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Home > 2006 > AprilChristianity Today, April, 2006  |   |  
Appreciate Our Efforts
Don't patronize or belittle Rwandan Christians committed to progress.



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As a development professional and human rights advocate with 21 years of field experience, I would like to challenge the thinking of Andrew Paquin expressed in "Politically Driven Injustice: Fixing global poverty requires more than Rick Warren's PEACE plan".



Certainly, the author's concern for global poverty is genuine and one that faithful Christians share. However, the church in Rwanda does not agree with his attitude. While he seems to be concerned with the suffering of African countries and Rwanda particularly, I find that his condescending attitude (with the insinuation that these countries are beyond redemption) is patronizing, to say the least.

He portrays the typical attitude of the West that Africans do not have the skills necessary to address their own problems. History proves the opposite. When the Western powers and the U.N. forsook Rwanda during the 1994 genocide that claimed at least one million human lives, Rwandans themselves halted the carnage. Rwandans have since embarked on the road to national healing, reconciliation, and reconstruction. To date, Rwanda is the most secure country in the Great Lakes/Horn of Africa region.

Only eight years after the holocaust, the 2002 report of the World Bank ranked Rwanda as one of Africa's leading lights for good governance. In addition, another World Bank report ("Doing Business in 2006") hailed Rwanda's economic progress.

The World Bank commended Rwanda for its rapid business-reform regulations, especially in credit, trade, and contracts. "Africa is largely still slumbering in efforts to open up its economy, with the exception of Rwanda," the report said. Efforts by Rwandans to boost their economy have resulted in a dramatic, sustained growth rate and investor confidence.

It is not armchair development experts who will make a difference in the developing world. Development is liberation, and sustainable liberation comes from within. The people themselves are the experts for their development. Others can only facilitate.

The Rwandan church and the whole of Rwanda welcome the PEACE plan and Saddleback Church's Rick Warren. Pastor Warren has been here, has seen us, and has listened to us. He and his team do not bring an "in-a-box" blueprint for development. The PEACE plan conforms to the vision and development priorities that Rwandans have set forth already. Development is measured by the capacity of people to impact their lives with positive change.

Malicious Campaign

It is also our duty to inform American Christians that there has been a malicious campaign to demonize Rwanda's leaders, distorting the political situation. This distortion emanates from people often hiding behind so-called humanitarian organizations. Some have a hidden agenda of distracting the international community so that their own role in Rwanda's tragedy cannot be exposed.

When Rwandan troops decided to pursue the genocidal forces and their sponsors in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in 1996 and 1998, they did so in the light of day. The peace we enjoy today in our country is mainly a consequence of that action. When our troops pulled out of DRC in 2002, it was under the intense gaze of international observers and media. So accusing Rwandan troops today of continuing "to occupy parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo" is simply mind-boggling.

By the grace of God, facts and actions speak for themselves in Rwanda, and no amount of fabrication and misrepresentation will derail us from the course we have embarked on to build a nation fit for all Rwandans. Andrew Paquin and others with similar views would be better served if they came and saw for themselves the transformation that is taking place. In Rwanda, the church of Jesus Christ plays her role in holistic recovery. The church runs most of the schools, thus promoting education for Rwandan youth. Likewise, health care services, poverty alleviation programs, as well as many other initiatives of public interest bless communities through the actions of churches and the government.





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