Date: 2006
Director: Peter
LeDonne
Summary: In April
of 1994, the president of Rwanda died when his plane was shot down in
Kigali. His tiny country – already suffering
from built-up political and ethnic tension – immediately descended into civil
war characterized by the genocide of 800,000 people. In the small second bathroom of a sympathetic
pastor, eight women hid for three months.
One of those women, twenty-four-year old Immaculée Ilibagiza, knew that many of her friends and most
of her family were dying. But she fought
to hold on to her faith in God and in her own future, and lived to share her
story with those who were willing to listen.
Review: Immaculée’s story is a powerful
one. While the violence of the genocide is horrifying, the world’s response to it sobering, and the young woman’s survival
nothing short of miraculous, the most remarkable part of this tale is the faith
Immaculée held on
to as the world fell apart around her. In
the midst of fear and anger, she was heroically steadfast in her trust in God’s
protection and eventually found the forgiveness she knew she would need to have
a chance at peace after the violence.
The Diary of Immaculée
is not the only medium Immaculée
Ilibagiza has used to tell the story of the Rwandan genocide. She – with the help of author Steve Erwin –
has also written the 2006 memoir Left to
Tell: Discovering God Amidst the Rwandan Holocaust. And, in this reviewer’s opinion, you should
read the book first.
The book tells the narrative of the Rwandan genocide in a
way that can make sense to a reader who has no knowledge of that history, and
it tells the narrative of Immaculée’s
part in that story. It describes her
family and her friends and traces her spiritual struggle and growth as she fights to survive not just physically, but also emotionally and spiritually,
as the violence escalates in the world outside her bathroom. The film – a short 38-minute documentary – is
a good companion to the book. It shows
the beautiful landscape of Rwanda, offers photographs of and interviews with the
people described in the book, and traces Immaculée’s footsteps as she goes home to visit the sites of
fond memories and nightmares. But is
does not have the same depth as the book, especially in terms of Immaculée’s spiritual journey, and
the information conveyed is sometimes out of order and a little difficult to
follow. The film is powerful in its own
right – because the images are moving and Immaculée’s voice makes her story more personal – but it is
a film that is much more meaningful with its book companion than without it.
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