A monument to memory, truth and justice
Wednesday, June 03, 2026
President Paul Kagame, First Lady Jeannette Kagame and French President Macron unveil the first permanent memorial for the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in France on Tuesday, June 2. Village Urugwiro

The unveiling on Tuesday of the first permanent memorial in France dedicated to the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi is a major milestone in the evolving relationship between Rwanda and France.

For years, the painful history of the Genocide against the Tutsi sat at the centre of strained relations between the two countries. France has, in recent years, taken important steps to confront that history with more honesty.

President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to give this memorial the importance it deserves is therefore commendable. By joining President Paul Kagame to inaugurate the monument in Paris, he sent a clear message that remembrance is not a matter for Rwanda alone but a duty for all humanity.

This memorial will certainly strengthen the ties between Rwanda and France. But its greatest value lies elsewhere: it will be a powerful tool in the fight against genocide denial.

France remains one of the countries where genocide denial and revisionism have found fertile ground. It is also where a number of suspects linked to the Genocide against the Tutsi found refuge for years, hiding behind legal technicalities, false narratives and networks of apologists. Some have worked tirelessly to distort history, erase memory and confuse unsuspecting French citizens about what happened in Rwanda in 1994.

This monument stands as a direct challenge to those efforts.

Placed in the heart of Paris, it will speak to French citizens, visitors, students, policymakers and future generations. It will tell them that more than one million Tutsi were hunted, dehumanised and exterminated in a carefully planned genocide. It will remind them that denial is not an opinion but the continuation of the crime. It will make it harder for perpetrators and their apologists to hide behind lies.

Memorials matter because memory needs a home. They give physical form to truth. They create space for reflection, education and vigilance. For survivors, they are a recognition of unbearable loss. For the world, they are a warning of what happens when hatred is normalised, institutions are captured by extremists, and the international community looks away.

The Paris memorial must therefore not be treated as a symbolic gesture alone. It should inspire deeper efforts in education, documentation, prosecution of genocide suspects, and the dismantling of denialist networks wherever they operate.

Other countries should follow France’s example. The Genocide against the Tutsi was committed in Rwanda, but genocide is a crime against the entire human race. Every country that believes in human dignity has a responsibility to preserve the truth, honour the victims and deny safe haven to those who planned, executed or continue to justify genocide.