Karuhimbi in interview with The Newtimes |
According
to the Newtimes describing this brave woman, ZULA KARUHIMBI born in 1925 as
indicates her identity Card, still lives in the same old mud and wattle house
she used to stay in years ago. It is a small house with two rooms. The
wooden door is rickety and its smaller windows, about the size of an iPad,
testify of the house’s age.
Karuhimbi poses for a picture with an unidenfied European national she saved |
It is hard to believe that more than 100 people escaped death by
hiding in this tiny house during the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. But that
is what happened when Karuhimbi decided to challenge Interahamwe militia who were murdering
Tutsi.
Karuhimbi’s identity card indicates she was born in 1925. But
despite her age, she still has vivid memory of the events that unfolded 20
years ago when Interahamwe went on a
killing spree.
She
exudes fresh memory about a simple event that occurred when she was still a
girl–she narrates calmly with a sense of humour.
Fictitious magical power
When the
country descended into hell in 1994, Karuhimbi responded in her own
manner.
Inspired
by the deeds of her mother, who she says was a generous woman who loved to help
those in need, Karuhimbi decided to fight back against the killers not with
machetes, clubs, arrows or guns, but with humanity, bravery–what she describes
as “extremely simple tricks done with determination.”
Having
grown up in a family of traditional healers, Karuhimbi had inherited the
practice and was as respected in her neighbourhood for her services as much as
she was feared.
Many
suspected she possessed supernatural powers.
With
blood splattering allover the country, Karuhimbi, then 69, decided to hide
behind the suspected magical power to save the Tutsi. She took in an estimated
100 individuals who had fled to her place.
Some of
the individuals were literary piled up in her small house, while others hid in
a deep hole she dug outside her house and covered it with woods. Others, she
says, used to lay down outside and covered them with beanstalks.
A handful of others hid in a huge Euphorbia umbellate tree (known
locally as Umukoni) plumes.Umukoni is a
highly flowering plant.
Twenty
years down the road, the ageing woman still remembers the names of some of the
individuals who took refuge at her home.
She says
some were acquaintances while others were people she had just met. Today, she
says she knows the whereabouts of some of the people she sheltered.
“No one was killed among those I took in,” she says proudly. “I
fearlessly confrontedInterahamwe whenever they would want to enter my enclosure to kill. I warned
them that if they entered they would face the anger and incur the wrath of Nyabingi (a supposed powerful spirit
in folklore).”
Feigned magical powers
“To
instil fear among the attackers, I would anoint my hands with herbs that cause
body irritation and touch them. Because they didn’t know the existence of such
herbs, whenever I touched them, they got upset and I used to tell them that it
was Nyabingi doing it,” she narrates.
“And to
supplement it, I would go back in the house, shake whatever I could find,
including metals and bags and tell the people I was hiding to scream. Then I
told the killers that the voices were of my spirits and that they were angrier
against them. The killers would flee in fright.”
On
several occasions, Interahamwe killers attempted to snatch the Tutsi from the
hands of Karuhimbi but she remained defiant. At one occasion they also
attempted to torch the house and at another they attempted to spray bullets at
her house.
Hiding
behind her reputation as a sorcerer, she threatened the militiamen that if they
dared attack her house, they would be swallowed by spirits and that their
families will face tremendous curses.
Frightened,
the attackers abandoned their plans, she says.
Karuhimbi,
a practicing Muslim, insists she never possessed nor did she believe in magic.
“I only
believed in one God and the thing of magical power was just an invention and
cover I was using to save lives. I am not a witch doctor.”
Awarded medal
By the time
the Genocide was stopped, Karuhimbi had saved the lives of more than 100 Tutsi,
three European nationals and about a dozen Burundians.
For her
valour, Karuhimbi paid with the lives of her two children who were killed by
Interahamwe.
“Of
course, the loss of my children caused unbearable pain, but it didn’t deter my
determination,” she says. “I am happy and proud of having been able to save
lives.”
Karuhimbi
is revered as a heroine in Musamo Village, Ruhango District, where she lives.
If there is anyone who does not know her or her home, it is those yet to be
born.
Her
bravery has also been recognised by government and, in 2006, President Paul
Kagame honoured Karuhimbi with Umurinzi, Rwanda’s Campaign against Genocide
Medal (CGM) for her courage and determination to stand against the Genocide.
The medal
is her pride, a token she goes to bed with every night.
In 2009,
a tree was planted in her honour in the Garden of the Righteous in Milan,
Italy. Karuhimbi was flown to Milan for the occasion.
Attempts
were also unsuccessfully made to have her nominated for the 2010 Nobel Peace
Prize.
Wallowing in poverty
Karuhimbi
never had a chance to attend formal education and her life has entirely relied
on small-scale agriculture. In her active years, she says, she used to sell
vegetables in Ruhango for sustenance.
But with
age, she has grown frail and can no longer farm, so she depends on
well-wishers, neighbours and relatives for survival.
Karuhimbi
spends most of her time indoor but fears the house she lives in might one day
collapse. When it rains heavily, the house leaks.
No comments:
Post a Comment