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About
In 1994, the akazu, Rwandan's political elite, planned the genocidal mass slaughter of 500,000 to 1,000,000 Tutsi and Hutu who lived in the country. Given the failure of the international community to acknowledge the genocide, in 1998, ten African authors visited Rwanda in a writing initiative that was an attempt to make partial amends. In this multidimensional novel, Abdourahman A. Waberi claims, "Language remains inadequate in accounting for the world and all its turpitudes, words can never be more than unstable crutches, staggering along... And yet, if we want to hold on to a glimmer of hope in the world, the only miraculous weapons we have at our disposal are these same clumsy supports." Shaped by the author's own experiences in Rwanda and by the stories shared by survivors, Harvest of Skulls stands twenty years after the genocide as an indisputable resource for discussions on testimony and witnessing, the complex relationship between victims and perpetrators, the power of the moral imagination, and how survivors can rebuild a society haunted by the ghost of its history.
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Reviews
"One of the more inventive of a new wave of African writers, Waberi is also unique in the range of his influences."
Anderson Tepper, contributor to Vanity Fair and Words without Borders
"Abdourahman Waberi is a land surveyor who assembles his stories from glittering kaleidoscopic beads: modern in form...poetic and ironic in tone - and mercilessly direct when it comes to pointing out the African traumas of colonisation, the struggle for independence, civil war, dictatorship and catastrophic famine... Harvest of Skulls is a book opposing forgetfulness."
Berliner Künstlerprogramm des DAAD
"An elegant writer-novelist."
RFI Voices of the World
Extended Details
- SeriesGlobal African Voices