Mass Conversions to Islam in Rawanda

Jihad Is Taught as 'Struggle to Heal'

By Emily Wax 

RUHENGERI, Rwanda -- The villagers with their forest green head wraps and 
forest green Korans arrived at the mosque on a rainy Sunday afternoon for a 
lecture for new converts. There was one main topic: jihad. 

They found their seats and flipped to the right page. Hands flew in the air. 
People read passages aloud. And the word jihad -- holy struggle -- echoed again 
and again through the dark, leaky room. 
 
April 6, 1994, the first day of the state-sponsored genocide in which ethnic 
Hutu extremists killed 800,000 minority Tutsis and Hutu moderates. 

"We have our own jihad, and that is our war against ignorance between Hutu and 
Tutsi. It is our struggle to heal," said Saleh Habimana, the head mufti of 
Rwanda. "Our jihad is to start respecting each other and living as Rwandans and 
as Muslims." 

Since the genocide, Rwandans have converted to Islam in huge numbers. Muslims 
now make up 14 percent of the 8.2 million people here in Africa's most Catholic 
nation, twice as many as before the killings began. 

Many converts say they chose Islam because of the role that some Catholic and 
Protestant leaders played in the genocide. Human rights groups have documented 
several incidents in which Christian clerics allowed Tutsis to seek refuge in 
churches, then surrendered them to Hutu death squads, as well as instances of 
Hutu priests and ministers encouraging their congregations to kill Tutsis. 
Today some churches serve as memorials to the many people slaughtered among 
their pews. 

Four clergymen are facing genocide charges at the U.N.-created International 
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, and last year in Belgium, the former colonial 
power, two Rwandan nuns were convicted of murder for their roles in the 
massacre of 7,000 Tutsis who sought protection at a Benedictine convent. 

In contrast, many Muslim leaders and families are being honored for protecting 
and hiding those who were fleeing. 
 
"I know people in America think Muslims are terrorists, but for Rwandans they 
were our freedom fighters during the genocide," said Jean Pierre Sagahutu, 37, 
a Tutsi who converted to Islam from Catholicism after his father and nine other 
members of his family were slaughtered. "I wanted to hide in a church, but that 
was the worst place to go. Instead, a Muslim family took me. They saved my 
life." 

Sagahutu said his father had worked at a hospital where he was friendly with a 
Muslim family. They took Sagahutu in, even though they were Hutus. "I watched 
them pray five times a day. I ate with them and I saw how they lived," he said. 
"When they pray, Hutu and Tutsi are in the same mosque. There is no difference. 
I needed to see that." 

Islam has long been a religion of the downtrodden. In the Middle East and South 
Asia, the religion has had a strong focus on outreach to the poor and tackling 
social ills by banning alcohol and encouraging sexual modesty. In the United 
States, Malcolm X used a form of Islam to encourage economic and racial 
empowerment among blacks. 

Muslim leaders say they have a natural constituency in Rwanda, where AIDS and 
poverty have replaced genocide as the most daunting problems. "Islam fits into 
the fabric of our society. It helps those who are in poverty. It preaches 
against behaviors that create AIDS. It offers education in the Koran and Arabic 
when there is not a lot of education being offered," said Habimana, the chief 
mufti. "I think people can relate to Islam. They are converting as a sign of 
appreciation to the Muslim community who sheltered them during the genocide." 

While Western governments worry that the growth of Islam carries with it the 
danger of militancy, there are few signs of militant Islam in Rwanda. 
Nevertheless, some government officials quietly express concern that some of 
the mosques receive funding from Saudi Arabia. They also worry that high 
poverty rates and a traumatized population make Rwanda the perfect breeding 
ground for Islamic extremism. 

But Nish Imiyimana, an imam here in Ruhengeri, about 45 miles northwest of 
Kigali, the capital, contends: "We have enough of our own problems. We don't 
want a bomb dropped on us by America. We want American NGOs [nongovernmental 
organizations] to come and build us hospitals instead." 

"The Catholic church has a problem after genocide," said the Rev. Jean Bosco 
Ntagugire, who works at Kigali churches. "The trust has been broken. We can't 
say, 'Christians come back.' We have to hope that happens when faith builds 
again." 

To help make that happen, the Catholic church has started to offer youth sports 
programs and camping trips, Ntagugire said. But Muslims are also reaching out, 
even forming women's groups that provide classes on child care and being a 
mother. 

At a recent class here, hundreds of women dressed in red, orange and purple 
head coverings gathered in a dark clay building. They talked about their 
personal struggle, or jihad, to raise their children well. And afterward, 
during a lunch of beans and chicken legs, they ate heartily and shared stories 
about how Muslims saved them during the genocide. 

"If it weren't for the Muslims, my whole family would be dead," said Aisha 
Uwimbabazi, 27, a convert and mother of two children. "I was very, very 
thankful for Muslim people during the genocide. I thought about it and I really 
felt it was right to change."

source: New Trend News

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