|
RWANDA
TEN YEARS ON
SOMETIMES it
is because churches are places of such beauty or history that silence
is the only appropriate response. Sometimes
but not always!
I asked our
guide if it would be appropriate to enter the unremarkable redbrick
church. Going through the front door and walking down the aisles
I noticed myself doing something very strange. I realised that I
was practically tiptoeing somehow feeling that I was on sacred
space. It was also a walk to be made in total silence.
Nyarubue Church
is no ordinary place. Not now. Set in a village and high in the
hills of eastern Rwanda it was a place that thousands of people
fled to in 1994. The reasoning was simple. As a church, surely it
would provide a place of sanctuary for people fleeing genocide.
In a country and at a time when neighbour was turning against neighbour
it seemed to offer one of the few places of safety and security.
It was not to be the case.
Over a short
space of time the church and its environs became thronged with terrified
people. It was at such a time that someone gave the word to the
militias. What followed was an attack on the church in which over
twenty-five thousand people were murdered. What was meant to be
a sanctuary became a mass killing ground. Some of those who ought
to have been protectors had in fact been the betrayers.
It is a brutal
fact that during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda the machete was most
often the weapon of choice. In the space of one hundred days approximately
one million people were murdered in this country. Perpetrators did
not come from afar. Murder, rape and maiming were committed by fellow
citizens. It was quite literally a case of neighbour against neighbour.
On occasion it was even family member against family member.
My reason for
being in Rwanda was as part of a seven-person team from CMS Ireland.1
The Anglican Bishop of Kibungo, in eastern Rwanda, had invited us
to lead a residential training week for his clergy. Our task was
to teach on subjects such as leadership, development and reconciliation.
Everywhere we went, and in all the people we met, the scars of genocide
were never far from the surface.
What prompts
the citizens of a country of approximately eight million people
to commit such acts of intense madness? Why was Rwanda propelled
from being an obscure country to being a main news item in 1994?
Rwanda was colonised during the end of the nineteenth and beginning
of the twentieth century. Colonisers decided to use a well-tried
tactic for maintaining power the tactic of divide and rule.
At that time Rwanda was largely made up from three tribes: Hutu,
Tutsi and Twa. Encouraging inter-tribal jealousy, suspicion and
insecurity was a way of distracting the population from the fact
of colonial rule.
During the
1950s and early 1960s Rwanda eventually gained its independence.
The success of divide and rule as a means of maintaining
power was not lost on those who came to political power. The ideology
of tribal division became well developed and articulated by those
in power. Two disturbing features ensured the success of such a
tactic. One was a compliant media that seemed happy to broadcast
messages of hate, suspicion and division on behalf of the government.
The other was a compliant church. Church had become close to power.
In the process, its hierarchy not only failed to criticise such
unchristian propaganda but also, in some cases, even supported it.
It is always
easier to preach a difficult message of peace and reconciliation
to someone else in far away places. On my first Sunday I was guest
preacher at a local Anglican Church. My sermon was on the story
of the Good Samaritan. Jesus was explicit about what was needed
to inherit eternal life to love God more than anything else,
and to love our neighbour as ourselves. Jesus was making the point
that our neighbour is not only our friend. Our enemy is also our
neighbour. By tending to the needs of his Jewish enemy the Good
Samaritan was loving his neighbour.
I was nervous
about preaching such a message. Here I was in a country that was
not my own and I did not want to cause more harm than good. I was
also concerned about preaching such a message among people who had
suffered far more than I would ever understand.
The congregation
warmly received the message. It was later that I discovered that
in the church were those orphaned and widowed by the genocide. Also
in that congregation were people who, by action or by silence, had
committed such terrible acts. Both sides of the conflict were represented
in the church. To talk about loving your neighbour as yourself,
in the terms of The Good Samaritan, was not lost on these people.
They would understand it only too well.
As a visitor
I had no right to tell them who their enemy was. But, I could tell
them I knew who my enemy was in Northern Ireland my political
opponent, a person I profoundly mistrust, someone from the other
community. Not only that, it would also include people who were
part of organisations that had killed or maimed friends.
We dont
get to choose our neighbour. Jesus is frighteningly
to the point and relevant. I realised afresh that my enemy is my
neighbour the one that Jesus commands me to love. If Christianity
in my divided community is to have any integrity this is what must
be lived out.
What is truly
remarkable in a people to have suffered so much, so recently is
their open commitment to peace and reconciliation. The message is
preached energetically by both government and church. At the end
of our visit I met with the Vice-Chairperson of the National Unity
and Reconciliation Commission, who happens to be a committed Christian.
He was unequivocal in saying that the message of reconciliation
had to be preached clearly and unmistakably. All this from a man
whos father was murdered in tribal violence in 1963! I reflected
on how tempting it is for the Church in Ireland to be so careful
in its talk about the most fundamental teaching of Jesus
loving our neighbour. So careful in fact that the real
impact of the teaching gets lost in our fearful diplomacy.
The message
I saw the Church in Rwanda preach was also holistic. It was a message
of the need for personal salvation. There was also an important
emphasis on the need for development. This was a message of particular
power and relevance in a country with few natural resources and
much poverty. It was clear that the gospel message had to be about
lifting up the poor. Running through the very sinews of the Church
was also the message of reconciliation. The cost of such a message
would not need to be explained in such a country.
It seems as
though the Church in Rwanda has managed to weave together the threads
of personal salvation, development and reconciliation. It is not
a case of either/or. To preach one of these is not to
diminish the importance of the other. This is a lesson for the church
in Northern Ireland where the Christian community tends to polarise
round one of these threads to the exclusion of the others. In so
doing, there is the temptation to look askance at others with different
emphases. The power of Christian witness in our own community is
where we have a burning heart for peoples souls, for the poor,
and for reconciliation in our divided community.
One reflection
has taken time to come together in my own mind. In Rwanda there
seems to be an agreed narrative about the awfulness of what happened
during the genocide. No one tries to justify or excuse what happened.
There is no appetite for calling it something other than what it
was. This honesty is a vital part of what makes reconciliation possible.
This seems to be absent in Northern Ireland. There is an attempt
to sanitise, rewrite and justify the unjustifiable.
Maiming and murder does not transform into something else with the
passage of time. It may do so in the telling of the story, but not
in reality. Airbrushing the story will impede rather than enable
reconciliation.
The genocide
of 1994 in Rwanda did not just come out of nowhere. It was not created
in a vacuum. It was the result of hunger for power, a constant message
of division and the absence of a critical voice either in the media
or from the church. So why is Rwanda a remarkable place? Is it because
of the unspeakable scale of the horror? Does the sheer volume of
loss of life mark it out on its own? In one sense, yes. Yet, in
another, it does not do justice to this county or these people!
What is remarkable is the honesty and mercy with which this population
is dealing with the legacy of its past. Their motivation is a desire
for the horrors of the past not to be the story of the future.
1 The Church
Missionary Society (Church of Ireland).
EARL STOREY
is a former Church of Ireland Rector who now works with a Community
Development Company. He is also running a peacebuilding project
in Derry and Raphoe dioceses. Earl is Chair of Community Relations
and Christians an umbrella organisation for churches of all
denominations in Derry/Londonderry.
|