From Red Earth: A Rwandan Story of Healing and Forgiveness
A Hundred Days of Carnage, Twenty-Five Years of Rebirth
In the space of a hundred days, a million Tutsi in Rwanda were slaughtered by their Hutu neighbors. At the height of the genocide, as men with bloody machetes ransacked her home, Denise Uwimana gave birth to her third son. With the unlikely help of Hutu Good Samaritans, she and her children survived. Her husband and other family members were not as lucky.
If this were only a memoir of those chilling days and the long, hard road to personal healing and freedom from her past, it would be remarkable enough. But Uwimana didn't stop there. Leaving a secure job in business, she devoted the rest of her life to restoring her country by empowering other genocide widows to band together, tell their stories, find healing, and rebuild their lives. The stories she has uncovered through her work and recounted here illustrate the complex and unfinished work of truth-telling, recovery, and reconciliation that may be Rwanda's lasting legacy. Rising above their nation's past, Rwanda's genocide survivors are teaching the world the secret to healing the wound of war and ethnic conflict.
Includes 16 pages of color photographs.
MY REVIEW: Denise Uwimana, author of "From Red Earth: A Rwandan Story of Healing and Forgiveness". is a survivor of the unimaginable horror of the Rwandan Genocide of 1994. During a period of 100 days, an estimated one million members of the Tutsi people were murdered by their neighboring Hutu countrymen. As many of her family and friends fell victim to the slaughter, Denise, pregnant with her third child, went into hiding with her two small sons. After giving birth to another son, she was on the run in a desperate attempt to save her children and herself. Her husband, Charles, did not survive the brutality of the Hutu. A woman of incredible strength, courage, and faith, Denise began to reach out to others who had been traumatized and suffered such terrible losses. Eventually, she would become the founder of Iriba Shalom International, an organization dedicated to raising awareness and funds for the rebuilding and healing process for the Rwandan people. Denise would later remarry and move to Germany. She and her second husband, Dr. Wolfgang Reinhardt, continue the work of her foundation to this day.
Book Copy Gratis Plough Publicity
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