1 / 13

The Roots of genocide

The Roots of genocide. Race, Ethnicity, and Power in Rwandan Colonial History. who’s hutu ? Who’s tutsi ? And Why does anyone care?. Race in rwanda. Three major groups Hutu (now 85% of population) Tutsi (14%) Twa (1%)

sana
Download Presentation

The Roots of genocide

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Roots of genocide Race, Ethnicity, and Power in Rwandan Colonial History

  2. who’s hutu? Who’s tutsi? And Why does anyone care?

  3. Race in rwanda • Three major groups • Hutu (now 85% of population) • Tutsi (14%) • Twa (1%) • Hard to tell how the groups originated, because early Rwandan history was preserved orally • Big question: Are Hutu and Tutsi genetically different, or is their difference socially constructed?

  4. Rwanda before imperialism • First populated by Twa(traditionally forest people) • Hutu and Tutsi pushed out Twa people • Hutu and Tutsi mixed extensively and developed a shared language (Kinyarwanda) and religion • Hutu were farmers • Tutsi were cattle herders – a much more profitable occupation • Tutsi gradually became a social elite

  5. Rwandan government before imperialism • Established a monarchy by the 18th century • Most (but not all!) government officials were cattle-owners, or Tutsis • People generally married within their social class (cattle-owners or farmers) • Consequently, physical distinctions between groups emerged

  6. Race, ethnicity, and imperialism

  7. Europeans in Rwanda: a brief timeline • 1899 – Germany colonizes Rwanda • 1919 – Germany loses WWI; Belgium takes over in Rwanda • 1950s – increasing waves of decolonization around the world; unrest in Rwanda • 1959-1961 – Hutu revolution against Tutsis and Belgians • 1962 – Rwanda becomes independent

  8. The hamitic theory • Developed by John Hanning Speke, a British explorer • Published 1863 • Described Africans as belonging to two races: • Hamitic – more “civilized” and originating in Ethiopia (and looking more like Caucasians) • Negroid – more “barbaric” and originating in Central Africa Social Darwinism!

  9. How did the Belgians rule Rwanda? • Believed in the Hamitic theory • 1920s: changes in government • Required all government officials to be Tutsi • More power to central authorities • 1933-34: issued identity cards listing a person’s race • Taught Tutsi superiority and racial differences • Effects: • Limited opportunities for Hutu  resentment • Sense of superiority among Tutsi • Reinforced idea that races were different

  10. Differences in characteristics Hutu Tutsi

  11. The end of empire • 1945: Belgium starts preparing for Rwandan independence • Gradual attempts to include Hutu in public life • Hutu start organizing opposition to Belgian rule and Tutsi supremacy • 1957: Hutu Manifesto – published by Hutu activists • Describes Tutsi as “foreign invaders” • Calls for majority rule in Rwanda

  12. The hutu revolution • PARMEHUTU (Party of the Hutu Emancipation Movement) founded 1957 – all-Hutu political party • November 1959: violence between Tutsi and Hutu political activists • 1960 and 1961: PARMEHUTU wins local elections • Belgium actively encourages Hutu violence against Tutsis • 1962: Rwanda achieves independence • Nearly 20,000 Tutsi killed and 160,000 made refugees

  13. The republic of rwanda • 1962-1973: PARMEHUTU rules Rwanda; systematic violence against Tutsis • 1973: General Juvenal Habyarimana stages a coup and makes himself president • Passed stronger laws against Tutsis • 1990-1993: Rwandan Civil War • Rwandan Patriotic Front – primarily Tutsi exiles • Led to backlash against Tutsis in Rwanda • April 6, 1994: Habyarimana killed in a plane crash

More Related