卢旺达
The Girl Who Smiled Beads 豆瓣
作者: Clemantine Wamariya / Elizabeth Weil Hutchinson 2018 - 4
A riveting story of dislocation, survival, and the power of stories to break or save us.
Clemantine Wamariya was six years old when her mother and father began to speak in whispers, when neighbors began to disappear, and when she heard the loud, ugly sounds her brother said were "thunder." In 1994, she and her fifteen-year-old sister, Claire, fled the Rwandan massacre and spent the next six years wandering through seven African countries, searching for safety--perpetually hungry, imprisoned and abused, enduring and escaping refugee camps, finding unexpected kindness, witnessing inhuman cruelty. They did not know whether their parents were dead or alive.
When Clemantine was twelve, she and her sister were granted asylum in the United States, where she embarked on another journey--to excavate her past and, after years of being made to feel less than human, claim her individuality.
Raw, urgent, and bracingly original, The Girl Who Smiled Beads captures the true costs and aftershocks of war: what is forever destroyed; what can be repaired; the fragility of memory; the disorientation that comes of other people seeing you only as broken--thinking you need, and want, to be saved. But it is about more than the brutality of war. It is about owning your experiences, about the life we create: intricately detailed, painful, beautiful, a work in progress.
2023年5月19日 已读
早就听说过卢旺达的genocide,但实际听一个幸存者的叙述还是觉得震惊和唏嘘,确实如作者所说,genocide的真实经历是没有经历过的人无法想象也没有类比的,然而这本读起来却非常琐碎,不仅是内容,连时间线的组织都像一团乱麻,本以为是因为去除宏大叙事之后置身其中的人和太过细节的表述弱化了大背景,直到最后意识到原来有ghostwriter,这写得真的太差了点
卢旺达 历史