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A SEAT IN THE GRASS
By Luleka Mangquku
April 1, 2004 (Pambazuka Newsletter #154) The mountains are
beguiling. Volcanic and tropical, they teem with life: bearded colobus,
a hundred kinds of butterflies and twice as many tree species all
in a space scarcely larger than Wales. Banana groves slide off the
slopes into valleys deeply rutted by brick cutters and potato mounds.
As the hills slip by it is tempting to forget the secrets they hold.
But in Rwanda, forgetting is impossible.
This was my first trip in 'Africa,' as we from South Africa like
to call the rest of our continent. I started in Kenya, confronting
what my country tried for 350 years to separate itself from: the
African experience. For years I had Kenyan and Ugandan acquaintances
who made me feel guilty for the xenophobic tendencies of my countrymen.
They reminded me constantly of the contributions and sacrifices
their countries made to assist our struggle against apartheid. They
said I should be grateful for their black governments. They made
me, a black South African woman, feel as if I owed them something.
Maybe I do.
Kenya and Uganda were moveable feasts: vibrant, sensuous, crumbling.
Their bustling cities and broken roads played to the lighter emotions
- curiosity, bemusement and, to a degree, affinity. But Rwanda was
different. Against the chaos of Kenya and Uganda, there is a calm
to Rwanda. Traffic moves at a seemingly different pace. The roads
are smoother. Perhaps it is the eeriness of confronting a horrific
past that is immediately, palpably present, but Rwanda feels more
contemplative.
At any rate, certain parallels with my own country's experience
are inescapable. Rwanda is about to commemorate 10 years since its
previous government incited a frenzy of ethnic genocide that consumed
an estimated 800,000 people. At that very horrible moment, thousands
of kilometres to the south, we were counting down the final tense
days to our first democratic election.
While we were dancing in the streets, Rwandans were hunting down
their neighbours, their brothers, their own wives and children in
the maize. While we held the world in rapture, the brave and powerful
turned their gaze away from Rwanda.
On my first ride through Rwanda's countryside, celebrating a decade
of democracy felt like desecrating the memory of the dead. Somehow,
the hundreds of years of being described as sub-human, discriminated
against, despised and abused that my people suffered paled in significance
to the 100 days of horror that Rwandans experienced.
Sitting on the bus, I felt I had intruded on a private affair. I
could never pretend to understand the pain of those in the seats
next to me. I am fortunate. The closest I ever came to the atrocities
of the apartheid era was when people came forward at the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to recount their stories of loss and suffering.
After a decade of democracy, we in South Africa are shielded by
a veil - a strong and encompassing constitution that makes it slightly
easier to pretend that apartheid is dead and buried. But in Rwanda
that veil does not exist. It is no longer official policy in Rwanda
to label people Hutu or Tutsi, to force them to carry identification
cards the way the apartheid governments made us carry passes. But
there is nothing to soothe the fears of ordinary Rwandans.
The drive from Katuna border post to Kigali took about an hour,
and in that time I tried to concentrate on the present - the amazing
slopes, the cool mountain air. But the past kept filtering through.
I couldn't help wondering what secrets lived in the hills. As we
neared the capital, one of my travel companions asked me what I
would like to see in his city. I couldn't say what I wanted to:
the genocide memorials. I wasn't sure if I could say the 'g-word'
out loud in a bus loaded with Rwandans, so I just smiled and looked
out the window.
As the road made a final descent into Kigali, my other companion,
also Rwandan, tugged at my sleeve and said: 'Genocide.' For a horrible
second I thought we had stumbled upon a fresh outbreak of violence.
His half-smile told me otherwise. Off to the right stood a genocide
memorial. That simple gesture broke the ice for me. I understood
that I could satisfy my curiosity openly without inciting anyone.
On my second day in the country, we drove south from Kigali to Gitarama
province where some of the worst of the killing occurred. Our first
stop was a memorial in the district of Kibagali, where human skulls
and bones were neatly stacked on glass shelves - the silent, faceless
remnants of husbands, wives and children.
Later that day, we attended a preliminary hearing of a gacaca, a
traditional court where perpetrators and victims resolve their differences
before the community and a panel of eminent persons. Rwanda has
revived gacacas - the word literally means 'in the grass' - in a
national experiment in social healing and reconciliation.
About 60 residents congregated under a few trees in an open patch
of ground next to some houses. Sixteen people sat in judgment. As
my companions and I found comfortable spots in the field, the chairman
of the panel called out a name of a victim. He asked if anyone gathered
there knew how the man had died. Silence. No hand went up. Finally,
one of the panellists stood up in anger and said it was impossible
that no one had witnessed the killing. She knew, she said, specific
people present at the sitting who should have seen the incident.
Provoked by further silence, she gave her own chilling account of
how dogs were set on the victim, chasing him through the village
until he finally lost the fight for his life. She then pointed out
an elderly man sitting under one of the trees as having witnessed
the chase. She accused the elderly man, describing how he continued
harvesting beans as the horrific drama unfolded nearby.
Dispassionately, the old man acknowledged that he had been tending
his garden at the time in question, but said he did not see anything.
I was stunned. Such passivity is incomprehensible, even when you
come from a country where crowds once gathered to watch gruesome
killings perpetrated in the guise of mob justice.
Across Rwanda, billboards promoting gacaca proclaim: 'The truth
heals. Let's tell what we saw, let's confess to what we did. This
will heal us.' I wonder. The success of the gacaca system heavily
relies on people volunteering information, being honest about what
they did and what they saw.
It was the same in South Africa. We offered amnesty - immunity from
prosecution - in exchange for the truth. By trading stories - what
we did, or what we endured - we hoped to find reconciliation. Who
can yet say if it has worked? Our society is still fragile and fragmented.
Who can say if it will work in Rwanda?
The reality of this country is that many ordinary people were incited
by the government to kill and there is not enough time to try them
all or space to imprison them. But how do you learn to trust a man
who picks beans while his neighbours are slaughtered? How do you
greet him in the marketplace? Will confessions and finger-pointing
in open-air tribunals enable Rwandans, the most Roman Catholic of
Africans, to forgive 'until seventy times seven?'
A few days later, once again at the Katuna border, I crossed back
into Uganda riding on a boda boda, a bicycle taxi, whizzing past
travellers who had left me in the immigration queue. As the cyclist
picked his way through the clog of people and cars, trying his best
to avoid the bumps and potholes on the road, I thought of Rwanda's
own uncertain road to recovery. The obstacles they face are revenge
and resentment. Ten years after the killing, the country's name
is still synonymous with genocide.
Perhaps, though, if Rwandans steer their course as we in South Africa
did ours, the hills of their homeland may in time reveal a new story:
a tale of hope.
* This article first appeared in the March 2004 issue of eAfrica:
The Electronic Journal of Governance and Innovation, an online monthly
journal published by the South African Institute of International
Affairs in Johannesburg. eAfrica can be found on www.wits.ac.za/saiia/online.htm
From: http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=21168
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