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Lessons from Rwanda: rethinking the genocide
Rank: Elder Joined: 7/1/2011 Posts: 8,804 Location: Nairobi
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I was reading about the bravery, and perhaps luck of Ghanian peacekeepers in being able to negotiate for the safety of 80 people who were marked for death by the interhamwe, when I started asking myself perhaps for the first time in earnest, how Rwanda and the world came to that point known as the genocide.
Previously, it was all too easy for me to say the genocide was a result of 'negative ethnicity' and I thought it a good thing that the country and government now put little emphasis on ethnicity. But I now believe I was misguided.
The problem was, is, and continues to be about how power is acquired, distributed, and safeguarded. And on this measure not just Rwanda, but the world in general is napping and similar catastrophes aren't far off.
The French are boycotting this year's commemorations, yet can they truly deny their complicity? In my view they stepped into Belgian shoes, shoes left to them by the Germans. The Germans who wore the shoes given to them by the Tutsis.
The current government in Rwanda may boast of economic health, and some of us may covet the feat, but that's so shortsighted. We need to evaluate Rwanda and any other state on the parameters of power and power distribution and on this scale there's very little to smile about.
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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Genocide.
It was an event past hence I doubt if it can be 're-thought'. There is nothing much to be 're-done'. Indeed it was about how power was (is) acquired, distributed and safeguarded. Who is this seeking for power?
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Rank: Elder Joined: 6/17/2008 Posts: 23,365 Location: Nairobi
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Rwanda was terrible!!!!..."Wewe ni mtu mdogo sana....na mwenye amekuandika pia ni mtu mdogo sana!".
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/1/2011 Posts: 8,804 Location: Nairobi
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Muriel wrote: Genocide.
It was an event past hence I doubt if it can be 're-thought'. There is nothing much to be 're-done'. Indeed it was about how power was (is) acquired, distributed and safeguarded. Who is this seeking for power?
I see genocide like tides in the ocean of a world order. They come and go. Hence thought and rethought is possible and necessary. First to know how far off the shore we should be, and then how to harness this tidal power. Every human is seeking power.
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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tycho wrote:Muriel wrote: Genocide.
It was an event past hence I doubt if it can be 're-thought'. There is nothing much to be 're-done'. Indeed it was about how power was (is) acquired, distributed and safeguarded. Who is this seeking for power?
I see genocide like tides in the ocean of a world order. They come and go. Hence thought and rethought is possible and necessary. First to know how far off the shore we should be, and then how to harness this tidal power. Every human is seeking power. 20 years later, with the old world order gone, its demise prompted by the Rwanda Genocide, genocide still occurs. To what purpose then is the world order? What promise does it hold that there will be no more genocide?
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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I remember watching, studying with morbid fascination, photographs of the dead bodies.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/1/2011 Posts: 8,804 Location: Nairobi
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Muriel wrote:tycho wrote:Muriel wrote: Genocide.
It was an event past hence I doubt if it can be 're-thought'. There is nothing much to be 're-done'. Indeed it was about how power was (is) acquired, distributed and safeguarded. Who is this seeking for power?
I see genocide like tides in the ocean of a world order. They come and go. Hence thought and rethought is possible and necessary. First to know how far off the shore we should be, and then how to harness this tidal power. Every human is seeking power. 20 years later, with the old world order gone, its demise prompted by the Rwanda Genocide, genocide still occurs. To what purpose then is the world order? What promise does it hold that there will be no more genocide? Your first paragraph is 'enigmatic'. But true in our context. The old world order is phasing out. In the new world order we should look forward to swords becoming ploughs.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 6/8/2010 Posts: 1,734
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The only thing I always ask is why do they insist its genocide against Tutsi and yet am sure it was two pronged. They better repackage it as against Rwandese Life is an endless adventure
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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freiks wrote:The only thing I always ask is why do they insist its genocide against Tutsi and yet am sure it was two pronged. They better repackage it as against Rwandese Revising the imagery leaves me with no strength to do anything else but reflect deeply on certain things. If that is the purpose of the commemoration, let it be.
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/19/2009 Posts: 3,142
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tycho wrote:Muriel wrote:tycho wrote:Muriel wrote: Genocide.
It was an event past hence I doubt if it can be 're-thought'. There is nothing much to be 're-done'. Indeed it was about how power was (is) acquired, distributed and safeguarded. Who is this seeking for power?
I see genocide like tides in the ocean of a world order. They come and go. Hence thought and rethought is possible and necessary. First to know how far off the shore we should be, and then how to harness this tidal power. Every human is seeking power. 20 years later, with the old world order gone, its demise prompted by the Rwanda Genocide, genocide still occurs. To what purpose then is the world order? What promise does it hold that there will be no more genocide? Your first paragraph is 'enigmatic'. But true in our context. The old world order is phasing out. In the new world order we should look forward to swords becoming ploughs. How can swords become ploughs when harnessing the tidal powers of genocide is a means to achieving the new world order? If it was achieved through genocide, it will be maintained through genocide.
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Lessons from Rwanda: rethinking the genocide
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