On April 6, 1994, all hell broke loose in RWANDA, signaling the commencement of the pre-planned genocide of the Tutsi. That same September, 1994, with the help of the French Catholic Church, 37 year old “Father” Wencheslas Munyeshyaka escaped from Rwanda, having desecrated Sainte-Famille parish in Kigali where he would invite his parishioners to meet their death, under his supervision. (more…)
Posts Tagged ‘Vatican’
Munyeshyaka is a mass murderer in Rwanda and priest in France
Posted: March 17, 2011 in Evidence MaterialTags: Catholic Church, France, French, genocide, Humanity, Hutu, Munyeshaka, murderer, Priest, Shalita, Tutsi, Vatican
Rwanda’s Laity Isn’t Forgetting
Posted: February 1, 2011 in Genocide DenialTags: Benedictin Nuns, Catholic Church, genocide, Gertrude Mukangango, God, Hutu, Italy, LA times, Mass grave, Militia, Mukabutera, Netherlands, Nyange, Priests, Rwanda, Safe, Tutsi, United States, Vatican
During the 1994 massacres, not even churches were safe. Clergy are among the charged, and the nation is in a spiritual crisis.
September 30, 2003|Solomon Moore | LATimes Staff Writer (more…)
ALLEGED SEER FROM APPROVED APPARITION SAYS NATURAL DISASTERS, GENOCIDE WERE FORESEEN
Posted: January 13, 2011 in Genocide DenialTags: Apparition, Blessed Mother, Church, Church-approved apparition, Destructive, Evil, genocide, God, harrowing, Heaven, Holy spirit, Jesus, Kibeho, May, ordeal, original, overseer, Rwanda, Tears, Valentine, Vatican, Virgin Mary, visionary
One of the alleged seers from the Church-approved apparition site of Kibeho in Rwanda claims she was told by "Jesus" that floods, quakes, and disruptive weather would be signs of a major looming event. (more…)
Genocide Denial with a Vengeance: Old and New Imperial Norms
Posted: December 16, 2010 in UncategorizedTags: Armenian Genocide, Holocaust Denial, Hutu, Interahamwe, Noam Chomsky, Rwanda, Tutsi Genocide, United Nations, United States of America, Vatican
By Noam Chomsky
Perhaps the most shattering lesson from this powerful inquiry is that the end of the Cold War opened the way to an era of virtual Holocaust denial. (more…)
Genocide and reconciliation in Rwanda: From complicity to credibility
Posted: October 29, 2010 in Evidence MaterialTags: Armenian Genocide, Catholic Church, France, Genocide Denial, Holocaust, Holocaust Denial, Hutu, Interahamwe, Tutsi, Tutsi Genocide, Vatican
By: Stephen D. Lowe, Associate Dean and Professor, Erskine Theological Seminary
Introduction
The world stood by and did nothing for one hundred days from April to July 1994. At that time Rwanda was one of the poorest countries in the world on a par with my wife’s adopted homeland of Haiti. (more…)
IGNORING GENOCIDE
Posted: October 29, 2010 in Genocide DenialTags: Armenian Genocide, Bagosora, Belgium, France, genocide, Genocide 1994, Genocide Denial, Holocaust Denial, Human Rights Watch, Hutu, Interahamwe, Rwanda, Tutsi, Tutsi Genocide, United Nations, Vatican
During the early weeks of slaughter international leaders did not use the word “genocide,” as if avoiding the term could eliminate the obligation to confront the crime. (more…)
Will the Vatican Ever Accept That Genocide Is Also a Crime?
Posted: August 3, 2010 in Genocide DenialTags: Benedict, Catholic Church, Christianity, genocide, Hans Kung, Holocaust, Pope, Rwanda, Tom Ndahiro, Tutsi, Vatican
By Tom Ndahiro
In the Vatican the three letter word “sex” makes the City’s insiders shudder. Pope Benedict XVI’s legacy is endangered as the scandal is sucking him in.
His role in the “mismanagement” of sex abuse cases in the 1980s – as the archbishop of Munich, and as head of the Vatican’s disciplinary Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – has put him in a weaker position. (more…)
Genocide Culpability Deserves Pope Benedict XVI’s Apology – At a Minimum
Posted: August 3, 2010 in Genocide DenialTags: Catholic Church, genocide, Genocide Denial, Holocaust, Pope, Pope Benedict XVI, Rwanda, Rwanda Genocide, Tom Ndahiro, Tutsi, Tutsi Genocide, Vatican
By Tom Ndahiro
On Monday 29, March 2010 the Guardian published Martin Kimani’s article with a title: “For Rwandans, the pope’s apology must be unbearable: If sexual abuse in Ireland warrants his contrition, what contempt is shown by the Vatican’s silence over its role in genocide”.
Martin appropriately said: “This turning away from the Rwandan victims of genocide comes at a time when the Catholic Church is increasingly peopled by black and brown believers. It is difficult not to conclude the church’s upper reaches are desperately holding on to a fast-vanishing racial patrimony. Perhaps it is time Catholics forced the leaders of their church to deal with a history of institutional racism that endures, if the church is truly to live up to its fine words. Apologies are not sufficient, no matter how abject. What is demanded is an acknowledgment of the church’s political power and moral culpability, with all the material and legal implications that come with it.” (more…)