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Genocide Of The Rwandan Genocide

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Genocide Research Paper Project- Rwanda
INTRODUCTION
Twenty years ago in the small east African country of Rwanda, eight hundred thousand people, mostly those of the Tutsi tribe, were slaughtered by their own government. The Hutu and the Tutsi tribes followed the same traditions and inhabited the same territory for over a thousand years. The rise of conflict between the Tutsi and the Hutu dates back to 1918, when the Germans lost their colonies following World War I, and the Belgians took control of Rwanda. In 1933, the Belgians establish the superiority of the "Tutsi" over the "Hutu" which lead to a great divide between these two groups (Admin of PBS.org). When the Belgians handed over power to the Hutu majority, a deep resentment of …show more content…

The Tutsis were generally wealthier, but not all Hutus were poor. In Rwanda and many other areas, the moderate Tutsis ruled the Hutus, and social standards set the people of these particular groups apart from each other. For instance, “if you were close to the king, you owned wealth, you owned a lot of cattle, you are a Tutsi. If you are far away from the king, you are a cultivator, you don’t own much cattle, you are a Hutu” (Admin of PBS.org). This shows how the two groups were separated: by the individual’s wealth and social status in society. They were different groups but they still lived peacefully together. There were social differences, but not deeply imbedded ethnic differences. To further cement the differences between the Hutus and the Tutsis, the Belgians did not permit the Hutus to attend school, own land, or hold government posts. When Belgium took control of Rwanda and Burundi in 1933, the people of Rwanda were forced to carry identity cards that clarified if the individual was a Hutu or Tutsi (Choe 8), which just separated the two groups even more. The Belgians treated the Tutsis better as a psychological tactic to keep the two groups separate; this was beneficial because it strengthened the Belgians’ power, as divided people do not propose as much of a threat. When the Belgians removed themselves from Rwanda, they left the Hutus with a deep hatred of the Tutsis. Conflicts between these

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