City of Stirling Library Services

You alone may live, one woman's journey through the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide, Mary K. Blewitt

Label
You alone may live, one woman's journey through the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide, Mary K. Blewitt
Language
eng
resource.biographical
autobiography
Illustrations
platesillustrationsportraits
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
You alone may live
Responsibility statement
Mary K. Blewitt
Sub title
one woman's journey through the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide
Summary
Up to a million Rwandan Tutsi were murdered by Hutu militias during the Rwandan genocide on 1994, fifty members of Mary Kayitesi Blewitt s family among them. Seeking sanctuary in her grandfather s village, they were herded by Hutu neighbours into a school classroom to await the Interahamwe militia, who later arrived in trucks, armed with machetes. Mary managed to locate the bodies of her loved ones and lay them to rest. After the killing ended she travelled around the capital, Kigali, witnessed the exhumation of mass graves and struggled to understand the scale of the killings. She recounts standing shoulder to shoulder with the Hutu neighbours who had done nothing to help when the killings began but later helped her bury her family. To try to make sense of what had happened, Mary undertook voluntary work, believing that she had been allowed to survive in order to help others like her. She became a figure of trust with survivors seeking her out to tell their own stories of atrocity and survival. One woman told how she was raped in front of members of her own family who were then murdered. She was allowed to live and told, You alone may live, so that you will die of sadness. This was a common experience for women survivors. You Alone May Live is an important book about grief and survival in the face of unimaginable trauma
Target audience
adult
Content

Incoming Resources