Paul Rusesabagina An Ordinary Man Quotes

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In the book “An Ordinary man: An Autobiography” by Paul Rusesabagina, the author faces many bad problems and experiences distasteful moments throughout the whole novel. The author uses quotes the explain the significance of the 1994 Genocide in his own eyes. Near the middle of the story, as Paul explains the harsh treatment and taunting of RTLM against them, he tells us about a teacher who brainwashed her students into hating the “Hutus.” “It always bothers me when I hear Rwanda’s Genocide being described as the product of ‘ancient tribal hatred.’ I think this is a easy way for westerners to dismiss the whole thing as a regrettable but pointless bloodbath that happens to primitive brown people (Rusesabagina Chp.4 Pg.53).” The significance of the quote from Rusesabagina is that they are being mocked by outsiders that think they are a “Primitive brown people.” Another one is that the outsiders think of the difference their country is compared to Rwanda’s more like “Musket gun vs. …show more content…

The scholar once said that the way you see the world with violence is “disillusioned.” “Kindness is not an illusion and violence is not a rule. The true resting state of Human affairs is not represented by a man hacking his neighbor into pieces with a machete (Rusesabagina Chp.8 Pg.202).” The significances of the quote was about how Paul disagreed about the truth is what we do in everyday activities. Instead, it determined that without violence, it is the true resting state of human affairs and therefore not condemned bloodshed nor terror. In conclusion, Rusesabagina faces terrible events and terror experienced from the 1994 Genocide of

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