In 1994 in Rwanda, a one-hundred-day genocide took place killing almost 800,000 Tutsis, an ethnic group in Rwanda, who were hunted down and brutally murdered by the Hutus, a separate ethnic group from Rwanda (site). The Tutsis were oppressed by the Hutu people. After all, they were considered a threat to the Hutus because they were favoured by the colonists, the Belgians. This mass genocide causes many Tutsis to flee the country, going to neighbouring countries and even America. The cause of the genocide was the shooting of the leader of the Hutus because the Tutsis were feeling oppressed. Soon after, mass genocide took place for one hundred days, with no one to stop it, not even the UN. The Rwandan genocide resulted in the deaths of almost …show more content…
The article talks about the Tutsi and Hutu people, the general dynamic of Rwanda and how it affected and ultimately led to the mass genocide (cite). The article then goes on to talk about how the genocide started, the killing of the leader of the Hutus; and how the genocide ended, with the Tutsis overthrowing the Hutus and taking away their power (cite). This article suggests and shows how the Tutsis were oppressed. The Tutsis were oppressed because they were being taken from their homes and families to be slaughtered for being a different group of people from the Hutus. This oppression also led to many Tutsis fleeing the country to attempt to find safety and avoid death. The Hutu people subjected them to death, rehoming, and in many women's cases, sexual assault. The rule by law was not being followed, which led to the Hutus abusing their power and forcing the Tutsis into these rash conditions, which they didn’t have a say about. The Hutus ultimately wanted to completely erase the Tutsis, as they were not the same as the Hutus and were considered a threat. The injustice upon the Tutsis was great, and the oppression was even …show more content…
The poem talks about how it was “never quiet” and alludes to the “shouts every night” and people “begging for their lives” (cite). This poem proves the pain, suffering and oppression the Tutsis faced, and how unjust it was (cite). It alludes to the suffering of being forced out of their own country for a chance to live, and how even the children faced oppression and showed no mercy (cite). This poem shows the oppression of the Tutsis by describing the horrific images of “machetes let fly” and the Hutu people “stare into the victims' eyes” (cite). It describes the “torn up country” and how the Tutsis felt during this oppression of genocide (cite). The oppression is shown by painting images of the Tutsi people being captured, murdered, and taken from their families all because of their ethnicity. The poem describes the intentions of the Hutus and how it was to erase the Tutsis by murdering or forcing them out of the country. The Tutsis' oppression was proven in this poem by describing images of the tragedy faced by the Tutsi