Being in the situation of Immaculee is very
exasperating! It’s the worst nightmare that can come to life. Hearing the
voices of the extremists walking thru the streets looking for Tutsis to kill
and calling them names is very traumatizing. It’s sad that people just go based
on people’s skin color and they don’t really try to find out the special
qualities of that person. Like in chapter 7 when Immaculee’s father goes
searching for help because his Tutsi neighbor are scared and they go to his
house so he can get protection and when he brings the two soldiers back to
protect them, they end up being the extremist. It is very sad when go looking
for help to someone that is supposed to protect you and ends up harming you is
just wrong. This is something that’s actually happens in real life like in
Mexico, there are a lot police officers that are corrupt and they just stop you
to get money out of you or won’t protect you because they are being paid from
someone like in the mafia to go away and leave the area unsecure. A part the
really broke my heart was when the Hutu burned down Immaculee’s parent’s house.
Watching your home burn down in minutes, the place where you created all your
beautiful memories and saw your kids grow up to become adults and always trying
to make it bigger and ready for you grandchildren is just sad. It’s crazy how Pastor Murinzi was able to
keep 7 women inside a restroom for days and kept them in silence, but that’s
something’s people have to go thru to
survive. At the beginning I thought the same way as Immaculee that Pastor
Murinzi was going to end up keeping the girls and harm them but I was wrong and
he protected them. These are horrible things that people go thru in different
countries and it’s very hard to stop it because people are being badly
influence. Hopefully one day we can all find peace and stop discrimination.
Even painless research is fascism, supremacism, because the act of confinement is traumatizing it itself. See the link below for more info.
ReplyDelete#traumatizing
www.ufgop.org