Colonial Influences on the Rwandan Genocide
The Colonial Roots of the Rwanda Genocide
During a five-week period, between the second week of April and the third week of May in 1994 (Hintjens 241), close to 800,000 Rwandans were massacred (Storey 366-367). This represented a shocking 11% of the total population at the time. The killings continued into June of the same year, probably resulting in the deaths of another 50,000 men, women, and children. The vast majority of those massacred were Tutsi, but dissident Hutu were also killed. Although Belgian colonial rule ended in 1962, the roots for the Tutsi genocide can be traced to that period in the country's history ("Rwanda: A Historical Chronology"). This report will examine how the colonial powers created conditions that would foster events eventually leading to the 1994 Tutsi genocide.
Why Does Genocide Exist?
Bradley Campbell briefly reviews the many explanations that have been proffered to help understand the phenomenon of genocide (151).1 A number of genocide 'experts' have proposed that the perpetrators are evil, insane, or criminal, but Campbell points out that perpetrators tend to characterize their victims using the very same words to justify genocide. Although the evil, insane, or criminal explanations for genocide tend to be viewed as distinct, all three could be grouped together if it can be assumed that they represent a moral vacuum. Campbell, however, argues that the perpetrators of genocide often rely on a collective morality to justify engaging in such a horrendous act. Genocide is therefore a moral act, not an act that can only occur in the absence of morality.
The commission of genocide is dependent on the collective actions of a large group (Campbell 153). Accordingly, centralized control made possible by governments, military organizations, or police agencies tend to increase the risk of genocide. Another common feature of genocide is that it is almost universally unilateral (Campbell 154). Genocide, as defined by Campbell, is therefore a moral, unilateral act committed by a large group of people against an ethnically-distinct group for the purpose of its destruction or elimination from a geographical region.
The other contributing factors to genocide are detailed by Campbell (160-167). Genocide participants need to be confined to a geographic location and the greater their immobility, the greater the risk of genocide. Both participants and victims must therefore live together in close proximity and be unable to easily emigrate or flee out of the area as the threat grows. The ethnicity of the perpetrators and victims must be distinct in some way, such that the greater the difference the greater the risk of genocide. Closely related to cultural distance is relational distance, which is the degree to which each group participates in the day-to-day lives of the other group. When two cultures become so enmeshed in each other's lives the risk of genocide decreases accordingly. Another prominent contributing factor is functional independence, which is the extent to which each group depends on the other for their social, political, religious, and economic well-being. As independence increases, so does the risk of genocide. Inequality, another genocide risk factor, would have been enforced by the class system.
Moral Justification for 1994 Rwanda Genocide
In a manner surprisingly similar to the justifications used to persecute Jews in Nazi Germany, the Rwandan Hutus claimed that Tutsis were clannish and held too many influential positions in government, academia, and religious organizations (Campbell 155). In addition, Tutsi women were considered more attractive and prone to seducing and manipulating Hutu men, while at the same time treating Hutu men as unworthy of their affections. In 1993, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) was blamed for the assassination of Habyarimana, the Hutu president of Burundi. This followed a war waged by the RFP rebel group against the Habyarimana government that resulted in a cease-fire agreement in 1992. The RFP consisted of Tutsi expatriates living in Uganda. Rwandan Hutus responded by claiming that all Tutsis were supporting the RFP in some way and their children would someday join the rebel group. The collective fear that grew out of this logic was that Tutsis would someday exterminate Hutus through genocide (Campbell, 156). Although genocide may be committed for utilitarian purposes, such as the accumulation of wealth, from Campbell's perspective, most contemporary genocides are justified with moral logic.
Colonial Contributions to the Rwandan Genocide
In 1918, under the Treaty of Versailles, Germany relinquished Rwanda-Urundi to Belgian control because of its new status as a League of Nations protectorate ("Rwanda: A Historical...
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