Colonial roots of the genocide in Rwanda | DW Documentary



Colonial roots of the genocide in Rwanda | DW Documentary

In April 1994, the parents of two-year-old Samuel Ishimwe were murdered in Rwanda. Their fate was shared by up to a million people in the genocide against the country’s Tutsi minority. Thirty years on, Samuel sets out to discover what set these terrible events in motion.

He undertakes a journey from Rwanda to Germany and Belgium, both former colonial powers in the small East African nation. He hopes it will help him to understand the basis for the Hutu majority’s animosity towards the country’s small Tutsi minority. In Rwanda and Europe, Samuel meets with historians and contemporary witnesses. He wants to understand what happened to make people in his homeland turn on each other in such a way. What role was played by the “Hamite hypothesis,” a theory that assigned the Tutsis racial superiority? What’s the story behind all the human skulls taken to Germany from Rwanda more than 100 years ago? And, he asks, are the former colonial powers to blame for the fact that his parents, like so many other Rwandans, had to die? Or do the Rwandans bear the responsibility for the terrible mass murders that occurred between April and July 1994?

Whereas Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda saw themselves as belonging to different social classes, the German colonial rulers who were here from the late 19th century until 1916 defined them along ethnic, racial lines. In the 19th century, many Tutsis were members of an upper class with assets that included valuable cattle. The Hutus, on the other hand, were usually farmers with little or no livestock. For centuries, the kings of Rwanda were Tutsis. The Belgians drove the Germans out of Rwanda in World War One and assumed control of the country until its independence in 1962. These colonial rulers exacerbated the divisions between Hutus and Tutsis, exploiting discord to further their own interests. In the second half of the 1950s, the Belgians withdrew their support for the king and the ruling Tutsi government, facilitating a Hutu power grab. Large numbers of Tutsis came under attack at the time. Hundreds of thousands fled the country.

30 years after the genocide, peace now prevails in Rwanda. President Kagame’s policies have worked to break down adherence to Hutu and Tutsi identities. Does this mean that the country’s dark past and the distrust that long simmered between the groups has now been overcome?

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23 comments
  1. Yeah, but on the other hand the genocide caused Rwanda to become one of the wealthiest countries in Africa.
    Just like the Renaissance in Europe after the crisis of the Late Middle Ages.

  2. Very unfortunate, but this blaming of colonization or racism needs to stop. Accountability for ones actions (inaction) and appetites is missing. People choose what they choose to do.My Sympathies.

  3. Jews spoke the same language and had the same culture and were German… this didn't stop the Jewish genocide. Humans are humans. We will find ways of hurting each other.

  4. One thing being taught as a person of color is if anything goes wrong in life just blame white people. Its the go to fall back as white people live in every non white persons mind.

  5. While it is clearly known that colonialism had played a role in contributing to the genocide, it's not every time that colonialism should be blamed as the genocide was started by the rwandese themselves.

  6. The genocide was merely an episode in an ethnic conflict between the Bantu and the Kushites that has been going on for more than half a millenia, long before Europeans knew about Sub-sahara.

  7. Germany outright refuses to take responsibility of a genocide…. The lack of awareness on how the ideologies of colonisation lives. Look at religion on the continent

  8. This brother just answered his own questions, the very fact that in some of the countries speak French, or other's in their land says it all, the word Africa is not the actual name of the continent, the fact that France, U.S and China is still treating Black Africa as theirs is all you need to know!

  9. Paul Kagame is a war criminal:
    – Who shoot down president Habyarimana's presidential plane in 1994, starting Rwanda genocide
    – Who, in April 1994 declared Rwanda genocide to be over and wrote to the UN opposing a military intervention to stop the genocide
    – Who killed thousands of Rwanda refugees inside Kibeho refugee camp in Rwanda and inside DRC
    – Who killed millions of Congolese

  10. That’s like blaming the Chinese for shepherds pie. This disgraceful racist approach has made me unsubscribe from this excellent documentary channel, too far, too far demonising and blaming every white person for battles between people who are not white and totally unrelated.

  11. U people have golden hearts u forgave Jesus loves you❤ God bless Rwanda may it have a bright future and be an inspiration to the world 😊

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