This week I learned two single important things - nothing is ever written in stone without exceptions and ... don't just stop at the Internet - USE books, dabble in the past! One of the best things we did this week was sit in a circle and debate, listen and take in each others point of views on the Genocide and exactly how we individually feel it - I felt that no one, no one wants to be bad, or do bad things. I think that the people, like Munyaneza, were taught wrong along the way - maybe someone simply whispered one line that wrote out their future and maybe this was his solid thought of right from the moment he could learn - birth. Yes, it is easy to argue the he knew what he was doing was wrong - how could you not, raping woman and killing children. But, I think that they saw it was justifiable and maybe even heroic to their culture. To see a classroom so heated, so pounding with the want to understand 'beliefs' and difference is almost time stopping. I walked out of that class room with my mind still running.
The genocide was something horrible, almost unimaginable but it taught us alot of things that we wouldn't have otherwise learned - from as big as a 'moral compass' to as small as learning how to use the library in our back yard. Both two very different sides of the Richter scale but both important.
Splitting up is normally a bad term used to explain when something doesn't mesh well together - like sally Joe and john in kinder garden or the marriage that just failed - but in our case it was something different, a new spice that we all loved. We had our first day of individual Aquinas classes and it was different was perfect - everything I imagined. Each teacher has something important to teach us in their own way over the next couple of months, and I can barely wait.
Britttttanyyy.
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