Transcript of Press Conference

Transcript of press conference at St. John’s University on January 31, 2007 with Immaculée Ilibagiza, Author of Left to Tell: Discovering God Amidst the Rwandan Holocaust, and Mary Ann Dantuono, Associate Director of the Vincentian Center for Church and Society at St. John’s University

Immaculée Ilibagiza: Thank you, thank you for having me. I am so glad the way my book Left to Tell is impacting people and I’d like to think it’s helping people. I hope to share with the students a message of courage, of love and respect – self-respect. Know that God is enough for you and to love your neighbor and God above all.

Can you relate your experience of discovering God in this experience to your background in Roman Catholicism?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: I think so. I couldn’t have made it without the rosary and knowing that the Blessed Mother was there to console me. The rosary was my food. There was a time when I felt that I couldn’t go on without doing something. And doing something was to pray. And praying with so much fear in the heart was impossible. My words at first were not words of prayer they were more like “send them to hell, do something to those animals,’ but those are not prayers. And since I couldn’t say those words, I began to say the rosary.

The good thing about the rosary is the words are made up already, so you say them and meditate after the words you are saying. So I said this from morning until night. I said 27 rosaries a day. I would say also 40 Chaplet of Divine Mercy.

So that was my food for the day, really. That’s something I did for two months and a half out of the three months I stayed in that bathroom. So it was completely related to my background.

Why was it important for you to share your message with the St. John’s community?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: I think because this is a Catholic University and I feel it’s important to speak to young people, because when it happened to me, I was in University. So to be here speaking to children – this is a message that concerns them, they need to take responsibility early, knowing that this belongs to them, that this is their story too. So I am really excited about it.

Mary Ann Dantuono: In the preface of the book, Immaculée states that we all can benefit from learning each other’s story. I think that in many ways her story can be looked at as a true modern day story of someone who lives through a horror, but since then has taken that and turned it into a very positive experience. It is so in tune with our theme for 2007 Founder’s Week. Our students have been looking at the theme of respect + passion = solidarity and in many ways Immaculée’s story is that lived virtue of solidarity.

What does forgiveness mean to you personally?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: The way I understood it is from within. To live with anger is almost like a chain of these ugly things haunting your heart, body and spirit. Forgiveness is freedom from the anger, freedom from the bitterness.

It’s not like you are just going to forget it, you don’t, but it doesn’t matter anymore to go through the anger because somebody hurt you. You decide to pray for them, to love them, and somebody you were cursing, you send them love and you wish to get to the truth. You realize their blindness.

What do you hope the students come away with from your lecture today?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: I hope that they would come away feeling that they have responsibility in the world. They have a purpose. Knowing that no matter what hurt they go through they can be strong and rise above that. And be strong knowing you can accomplish what you have to accomplish. (I am) hoping that they will be people who will change what’s going on in the world and that I will inspire them to feel like ‘what can I do?’ because there’s no small person in this. I think it’s all about listening to the voice inside to inspire you to do something, to be the best you can be. To choose courage, to choose truth, to choose solidarity, to choose to know, instead of going the other way around and lying down and dying the in the face of hardship.

Your story is so powerful, yet also so painful, were you at all hesitant to share it?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: I was more hesitant to share it in terms of, I didn’t’ want to make people sad. You know, you have seen such bad (things), you have felt so bad, it’s almost like telling people, ‘come with me, this is what it feels like.’ I didn’t want that, I didn’t want others to feel what I went through. God knows, that he comes through in mysterious ways to show me you can stay this strong, but yet I felt ‘how can I share the lessons, without telling them how I got them?’

I felt it was an urgency to talk about my message, to talk about life to talk about what it is.

Mary Ann Dantuono:  Her statement was this is what I have the power to do, I can forgive. That sense of freedom is really the foundation of what we talk about in terms of solidarity. What can I do? She had the power to forgive, that was her power.

Immaculée Ilibagiza: In a way you realize, the whole genocide happened – that atrocity – it all happened because somebody couldn’t forgive what had hurt them. That was the whole reason why one million people had to die in three months. When you think how far that can go and when you think we all have that power inside to let go and to build instead of tearing. You feel like, ‘I have something deep, and everyone has that.’

When did the horror stop for you?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: That was in 1994.

When did the urgency to tell the story begin?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: In about 2000, that’s when I first wrote the book. Almost everyday I have to share this story with my friends. Or, my story will come out just to help them deal with the issue they are dealing with. Many people have told me ‘you should put it in a book.’ But I thought ‘I’m not a writer, how can I publish?’ and all of these challenges. So, one time in 2000 I just decided, let me start now. (I thought) ‘I learned English, so let me just write my story.’ In my heart I tell myself, ‘I tell my friends and they listen to me, and it helps them. All I have to do is imagine a friend here, and I’m going to talk to her about my story.’

I was really thinking about telling my story to Americans. So I wrote it in English, like I was talking to people in my new home, in America. It was a bittersweet experience. I was writing nonstop.  I used to just wake up and go in the basement and write for eight hours straight. Writing, crying, laughing, at the stories of my family. It was such a bittersweet story, but I feel that it was maybe the word of god, that I just have to put it down.

How has your life changed since you have been going around giving talks?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: Upside down! I would say completely. First of all, coming from Rwanda, working at the UN, you feel like you are not in America, I mean if you live here, because I was dealing with African or Asian programs. So when I decided to speak it was almost like opening a door to America.

After I speak many people come to me and tell me their personal stories, they cry with me. Those are the things I love the most. To feel like now I’m part of the country, of the culture. I’m learning, I’m talking to Americans. I love it. Just to here the stories of people changing, that just really touched my heart.

When I was first speaking, one lady who was a holocaust survivor came to me and told me, ‘I never let go of the anger I had since then, until now that I see you. If you can tell me you can forgive, then I can believe you. Then I can do it.’ This is a lifetime gift for someone to be able to tell you that. She was crying and shaking. I feel freedom now, it is over, now I can live.

I am speaking my experiences. You don’t expect people to come up with those sudden decisions and it has been overwhelming to see what is going on and what happened.

I really love it. I feel it’s a privilege. I feel it’s a chance in life God gave me and I feel like maybe that’s why I had to go through what I had to go through. Because this is so fulfilling, and, if I had to go through this to inspire millions of people, I hope, then maybe what I went through, is ok.

Mary Ann Dantuono: Immaculée has spoken at several places around the U.S. as well as internationally. She is not only sharing her story with us as Americans, but she’s sharing her story worldwide. Hopefully, that will be help to build a world where we do learn from the experiences of people like Immaculée. To love and to share those love stories with each other and build a world of peace and solidarity. We really do hope for that.

Immaculée Ilibagiza: The last time I was in Japan, when my book was published, I never knew that (people from) Japan don’t believe in God. I had so many interviews and people would say, ‘tell us, without God, tell us how you survived.’ I would say, ‘I don’t know if I would have survived without God in my life.’ It was confusing for them

To put God in the title without accepting God in the country felt like such a big responsibility. The First Lady said, ‘You were a child and you went through that? Tell us, without God what you’re talking about.’ I think God is touching his people the way he wants; he’s just using my story.

Are you still with the UN?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: No

Mary Ann Dantuono: Immaculée has started a foundation called the Left to Tell Foundation which helps women and children in Africa, particularly in Rwanda. She has been working with that foundation as well as giving her talks around the world. For the past two years, that’s been her work now, as well as raising her two children.
 
Since the time she came out of captivity, Immaculée has never stopped trying to help people. I think that’s a key to coming out of such a sad and terrorizing experience, she still found it within herself to give to the children in the refugee camp, to relatives, to friends, she has helped them all to try to reestablish their lives and now in a more formal way she’ll be helping with her foundation to help the orphans in Rwanda.

Immaculée Ilibagiza: I never felt in my life a belonging to the world, and being a part of the world until after these atrocities. When the genocide happened, when you have trusted people in high positions, you feel that they are smart; they must know what they are doing. All of a sudden they all disappoint you, they are mischievous. All the things they told you before were wrong, now they are the masters of doing those things.

So you just feel like, maybe my voice can do something. Maybe God left me here so that in my heart I can put things together. I just have to do what I have to do for my heart.  I hope really, that each person can just take that. I think that is what’s such a big lesson.

To know that I have responsibility, I am not waiting for anybody anymore. I will respect people, I will listen to what they say, but I’m not going to suppress what I have inside. If God can inspire you to say something, you never know how it can help somebody. To trust that you are here for a reason, you are here and Go can work through you.

Being a human being is just so powerful. And learning to respect each other and to treat each other equally is so smart. I have seen things pass through invisible people, people who you feel don’t mean much, and then here they are and that is where God decided to pass through. To help you, to give you a job – something.  That’s really why I decided to write and share with people.

I really feel now that life is so short. I lived with my family thinking everything is so great. I had protection from my father, my mom, and for everything to go at one time? You think about Noah’s Ark. You think things can’t change like that, they can’t turn upside down. And all of a sudden you realize, my God, those things were serious. That is really how I read the bible. I think, tell me, what do you want in my life. Tell me, because only truth comes from God. Truth is inspired by God. There’s nothing more and the bible is the basis of everything.

What are your thoughts on what is happening in Darfur?
Immaculée Ilibagiza: Heartbreaking. It makes me sick. To know that can be happening in the world, but the thing is to know that God is there. That’s really my consolation. My consolation is to know that where we are on Earth is a passage. It’s a place where we have to try to see how much love we can love. And if we are failing to love, we are failing life. But the people who are dying, God knows how he will welcome them as kings and queens, so I don’t pity them.

Sometimes I think I don’t know if I’m doing enough and I question myself. We all should question ourselves.

Mary Ann Dantuono: One of the things Immaculee said in her book is that she would always look at life as ‘before and after.’ We hope that someday there’s a real after to genocide, but today we’ll have to just believe that her experience is going to bring a better and a happier after.