Zürcher Nachrichten - Rwanda orphans build hope from horror 30 years after genocide

EUR -
AED 3.972785
AFN 71.358961
ALL 98.699476
AMD 419.293895
ANG 1.95499
AOA 985.898771
ARS 1063.516951
AUD 1.620889
AWG 1.949619
AZN 1.838335
BAM 1.955772
BBD 2.190188
BDT 129.628113
BGN 1.955465
BHD 0.407698
BIF 3148.983266
BMD 1.081619
BND 1.424092
BOB 7.511891
BRL 6.153979
BSD 1.084694
BTN 91.189372
BWP 14.472923
BYN 3.549881
BYR 21199.737344
BZD 2.186488
CAD 1.496274
CDF 3077.206407
CHF 0.935703
CLF 0.037327
CLP 1029.971569
CNY 7.705992
CNH 7.700367
COP 4626.896756
CRC 557.791879
CUC 1.081619
CUP 28.66291
CVE 110.263395
CZK 25.274232
DJF 193.158974
DKK 7.457462
DOP 65.25905
DZD 144.678484
EGP 52.641542
ERN 16.224289
ETB 130.412201
FJD 2.418172
FKP 0.827622
GBP 0.832841
GEL 2.942619
GGP 0.827622
GHS 17.344747
GIP 0.827622
GMD 75.713401
GNF 9356.950277
GTQ 8.387878
GYD 226.836697
HKD 8.40694
HNL 27.015607
HRK 7.451308
HTG 142.779241
HUF 401.276962
IDR 16831.077184
ILS 4.089521
IMP 0.827622
INR 90.937301
IQD 1420.992449
IRR 45538.880147
ISK 149.100674
JEP 0.827622
JMD 172.37749
JOD 0.766902
JPY 163.179559
KES 139.929366
KGS 92.477658
KHR 4401.976608
KMF 492.29909
KPW 973.457083
KRW 1492.867099
KWD 0.331495
KYD 0.903995
KZT 523.12722
LAK 23824.873394
LBP 97137.683806
LKR 318.03831
LRD 208.80889
LSL 19.116298
LTL 3.19374
LVL 0.65426
LYD 5.219972
MAD 10.755643
MDL 19.416897
MGA 5004.973403
MKD 61.524673
MMK 3513.05714
MNT 3675.342249
MOP 8.684054
MRU 42.944375
MUR 49.661875
MVR 16.613693
MWK 1880.790005
MXN 21.587606
MYR 4.676901
MZN 69.061548
NAD 19.116298
NGN 1775.434864
NIO 39.919788
NOK 11.83689
NPR 145.902876
NZD 1.790058
OMR 0.416398
PAB 1.084684
PEN 4.071241
PGK 4.271938
PHP 62.576008
PKR 301.1758
PLN 4.320337
PYG 8592.954337
QAR 3.956142
RON 4.973498
RSD 117.04846
RUB 104.701228
RWF 1467.592201
SAR 4.062826
SBD 8.976712
SCR 14.731595
SDG 650.60203
SEK 11.424609
SGD 1.4228
SHP 0.827622
SLE 24.709601
SLL 22681.01145
SOS 619.890975
SRD 35.925972
STD 22387.33474
SVC 9.49095
SYP 2717.60111
SZL 19.110898
THB 36.262906
TJS 11.557839
TMT 3.785667
TND 3.354551
TOP 2.533261
TRY 37.024259
TTD 7.360961
TWD 34.674573
TZS 2947.412743
UAH 44.813562
UGX 3975.942112
USD 1.081619
UYU 45.169342
UZS 13900.92613
VEF 3918222.563442
VES 42.325847
VND 27448.792573
VUV 128.412043
WST 3.029815
XAF 655.953514
XAG 0.032065
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.92313
XDR 0.813596
XOF 655.953514
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.810454
ZAR 19.06278
ZMK 9735.877214
ZMW 28.934846
ZWL 348.280958
  • RBGPF

    61.7500

    61.75

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.5400

    47.63

    -1.13%

  • NGG

    -0.9700

    67.03

    -1.45%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    24.65

    -0.53%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.42

    +0.27%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    12.89

    -0.93%

  • GSK

    -0.3900

    38.16

    -1.02%

  • BCC

    -3.8400

    137.9

    -2.78%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    34.25

    -0.73%

  • RIO

    -0.4100

    64.95

    -0.63%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.15

    -0.53%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    33.39

    -0.45%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    77.44

    -1.06%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    9.63

    -1.35%

  • BP

    0.1400

    31.47

    +0.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.1700

    24.87

    -0.68%

Rwanda orphans build hope from horror 30 years after genocide
Rwanda orphans build hope from horror 30 years after genocide / Photo: Guillem Sartorio - AFP

Rwanda orphans build hope from horror 30 years after genocide

Jeanne Allaire Kayigirwa was sure she was going to die three times during the Rwandan genocide in which most of her friends and family were massacred.

Text size:

She and her sister hid in the bush for six weeks as the slaughter went on around them, moving on all the time as Hutu extremists hunted Tutsis like them "down with dogs".

"I don't know how we survived," she said.

Much about that time she does not want to remember. "Otherwise I won't be able to go on."

Jeanne learned to live with her demons, but "you cannot wipe a genocide from your memory. It comes back went it wants."

Then one day she took stock. "Am I going to let the killers who wanted to wipe me out also take my second life?

"Or am I going to live it?" said the 46-year-old, who went on to be a top local government official in Paris.

More than a million people died in the genocide organised by the extremist Hutu regime in 1994.

Men, women, children from the Tutsi minority systematically exterminated between April and July 1994 -- often with machetes -- by Hutu forces, and sometimes even by their neighbours, colleagues and even friends.

Three decades after the horror, AFP set out to find Tutsi children who survived the killing and who were adopted or grew up in France.

They talked of the weight of what they witnessed, their feeling of injustice and about living for those who were slaughtered.

Some have remained abroad, while others have been drawn back to Rwanda.

Jeanne lost her father, sister, friends, cousins, aunts and uncles -- "I try not to count".

"They put the guns to our temples the day they came to kill us," she said.

- Silences -

Moving to France "gave me the chance to study", but more than anything it "helped me because I didn't have to see the killers every day."

Soon after arriving, Jeanne helped found the Ibuka group, a survivor group which keeps the memory of the genocide alive, going out into schools to speak about what happened.

Jeanne grabbed her "second life" in both hands, began a family and worked for the mayor of Paris.

"I feel that by talking about it I am not shutting up the dead who have been silenced."

A heavy silence, however, hung over Manzi Rugirangoga's childhood.

Now living back in the Rwandan capital Kigali, Manzi survived the unthinkable as a baby.

He was just 15 months old when his family took refuge in a school with other Tutsis in the southern town of Butare. On April 29, 1994, Hutu militia attacked. His mother, who was carrying him on her back, was killed along with his aunt and uncle.

But he and his sister and brother, who were four and seven, were not.

"The killers didn't spare us, they just said that they didn't want to waste their bullets on us." Instead they were left to "die from hunger and grief".

Manzi's father found him in an orphanage in Burundi three months later.

- A terrible injustice -

The children survived thanks to an extraordinary rescue operation by the Swiss charity Terre des hommes (Tdh), which has only come to light recently thanks to a book called "The Convoy" by Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse, one of 1,000 survivors its aid workers got out of the country.

"Dozens of members of my family" were killed in the genocide, said Manzi, now 31. "My father is the only survivor on his side." A vet, he was in France on a training course when the genocide began.

He brought the children to France "because he had very little hope of finding anything in Rwanda".

"I still feel this huge feeling of injustice about what happened," said Manzi.

Little was ever said at home. "People would ask you where you came from, and I knew very little."

It was only after the "shock" of returning to Rwanda for the first time when he was 10 that he felt "an instinctive need" to go home.

"I finally knew where I came from," he said.

After some difficult teenage years, Manzi went back to Kigali on his own when he was 15 to stay with his aunt, and then boarded at high school in the east of the country, where he had to learn Rwandan.

After university in France, he moved back to Kigali.

"Back then, I didn't see my future in France," he said.

Sandrine Lorusso grew up in the same silence. The youngest of nine, she lost both her parents and three siblings in the massacres.

Adopted by her eldest sister and her husband who were living in France, her interview with AFP was the first time the soft-spoken mother-of-two has ever talked publicly about what she went through in Kigali.

"It wasn't something we talked about," said the nurse.

"The killers gathered in front of our house. They took my mother, but they left me and my sister Aline. We ran to our neighbours and a few minutes later we heard gunfire," she said, her voice breaking with emotion.

- Panic attacks -

She still doesn't know how her father died. He was found in a mass grave.

Growing up, "my brain worked hard to hide" the memories. But things got "complicated" as Sandrine approached adulthood. It all got too much "between the ages of 17 and 24 and I had depression".

The trauma came back with a vengeance when she was pregnant with her first child. "I had inexplicable panic attacks. You try to keep it down but sooner or later it comes out," she said.

When she left for France, Jeanne thought she was also "leaving the genocide" behind her.

"I thought I was going to live a good life, I hoped to never have to see the images of the bones and the ruins. But even if you move 6,000 kilometres (3,700 miles), you bring the genocide with you," she said.

She described how it followed her down French streets where she would notice "spots where people might be able to hide", or be spooked by the "sound of shooting" when she went to the cinema.

"The nightmares have lasted a long time," she said.

Gaspard Jassef's memories would not leave him alone either. As a six-year-old, he hid out from the genocide alone in the forest for five months.

"The commemoration of the 30 years (since the genocide) touched me intensely... and I want to sort out of all the unknowns in my head about what happened to me," he told AFP in a Paris cafe.

His little sister and his mother -- a Tutsi married to a Hutu -- were poisoned by their Hutu relatives at the start of the genocide.

Fearful for his "mixed" child, his father told him to hide in the forest. But he never came to find him. He too had been killed, according to information Gaspard has been able to piece together.

In October 1994 -- three months after the genocide ended -- a French nurse called Dominique Jassef, who had been working in a local dispensary, found him in the forest with advanced malnutrition. "I ate what I could. I hunted small animals. I stayed in the trees," he said.

"When my second mother found me, I probably had a week to live," he said. The doctors thought "there was no hope" but the French nurse refused to give up on him, got him treatment and later adopted him, changing his life.

- France's shameful legacy -

Gaspard still has trouble sleeping and is haunted by the day when he had to bury his mother and his sister.

But in "my sadness I have had the great good luck to have had two very loving mothers", he added.

Despite the trauma, he was a brilliant student and worked for several years for a think tank and co-founded the support group, The Adopted of Rwanda.

Even so, "everyday life can be a struggle, and sometimes I feel very old", he admitted.

A deeply social party animal, Gaspard loves nothing more than talking French politics for hours on end. "My blood and my skin is Rwandan and I also feel fully French," he said.

Yet France's role in the genocide of the Tutsi has been an extremely touchy subject.

Paris, which had close relations with the murderous Hutu regime, was for a long time accused by Kigali of "complicity" in the genocide.

A commission of historians in 2021 found that France under the late president Francois Mitterrand had "heavy and overwhelming responsibility" for the genocide but had not been complicit.

The writer Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse makes a distinction between "the absolutely fantastic French people who welcomed her" and "the French politicians and military whose actions should be condemned".

Her host family "really looked after me" and even took her to a psychologist.

Despite the trauma, she was able to "reconstruct" her life. "Of course, you feel fragile," she admitted. "When you have been excluded from humanity... it's a long road back from that," she said.

She chose a career where she "fights against death", working for NGOs dealing with AIDs and addiction.

- Reconnecting -

The 30th anniversary of the genocide has been a big moment for many of the survivors.

Last year Jeanne moved back to Rwanda with her husband and young son.

"I felt I was missing something in France," she told AFP from Kigali. "I wanted to live with my family and my mother again. She is now over 80. I wanted to show my son my homeland and my language and maybe help rebuild the country."

Gaspard said he has finally found a "form of stability" and wants to go back to his village and understand what happened to his father.

Manzi has a heap of projects on the go in Kigali. He has written an "African futurist" novel, founded a publishing house and has invested in farms growing peppers, beans and watermelons.

"Reconnecting with my roots, my family and my history has helped me," he said.

But "the idea that we can totally reconstruct ourselves, and that we don't think about what happened, that is unobtainable," Manzi added.

Back in France, Sandrine wants to get more involved in a group keeping alive the memory of what was done.

She has also thought about going to a therapist. "There are things about what happened in 1994 that I can't remember -- and the genocide has also robbed me of my memories of what went before, of my early childhood."

Since she went back to Rwanda, Beata has found happiness in its particular "light and landscapes" and the spirit of the place.

"Every time I return, I reconnect with who I was," she said.

Y.Keller--NZN