Rwanda Lifts Moratorium on Teaching History; Featured on NPR
There has been a moratorium on teaching history in
Rwanda since 1994, when 75% of Rwanda's teachers were murdered during
the genocide or imprisoned shortly thereafter. When people began to
examine the roots of the genocide, it became clear that history
education, as a source of propaganda, had played a large role.
Today, schools are recognized by the post-genocide
Rwandan government as having the capacity to build unity and promote
reconciliation, by fostering collective memory, encouraging
cross-ethnic affiliation, and the reshaping of social identity. In
2003, Facing History and Ourselves began a partnership with UC
Berkeley's School of Education and Human Rights Center, the National
University of Rwanda, and the Rwandan Ministry of Education's
"Education for Reconciliation" project-providing consultation and
training to assist Rwandan educators as they created a new,
post-genocide history curriculum for the country. This project was
funded by the United States Institute of Peace and the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Three individuals involved in the project - John
Rutayisire of the Rwanda National Examinations Council; Innocent
Mugisha, a teacher trainer at the National University of Rwanda and
Karen Murphy, Facing History's Director of International Programs -
were recently featured on "All Things Considered," a show on National
Public Radio (August 20, 2006).
Visit NPR.com to listen to the segment, Rwanda May Lift Ban on Teaching Its Sensitive History
Creating a History Curriculum after Genocide in Rwanda
by Sarah Warshauer Freedman
Pages 12-16
Connected
The magazine of UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Education
Winter 2006 * Volume 1 * Number 1

