In Rwanda we say...
The family that does not speak dies

“The filmmaker's taste and restraint has resulted in two of the most remarkable documentaries you are likely to see this year.”
—The Connecticut Post

2005 Emmy Award Winner for its broadcast on Sundance Channel

synopsis

Since 1999, award-winning filmmaker Anne Aghion has traveled to rural Rwanda, to chart the impact of that country’s efforts at ethnic reconciliation. In Rwanda we say… The family that does not speak dies, her second film on the subject, continues Aghion’s quest to learn how the human spirit survives a trauma as unfathomable as the attempt, in 1994, to wipe out the Tutsi minority, with 800,000 lives claimed in 100 days. In Rwanda we say… is the next chapter in a fascinating and intimate look at how, and whether, people can overcome fear, hatred and deep emotional scars, to forge a common future after genocide.

Aghion’s influential 2002 film, Gacaca, Living Together Again in Rwanda? captured the feelings of both survivors and alleged killers in the remote community of Ntongwe, just as the government was announcing the Gacaca (ga-CHA-cha), a new system of citizen-based justice intended to handle over 100,000 genocide suspects languishing in detention. In Rwanda we say… returns two years later as close to 16,000 of these suspects, still untried, are released across the country: having confessed to their crimes, and served the maximum sentence the Gacaca will eventually impose, suspects of appalling crimes are sent home to plow fields and fetch water alongside the people they are accused of victimizing.

In Rwanda we say… focuses on the release of one suspect, and the effect of his return on this tiny hillside hamlet. While the government’s message of a “united Rwandan family” infiltrates the language of the community, reactions to this imposed co-existence reel from numb acceptance to repressed rage. Violence seems to lurk just below the surface. What unfolds, however, is an astonishing testament to the liberating power of speech: little by little, people begin to talk in a profound and articulate way – first to the camera, and then to each other -- as these neighbors negotiate the emotional task of accepting life side by side.

production credits

Director
Producers Laurent Bocahut
Anne Aghion
Editor Nadia Ben Rachid
Photography Claire Bailly du Bois
James Kakwerere
Sound Recordist Richard Fleming
Sound Editor Dolorès Jordi
Sound Mixer Yves Servagent
Production Manager Benoit Gryspeerdt
Translation / Interpretation Jean Pierre Sagahutu
Aubert Ruzigandekwe
Assumpta Mugiraneza
Pauline Ligtenberg-Mukabalisa
Jean Damascène Bizimana
Charles Rukikanshuro
Joseph Binego

A Production of: Gacaca Productions / Dominant 7 / in association with NDR/ARTE

Directed by: Anne Aghion

Produced by: Laurent Bocahut & Anne Aghion

The film was produced with support from:

• The Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation
• The Federal Service of Foreign Affairs of Belgium
• The Austrian Development Cooperation
The Sundance Documentary Fund, a program of the Sundance Institute
The United States Institute of Peace
• The Centre National de la Cinématographie (France)

Fiscal Sponsor: Film/Video Arts

Distributed by:

First Run Icarus Films
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with the support of:
New York State Council on the Arts Electronic Media and Film Program

Color – 54’ – In Kinyarwanda with English subtitles

© Gacaca Productions - Dominant 7 - NDR – 2004

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