Rwanda’s tomorrow depends on its memory of yesterday. In a country where the deepest bonds of trust were shattered, where friends became killers, and families turned against their own, forgetting is not healing; it is danger. Memory stands as the nation’s strongest defense, ensuring that the truth of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi remains alive to guide a more conscious and united future.
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In safeguarding that memory, music, our powerful and enduring cultural expressions has played important role. Songs of commemoration have become the guardians of remembrance, carrying stories that cannot be allowed to fade, giving voice to those who were silenced, and translating history into emotion that each generation can feel, not just learn. Through melody and lyric, memory is preserved not as distant fact, but as a living presence, sung on radios, echoed at memorials, and woven into the collective conscience of the nation.
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These musical expressions do not merely console; they serve as living archives, emotional bridges, and moral anchors, ensuring that the horrors of April to July 1994 are neither forgotten nor distorted.
In a nation where radio once broadcast hate-filled anthems that incited killings, turning familiar melodies into tools of extermination, music has undergone a profound redemption. Today, it carries the weight of agahinda (profound sorrow) while fostering unity and healing, especially during Kwibuka commemorations.
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During the genocide, music was weaponized. Extremist outlets like Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines amplified songs by artists such as Simon Bikindi, whose lyrics glorified Hutu Power extremist ideology and dehumanized the Tutsi, urging ordinary citizens to "work”, a coded call to kill. Militias marched and murdered while singing, using rhythm and familiarity to terrorize victims and embolden perpetrators.
Today, music has become a cornerstone of remembrance. Songs such as those by Senderi Hit, including "Guhanga si uguhaga, ahubwo ni agahinda” and "Nyarubuye Nziza Twibuke” embody this transformation. The message is clear. Composing commemorating songs (guhanga) is not celebration or indulgence (uguhaga), but an encounter with deep sorrow (agahinda). Rooted in lived grief, these works refuse superficial remembrance. They demand confrontation with the realities of places like Nyarubuye, where thousands of Tutsi men, women and children were massacred, ensuring that memory remains emotionally alive rather than abstract.
These songs also preserve the truth against denial and revisionism. By weaving survivor testimonies, specific locations such as Murambi, Ntarama, Rukara, Bigogwe, and raw emotional narratives into melody, they create accessible and repeatable forms of remembrance. For younger generations, many born long after 1994, these songs become a vital educational tool. They communicate that the genocide was not a spontaneous conflict, but a deliberate, systematic extermination targeting the Tutsi.
In doing so, they sustain the national ethos of "Twibuke Twiyubaka” (Remember, Unite and, Rebuild), transforming remembrance into responsibility. Music ensures that knowledge is not passive, but internalized, guarding against the re-emergence of division and hate.
Beyond preservation, songs, facilitate collective healing. The trauma of the genocide is deeply intergenerational, affecting survivors and descendants alike. Music offers a channel through which grief can be expressed when words fall short. It creates shared emotional spaces where sorrow is acknowledged collectively, rather than borne in isolation.
During Kwibuka, these songs guide the nation through mourning, helping transform personal grief into collective resilience, allowing pain to be shared and processed. In this way, music becomes not only remembrance, but therapy, providing catharsis while reinforcing that healing does not mean forgetting.
Equally important is the role these songs play in rebuilding Rwanda’s social fabric. Post-genocide unity, rooted in the principle of Ndi Umunyarwanda, depends on confronting the past honestly. Commemoration songs disarm denial by openly recounting how innocent Tutsi were killed, thereby promoting reconciliation grounded in truth.
They also humanize loss. Rather than abstract statistics, they evoke lived realities, families destroyed, children killed, entire communities erased. Through melody, these stories remain present, ensuring that "Never Again” is not a slogan, but a lived national commitment.
In today’s digital age, where misinformation and genocide denial can spread globally, these songs also act as portable testimonies. They reach the diaspora and international audiences, countering narratives that minimize or distort the genocide.
Music, once perverted to divide and destroy, now reconstructs. It carries agahinda, while guiding a nation toward renewal. These melodies ensure that the voices of the silenced endure across generations, shaping a future grounded in unity and resilience.
Without them, memory risks fading. With them, it remains a living flame, painful, purposeful, and enduring.
The writer is an ideator and alternative development financing strategist.