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Paul Rusesabagina

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Paul Rusesabagina
Born
Paul Rusesabagina

(1954-06-15) 15 June 1954 (age 70)
NationalityRwandan
Spouses
  • Esther Bamurage (div.)
(m. 1989)
Awards
  • Presidential Medal of Freedom
  • Immortal Chaplains Prize for Humanity
  • Wallenberg Medal of the University of Michigan
  • National Civil Rights Museum Freedom Award
  • Tom Lantos Human Rights Prize from The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice

Paul Rusesabagina (Kinyarwanda pronunciation: [ɾusesɑβaɟinɑ]; born 15 June 1954) is a Rwandan humanitarian who, while working as a house manager at the Hôtel des Mille Collines in Kigali, hid and protected 1,200 Hutu and Tutsi refugees from the Interahamwe militia during the Rwandan genocide. None of those refugees were hurt or killed during the attacks.

Rusesabagina's efforts were the basis of the fictional Academy Award-nominated film Hotel Rwanda (2004), in which he was portrayed by American actor Don Cheadle. He has homes in Brussels, Belgium and San Antonio, Texas. Rusesabagina founded the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation to fight for global human rights.[1]

Birth and career

Rusesabagina was one of nine children born to a Hutu father and Tutsi mother in Murama, Rwanda. Rusesabagina's parents sent him to school in a town near Gitwe run by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. By age 13, he was fluent in English and French. He married his first wife, Esther Sembeba, on September 8, 1967. By the end of his adolescence, Rusesabagina had decided to become a minister. He and his wife moved to Cameroon where he studied at seminary.

In December 1978, he, his wife, and two children moved to Kigali. While there, a childhood friend, Isaac Mulihano, invited Rusesabagina to apply for an opening to work at the Mille Collines. He was offered a position and was later sent to Switzerland and Brussels to study hotel management. Due to distance and his commitment to work, he and Esther legally separated in 1981. Rusesabagina was granted full custody of their three children: Diane, Lys, and Roger.

In 1987, he was invited to a wedding where he met Tatiana, the maid of honor and a Tutsi nurse in Ruhengeri. Rusesabagina bribed a frequent customer of the Mille Collines, a Minister of Health, to transfer Tatiana to a job at Central Hospital in Kigali. Tatiana and Paul married two years later and she adopted his children. Later, they had a son, Trésor.

In 1992, Paul Rusesabagina was promoted to assistant general manager of the Diplomates Hotel, an affiliate of the Mille Collines.

The Rwandan genocide

In Rwanda, while Paul was receiving education in Nairobi, Switzerland, and Brussels, the Hutu-dominated government of President Juvénal Habyarimana faced pressure from a Tutsi-led rebel force as they tried to maintain their power. Machetes were ordered and brought to the capital and given to the Interahamwe; while Tutsi were being discriminated against, a rumour brought on by a radio station RTLM explained that the Tutsi wanted to kill all the Hutus.

On April 6, 1994, President Habyarimana's plane was shot down by surface-to-air missiles as it approached the Kigali Airport for landing. On board the plane with Habyarimana were the President of Burundi Cyprien Ntaryamira, the Rwandan Army Chief of Staff Déogratias Nsabimana, and Colonel Elie Sagatwa, the head of presidential security. The wreckage landed in the garden of the presidential palace and all on board were killed.[3][4] The Rwandan genocide started on April 6, 1994. On April 7, 1994, the Presidential Guard assassinated Prime Minister Agathe Uwilingiyimana along with many other ministers, mainly those from political parties different from that of the assassinated Habyarimana and those slated to play important roles in the transitional government that had been planned to be instated on April 8. Ten Belgian UN peacekeepers were also killed.[3] Interahamwe hunted down Tutsi and began killing them at the start of the genocide. Though Rusesabagina was Hutu (his father was Hutu and his mother Tutsi), his wife Tatiana was a Tutsi and his children considered mixed. Due to this, he was unable to escape from the war zone with his family.

When the violence broke out, Rusesabagina brought his family to the Hôtel des Mille Collines for safety. As other managers departed, Rusesabagina phoned the hotel's corporate owners, Sabena, and secured a letter appointing him the acting general manager of the Mille Collines.

When a murderous Hutu militia threatened to enter the Mille Collines, Rusesabagina ensured that his wife and children fled safely in a truck past the militia's roadblocks. The truck set out for Kigali airport so they could flee to another country. He remained in the hotel to tend to the refugees. Tatiana and her children were specifically targeted within the convoy by radio messages, and returned to the hotel after being attacked.

Tatiana's family faced extreme tragedy. Her mother, brother and sister-in-law, and four nieces and nephews died in the genocide. Her father paid Hutu militia to be executed so he would not die a more painful death:

 We all knew we would die, no question. The only question was how. Would they chop us in pieces? With their machetes they would cut your left hand off. Then they would disappear and reappear a few hours later to cut off your right hand. A little later they would return for your left leg etc. They went on till you died. They wanted to make you suffer as long as possible. There was one alternative: you could pay soldiers so they would just shoot you. That's what her [Tatiana's] father did.

— Paul Rusesabagina in Humo, nr. 3365, March 1, 2005

The Interahamwe left nearly 1 million corpses behind. Tutsi rebels pushed the Hutu militia into the Congo in July 1994, after over half of the Tutsis in Rwanda had been murdered. Rusesabagina took orphans from the camp behind Tutsi rebel lines with him to Tanzania, to keep them safe and away from Rwanda. By the end of the massacre, four of his eight siblings remained alive. He comments in his autobiography that "For a Rwandan family, this is a comparatively lucky outcome".

Rusesabagina, his wife and children, and the refugees eventually managed to escape to Tanzania, thanks to the Rwandan Patriotic Front. After staying in Rwanda for two more years, Rusesabagina applied for asylum in Belgium and moved to Brussels with his wife, children, and his two adopted nieces in 1996 after receiving credible threats on his life. When they received threats again, they settled in Texas although they still maintain their Belgium home.

Awards received

  • 2000 – Immortal Chaplains Prize for Humanity.
  • 2005 – Wallenberg Medal of the University of Michigan
  • 2005 – National Civil Rights Museum Freedom Award
  • 2005 – Presidential Medal of Freedom
  • 2007 – Honorary Doctorate of Law from the University of Guelph
  • 2008 – Honorary Degree from Gustavus Adolphus College
  • 2009 – Honorary Degree from Loyola University Chicago, at the Bachelor of Arts Commencement
  • 2011 – Tom Lantos Human Rights Prize from The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice

Media

Books

His story was first told in Philip Gourevitch's book We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families, which was published in 1998.

Autobiography

His autobiography An Ordinary Man (written with Tom Zoellner ISBN 0-670-03752-4) was published by Zach Bell in April 2006.

Film

Paul's work in the genocide is dramatized in the 2004 movie Hotel Rwanda in which he is played by Don Cheadle.[5] Cheadle's performance was met with critical acclaim and the actor was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama and Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role.

Feud with Paul Kagame

Rusesabagina and Rwandan president and former head of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) Paul Kagame have become public enemies of each other. In his autobiography, Rusesabagina alleges, "Rwanda is today a nation governed by and for the benefit of a small group of elite Tutsis... Those few Hutus who have been elevated to high-ranking posts are usually empty suits without any real authority of their own. They are known locally as Hutus de service or Hutus for hire." He has also criticized Kagame's election to president.

On April 6, 2006, Kagame suggested, "[Rusesabagina] should try his talents elsewhere and not climb on the falsehood of being a hero, because it's totally false." Despite this, Rusesabagina stated in a public lecture at the University of Michigan on March 27, 2014, that he has chosen to forgive Kagame, as this is the only way that Rwanda can move past the genocide.[6] Francois Xavier Ngarambe, the president of Ibuka, the umbrella body of survivors' associations for the genocide, said of Rusesabagina, "he has hijacked heroism. He is trading with the genocide. He should be charged." Terry George, the director of Hotel Rwanda, characterized the comment as part of a smear campaign.[7]

In 2008, the book Hotel Rwanda or the Tutsi Genocide as seen by Hollywood, by Alfred Ndahiro, a public relations advisor to Kagame and journalist Privat Rutazibwa, was published.[8] It provides an alternative take to the portrayal of Rusesabagina's actions as seen in Hotel Rwanda.

Rusesabagina has consistently denied allegations put forward by the Rwandan government accusing Rusesabagina of helping the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda, a Rwandan rebel group. In a 2010 interview with CNN, Rusesabagina said: "I have sent no money to terrorists... He [the prosecutor] is not only lying, but lying with bad logic... This is pure and simple fabrication from Kigali."[9]

Controversy

Some of those who survived the 1994 genocide in the Hôtel des Mille Collines, including Edouard Kayihura, a lawyer and former prosecutor of those accused of genocide in Rwanda, and Odette Nyiramilimo, a Rwandan doctor who later became a senator and minister within the Rwandan government, question Rusesabagina's humanitarian endeavours. In a letter to Terry George, the director of the film Hotel Rwanda, Odette wrote that "People thank [Rusesabagina] on how he was taking care of orphans in the hotel, and he agrees! Terry, there has never been orphans! Who would have brought them? Some people even call me or send nice messages to me thanking me to have been taking care of the orphans at that tragic period. Of course I explain it did not happen like that! But it has happened maybe somewhere else".[10] Kayihura's book "Inside the Hotel Rwanda: The Surprising True Story and Why It Matters Today" (Benbella Books, 2014) illustrates conflicting statements made by Rusesabagina himself since the 1994 genocide, such as how he charged people for food and drink during the genocide[11] and threatened to kick out Christophe Shamukiga, an occupant of the Hôtel des Mille Collines, for distributing soft drinks, boiled water, and cookies to other hotel guests found in a basement cache without paying for them.[12] Rusesabagina denies these allegations.[13]

Rusesabagina has also claimed that the killings committed by the RPF rebels during the conflict constituted a genocide.[14] The historian Gérard Prunier agrees that the RPF committed "horrendous crimes", but he rejects the notion of a "double genocide", which he argues "does not stand up to serious inquiry".[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "'Hotel Rwanda' Manager: We've Failed To Learn From History". National Public Radio. April 5, 2014. Retrieved February 21, 2015.
  2. ^ "Paul Rusesabagina, Rwanda's hotel " (13 November 2013), by Patt Morrison, Los Angeles Times
  3. ^ a b Melvern, Linda (2006). Conspiracy to Murder: The Rwandan Genocide. Verso.
  4. ^ Rusesabagina, Paul (2006). An Ordinary Man. The Penguin Group.
  5. ^ 12/29/2011 12:09 pm EST (2011-12-29). "Romeo Dallaire: Senator Slams 'Hotel Rwanda' Film As Revisionist 'Junk'". Huffingtonpost.ca. Retrieved 2015-12-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Public lecture at University of Michigan, March 27, 2014 4:30-6
  7. ^ George, Terry (May 10, 2006). "Smearing a Hero". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  8. ^ Movie sparks public feud[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ Karimi, Faith. "'Hotel Rwanda' hero denies sending money to rebels." CNN. October 28, 2010. Retrieved on October 28, 2010.
  10. ^ Kayihura, Edouard and Kerry Zukus. Inside the Hotel Rwanda. Dallas: BenBella Books, 2014. 171.
  11. ^ Kayihura, Edouard and Kerry Zukus. Inside the Hotel Rwanda. Dallas: BenBella Books, 2014. 91.
  12. ^ Kayihura, Edouard and Kerry Zukus. Inside the Hotel Rwanda. Dallas: BenBella Books, 2014. 92.
  13. ^ Clare Rudebeck (2005-02-22). "Paul Rusesabagina - the modest Rwandan - Africa | IOL News". Iol.co.za. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  14. ^ "Keith Harmon Snow interview with Paul Rusesabagina". Allthingspass.com. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  15. ^ Prunier, Gérard (2009). Africa's World War: Congo, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe. Oxford University Press. pp. 13. ISBN 9780199705832.

Further reading

  • Interview with Paul and Tatiana Rusesabagina in the Belgian magazine HUMO, nr. 3365, March 1, 2005.
  • Hotel Rwanda: A Lesson Yet to be Learned – talk (part of the Presidential Events series) at Eckerd College on February 23, 2006.
  • Rusesabagina on Gardens of the Righteous Worldwide – Gariwo
  • Shake Hands With The Devil - Gen Romeo Dallaire (Canada)
  • George, Terry. "Smearing a Hero." The Washington Post. Wednesday 10 May 2006.
  • Inside the Hotel Rwanda: The Surprising True Story and Why It Matters Today. Edouard Kayihura and Kerry Zukus. Dallas: BenBella Books, 2014.