History has a way of speaking softly before it speaks loudly.
On the banks of the Seine in Paris, a new memorial now stands in honor of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. It was inaugurated by President Paul Kagame and President Emmanuel Macron, and for many survivors, it carried a weight words can barely hold.
It is not just stone and art. It is memory made visible.
It is for the mothers who never returned home, for the children whose voices were silenced, for the fathers, sisters, brothers, and neighbors whose lives were stolen in the shadow of hatred. And it is for the survivors, those who lived through the fire and have carried the burden of remembrance ever since.
In that moment, Paris did not only receive a memorial. It received a chapter of Rwanda’s history, a truth that must be remembered, and a promise that the victims will never be reduced to numbers alone.
This is what justice sometimes looks like after time: not silence, but remembrance. Not forgetting, but honoring. Not ending the story, but making sure the world never misreads it again.
#Kwibuka32 #NeverAgain
Uyu munsi tariki 18/04/ 2026 RYVCP ,RPF Task_ Force UR Nyagatare, RYVCP Nyagatare Sector, RDF,twazindukiye mu gikorwa cy'umuganda webereye mu Kagari ka nyagatare, ahahoze banki y'abaturage hafi no ku Kiyenzi.Nyuma hatanzwe ubutumwa butandukanye.
@ur_nyagatare3@NyagatareDistr