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Kwibuka 30

Kwibuka 30 / April 17, 2024

Kwibuka, which means 鈥渢o remember鈥 in Kinyarwanda, is how Rwandans refer to their annual commemorations of the 1994 Genocide Against the Tutsi in Rwanda. To mark the 30th remembrance of the genocide, the students of Dr. Jacob Ari Labendz鈥檚 Fall 2023 course, 鈥淧aradigms of Genocide,鈥 prepared this digital exhibition. We did not aim to present a comprehensive overview of the 1994 Genocide of Tutsi in Rwanda. The panels, instead, reflect the individual choices that students made about what to research and present鈥攁fter close study and meaningful meetings with survivors and witnesses. This exhibit reflects the Gross Center鈥檚 commitment to training students and the regional public to uphold their responsibilities to learn and teach about genocide鈥攖o become influential storytellers in the digital age.

Learn more about the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi in Rwanda

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In 1994, during the Rwandan genocide, the British Red Cross deployed 55 members to help, investigation measures for families were provided. British Red Cross, 26 June 2006.


Before the Genocide: Colonialism and Division

Hutu and Tutsi: A Casualty of Colonialism

Last Kings of Rwanda and the Genocide

Rwandan Identification Cards


Genocidal Propaganda against the Tutsi

Radio T茅l茅vision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM)

Simon Bikindi

Kangura Magazine


The Genocide

Tutsi Women During the Genocide

The Hutus鈥 Machete


Failure of the International Community

United Nations Inaction

The French Government

Rom茅o Dallaire


Justice, Recovery, and Commemoration

Gacaca Courts

Agahozo-Shalom Youth Village

 

Psychological Impacts on Child Soldiers

Education in Rwanda

Kigali Memorial


International Attention and Denial

International Media Attention

U.S. Popular Culture and the 1994 Genocide of Tutsi in Rwanda

Genocide Denial


Our student researchers included: Christopher Alepa, Isabella Apgar, Giavanna Barras, Colin Caliciotti, Lizbeth Coliente, Hope DeWitt, William Egner, Paul Fiorello, Alessia Guerriero, James Jackson, Aime Lara, Patrick Larsen, Tyler McConnell, Trent Montgomery, Lisa Mujica, Christian Navarro, Juan Navarro, Gina Reyes, Alan Rosenberg, Joseph Salerno, Stefanie Viera, Madeline Zech.

Luc Bernard generously built an immersive, virtual-reality version of our exhibition, which may be accessed here. Dr. Hollie Nzitatira provided scholarly and editorial guidance.

We would additionally like to thank Providence Umugwaneza, Erick Nkurunziza, Carl Wilkens, Maddie Zech, and Hope DeWitt.

Texts have been edited for content and form.