25 years later, park guide still going strong

For 25 years, Rick Masumbuko, has dedicated his life to Nyungwe forest.

Tuesday, July 02, 2013
Masumbuko has worked as a tour guide since 1987. The New Times/ By Jean Pierre Bucyensenge

For 25 years, Rick Masumbuko, has dedicated his life to Nyungwe forest. Now 59, Masumbuko has no regrets for the path taken years before the forest was elevated to national park status.He fell in love with the park when he was still a teenager after joining a team of Rwandans and Swiss conservationists who were working to plant trees around the forest-in what is better known as buffer zone. He later worked as an aide to the team in their research on bird watching, trees, primates and different types of plants in Nyungwe forest.Then in 1987, the father of six started his long-desired work as a tour guide in the park. And he has never looked back, turning down a number of ‘highly paying’ jobs to keep this one.Today, despite his advanced age, Masumbuko still leads tourists around Nyungwe Park, but this time showcasing Rwanda’s rich culture through Community Tourism."It is very, very important to exchange with others. We get many visitors from outside and obviously we learn from them,” Masumbuko, who  fluently speaks several languages including English, French and Swahili- says."I learnt all of them [the languages] from my work and interaction with tourists.”The man who never studied beyond primary school spends everyday  guiding tourists through local communities and explaining to them about Rwandan culture.He takes tourists through tea, banana and coffee plantations as well as helping them  through mountain trails to witness the lifestyle of local residents and visit handicraft workshops, among others."The benefits of community tourism are immense. Visitors go to the villages and learn the Rwandan culture from the very people living and practicing it,” Masumbuko says.MarketingMasumbuko is one of the 65 members of Friends of Nyungwe cooperative which runs Kitabi Cultural Village. The place was set up with the aim of promoting community-based tourism by involving local communities in the preservation of Nyungwe Park as well as the promotion of Rwanda’s culture and heritage.Kitabi Cultural Village offers day trips, king’s hut accommodation, royal ambiance, traditional music and dance, community walk through tea and banana plantations as well as camping sites.Masumbuko believes his work contributes to marketing the country’s rich culture and, particularly, the thrilling adventures of Nyungwe Park."When they come, our visitors learn something and once they go back to their countries, they spread the word and we keep getting other tourists,” he proudly says.