Alaa’s Reviews > We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families > Status Update
Alaa
is on page 100 of 356
Hatred and power are both, in their different ways, passions. The difference is that hatred is purely negative, while power is essentially positive: you surrender to hatred, but you aspire to power. In Rwanda, the orgy of misbegotten power that led to genocide was carried out in the name of Hutuness, and when Paul, a Hutu, set out to defy the killers, he did so by appealing to their passion for power
— Feb 29, 2016 12:40AM
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Alaa
is on page 100 of 356
To their minds, it seemed, their acts of decency exonerated the guilt of their crimes. But to survivors, the fact that a killer sometimes spared lives only proved that he could not possibly be judged innocent, since it demonstrated plainly that he knew murder was wrong
— Feb 29, 2016 12:43AM
Alaa
is on page 100 of 356
It was not uncommon for a man or a woman who regularly went forth to kill to keep a few favorite Tutsis hidden in his or her home. Later, such people sometimes pleaded that they took some lives in order not to attract attention to their efforts to save others.
— Feb 29, 2016 12:43AM
Alaa
is on page 100 of 356
“they” were the ones who had chosen to take life away and he grasped that that meant they could also choose to extend the gift of retaining
— Feb 29, 2016 12:41AM
Alaa
is on page 13 of 356
In discussions of us-against-them scenarios of popular violence, the fashion these days is to speak of mass hatred. But while hatred can be animating, it appeals to weakness. The “authors” of the genocide, as Rwandans call them, understood that in order to move a huge number of weak people to do wrong, it is necessary to appeal to their desire for strength—and the gray force that really drives people is power.
— Feb 29, 2016 12:38AM
Alaa
is on page 13 of 356
"So the people of influence, or the big financiers, are often the big men in the genocide. They may think that they didn’t kill because they didn’t take life with their own hands, but the people were looking to them for their orders. And, in Rwanda, an order can be given very quietly" 2/2
— Feb 25, 2016 08:29AM
Alaa
is on page 13 of 356
“In Rwandan history, everyone obeys authority. People revere power, and there isn’t enough education. You take a poor, ignorant population, and give them arms, and say, ‘It’s yours. Kill.’ They’ll obey. The peasants, who were paid or forced to kill, were looking up to people of higher socio-economic standing to see how to behave. 1/2
— Feb 25, 2016 08:28AM
