Rwandan Testimony: Beata Uwazaninka

My name is Beata and I was born in Rwanda in 1980. At the time of the genocide, I was 14 years old. My father’s name was Joseph Nemeye and my mother’s Devotha Uwimana. My father was a farmer and my mother used to help him in the fields or looking after our cows. On the day I was born, our neighbour gave us a cow to celebrate. I was born at six o’clock behind our house and my father gave me the name ‘Uwazaninka’ – it means ‘if you bring a cow, you’ll get the bride’ because in our culture when a man asks for a girl’s hand in marriage, he has to give cows. So my father definitely wanted a cow from any man who married me! My mother told me that. My father had two boys by his first wife and he was very happy when I was born. He loved me so much. I cried every night when I was a baby and stopped my parents sleeping, so my Dad gave me the nickname ‘Shobya’. Later on, my Grandma changed my nickname to ‘Kiki’ because I made her laugh.


© 2006 The Aegis Trust

Testimony from “We Survived” © 2006 Aegis Trust/Quill Press in association with Kigali Memorial Centre, Rwanda. Reproduced with kind permission of The Aegis Trust.

Copies of “We Survived” can be purchased for £12 (+£2.95 p&p) by calling the Aegis Trust on 01623 836627. Additionally, an order form for this book is available above.

Holocaust Memorial Day Trust logo
Holocaust Memorial Day Trust
PO Box 61074
London SE1P 5BX
(t) 0845 838 1883
(e)
© 2008 Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, all rights reserved