Colonial roots of the genocide in Rwanda | DW Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 4 апр 2024
  • 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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Комментарии • 714

  • @ebenarhin2590
    @ebenarhin2590 Месяц назад +174

    I'm a Ghanaian and I felt sad watching this.This documentary is a masterpiece.Much love to everyone from Rwanda.

    • @GaBlack-wo9vx
      @GaBlack-wo9vx Месяц назад +3

      we love you too brother❤

    • @sibomanaemmanuel1831
      @sibomanaemmanuel1831 Месяц назад +2

      Thanks 😢

    • @bflsceo5854
      @bflsceo5854 Месяц назад +6

      Ghana is one of the country's that sent help to rwanda at that time i respect them for that because many more people just watched it unfold and didn't want anything to do with it

    • @ageireypaul1585
      @ageireypaul1585 Месяц назад +1

      Me too

    • @johnrizi5978
      @johnrizi5978 Месяц назад

      We love you all people of Rwanda.

  • @6alun1
    @6alun1 Месяц назад +127

    I am from kyrgyzstan and i 've been interested in the history of genocide in Rwanda since i was 10 year old . It is such a tragic history to discover.Lessons to be learnt.But I know that nowdays Rwanda is one of the cleanest countries in the world,maybe even the cleanest one.Peace and prosperity to Rwanda from Kyrgyzstan.

    • @sleepyjoe7518
      @sleepyjoe7518 Месяц назад +2

      Is there still bride-kidnapping going on in Kyrgyzstan?

    • @KeefeL
      @KeefeL 26 дней назад

      ​@@sleepyjoe7518part of the culture

    • @rocktower7412
      @rocktower7412 13 дней назад

      Thank you

    • @AR-so6ch
      @AR-so6ch 11 дней назад

      I was in Rwanda last summer. Kigali is nice and the rich parts are clean. But its nowhere the cleanest country on earth.

  • @prestonrick5103
    @prestonrick5103 Месяц назад +13

    I visited Rwanda for the first time 3 months ago. I was so impressed with the country. The people are friendly and Kigali is very clean. They take pride in the country. I did go to the genocide memorial where 250,000 Rwandans are buried. I knew it would be difficult but I had no idea the experience would be as hard as it was. My Rwandan friend born after the Genocide went with me. He has lost grandparents, aunts and uncles in this terrible genocide. He says his mother still can't even talk about it. She trusts nobody. I was overwhelmed in a room full of skulls with machete marks. I couldn't take it anymore and had to sit and cry for a while before I could continue. This documentary really helped me understand the history. This past weekend was the 30th anniversary of the start of the genocide. I wish Rwanda all the best in healing from this terrible event. Thank you so much for producing this excellent documentary. I knew about the Belgian history but not the German history. I do think an apology is in order!

  • @in-x-orable2769
    @in-x-orable2769 Месяц назад +72

    I love me a documentary of Rwanda by a Rwandan. It's like looking at history through the eyes of those who didn't just witness it but who were actively involved in its making.

  • @glenv8425
    @glenv8425 Месяц назад +78

    Mr. Ishimwe---
    I am watching your film now on live television.......all the way from Puerto Rico in the Caribbean. It is a beautifully made piece, and in it you ask all the right questions while leaving the viewer to ponder some of the possible answers. Such a lovely film.........I am so so sorry for your trauma and for that of your country and I wish you all the best in life...... you did a wondetful job with the film.

  • @kiberinkaaline
    @kiberinkaaline Месяц назад +38

    Samuel was my classmate at APAPER primary school he was sooo quite but very clever and smart I was always wondering why he was so quite and I am very sad to found out that he is an orphan of genocide, I am glad that he is now successful. ❤

    • @vanessamutoni7287
      @vanessamutoni7287 28 дней назад +1

      One of APAPER students here. Love and support ❤️👏🏾
      When you choose to define your own history!!!

  • @ThroughBirdEye
    @ThroughBirdEye Месяц назад +43

    "I'm from India 🇮🇳! Oh, Rwanda, you've endured a challenging past. I have several friends there who lost their parents during those times. But now, you've come together and never looked back! We stand with you, my Rwandan brothers and sisters. 🙏🙏" "I've heard numerous stories about the Rwanda genocide from my friends. Being born in 1995, I deeply empathize with this history. One day, I aspire to visit your country."

  • @jbmikadom2755
    @jbmikadom2755 Месяц назад +96

    For those in the comments who seem confused: As Rwandans, we take responsibility for what happen during the genocide against Tustis. However, a full blown genocide takes years or decades of popular conditioning which started with belgians colonisers & the head of catholic church in Rwanda, it continued resulting in 1st anti Tutsis pogroms in 1959, the 60s after independance, 1973, 90,92 & the worst of them all 1994. There is no possible genocide without the backing of a powerful nation (France in our case) &/or the indifference of the world at large (UN, African countries,) in another words. We were left to be eaten alive by the hyenas. Thanks largerly to the RPF, and so much sacrifice from survivors, Rwanda that was condemned to be a failed state is standing tall. We have the most progressive & the most panafricanist leader most Africa would wish for. Rwanda is here to remind you all. Beware of Hyenas amongst ur leaders, a.k.a the corrupt, lazy, opportunistic, short cutters.

    • @segbwemabee5757
      @segbwemabee5757 Месяц назад +6

      Propaganda galore!

    • @Elttilitt
      @Elttilitt Месяц назад +9

      ​@@segbwemabee5757Hate galore

    • @jothammuthee2090
      @jothammuthee2090 Месяц назад +9

      Very well put.But l sometime worry about post Kagame Rwanda.l am Kenyan and very proud of the strides Rwanda has made from the ashes of the genocide.

    • @waitaminute2015
      @waitaminute2015 Месяц назад

      What religion are each tribes?

    • @Pmooli
      @Pmooli Месяц назад

      I understand tutsis have all the big positions. It wont work well for long. I bet after Kagame

  • @camaradepatrick8389
    @camaradepatrick8389 Месяц назад +17

    as Rwandese, this documentary has taught me about Rwanda more than i leant in 32 years of my existance! well done brother. i dreamt of doing such a documentary and im glad someone brought it to life

    • @matsinilsson9578
      @matsinilsson9578 13 дней назад

      As a Rwandese: Do you seriously blame colonialism for your own barbarism? It is time for Africa to evolve.

  • @sabinouchou8293
    @sabinouchou8293 Месяц назад +46

    I'm a burundian woman born and raise in Canada. My parents used to tell me stories about the same territory Burundi Rwanda used to share. Colonial did us wrong but we now have to power to take control of our destiny. What a beautiful documentary!

    • @1Surt
      @1Surt Месяц назад

      Without Colonialism; you would not be enjoying White Man's Western Civilization, Rwanda would be Haiti/ Somalia/ Liberia in functionality. There would be zero social order, nor functional infrastructure. Even that device & internet you use to post this White Man bashing rubbish was invented, built & gifted to the world by White Men. What have "your people" done to improve the world?
      Get over yourself and stop being racist.

    • @pepeinno9336
      @pepeinno9336 Месяц назад

      Dear, in Burundi 93, whole families were exterminated while the army and police did nothing to intervene yet the victims were their relatives. In Rwanda 94, a different scenario but on the same pattern: The RPf which was the strongest military in Rwanda on the death of the president, did nothing to fight the genocide, nothing to request international support and even opposed all plans of international intervention. The Ugandan army which had backed RPf could have intervened and the Burundian army was of the same 'ethnicity' as the targets in Rwanda. What happened in Rwanda is similar to a situation in the Jewish holocaust in which the Jews had the strongest military in Germany as was the case with RPf, and Frances' army was totally Jewish and the Polish army had Jewish command and supported the Jewish army in Germany, as was the case for Uganda. Would the Jewish genocide have happened in that case? The answer is obviously, no! Why did it then happen in Rwanda?

    • @Strugglin
      @Strugglin 23 дня назад

      Lol

    • @1Surt
      @1Surt 23 дня назад +2

      Without Colonialism, you would have never known comforts of modern life, nor English language. To claim you were done wrong is disingenuous.
      Hoping you are back in Burundi or Rwanda, not in White Man's Western Civilization.
      Ps: Burundi & Rwanda are not getting along at the moment.

    • @deder2020
      @deder2020 23 дня назад

      @@pepeinno9336 lies a lot of survivors were rescued by RPF if RPF didn’t who weren’t strategic could have been left by themselves until the war is done but RPF went and rescued them and RPF wasn’t the strongest military in there, they were UN, France and even the government forces of Rwanda in that time but decided to support the genocide so telling lies and do research

  • @iribagizaglory2265
    @iribagizaglory2265 Месяц назад +18

    This is so so beautiful. Finally, someone can tell our story the right way. Sending love to Samuel and his uncle and auntie, and to his nanny who risked her life to save he and his brother. Indeed, we can live a good life.

  • @nwadi6408
    @nwadi6408 Месяц назад +20

    I am an African American woman who has been reading various books on the history of Rwanda including what led to the genocide in 1994. I am extremely grateful for this documentary and for the insight it has provided. Thank you.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад +4

      Thanks for watching and sharing your thoughts!

    • @1Surt
      @1Surt Месяц назад

      Do tell me what your gender and race have to do with your statement?
      Could have opened with, 'I have been reading various books ...'. Nope, you had to do the racist thing.

    • @QueenJoelle
      @QueenJoelle Месяц назад +7

      @@1Surt Or she can choose her own words and how she wants to present herself😇

  • @samwrought5650
    @samwrought5650 2 дня назад

    I’m Khmer 🇰🇭 my parents survived the Cambodian Civil War and genocide, I first heard about your beautiful country of Rwanda 🇷🇼, in school, I later watched Hotel Rwanda, and it broke my heart to learn what your people endured. I pray and hope your people thrive and heal and never ever experience this dark and evil chapter in history, the way to never forget is to teach.

  • @fp8901
    @fp8901 Месяц назад +12

    I've seen three new RUclips hosted documentaries on the Rwandan Genocide, yesterday and today. This may be the best one.

    • @QueenJoelle
      @QueenJoelle Месяц назад +1

      The Genocide against the Tutsi, you mean.

    • @user-xg7ps7hi6k
      @user-xg7ps7hi6k Месяц назад +1

      @@QueenJoelle
      Rwandan genocide because thousands of Hutus and Twa people were also killed by kagame’s rebels who orchestrated the entire massacre

  • @nbbim2012
    @nbbim2012 Месяц назад +13

    What a harrowing, thoughtful, captivating & beautiful masterpiece- clearly a love letter to your parents, community & country. Well done Samuel. I pray for Rwanda to truly heal & have peace

  • @user-nm2de2mv9z
    @user-nm2de2mv9z Месяц назад +14

    A well-crafted documentary that combines thorough research, compelling storytelling, and impactful testimonies. Congratulations to Samuel Ishimwe, and may the people of Rwanda continue to overcome challenges and flourish. Sending love and support from Burundi

  • @princesselizabethgarden7556
    @princesselizabethgarden7556 Месяц назад +4

    The genocide might have roots in the legacy of Belgian colonial rule but ultimately, it was down to Rwandans themselves to bear the responsibility for the genocide, starting with the leaders of Rwanda and then the people themselves.

  • @katherinesavarese6009
    @katherinesavarese6009 Месяц назад +42

    5:55 it sent a chill up my spine when this woman said that, even 30 years after the genocide, she gets terrified when she sees someone with a machete.
    I cant imagine the trauma!!
    Or being able to trust people not to go off the deep end again!
    Ive never lived through a genocide, but I am an african american and when I was little and learned about american slavery, and how recent and institutionalized it was, it scared me so much that it could easily come BACK.
    People can be driven to do the most depraved things imaginable as a group.
    Its terrifying

    • @bibivanderveen5455
      @bibivanderveen5455 Месяц назад +3

      Mark you most people carry machetes everywhere in rural areas. She sees this on a daily basis

    • @Jerry-jd-_
      @Jerry-jd-_ Месяц назад +1

      @@bibivanderveen5455that’s the crazy part

    • @Mutaaga13
      @Mutaaga13 Месяц назад

      Does that remove the bitter fact that she's scared of machetes? ​@@bibivanderveen5455

  • @QueenJoelle
    @QueenJoelle Месяц назад +6

    Thank you so much for making this happen. It is so refreshing to see our story being told by a fellow Rwandan. I have always failed to wrap my head around how the hate between brothers, neighbours, and countrymen was pretty much fueled by a made-up story. To this day, when people choose to refer to others by these so-called "ethnic" groups, I wonder if I am the one who is crazy for not seeing it or if they are blind. I loved the last part that emphasised that being Rwandan is so much more than our story about the genocide (even though it is very important and we shall forever remember it). I can't wait to see more people diving into re-educating, re-populising, and simply living in our true heritage of arts, values, and mostly love. You can't imagine how much your work is amazing. Thank you, Sam and the team.

  • @keniebarry7607
    @keniebarry7607 Месяц назад +24

    Thank you for the eye opening documentary, I am from Kenya and I now understand the scope of the division in Rwanda terrible how people easily kill out of hate. May Africans never do each other dirty like this again.

  • @emmanueltuyishime
    @emmanueltuyishime Месяц назад +7

    Great work my brother! I love the authenticity of your work, and It was about time for telling our history by us! 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿much love from Canada 🇨🇦.

  • @internationalafricanschool3506
    @internationalafricanschool3506 Месяц назад +4

    Best documentary ever. Made by Rwandans themselves. Thank you. Let us continue being our own voice- Not letting others speak for us.

  • @amolawuor8274
    @amolawuor8274 3 дня назад

    'Genocide is beyond the scope of humanity. " The lady called Beatrice Mutoni captures this catastrophe so well toward the end of the film. It's refreshing to hear Rwanda is rising and gradually healing from this preventable tragedy of the 20th century.

  • @thebesthoyame
    @thebesthoyame Месяц назад +7

    So proud of you Samuel. Our mother always told about your mom Julienne she used to regret her a lot and told us how she was a very kind and lovable human. So sorry you will never know her and your dad. But glad to see where you are up to now. Hope your brother Daniel is doing great as well.

  • @noellanono886
    @noellanono886 Месяц назад +7

    This is a must watch documentary…it went back to the root cause of what happened to my country. What i saw was just half of history. This one is a masterpiece of them all. Thank you

  • @nicoledonald3858
    @nicoledonald3858 18 дней назад

    Loved watching, and the people who participated were very informative too

  • @sandrineingabire4445
    @sandrineingabire4445 Месяц назад +7

    This is a well done documentary, Thank you very much Mr. Karemangingo Ishimwe Samuel and the whole Team You are a very hard working person like your father 💔❤️‍🩹❤️ Ntibazimye komeza ubeho neza kubwabo👍❤
    The whole village is proud of you😘❤

  • @ShannonMarie_aguafiestasvlogs
    @ShannonMarie_aguafiestasvlogs Месяц назад

    This is such an incredible documentary. Thank you for making it and sharing it.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад

      Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment!

  • @MSal7
    @MSal7 Месяц назад +2

    fresh perspective on this subject that I’ve yet to see in many docs on this topic. Great work and continued blessings for your future film work :)

  • @archieb1801
    @archieb1801 5 дней назад +1

    such a brilliant documentary

  • @chukwuebukailozumba3146
    @chukwuebukailozumba3146 24 дня назад +4

    First time learning that despite the tribal nomenclature, the 3 tribes spoke the same language. The ignorant thing about the war was while the thought they were fighting a tribal war, it was actually a class war. Their similarities were so much that the only thing they could use in differentiating each other was the content of their identity document.
    I must congratulate the people of Rwanda for the heavy strides they made by accepting responsibility for the past and ensuring such evil does not occur again in their future. That is a great feat and I salute you all.
    The major heroes are those that were able to forgive the known perpetrators all in a bid to leave a better future for their offsprings. How else does one determine a Saint?

  • @ishimwepascaline8092
    @ishimwepascaline8092 Месяц назад +6

    From Kigali ! This is Big Sam keep inspiring Youths and Rwandan community!

  • @PierreJJ.
    @PierreJJ. Месяц назад +61

    As a Rwandan, I must first establish my background. I am a Tutsi from Belgium, belonging to the clans of Abega on my father's side and Abanyiginya on my maternal side. However, in most African cultures, we primarily identify with our father's lineage. It's essential to provide factual historical and scientific context, which we traditionally acquired through oral storytelling, but is now supported by genetics.
    Before colonial times, Rwanda and Burundi were kingdoms ruled by a pastoralist aristocracy. This regional landscape extended across Northwestern Tanzania in Kagera, the Ankole Hima Region in Uganda, significant parts of Burundi, and Eastern Congo. Addressing the notion of Tutsis being merely a caste, and Hutus another, is fundamentally incorrect. We coexist and have shared this country for generations. However, asserting that we are the same is akin to suggesting that a Kikuyu Kenyan and a Borana Kenyan are identical, just belonging to different social castes, which anyone can transition between. Such claims are baseless and misleading.
    Tutsis are predominantly Southern Cushitic cattle herders of the Great Lakes region, closely related to other Cushitic groups like the Borana Oromo, Somalis, Nilotic-speaking Maasai with Cushitic admixture, Datooga, Samburu, and Rendille across Eastern Africa. Over time, we adopted a Bantu language from the agriculturalists in the regions we settled, forming a type of vassal state or feudalism which later was exploited by the colonial powers as the classic divide and conquer tactic straight out from the playbook . Despite some intermixing, less among upper-crust clans, we remain predominantly Cushitic genetically. ( haplogroup designation is E1b1b)
    Today, the newer generations of Rwandans, especially those with parents from both sides, hold the potential to become a unifying force, fostering trust and erasing divisions. However, denying our distinct identities is unnecessary. A comparison between individuals like Naomie Nishimwe and Solange Tuyishime or leaders like Paul Kagame and Juvenal Habyarimana you don't need a Phd in geneology and phenotypes to understand that we are two totally distinct ethnic groups with two very different origins. One came through the larger Bantu Expansion from West Central Africa, and us Tutsis came from North East.
    Check out Sage.Nomad on RUclips for genetic breakdowns on Tutsis.

    • @Syomiti
      @Syomiti Месяц назад +7

      🎯💯❗

    • @jacquelynebrown1382
      @jacquelynebrown1382 Месяц назад +6

      The entire Africa population is of Africa is obviously not the same.What is the commonality besides being African? How many ethic groups reside and coexist on the continent?

    • @lockethomas7165
      @lockethomas7165 Месяц назад

      When Europe is in war a European will make a tank out of household waste. When Africa is in a war, they blame the Europeans.

    • @trackmonger
      @trackmonger Месяц назад +11

      This was my original point. Just because we are Africans of different genetic origins does not mean we can't live in peace. If we choose not to, we cannot blame Europeans for it.

    • @Inzira155
      @Inzira155 Месяц назад +5

      I am a Munyarwanda Tutsi from Bazigaba clan and i do not agree with you.
      We are Bantu maybe Abega are southern cushites but not all of us.
      Infact the majority of tutsi are Bantu Y dna check any study.
      You mentioned oral history and did not consider it can be easily influenced by the fact most of the old generation was educated by missionaries and their hamitic theories.
      Thirdly i have less in common with the Iraqw culturally than the Zulu and Luba.
      Infact even among the Abega Y dna E1b1a and its subclades is probably the largest.
      Lastly the current president of Rwanda is Ega too but speculated to be E1b1a1 because of tests taken by close male relatives of his by FTDNA.

  • @elodienancynishimwe9095
    @elodienancynishimwe9095 Месяц назад +8

    Bravo Samuel and the rest of the your team good documentary 👏👏

  • @ValleyCrest6
    @ValleyCrest6 Месяц назад +4

    A very well-done documentary. Thank you for all the effort and research you put into the making of it. I'm sorry for the loss of your parents and other family members during the genocide. God Bless you and yours.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.

  • @moiserwibutso4899
    @moiserwibutso4899 Месяц назад +2

    Such a well done and informative documentary film. Good job Samuel and Mathias

  • @GaBlack-wo9vx
    @GaBlack-wo9vx Месяц назад +3

    Thank you Sam for this great documentary🙏

  • @BimRen246
    @BimRen246 16 дней назад +1

    Thank you for taking the time to make this documentary. It was an emotional watch, both sad and beautiful at the same time.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  16 дней назад

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!

  • @muhirwafelix1851
    @muhirwafelix1851 Месяц назад +5

    I'm in Kigali, this is indeed a good documentary, I think from now on people should learn how to live together in harmony, love, united and peacefully, despite their differences

    • @user-xg7ps7hi6k
      @user-xg7ps7hi6k Месяц назад

      Talk is cheap.
      Why are you oppressing the Hutus and Twa people then?

  • @phionaahhh
    @phionaahhh Месяц назад +9

    I am from Rwanda and I’m urging you to use the right words. It is not the genocide in Rwanda, it is the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. Thank you

    • @PaulKagameSpeeches
      @PaulKagameSpeeches Месяц назад +1

      Why are you so hypocritical? This story was told by a Rwandan survivor, very smart and mature, unlike you. (I've watched all of your content, I know the level of research and energy you put into your films and vlogs. Your ideas are too poor.) He told the truth 100%, unlike Victoria Uwonkunda. She was afraid to mention her family, but Samu did mention not all Hutus are genocidaires. We know that Hutus also died, and you know that, my dear. (The population of Rwanda was 7 million; only 14 percent were Tutsi, nearly a million. And we have more than a million bodies and still finding more buried underground. Open your eyes, my dear. Don't get stuck on just a slip of the tongue. Naming isn't going to change what happened, but recognizing millions of Hutu orphans and widows is the only way of healing this wound.
      (Growing up, I was told my father was killed, and I knew who killed him. He was wandering around. Don't get confused, my dear. My father was a teacher, not an interahamwe or a political figure. He saved lives; he didn't take any. But he was killed later as a young kid. I didn't care about anything, but looking at how these people on Twitter call everyone interahamwe, even the young generation, got me to this point that I not afraid of speaking out, not afraid of being canceled or jailed . I am depressed.)
      My point is we need to stop this Tutsi-Hutu thing, forgive and forget what happened; otherwise, we are touching wounds that were already healed. We are making them new. Phiona, do you know how many Hutus died in DRC in 1996? Do you read? Did you mean to ask your friends where their fathers are? I mean those who are not in FARG and AERG.
      (I am not a genocide denier. Genocide has happened, and it has taken millions of Tutsi lives. Tutsis were the target group, and the mission was to eliminate them. We know. But let's at least take time and remember those Hutus who gave their lives to save, like Sam's story. Let's remember those doctors, nurses, and teachers, I mean those innocent educated Hutus who were killed after the genocide, and even those who were killed by cholera. They didn't deserve that

    • @user-xg7ps7hi6k
      @user-xg7ps7hi6k Месяц назад

      Both Hutus and Twa were also killed by kagame’s rebels and therefore,it’s a rwandan genocide.
      Have respect for your other countrymen

    • @lukemuga434
      @lukemuga434 12 дней назад

      ​@@PaulKagameSpeeches perfect response on the insistence of calling it genocide against tutsi

  • @3yesgirl
    @3yesgirl 12 дней назад +2

    When I was limited the narrow vision , the DW takes me to another world. Thank you for the excellent quality of videos.

  • @davidukwishaka8641
    @davidukwishaka8641 Месяц назад +3

    What a nice documentary!, thank you Samuel Nishimwe for the efforts to document Rwandan History

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!

  • @Kangabe_
    @Kangabe_ Месяц назад +4

    This is such a well thought out production, thank you for sharing your story and perspective on how we can reclaim our history.

  • @strappaplank6017
    @strappaplank6017 Месяц назад +2

    a fantastic documentary that Samuel and all involved should be very proud of

  • @22_SamHassy-Union
    @22_SamHassy-Union Месяц назад +7

    Before colonialism, African tribes were already annihilating ourselves. We love to blame everyone except our own choices, just to elude responsibility taking.

    • @Africankingson
      @Africankingson Месяц назад +7

      according to you which African tribes were genociding others in precolonial Africa , apart of just confrontations which humans tribes all over the world have always done since dawn of time.

    • @michellekabanga3612
      @michellekabanga3612 Месяц назад +1

      Stayed

    • @YT-xk5jl
      @YT-xk5jl Месяц назад +3

      Speak for yourself. I am African and my ppl were never unaliving ourselves. Also one thing ignorant Africans fail to realize is that when we did fight amongst ourselves before colonization, it was for survival (resources) and not because we were taught to hate each other and see the other as evil, which is the exact case here. The Hutus were taught that the Tutsis were a representation it extension of Colonialism which they hated. And the Tutsis were taught and conditioned to believe that they were closer in terms of superiority to Europeans and the Hutus were beneath them.

    • @Africankingson
      @Africankingson Месяц назад

      @@YT-xk5jl as a person from Rwanda I agree

  • @verablau
    @verablau Месяц назад +2

    This is such an important documentary….for all human beings, regardless of their nationaliy…healing through forgiveness is the universal message….thank you from Germany…

  • @doreenmwasi4929
    @doreenmwasi4929 8 дней назад

    Am Kenyan and i can relate with pre-colonial Rwanda. Most of our community members identified themselves by clan before colonialism. Its sad how negative ethnicity has divided most of African people.

  • @TYFashion_cosmetics409
    @TYFashion_cosmetics409 Месяц назад +7

    Several times i think about this,who divided us kweli?the truth is this we are Rwandans,we are the one.

  • @PaulA-px4kx
    @PaulA-px4kx Месяц назад +3

    Thank you for sharing through this excellent film - love to Rwanda and a brighter future for you all ❤

  • @eugenea7886
    @eugenea7886 Месяц назад

    Great film. The presenter does a wonderful, thorough job.
    We look towards a promising future.

  • @chrism5159
    @chrism5159 Месяц назад

    Great documentary , proud of my country Rwanda. and kudos to this Guy

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks for watching and for the feedback!

  • @Smukasi
    @Smukasi Месяц назад +2

    Great piece of work Sam. I have watched numerous documentaries on the Rwandan genocide and i must say this has taken the number one spot. It captures Primary, Secondary and Tertiary information making it easier to understand. Bravo

    • @ndahiroderrickalter2912
      @ndahiroderrickalter2912 Месяц назад

      The 1994 Genocide against Tutsi

    • @user-xg7ps7hi6k
      @user-xg7ps7hi6k Месяц назад +1

      @@ndahiroderrickalter2912
      Rwanda genocide because Hutus and Twa people were also killed by kagame’s rebels who orchestrated the massacre

    • @mashobane6177
      @mashobane6177 Месяц назад

      ​@@user-xg7ps7hi6k The Hutus are the ones that were treated better by Germans?

    • @lukemuga434
      @lukemuga434 12 дней назад

      ​@@mashobane6177 No, it was the Tutsi that were given preferential treatment

  • @MaColline4321
    @MaColline4321 Месяц назад +1

    wow! this is encredible

  • @victorolatope5148
    @victorolatope5148 Месяц назад

    Thanks for doing this. I see a lot of this pattern in many African countries. I enjoyed the songs a lot... it reflects the beauty of this continent Africa.. I am just left with a lot more question... but the lesson for me is for us to look beyond our prejudice.

  • @user-ic7up5ug3m
    @user-ic7up5ug3m 21 день назад

    Thanks😢❤

  • @ndahiroderrickalter2912
    @ndahiroderrickalter2912 Месяц назад

    Mr .Ishimwe thank you for compiling this masterpiece of Rwanda’s history..
    Blessings

  • @acespark2894
    @acespark2894 Месяц назад +6

    We African don't take responsibility for anything. We act like we were one homogeneous community rather than warring communities. It's always other people fault

    • @YT-xk5jl
      @YT-xk5jl Месяц назад +1

      Who is the we? Speak for yourself. As an African my people never fought each other. You must speak for yourself only and leave all Africans out of that racist supremacist idea. Besides even if that were the case, does it undermine Belgium and Germany’s obvious major role in the exacerbation of the tension amongst the two ethnic groups? These Europeans saw that tension and they fed off of it, they exacerbated it, that’s a fact.

    • @CAM8689
      @CAM8689 Месяц назад

      @@YT-xk5jl they exacerbated what already existed in a major way.....

  • @VaucluseVanguard
    @VaucluseVanguard Месяц назад +4

    The people who slaughtered Rwandans were other Rwandans. Colonialism had nothing to do with it.

    • @YT-xk5jl
      @YT-xk5jl Месяц назад +1

      Colonialism had everything to do with it and so did Leopold.

    • @YT-xk5jl
      @YT-xk5jl Месяц назад +1

      It’s why they were called colonial subjects and not Colonial independents. They were not even allowed to practice certain aspects of their own spirituality. There’s nothing that occurred within African colonial society that didn’t occur at the approval and support of the colonizers, who in this case are Belgium and Germany

    • @malal25
      @malal25 Месяц назад

      It’s has all to do with colonialism. They carried their racist bastardized ideology of ethnic classsification and rivalry.
      France 🇫🇷 generally is the more pervasive of all colonial powers

  • @brittrucker7218
    @brittrucker7218 15 дней назад

    Fantastic documentary. All of us all over the world are the same and only greed seperates us.

  • @vigezo
    @vigezo Месяц назад +29

    I think the existence of separation/classes between the 2 was there before colonialism, simply the colonialist made it to work for their advantage(devide and rule)

    • @PierreJJ.
      @PierreJJ. Месяц назад +2

      Correct

    • @jacquelynebrown1382
      @jacquelynebrown1382 Месяц назад

      Again, The main purpose international colonialism was to created internal chaos among primitive governments, self-incentivism thru disingenuous trade agreement, over-reaching, believe system, missionary and religion warfare. Then forced military warfare

    • @elt7219
      @elt7219 Месяц назад

      Once they have a so called minority, they manipulate them so they can influence the majority to do anything they want. The west still use the same tactic to this day.

    • @indemarugambarobert1632
      @indemarugambarobert1632 Месяц назад +1

      STOP LYING.

    • @moseskato8413
      @moseskato8413 Месяц назад

      Yeah just like they’re doing in Congo

  • @denisek3383
    @denisek3383 Месяц назад +2

    Thank you DW for the documentary and thanks to a lot of commentators here. To me this was very informative and insightful.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад +2

      Thanks a lot for watching and for your positive feedback. We appreciate you taking the time to comment and
      are glad you like our content!

  • @kforest2745
    @kforest2745 Месяц назад

    Those are good questions that you will find the answer to very easily by reviewing the history of policies in the country

  • @sukantimamusic
    @sukantimamusic Месяц назад +1

    Excellent work of shedding light on the genesis. Also, your approach, questions...really to be applauded. Sad and humbling history, never again.

  • @jojochance2695
    @jojochance2695 Месяц назад

    Super proud of being Rwandan ❤❤❤

  • @JustMe-zk9dc
    @JustMe-zk9dc Месяц назад +39

    So the tale is the Rwandans genocide is because the Belgium’s told them to do so.
    Didn’t Rwandans have a will of their own.
    Colonialism is the magic word in Africans to excuse their own failings.

    • @alephmale3171
      @alephmale3171 Месяц назад

      So the tale is the Woman got raped because the man forced her to have sex at gun point?
      Did she not have a will of her own?
      Rape is the magic word in women to excuse their own failings.
      (That's how you sound.)

    • @TheoOosthuizen-xs2nq
      @TheoOosthuizen-xs2nq Месяц назад +14

      Definitely, the irony is that they don't see that narrative also belittle's black people and makes them seem incapable of making their own decisions. I wonder, was WW2 because of Attila the Hun?

    • @arieldade4365
      @arieldade4365 Месяц назад

      Wrong

    • @TheoOosthuizen-xs2nq
      @TheoOosthuizen-xs2nq Месяц назад +1

      @@arieldade4365 Prove it.

    • @harrisleif7871
      @harrisleif7871 Месяц назад +10

      Belgians appointed one group to supervise forced labour on the other group? Colonialism means exaclty that... no will? Give us another colony which had a say in how it was colonized.

  • @user-mp8xn4zm4u
    @user-mp8xn4zm4u Месяц назад +1

    Thanks bro for putting this on air,let no one tell a wrong story yet we’re the ones who lived it. Can always bring clarity to inform the public so they can have a good perspective of what really happened other than distortion from haters❤❤❤.One love banyarwanda❤.

  • @Selfmadexiiiv
    @Selfmadexiiiv Месяц назад +1

    Good job Samuel , this documentary is a master peice👌

  • @CBAKA100
    @CBAKA100 Месяц назад

    Thank you so much for these rich documentary .Keep it up!

  • @bwambalefrank8736
    @bwambalefrank8736 Месяц назад

    Sending love and support from Uganda 🇺🇬 ❤

  • @alberuda
    @alberuda Месяц назад +1

    The Best Documentary about Rwanda from the beginning to colonial to genocide to the rebirth of a nation

  • @xermierklaus4550
    @xermierklaus4550 Месяц назад

    Watching this film, it feels so sad for Rwandan people.. i hope leaders in this country learn a lesson that violence/war is not a solution and must not be existence in dealing the people.. let the people live in peace and love should prevail..

  • @Mayo9464
    @Mayo9464 Месяц назад +7

    This is why Africa needs to determine its own future. Relying on colonial legacies including their languages and laws will never avail us anything .

    • @matsinilsson9578
      @matsinilsson9578 13 дней назад +2

      The human race is over 400,000 years old and there has been tribal warfare, slavery and colonialism by ALL sides throughout. Africa needs to focus on secular humanism, education, science and development and not on fairytales, alternative facts, conspiracy or various mumbo jumbo religions.. It is a huge problem that Africans are now choosing the wrong sides (Russia, China) for collaboration in an attempt to evolve. Africa can do what they want but it is clear which nations are most human and evolved. Model after them. Not evil dictatorships.

  • @olivieriradukunda9918
    @olivieriradukunda9918 Месяц назад +2

    Great documentary! I believe in research ❤

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад

      Thanks for watching and for the feedback!

  • @fabricekabs
    @fabricekabs Месяц назад +1

    A master piece Ishimwe
    Thank you

  • @TheNameisPY
    @TheNameisPY Месяц назад

    Such a well made documentary. Love to Rwanda for surviving such challenges. I have heard from some Germans how ignorant they are about their colonial history.

  • @gkarumbi
    @gkarumbi Месяц назад +1

    This is some great journalist, Great work by Samuel.

  • @eaglenetmedia9928
    @eaglenetmedia9928 Месяц назад +2

    History holds us accountable of today, the genocide affected many and displaced many and thats history, only that historical scars take long to heal. Samuel who took the initiative to make this educative documentary, thank you.

  • @2placsmook
    @2placsmook Месяц назад +1

    I studied with Samuel at Apaper primary, I also new the footage at stade Amahoro, I didnt know it was him. I am so sorry for his loss! A wonderful professional documentary.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  Месяц назад

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.
      Best,
      The DW Documentary Team

  • @arbaz79
    @arbaz79 20 дней назад +2

    Thank you DW for this informative documentary 👍. I always wanted to know about the Rwandan genocide.

    • @DWDocumentary
      @DWDocumentary  20 дней назад +1

      Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!

  • @carmenmugeni3047
    @carmenmugeni3047 Месяц назад

    I came here not knowing I was watching a family member. Amelia was (is) my bestfriend growing up! This just brought me to tears. Thank you for work! Thank you! T❤ Nenela.

  • @gaellakaligirwa
    @gaellakaligirwa Месяц назад +1

    Thank you Sam ❤

  • @abbassaquee286
    @abbassaquee286 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks brother for the documents it gave an understanding from someone who knows what really happened during horrible time and what took place during dark days of 94 and it's fresh in my head like it was yesterday and I am even a Rwandan but as an African I can identify with what went on because I lived through the war in Liberia.

  • @blackhibiscus1876
    @blackhibiscus1876 Месяц назад +5

    Thank you Ishimwe. Thank you DW for confronting uncomfortable truths.

  • @Reggypeacenotwar
    @Reggypeacenotwar 10 дней назад

    I was watching the genocide in Amritsar 1919
    I came across this
    Its terrible whats happened around the world 🌎😢

  • @ombeninsanzanzamahoro3905
    @ombeninsanzanzamahoro3905 Месяц назад +2

    Excellent job, keep it up. The truth starting being reveal

  • @alexgoslar4057
    @alexgoslar4057 Месяц назад +1

    So sad, people segregate and view others as inferior. Racial hatred happens everywhere. How can we ensure a better future for Humanity?

  • @ndehornella6540
    @ndehornella6540 Месяц назад +1

    Very touching documentary. These events were really a sad phase in Rwanda's history. It takes a lot of bravery to keep looking foward after all these, I commend the rwandans for that. Thanks for a well filmed documentary !

  • @damarmuhammad8951
    @damarmuhammad8951 Месяц назад

    0:02 name of the song please I know the artists name is Sophie but what is the name of the song

    • @lusimyer
      @lusimyer Месяц назад

      I agree..very lovely song 🎵 ❤

    • @damarmuhammad8951
      @damarmuhammad8951 26 дней назад

      What is the name of the song

    • @lusimyer
      @lusimyer 26 дней назад

      @@damarmuhammad8951 I couldn't find that answer yet. I agree it's a lovely song

  • @MaColline4321
    @MaColline4321 Месяц назад

    very nice film

  • @chrissienizy5775
    @chrissienizy5775 Месяц назад

    Very well documented

  • @dianeishimwe1037
    @dianeishimwe1037 Месяц назад +1

    What a nice documentary! well done Sam , the last time I saw you was in primary school at APAPER. You were my classmate . You became a very nice filmmaker. Keep it up

  • @jaymeskuriah
    @jaymeskuriah Месяц назад +2

    This documentary serves as a reminder of why we need to reflect on the past in order to pursue a better future....We are all human beings; let's be humane

  • @rutagengwagard4258
    @rutagengwagard4258 Месяц назад

    story well said

  • @user-ji6lh6tm4m
    @user-ji6lh6tm4m Месяц назад +1

    you make the best documentary films

  • @naaayorkoryemoh
    @naaayorkoryemoh Месяц назад

    First time I heard about this was in my sociology class last year, I was deeply interested in the story but couldn't connect much
    Thank God for you, today I can hear the story and appreciate it even better than before!❤

  • @lemisoshabanji6633
    @lemisoshabanji6633 Месяц назад

    Such a wonderful documentary considering that my home library is home to Romeo Dallaire book 'Shake hands with the devil' that I've read twice.❤ from 🇰🇪

  • @abbassaquee286
    @abbassaquee286 Месяц назад +1

    The colonisers never left Africa because they still exist in many aspects of our lives that why Africa unity will be very to accomplished because the different colonisers doctrines and conquered and divide rules and it's now left with the younger generations to change the narrative and effect the changes for Africa to move on , not going to be easy but with determination and hard work it can be done and let Africa rise like the phoenix.

  • @rickeycook7940
    @rickeycook7940 Месяц назад +1

    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!

  • @Vtech82
    @Vtech82 3 дня назад

    It's best to accept the wrong in the past, move on and be better. Blaming others won't help anything.

  • @Karahalios1
    @Karahalios1 Месяц назад +2

    Beautiful work Sam. I was there in the summer of '94 working as cameraman for a Greek tv network. For sure I cry more than you😊.

    • @YT-xk5jl
      @YT-xk5jl Месяц назад +1

      You Europeans could never cry fur Africans,, who are you kidding here