Umuganda and the Kigali Genocide Memorial
The day split into two halves. The morning was about community. The afternoon was about the dead. Both stayed with me.
Umuganda: Community Service Day
The last Saturday of every month, Rwanda observes umuganda. Mandatory community service. Businesses close, traffic stops, and the entire community comes out to work on a shared local project. This month, the task was clearing vegetation along the roadsides.
We joined in. About four hours of work alongside local residents, cutting back brush and overgrowth with machetes. Machetes are the standard tool here, and everyone, young and old, knows how to use one. For us it took some adjustment. The locals were surprised to see Western visitors out there with them, and there were curious looks and some laughter at our technique. The work got done regardless.
What struck me about umuganda wasn't the labor itself — it was how genuinely communal it was. This wasn't a handful of volunteers showing up for a scheduled event. It was the entire neighborhood, out in the road, doing the work together. After the physical work finished, everyone gathered for a town hall. Local issues raised, announcements made, people talking. It's what civic participation looks like when it's actually participatory.
Kigali Genocide Memorial
In the afternoon, we went to the Kigali Genocide Memorial at Gisozi. The largest memorial site in the country. The mass graves on these grounds hold approximately 250,000 victims from the Kigali region alone. A quarter of a million people, from one region, buried in one place. The number resists comprehension no matter how many times you say it.
The memorial grounds include a series of symbolic gardens, each representing a period in Rwanda's history. One for the pre-colonial era, when Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa lived together. One for the colonial period, when Belgian administrators deepened and systematized ethnic divisions that previously had been more fluid. One for the post-genocide period and the work of reconstruction. The gardens are quiet and well-maintained. They frame the context before you reach the graves.
Along one wall, the names of victims are inscribed. Row after row. You can stand at that wall and read for a long time without reaching the end. Stained glass panels nearby depict scenes from the genocide — the execution is precise and the subject matter does not turn away from itself.
The museum section walks through the history that led to 1994, the hundred days, and the aftermath. Comprehensive and unflinching. I have been studying this subject in academic settings for two years. Standing in the place where it happened, reading survivor testimonies on the walls, looking at photographs of the victims as they were before — that is a different thing entirely. The academic framework holds, but the distance it provides does not.
Some days don't resolve into anything tidy. You just carry what you saw.