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Gilbert
Mwenedata and World Vision chief executive Tim Costello
release 10 doves to commemorate a decade of peace in Rwanda
at Melbourne's Federation Square. Photo courtesy of World
Vision.
Tim
Costello told those gathered in Melbourne to commemorate
the anniversary that while the progress in Rwanda over the
past 10 years has been commendable, there was still a long
way to go.
“The job does not just rest with Rwandans though,”
he said. “We, the international community that failed
Rwanda in her time of need in 1994, must not fail her now
as she faces additional challenges to the genocide.”
Costello
said Australians have given more than $10 million to assist
those affected by genocide in Rwanda over the past 10 years
but said it was vital the assistance continued.
• Anyone wishing to make a donation to World Vision
can call 13 32 40.
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7th April, 2004
In
Australia to commemorate a decade of peace since 1994, Rwandan World
Vision worker Gilbert Mwenedata spoke with DAVID ADAMS about where
his country has come from and where it's headed...
Gilbert Mwenedata was just 19-years-old when he and his family were
forced to flee their home and hide in a swamp as death raged across
Rwanda.
Five weeks later, when the then student emerged from the swamp,
it was without his mother and sister, who along with many members
of his extended family and friends were among the more than 800,000
people who died during the “100 days of madness” when
Hutu extremists rampaged through the east central African nation
from April to June, 1994.
In Australia to commemorate the tragic events of that year (which
he officially marked in Melbourne on April 7 by releasing 10 doves
with World Vision chief executive Tim Costello), Mwenedata says
that as well as remembering the terrible events of 1994 which left
as many as 300,000 children orphaned and millions without a home,
this week was also a celebration of what had been achieved in Rwanda
since.
“We learned many lessons from the genocide,” he says.
“One lesson is that we have to go ahead even though...we had
this bad experience. We must go ahead and look at other ways of
having a better future. I think we have to come to terms with our
lot and to rebuild our lives and our country.”
Gilbert, now 29, was in his home village on holidays from his studies
at a Kigali seminary when the killings began. He and his family
fled into a swamp when they learned of what was happening and remained
there for the next five weeks. But even there, Mwenedata now recalls,
they were not safe.
“Many people were killed there and even those who survived
they have many scars and they having been seeing such things which
affected them even after the genocide.”
After he returned home, Mwenedata found the seminary where he had
been studying closed. He attended another college and soon became
involved in healing and reconciliation workshops. Then, in 2001
Mwenedata began working with World Vision in assisting people to
tell their stories part of the organisation’s healing, peace-building
and reconciliation program. He now trains volunteer counsellors.
“We are helping people to have a time of bereavement because
during that time many people didn’t get and opportunity to
even weep or cry for what was happening to them so that is why now
we are trying to help them...” he says. “It is
a challenge, but we have to face it and we have to overcome it.”
Mwenedata adds that it is only by the grace of God that those who
witnessed the killings in 1994 have been able to move on.
“I can say that even God is helping us. For myself, I think
that we can achieve nothing but when I see the situation, I think
there is the hand of God in what we are doing...”
He adds that being able to share passages from the Bible and pray
with survivors has been a very positive experience.
Mwenedata says that while the shadows of past horrors are still
ever present in Rwanda, these days he sees “people living
together and sharing what they have”.
“I can see say there are many many things which have changed
just after the genocide. It is giving me hope for the future.”
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