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You are here: Frontpage > Issues > 2445 >
Life after genocide
Mahmood Mamdani, When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in
Rwanda (James Currey, 2001. ISBN 0 85255 859 7, 364 pp, £19.95 p/b )
Reviewed by: ANDREW RIGBY
I had a Rwandan student who told me that during the genocide of 1994 husbands in cross-community
marriages would kill their wives (and vice-versa). It is beyond imagining. This was not some
bureaucratically organised, impersonal, rational process like the Holocaust of the Second World War.
This was a genuinely popular genocide.
What most of us cannot understand is how it came about that hundreds of thousands of people who had
never killed before took part in the mass slaughter. It is to Mamdani's credit that he does make the
genocide "thinkable". His analysis has too many threads to unravel in this review but the factors that he
highlights include 1) the "racialisation" and politicisation of identity under the Belgian colonial power
who promoted the Tutsis as a superior race set above the servile Hutus; and 2) the resentment of the
Hutus that resulted in the establishment of the Hutu dominated first republic in 1961 and the flight of
significant numbers of the former Tutsi elite into exile in Uganda.
Discriminated against in Uganda, the Tutsi refugees maintained their dream of returning home, and
after they helped Musoveni win power in 1986 he in turn supported the armed "invasion" of Rwanda
by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) in 1990. The RPF considered itself an army of liberation, but for
the Hutus in Rwanda it was an invasion. As they fled before the advancing army they raised the spectre
of a return of Tutsi domination, thereby strengthening the influence of those that advocated "Hutu
Power" as the necessary safeguard against the return to the bad old days of Tutsi supremacy. As
Mamdani puts it, "The growing appeal of Hutu Power propaganda
among the Hutu masses was in
direct proportion to the spreading conviction that the real aim of the RPF was not rights for all
Rwandans, but power for the Tutsis."
As the threat of the RPF grew, so any internal dissent was defined as treachery, and people turned on
the enemy within, a traditional culture of obedience making them easy prey to the hate-messages of the
propagandists.
Mamdani highlights the dreadful irony that lay at the heart of the
barbarism: "If it is the struggle for
power that explains the motivation of those who crafted the genocide, then it is the combined fear of a
return to servitude and of reprisals thereafter that energised the foot-soldiers of the genocide. The irony
is that ... the perpetrators of the genocide saw themselves as the true
victims of an ongoing political
drama, victims of yesterday who may yet be victims again. That moral certainty explains the easy
transition from yesterday's victims to killers the morning
after."
In a concluding chapter the author turns his attention to Rwanda's future. The key dilemma is how to
build a state and society that can embrace a guilty majority alongside an aggrieved and fearful
minority. For many of the Tutsis in the post-genocide state the driving force is "never again".
Above all else the genocidaires must be brought to justice. Indeed, the recent introduction of a
community-based system of justice (gacaca) in order to deal with the thousands of suspects still
crammed into the jails has roused fears amongst survivors that the perpetrators will escape their due
punishment.
With genuine insight Mamdani points to the dangers of revenge masquerading as justice, which might
feed yet another cycle of violence, and he asks whether there is any other form of justice that might
promote reconciliation. He points out that in the case of South Africa the beneficiaries of apartheid
were many, hence the proper basis for reconciliation there should be social justice. But in Rwanda
there were many perpetrators but few beneficiaries of the slaughter, and the prime requirement for
reconciliation should be political justice. Whilst acknowledging the real political obstacles to
democratising public life in Rwanda, Mamdani challenges the Tutsi political elite:
"Rather than think that power is the precondition for survival,
the Tutsi will sooner or later have to
consider the opposite possibility: that the prerequisite to cohabitation, to reconciliation, and a common
political future may indeed be to give up the monopoly of power. ... So
long as Hutu and Tutsi remain
alive as political identities, giving up political power may be a surer guarantee of survival than holding
on to it."
This is an excellent and insightful work which should be read by anyone concerned about the future of
Africa and the Great Lakes region in particular. But I have to confess that despite the clarity of the
book there remains a gulf in my understanding. I can follow the intellectual analysis of the different
historical, geographical and political forces that made the genocide possible, but I still cannot grasp in
any real sense how it was that otherwise "normal folk" could actually participate in such horrors.
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