Unearthing, untangling and re-articulating genocide corpses in Rwanda

Translated title of the contribution: Déterrer, démêler et réarticuler les corps du génocide au Rwanda

Laura Major*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper is concerned with the mass graves and exhumed bodies of victims of the Rwanda genocide and war of the 1990s. A government-led programme of exhumation of mass burials and individual graves has taken place over the last decade. The exhumation of mass graves has been undertaken, in the main, by Tutsi genocide survivors who work under the supervision of state officials. Post-unearthing, these bodies are unravelled, and the remnants of soft flesh, clothing, personal possessions and bones are separated from each other. Skeletal structures are fully disarticulated and the bones pooled into a vast collective, for placement within memorials. The outcome of these exhumations is that remains almost always lack individual identity at the point of reinterring. A productive analytical comparison is found in examining exhumations of Spanish Civil War graves, where the fates of individual dead are closely entangled with the lives of survivors. Here there is a clear contrast with exhumations in Rwanda, in the possible re-articulation of identities with specific human remains. But a similarity is also critical: in both cases the properties of human remains, as unsettling materials, garner specific ‘affects’, which drive forward national political projects that aim to consolidate particular collective memories of conflict, albeit that this kind of ‘material agency’ is mobilized to very different ends in each case.

Translated title of the contributionDéterrer, démêler et réarticuler les corps du génocide au Rwanda
Original languageFrench
Pages (from-to)164-181
Number of pages18
JournalCritical African Studies
Volume7
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Jul 2015

Keywords

  • Exhumation
  • Genocide
  • Human remains
  • Memorials
  • Post-conflict
  • Rwanda

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