With thanks to the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, the charity that promotes and supports Holocaust Memorial Day in the UK, www.hmd.org.uk/ and Antoinette Mutabazi from Youth With A Mission, an international volunteer movement of Christians from many backgrounds, cultures and traditions. www.ywamengland.org/
Subtitles? This is a harrowing recount of what humans are capable of, because of divisions in society. So subtitles, are you trying to make a point? A Political point?
The news downplaying this whole genocide event. Makes me feel blessed beyond belief and hope other people see how lucky they got it. The value of human life is so low to these people who's hearts are so deeply poisoner with blind hatred. How do you change people's way of thinking when this kind of hate is breed for generations and becomes just a way of life. .???
Every time I hear a story like this of someone who has been wronged and traumatized, but who is doing ok or even "thriving," the key is always forgiveness. If you think about all the conflicts between humans, and the death that has come from it, the missing ingredient has been forgiveness. If we could all just lean into forgiveness a little more, the world could become a better place. But, like she said, forgiveness isn't easy. Hate comes from anger, and anger is usually a mask for fear and pain. We need to learn to hold our own pain with compassion, and hold a compassionate space for others to share their fears, so that they can be allayed. As long as we allow ourselves to be run by our fear and our pain, this sort of thing will go on.
The crazy thing is if you walked past her in a store you would never know any of this story, this is why it is important to be kind to people around you
“Forgiveness is the key to your freedom” after hearing her recall the most brutal and terrifying time period in her life really meant something to me. What an amazing woman.
forgiveness is how you defeat evil. evil only breeds by corruption. if someone does bad things to you, and you end up doing bad things to someone else... you can see how the vicious cycle goes, unless one of the people in it forgives to his tormentor. That's the main principle of Christianity. Of course, forgiveness doesn't mean letting people do whatever they want, there should still be legal consequences, but forgiveness should happen in the heart. one thing about forgiveness is that actually the person that gets helped the most is yourself. when we forgive others, we free ourselves from pain.
"My father told us not to hide together, so if we were caught, we both wouldn't be killed" absolutely broke my heart. Imagine having to say that to your own children
She also said that her father survived. I can't imagine the survivor's guilt he must have, knowing that his 2 sons and wife were killed. I know there's no way he could have saved them. I think of him, and I hope that he knows that, too.
As a child I was always afraid of ghost and the paranormal. But as I grew older and learning about human cruelty, I can't help but find humans scarier than any other creature.
Absolutely. My children will always know that mommy is here to love and protect them. My little girls are my entire world and the thought of them ever being hurt is enough to break my heart. I can’t imagine having to see all of this.
This woman studied, got a job, educates people whilst fighting the most abhorrent trauma imaginable and can say that she is thriving. Nothing less than incredible and completely exceptional.
Both my parents are survivors but what stuns me most is the courage and power these people have to preach forgiveness . The pain Tutsi’s endured in 1994 is beyond human comprehension.
Forgiveness is all you have when you suffer crimes...either that or die a bitter vine on a soured root...oppressors may take your life...but it is up to you to give them your Soul and if you can't Forgive whether you are dead or alive you've given them your Soul. That was something I couldn't live with. But I will admit it took a while...I dreamt about committing murder many times, making my oppressor the oppressed until one time I woke up and realized 1.) that I had actually been dreaming of murdering someone and 2.) I realized I had been having this dream over and over and had never realized it and 3.) how evil my dream was...(and I do mean evil I literally saw myself in the dream as some sort of "Regan" possessed. That's right from "The Exorcist" movie THAT Regan...and my head did a full 365 and my evil self looked at me straight in the eye just before I pulled the trigger on the gun I was holding in my dream...woke me right up. Had that dream for years before I actually knew I was dreaming it over and over. Never dreamt it afterwards. It spooks me to this day just thinking about it. But it was a clear message. G*d was not messing around. I either forgave...or, I was "Regan" it was just THAT clear. Do you see what had happened to my Soul, my soured and embittered Soul...as John Lennon once sang "I just had to let it go..." Forgiveness is NEVER about "them" the oppressor it is about surviving the pain of what they do to us...Forgiveness is/was about me and every survivor. People think it is generosity. Kindness, sure, but it's much deeper than that. It's pure survival. Pure greed in a sense...the greed that says the choice of LIFE is better than the choice of Death.
I am not sure if you live in Rwanda or go there/have been there so forgive me if I am telling you something you already know, but my father is a Rwandese Tutsi from Gisenyi who survived, and when I have gone a couple of times in my life to visit I noticed every morning wherever we went (Kigali, Gisenyi, Butare) there were 100's if not 1000's of men in orange (some pink) jumpsuits cleaning up the streets and maintaining the city. I asked my father what it was, as I had never seen prisoners cleaning cities in any other country, under what seemed to be little supervision and so openly. He told me they were those convicted of Genocide, and this was the program established in order for them to repent and repay for the damage they inflicted on their own people and country as a whole. It struck me, that not only was this a thing, but that the way my father spoke about it was with complete forgiveness, and clearly the public shared this view as no one was treating these prisoners any differently or even looking at them with anger/disdain/hurt (it had been said before but I think I was too young to really understand how profound that is). History usually tells a different story; there is typically revenge and a violent counter-reaction. I asked him if he ever met Hutus/other extremists/genocide perpetrators that he suspected actually managed to avoid conviction for their crimes (many fled abroad much like the victims, and have settled all over), and he told me he had, and I asked him if he was angry about it and he said "it is very difficult, but we were all told from the beginning and have understood that forgiveness is the only way we can all heal". It is really cool to see you observed the same thing, and I hope you and your family are well.
I appreciate how she stopped and corrected herself sometimes when she was telling her story and mentioning the Hutu she made a point to say "the killers" rather than "the Hutu". It really showcases a willingness to see individuals and judge them on their own faults and merits.
@@iAmNothingness how are they treated like garbage compared to the rest of the population? They get free healthcare, education, and are worshipped by politicians. Maybe during the Vietnam War they were, but today they're treated pretty well. Whereas civilians who go through traumatic situations have no guarantee of healthcare or no prestige for what they went through..
She reminds me of my mum, who is also a survivor of the Rwanda genocide. To share such a traumatic story is a level of strength too high that there is no words for it.
My friend lived there. She lost many family members. She escaped and had been raped and a machete was used on her thigh bone. I don’t know how she survived. This woman loves EVERY day and tackles it with hunger amd awe. She loves life. Always has a smile on her face! She became a nurse here to help others. Cecille. I love how strong you are girl! God bless you!
Hi Ramona I had tears in my eyes hearing about your friend. I had watched a video about a survivor just before. I am so proud of both that they lived to tell the tale. They have turned hate to Love which helps them and all of us. Light and Love Along Your Way.xxx
So many people suffered or were killed..A million deaths in three months! Yet very little attention of the situation was given us by the so called western news media at the time. Average people in the west knew something bad was going on, yet big news media outlets wouldn't really report it. WHY? It's good that people know what happened in Rwuanda, but at the same time I feel it's a kind of a social porn clickbaits with these videos. Especially as there is no report of peace, or how these nations and tribes interact with each other today.
I have a friend who survived the Rwandan genocide. He was held at gunpoint at the roadside and forced to dig his own grave. He was almost done, minutes away from being shot and dumped into the hole he dug, when suddenly the heavens opened and torrential rain flooded the area. The downpour was so heavy, in a moment, people scattered in all directions for shelter. My friend also hurried away, too afraid to look behind him and anticipating a bullet in his back any second....it never came.
I am 40 years old and remember the genocide like it was yesterday. Remember, everyday above ground is good day. Thank you Unilad for sharing our survival stories. From one survivor to another I am proud of you sister 🇷🇼
@@Fraudkuna. that's a pretty naive view. World history is important to every nation, politics of nations can slowly impact any other. Whether you want to hear it or not its true. I for one would rather be informed than insular
The hole of small children being set on fire to burn all of them alive must be one of the worst things I've ever heard. The pain, the guilt of the parent the killers spotted, the screams....this is humanity at its absolute worst. I'm glad she's thriving, though. After everything she went through, she deserves to be thriving.
I don’t know if you can thrive per say after this type of trauma. I’ve experienced far less than her but some pretty horrific things. The pain may erode… & I wouldn’t say it’s just surviving… but it’s not thriving… it’s something in between if you get help.
I was in Rwanda in early 2020, while I was there I was stunned by the beauty of the country in each of the cities I visited, from Kibuye to Kigali all the way to Kayonza. The genocide is a horrific part of their history but Rwanda stays strong. The strength and kindness of the people who survived never ceases to amaze me.
@@abbajabba7 There's still Tutsis alive in Rwanda today. And not every Hutu commited murder. Not everyone in Rwanda today is evil or played a part in the genocide, that is an incredibly ridiculous statement to make.
@@garynelson9538 What we call justice is often nothing more than revenge. We try to ease our mind, by knowing that the person who wronged us suffers as well. But in reality we gain much greater peace if we can forgive them and move on without the shackles of hate and pain. Edit: grammar
@@logicandreason3812 That is not true at all. So someone takes your money and leave you poor and struggling, never to recover and impoverished for life as a result because of ill health that was there before the crime and worsened by the result of the crime, and you must "forgive" and move on?
@@the8thchurch461 What do I gain from hating him? From cursing him and crying about my state? I suffer from mental stress, because I obsess about what happened. Iwish him ill, building resentment and bitterness in my mind. When I forgive I can let these things go. I stop clinging to these fruitless thoughts and actions. I gain freedom from unnecessary mental stress.
@@logicandreason3812 I am talking about the material side of it. I was preyed on by a cult when unbeknown to me, I was suffering from chronic depression. I just thought I was extremely unhappy but life was one big struggle. Then the cultists preyed on me and I couldn't protect myself from them as I was not well. The cult robbed me blind and took 10% of my money monthly over a period of 6 years. So I shouldn't try and get my money back as it would be revenge? Their actions have made my already problematic life worse. The hole they have thrown me into is hard for me to come out of because of depression. So asking the law to help me is revenge? I rest my case.
Seeing that she only started to cry when she said she was too afraid to save the baby... god. Poor lady, she clearly is still an empathetic, caring person despite what she went through. I'm not sure if I would.
I think that seeing the suffrage of people. Especially people that looks like you makes you more empathetic. Our minds may not want to be, but our hearts know and understand what that kind of suffering does/can do to other people. Showing empathy outwardly, is somewhat of a cathartic action. When someone that has experienced extreme trauma doesn’t show that empathy, that doesn’t make them bad or different, they may truly suffer inwardly.
my mom survived the rwandan tutsi genocide and until this day, she never talked to my family about it. i cannot begin to imagine the trauma she went through and yet she is probably the strongest person i know. edit : thank you so much for all of the kind words, i am extremely grateful. you're all so sweet
My dear, it’s harder holding on than letting go. My parents were also affected by this. My mom said if it hadn’t been for God. She wouldn’t have been alive. It took over 20+ years to truly become a survivor and not a victim anymore.
You would die in your hatred. Forgiveness is for you my love. I've held so much unforgiveness and bitterness in my life over some things that has literally led to illness. I imagine what something of this magnitude would do to someone if they didn't let it go..
@@lunasloanbailey bullshit, people are responsible for their actions. Do you know what German soldiers said during nuremberg trial? "I was just following orders"
@@animae008 You don't understand the spiritual aspect of our world. Humans are good by nature, but are influenced by outside forces. Please stop picking on Germans. When Bolshevists and Stalin did things a hundred times worse. No one ever talks about them, I wonder why? Propaganda. But thanks for your opinion. Germans are a great people and nothing will keep them down
I have a small baby girl myself and this story completely destroyed me. My heart broke into a million pieces. I've been crying for two days and hugging my baby tighter than ever...
Especially when you've nursed your baby's, I struggled to keep my shit together when I heard that. I hope her baby made it out okay, all though I doubt it.
This isn't the most traumatic story ever heard. This is the most traumatic story ever heard; Ghengis Khan, Pol Pot, Hernán Cortés, and Joseph Stalin. Centuries separate them, and there's no recorded proof that they ever even got together to write their traumatic story, but there is proof that they killed upwards of 500 million human lives.
@@JerdMcLean the Interahomwe murder 800,000 with only machetes, in 9 months. That's pretty insane, up there with the aforementioned for sure. No one touches Pol Pot IMHO
When the interviewer asks Antoinette “How are you today?” and she replies, “I am alive.” I broke down crying thinking of the horrors this amazing woman and her family had and continues to endure today. Sending much ❤ and hope to you all. Your story has touched and inspired so many people.
Setting children on fire, I just can't understand how people can be so inhumane and cruel. And to think the people that took part in these acts are walking around living their normal lives.
Yeah... Well it somewhat makes me think of gangs we have here in the U.S., and to a little lesser extent, Antifa and BLM who are basically protected by our government.
@@annasthoughtsandmusicalpar2239 Oh you mean like the kkk used to do?? Cutting babies out of the stomach of mothers they just hanged? The same kkk who's decendants are now infiltrated in the police force and kill especially Black people in the streets with impunity?? Those lawabusers that are protested against by BLM and Antifa? There, fixed it for ya.
People get taught...persuaded....brainwashed, call it what you wish, that the other guy is not human. That's how they cope with killing. She said they called her a cockroach. That's your clue. Easier to kill a vermin than a person. Happened many many times throughout history. I watched interviews with people from WW2 and that's how they coped. Americans didn't think the Japanese as people, Japanese considered Chinese to be "logs" rather than humans...Russians killing Germans and vise versa without remorse for the same reasons. I'm not justifying or defending anyone taking a life for any reason but that's just my take on it from purely psychological point of view.
Just cuz someone's bad day is "worse" than yours doesn't mean it invalidates it, we all have different boiling points and we should never compare it to others.
@@unloyal4847 lol what we have and what they have is u comparable , we have so much more than they do and I can never be unhappy and ungrateful seeing what these people go through and what I have on my plate
@@xtcchewy2483 Thats not really the case, no matter where you stand on the hierarchy may it be high or low you have the right to feel sad and unhappy, sure you can feel grateful that you have more than what others have but you shouldn't kick yourself because of it. Why do you think we have suicides on all groups? Should we ignore all those that took their lives just because they were wealthy? We all have different tipping points its what makes us human, nothing fits like a puzzle when it comes to our self being, feel sad when you feel sad and feel grateful when you feel grateful.
@@unloyal4847 suicide of the wealthy is just plain selfishness and ungrateful ness when people would kill to be in their position, i am extremely grateful and thankful for what I have and what my family has worked hard to give me and I’d never think of being ungrateful or unhappy especially as my parents sacrificed so much of their dreams for me . We are too soft as people tbh. I see your ping as people have different tipping points but we need to learn how to bare our weight and be stronger
I saw a documentary where some villages had the people who were involved in the killings confess and apologize. These people were their neighbors. The cruelty of man is astounding.
"one of my aunties married a hutu man and he killed her" unbelievable. he put the tribal heritage over the love to his wife. let alone the value of her life. i could not have forgiven him under any circumstance
@@Benny-ye7ro you must have gotten me wrong. I just repeated what the woman in the video said what you have obviously not watched with all of your attention. btw there are " " which should show that it´s direct speech
That is the custom there. They kill each other. It was not just one person doing it all. You cannot be a Tutsi around the Hutus. Just the way it is there.
It could happen today in America. All it takes is one drastic event to blow the lid off the racial tension that has been building over the past 30 years. When you are brainwashed to believe that one race of people is causing all of your problems in life, killing a spouse is a small price to pay "for the greater good." We are not so different from these people, we just have different circumstances.
@@florianbischoff9764 Well if you're in United States of Europe then you already know how quickly people will start murdering each other when the government says its okay.
The mere fact that she survived because of robbing of a bank, is just wow. Two people ahead of her and she was just, "well this is happening," AT PEACE and by the greed of people she lived. Just wow.
My parents are survivors too, I heard these type of stories when I was younger, truly horrifying, I'm happy they managed to escape and flee to a safer place
It’s so important to continue telling these stories, Im also very happy your parents were able to get out of there. I hope you and your family are doing well
@@fletcherrichmond5143 The German and Belgian colonizers fabricated the racial differences between the two groups. They decided that the Tutsi were closer to the white race and therefore higher up in the hierarchy of races.
@@marshallnay thanks I've done some reading on it since I watched this video the fact the rewanada and Bosnian genocide paractally happend at the same time is fucked.
You can see the inner turmoil and panic as she's recounting the things she saw. In the end she said forgiveness is the key to freedom. I've been wronged in my life, nothing of that magnitude but I know that it isn't about the other person. I've forgiven people for hurting me because it releases the mental energy I'm diverting towards being angry at them. It frees up a part of my mind to live again and not be consumed by hatred. It really does help. It doesn't mean you ever have to tell them or interact with them ever again because they are obviously bad for you but it does mean you get to sleep with a slightly lighter heart at night.
I spent a little time in Rwanda a couple of years before the genocide. I knew nothing about the Hutu Tutsi divide, they just all seemed like the friendliest of people. Our governments knew they were planning to eradicate the Tutsi and did nothing. Apparently a small contingent of around 5000 UN troops was all that was needed to stop this, but they just sat on their hands and let it happen.
@@personwitharat9039 wym they cant do shit? They literally stopped it with (compared to the amount of killers) small amount of troops to stop them. They literally could've ended this early.
I think its very important to emphasize the genocide, in this form wouldn't have happened without the colonial powers of France, Germany and Belgium dividing the country for years and breeding hate between the parties for years. Hutu and Tutsi originally were 2 out of 3 classes, not particularly tribes. Only when the colonial powers took over and changed the whole legislature and political organisation, the division and differences between the groups became so crucial and ultimately led to the genocide.
The USA intervenes constantly for the most selfish reasons (profit) and pretend its to liberate ppl and bring democracy. Yet this very obvious case in which intervention could have helped was not provided. The USA govt should bow down in shame.
She is so incredibly strong and brave, even as a little girl, hiding alone, she's amazing. I can't even imagine the horrible things she's seen that she hasn't talked about, I hope she lives a good life, she deserves so much better.
I read about this genocide. An entire novel. She's right about compressing some memories because there's more that happened that she would tell if she remembered. It was absolutely vile.
I watched a documentary about that genocide once and it's almost unbearable to watch and hear what happened to the people. I can hardly bare the cruelty.... Thank you so much for your testimony, you are incredibly strong and amazing! ❤
@@ashotofmercury do you know the reason why this genocide happened? its because the Europeans went there, labelling the Tutsis the "better" tribe, because they were "lighter skinned" which caused a break in the relationships between the 3 main tribes. That spiralled out of control and caused this genocide. Maybe its not white supremacy directly, but being light skinned, and the white man played a part.
You have to research the methods used to get so many people to think in that way, in this particular case--what was happening in this country in the 90s and the influences in that situation.
a 12 year old going through all that and seeing all that over a 3 month experience and to still grow into the person she is today is unreal. she is something special.
We have this woman and others who went through a living hell and came out trying to do better and then we have people who commit horrendous crimes and blame it on things they went through growing up.
@@colettebaker2842 it can either make you or you can let it define you. You can can make something of yourself (and show these animals that they didn't win/take you) or you can let it break you. You have a choice more often than not to let yourself heal, or you can forever be the victim of your circumstances (albeit this is an extreme example and an extremely brave and strong person).
My heart broke watching her re-living the experience to answer the questions. THANK YOU for making the decision to filming this video. You have shined light on Rwandan history that many people here have probably never heard about including myself. Thinking of you and wishing you the very best in your healing journey.
This is exactly what I thought. I was abused by narcissistic abusers who did make several sincere attempts on my life but the stuff she is talking about makes me wonder how she can exist with such memories. It's bloody horrifying isn't it....
@Gonzo Papers You do know that there's a fuckton of political unrest there meaning that it is essentially a warzone in some parts without the official tag of war.
All that my mind kept repeating for the last 19 minutes and and 48 seconds was, “ this is one of the most beautiful people I have ever seen in my life..” And then for the last few seconds I kept hearing her say how forgiveness is the key to you freedom, but how it is not easy.. Forgive yourself, forgive those whom have hurt you, and be set free I’m still working on forgiveness 🙏🏾 thank you for sharing your story
Imagine being a 12 year old kid and having to witness that kind of horror… this is so sad. My heart goes out to her and every person who fell victim to this.
She lived within the privileged class. They had their boots on the necks of these people for tens of years! The hutu were enslaved by the tutsi- they treated them like the whites in South Africa and the whites in America treat all people of color... I zm not condoning how they dealt with it, but it had to be done...the tutsi were enjoying being the bosses, the masters, they took this to another level that would make the kkk look like Sunday school teachers!!! Try talking with Hutu people, then znd only then can you truly understand the reasoning behind the genocide
@@train123z it's logical to defend yourself against tyranny- to continue to allow them to rule as twisted masters would be insane...anyone, everyone would rise up against this type of enslavement within one's own nation by an invading force that took over and stayed - reaping every benefit znd resource while treating them worse than dogs! Before the so-called - genocide - these same people were cutting the breast off women znd giving them to their male children to play with...these bastards deserved what they got
How she can have any level of forgiveness just shows what a beautiful person she is and a much better person than I. The things she witnessed no human should ever had to witness, never mind as a 12 year old child. To hear what happened to her baby brother, her mother and her other brother and the traumatic things she saw is just absolutely harrowing, vile, digusting and so so sad. How can another human carry out such attrociaties on another human? I just cant comprehend it. I'm just so happy she still has her father and one of her brothers who survived. What a powerful, brave, courageous woman.
horrific. the human spirit to survive it is only God who can touch the heart to forgive There is another book which gives a vivid account of this sad chapter in Rwandan history. the book LEFT TO TELL .. THIS IS A MUST READ BOOK. may God continue to give this lady PEACE
Forgiveness just means you're not holding a debt against someone. It's NOT the same thing as reconciliation. Holding an emotional debt against someone who will never and can never satisfy it is folly. Only hurts yourself
@@lisagyamfi5143 You are comparing one part of society having better positions in government much like checheslovakia back then to a full blown genocide at a time were this wasnt the case anymore. the country was adapting but hutu fundamentalists preached violence. People like you are partly responsible for creating the hate culminating in the unprovoked mass murder of over a million people.
She can forgive someone who killed her aunt and I'm here sitting on my comfortable chair can't even forgive someone who keeps trauma dumping on me. She's such a strong character and there are a lot of things I wish to learn from her.
Well you don't need to forgive them. It differs per person. For some people, forgiveness is their way of letting go. For many others, allowing themselves to grieve, accept that people suck, and let go is the way to freedom. No forgiveness is involved, cause just so you know, you do NOT need to forgive anyone. Especially people who commited literal genocide. Forgiveness is overrated, and at some point can become toxic when people have this idea that they HAVE to forgive their abusers or horrible people in their life, cause you dont. Many people never have forgiven horrible people, but have accepted that it happened and that they shouldn't hurt themselves more by allowing it to eat them alive, so they just try to let go and distance themselves. To each their own.
I am Rwandan, through the forgiveness we healed the wounds on the heart and we live peacefully with those who killers our people. If you need the lessons of forgiveness, please come to Rwanda! You will see many testimonies.
You know what amazes me most about listening to her talk, she holds no hate towards the people that did this! Just the tone of her voice, the words she chooses to use she is hurt but she isn’t angry and that is beyond amazing! She is the true example of a pure heart ♥️
This woman is truly amazing. To even talk about forgiving these people. She is a better person than I will ever be. My heart and love goes out to her and anyone else who suffered in those dark times.
oh yes trust me when i tell you she is one of a kind I mean it because I am from the country beside rwnda and us too have tutsis and hutus and most tutsis hate hutus to death like i am not even allowed to hang around them and sometimes i dont even realize some people around me are hutus cause i dont ask
I'm also a war child survivor. Had to sleep among the dead for 2 days pretending dead to save my life. It was horrible tiller today I dont sleep without light. I'm alive thats the most precious thing to me. I got adopted in the Netherlands by a Loving family.
We talk about PTSD in the military, but I cannot imagine the horrific scenes and depth of suffering this poor lady has gone through. Her and so many like her. May God heal and richly bless her. May she be surrounded by His grace and goodness for the rest of her days. May she find peace and even joy in life.
one of my history teachers in high school survived this horrific tragedy and made it a point to educate us on it. it was not a required piece of learning, she set up the lesson plan on her own time. i am forever appreciative of her for teaching us about this tragedy, there is so much to learn from these horrifying events, and the stories of these people deserve to be heard. bless this woman and her strength. videos like these always remind me that you never know what someone may have gone through. you pass by hundreds of people just like this brave woman every day. treat everyone with kindness, you never know who needs it.
the fact that she saw all these with her own eyes are beyond control. I am a young mum and the thought of me being beheaded while carrying my little baby just hit me deep. I pray she heals from all those things, all she saw, all she feels every day memories flashes through her mind. Sending Love and Hugs to all Rwandese.
When she said she wanted to take the baby but was scared to run around w her 😭😭😭 my heart broke for her. I had to pause the video. Shes so brave and strong to tell her story 💗
I’m a Rwandan citizen who “luckily” wasn’t born by the time of the genocide against tutsi but until today from April 7th our country has a 100 days of honor for all the lives lost then people share there stories and lessons through out those 100 days and teach the younger generation that we are all Rwandan people no tribes or anything…prayers to this strong beautiful strong woman, she’s unimaginably strong
@@EvelynDeCobainthe difference between Tutsi and Hutu was mostly social - Tutsi being the wealthier and more powerful and the Hutu being the poorer, lower class.
@@EvelynDeCobain the Belgian and French colonists separated them into these groups. They stood by why horrible things took place. they armed the slaughter. They told the United Nations not to worry, they have this under control. 1 million dead later. the Rwandan people want to forgive and forget. I am too angry and unwilling to forgive. and certainly not to forget.
I remember as a child watching the movie “Hotel Rwanda” and believing it was fictional. It’s an extremely sad movie. When I became an adult and learned it was based on a true story and true events I couldn’t believe it. Hearing her story has made it all the more real
Who turns one group against another, black against white, black against black, children against parents, female against male, religion against religion, nation against nation? The Swamp. ua-cam.com/video/y6KZAZqwt9c/v-deo.html
Wow I can’t imagine watching that as a kid. I was in my early 20s when the genocide happened, and later watched the movie with Don Cheadle. Phenomenal movie, and a part of history that we can’t afford to forget, but hard enough to watch the movie as an adult.
when the reporter asked, "how are you?" and she said, "i am alive" blew me away and moved me so much. after what she had endured, her answer was so full of hope and strength and resilience and this brief insight into her optimism despite the horrors she faced made me understand her gratitude for life, and ultimately her drive to continue living it because she's here, and she survived. and that is so empowering and so beautiful. i wish this woman everything good and everything she deserves and so much more. because she's here, and she's alive
@@jaysheriffe6292that’s the case with many. It either hardened their hearts, or made them soft. I’m a Burundian/Rwandese American. (Parents came from those countries, and survived.) but the long term effects was so devastating. My parents, members of my communities are some of the strongest people I know. And have big hearts, who are crazy for Jesus. :)
I remember when I was in Junior High School in Brooklyn NYC, I was in maybe the 7th grade...we had been assigned to read the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel. I read the book and the picture that he painted of some of what had transpired during the holocaust was so horrifying that it was hard for me to feel like it was "real"... then one day I was riding the train on my way home from school, and an older man was standing a few seats away from where I was. At first he was holding onto one of the poles in the bus that go from the floor to the roof, but then, he switched to grab one of the over head straps to hold on to, and as he did that his sleeve rode up on his arm I saw a series of faded green numbers tattooed on his fore arm and I IMMEDIATELY recognized them from their description in the book "Night".. I think I was in a state of shock for the whole rest of the ride, and I've never forgotten it... to think about what that man had lived through and survived!!!
@@killuminatikilla3235 Monsters do not deserve forgiveness there is no redemption for them and forgiving them as a means of coping with their atrocities is inhumane and unjust you are locking your emotions, reality, justice into a cage as a means of moving forward when in reality you left apart of yourself behind a part that should still be apart of you what more will you allow them to take from you. Situations like this are only magnified and worsened when the law, the justice system fails you and that monster that irredeemable monster still walks the streets with no repercussions.
I read about the Rwandan hutu-tutsi genocide in sixth grade from a woman who lost her whole family. She only has her brother left, and it was a terribly vivid biography. It was the first time I had heard about it. It feels so wrong that so many of us Americans don't know what happened to them. Edit: I would really like it if the Americans and the non Americans in my replies stopped fighting over how we're either A. Assholes for not knowing or B. Not assholes because we should never care about anything outside of the us. Both your viewpoints are wrong, stop using my comment to be so ignorant and awful.
I've never in my life wanted to be able to hug someone through the screen so bad, I cannot begin to imagine what this poor soul had to endure. You are such a warrior Antoinette, beautiful soul inside and out.
I can’t imagine being an adult and experiencing this nightmare, let alone a 12 year old child! Bless her and keep her!!! She’s so beautiful and brave!! I pray the rest of her life is happy, stable and blessed!🥰
@maple yi yes there are plenty of online tools available to help you with that it's best not to shout that at random but go type it in Google search bar for more help. Love You have a nice life
@@dreamsprayanimation Yes, strong & beautiful...& with the most forgiving & merciful heart...no one can ever unsee such atrocities, surely such people must have haunted dreams.
The mix of sadness, intelligence, perseverance and beauty in this woman is breathtaking. She hurts the most when remembering she couldn't do anything for the baby whose mother was beheaded. She was a just a child herself experiencing the unfathomable, but yet to this day, she has genuine empathy that is pure and stunning to witness. This video was so difficult to watch but I'm grateful that I did. She deserves her story to be heard.
I too saw Hotel Rwanda, it was horrific, I was in America safe in my comfortable house, yet I was very touched and very empathetic, traumatized and very sad, is this really what's going on, or am I in a dream! Putin killing people right before our eyes, it's sick and totally abominable! We're going to hell now!
@@sandycarroll7021 just because others are going through more doesn’t mean your problems aren’t significant enough and you can’t complain, everybody has a lot going on in their own plate and some peoples plates are smaller than others. One thing which might affect me a lot may seem like nothing to somebody. Don’t invalidate others :(
@@meliora19 I agree with you and have always hated the sentiment that others have it worse and so ur struggle means nothing. A very dangerous and insensitive thing u could say to someone
That happened. God bless her. We went through that in the neighbouring country Burundi. My mother was half Hutu /Tutsi and was married to an Arabic man from Dubai. Our dad. Our parents had everything you could wish for in life before that happened. I remember the day it started, our dad had sent 3 trucks to get us out. I think it was on a Friday/Wednesday cause not all of the children were at home at the time. Me and me twin sister age 6 were home with our mom and older sister 11 age. Our older brothers were at school I believe. When the trucks arrived and in panic telling our mom to get the children's and anything of value. That's when I first saw my mom become the hero that she has become in her sacrifice. Mother took only a small iron box out of the house, and grabbed us me/twin and our older sister. We head for the trucks and mom told the driver to rush towards the school where our brothers were. On the way chaos/mayhem was already at large. The other 2 trucks panicked and rook of and our driver pleading to our mom not to go into that direction. The school was already in flames he said and told her to think of her younger children. Mom made this horrible yell and cry knowing that it was impossible to find our brothers in that chaos. And told the driver to get us out of there. Long story short, from that point on we were stranded as refugees on the run. And mother did all in her power and connections to get us to safety. In and out of neighbouring countries into refugees camps. Then in 1998 mother made the choice to flee to the Netherlands. We arrived in the Netherlands in 1998 March 11 Friday I believe. And we where given a chance to have a life here. After all those years thinking our brothers were lost, in a miracles way they survived and was looking for us . Somehow we are all together now. Our dearest father did not make it unfortunately. I joined the Dutch military airforce in 2004. We are now Dutch citizens, but strangely still Burundi has a bigger hold on us and we accept it. Life has been good to us comparing to those who didn't make it or went through worst in that situation. I will end this with saying something about our mother, Nzeyimana her last name and she never complained or cried to us when we were going through that. She always had a smile on her face telling us all will be fine and not to worry. And yes she did it all and we are fine and OK. We as children blocked most of the traumatic events throughout, I remember having nightmares after playing with dead body's as we were in that situation. Somehow I'm doing well in my head and consider me self a good person. Anyway life is good . To you mom my hero
Horrific is a complete understatement, I have NO words. I am a radio host and I have a healing show where I have interviewed many amazing survivors of various traumatic events, but this right here... 😔 Sending this beautiful survivor love and light. 🙏🏾
I feel ashamed for complaining about anything in my life because living through this is truly hell on earth , especially for a child. You never know what people have been through, so i'm extremely careful about how i see and how i feel about strangers. There are people we pass on the street every day that have lived truly horrific lives and yet they smile. Peace and God be with you sister.
Just because things are worse for others, it doesn't lessen the pain that you yourself feel. That type of thinking doesn't heal you. Dealing with and learning from those who went through worse heals you.
@@KettleBlacktheBat exactly. I view it the same way I do the pain scale. You only have a capacity for what you've been exposed to. The highest level of pain you've experienced in your life may be what another who was born with chronic pain would consider a good day. That doesn't devalue your pain in the least as it's still an absolutely overwhelming experience for you. I deal with excessive chronic pain, but I still drop everything to help my mother on her high pain days too. I've never thought lesser of her for being brought to tears for her pain. It's just as much of a struggle for her to process that as it is for me to process mine. She sometimes apologizes for it and I always remind her of this. My experience with crippling pain can't be compared to hers because the exposure is entirely different experiences, two different scales of measure.
I am an American. I have lived in Rwanda for over 3 years. Knowing ll that has happened in this beautiful nation...all the wounds and heartbreak...I am in awe at how these precious people have forgiven and continue on with their lives. There are monuments everywhere that say, "Never Again." I believe that is the heart of these people. I am humbled to live among them.
The poor little innocent kids being burnt alive really struck me. I can imagine their cries and it really breaks my heart to know they were given such a horrible death and they were so young!!
How can things like this happen? How can people kill children, their own wives? This woman is so strong and has experienced more hardship than anyone conceivably should. She’s brave for telling her story and awareness is key. I’m heartbroken for them. 💔
YOU HAVE QUESTIONS? I HAVE ANSWERS!!-Perversion, death and murder increasing! ...LAWS are made to protect people and increase or maintain quality of life for humans.. There is a growing REBELLIOUS trend to TRASH laws, including moral ones, as mentioned in the bible. 99% of preachers don't even support ALL 10 commandments, and many don't support even any by their LAWLESS heresy. CRIME & CLERGY CONNECTION = TRICKLE DOWN IMMORALITY.. "When people’s thinking is controlled by the sinful self, they are against God, because they refuse to obey God’s law and really are not even able to obey God’s law." ROMANS 8:7 Society will increasingly SUFFER! The barbarians are coming, the barbarians are coming...!!! The preachers lead the charge!! "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because you have rejected knowledge, I will also reject you, that you shall be no PRIEST to me: seeing you have forgotten the LAW of your God, I will also forget your children.” Hos 4:6 Christianity is mostly now populated by GULLIBLE , DECEIVED, FANATIC VICTIMS who have never read even the whole new testament once. They spend almost ALL of their weekly waking minutes (6720) influenced by perverted , depraved worldly culture and , if they attend church, learn a bunch of ambiguous, abstract, obscure, religious lingo & cliches for teaching by inept preachers who are deceived modern, law trashing, bible warping Pharisees. RESULT??? MATT 24:24...
It was trough constant propaganda that the genocide happened,it just shows how bad can a propaganda can be if it is not censored,crazy thing is even wives or husband that were Tutsi were killed by their Hutsu spouse with their mix blood kids ,how brainwashed can you be by propaganda that you killed your Tutsi wife or husband and your kids because they are not Tutsi , propaganda also is the reason nazi overtook germani in the ww2 .
France provided the weapons for that genocide. Dutch and German divide and conquer colonial strategies set these once peaceful cohabitating ethnic groups at each other's neck from colonial rule to the point of that genocide. I'm not trying to lay blame on European foreigners but it sounded like you wanted to know the origins of this sad history
Yes, Rwanda was another nasty case of Us vs Them…Jared Diamond in a comprehensive historical undertaking writes about, COLLAPSE, HOW SOCIETIES CHOOSE TO FAIL OR SUCCEED. When addressing the conditions in Rwanda pre-genocide, Professor Diamond expounds on multiple aggravating circumstances, one being high density population. Quote: “…population and environmental problems created by non-sustainable resource use will ultimately get solved in one way or another: if not by pleasant means of our own choice, then by unpleasant and unchosen means…”. The world population in 1994 was 5.66 billion; world population as of end of 2023 was 8.04 billion and rising. When population increases dramatically, availability of resources becomes a survival issue that the poorly educated cannot comprehend, nor address…so unfortunately, We the members of a community, revert to an Us vs Them mentally…Them being thought of as ‘cockroaches’…no disrespect to real cockroaches intended. It is literally only human primates that are destructive, invasive, exploitive, malicious, and murderous! And global population is still increasing - Just how smart are human primates, past and present, in every country? In the future, are We capable of comprehending the strain We put upon limited resources and actually adjust our innate primitive behaviours for the better of We the community!
One of my friends was 10years old and living with her parents and siblings in Rwanda, during the Rwandan genocide in 1994. I couldn't stop crying when she told me how the Hutus killed the Tutses and how many dead bodies they saw scattered around their house and in the streets. They had to hide their maid, who was a Tutse. My deepest sympathy to you and your dad Antoinette Mutabaz. I am so sorry that you lost your mum and siblings. You are such a brave woman. God had a purpose for your life, that is why your life was spared. Stay strong. God bless and keep you safe. Much love and hugs to you!
@@czarbuscus1475 Look i understand you believe in god and bla bla but i don't think this is the time to say that god let things happen for a reason since right now the event had done nothing good to the souls who survived but are now left with a traumatic memory
@@czarbuscus1475 completely ignorant and dense on you. Don't bring your religion when no one mentioned it. Especially in a serious matter like this. This is why people are fed up with religions. People like you kept shoving it around. The reason why people are going further from God is ironically because ignorants like you who kept on blabbering about God in the wrong time, unsolicited.
Seeing this woman swallowing her tears when I can't even keep my eyes dry just listening to her story makes me wish I could hug all her pain away. Her strength is incredible as much as inspiring. Much love and respect to you ms. Mutabazi !!🤗❤
I felt the same ..just wanted to reach through and grab her and hold her. It took me a while to watch as I kept pausing to stop tearing up. Your clearly a good human being. Love from Australia 🇭🇲
@@asmrhooded people are very much so evil this absolutely can happen anywhere and has you are absolutely correct people do not think for themselves they just follow no matter the outcome
Incredible, and heartbreaking stories, there. That she can answer how she’s doing with her head up, and an “I’m thriving” makes me smile. She has seen the very very worst humanity can offer, and has not lost her faith in human kindness. That’s a special type of strength.
It’s enough that people are killed but when she stated how she wasn’t worried about being killed because of how numb she became at 8:28, for the first time in a while I felt genuine chills. The inhumanity of it all!! What she’s been through is unfathomable, just thinking how you KNOW your death is next while witnessing all of that really brings me to tears. I hope all of those monsters rot
My heart dropped when she said her mother and brother were killed. I cannot even imagine the pain and heartbreak of what she went through. Especially with her second brother. I hope she is doing well now 🙏🏼
I can see the pain in her eyes, she is so strong for being able to talk about this & I have so much respect for her.. Genocide sounds like the worst possible nightmare to become a reality! She is so so brave. I commend her for being able to talk about this & spread awareness about this. So happy she is alive & smiling today.
The ability for her to simply recall these horrors is indicative of how long she has been fighting for a sense of normalcy. This woman is powerful. Her pain, immeasurable. Her will to strive, truly inspiring.
I cannot fathom the pain she lives with on a daily basis, this is gut wrenching and the fact that many other Tutsis went through worse is unbelievable…
My mother is Rwandan and she lost her siblings, parents and grandfather during the genocide. Luckily, she was in New Brunswick studying while this was happening in Rwanda; My aunt (her sister ofc) was also somewhere else during the events. Two of her brothers also survived thankfully. She was getting married to my dad around the time that it happened so their wedding wasn't too extravagant due to my mother grieving. On a side note, we just recently lost my great grandmother in February 2022 who survived the genocide back home, she was 103 I think :) Watching this video was absolutely heartbreaking for me because the thought of my family dying in such inhumane ways breaks my heart. I thank God every day for saving my mother.
@@macman975 I hope they’re resting and found peace 🫶🏾 I didn’t know them since I was born after the Genocide but they seemed like wonderful people based on the stories my mom tells me about them :)
@@macman975 what a disgusting comment. This girl just shared the story of her mom, and a very traumatic story, and all you have to say is an argument against her religion? Would you ask a Jew after the Holocaust why they still read the Torah???
@@leysxo5991 I hope you know what was behind my question?. I'm a Christian and a few years ago I lost the 2 people who were the closest to me. They both died in the same 'accident', it shook my faith to the core because acknowledging God saved one surely means I was acknowledging God let one die?. If God did save one why couldn't he have saved both?. It was something I struggled with for years but I eventually met someone who had so much wisdom and he led me out of the dark place I was trapped in. Just reading what happened to your family made me think about how you coped with everything. I didn't really want to go into it in my previous comment as the UA-cam comment section is full of judgmental strangers. I appreciated your reply and I thought that you understood that it wasn't meant to be anything but a question, it's a shame others didn't realise that too but it's a shame many people's default setting is to attack. I used the word 'slaughtered' because I didn't think 'killed' was strong enough to describe what those monsters did to your family. Take care and all the best to you and yours :)
My friend and his family survived the genocide. He talked about his family hiding in a tree and his little sister peeing into mom's hand to avoid detection from the soldiers below and driving over dead bodies during their escape. I couldn't believe that someone just a couple years older than me had experienced such atrocities.
With thanks to the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, the charity that promotes and supports Holocaust Memorial Day in the UK, www.hmd.org.uk/
and Antoinette Mutabazi from Youth With A Mission, an international volunteer movement of Christians from many backgrounds, cultures and traditions. www.ywamengland.org/
@@anona8749 IT'S LIKE ANUDDAH SHOAH
Subtitles?
This is a harrowing recount of what humans are capable of, because of divisions in society.
So subtitles, are you trying to make a point? A Political point?
Good lord. I've seen the documentaries, the movies, read the stories but this hits harder.
This is really eye opening, I remember
The news downplaying this whole genocide event. Makes me feel blessed beyond belief and hope other people see how lucky they got it. The value of human life is so low to these people who's hearts are so deeply poisoner with blind hatred. How do you change people's way of thinking when this kind of hate is breed for generations and becomes just a way of life. .???
Watching a baby feed on its beheaded mother is an unfathomable level of trauma.
Truly.
it really is. i had to pause the video for a moment
At that moment I paused the video and started to imagine the scenario in my head,
God...we humans are devil incarnate
I agree, hearing this literally blew me away, I can't imagine witnessing such horror
@@michaelidara3328 Social media has proven this to me. The amount of vile hate towards others fir no reason other than a difference of opinion, crazy
"How are you today?"
And she straightens up and says "I am alive. I am doing great. I am thriving." I admire her so much.
@The Unvaccinated youre here too lmao
She's truly amazing.
@Valu will you give any reason for your comment?
Well said...beautiful woman....
Every time I hear a story like this of someone who has been wronged and traumatized, but who is doing ok or even "thriving," the key is always forgiveness. If you think about all the conflicts between humans, and the death that has come from it, the missing ingredient has been forgiveness. If we could all just lean into forgiveness a little more, the world could become a better place. But, like she said, forgiveness isn't easy. Hate comes from anger, and anger is usually a mask for fear and pain. We need to learn to hold our own pain with compassion, and hold a compassionate space for others to share their fears, so that they can be allayed. As long as we allow ourselves to be run by our fear and our pain, this sort of thing will go on.
The crazy thing is if you walked past her in a store you would never know any of this story, this is why it is important to be kind to people around you
I was thinking the very same thing. We should love our neighbours as we love ourselves.
Agreed!!
This is actually my life credo. While some people perceive me as weak, I know better.
@@martas9977 Don't change Marta.
@@moore1523 💚
“Forgiveness is the key to your freedom” after hearing her recall the most brutal and terrifying time period in her life really meant something to me. What an amazing woman.
forgiveness is how you defeat evil. evil only breeds by corruption. if someone does bad things to you, and you end up doing bad things to someone else... you can see how the vicious cycle goes, unless one of the people in it forgives to his tormentor. That's the main principle of Christianity. Of course, forgiveness doesn't mean letting people do whatever they want, there should still be legal consequences, but forgiveness should happen in the heart.
one thing about forgiveness is that actually the person that gets helped the most is yourself. when we forgive others, we free ourselves from pain.
Idk how she even has that strength
"My father told us not to hide together, so if we were caught, we both wouldn't be killed" absolutely broke my heart. Imagine having to say that to your own children
When she talked about how her brother was shot hit me the most.
well it’s pretty easy to imagen when you think about yourself in a genocide
She also said that her father survived. I can't imagine the survivor's guilt he must have, knowing that his 2 sons and wife were killed. I know there's no way he could have saved them. I think of him, and I hope that he knows that, too.
That means you have given up. You are not sure you will be able to see them again. You are just trying. So painful...
Thr pressure he had
As a child I was always afraid of ghost and the paranormal. But as I grew older and learning about human cruelty, I can't help but find humans scarier than any other creature.
Demons I get but humans.....
LITERALLY!!!!
my mother has a very negative view of the world because of things like this. what people do to each other. no monster is scarier than man-kind.
yup.
Absolutely. My children will always know that mommy is here to love and protect them. My little girls are my entire world and the thought of them ever being hurt is enough to break my heart. I can’t imagine having to see all of this.
This woman studied, got a job, educates people whilst fighting the most abhorrent trauma imaginable and can say that she is thriving. Nothing less than incredible and completely exceptional.
She is incredible. Deserves everything good in life
Amen
@@amymuchko7106 1
This woman is remarkable. God bless you.
🙏
Both my parents are survivors but what stuns me most is the courage and power these people have to preach forgiveness . The pain Tutsi’s endured in 1994 is beyond human comprehension.
Forgiveness is all you have when you suffer crimes...either that or die a bitter vine on a soured root...oppressors may take your life...but it is up to you to give them your Soul and if you can't Forgive whether you are dead or alive you've given them your Soul. That was something I couldn't live with. But I will admit it took a while...I dreamt about committing murder many times, making my oppressor the oppressed until one time I woke up and realized 1.) that I had actually been dreaming of murdering someone and 2.) I realized I had been having this dream over and over and had never realized it and 3.) how evil my dream was...(and I do mean evil I literally saw myself in the dream as some sort of "Regan" possessed. That's right from "The Exorcist" movie THAT Regan...and my head did a full 365 and my evil self looked at me straight in the eye just before I pulled the trigger on the gun I was holding in my dream...woke me right up. Had that dream for years before I actually knew I was dreaming it over and over. Never dreamt it afterwards. It spooks me to this day just thinking about it. But it was a clear message. G*d was not messing around. I either forgave...or, I was "Regan" it was just THAT clear. Do you see what had happened to my Soul, my soured and embittered Soul...as John Lennon once sang "I just had to let it go..." Forgiveness is NEVER about "them" the oppressor it is about surviving the pain of what they do to us...Forgiveness is/was about me and every survivor. People think it is generosity. Kindness, sure, but it's much deeper than that. It's pure survival. Pure greed in a sense...the greed that says the choice of LIFE is better than the choice of Death.
@@ramblinrose8Forgiveness is what transforms you from victim to survivor
Forgiveness is a gift you give yourself.
I am not sure if you live in Rwanda or go there/have been there so forgive me if I am telling you something you already know, but my father is a Rwandese Tutsi from Gisenyi who survived, and when I have gone a couple of times in my life to visit I noticed every morning wherever we went (Kigali, Gisenyi, Butare) there were 100's if not 1000's of men in orange (some pink) jumpsuits cleaning up the streets and maintaining the city. I asked my father what it was, as I had never seen prisoners cleaning cities in any other country, under what seemed to be little supervision and so openly. He told me they were those convicted of Genocide, and this was the program established in order for them to repent and repay for the damage they inflicted on their own people and country as a whole. It struck me, that not only was this a thing, but that the way my father spoke about it was with complete forgiveness, and clearly the public shared this view as no one was treating these prisoners any differently or even looking at them with anger/disdain/hurt (it had been said before but I think I was too young to really understand how profound that is). History usually tells a different story; there is typically revenge and a violent counter-reaction. I asked him if he ever met Hutus/other extremists/genocide perpetrators that he suspected actually managed to avoid conviction for their crimes (many fled abroad much like the victims, and have settled all over), and he told me he had, and I asked him if he was angry about it and he said "it is very difficult, but we were all told from the beginning and have understood that forgiveness is the only way we can all heal". It is really cool to see you observed the same thing, and I hope you and your family are well.
Hutsi’s not Tutsi’s
I appreciate how she stopped and corrected herself sometimes when she was telling her story and mentioning the Hutu she made a point to say "the killers" rather than "the Hutu". It really showcases a willingness to see individuals and judge them on their own faults and merits.
Exactly!
Apparently, some of the more moderate Hutus were murdered by their own brethren as well.
Ya she is truly an angel
Seeing so much empathy and consideration after all she's been through. It's incredible.
@@rosvlinds Exactly! And a person like that lady's a true BAD-ASS in my eyes; we need more like her in this world.
@@rosvlinds IMHO that lady can also be a teacher, even if discussing street smarts, can come in quite handy.
"And how are you today?" "I am alive." Full body chills. I can't even imagine coming out of something like that with the strength this woman has
What a testimony of endurance!!
Ask any veteran soldier and soldier how lots of them get treated like garbage after seeing such things.
not to this level
@@iAmNothingness how are they treated like garbage compared to the rest of the population? They get free healthcare, education, and are worshipped by politicians. Maybe during the Vietnam War they were, but today they're treated pretty well. Whereas civilians who go through traumatic situations have no guarantee of healthcare or no prestige for what they went through..
why do u think mexicans are hard workers.
Had never heard about this genocide in Rwanda. I feel like more people should know about it. It’s awful the sickening evil human beings can show
Yeah I’d heard of this film but never knew what it’s about. Will probably check it out
There’s Hotel Rawanda, and there’s another movie sometimes when it rains in April.
Thanks for your recommendations!
And the documentary called _“Ghosts of Rwanda”._
kagame.a mort
She reminds me of my mum, who is also a survivor of the Rwanda genocide. To share such a traumatic story is a level of strength too high that there is no words for it.
My friend lived there. She lost many family members. She escaped and had been raped and a machete was used on her thigh bone. I don’t know how she survived. This woman loves EVERY day and tackles it with hunger amd awe. She loves life. Always has a smile on her face! She became a nurse here to help others. Cecille. I love how strong you are girl! God bless you!
Your friend was a very strong woman and inspires me cause I have PTSD which I struggle with every day. Hope I can get past it.
Hi Ramona I had tears in my eyes hearing about your friend. I had watched a video about a survivor just before. I am so proud of both that they lived to tell the tale. They have turned hate to Love which helps them and all of us. Light and Love Along Your Way.xxx
give cecille a hug from a fellow nurse :-)
So many people suffered or were killed..A million deaths in three months! Yet very little attention of the situation was given us by the so called western news media at the time. Average people in the west knew something bad was going on, yet big news media outlets wouldn't really report it. WHY?
It's good that people know what happened in Rwuanda, but at the same time I feel it's a kind of a social porn clickbaits with these videos. Especially as there is no report of peace, or how these nations and tribes interact with each other today.
Oh my goodness! 🥺 Thank you for telling her story ❤️
interviewer: how are you today?
her: i am alive
this is way more meaningful than many would understand.
Such a simple but powerful statement
Weird that some people would think that she can speak without being alive.
I'm hoping for her mental and emotional contentment and resilience
This has profound meaning,the gift of Life. Never take it for granted.
That's always my response to that question... I'm alive
I have a friend who survived the Rwandan genocide. He was held at gunpoint at the roadside and forced to dig his own grave. He was almost done, minutes away from being shot and dumped into the hole he dug, when suddenly the heavens opened and torrential rain flooded the area. The downpour was so heavy, in a moment, people scattered in all directions for shelter. My friend also hurried away, too afraid to look behind him and anticipating a bullet in his back any second....it never came.
Holy fuck
that's a miracle from the heaven
woh
And then they all clapped!
Nice story but that’s honestly just pure luck - considering over 800k people were killed mercilessly.
I am 40 years old and remember the genocide like it was yesterday.
Remember, everyday above ground is good day.
Thank you Unilad for sharing our survival stories.
From one survivor to another I am proud of you sister 🇷🇼
Truly terrifying what people are capable of. This woman is tougher than I'll ever be.
African women in general are unbelievable when it comes to strength
@@tjm9565 dont make this about race
Same here
Humans are the worst beasts on the planet
@@whitedom2041 It ain't about race, it's about CULTURE and SURROUNDINGS.
African history is not discussed enough. Full stop. What an amazing women.
Where is it not discussed enough?
@@joshryder7242 everywhere
@@aa-gn6zn maybe because it doesnt matter to our nation and we would rather learn about the important countrys in the world and their history
@@Fraudkuna. that's a pretty naive view. World history is important to every nation, politics of nations can slowly impact any other. Whether you want to hear it or not its true. I for one would rather be informed than insular
@@Fraudkuna. you make zero sense
The hole of small children being set on fire to burn all of them alive must be one of the worst things I've ever heard. The pain, the guilt of the parent the killers spotted, the screams....this is humanity at its absolute worst.
I'm glad she's thriving, though. After everything she went through, she deserves to be thriving.
I don’t know if you can thrive per say after this type of trauma. I’ve experienced far less than her but some pretty horrific things. The pain may erode… & I wouldn’t say it’s just surviving… but it’s not thriving… it’s something in between if you get help.
@@a.evelyn5498 Yeah because you know her.
@@a.evelyn5498 you're projecting so fucking hard on this poor woman, my god. Mind your own business beloved
@@user-ov1ue2bx5x wth there are just trying to acknowledge on how much trama the woman has to go through everyday why are you being so rude?
@@user-ov1ue2bx5x she literally says in the video how she constantly gets flashbacks every year- each april. that's for sure not thriving.
I was in Rwanda in early 2020, while I was there I was stunned by the beauty of the country in each of the cities I visited, from Kibuye to Kigali all the way to Kayonza. The genocide is a horrific part of their history but Rwanda stays strong. The strength and kindness of the people who survived never ceases to amaze me.
As a Rwandan citizen i thank you for the honesty
You weren't talking to survivors, you met and talked with the evil folks who carried it out ....
@@abbajabba7 There's still Tutsis alive in Rwanda today. And not every Hutu commited murder. Not everyone in Rwanda today is evil or played a part in the genocide, that is an incredibly ridiculous statement to make.
Is it relatively safe in Rwanda?
@@Lemonade_Stand_ It is very very safe. It's ranked the 11th safesty country in Africa
"Forgiveness is the key to your freedom"
The fact that she could find this path after what she has gone through is amazing.
This woman is amazing.
Forgiveness and Justice are two different things. She deserves Justice now.
@@garynelson9538 What we call justice is often nothing more than revenge. We try to ease our mind, by knowing that the person who wronged us suffers as well. But in reality we gain much greater peace if we can forgive them and move on without the shackles of hate and pain.
Edit: grammar
@@logicandreason3812 That is not true at all. So someone takes your money and leave you poor and struggling, never to recover and impoverished for life as a result because of ill health that was there before the crime and worsened by the result of the crime, and you must "forgive" and move on?
@@the8thchurch461 What do I gain from hating him? From cursing him and crying about my state? I suffer from mental stress, because I obsess about what happened. Iwish him ill, building resentment and bitterness in my mind.
When I forgive I can let these things go. I stop clinging to these fruitless thoughts and actions. I gain freedom from unnecessary mental stress.
@@logicandreason3812 I am talking about the material side of it. I was preyed on by a cult when unbeknown to me, I was suffering from chronic depression. I just thought I was extremely unhappy but life was one big struggle. Then the cultists preyed on me and I couldn't protect myself from them as I was not well. The cult robbed me blind and took 10% of my money monthly over a period of 6 years. So I shouldn't try and get my money back as it would be revenge? Their actions have made my already problematic life worse. The hole they have thrown me into is hard for me to come out of because of depression. So asking the law to help me is revenge? I rest my case.
Seeing that she only started to cry when she said she was too afraid to save the baby... god. Poor lady, she clearly is still an empathetic, caring person despite what she went through. I'm not sure if I would.
silence, white girl. you do not understand our minds.
@@hamwamson7580 did you live through the genocide? if not, then you don't understand either
@@joseanurkkalainen2832 they deleted their comment
to go through something so dark and come out hopeful, its a strength i cant even imagine
I think that seeing the suffrage of people. Especially people that looks like you makes you more empathetic. Our minds may not want to be, but our hearts know and understand what that kind of suffering does/can do to other people. Showing empathy outwardly, is somewhat of a cathartic action. When someone that has experienced extreme trauma doesn’t show that empathy, that doesn’t make them bad or different, they may truly suffer inwardly.
my mom survived the rwandan tutsi genocide and until this day, she never talked to my family about it. i cannot begin to imagine the trauma she went through and yet she is probably the strongest person i know.
edit : thank you so much for all of the kind words, i am extremely grateful. you're all so sweet
so much respect towards your mother. she’s very strong.
God bless you all this is truly heartbreaking ❤️
@crist don't know what that means but it's not funny at all. you don't know anything about me or my family.
Prayers sent out
God bless you all
19:15 being able to forgive someone who did that is something I myself would never be able to do. Massive respect for this woman.
My dear, it’s harder holding on than letting go. My parents were also affected by this. My mom said if it hadn’t been for God. She wouldn’t have been alive. It took over 20+ years to truly become a survivor and not a victim anymore.
You would die in your hatred. Forgiveness is for you my love. I've held so much unforgiveness and bitterness in my life over some things that has literally led to illness. I imagine what something of this magnitude would do to someone if they didn't let it go..
Those people were probably under demonic influence, so that's why they did such inhuman things.
@@lunasloanbailey bullshit, people are responsible for their actions. Do you know what German soldiers said during nuremberg trial? "I was just following orders"
@@animae008 You don't understand the spiritual aspect of our world. Humans are good by nature, but are influenced by outside forces. Please stop picking on Germans. When Bolshevists and Stalin did things a hundred times worse. No one ever talks about them, I wonder why? Propaganda. But thanks for your opinion. Germans are a great people and nothing will keep them down
Just hearing the story of that mother beheaded and her baby nursing while the mother is dead is heartbreaking.
I have a small baby girl myself and this story completely destroyed me. My heart broke into a million pieces. I've been crying for two days and hugging my baby tighter than ever...
That was the most awful one to me too.
Especially when you've nursed your baby's, I struggled to keep my shit together when I heard that. I hope her baby made it out okay, all though I doubt it.
@@ciarajones4970 Unlikely, even if another survivor picked up the baby they most likely were caught later on.
@@YvngMeechii thought so, I don't understand how someone can brutally murder people like that, let alone poor innocent children.
This was the most traumatic story I've ever heard. Her saying, 'forgiveness is the key to your freedom' was enlightening.
Truer words have not been spoken
It’s the truth though. If you watch videos of other people who have been through trauma , they say the same thing
I learned this I think... At least I hope I have. I'm tired of hanging onto the hot rock in my hand, just waiting to throw it at my enemy
This isn't the most traumatic story ever heard. This is the most traumatic story ever heard; Ghengis Khan, Pol Pot, Hernán Cortés, and Joseph Stalin. Centuries separate them, and there's no recorded proof that they ever even got together to write their traumatic story, but there is proof that they killed upwards of 500 million human lives.
@@JerdMcLean the Interahomwe murder 800,000 with only machetes, in 9 months. That's pretty insane, up there with the aforementioned for sure. No one touches Pol Pot IMHO
Speechless. This woman is the example of strength.
are you Tutsi or Hutu?
Strength and a lot of luck to survive the senseless genocide.
Her eyes , says it all. She's seen things no one should ever witness in their life
more like the definiton
i szellüDe äfri ´Fit afriCän ´emergensi negro eh carniväll vv
When the interviewer asks Antoinette “How are you today?” and she replies, “I am alive.” I broke down crying thinking of the horrors this amazing woman and her family had and continues to endure today. Sending much ❤ and hope to you all. Your story has touched and inspired so many people.
Setting children on fire, I just can't understand how people can be so inhumane and cruel. And to think the people that took part in these acts are walking around living their normal lives.
That part especially made my stomach twist with queasiness, poor babies
Yeah... Well it somewhat makes me think of gangs we have here in the U.S., and to a little lesser extent, Antifa and BLM who are basically protected by our government.
@@annasthoughtsandmusicalpar2239 Oh you mean like the kkk used to do?? Cutting babies out of the stomach of mothers they just hanged? The same kkk who's decendants are now infiltrated in the police force and kill especially Black people in the streets with impunity?? Those lawabusers that are protested against by BLM and Antifa?
There, fixed it for ya.
People get taught...persuaded....brainwashed, call it what you wish, that the other guy is not human. That's how they cope with killing. She said they called her a cockroach. That's your clue. Easier to kill a vermin than a person.
Happened many many times throughout history. I watched interviews with people from WW2 and that's how they coped. Americans didn't think the Japanese as people, Japanese considered Chinese to be "logs" rather than humans...Russians killing Germans and vise versa without remorse for the same reasons.
I'm not justifying or defending anyone taking a life for any reason but that's just my take on it from purely psychological point of view.
@ǞЯƮΦЯiǞ РęПDЯǞgΦП so somehow you haven't seen how they destroy people's lives?
Listening to her has made me realise I should really never ever complain about going through a bad day.
Um ok, but your emotions are valid
Just cuz someone's bad day is "worse" than yours doesn't mean it invalidates it, we all have different boiling points and we should never compare it to others.
@@unloyal4847 lol what we have and what they have is u comparable , we have so much more than they do and I can never be unhappy and ungrateful seeing what these people go through and what I have on my plate
@@xtcchewy2483 Thats not really the case, no matter where you stand on the hierarchy may it be high or low you have the right to feel sad and unhappy, sure you can feel grateful that you have more than what others have but you shouldn't kick yourself because of it.
Why do you think we have suicides on all groups? Should we ignore all those that took their lives just because they were wealthy?
We all have different tipping points its what makes us human, nothing fits like a puzzle when it comes to our self being, feel sad when you feel sad and feel grateful when you feel grateful.
@@unloyal4847 suicide of the wealthy is just plain selfishness and ungrateful ness when people would kill to be in their position, i am extremely grateful and thankful for what I have and what my family has worked hard to give me and I’d never think of being ungrateful or unhappy especially as my parents sacrificed so much of their dreams for me . We are too soft as people tbh. I see your ping as people have different tipping points but we need to learn how to bare our weight and be stronger
I saw a documentary where some villages had the people who were involved in the killings confess and apologize. These people were their neighbors. The cruelty of man is astounding.
By any chance might you remember the name of the documentary?
@@Just.Lailen i would love to know too
No form of apology could ever make up for what they were a part of
Evil in its purest form
I remember watching this too…the men were in prison and they said it was as if a dark cloud had come over Rwanda
This woman is beyond the definition of strength compassion and understanding.
people can be so evil. this woman is so incredibly strong, i can’t imagine what this was like to go through, let alone hear it
Men * women don’t do this
Who said woman don't do this shit broo you are being feminist damnn
@@bro................. that has nothing to do with feminism thats sexist to the max
@@Alexandra-ng1ih no it dosent matter by race
@@Alexandra-ng1ihsome people do these things, women too.
"one of my aunties married a hutu man and he killed her" unbelievable. he put the tribal heritage over the love to his wife. let alone the value of her life. i could not have forgiven him under any circumstance
@@Benny-ye7ro you must have gotten me wrong. I just repeated what the woman in the video said what you have obviously not watched with all of your attention. btw there are " " which should show that it´s direct speech
That is the custom there. They kill each other. It was not just one person doing it all. You cannot be a Tutsi around the Hutus. Just the way it is there.
It could happen today in America. All it takes is one drastic event to blow the lid off the racial tension that has been building over the past 30 years. When you are brainwashed to believe that one race of people is causing all of your problems in life, killing a spouse is a small price to pay "for the greater good." We are not so different from these people, we just have different circumstances.
@@haikat4 luckily I don´t live in the united states of america as it is correctly named
@@florianbischoff9764 Well if you're in United States of Europe then you already know how quickly people will start murdering each other when the government says its okay.
I’ve never wanted to give a stranger a hug so badly.
I literally just said that same thing to myself!!!!
something we should be able to do freely, why do we hold back........
@@tisme343 Its polite to at least ask
Yo I literally just said the same thing to myself:(
Amen to that. Yowza
The mere fact that she survived because of robbing of a bank, is just wow. Two people ahead of her and she was just, "well this is happening," AT PEACE and by the greed of people she lived. Just wow.
she was numb, disassociated with her reality
Well she accepted it, and then she got to live, that's another layer of mind-fuck...
My parents are survivors too, I heard these type of stories when I was younger, truly horrifying, I'm happy they managed to escape and flee to a safer place
can I hear their story?
@@Ana-brwn yes same here
It’s so important to continue telling these stories, Im also very happy your parents were able to get out of there. I hope you and your family are doing well
Thank God, that they made it . God bless you and your family
I am too
Jesus I am holding back tears, especially after she said forgiveness is the key to freedom. I just hope she continues to thrive.
Amen
I flat out cried. My god. I am so lucky to be a white male born in Canada. Fuck. So lucky
They may take her dogs but they will never take her FREEDOM!
@@nooneinparticular9868 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Iksvomid bro dum☠️☠️☠️
What's also disturbing is that both tribes live together now, so many people have neighbours who killed their family members.
I would never forgive them.
What caused the genocide why do they hate each other?
@gothnix they had to carry ID cards they must of not been able to tell the difference between tribes so they must of not even been that different
@@fletcherrichmond5143 The German and Belgian colonizers fabricated the racial differences between the two groups. They decided that the Tutsi were closer to the white race and therefore higher up in the hierarchy of races.
@@marshallnay thanks I've done some reading on it since I watched this video the fact the rewanada and Bosnian genocide paractally happend at the same time is fucked.
You can see the inner turmoil and panic as she's recounting the things she saw. In the end she said forgiveness is the key to freedom. I've been wronged in my life, nothing of that magnitude but I know that it isn't about the other person. I've forgiven people for hurting me because it releases the mental energy I'm diverting towards being angry at them. It frees up a part of my mind to live again and not be consumed by hatred. It really does help. It doesn't mean you ever have to tell them or interact with them ever again because they are obviously bad for you but it does mean you get to sleep with a slightly lighter heart at night.
Definitely agree, it's the only way to true liberation.
I spent a little time in Rwanda a couple of years before the genocide. I knew nothing about the Hutu Tutsi divide, they just all seemed like the friendliest of people. Our governments knew they were planning to eradicate the Tutsi and did nothing. Apparently a small contingent of around 5000 UN troops was all that was needed to stop this, but they just sat on their hands and let it happen.
It's the UN what do you expect they can't do shit
@@personwitharat9039 wym they cant do shit? They literally stopped it with (compared to the amount of killers) small amount of troops to stop them. They literally could've ended this early.
I think its very important to emphasize the genocide, in this form wouldn't have happened without the colonial powers of France, Germany and Belgium dividing the country for years and breeding hate between the parties for years. Hutu and Tutsi originally were 2 out of 3 classes, not particularly tribes. Only when the colonial powers took over and changed the whole legislature and political organisation, the division and differences between the groups became so crucial and ultimately led to the genocide.
The USA intervenes constantly for the most selfish reasons (profit) and pretend its to liberate ppl and bring democracy.
Yet this very obvious case in which intervention could have helped was not provided. The USA govt should bow down in shame.
Isn't that what white governments have always done?????
She is so incredibly strong and brave, even as a little girl, hiding alone, she's amazing. I can't even imagine the horrible things she's seen that she hasn't talked about, I hope she lives a good life, she deserves so much better.
True
💯💯💯💯
It's hard to even listen but to go through this.. 💔. God bless her beautiful resilient soul.
I read about this genocide. An entire novel. She's right about compressing some memories because there's more that happened that she would tell if she remembered. It was absolutely vile.
What was the book? Would love to learn more
but whats the nane of the book
do you have the name of the novel?
could you share the book name?
@@tiaguixo Small Country by Gael Faye
I watched a documentary about that genocide once and it's almost unbearable to watch and hear what happened to the people. I can hardly bare the cruelty....
Thank you so much for your testimony, you are incredibly strong and amazing! ❤
What was the name of the documentary?
This is absolutely horrific. My heart goes out to this woman and all off those who have had similar experiences.
@@keirania__4759 are you fucking serious, what in gods name is wrong with you
shes a victim of white supremacy
@@whitedom2041 Are you dumb? Legit question...... 🤔
@@ashotofmercury do you know the reason why this genocide happened? its because the Europeans went there, labelling the Tutsis the "better" tribe, because they were "lighter skinned" which caused a break in the relationships between the 3 main tribes. That spiralled out of control and caused this genocide. Maybe its not white supremacy directly, but being light skinned, and the white man played a part.
@@swiggedyswoner7315 they are spamming bots
The fact that some people don't feel the wrong in any of that is scary
You have to research the methods used to get so many people to think in that way, in this particular case--what was happening in this country in the 90s and the influences in that situation.
@@standardprocedure7017 yeah i know that but it's scary how their instinct of feeling any kind of wrong was just non existent
@@Gkmc-hl2fn Well said.
I'm stealing this.
Coming to a USA near you, 2024!
@@Gkmc-hl2fn idk man this crack is pre strong
a 12 year old going through all that and seeing all that over a 3 month experience and to still grow into the person she is today is unreal.
she is something special.
We have this woman and others who went through a living hell and came out trying to do better and then we have people who commit horrendous crimes and blame it on things they went through growing up.
She truly is
@@colettebaker2842 it can either make you or you can let it define you. You can can make something of yourself (and show these animals that they didn't win/take you) or you can let it break you.
You have a choice more often than not to let yourself heal, or you can forever be the victim of your circumstances (albeit this is an extreme example and an extremely brave and strong person).
She was 16
@@azchanna 2:20 the screen says she was 12. But even if she were 16 or 26 it was a complete horror regardless.
My heart broke watching her re-living the experience to answer the questions. THANK YOU for making the decision to filming this video. You have shined light on Rwandan history that many people here have probably never heard about including myself.
Thinking of you and wishing you the very best in your healing journey.
Can’t imagine how she stayed sane. May God give her all the best this life can offer.
This is exactly what I thought. I was abused by narcissistic abusers who did make several sincere attempts on my life but the stuff she is talking about makes me wonder how she can exist with such memories. It's bloody horrifying isn't it....
and the afterlife. Ameen.
God already gave her something else, she didn't seem to enjoy it.
@@bubblezovlove7213 no one cares
Chances are she's not sane no offence she's probably mental now and it's understandable ay
“ I raped so and so, I killed so and so.” The fact that how she told us sounded like they were so proud of their deeds..
Just like American soldiers.
@@newstartalltheway lol
I don’t think people who do things like that have remorse or empathy.They probably were proud of their actions…
@Gonzo Papers You do know that there's a fuckton of political unrest there meaning that it is essentially a warzone in some parts without the official tag of war.
@Gonzo Papers you act like it’s any different here
"What happened to your family?" The question hits her right in the heart that almost left her literally breathless.
All that my mind kept repeating for the last 19 minutes and and 48 seconds was, “ this is one of the most beautiful people I have ever seen in my life..”
And then for the last few seconds I kept hearing her say how forgiveness is the key to you freedom, but how it is not easy..
Forgive yourself, forgive those whom have hurt you, and be set free
I’m still working on forgiveness 🙏🏾 thank you for sharing your story
We all think we have problems until someone like this lady comes along with their story…the savagery in this world is heartbreaking 💔
Indeed absolute savagery
@Diamond true
@Diamond its definitely levels to problems though. Your car breaking down and genocide of your family are different ballparks. We must stay grateful
@@toreydshaun very well said.
@@SandraVWithTheKey 🙏🏾
Imagine being a 12 year old kid and having to witness that kind of horror… this is so sad. My heart goes out to her and every person who fell victim to this.
It`s already started showing up in the UK...so you`ll be sure to see a bit of yourself soon...
This lady is a literal saint. After all of that horror her journey is to forgive those people.
Ä8⁸⁷
Takes real strength to do that, we all could learn from her tbh
She lived within the privileged class.
They had their boots on the necks of these people for tens of years!
The hutu were enslaved by the tutsi- they treated them like the whites in South Africa and the whites in America treat all people of color...
I zm not condoning how they dealt with it, but it had to be done...the tutsi were enjoying being the bosses, the masters, they took this to another level that would make the kkk look like Sunday school teachers!!!
Try talking with Hutu people, then znd only then can you truly understand the reasoning behind the genocide
@@c.a.greene8395 top 10 genocide defenders
@@train123z it's logical to defend yourself against tyranny- to continue to allow them to rule as twisted masters would be insane...anyone, everyone would rise up against this type of enslavement within one's own nation by an invading force that took over and stayed - reaping every benefit znd resource while treating them worse than dogs!
Before the so-called - genocide - these same people were cutting the breast off women znd giving them to their male children to play with...these bastards deserved what they got
How she can have any level of forgiveness just shows what a beautiful person she is and a much better person than I.
The things she witnessed no human should ever had to witness, never mind as a 12 year old child. To hear what happened to her baby brother, her mother and her other brother and the traumatic things she saw is just absolutely harrowing, vile, digusting and so so sad. How can another human carry out such attrociaties on another human? I just cant comprehend it. I'm just so happy she still has her father and one of her brothers who survived. What a powerful, brave, courageous woman.
horrific. the human spirit to survive it is only God who can touch the heart to forgive
There is another book which gives a vivid account of this sad chapter in Rwandan history.
the book LEFT TO TELL ..
THIS IS A MUST READ BOOK.
may God continue to give this lady PEACE
Forgiveness just means you're not holding a debt against someone.
It's NOT the same thing as reconciliation.
Holding an emotional debt against someone who will never and can never satisfy it is folly. Only hurts yourself
"Forgiveness is the key to your freedom". Very wise words from this incredible lady. Bless all of you who watch this video, and may peace be with you.
The oppressor class always makes such stupid statements, hoping their victims believe that bullshit
♥️
They have no choice but to forgive... they started oppressing hutus first!
@@lisagyamfi5143 You are comparing one part of society having better positions in government much like checheslovakia back then to a full blown genocide at a time were this wasnt the case anymore. the country was adapting but hutu fundamentalists preached violence. People like you are partly responsible for creating the hate culminating in the unprovoked mass murder of over a million people.
It's the opposite
She can forgive someone who killed her aunt and I'm here sitting on my comfortable chair can't even forgive someone who keeps trauma dumping on me. She's such a strong character and there are a lot of things I wish to learn from her.
its k if u cant ...its jus maybe u'll feel better one day when u let go of it but if u r not able too...both make sense so
Well you don't need to forgive them. It differs per person. For some people, forgiveness is their way of letting go. For many others, allowing themselves to grieve, accept that people suck, and let go is the way to freedom. No forgiveness is involved, cause just so you know, you do NOT need to forgive anyone. Especially people who commited literal genocide. Forgiveness is overrated, and at some point can become toxic when people have this idea that they HAVE to forgive their abusers or horrible people in their life, cause you dont. Many people never have forgiven horrible people, but have accepted that it happened and that they shouldn't hurt themselves more by allowing it to eat them alive, so they just try to let go and distance themselves. To each their own.
Trauma dumpers dont deserve to be forgiven. They are TOXIC.
I am Rwandan, through the forgiveness we healed the wounds on the heart and we live peacefully with those who killers our people.
If you need the lessons of forgiveness, please come to Rwanda!
You will see many testimonies.
I thought trauma dumping was someone who tells others about their trauma…why would you be mad at someone for telling you their trauma I’m confused
Mad you walk past someone and have no fucking idea what they have been through. I literally just want to give this woman a hug mate
You know what amazes me most about listening to her talk, she holds no hate towards the people that did this! Just the tone of her voice, the words she chooses to use she is hurt but she isn’t angry and that is beyond amazing! She is the true example of a pure heart ♥️
This woman is truly amazing. To even talk about forgiving these people. She is a better person than I will ever be. My heart and love goes out to her and anyone else who suffered in those dark times.
oh yes trust me when i tell you she is one of a kind I mean it because I am from the country beside rwnda and us too have tutsis and hutus and most tutsis hate hutus to death like i am not even allowed to hang around them and sometimes i dont even realize some people around me are hutus cause i dont ask
I'm also a war child survivor.
Had to sleep among the dead for 2 days pretending dead to save my life.
It was horrible tiller today I dont sleep without light.
I'm alive thats the most precious thing to me.
I got adopted in the Netherlands by a Loving family.
She's a d@mn sight better than me. I'd be consumed by hatred.
We talk about PTSD in the military, but I cannot imagine the horrific scenes and depth of suffering this poor lady has gone through. Her and so many like her. May God heal and richly bless her. May she be surrounded by His grace and goodness for the rest of her days. May she find peace and even joy in life.
Amen
And may the justice of the Lord come upon the perpetrators.
Amen
one of my history teachers in high school survived this horrific tragedy and made it a point to educate us on it. it was not a required piece of learning, she set up the lesson plan on her own time. i am forever appreciative of her for teaching us about this tragedy, there is so much to learn from these horrifying events, and the stories of these people deserve to be heard. bless this woman and her strength. videos like these always remind me that you never know what someone may have gone through. you pass by hundreds of people just like this brave woman every day. treat everyone with kindness, you never know who needs it.
the fact that she saw all these with her own eyes are beyond control. I am a young mum and the thought of me being beheaded while carrying my little baby just hit me deep. I pray she heals from all those things, all she saw, all she feels every day memories flashes through her mind. Sending Love and Hugs to all Rwandese.
When she said she wanted to take the baby but was scared to run around w her 😭😭😭 my heart broke for her. I had to pause the video. Shes so brave and strong to tell her story 💗
I’m a Rwandan citizen who “luckily” wasn’t born by the time of the genocide against tutsi but until today from April 7th our country has a 100 days of honor for all the lives lost then people share there stories and lessons through out those 100 days and teach the younger generation that we are all Rwandan people no tribes or anything…prayers to this strong beautiful strong woman, she’s unimaginably strong
Rwanda is an amazing country indeed!
what did it mean to be Tutsi or to be Hutu? what was the difference between the tribes? if you don't mind me asking
@@EvelynDeCobainthe difference between Tutsi and Hutu was mostly social - Tutsi being the wealthier and more powerful and the Hutu being the poorer, lower class.
@@EvelynDeCobain the Belgian and French colonists separated them into these groups. They stood by why horrible things took place. they armed the slaughter. They told the United Nations not to worry, they have this under control. 1 million dead later. the Rwandan people want to forgive and forget. I am too angry and unwilling to forgive.
and certainly not to forget.
@@lazloholyfeild that's so horrible it's really hard to imagine, thank you for sharing
I remember as a child watching the movie “Hotel Rwanda” and believing it was fictional. It’s an extremely sad movie. When I became an adult and learned it was based on a true story and true events I couldn’t believe it. Hearing her story has made it all the more real
There is another movie based on a true story, 'Shooting Dogs'. I highly recommend it.
Who turns one group against another, black against white, black against black, children against parents, female against male, religion against religion, nation against nation? The Swamp. ua-cam.com/video/y6KZAZqwt9c/v-deo.html
Damn as I child I remember watching Toy Story. Jeez.
That movie ...... But this is happening all over the world. People should destroy the source of this killing machine...This killing never ends.
Wow I can’t imagine watching that as a kid. I was in my early 20s when the genocide happened, and later watched the movie with Don Cheadle. Phenomenal movie, and a part of history that we can’t afford to forget, but hard enough to watch the movie as an adult.
when the reporter asked, "how are you?" and she said, "i am alive" blew me away and moved me so much. after what she had endured, her answer was so full of hope and strength and resilience and this brief insight into her optimism despite the horrors she faced made me understand her gratitude for life, and ultimately her drive to continue living it because she's here, and she survived. and that is so empowering and so beautiful. i wish this woman everything good and everything she deserves and so much more. because she's here, and she's alive
One of my coworkers was a survivor of the genocide, he was a very cheerful guy and you would have never expected that he survived something horrific
Thats often the case. Maybe because he survived he leared to live life to the fullest and appreciate the small things in life.
@@jaysheriffe6292that’s the case with many. It either hardened their hearts, or made them soft. I’m a Burundian/Rwandese American. (Parents came from those countries, and survived.) but the long term effects was so devastating. My parents, members of my communities are some of the strongest people I know. And have big hearts, who are crazy for Jesus. :)
I remember when I was in Junior High School in Brooklyn NYC, I was in maybe the 7th grade...we had been assigned to read the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel. I read the book and the picture that he painted of some of what had transpired during the holocaust was so horrifying that it was hard for me to feel like it was "real"... then one day I was riding the train on my way home from school, and an older man was standing a few seats away from where I was. At first he was holding onto one of the poles in the bus that go from the floor to the roof, but then, he switched to grab one of the over head straps to hold on to, and as he did that his sleeve rode up on his arm I saw a series of faded green numbers tattooed on his fore arm and I IMMEDIATELY recognized them from their description in the book "Night".. I think I was in a state of shock for the whole rest of the ride, and I've never forgotten it... to think about what that man had lived through and survived!!!
@mikailmillion
It's how they honoured those who died by living life to the fullest
"Forgiveness is the key to your freedom". What a human being she is.
The strength to accept the only way forward , looks fucking rough man
Forgiveness is the only key
Forgiving monsters and not punishing them is not a key it is a cage.
@@A_Bag_of_Potatoes what do you mean by that
@@killuminatikilla3235 Monsters do not deserve forgiveness there is no redemption for them and forgiving them as a means of coping with their atrocities is inhumane and unjust you are locking your emotions, reality, justice into a cage as a means of moving forward when in reality you left apart of yourself behind a part that should still be apart of you what more will you allow them to take from you. Situations like this are only magnified and worsened when the law, the justice system fails you and that monster that irredeemable monster still walks the streets with no repercussions.
I read about the Rwandan hutu-tutsi genocide in sixth grade from a woman who lost her whole family. She only has her brother left, and it was a terribly vivid biography. It was the first time I had heard about it. It feels so wrong that so many of us Americans don't know what happened to them.
Edit: I would really like it if the Americans and the non Americans in my replies stopped fighting over how we're either A. Assholes for not knowing or B. Not assholes because we should never care about anything outside of the us. Both your viewpoints are wrong, stop using my comment to be so ignorant and awful.
Look for the movie Hotel Rwanda
I remember documentary footage horrible event. I still remember seeing stiff bodies flowing in a river
We americans do know about it just don't care...sorry
@Kkbunns🐰 Literally same except I watched it in my 9th-grade English honors class. Literally couldn't forget it.
@@dlilwonI've been wanting to see that, I found it at a CD Exchange but didn't buy because I didn't have money on me at the time.
I've never in my life wanted to be able to hug someone through the screen so bad, I cannot begin to imagine what this poor soul had to endure. You are such a warrior Antoinette, beautiful soul inside and out.
I can’t imagine being an adult and experiencing this nightmare, let alone a 12 year old child! Bless her and keep her!!! She’s so beautiful and brave!! I pray the rest of her life is happy, stable and blessed!🥰
"They stopped killing because someone shouted that they are robbing a bank."
Ameen 🤲🏻
It happens everyday in the hoods of America what do you mean you can't imagine
@@johnsmith_treeler9031 reading comprehension...
@maple yi yes there are plenty of online tools available to help you with that it's best not to shout that at random but go type it in Google search bar for more help. Love You have a nice life
This woman is so strong, the definition of resilience.
Yes this is what an actual strong woman looks like. Won’t find that on Tumblr.
@@dreamsprayanimation Yes, strong & beautiful...& with the most forgiving & merciful heart...no one can ever unsee such atrocities, surely such people must have haunted dreams.
The mix of sadness, intelligence, perseverance and beauty in this woman is breathtaking. She hurts the most when remembering she couldn't do anything for the baby whose mother was beheaded. She was a just a child herself experiencing the unfathomable, but yet to this day, she has genuine empathy that is pure and stunning to witness. This video was so difficult to watch but I'm grateful that I did. She deserves her story to be heard.
Agree. Yes, very difficult to watch. I'm thankful we have stories like this to open our eyes
I too saw Hotel Rwanda, it was horrific, I was in America safe in my comfortable house, yet I was very touched and very empathetic, traumatized and very sad, is this really what's going on, or am I in a dream! Putin killing people right before our eyes, it's sick and totally abominable! We're going to hell now!
How she survived is a miracle.
You can tell in her face when she talks about it that she is traumatized. That’s so sad I just couldn’t imagine the fear they al felt.
This is more than trauma, unexplainable.
A lesson is learnt here... No matter how hard your life is, there's always someone going through worse. Bless this beautiful strong woman.
That’s right!! People need to stop complaining about small stuff.
And no matter how hard many other's lives are, that doesn't mean the troubles you go through are invalidated, or don't mean anything.
don’t invalidate peoples feelings…
@@sandycarroll7021 just because others are going through more doesn’t mean your problems aren’t significant enough and you can’t complain, everybody has a lot going on in their own plate and some peoples plates are smaller than others. One thing which might affect me a lot may seem like nothing to somebody. Don’t invalidate others :(
@@meliora19 I agree with you and have always hated the sentiment that others have it worse and so ur struggle means nothing. A very dangerous and insensitive thing u could say to someone
That happened. God bless her.
We went through that in the neighbouring country Burundi.
My mother was half Hutu /Tutsi and was married to an Arabic man from Dubai. Our dad.
Our parents had everything you could wish for in life before that happened.
I remember the day it started, our dad had sent 3 trucks to get us out.
I think it was on a Friday/Wednesday cause not all of the children were at home at the time.
Me and me twin sister age 6 were home with our mom and older sister 11 age.
Our older brothers were at school I believe.
When the trucks arrived and in panic telling our mom to get the children's and anything of value.
That's when I first saw my mom become the hero that she has become in her sacrifice.
Mother took only a small iron box out of the house, and grabbed us me/twin and our older sister.
We head for the trucks and mom told the driver to rush towards the school where our brothers were.
On the way chaos/mayhem was already at large.
The other 2 trucks panicked and rook of and our driver pleading to our mom not to go into that direction.
The school was already in flames he said and told her to think of her younger children.
Mom made this horrible yell and cry knowing that it was impossible to find our brothers in that chaos.
And told the driver to get us out of there.
Long story short, from that point on we were stranded as refugees on the run.
And mother did all in her power and connections to get us to safety.
In and out of neighbouring countries into refugees camps.
Then in 1998 mother made the choice to flee to the Netherlands.
We arrived in the Netherlands in 1998 March 11 Friday I believe.
And we where given a chance to have a life here.
After all those years thinking our brothers were lost, in a miracles way they survived and was looking for us .
Somehow we are all together now.
Our dearest father did not make it unfortunately.
I joined the Dutch military airforce in 2004.
We are now Dutch citizens, but strangely still Burundi has a bigger hold on us and we accept it.
Life has been good to us comparing to those who didn't make it or went through worst in that situation.
I will end this with saying something about our mother, Nzeyimana her last name and she never complained or cried to us when we were going through that.
She always had a smile on her face telling us all will be fine and not to worry.
And yes she did it all and we are fine and OK.
We as children blocked most of the traumatic events throughout, I remember having nightmares after playing with dead body's as we were in that situation.
Somehow I'm doing well in my head and consider me self a good person.
Anyway life is good .
To you mom my hero
How did you lose your dad? I thought he was an Arabic man in Dubai
This is a traumatic story
God bless you and your family!
💖💖💖💖🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
🥺🥺🥺🥺😔made me so teary and happy to know you are all together. All of this is extremely sad. U didnt say how ur father passed away.
Horrific is a complete understatement, I have NO words. I am a radio host and I have a healing show where I have interviewed many amazing survivors of various traumatic events, but this right here... 😔
Sending this beautiful survivor love and light. 🙏🏾
I feel ashamed for complaining about anything in my life because living through this is truly hell on earth , especially for a child. You never know what people have been through, so i'm extremely careful about how i see and how i feel about strangers. There are people we pass on the street every day that have lived truly horrific lives and yet they smile. Peace and God be with you sister.
Just because things are worse for others, it doesn't lessen the pain that you yourself feel. That type of thinking doesn't heal you. Dealing with and learning from those who went through worse heals you.
@@KettleBlacktheBat Understood...
@@KettleBlacktheBat exactly. I view it the same way I do the pain scale. You only have a capacity for what you've been exposed to. The highest level of pain you've experienced in your life may be what another who was born with chronic pain would consider a good day. That doesn't devalue your pain in the least as it's still an absolutely overwhelming experience for you.
I deal with excessive chronic pain, but I still drop everything to help my mother on her high pain days too. I've never thought lesser of her for being brought to tears for her pain. It's just as much of a struggle for her to process that as it is for me to process mine. She sometimes apologizes for it and I always remind her of this. My experience with crippling pain can't be compared to hers because the exposure is entirely different experiences, two different scales of measure.
@@KettleBlacktheBat is the OC not allowed to contextulize their complaints, tf is this comment
@@angelofdeath275 everyone's a victim no matter how small your problems are i guess
I am an American. I have lived in Rwanda for over 3 years. Knowing ll that has happened in this beautiful nation...all the wounds and heartbreak...I am in awe at how these precious people have forgiven and continue on with their lives. There are monuments everywhere that say, "Never Again." I believe that is the heart of these people. I am humbled to live among them.
🙏🙏🙏
True, but people always forget about Burundi. Even the genocide is called genocide of Rwanda like the Burundi was never implicated
The poor little innocent kids being burnt alive really struck me. I can imagine their cries and it really breaks my heart to know they were given such a horrible death and they were so young!!
Yes painful.. CAnt imagine at all.. Very sad.. Little angels
I can’t imagine it. I don’t want to and I hope o never will
How can things like this happen? How can people kill children, their own wives? This woman is so strong and has experienced more hardship than anyone conceivably should. She’s brave for telling her story and awareness is key. I’m heartbroken for them. 💔
Another case of group think. Once it becomes acceptable to a big enough group its a wrap. Humanity is out the window
YOU HAVE QUESTIONS? I HAVE ANSWERS!!-Perversion, death and murder increasing! ...LAWS are made to protect people and increase or maintain quality of life for humans.. There is a growing REBELLIOUS trend to TRASH laws, including moral ones, as mentioned in the bible. 99% of preachers don't even support ALL 10 commandments, and many don't support even any by their LAWLESS heresy. CRIME & CLERGY CONNECTION = TRICKLE DOWN IMMORALITY.. "When people’s thinking is controlled by the sinful self, they are against God, because they refuse to obey God’s law and really are not even able to obey God’s law." ROMANS 8:7 Society will increasingly SUFFER! The barbarians are coming, the barbarians are coming...!!! The preachers lead the charge!! "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because you have rejected knowledge, I will also reject you, that you shall be no PRIEST to me: seeing you have forgotten the LAW of your God, I will also forget your children.” Hos 4:6 Christianity is mostly now populated by GULLIBLE , DECEIVED, FANATIC VICTIMS who have never read even the whole new testament once. They spend almost ALL of their weekly waking minutes (6720) influenced by perverted , depraved worldly culture and , if they attend church, learn a bunch of ambiguous, abstract, obscure, religious lingo & cliches for teaching by inept preachers who are deceived modern, law trashing, bible warping Pharisees. RESULT??? MATT 24:24...
It was trough constant propaganda that the genocide happened,it just shows how bad can a propaganda can be if it is not censored,crazy thing is even wives or husband that were Tutsi were killed by their Hutsu spouse with their mix blood kids ,how brainwashed can you be by propaganda that you killed your Tutsi wife or husband and your kids because they are not Tutsi , propaganda also is the reason nazi overtook germani in the ww2 .
France provided the weapons for that genocide. Dutch and German divide and conquer colonial strategies set these once peaceful cohabitating ethnic groups at each other's neck from colonial rule to the point of that genocide. I'm not trying to lay blame on European foreigners but it sounded like you wanted to know the origins of this sad history
Yes, Rwanda was another nasty case of Us vs Them…Jared Diamond in a comprehensive historical undertaking writes about, COLLAPSE, HOW SOCIETIES CHOOSE TO FAIL OR SUCCEED.
When addressing the conditions in Rwanda pre-genocide, Professor Diamond expounds on multiple aggravating circumstances, one being high density population. Quote: “…population and environmental problems created by non-sustainable resource use will ultimately get solved in one way or another: if not by pleasant means of our own choice, then by unpleasant and unchosen means…”.
The world population in 1994 was 5.66 billion; world population as of end of 2023 was 8.04 billion and rising.
When population increases dramatically, availability of resources becomes a survival issue that the poorly educated cannot comprehend, nor address…so unfortunately, We the members of a community, revert to an Us vs Them mentally…Them being thought of as ‘cockroaches’…no disrespect to real cockroaches intended. It is literally only human primates that are destructive, invasive, exploitive, malicious, and murderous!
And global population is still increasing - Just how smart are human primates, past and present, in every country? In the future, are We capable of comprehending the strain We put upon limited resources and actually adjust our innate primitive behaviours for the better of We the community!
One of my friends was 10years old and living with her parents and siblings in Rwanda, during the Rwandan genocide in 1994.
I couldn't stop crying when she told me how the Hutus killed the Tutses and how many dead bodies they saw scattered around their house and in the streets. They had to hide their maid, who was a Tutse.
My deepest sympathy to you and your dad Antoinette Mutabaz. I am so sorry that you lost your mum and siblings. You are such a brave woman. God had a purpose for your life, that is why your life was spared.
Stay strong. God bless and keep you safe. Much love and hugs to you!
@@czarbuscus1475 Look i understand you believe in god and bla bla but i don't think this is the time to say that god let things happen for a reason since right now the event had done nothing good to the souls who survived but are now left with a traumatic memory
@@trainchamomile22 u right my bad. Thanks for not making fun of my religion tho
@@czarbuscus1475 completely ignorant and dense on you. Don't bring your religion when no one mentioned it. Especially in a serious matter like this. This is why people are fed up with religions. People like you kept shoving it around. The reason why people are going further from God is ironically because ignorants like you who kept on blabbering about God in the wrong time, unsolicited.
@@arthurmorganSUN the op’s comment mentioned religion though?
🙏❤️🙏❤️🙏
Seeing this woman swallowing her tears when I can't even keep my eyes dry just listening to her story makes me wish I could hug all her pain away. Her strength is incredible as much as inspiring. Much love and respect to you ms. Mutabazi !!🤗❤
I felt the same ..just wanted to reach through and grab her and hold her.
It took me a while to watch as I kept pausing to stop tearing up.
Your clearly a good human being.
Love from Australia 🇭🇲
Imagine how absolutely amazing the world would be if people weren’t so evil and hateful
It would be a utopia, and we would have easier lives. Probably band together to create innovations, and artistic expressions.
people aren't evil, they just don't think for themselves. This evil could happen anywhere, So that would mean everyone is evil.
@@asmrhooded people are very much so evil this absolutely can happen anywhere and has you are absolutely correct people do not think for themselves they just follow no matter the outcome
@@asmrhooded I believe this is true because people who do brutal stuff like this are probably being told to by someone controlling them.
@@asmrhooded "some" people were treated Very badly growing up so they want revenge . Others are just EVIL by nature
Incredible, and heartbreaking stories, there. That she can answer how she’s doing with her head up, and an “I’m thriving” makes me smile. She has seen the very very worst humanity can offer, and has not lost her faith in human kindness. That’s a special type of strength.
It’s enough that people are killed but when she stated how she wasn’t worried about being killed because of how numb she became at 8:28, for the first time in a while I felt genuine chills. The inhumanity of it all!! What she’s been through is unfathomable, just thinking how you KNOW your death is next while witnessing all of that really brings me to tears. I hope all of those monsters rot
My heart dropped when she said her mother and brother were killed. I cannot even imagine the pain and heartbreak of what she went through. Especially with her second brother. I hope she is doing well now 🙏🏼
This is horrible Africa is just the heart of darkness
She might of deserved it you never know
I can see the pain in her eyes, she is so strong for being able to talk about this & I have so much respect for her.. Genocide sounds like the worst possible nightmare to become a reality! She is so so brave. I commend her for being able to talk about this & spread awareness about this. So happy she is alive & smiling today.
You can see the Pain in her eyes??? You must be psychic or something.... You MUST join the X-Men... What a phenomenon you are... Keep it real!!
@@johnnyboy9837 there are tears in her eyes man it's not hard to see
@@johnnyboy9837 stop disrespecting the pain and suffering of human beings, and go troll another video
my god, how on earth is she still physically standing or mentally there is a testament to her incredible strength.
This woman is incredible. So much courage and strength. The way she spoke about forgiveness at the end. Speechless.
So well said. I second this.
The ability for her to simply recall these horrors is indicative of how long she has been fighting for a sense of normalcy. This woman is powerful. Her pain, immeasurable. Her will to strive, truly inspiring.
My wife is still breastfeeding my child and my jaw dropped when she told the story about the woman. Picturing that horror is like a gut punch.
I cannot fathom the pain she lives with on a daily basis, this is gut wrenching and the fact that many other Tutsis went through worse is unbelievable…
My mother is Rwandan and she lost her siblings, parents and grandfather during the genocide. Luckily, she was in New Brunswick studying while this was happening in Rwanda; My aunt (her sister ofc) was also somewhere else during the events. Two of her brothers also survived thankfully. She was getting married to my dad around the time that it happened so their wedding wasn't too extravagant due to my mother grieving. On a side note, we just recently lost my great grandmother in February 2022 who survived the genocide back home, she was 103 I think :) Watching this video was absolutely heartbreaking for me because the thought of my family dying in such inhumane ways breaks my heart. I thank God every day for saving my mother.
What do you say to God regarding your Aunties and Uncles, Grandparents and Great-Grandfather who were all slaughtered in the Genocide?.
@@macman975 I hope they’re resting and found peace 🫶🏾 I didn’t know them since I was born after the Genocide but they seemed like wonderful people based on the stories my mom tells me about them :)
What a horrible experience. You guys are beautiful people
@@macman975 what a disgusting comment. This girl just shared the story of her mom, and a very traumatic story, and all you have to say is an argument against her religion? Would you ask a Jew after the Holocaust why they still read the Torah???
@@leysxo5991 I hope you know what was behind my question?. I'm a Christian and a few years ago I lost the 2 people who were the closest to me. They both died in the same 'accident', it shook my faith to the core because acknowledging God saved one surely means I was acknowledging God let one die?. If God did save one why couldn't he have saved both?. It was something I struggled with for years but I eventually met someone who had so much wisdom and he led me out of the dark place I was trapped in. Just reading what happened to your family made me think about how you coped with everything. I didn't really want to go into it in my previous comment as the UA-cam comment section is full of judgmental strangers. I appreciated your reply and I thought that you understood that it wasn't meant to be anything but a question, it's a shame others didn't realise that too but it's a shame many people's default setting is to attack. I used the word 'slaughtered' because I didn't think 'killed' was strong enough to describe what those monsters did to your family. Take care and all the best to you and yours :)
"Hell is empty and all the devils are here" - William Shakespeare
No hell is not empty, hell has in larger herself, many peoples are there as I text
Yes it really empty because it not yet time for judgment
@@tomaustin4926 why do you call Hell a her?
My friend and his family survived the genocide. He talked about his family hiding in a tree and his little sister peeing into mom's hand to avoid detection from the soldiers below and driving over dead bodies during their escape. I couldn't believe that someone just a couple years older than me had experienced such atrocities.