• Joel Brown

    Senior Staff Writer

    Portrait of Joel Brown. An older white man with greying brown hair, beard, and mustache and wearing glasses, white collared shirt, and navy blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey background.

    Joel Brown is a senior staff writer at BU Today and Creatives editor of Bostonia magazine. He wrote more than 700 stories for the Boston Globe and has also worked as an editor and reporter for the Boston Herald and the Greenfield Recorder. Profile

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There are 4 comments on Telling the Truth about Rwanda

  1. I think this article is great but if you don’t talk to ppl in the region who know how the culture works and things been for centuries you come up with truths that are biased. If you want to believe Tutsis aren’t innocents ppl, they are so politicized to the point they don’t want anybody else to be alive in the region.Take for example the situation in Burundi, Uganda,and the DRC.The 15%of citizen of Rwanda want to take over all these countries and impose their dictatorship there.
    I really don’t know too much of what happened in Rwanda in 1991-1994 but I was in the eastern Congo at that time and when in 1996 they attacked the refugees camps.They were dropping Bombs and rockets shells on camps without discrimination. They attacked Congolese cities and families. Anything that didn’t look Tutsis were to dye period. They chassed whoever was not Tutsi including innocents Congolese in the jungle massacring in tingitingi, Kisangani, and buried women, nuns alive in kasika.
    I’m sorry that I have to comment this way but it my feeling that the international community don’t want to hear the truth and are biased by what Kagame the killing machine make them swallow
    DRC is burning now because of Kagame and the tutsis who play victims after the kill everyone
    Thank you anyway for the book

    1. Sounds like a lot of victim-blaming to me. What the Rwandan-backed government did in the Congo is not really justification for the genocide – if so, then only those responsible would have been held accountable, not all Tutsis and even politically moderate Hutu.

      No one is “innocent.” That doesn’t mean that they deserve extreme suffering, however.

      From what I’ve studied, the blame clearly lies with European colonizers, who exploited tensions to create the atrocities that happened then and are still happening worldwide. They were the ones responsible for putting minority Tutsi in political positions so that the Hutu majority would feel disenfranchised politically and would want power. Unfortunately, instead of uniting with other groups to fight the Belgians, they blamed anyone who didn’t fit their political ideals. Keep in mind that Europeans also drew the boundaries of Africa, and traditional African governing systems dissipated. Thus, they made Rwanda into a nation-state where Tutsis were a minority, and the rest of the Abatutsi were divided into neighboring countries. They also used their power to allow these killings to happen (remember the UN “peacekeepers”?) and interfere only when it was convenient for them, all under the guise of Christianity.

      Africans and other colonized peoples were taken advantage of, and the only ones who benefited were the West, as evidenced by comparing the amount of wealth they had before and after “discovering” the world.

      Think – who benefits most from genocides? Why would Tutsis benefit from killing their neighbors? They are not “playing the victim,” and what you said makes it sound like genocide of an entire group is okay if a couple people from that group committed crimes. By that logic, genocide against all ethnic groups is permissible. Instead, we should all learn to view humans as responsible for their own actions and not as representatives of their ethnicity. Doing so just perpetuates the flaws of the system set up by the Conquerors anyway. I mean, we certainly don’t see Europeans fighting themselves today – they’re just enjoying their newfound wealth and power. If we want to see a better world, we have to recognize what went wrong and prevent them from happening again.

      1. True, entire populations should not be held responsible of awful acts of some individual. Tutsis should never be held responsible of RPF’s acts. Neithet should Hutus be held responsibke of acts of Hutu extremists.

  2. Dear Professor Timothy Longman,

    I hope this message finds you well. It has been some time since we met in New York, and I wanted to take this opportunity to engage with you on a topic that is deeply personal to me as a Rwandan. I recently came across some comments, including yours, and I noticed a recurring theme: a lack of understanding about the complexities of the Hutu and Tutsi identities and the historical context of the Rwandan genocide. This is not uncommon among Americans, but I appreciate that you and others have taken the time to engage with this history, even if there are gaps in understanding.

    To provide some context, I am Rwandan, and I was surprised to recognize one of the children in the photo you shared as my cousin from Kibungo in Kabarondo. This personal connection brings an added layer of gravity to the discussion. The history of Rwanda is deeply intertwined with the tragic events of 1994, and the narratives surrounding it are often oversimplified or misrepresented, particularly in Western media.

    The genocide in Rwanda was not just a conflict between Hutus and Tutsis; it was a catastrophic event fueled by colonial legacies, geopolitical interests, and external interventions. The assassination of Presidents Habyarimana of Rwanda and Ntaryamira of Burundi in 1994 was a pivotal moment that escalated the violence. The role of external actors, including the U.S. under the Clinton administration, cannot be overlooked. Figures like Roger Winter, who was then the Director of the U.S. Refugee Agency, played a significant role in shaping the political landscape of the region, often with devastating consequences.

    The narrative that has dominated Western media—that over 800,000 Tutsis were killed—while not entirely false, is incomplete. The reality is that both Hutus and Tutsis suffered immensely. According to the numbers, Rwanda had a population of 6 million in 1994, with Tutsis making up 14% (approximately 840,000) and Hutus 85% (approximately 5.1 million). The Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), led by Paul Kagame, claimed to have rescued over 500,000 Tutsis. If we subtract this number from the total Tutsi population, it suggests that around 340,000 Tutsis were killed. Yet, the total death toll during the genocide is estimated at 1.2 million. This leaves approximately 860,000 unaccounted for, many of whom were Hutus.

    The Western media and political narratives have largely ignored these Hutu victims, focusing instead on the Tutsi deaths. This selective storytelling has perpetuated a one-sided view of the genocide, which has been further entrenched by the geopolitical interests of powerful nations. The U.S., under the Clinton administration, played a significant role in shaping this narrative, often to justify its own interventions in the region.

    Professor Longman, your work has been influential in shedding light on the complexities of the Rwandan genocide. However, I urge you to consider the broader picture, one that includes the suffering of Hutus and the role of external actors in perpetuating the violence. The international community, including Western scholars and politicians, has a responsibility to acknowledge the full scope of the tragedy, not just the parts that fit a particular narrative.

    Thank you for your time and for your continued engagement with this important issue. I look forward to your response and hope that we can continue this dialogue in a way that honors the memory of all those who lost their lives.

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