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BRINGING HISTORY BACK IN: PAST, PRESENT, AND CONFLICT IN RWANDA AND THE EASTERN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2017

GILLIAN MATHYS*
Affiliation:
Radboud University

Abstract

This article argues that on the borderland between eastern DRC and Rwanda, the past and its representations have been constantly manipulated. The cataclysmic events in both Rwanda and Congo since the 1990s have widened the gap between partial and politicized historical discourse and careful historical analysis. The failure to pay attention to the multiple layers in the production of historical narratives risks reproducing a politicized social present that ‘naturalizes’ differences and antagonisms between different groups by giving them more time-depth. This is a danger both for insiders and outsiders looking in. The answer is to focus on the historical trajectories that shape historical narratives, and to ‘bring history back in’.

Type
Reimagining and Contesting the Past
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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Footnotes

*

I would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their crucial comments on an earlier draft of this article. This article benefited tremendously from the comments and insights provided by Judith Verweijen and David Newbury. It would have been impossible to write this without the help of several Congolese and Rwandan researchers, and without the patience of many Congolese and Rwandans who were so kind to sit down and share their histories with me. Author's email: gillian.mathys@ugent.be

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27 Both in interviews and during informal conversations I had in Rwanda between 2009 and 2013.

28 P. Butamire, ‘While the DRC burns, the West plays roulette’, The New Times (Rwanda), 8 June 2012. References in daily speech, and this article were produced in the context of a discussion of the ‘crisis’ in Congo that was a result of the war with M23 (see below), (http://www.newtimes.co.rw/news/index.php?i=15017&a=54575). A more recent example is E. Kabanda, ‘The next rebel leader in eastern Congo will be less astute and more brutal’, The East African, 1 Dec. 2016, (http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/Next-rebel-leader-in-eastern-Congo-less-astute-and-more-brutal/2558-3471376-item-1-nf4vw5z/index.html). The East African is a Kenyan-based newspaper, but Emma Kabanda is based in Kigali and used to write for the New Times.

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30 Ibid . 220n9.

31 At the end of October and beginning of November 1996: Reyntjens, Great, 56.

32 Newbury, ‘Irredentist’; Lemarchand, Dynamics, 64.

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37 Newbury, ‘Irredentist’; Vansina, Antecedents; G. Mathys, ‘People’.

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40 Collection Derscheid, ‘Notes sur les faits et gestes de Rwabugiri au Kinyaga, d'après Birasenyeri témoin oculaire et compagnon assidu du roi guerrier’, Par le RP Delmas des Pères Blancs, Nyamasheke, 1 Nov. 1929.

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48 Special Correspondent the East African, ‘Former RDF boss Rusagara arrested over “link” to exiled opposition’, The East African, 20 Aug. 2014, (http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/rwanda/News/Former-RDF-boss-Rusagara-arrested-over-link-to-exiled-opposition/1433218-2425662-l5aust/index.html). For a detailed analysis of Rusagara's ‘Rwandancity’, see Newbury, D., ‘Canonical conventions in Rwanda: four myths of recent historiography in Central Africa’, History in Africa, 39 (2012), 61CrossRefGoogle Scholar and passim.

49 Sundberg, M., Training for Model Citizenship: An Ethnography of Civic Education and State-Making in Rwanda (New York, 2016), 66 Google Scholar. For a thorough discussion and critique of itorero, see Purdekova, A., ‘Civic education and social transformation in post-genocide Rwanda: forging the perfect development subjects’, in Campioni, M. (ed.), Rwanda Fast Forward. Social, Economic, Military and Reconciliation Prospects (London, 2012), 192209 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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51 See Pan Butamire's quote above.

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57 Jackson, ‘Of “doubtful”’, 486; Malengana, Nationalité, 100.

59 Nzongola-Ntalaja, ‘The politics’.

60 Jackson, ‘Of “doubtful”’, 487.

61 The ‘first group’ of Kinyarwanda-speakers, those already settled in North Kivu long before the colonial period have their own chefferie, the Bwisha chefferie (Rutshuru Territory), and have ‘customary’ Hutu chiefs at lower levels of administration. Kinyarwanda-speakers not having legal access to land and ‘customary’ authority on the local level is mainly a problem in Masisi (North Kivu) where Kinyarwanda-speakers are the majority but do not have ‘customary’ representation.

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67 Governor Schmidt supposes Kajiga is Tutsi; see AAB GG/5915, Letter from the province. According to Murairi Mutima though, Kajiga was Hutu. See Murairi Mitima, J.-B., Les Bahunde aux pieds des volcans Virunga (Paris, 2005), 51 Google Scholar.

68 Ceuppens and Geschiere, ‘Autochthony’, 387–9.

69 The Goma Peace Conference was held in Goma in January 2008 and reunited over twenty armed groups in negotiations with the government.

70 Mwenebatu Assanda Joseph, ‘Déclaration des Mai-Mai de Fizi à la conférence sur la paix, la sécurité et le développement dans les provinces du Nord-Kivu et Sud-Kivu Tenue à Goma en Janvier 2008’, emphasis added. Thanks to Judith Verweijen for this document. The palata was the sign the chefs médaillés carried. For a very short time, Banyamulenge had a ‘customary’ organisation. See Vlassenroot, K., South Kivu: Identity, Territory, and Power in the Eastern Congo (London, 2013), 1314 Google Scholar.

71 It is possible that Banyabwisha – in analogy with Banyamulenge – was chosen to stress differences with groups of Kinyarwanda-speakers who arrived later. On the genesis of the term Banyamulenge, see Lemarchand, ‘Exclusion’, 10–11.

72 See, for example, Mpisi, J., Le Kivu pour la paix!: Les actes de la conférence de Goma (janvier 2008) (Paris, 2008), 31 Google Scholar.

73 Muhindo, L. K., Après les Banyamulenge, voici les Banyabwisha aux Kivu (Kinshasa, 1999)Google Scholar. A similar vision is present in Mahano, M. G., Existe-t-il des rwandais congolais? (Kinshasa, 2001), 4650 Google Scholar.

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78 See also, interview with Bernard, Monigi, 26 Feb. 2011; Interview with Jean-Bosco, Bulengo, 4 Sept. 2011. Referenced in Murairi Mitima, Les Bahunde, 93–4. I was told the name of the song is lwimbo lwa malira (the song of tears). Malira signifies ‘tears’ or ‘crying’, and is given as a name to newborns after the death of an important person. See Mitima, Murairi, Parlons Kihunde (Paris, 2008), 105 Google Scholar.

79 I recorded the song on 8 Oct. 2011. A copy of this recording was given to those who performed it.

80 The fact that the ‘tree’ and the ‘head’ are associated in historical memory does not necessarily mean that they have the same origin. The link between the tree and the story about the head could be iconatrophic, or could have been made later.

81 Group discussion, Bweremana, 8 Oct. 2011.

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83 Personal communication with David Newbury.

84 For the most complete overview, see UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 1993–2003, Report of the Mapping Exercise (Aug. 2010).

85 Group discussion, 7 Oct. 2011, Bweremana.

86 In North and South Kivu. See also, International Alert, Les mots qui tuent: rumeurs, préjugés, stéréotypes et mythes parmi les peuples des pays des Grands Lacs d'Afrique (International Alert: 2007).

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93 Jackson, ‘Of “doubtful”’; Lemarchand, Dynamics, 213–14.

94 Jackson, ‘Of “doubtful”’, 486.

95 David Newbury dates their arrival to the late eighteenth century; see Newbury, ‘Irredentism’, 216; Verweijen, J. and Vlassenroot, K., ‘Armed mobilisation and the nexus of territory, identity, and authority: the contested territorial aspirations of the Banyamulenge in the Eastern DR Congo’, Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 33:2 (2015), 8 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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97 Stearns, Dancing, 58–9.

98 Verweijen and Vlassenroot, ‘Armed’, 9.

99 See Stearns, Dancing; more details in Mathieu, P. and Willame, J. C. (eds.), ‘Conflits et guerres au Kivu et dans la région des Grands Lacs’, Cahiers Africains (1999), 3940 Google Scholar.

100 Verweijen and Vlassenroot, ‘Armed’, 9.

101 J. Stearns, North Kivu, 27–8.

102 Verweijen and Vlassenroot, ‘Armed’, 10.

103 Stearns, J., ‘Causality and conflict: tracing the origins of armed groups in the Eastern Congo’, Peacebuilding, 2:2 (2014), 164 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also, Stearns, North Kivu, 27–34.

104 Especially for M23. Stearns, From, 48. For motives, see Stearns, ‘Causality’. For appreciation among Congolese Tutsi, see Umutoni, A. F., ‘“Where do we belong?” Identity and autochthony discourse among Rwandophones Congolese’, African Identities, 15:1 (2017), 4161 Google Scholar.

105 C. Vogel, ‘Mapping: the landscape of armed groups in the DRC’, Dec. 2013, (http://christophvogel.net/mapping/).

106 Informal conversations, own observations Nov. 2012, July/Aug. 2013.

107 See K. Manson, ‘Rwanda's proxy forces muddy Congo conflict’, Financial Times, 26 Sept. 2012, (http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/789e8192-0627-11e2-a28a-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2B0WklCLU).

108 On Rwandan involvement in M23, see United Nations Group of Experts (UN GoE), S/2012/843, Final report of the GoE on the DRC submitted in accordance with paragraph 4 of Security Council Resolution 2021, 2012, and UN GoE, S/2013/433, Midterm report of the GoE on the DRC submitted in accordance with paragraph 5 of Security Council Resolution 2078, 2013.

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111 Lemarchand, Dynamics, 276. For more examples, see UN GoE, S/2012/843, Report of the Panel of Experts on the Illegal exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the DRC, 2001.

112 Personal observations, Bukavu, Nov. 2012. For references to this discourse, see Murairi Mitima, Les Bahunde, 169.

113 D. M. Onakaya, ‘Tutsi rentrez chez vous’, Le Potentiel, 30 May 2013, (http://www.courrierinternational.com/article/2013/05/30/tutsis-rentrez-chez-vous). For more examples of the balkanization reference frame in Kinshasa's newspapers, see Huening, L.-C., ‘Making use of the past: the Rwandophone question and the “Balkanisation of the Congo”’, Review of African Political Economy, 40:135 (2013), 1331 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

114 Heuning, No Mistaken, 125.

115 Chrétien, ‘Presse’, 116.

116 ‘Vangu report’ or Haut Conseil de la Republique – Parlement de Transition (HCR-PT), ‘Rapport de la commission d'information du HCR-PT sur la situation au Nord et Sud Kivu du 24 avril 1995’, Annex to Guichaoua, A. (ed.), Exilés, réfugiés, déplacés en Afrique centrale et Orientale (Paris, 2004), 958 Google Scholar.

117 Janvier Buingo Karairi and anonymous researchers, ‘Que sais-je de ces guerres à répétition à l'est de la RD Congo!’ (2012). Digital copy in my possession thanks to Alexis Bouvy.

118 L. Nkunda, ‘Un mouvement authentiquement congolais’, 15 Jan. 2009, (http://www.congoindependant.com/article.php?articleid=5019).

119 Published interview with Laurent Nkunda, 7 Sept. 2007, (http://www.laconscience.com/Laurent-Nkunda-Je-ne-protege-pas-les-Tutsi-Je-plaide-leur-cause-Il-y-a-une-cause-tutsie-qui-n-a.html). For similar sentiments, see Nkunda's speech in Nyamitaba, 6 Aug. 2006 in Stearns, From, 26.

120 On the naturalizing capacities of autochtony discourses, see Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J. L., ‘Naturing the nation: aliens, apocalypse, and the post-colonial state’, Social Identities, 7:2 (2001), 648–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

121 For more examples, see International Alert, ‘Les Mots’.

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