The next journey begins Poland and Rwanda 2019

The next journey begins  Poland and Rwanda 2019
2019 adventures

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Gihembe Refugee camp

Today we visited the Ghembe refugee camp with over 12000 Congolese refugees.The camp was established in 1997 and many have lived here for 21 years. The streets are dirt, the dust is everywhre. Peoples faces are stained yellow from the dust that is constantly kicked up. Most people wear flip flops  The women are wearing traditional colorful dresses and the children are everywhere and seems to be attracted
like bees to honey to visitors. They are dressed in t shitrs from USA and other places with logos like NY and Nike- so I assumed these were donated but they are not because that would make them feel/like beggars.  They are all smiling, wanting to touch us, high five us , fist bump, try their english and just enjoy the oddity of us.

341 people were restelled to Iowa, Missouri fro this camp.
We met with teachers- who are mostly women- refugees themselves. We also heard from  the representative from ADRAS who have invested a lot in the running of the camp. The reason why the refugees are from Congo is complicated but to summarize- once the genocide was over 1996 the perpertrators fled to Uganda, and Congo. In Congo they began another genocidal onslaught Congolese and Tutsi- they all speak the same language. People began to flee the Congo and go to Rwanda.

The people subsist on the equivilent of $7 USD per month. Certainly not much.  They live in huts similar to the houses we visited on Mind Leap visit.  But the kids were out playing basketball and soccer. Smilig, laughing, covered in dirt from head to toe.  When Johnson as me today what I thought about it and I said the kids were very dusty and dirty he said `I was one of them`  my heart just broke. Although not in a refugee camp he was in an orphanage.
The kids are given porridge in the mornings before school and for many this is their only meal.

There are 8 committees covering culture, education, gender issues, sports, security, youth, and people with dsabilities. We met with two people who are President of the committees and one of the heads who was the head of a clan.When discussing the political issue he said that Bad leaders can lead to a loss of humanity.

A good leader can take someone out of a ditch , pick them up and make them part of humanity

Much funding comes from UN World Vision and many other charities but when we were invitted into two homes they looked like the hovel we were in before. Yet the women who invited us in were warm, smiling and excited to show us where they live with their children. Each house had a new born baby.  I asked about birth control and ws told they distribute condoms but often they and disposable gloves are being used to make a soccer ball.

In Rwanda there are 6 camps one is for Burundi refugees and the other 5 for Congolese.
In this camp 60% are women.  But I saw kids everywhere. It felt suffocating at times.

We heard severeal stories today one was Geoffry- Rep fromADRAS who told us how his grandparents left Rwanda after the first genocide in 1959 they had 12  kids one was Geoffrey father. His father met and maried his mother who was not accepted by the family because she was Hutu. It was a long story but his father was forced to give him up to his maternal grandmother who brought him up to beleive he was her son. There is a long story of when he found out the truth. His parents had reunited and had another chld- his sister whom he would not meet until she was 14. His mother gave her side of the story years later and he made an effort to listen. His father said Geoffrey life may have been different but it was the situation

At dinner we heard from another survivor  Vannie, with a horrific tale of rape, torture, and her moher being beaten so severely she still has scars on her head and arms. Her brother hid in the ceiling and she was left for dead. Her father was killed and one of her brothers. SHe survived and has now adopted a child. SHe says how the child s tribe is unknown- its not a distinction to be made anymore.

The stories are  horrific but are stories of the human desire to live and find joy . I have witnessed this in all the stories.  I am still waiting to hear all of Johnson story since I only got bits and pieces, I do kow he escaped with his aunt who was 14 he was 9. He lost his entre family

Photos to follow
refugee teachers






Clan elder leader

Pesident of the caommittees

Johnson talking to committee member

Refugee kids



Inside the mud hut


market of produce grown there





main road into the village

The school for the kids



sign for explaining where it is safe to eliminate waste


make shift soccer ball

Gad

Yes  I really saw this

Vannie

dinnerwth Vannie

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

favorite photos today




Add caption

Murumbi


  • Today we traveled five hours south near border with Burundi to visit the Murumbi memorial,  I am pasting link . It was the site of a technical school which was still being built 19 1994. It was suppose to be h

for Huti students - no Tutsi allowed, The genocidal government lied to the people ( sound familar?) and told them they would be safe in this school and the people thought since h
the aea was in a safe zone--- torquose zone- led by French forces that this was true. The result was on April 21 1994 over 50,000 Tutsi were murdered. They tried to fight back with what they had- rocks and stones. The bodies were all thrown into a pit and because there were so many there was little oxygen so the result looks like the victims of Vesuvius with victims frozen in time. The bodies, many still with tufts of hair, and wering clothes were found and now Rwanda is in the process of preserving the remains. Wgatwas suppose to be classrooms are now holding area for these bodies that ae still in the position when they were murdered, Many with the gashes, cuts, blows clearly seen. Not a place for eveeryone. Many participants were visably shaken and yu will see a few photos I took. Our guide, Lillian, whe asked told us her own story of survival. It appers anyone we meet between ages of 25 and up have a story to tell Of those attacked at the school only 32 survived.


door to classrooms

where bodies exhumed


Lillian


The French built a volley ball court on top of mass graves


mass grave





There is also a mass grave for the bodies that wre not identifiable. Together with Mitch and Jim we read Kaddish. Lllian truly was moved and she has never had that prayer said before at this site. However, it may have been said by other Jewish visiors before she worked there.

On the way home we all tried to lihten the mood and you will see a picture of a litle boy wo was so curious about us, when we stopped for a rest break he just got on the bus and said hello to all of us.

Later our driver, Peter, stopped and we met is children who are so polite, and not shy to shake hands with us all. There is a handshake which shows respect to elders w
that when you reach out the other person puts there other hand on their upper arm indicating respect.

our little hitchhiker

ice cream shop!

Lillian

Another worker at the memorial