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The Rwandan Genocide's Church Role: Sanctuary or Complicity?

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The Crossroads of Faith and Atrocity Between April and July 1994, the world witnessed one of the most rapid and brutal genocides in modern history. In just one hundred days, an estimated 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu were systematically murdered by Hutu Power militias, the Interahamwe, alongside elements of the Rwandan armed forces and civilian populations. What renders this catastrophe particularly disturbing for scholars of religion and ethics is a singular, haunting fact: Rwanda, before the genocide, was often celebrated as "one of the most Catholic countries in Africa" - 8 . The nation had been transformed through decades of missionary endeavor into a predominantly Christian nation, with the Catholic Church wielding immense spiritual, educational, and political influence. This reality gives rise to a pressing and painful question: Did the churches in Rwanda serve as sanctuaries protecting the innocent, or did they become complicit in the machinery of genocide? The answe...

The 1919 Red Summer: White Mobs, Black Resistance

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In the scorching months between April and October of 1919, the United States experienced an unprecedented wave of racial violence. From Longview, Texas, to Chicago, Illinois; from Washington, D.C., to Elaine, Arkansas, white mobs attacked Black communities with impunity, burning homes, lynching veterans, and destroying entire districts. The African American journalist and activist James Weldon Johnson christened this period the “Red Summer,” a chilling double-entendre referring both to the bloodshed and to the anti-communist “Red Scare” gripping the nation. Yet the standard narrative of helpless Black victimization obscures a crucial dimension of the Red Summer: organized, armed Black resistance. Across the country, African Americans—many of them recent veterans of the Great War—defended their homes, families, and neighborhoods with military precision and moral fury. As historian David F. Krugler argues, “The Red Summer was not merely a series of one-sided pogroms but a confrontation b...