Musinga’s prominent and powerful mother) (Barahinyura 1988, 143). Rather than try to enlarge his
regional and ethnic power base, Habyarimana limited the fruits of power to those individuals linked or
loyal to Mrs. Habyarimana’s clan. This inner circle o r akazu (little hut) became the locus of power
from the mid-1980s as Rwanda entered a period of economic decline, which limited its ability to
shape the political and social landscape.
In October 1990 the then rebel RPF attacked Rwanda from Uganda. This marked the beginning of a
low-intensity civil war and led to negotiations for power sharing among the MRND, the RPF, and
other political parties. Habyarimana’s regime also suffered under the double pressure of structural
adjustment and international pressure to democratize. Because of his willingness to negotiate with the
RPF, Habyarimana became a potential enemy of the akazu, particularly of its alleged extremist
faction, the Zero Network (Réseau zéro). The economic decline, continued elite manipulation of
ethnicity, and the civil war all contributed to the disintegration of Rwandan society starting in 1990,
which in turn allowed the “self-interested fraction of an elite, not of an ethnic group,” to plan and
carry out the 1994 genocide (Jefremovas 2000, 304).
Conclusion
The historical record shows that ethnic identities are very much a product of the state and of the
various state-building projects that successive regimes have undertaken, demonstrating that the policy
of national unity and reconciliation is a product of this historical legacy of administrative domination
and regime authority. The policies and actions of the Belgian colonizers and missionaries had a
negative impact on the lives of ordinary Rwandans, just as the policy of national unity and
reconciliation claims. But ordinary Rwandans also suffered at the hands of their Rwandan overlords
under land and clientship arrangements that started under the royal court and that were fully
consolidated as oppressive practices of socioeconomic stratification by the end of the colonial period,
in 1962. The failure of the Belgians to understand the complexity of Rwanda’s political and social
organization allowed the king and his chiefs and subchiefs to shape power relations between ordinary
Rwandans and the state in strategic ways that consolidated state power at the expense of individual
political agency and participation. The intersection of Belgian policy and the practices of local
Rwandan authorities transformed power relations, notably through land tenure and distribution
patterns. Some individuals, mostly Tutsi but some Hutu, benefited under these changes; others, mostly
Hutu but some Tutsi, did not. As state power became more centralized and hierarchical, ordinary
people lost their ability to actively shape their everyday realities to suit their daily lived realities.
Instead, the relationship of ordinary people to their local authority, not their ethnicity, came to
determine their life chances, just as it does today under the policy of national unity and reconciliation.
Ethnicity mattered most during periods of acute violence, such as those at the beginning and end of
the period of Belgian colonization and again during the 1959–62 Social Revolution. The tactics and
practices of control that both Tutsi and Hutu leaders used to justify policies of sociopolitical exclusion
to control the state apparatus actually varied little over the years. The supposed historical unity that
the policy of national unity and reconciliation of the current government relies upon to justify its
policies is not grounded in empirical fact. Instead, it is another example of a strategic version of
history designed to protect the grip of political elites on state power.
The historical record also shows that ethnic violence is not an innate aspect of Rwandan society.
Quite the opposite; analysis of the historical record illustrates how the manipulation of ethnicity is a
tactic used by the elite—whether Hutu or Tutsi—to justify resorting to violence, something in which
ordinary peasants are regularly caught. Violence is an everyday part of Rwandans’ past and present
lives. It is not, however, rooted in ethnic hatred or, as the current government would have us believe,
pent-up feelings of genocide ideology among a poor rural population. Violence in Rwanda has been
consistently dressed up as ethnic when in fact its organizers and sponsors have merely invoked age-
old ethnic animosity to seize, gain, or consolidate power. In this way, the policy of national unity and
reconciliation is hardly a new interpretation of history, nor is it representative of an enlightened
political elite that claims to “undo the infrastructure and ideology of the past to ensure that genocide
never again happens in Rwanda” (Office of the President 1999, 22). Instead, it is a tool that the current
government uses to deemphasize the actual causes and consequences of the 1994 genocide while
masking its own efforts to mold Rwandan society according to its singular vision of precolonial ethnic
unity, a theme that I examine in the next chapter.
3
A Continuum of Violence, 1990–2000
I wanted to go to ingando [reeducation camp] but was told I couldn’t because I
was a Twa in 1994. [The official] said, “You don’t need reeducation because you
are not part of the genocide. Your people did not kill or get killed.” I was so
angry with him. I lost my [Twa] mother and sister, and I even hid some Tutsi in
my home. I asked my wife to go out during the killing and get food for us. I
couldn’t go myself. I was too scared. But I knew they wouldn’t even look at an
old Twa woman. Those Tutsi we saved don’t even speak to me when they see me
now. And I saved their lives! As soon as he [the official] said that [I don’t need
reeducation], I slammed my fist on the table like this [gestures]. He looked at
me, and I knew I had done a wrong thing. He called some people, and I spent the
next week in prison. Now I just keep to myself and try not to cause any trouble.
(Interview with Théogène, a destitute Twa man, 2006)
Before 1994, I felt proud to be Rwandan. Then there was genocide, and now the
new government shames us by saying that we [Hutu] did that. Some of us did. I
killed, too. I killed my Tutsi neighbor because we ran when the events started,
and we soon understood that only his kind [Tutsi] were getting killed. He said to
me over there [points to the location], “If the Interahamwe comes, kill me so I
can die with respect. I don’t want to be thrown away. You can kill me and bury
me on my land so my ancestors will know me.”
He said this! Imagine how I felt! But I also understood because it was a very
difficult time for us. Our [community] was unsettled. Homes were being burned,
cows were slaughtered, and many of our women got violenced [raped], although
those women don’t talk about it, I saw it myself. So when the time came to kill
my friend, I did. That is the only Tutsi I killed. For the rest, I just went along in
the group. I joined some of the killers so they would think that I supported them.
So eventually my government lost, and the Tutsi one came in. I fear a lot now
because I know how they [the government] hate Hutu. (Interview with Félicien,
an imprisoned Hutu man, 2006)
During the genocide, you cannot imagine how it was. My father was an
intellectual and taught at the university. He was amongst the first to be killed
when the Interahamwe and the other killers got to Butare. My mother died with
him, as did my three sisters and my young brother. They killed them all at the
home I grew up in. My father told us when things started in Kigali that the
genocide would not reach here [Butare] because of the good relations between
Hutu and Tutsi. But he underestimated his colleagues; his Hutu colleagues killed
my family. My other brother got killed at a roadblock not far from here. I was
alone after that; I am the only survivor in my [immediate] family. The one that
killed my brother was a famous Hutu—very powerful since he owned land and
had many people working for him. But before things happened [the genocide] he
was known to be a moderate.1 My father was his friend, and he and his wife used
to visit us at least once a month. All this and he still killed my brother!
Since my family had been killed, I thought it would be smart to go home and
hide there until the killing stopped. When I got there, the Hutu that killed my
brother was there. So I panicked. I panicked so badly that I just stood there when
I saw him in our kitchen. He saw me and ran out of the house. I knew I was
going to die at that moment so I didn’t run. I was so tired of hiding and running.
...
When he came, I hid my face and hoped he would kill me quickly. But
instead, he held on to me so tight, and he cried. He wept and wept and asked for
my understanding. He said, “It is war. And we are killing all Tutsi. I am doing
my duty. I killed many of my friends. You can’t stay here. It’s not safe because
the [death] squads are on their way to loot and then burn this home.” I couldn’t
believe my ears. This Hutu who killed my people was trying to protect me. I told
him I was so tired and didn’t know what to do to save myself. He said he was
tired too. We sat on the ground and rested together for a minute. Then he said,
“This is what you will do. You will go to my house. There are other Tutsi there.
You cannot stay in the house because we [the killers] are looking for you. The
higher-ups have told us to kill you because of your father. You are the only one
left in your family, and your name is on our list of people who must be killed. If
you go to my home, you will put other Tutsi there in danger. I want you to go to
my chicken coop. Hide in there until we can figure out how to care for you.
There are too many roadblocks, and the militias are on their way.”
I went to stay under his chickens and stayed there for three weeks until the
war ended. He brought me food and water. He really saved me. He fled into the
[internally displaced persons] camps after the French [protection force] came
here, and I never saw him again. He has never been charged with genocide that I
know of. All I know is he saved me; maybe he saved some others because there
were about twenty Tutsi at his house when I got there. But he also killed. I don’t
know what was wrong with his mind, but maybe some people do evil things for
reasons I don’t understand. I know that he saved me, but I also know that he
killed my brother. (Interview with Didier, a salaried poor Tutsi man, 2006)
Each of these individual narratives reveals more than simply different lived experiences during the
1994 genocide. They also show the nature of local ties in determining who lived, who died, and how.
Individual personal actions and lived realities are “embedded in local histories, specific
circumstances, and immediate biography” (Nordstrom 2004, 183). Didier, the Tutsi man who hid in
the chicken coop of his Hutu friend, survived because of a known and perhaps even enthusiastic
killer.2 Félicien, the Hutu man who killed his Tutsi friend, did so as a favor and then joined the killing
squads as a survival strategy to appear to support the execution of Tutsi in his community. Théogène’s
narrative shows how Twa individuals also experienced the genocide through his description of how he
rescued some Tutsi while losing his family members in the genocide. Implicit in these three excerpts
is an appreciation of local power relations. Those with power, like the killer who spared Didier’s life,
had different options available to them (cf. Fujii 2009). Those not in positions of power had more
limited options available to them, but this does not mean that they lacked individual agency. Instead,
it was an agency shaped by the complex and shifting nature of the situation. Didier struggles to
understand how an individual respected in the community could kill some Tutsi while saving the lives
of others. Félicien killed as an act of friendship—both he and his Tutsi friend seemed to understand
that options for survival were limited. Théogène understands that his existence, both during the
genocide and now, is shaped by broader historical patterns that result in his continued sociopolitical
marginality as an ethnic Twa.
In order to interpret the ways in which a cross-section of ordinary peasant Rwandans from different
backgrounds understand their own lived experiences of the 1994 genocide, it is necessary to have an
understanding of the broader social and political context in which the violence occurred. The purpose
of this chapter is to analyze the continuum of violence in Rwanda from 1990, when the then rebel RPF
first invaded Rwanda from Uganda, through 2000, when the RPF government first began to “talk
seriously about national reconciliation” following the defeat of Hutu Power forces in the northwest of
the country and the subsequent consolidation of its political power and territorial control of the
country (Waldorf 2006, 38). This exercise is critical since the RPF’s near-hegemonic interpretation of
the causes and consequences of the 1994 genocide has shaped Rwandans’ opportunities to rebuild their
lives since. This chapter continues the historical analysis begun in chapter 2 to further situate the
broader context of routine physical and structural violence that ordinary peasants experienced before,
during, and after the genocide. Before doing so, I first analyze the RPF’s official version of the
genocide and how it is represented as part of the policy of national unity and reconciliation.
The second section of the chapter analyzes patterns of violence in Rwanda during three distinct
periods—the civil war of 1990–94, the 1994 genocide from April to July of that year, and the
emergency period from July 1994 to 2000—when the RPF government began to implement the policy
of national unity and reconciliation. The emphasis is on the role of the state in fomenting violence to
show how the official representation of the genocide is well outside the lived experiences of everyday
violence of most Rwandans. This is an important step, as it situates the ways in which Rwandans of
different backgrounds experienced violence in the recent past; in particular, the analysis shows that
violence was a regular and normal part of everyday life throughout the 1990s. It also shows that the
1994 genocide was not an instance of atavistic ethnic hatred or a spontaneous outburst of tribal
violence, as asserted by the version of events found in the policy of national unity and reconciliation.
Specifically, the way in which the policy represents the genocide as something that happened only to
Tutsi victims whom the RPF eventually saved by taking military control of Rwanda in July 1994 has
two main effects: first, it negates the everyday lived experiences of violence that Rwandans of all
ethnicities experienced before and after the genocide; second, it privileges the genocide as the only
source of violence in the lives of ordinary Rwandans. The remainder of this chapter demonstrates that,
in addition to the violence of the 1994 genocide, Rwandans of all ethnicities experienced, to varying
degrees of intensity, a continuum of everyday violence before, during, and after the genocide. Instead
of acknowledging these differences, the RPF is promoting a policy of national unity and reconciliation
that feeds into deep-rooted fear, anger, and despair that many ordinary peasants have felt both before
and since the 1994 genocide.
Official Representations of the 1994 Genocide
The policy of national unity and reconciliation relies on two interpretative filters to shape the post-
1994 Rwandan sociopolitical order. The first is “history,” and the second is “genocide.” In this
section, I analyze the official representation of “genocide” to show how the policy of national unity
and reconciliation collapses the different forms of killing (and the attendant motivations) into a
singular representation of genocide as something that happened only to Tutsi. Eltringham and Van
Hoyweghen (2000, 106) explain the importance of unpacking the official representation of
“genocide”: “Official discourse on the 1994 genocide maintains in practice the ethnic division which
the RPF-led government denounces in theory: only Tutsi are victims of genocide; moderate Hutu are
victims of politicide who died in massacres.” Pottier (2002, 126) calls the distinction between Tutsi-
survivor and Hutu-perpetrator a “moral hierarchy.” Before analyzing the reductionism of the official
representation of the 1994 genocide, I first situate the actors and actions of the genocide (April–July
1994) to illustrate the extent to which its official representation does not correspond to individual
lived realities.
SITUATING THE GENOCIDE
Between April and July 1994, genocide engulfed Rwanda. Across the hills and in the valleys, in
churches and homes, at bus stops and roadblocks, on narrow footpaths and in banana groves, in
stadiums and schools, killers slaughtered at least five hundred thousand people, mainly ethnic Tutsi
(Des Forges 1999, 15). The genocide was carefully planned by a small elite group of powerful ethnic
Hutu extremists who refused to share power under the conditions of the Arusha Accords (discussed
later). Through an orchestrated strategy to liquidate Tutsi and any politically moderate Hutu perceived
as opposed to the Habyarimana regime, the extremists had one goal in mind: to maintain their
monopoly on state power.
The killing started in the capital during the night of April 6–7, 1994, as unknown assailants shot
down the plane carrying President Habyarimana as it approached Kigali airport. Militias—the
Interahamwe3 and the Impuzamugambi4—led the killing with the help of the Presidential Guard, the
army, and local government officials (African Rights 1994; Des Forges 1999; Prunier 1997). Outside
Kigali, ordinary Hutu men, often under the direction of militia or government soldiers, committed acts
of genocide under the threat of loss of their own life or those of loved ones if they were unwilling to
participate (Straus 2006, 122–52). Genocidal violence occurred at different times in different regions
of the country (Des Forges 1999, 303–594; Straus 2006, 53–60). In many instances, local political and
business elites colluded to enlist ordinary Rwandans to commit genocide (Longman 1995; Wagner
1998). Social ties and local power dynamics often compelled ordinary peasant Hutu to kill. Others
resisted participation. Some stood by, while a few rescued instead of killing intended victims (Fujii
2009, 140–47; Straus 2006, 65–94). Not all Hutu participated, and not all participated to the same
degree. Some killed enthusiastically; others killed a few (Prunier 1997, 242–50). Some Tutsi men
joined in the killing as a means to save themselves and their families (field notes 2006).
The RPF also committed widespread reprisal killings—between ten thousand and fifty thousand
Hutu died—while countless others of all ethnicities died as the RPF gave greater priority to military
victory than to protecting Tutsi civilians (Des Forges 1999, 16; Kuperman 2004). An estimated ten
thousand ethnic Twa were killed during the genocide (IRIN 2001). At least 250,000 women—mostly
Tutsi but some Hutu—were raped (Burnet 2012, 16–17; HRW 2004, 7). Some men also admit to
having been raped (field notes 2006). Countless others, men and women, young and old, healthy and
infirm, were tortured or maimed.
The 1994 genocide is much more than a series of facts and figures about who killed, who died, and
who survived. Irrespective of ethnic category, ordinary Rwandans were caught up in the maelstrom.
There are countless stories of survival, of friends and family who took extraordinary risks in
protecting their Tutsi kith and kin (African Rights 2003f, 2003g; Umutesi 2004). There are stories of
Tutsi who put their own lives on the line to protect Hutu family and friends from the coercion and
intimidation tactics that the killing squads used to goad ordinary Hutu into killing (African Rights
2003b, 2003c; field notes 2006). Notorious killers protected Tutsi they knew personally, ushering
them safely through roadblocks, warning them of the whereabouts of marauding groups, and even
hiding them at their homes. Some individuals killed during the day, only to shelter Tutsi friends and
relatives at night (field notes 2006). Many Tutsi survived because of the aid and succor of a Hutu
family member, friend, colleague, neighbor, or stranger (Jefremovas 1995). There are stories about
ethnic Twa and ethnic Hutu who were killed in the genocide because of their stereotypical Tutsi
features (field notes 2006).
INSTRUMENTALIZING THE GENOCIDE
Despite its complexity and reach into the lives of Rwandans, the RPF-led government presents the
genocide as a clear-cut affair: Hutu killed Tutsi because of ethnic divisions that were introduced
during the colonial period (1890–1962) and hardened to the point of individual action during the
postcolonial period (1962–94). According to the policy of national unity and reconciliation, ethnicity
is a fiction created by colonial divide-and-rule policies. Ultimate blame for the 1994 genocide
therefore lies with Rwanda’s colonial powers, which instituted policies that made the Hutu population
hate Tutsi. In this telling, divisive politics grounded in decades of bad governance resulted in deep-
rooted ethnic hatred of all Tutsi by all Hutu, causing the 1994 genocide (NURC 2004; Office of the
President 1999). This simplistic interpretation of events forms the backbone of the policy of national
unity and reconciliation.
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