Africa-Press – Rwanda. Thirty-two years after the Genocide against the Tutsi, Rwanda remains locked in a persistent struggle against denial, one increasingly waged through language itself. Today, words are not merely descriptive; they have become instruments used to distort the historical record and sow confusion about the 1994 genocide.
The terminology is not incidental. The correct and internationally recognized term is the genocide against the Tutsi. Yet denialists, perpetrators, and their apologists continue to promote the misleading phrase “Rwandan genocide.” This is not a matter of carelessness or semantics, it is a deliberate tactic.
By flattening the specificity of the crime, such language obscures intent, erases victims, and ultimately distorts responsibility. Referring to the genocide against the Tutsi as a generalized “Rwandan genocide” is not only inaccurate; it risks recasting victims and perpetrators into a false equivalence. For survivors, this is more than offensive—it is dangerous.
It is true that moderate Hutu were also killed during the genocide. But they were not the primary targets. They were murdered because they opposed the genocidal regime or refused to participate in the extermination campaign against the Tutsi. The central objective remained clear and systematic: the annihilation of the Tutsi population.
The genocide against the Tutsi was not a spontaneous eruption of violence. It was a meticulously planned and executed campaign. Years of ideological preparation laid the groundwork: Tutsi were dehumanized in propaganda, portrayed as “cockroaches” (inyenzi) and existential threats. Publications like Kangura and broadcasts from RTLM (Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines) normalized hatred and incited violence.
The machinery of genocide was steadily assembled. The definition of the “enemy” expanded to include all Tutsi civilians, as well as Hutu who opposed the regime. Militias such as the Interahamwe and Impuzamugambi were trained, armed, and organized. Weapons—including vast quantities of machetes—were imported and distributed. Lists of those to be killed were compiled well in advance.
As documented by Human Rights Watch, this was a calculated political project driven by a “Hutu Power” elite determined to retain control. Nothing about it was accidental.
That Rwanda is still forced, three decades later, to contest the very language used to describe the genocide is itself revealing. It underscores how denial is not an afterthought, but an extension of the original crime—a continuation of the attempt to erase truth and accountability.
Denial today often disguises itself as nuance, debate, or even sympathy. But when terminology is manipulated to obscure the identity of victims and the intent of perpetrators, it becomes a tool of revisionism. Such narratives should not be amplified or normalized.
As genocide scholar Gregory Stanton has argued, denial is the final stage of genocide. It seeks to complete what violence began: the erasure of a people from memory, history, and truth.
This is why the fight over words matters. It is not a semantic dispute—it is a defense of historical accuracy, justice, and dignity. In the face of denial, precision is not optional. It is a responsibility.
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