Africa-Press – Rwanda. The memory of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi cannot be preserved by official ceremonies alone. It must live in homes, in schools, in conversations, in communities, and increasingly, on the digital platforms where today’s battles over truth and falsehood are being fought.
This is why Rwanda’s youth must treat the defence of that memory not as an occasional duty, but as a primary responsibility.
Recent appearances by musicians and celebrity personalities at various memorial sites are a welcome gesture. Their presence matters. It signals solidarity, respect, and a willingness to stand with the country in remembrance. For young followers, especially, such acts can help make commemoration more visible and relatable.
But this should not be just another photo op; it should run profoundly.
Honouring the victims of the Genocide against the Tutsi cannot end with attending organised events, posting memorial photos, or making symbolic appearances once a year. The real test is what happens beyond the cameras and beyond the commemorative calendar. Memory is preserved through personal conviction before it is amplified through public action.
Young people, especially those with influence, must take this up at an individual level. They must seek to understand the history, visit memorials on their own, listen to survivors, engage in difficult conversations, and reject the temptation to treat remembrance as a seasonal obligation.
Similarly, the fight against genocide ideology and denial requires consistency, courage and moral clarity.
This is where celebrities, artists and public personalities carry an even greater burden. Many of them command huge followings, some extending far beyond Rwanda’s borders. Their words shape opinion. Their silence, too, speaks volumes. In a time when denial and distortion often spread through social media with alarming speed, those with louder voices cannot afford neutrality.
Their platforms should not only entertain; they should also defend truth. They should use their reach to call out genocide ideology, confront denial, and challenge attempts to revise history. That is not asking too much of public figures. It is asking them to stand on the right side of humanity.
The preservation of memory is a collective duty, but not all voices carry the same weight. Those with influence have a greater ability to educate, to mobilise and to protect the truth from those who seek to erase or corrupt it.
Rwanda’s youth are not just the custodians of the future. They are also the guardians of memory. And in that duty, especially for those blessed with public platforms, standing to be counted is not optional. It is necessary.
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