IMAGIN8 with Serrah Galos
Serge Rwigamba goes to work every day at the Kigali Genocide Memorial. His family is buried there. For over two decades, Serge has served as a guide, head guide, and memory keeper at one of the most significant historical sites in Africa — walking visitors through the history of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, managing their emotions, and bearing witness on behalf of more than a million people who were killed in 100 days. In this episode of Imaginate, recorded on-site at the memorial in Kigali, Rwanda, Serge sits down for one of the most detailed, honest, and deeply human conversations this history has received. He does not speak from a textbook. He speaks from inside the events themselves. This conversation is for anyone who wants to understand how genocide actually happens — not as an abstract historical event, but as a process built over decades inside schools, radio stations, economic systems, and ordinary neighborhoods. It is for young Rwandans who are inheriting this history. It is for people outside Rwanda who want to understand why commemoration matters. And it is for anyone who has ever asked: how do ordinary people become capable of extraordinary violence — and what does it take to come back from that? Guest: Serge Rwigamba — Survivor, Guide & Head Guide, Kigali Genocide Memorial Recorded at: The Kigali Genocide Memorial, Kigali, Rwanda #Kwibuka #Rwanda #GenocideAgainstTheTutsi #KigaliGenocideMemorial #NeverAgain #AfricanHistory #RwandaHistory #Genocide1994 #Survivor #Imaginate #AfricanPodcast #BlackHistory #HumanRights #MemoryAndJustice #Podcast
19 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de IMAGIN8 with Serrah Galos!