Genocide survivors and perpetrators
live together peacefully in Rwanda's reconciliation
village |
KIGALI, Before the Rwandan genocide, Mutiribambi Aziri
and Jaqueline Mukamana were neighbours in the town of
Nyamata, south of the capital Kigali. When the 100-day
slaughter began in April 1994, Mukamana, a teenage Tutsi
student, and Aziri, a Hutu farmer, found themselves on
opposite sides as 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were
slaughtered by Hutu militias, known as the Interahamwe, and
ordinary Rwandans.
Mukamana went to fetch water from the community well and
returned to find her entire family hacked to death by
neighbours. She hid in the fields and then fled on foot to
neighbouring Burundi.
Aziri was one of those whipped up into a killing spree by
Rwanda’s hard-line Hutu administration. He did not murder
Mukamana’s family but he admits to killing some of her
neighbours with a machete.
Thirteen years later, they are neighbours again, chatting on
the dusty roads and attending church services together.
“We help each other,” Aziri told IRIN. “When a member of one
family is sick, we drop by.” Most importantly, he says, “our
kids are friends”.
The 40 families living in Imidugudo, which translates as
“reconciliation village”, in Nyamata, 30km south of the
capital, Kigali, are part of an experiment whereby genocide
survivors and confessed perpetrators live in the same
community, in small tin-roofed houses they built themselves.
The village is the brainchild of Pastor Steven Gahigi, an
Anglican clergyman who survived the genocide by fleeing to
Burundi with his wife and two children. His mother, father
and siblings all died and Gahigi thought he had lost his
ability to forgive.
“I prayed until one night I saw an image of Jesus Christ on
the cross,” Gahigi says. “I thought of how he forgave and I
knew that I and others could also do it.”
Inspired by the vision, Gahigi began preaching forgiveness
not only in Nyamata parish, but in the cramped prisons where
hundreds of thousands of perpetrators were awaiting trial.
Seeking forgiveness
In 2003, faced with crowded prisons and a shortage of
qualified judges, the Rwandan government began offering a
provisional release to low-level perpetrators, including the
sick, elderly and those who were children at the time of the
genocide.
People tried by Rwanda’s traditional “gacaca” courts, in
which members of the community act as judges, had their
sentences halved if they confessed their involvement in the
genocide.
Today, Gahigi provides spiritual council to both
perpetrators and victims, most of whom work as small
farmers, just as they did before the genocide.
The path to forgiveness was not easy, residents say.
Skulls of genocides victims at the
Murambi Genocide Memorial site in Gikongoro Province,
southeastern Rwanda |
“I did not think I could forgive,” Mukamana says, “until
I heard the pastor’s message.” Now, she is fond of elderly
Aziri, who often stops by her house to chat.
Residents say their ability to forgive is rooted in
Christian beliefs.
“These people killed my parents,” Janet Mukabyagaju told
IRIN. “It is not easy for me to forgive them. But God
forgave. I must do the same.”
With funding from non-profit Christian organisation Prison
Fellowship International, survivors and perpetrators agreed
to live together harmoniously. The founding members of the
community voted on who could live at Imidugudo - a practice
that continues today.
Gahigi said they generally choose families who are most
vulnerable due to poverty or illness.
Reconciliation
While Rwanda’s current administration has renounced the use
of ethnic terminology and instead promotes reconciliation,
many Rwandans say there is still a raging undercurrent of
mistrust among those who survived the genocide and those who
committed it.
Residents in Imidugudo say although the terms Hutu and Tutsi
should no longer be a part of Rwandan society, they do not
believe in painting over the past. They speak to their
children about their roles in the genocide.
“Genocide has enormous consequences for those who did it and
for those who survived,” Xavier Namay, an admitted
perpetrator, told IRIN. “My children must know what I did so
they can rebuild this country positively.”