We Can Help Survivors of the Rwanda Massacre
Raped, widowed, and infected with the HIV/AIDS virus, these hardworking
victims of the Rwanda genocide long for a chance to support themselves and the
125 children they care for. With your help we can make it happen.
I recently had the privilege of visiting
for the second time the beautiful and fertile
country of Rwanda. On both occasions, I
stopped to see the Genocide Museum in Kigali,
where the heart-wrenching story of the brutal
genocide of 1994 is told. Buried in a mass grave
are more than 250,000 Rwandans massacred
during those terrible days.
During the 100-day massacre, more
than a million men, women, and children were
slain. Tens of thousands of women were left
widowed. Hundreds of thousands of children
were ophaned. Thousands of women were
infected with the HIV/AIDS virus—many of
them deliberately.
Today, Rwandans are working to recover from
that dark time in their history, to rebuild their
nation, and to bring about reconciliation between victims and perpetrators of the genocide.
Christians have been at the forefront of these efforts. While in Kilgali in January, I met with
Tracy Stone, Director of Rwanda Partners, a U.S.
based organization working to bring help and
healing to the nation.
One very worthy project is the Wirira Widows
Farm, comprised of 56 widows—most of whom
were raped during the genocide, leaving 34 of
them with HIV/AIDS. They have come together
to provide a support system and to help one
another to rise up out of the terrible poverty
they face. They care for a total of 125 children—
their own and the orphans they have taken in.
The women live in Bugesera—a region where
people suffer from rampant malnutrition. Working with Rwanda Partners since 2006, they have
formed a cooperative with a steering committee
to oversee their activities.
They have saved money and organized them-
selves into four small groups according to their
skills. Rwanda Partners provides training in
project management, accounting, and in dealing
with tax requirements.
Rwanda Partners has purchased five acres of land
for them to cultivate in Nyamata, where most of
the widows live. The project will have two
components: egg and corn production.
There is a great demand for eggs and ground
corn flour in the local markets of Bugesera as
well as in the capital city of Kigali. The farm
should produce 300 eggs a day. Besides supplying the widows and their children with much-needed nutrition, the surplus will be sold in the
local markets.
To provide additional help, Rwanda Partners has
financed a corn grinder machine and a shop for
the Wirira widows to sell the corn flour they
produce. In the first four months of production,
they expect to sell 3.5 tons of corn flour.
Tracy Stone says that in their five years of work
in Rwanda they have not met a more wounded
or more deserving group of people than the
women of Wirira, who have worked hard to
overcome so much and shown tremendous
growth in their lives over the past three years.
Charis International, with your help, seeks to
provide the additional funds Rwanda Partners needs to complete the Farm Project, so that
these widows can support themselves and the
125 children they care for.
Can you help with a gift that will make an big
difference in the lives of these needy ones?
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Alec D. Brooks
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