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Inside the Hotel Rwanda by Edouard Kayihura and Kerry Zukus
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Inside the Hotel Rwanda

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Inside the Hotel Rwanda by Edouard Kayihura and Kerry Zukus
Paperback $19.95
Sep 07, 2021 | ISBN 9781637741160

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    Sep 07, 2021 | ISBN 9781637741160

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  • Apr 01, 2014 | ISBN 9781937856731

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Praise

“This book offers a window into the real life experience of those who hid in the Hotel des Mille Collines during the 100 days of the genocide. For those who have learned of this story only through the famous movie Hotel Rwanda, the story of Edouard Kayihura is a privileged opportunity to put reality to the Hollywood dramatization.”
—Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire (Retired) Force Commander of the United Nations peacekeeping force for Rwanda between 1993 and 1994, founder of The Roméo Dallaire Child Soldiers Initiative, Senior Fellow at the Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, and Co-Director of the Will to Intervene Project

“I would like to thank the authors of the book Inside the Hotel Rwanda: The Surprising True Story…and Why It Matters Today for providing an honest account of the daily challenges experienced inside the Hotel Mille Collines during the Genocide Against the Tutsi. It stands apart from the tales of those who have abused, manipulated, and diverted public attention and opinion from what has been endured.”
—Bernard Makuza, Vice-President of the Rwandan Senate, former Rwandan Prime Minister, and Rwanda’s former ambassador to Germany and Burundi

“Historical truth is a slippery thing—even more so when the mass media is involved. The story of ‘Hotel Rwanda’ is complex and fascinating. This book adds new depth to our understanding of the Rwandan genocide and the episode that has become its best known symbol.”
—Stephen Kinzer, award-winning foreign correspondent, author: A Thousand Hills: Rwanda’s Rebirth and the Man Who Dreamed It, teacher of journalism, Brown University

“Everyone who saw the movie Hotel Rwanda MUST read this book in which true survivors tell their story. While the movie indisputably raised awareness of genocide against Rwandan Tutsi, its distortion of facts created one of the most virulent platforms championing trivialization of that tragedy through theories of double genocide and related tactics.”
—Egide Karuranga, PhD, professor at the Laval University School of Business in Quebec; President of Rwandan Diaspora of Canada, and genocide survivor from the Hotel des Mille Collines

“I will never forget the eight days my family and I spent in hiding at Hotel des Milles Collines. I was only 13 at the time, but I remember like it was yesterday. Twenty years later, it’s important that we continue to acknowledge and commemorate the events that took place during those 100 days through stories such as those captured in Inside the Hotel Rwanda.”
—Ashish J. Thakkar, Africa’s youngest billionaire, Founder of Mara Group and Mara Foundation, a nonprofit social enterprise that focuses on emerging African entrepreneurs

Inside the Hotel Rwanda reveals the real story of the events at the Hotel Mille Collines during the genocide in Rwanda. It exposes the untruths and inaccuracies of the Hollywood depiction of the exploits of Paul Rusesabagina. It lays bare how Rusesabagina has been able to fuel his own dangerous political ambitions as a result of the twisted facts of the film. Inside the Hotel Rwanda is important for finally setting the record straight, and doing so authoritatively from the perspective of a survivor of the events.”
—David Russell, former Director of Survivors Fund (SURF), and Founder of The Social Enterprise

Inside the Hotel Rwanda: What Really Happened and Why It Matters Today is a gripping first-person testimony of life inside the famous hotel that served as a sanctuary for over 1,000 souls during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. The author artfully blends his personal memoir with a cri de Coeur for the future of his nation. It provides a beacon of light for those seeking to eradicate genocide around the world.”
–Melanie Tomsons, Executive Director and CCO of Never Again International-Canada

“For more than a decade, the film Hotel Rwanda has come to define a particular story and understanding of Rwanda. In this heartfelt work, Kayihura provides a moving tale from within that hotel, and seeks to set the record straight on the events there and since. For all craving authenticity about that horrific time, this is essential reading.”
–Josh Ruxin, PhD, Truman Scholar, Fulbright Scholar, Marshall Scholar, and author of A Thousand Hills to Heaven: Love, Hope and a Restaurant in Rwanda

“I thank the author for this genuine and true recount of the daily fears and threats, hopes and despair, joys and sufferings experienced by refugees in the Hotel des Milles Collines. Edouard is presenting with humility and a heart-breaking accuracy the reality of what happened in the hotel, unlike those who abused, misused, manipulated, and diverted the world opinion with a far-fetched story for their own interests, fame, and self-aggrandizing agenda.”
—Gasamagera Wellars, Director General of Rwanda Management Institute and former Rwandan Senator

“Edouard Kayihura’s memoir about the actual events inside the famed ‘Hotel Rwanda’ serves as multifaceted rejoinder to the mythology that emerged from Hollywood’s fictionalized version of the 1994 genocide. If you want to become a better-informed global citizen and go beyond glossy feel-good images, read Kayihura’s account of how twisting a story can spiral into a maelstrom of deception and divisiveness.”
—Gerise Herndon, PhD, Director of Gender Studies and English professor at Nebraska Wesleyan University

“This is a serious and well-written reappraisal of the events at ‘Hotel Rwanda’ in 1994. Kayihura’s survivor account demonstrates the gulf between media portrayals and reality, and shows how myth-making has done nothing to resolve the polarity of perceptions of the genocide.”
—David Whitehouse, author of In Search of Rwanda’s Génocidaires: French Justice and the Lost Decades

“A chilling account by a Rwandan who was targeted by name and narrowly escaped death during Rwanda’s time of genocide, his desperate flight seeking safety into the real ‘Hotel Rwanda,’ and his first-hand report on who really kept him and the other refugees in the hotel from being slaughtered.”
—John Quigley, LL.B. Harvard University, President’s Club Professor Emeritus of Law at Moritz College of Law, Ohio State University

“Like The Diary of Anne Frank, this book provides a glimpse into the day-to-day life of people combating the insanity of genocide. The book is above all a story of humanity in the midst of an insane genocide. In the end, there are no heroes; there are only people willing to take a risk for the sake of humanity.”
—Amy Shuman, PhD, professor at Ohio State University

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