Unsung heroes who saved 1,000 children from Rwanda genocide
The untold story of how around 1,000 children were rescued from Rwanda during the bloodiest and most chaotic days of its genocide is finally coming to light three decades after they were saved from the slaughter.
Aid workers risked their lives to get the children — mostly orphans — out to safety in neighbouring Burundi in a series of Swiss humanitarian convoys.
Many of the children were wounded or had watched their families being massacred in front of them in the 100 days of systematic slaughter.
Around one million people, mainly from the Tutsi minority, were clubbed, shot or hacked to death with machetes between April and July 1994 by the army and Hutu extremists from the Interahamwe militia.
Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse, who was 15 when she was smuggled out, tells of the little known operation from the inside in her acclaimed new book, “The Convoy”.
Umubyeyi Mairesse was hidden in the back of a truck under a sheet, with orphans sitting on her and her mother to conceal them when they were stopped at Hutu checkpoints.
The Rwandan authorities only allowed children under 12 to be transported on the packed convoys run by the Swiss charity Terre des hommes (Tdh) — “People of the Earth” in English.
In her book, Umubyeyi Mairesse tells how they held their breath at the roadblocks, trying not to move a muscle as militiamen inspected the trucks, hoping the fear on the faces of the bandaged and traumatised children would not give them away.
She took several years to piece together the testimonies of the “children of the convoys” — now scattered across the world — who were rescued thanks to the courage of aid workers, nuns, journalists, a diplomat and a priest.
Some had been in Rwandan orphanages before the massacres began, while many were the children of Tutsis killed during the genocide.
“Terre des hommes found itself facing an unbelievable situation,” said Jean-Luc Imhof, a longtime Rwanda specialist for the charity.
They “were responsible for more than 1,000 of these children”, and with war and the genocide raging all around, the situation was completely “chaotic”, he told AFP.
“Lots were really young, some under three years old, but mostly there were between five and 10. Many had been wounded, including with machetes,” he said.
As the Tutsi rebels from the Rwandan Patriotic Front (FPR) — who put an end to the massacres — closed in, the army and the Hutu-led Interahamwe militia sensed defeat and “became crazy”, he said.
The first convoy in early June, which Tdh organised with the International Committee of the Red Cross, for whom Imhof had previously worked, got safely through to Burundi. But another that set off on June 18, unassisted by the ICRC, “was even riskier”, said Imhof.
“The convoy went into the incredible unknown — they were risking their lives at every checkpoint. The soldiers made the children get out… their lives were hanging by very little,” he said.
These were deeply traumatised children who had “seen their families massacred” and “taken their trauma with them”.
“Their normal had become escaping death multiple times a day,” he said,
That was also the case for Claire Umutoni and one of her sisters, who got to Burundi on a July 3 convoy in an escape she still remembers vividly.
“We received a phone call around April 20 from someone whose voice my father recognised. He knew it was one of the dignitaries from the town of Butare, who told him: ‘Your time has come.'”
He ordered his five daughters to flee and Umutoni, then 17, suddenly became head of her family, the sisters chased from one hiding place to the next.
Their parents were later murdered with “unimaginable cruelty”, she said.
“Bombs were falling near the school where we were staying with several orphans — the children had all sorts of injuries, both physical and emotional. It was terrible,” Umutoni said from her home in Canada.
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