Rwandans start Genocide commemoration week

Apr 08, 2016

This year’s commemoration of the Genocide is taking place under the theme of “Fighting Genocide Ideology”, which experts say is crucial for promoting unity

Rwandans and friends of Rwanda across the world yesterday, started a week-long commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.

The events to commemorate the Genocide took place in every village (umudugudu) across the country, with people meeting to hear testimonies of how the Genocide was organised and perpetrated, killing more than a million Rwandans in only 100 days in 1994.

In the capital Kigali, President Kagame and First lady Jeannette Kagame, as well as visiting Tanzanian President Dr John Pombe Magufuli and his wife Janeth Magufuli, joined the country's officials, members of the diplomatic corps, friends of Rwanda from abroad and Genocide survivors at Kigali Genocide Memorial in Gisozi in an event to commemorate the Genocide.

Presidents Kagame and Magufuli and both First Ladies laid wreaths at the memorial in honour of the over one million Genocide victims and then the Presidents lit the Flame of Remembrance which will burn for 100 days during the mourning period. The flame symbolises the courage and resilience of Rwandans after the Genocide.

At the commemoration event to begin the mourning week in Gisozi, the Executive Secretary of the National Commission for the Fight against Genocide, Dr Jean Damascène Bizimana, said that the Genocide was a result of a genocide ideology that was nurtured in Rwanda and called on Rwandans and the entire world to join hands in fighting both the ideology and genocide denial.

"Genocide can't happen anywhere in the world without the existence of a genocide ideology," Bizimana said, emphasising that the fight against the ideology everywhere in the world has to be everyone's role if it is to be eradicated.

Kigali Genocide Memorial, where more than 500 guests gathered for the ceremony to mark the beginning of the national commemoration week, is the final resting place for more than 250,000 victims of the Genocide.

Genocide survivors, relatives and friends of victims, global tourists and researchers ,among other people, visit the memorial every year to remember their loved ones and to get a better understanding of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.

This year's commemoration of the Genocide is taking place under the theme of "Fighting Genocide Ideology", which experts say is crucial for promoting unity among Rwandans and preventing genocide from happening again anywhere in the world.

Source: www.newtimes.co.r 


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