Gourevitch, Phillip the author of “Remembering in Rwanda”
published In the New Yorker 90.9(2014) talks
about the ceremonies that the genocides have, and how the genocides were named.
The ceremonies take place in a stadium that thousands of mourners trek to by midmorning
when it is already hot. There is an Army band that walks to the center of the
field and plays solemn hymns. In this article he talks about a man in a brown
suit approaches the stage and states “I was a Fidel, a genocide survivor who
was supposed to be killed.” Then it goes on talking about the people coming
into the world after 1994 who have never heard of the genocides still have not
been taught about it in history. Lastly, they state how the amount of people killed
in a day.” At no other time in the history of our species were so many killed
so fast or so intimately: roughly a million people in a hundred days, most of
them butchered by hand, by their neighbors with household tools and homemade
weapons.”
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