Abstract

In Rwanda today it is considered poor manners to cry at funerals. Public grieving for the death of a single person is thought to minimize the grief people felt after the genocide when many people lost entire families. That genocide was eight years ago and to date little has been done to bring the perpetrators to justice. The newly established gacaca courts are meant to rectify this situation and assess the guilt or innocence of some of the tens of thousands of people now held in Rwandan jails.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2003

Publisher Statement

Copyright © 2003 Ethnopolitics. This article first appeared in The Global Review of Ethnopolitics 2:2 (2003), 65-66.

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