killed in the genocide.

    Mass graves contain anywhere up to 250,000 people and inside a
    specially constructed building there are displays teaching a new
    generation of Rwandans about what happened in 1994.

    Systematically eliminated

    But it is not only the Rwandan genocide which is remembered here.

    They measured the nose. They were measuring the eyes, heights and
    it is very similar

    Rwandan student Teddy Mugabo

    There are exhibitions about other mass killings during the past
    century, of the Namibian Herero people, the Armenians and of the Jews
    during the Holocaust.

    Teddy Mugabo lost her grandparents and many other relatives in 1994.
    Like other Rwandan students visiting the memorial, she is now also
    learning about the Holocaust.

    "It shows how the Nazis started segregating people and it shows the
    way they measured the nose and eyes to show that they are different
    people.

    "In Rwanda when they were killing Tutsis they did the same thing.
    They measured the nose. They were measuring the eyes, heights and it
    is very similar."

    Like the Jews during the Holocaust, Tutsis in Rwanda were
    systematically eliminated because of their identity.


    Blaming ethnic strife

    In the aftermath of both genocides, the world said: "Never again".

    1994: RWANDA'S GENOCIDE

    6 April: Rwandan Hutu President Habyarimana killed when plane shot
    down
    April -July: An estimated 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus killed
    July: Tutsi-led rebel movement RPF captures Rwanda's capital Kigali
    July: Two million Hutus flee to Zaire, now the DRC

    Genocide planning revealed

    But many Rwandans who saw UN troops stand aside in 1994 are sceptical
    that the world would act differently today.

    Tom Ndahiro of the Rwandan Human Rights Commission says western
    countries are still not ready to prevent genocide in African
    countries - unless their national interests are at stake.

    "What Nato did in former Yugoslavia was different from what it did on
    Darfur or in Rwanda.

    "When it happens to Rwanda - [there's a] sense of saying: 'Well it's
    the Rwandans - savages, tribal warfare, ethnic strife.' And it's
    nonsense."

    But the organisers of Kigali's memorial hope that by teaching new
    generations the painful history of the Rwandan genocide and the
    Holocaust the promises of "Never again" really will be kept next
    time.
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