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Christianity and Genocide in Rwanda by T. Longman New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Pp. 350, $99.00 (hbk).

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Christianity and Genocide in Rwanda by T. Longman New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Pp. 350, $99.00 (hbk).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2011

BERT INGELAERE
Affiliation:
University of Antwerp
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Abstract

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

Pope John Paul II reacted to criticism of the Christian church and its alleged involvement in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda by stating that only individuals (thus Christians as well) were implicated in the genocide, but that the church as an institution was not to blame. In Christianity and Genocide in Rwanda Timothy Longman challenges this claim. He suggests that the churches and even Christianity bear an important responsibility for the Rwandan genocide. At least, Christian faith as it existed in Rwanda. The latter issue, a contextualisation of Christianity in Rwandan socio-political history, is paramount if one wants to grasp the nature of the involvement of Christianity in one of the most horrific events of the twentieth century.

Longman argues that the distinct nature of Christianity in Rwanda as it developed over time made genocide morally possible: ‘The Christian message received in Rwanda was not one of “love and fellowship”, but one of obedience, division, and power’ (p. 10). Moreover, his analysis of the process through which a significant part of the church leadership became actively involved in the genocidal violence parallels the dominant interpretations of the dynamics of the Rwandan genocide: the ethnic card was played to counter a threat to the status quo. Generally this argument is used to explain the reaction of the incumbent political elite to the challenge to its reign, but in the context of Christianity it refers to a threat to the dominant Christian message in Rwanda and the established order in the Church hierarchy.

Longman meticulously traces the origins of the Christian church in Rwanda from the first missionaries until the apocalyptic last days of the Second Republic in 1994. The first part of the book comprises five chapters through which the evolution of Christian churches in Rwanda is described and analysed in chronological order. The first two chapters in this section deal with Christianity and the colonial state. The missionary activity of the White Fathers was marked by the desire to foster a partnership with the state; church leaders did not side with the poor. Over time, the Christian churches actively helped to shape the nature of ethnic identities through their alliance with vested powers and the participation in (ethnic) politics. The church imbued ethnicity with racial connotations and the socio-political landscape was read through the prism of ethnic identities. The missionary work undertaken by the White Fathers laid the groundwork for the nature of Christianity in Rwanda. Significantly, Longman's analysis also implies that the most important chunk of Rwandan civil society was co-opted by the state from the start.

Chapters four to six deal with the developments of Christianity in the post-colonial era and especially with the period of democratisation starting in 1990. There were no major changes in the nature of Christianity in Rwanda after independence. In the end, it was the overall environment created by the churches since their arrival in Rwanda that made it possible that ‘practicing Christians could kill their neighbours without feeling that they were acting inconsistently with their faith’ (p. 191). Such a claim is almost shocking although Longman presents his argument convincingly. And it counters the claim made by several authors that massive participation of Christians in the genocide was a consequence of the fact that Christianity had not taken deep root in Rwandan society. But the puzzle of the Rwandan genocide is not only why the majority of ordinary (Christian) Rwandans could become involved in the genocide, but also why and how they actually were involved in the killing of their neighbours. To make sense of the actual behaviour by the mass of practicing Christians living on the hills of Rwanda one also needs an insight in the so-called ‘passage à l'acte’. To do so, Longman develops a second argument. He suggests that an undercurrent of dissent with the policy of (political) engagement with the powerful that the churches had pursued since their arrival could only come to maturity during the period of democratisation in the years preceding the genocide. The growing influence of diverging practices and visions within the church would eventually – and paradoxically – define the nature of the involvement of the established church structures and personnel in the genocidal violence: ‘the genocide helped to eradicate those other possibilities and to reassert churches as authoritarian institutions allied to an authoritarian state’ (p. 197).

An exploration of micro-level dynamics and motives is paramount to underscore the claim that the genocide was also used to bolster the positions of those with authority within the churches. In the second part of the book the focus changes therefore to micro-level developments in two Presbyterian parishes situated in rural Rwanda: Kirinda and Biguhu. Longman describes the different nature of the relations between the church, local elite and inhabitants in the parishes in the period preceding the genocide. The local elite of Kirinda was centred around the church in a ‘patron-client system parallel to and linked with the state patrimonial system’ (p. 200). During the genocide and in an attempt to reassert their recently challenged authority, they found enough support among the peasants to organise the massacre of the Tutsi. The genocidal violence in Biguhu, a nearby parish, had to be initiated from the outside. Longman connects this diverging conflict pathway with the fact that the church in Biguhu had fostered a cooperative connection with and within the general population devoid of any misuse of power and ethnic polarisation.

One of the absolute strengths of the book is the wealth of first-hand information presented. Longman is one of the few scholars in the exploding field of Rwanda studies able to pair research conducted in the post-genocide era with first-hand insight from before the genocide. He conducted his initial research on Christian churches in Rwanda in 1992–3. In the aftermath of the genocide, he was a researcher with Human Rights Watch and contributed to the most comprehensive study on the genocide to date: Leave None to Tell the Story. During this period he was able to follow up on the information he had collected before the genocide. First-hand observations, in-depth interviews and even rare material from communal archives make the evidence compelling.

Nevertheless, some issues deserve more attention. For example, Longman only briefly mentions the fact that members of the Abarokore religious movement resisted the genocide since they ‘were generally not integrated in the established structures of power’, and ‘arose as challenge to the structures of power’ of the Pentecostal church (p. 196). Together with the fact that Muslims are said to have participated much less in the genocide, this observation poses an important counterexample that could have been put to greater use to underscore the main thesis about the nature of the dominant Christian faith in Rwanda. Equally, the fact that in the end there was also genocide in Biguhu and that the genocide was not initiated by the church in either parish raises some questions with respect to the overall conclusion that churches are necessarily political institutions (p. 313); ultimately, it was the state and state personnel that initiated and drove the genocide through these parishes and the entire Rwandan society. Although it is clear that churches should indeed be considered as centres of power, Longman's analysis lacks an adequate explanation of the differences observed between church and state (actors) during the genocide.

These minor remaining questions do not render the book weaker. They could be considered as further avenues for research. The layered analysis means that the work can be read with different objectives in mind and by a wide and diverse audience. The main story of the nature of Christianity is embedded in the political and social developments in Rwanda, at both the national and the local level. Such a combination of perspectives is hard to find in the works on both Rwanda and the phenomenon of genocide as such. Christianity and Genocide is a necessary piece of the puzzle for those interested in a range of topics: Rwandan history (and the genocide), genocide, Christianity and religion, civil society and wider socio-political developments in Central Africa.