After Rwanda genocide, Women’s Opportunity Center will help survivors in a sustainable environment

Saron Davis Design's sustainable Women's Opportunity Center in Rwanda

Rwanda's Women's Opportunity Center will feature a sustainable structure by Sharon Davis Design.

The Women’s Opportunity Center in Kayonza, Rwanda, will not be a place for victims, but for survivors, writes Benita Hussain in her report to the GOOD Foundation.  When the facility opens in 2013, it will train women who lived through the Rwanda genocide of 1994  to help rebuild their country, literally brick by brick.

[pullquote]‘…the effects of the organized massacres and sexual assaults against the Tutsi minority and moderate Hutus were especially devastating for women and girls.”[/pullquote]The project is the result of a collaboration between Washington, D.C.-based non governmental organization (NGO) Women for Women International, which aids women who have lived through wars around the world, and New York architecture firm Sharon Davis Design. Since 2008, the two groups have focused on building a community center to help educate and prepare the women of the Rwanda genocide for economic independence.

Writer Benita Hussain describes Rwanda's Women's Opportunity Center

Writer Benita Hussain

It’s a much-needed effort in Rwanda, where the effects of the organized massacres and sexual assaults against the Tutsi minority and moderate Hutus were especially devastating for women and girls. The resulting emotional trauma, unintended pregnancies, and HIV infections led to massive economic losses and financial instability, especially for those who lost their husbands and children to imprisonment, death, or militia recruitment.

Since the conflict ended, Rwanda’s democratic leadership, now led by President Paul Kagame, has mandated 30 percent female representation in government and has been outspoken about the need to empower women as part of Rwanda’s reconciliation efforts. That mission inspired the creation of the Women’s Opportunity Center, conceived as a sustainable space for vocational and agricultural training that will be built by local women survivors of the Rwanda genocide as part of the educational process. The design won 2nd place among planned projects and 1st place in the education subcategory in last November’s World Architecture Festival.

“We approached the design of the project to be an educational tool in itself,” says project manager Bruce Engel. “For example, water scarcity is a huge issue, but no one collects rain. Designing some of the roofs in the shape of big leaves that collect rainwater was meant to express this idea, to teach it.”

The hopeful story of survivival of the Rwanda genocide emerges at a moment when social media are still aflame with stories about Ugandan Joseph Kony and an historic web-based “Make Joseph Kony Famous” campaign to apprehend the infamous 1990s child abductor and mass murderer, who now hides out in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.  Unfortunately, the Joseph Kony viral video has drawn far more global attention than less dramatic efforts, such as the ongoing recovery and forgiveness successes in Uganda.

Also occurring outside the global spotlight is the fact that the holistic, survival-oriented women’s center in Kayonza, Rwanda will also include earth-friendly designs such as a water purification and filtration system, compost toilets, and a demonstration farm that will produce food and animal waste for methane-based biogas—an imperative considering the region’s over-harvesting of timber for fuel.  This project embodies empowerment of women, sustainable practices and recovery from horrific abuses.

 

PBS documents 1994 Rwandan genocide in April series on forgiveness

No other topic brings reader response like those I receive when I post moving stories of forgiveness.  Stories about Rwandan genocide seem to speak to Fairnessworks.com readers more than any other topic.

A Sunday night series — Forgiveness: A Time to Love and a Time to Hate —  on the Public Broadcasting System (PBS)  in the U.S. will tackle four different dimensions of evil, cruelty and forgiveness, including this story of the Rwandan genocide.  Acclaimed writer, producer and director Helen Whitney explores a compelling range of stories, from personal betrayel to global reconciliation after genocide.

Divided into two 90-minute acts, the film airs Sundays, April 17 and 24, 2011 at 10p.m. ET on PBS stations nationwide (check local listings).

Funding for Forgiveness, A Time to Love and a Time to Hate is provided by the Fetzer Institute and the John Templeton Foundation.

A friend of this blog, Ginny H., shared this information from the Fetzger Institute. I will post more information, along with some supplementary information, in the near future.  In the meanwhile, I share a clip from the series about the horrific Rwandan genocide and eventual forgiveness which is occurring among many through restorative justice processes in Rwanda..

Please share this story with friends and post your responses below.
http://www-tc.pbs.org/s3/pbs.videoportal-prod.cdn/media/swf/PBSPlayer.swf

Watch Confronting Evil on PBS. See more from Forgiveness: A Time to Love and a Time to Hate.

One of the four segments in the April PBS documentary will address the phenomenal forgiveness which is occurring in the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide.

Forgiveness and Restoration Are Real: An Easter Message of Hope from Rwanda

The main focus of this blog is on local applications of peacemaking, with a special focus on examples of Restorative Justice (RJ).  My goal with this blog is to connect “seat-of-the-pants peacemakers” with groups and individuals who are a few steps further along the path of making peace and are bringing restoration to people harmed by crimes, including the victims and the offenders .

Sometimes, however, successful reconciliation happens in the most unlikely situations, where all human perceptions would tell us no peaceful solution is possible, no forgiveness likely.  For those of us who observe Resurrection Sunday (“Easter”), these successes have to remain at the center of our focus, and we just have to celebrate them when they happen.  (But, let’s face it, it is hard to find any major world religion that does not seek peace, reconciliation and forgiveness, despite the egregious actions of the extremists in their/our midst.)

Reconciliation Village, Musanze, Rwanda. Forgiveness is lived out daily in rebuilding community.

When we watched the horror of the Rwanda genocide in 1994, any hopes of reconciliation seemed impossible.  But Prison Fellowship International looked with the eyes of faith on the overwhelming brutality, and they set about doing the difficult work of putting their faith and forgiveness into practice.  So, in the ruins of the scene of some of the most brutal genocide, in the village of Musanze, Rwanda, and in five other decimated villages, Prison Fellowship International created “Reconciliation Village.”  Here, forgiveness is lived out in rebuilding community.  [Editor's Note: Click for a look at forgiveness in Uganda.

Today, dozens of former murderers and brutalizers live side-by-side with their victims, in harmony.

"Residents of the 182 homes that make-up the village of Musanze, Rwanda, work as one to grow crops and tend to livestock. The village’s community spirit may not seem unusual until you learn that within this small community live both convicted perpetrators and surviving victims of the 1994 genocide."

Map of Rwanda, Africa

The story of this seemingly impossible reconciliation is available at this link.  For anyone who doubts that reconciliation and forgiveness are unachievable, unattainable, I highly recommend this link:

http://www.pfi.org/media-and-news/news/rebuilding-in-the-aftermath-of-destruction

Read this story, and tell me we can’t address bullying and domestic abuse in the “Developed World.”  A Christian scripture reference comes to mind:  ”Go thou and do likewise.”  (If you have sacred scripture to share, select “Comment” below and share it.

But, before doing that, ponder this image:

Young boy, a victim of the Rwanda genocide. Few would have thought forgiveness possible.