Rwanda genocide  – April 1994

Rwanda genocide - April 1994

It is hard for people in North America’s multicultural society to realize how one cultural group can hate another so much that it is willing to completely eliminate it.

In April & July 1994, planned campaign of mass murder in Rwanda that occurred over the course of some 100 days in April–July 1994. The genocide was conceived by extremist elements of Rwanda’s majority Hutu population who planned to kill the minority Tutsi population and anyone who opposed those genocidal intentions. close to one million Tutsis were murdered, As many as two million Rwandans escaped the country during or immediately after the genocide and also urged on by national radio broadcasts that kept shouting slogans such as “Kill them all,” or “Who will help us fill the half-empty graves?”

The reason is that in Africa group rights and group loyalty are frequently the primary concern, not the individual and his or her rights and loyalties. In Rwanda, over the course of the thirty years since it secured independence from Belgium, there were recurring conflicts between the two main tribal groups. The events of 1994 were by far the worst. They were also the most barbaric actions seen anywhere in Africa in modern times.

It is hard for people in North America’s multicultural society to realize how one cultural group can hate another so much that it is willing to completely eliminate it.

These acts of genocide were not unique. Similar campaigns of violence against particular groups happened in many parts of the world in the course of the twentieth century.

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