After school, I went to visit Gordon library to get a few books about Rwanda.
These are the books I am borrowing:
Non-Fiction:
Sebaraenzi is a former nember of the UN and speaker of the Rwandan Parliament throughout 1997 - 2000. Mallane is an educated American writer.
It is a passionate, heartfelt perspective about tragedy about Sebarenzi's experience in Rwanda throughout the genocide.
Sebarenzi, Joseph, and Laura Mullane. God sleeps in Rwanda: a journey of transformation. New York: Atria Books, 2009. Print.
Non-Fiction:
With assistance with the Presient Paul Kagame, this book highlights the details of the Rwandan Patriotic Force who ended the genocide and tells Kagames dramatic story.
Kinzer, Stephen. A thousand hills: Rwanda's rebirth and the man who dreamed it. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2008. Print.
Non Fiction:
From the Australian Military History series it accounts the involvement of Australia in Rwanda and how the rules of the UN affected them. It includes soldiers reflections and information about the 22nd April 1995 event where Australian soldiers witnessed 4000 innocent civilians being killed but under UN peace agreements were not allowed to stop the killings.
Fegley, Randall. Rwanda. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Clio Press, 1993. Print.
These are the books I am borrowing:
Non-Fiction:
Sebaraenzi is a former nember of the UN and speaker of the Rwandan Parliament throughout 1997 - 2000. Mallane is an educated American writer.
It is a passionate, heartfelt perspective about tragedy about Sebarenzi's experience in Rwanda throughout the genocide.
Sebarenzi, Joseph, and Laura Mullane. God sleeps in Rwanda: a journey of transformation. New York: Atria Books, 2009. Print.
Non-Fiction:
With assistance with the Presient Paul Kagame, this book highlights the details of the Rwandan Patriotic Force who ended the genocide and tells Kagames dramatic story.
Kinzer, Stephen. A thousand hills: Rwanda's rebirth and the man who dreamed it. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2008. Print.
Non Fiction:
From the Australian Military History series it accounts the involvement of Australia in Rwanda and how the rules of the UN affected them. It includes soldiers reflections and information about the 22nd April 1995 event where Australian soldiers witnessed 4000 innocent civilians being killed but under UN peace agreements were not allowed to stop the killings.
Fegley, Randall. Rwanda. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Clio Press, 1993. Print.