[identity profile] emma-in-oz.livejournal.com
# 32 - An Ordinary Man: The True Story behind Hotel Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina with Tom Zoellner (2006)

I got this book out of the library because of the review written by Lady_Jem - http://community.livejournal.com/50books_poc/tag/a:+rusesabagina+paul

(My intention is to try to read Aboriginal literature but I keep going off on tangents inspired by the amazing books that other people read and review here.)

Paul Rusesabagina was the manager of the Hotel Mlle Collines. He managed to keep the 1200 people sheltering in the hotel safe from the Rwandan genocide.

His description of how he did this is remarkable. He is modest but it is obvious that he relied on his ability to negotiate, flatter, call in favours, bribe and deceive. With no real power and essentially no military power, he managed to keep the hotel as an island of safety. This is real triumph of the human spirit stuff.

He also makes clear how the genocide came to take place. He talks about the history of Rwanda and the development of divisions between Hutus and Tutsis, matching it up to the course of his own life. He talks intelligently and plainly about internal politics and the rise of a xenophobic radio station. (My God, that section sent shivers down my spine. I knew the station was ordering/encouraging people to kill their neighbours. I did not know that if anyone managed to run their location was literally broadcast on the radio so they could be hunted through the streets.)

He outlines the shameful role of the United Nations. It really was a low point for the UN. As he says they were worse than useless - if they had not been there at all perhaps individual countries might have intervened. But when has there ever been an intervention into a genocide? I can’t think of one.

In short: this is a really, really good book. Read it.
[identity profile] lady-jem.livejournal.com
4. Left to Tell by Imaculee Ilibaziga

This is a really lovely book, although it's probably not for everyone.  The book is an autobiography of a young Tutsi woman who survived the Rwandan genocide hiding in a pastor's bathroom with six other women for 3 months.  Through the power of prayer and her deep faith, she was able not only to survive the genocide but actually forgive her enemies.

The book was not what I expected--there was actually fairly little actually about her time in the bathroom, largely because it sounds like she at least, and probably the other women as well, spent much of that time in such deep prayer and meditation that they were in an almost trance-state.  Her perception of time during those months sounds like it was severely altered--being in a state of dehydration and near starvation probably didn't help that much either.  And the narrative is full of what I'd call "God-talk"--as a devout Catholic, Imaculee's faith permeates every aspect of her life and thinking, and this comes out in the writing.  She places a lot of trust in the whole "power of positive thinking" form of prayer and visualization, where she envisions what she believes God has in mind for her and focuses wholly and deeply on it, and in case after case it actually comes to be. (I haven't read it, but isn't this sort of what's behind that bestseller "The Secret"?)  Her "voice," in fact, reminds me of a similarly-minded friend I had in college, whose prayers tended to be so specific and demanding that I sometimes felt like saying, "Okay, hon, God doesn't need an instruction book, just pray and then let go."  Imaculee's prayers tend to be in this highly specific vein, and I'm not always comfortable with it--even when they come true. :-)

For the record, I am a Christian believer, and I do believe in the power of God in our lives--and I also believe that humility and gratitude is a far better way to accept wonderful and miraclous things that come our way than egotism and pride.  But as an outsider, I have to say that Imaculee sounds like an extraordinarily intelligent woman with an uncanny ability to focus her mind on a task--she taught herself English (though without pronunciation guidance her spoken command of the language was probably not great) from dictionaries and books while in the bathroom, she learned to touch type enough to get a job in something like 3 or 4 weeks, she achieved a level of education that Tutsis in Rwanda (especially women!) seldom could achieve, even before the massacres.  An extraordinary young woman who would likely have risen to high things under any circumstances; that she gives the glory to God is just another aspect of her character. 

The narrative style is fairly simple and straightforward, almost over-simple sometimes.  And anyone who respond with annoyance to God-talk will probably be put off.  But if one can get past that, this book is a pretty amazing story of an amazing woman.  Worth the read.

peace,
J
[identity profile] lady-jem.livejournal.com

#3, An Ordinary Man by Paul Rusesabagina

An autobiographical memoir by the general manager of the Hotel Mille Collines in Rwanda, who sheltered over 1200 people in his hotel during the three months of the massacres.(In the interest of full disclosure: he worked with another writer on it, who may or may not have been of color.  I really don't care.  It's clearly his voice.)

It's a fascinating book, and he's a fascinating man. He makes no apologies for his Machiavellian approach to dealing with people who came into his office with blood splatters on still their clothing, how he could talk and smoothe and bribe them into letting the hotel's "guests" live one more day. An interesting blend of pragmatism and idealism, whose ability to read and manipulate people with his words saved over a thousand lives.

This book was a revelation to me--the descriptions of the massacres, of the pointless and horrible slaughter of neighbor by neighbor, the sheer numbers...and when I'd heard in the past of this man and the hotel, I always thought in some way they were hidden (though if I'd realized the number of the saved was so high, I would have abandoned that idea!), not that all of Rwanda knew that they were there and somehow this one man was able, with words and cases of cognac and a binder full of phone numbers he'd collected of people who owed him favors, to stand between them and the machetes. 

A story at once horrible and wonderful...definitely worth the read.
peace,
J

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