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Every Genocide Leaves a Legacy

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  • Every Genocide Leaves a Legacy

    PR Newswire
    April 19, 2013 Friday 12:07 AM EST


    Every Genocide Leaves a Legacy: Rwandan Tutsi Genocide Testimonies
    Integrated Into USC Shoah Foundation's Visual History Archive

    LOS ANGELES, April 19, 2013


    USC Shoah Foundation - The Institute for Visual History and Education
    has added a collection of testimonies of survivors and rescuers from
    the 1994 Rwandan Tutsi genocide to its Visual History Archive. This
    marks the first integration of testimonies outside of Holocaust
    survivors and witnesses into the Visual History Archive. The 65
    audiovisual interviews in this new collection mark the beginning of
    the Rwanda Archive and Education Program, the Institute's landmark
    initiative in partnership with Aegis Trust at the Kigali Genocide
    Memorial (KGM) that aspires to record and preserve approximately 500
    Rwandan testimonies as an educational resource for the entire world,
    for all time.

    (Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20121113/DC12566LOGO)

    "Every genocide leaves a legacy," said Freddy Mutanguha, Country
    Director of Aegis in Rwanda, who lost his parents and four sisters
    during the genocide. "This legacy includes the memories of survivors.
    I gave my testimony to the Institute because I think it's important to
    preserve an historical record of what happened in Rwanda. Through the
    educational use of testimony, made possible by access to the Visual
    History Archive, the memories of Rwandan survivors and Holocaust
    survivors are becoming a conduit for peace in my country, as well as
    in countries across the world."

    The Rwanda Archive and Education Program is part of an ongoing effort
    by the Institute to broaden the content in its Visual History Archive.
    "The Rwandan testimonies will support scholarship and research into
    the causes and consequences of genocides and the role of audiovisual
    testimony in research and education, as well as the development of
    education programs and learning tools for students in Rwanda and
    worldwide," said USC Shoah Foundation Executive Director Stephen D.
    Smith, noting that Steven Spielberg established the Institute in 1994
    - the same year as the outbreak of genocide in Rwanda.

    In addition to Rwandan Tutsi genocide, the Institute is also
    fundraising to integrate testimonies from the Armenian and Cambodian
    genocides. Each testimony collection is to add context for the
    others, providing multiple pathways for students, educators, and
    scholars to learn from the eyewitnesses of history across time,
    locations, cultures, and social-political circumstances.

    The Institute recorded 15 Rwandan testimonies in the United States,
    and Aegis, which began working with the Institute in 2008, is
    providing its first 50 testimonies taken in Rwanda. In addition to
    becoming available in the Visual History Archive that is available at
    43 institutions and universities around the world, testimonies will be
    included in the partnership's work to establish a national
    peace-building education program that will eventually be available in
    the five provinces of Rwanda.

    Some of the testimonies will also be added to the Institute's public
    web portal, called the Visual History Archive Online
    (vhaonline.usc.edu). By summer 2013, the testimonies will also be
    integrated into IWitness, the Institute's award-winning website for
    secondary students and teachers (iwitness.usc.edu).

    About the USC Shoah Foundation

    USC Shoah Foundation - The Institute for Visual History and Education
    (sfi.usc.edu) is dedicated to making audio-visual interviews with
    survivors and other witnesses of the Holocaust and other genocides, a
    compelling voice for education and action. The USC Shoah Foundation's
    current collection of nearly 52,000 eyewitness testimonies contained
    within its Visual History Archive preserves history as told by the
    people who lived it, and lived through it. Housed at the University of
    Southern California, within the Dana and David Dornsife College of
    Letters, Arts and Sciences, the USC Shoah Foundation works with
    partners around the world to advance scholarship and research, to
    provide resources and online tools for educators, and to disseminate
    the testimonies for educational purposes.

    About Aegis Trust

    The Aegis Trust is an international organization working to prevent
    genocide. Aegis honors the memory of the victims of genocide and
    enables students, professionals, decision-makers and a wider public to
    meet survivors and learn from their experiences. Through education,
    Aegis works to build long-term peace and confront the prejudice and
    beliefs that lead to genocide, while finding ways to support survivors
    to rebuild their lives. Aegis conducts research on places where
    genocide is a current threat, works to end impunity by holding
    perpetrators to account, provides policy advice to decision-makers who
    can respond, and undertakes advocacy to take the voices of those at
    risk to politicians, the media and the public. Launched in 2000, Aegis
    developed from the work of the UK Holocaust Centre and has offices in
    London, UK and Kigali, Rwanda.

    About Kigali Genocide Memorial

    In 2001, the Mayor of Kigali and Rwanda's Minister of Culture traveled
    to various memorials and museums in Europe and North America, when
    they discovered The Holocaust Centre in the UK - home of the Aegis
    Trust. Inspired by The Holocaust Centre's function as both a place of
    remembrance and education, they commissioned Aegis to create the
    Kigali Genocide Memorial. The Memorial was opened in 2004 on the 10th
    anniversary of the genocide. Standing in the heart of Rwanda's capital
    at a site where some 250,000 victims of the genocide are buried, it
    comprises exhibitions, memorial gardens, educational facilities and
    the Genocide Archive of Rwanda. Hosting tens of thousands of visitors
    a year, from local Rwandan school students to international
    dignitaries such as former US President Bill Clinton and UN
    Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, the Memorial serves both as a place of
    commemoration and as a unique educational centre. On behalf of CNLG,
    Aegis manages the Kigali Genocide Memorial, ensuring it continues to
    be a place of commemoration and a place for investment in
    peace-building. The Memorial operates entirely on the support of
    generous donors.

    Contact:
    Anne Marie Stein
    213-740-6036
    [email protected]

    SOURCE USC Shoah Foundation Institute

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