Oh How I Forever Wish!

Red Crosses for our 4 angels who grew wings in April 1994

Somewhere beyond the rainbow,

where time does not fracture memory,

I imagine you four together

a family whose journey was cut short—

Mama, still keeping watch over each of you,

your bodies made whole—

no trace of the machete wounds that took you.

I speak to you there. Quietly.

Across years that never asked permission to pass,

across a childhood that learned too early

how absence can take shape,

sit at the table,

and never leave.

You did not see what came after.

You did not see us grow—

not the trembling steps.

You did not see the weight we carried—

hardship that did not pause for the orphaned

betrayal that found us anyway,

roads that did not open easily.

You did not live to see the strength that followed.

You were not there—

when our names were called,

when we crossed the stage,

when vows were spoken

into a life you should have stood inside.

When first doors opened,

when the world widened before us,

when successes took shape in our hands,

when little loves began to blossom—

we longed for you.

Treasures who will never know

Grandma and Grandpa,

never feel the way you would have held them,

loved them,

spoiled them as only you could.

Oh how I wish

you had stood there—

just once—

to witness it.

There are pieces that do not gather.

Words that do not form.

Silences we hand over carefully.

When the days turned heavy

and comfort had a voice—

yours was gone.

Oh how I wish

I could still hear you

say my name.

Thirty-two years later

We remember you every day—

not just April.

Papa

the kindest soul,

my first love,

my best friend—

who carried my name with pride,

who called me his little princess.


Mama

I remember the last words you said—

your prayer that we would all leave together,

no heartbroken left behind.

I remember the ground that took you.

I refuse to think of what followed

after I was sent with an armed escort

to reveal where the little ones were hidden—

so we could all be killed.

I refuse it—

the torture

your clothes stripped.

Oh how I wish

time had broken there—

before they reached you.


Nkeke—my older brother, my protector—

beaten with wires, your face bloodied,

above the mass grave

that waited for you and Mama.

Did they let you both

breathe your last

before the pit?


Magnifique

my little sister,

gentle and bright—

a blade at your throat,

among the first taken in our village.


Mama and Papa—

We did not see you grow old.

Did not watch the years settle into your faces,

did not stand inside the warmth

of the smiles that once filled our home.

The God you taught us,

Has carried us—

until we see you again,

in a life that knows no sorrow!

The four of us carry you.

Every day—

in joy and in the fight,

in success and in trials—

you are here,

a cloud of witnesses.

Years pass by,

grief remains.

We have learned to live with it.

Oh how I wish

it had softened with time.

The questions stay.

No one to answer.

How do I say this

to those who come after us—

Your last born—

her memory of you is a trace.

And one day—

she will be asked.

Today and all our days—

we grieve,

we honor,

our memories of you are intact—

in the lives we have built,

in the strength that goes before us,

in the fiercest love that remains—

with pride,

with remembrance,

with faith unshaken,

with a legacy that continues to rise.


We will see through what you started!


♡♡♡♡

Forever in our hearts

“And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying. There shall be no more pain, for the former things have passed away.” Reveleation 21.4

For My Light that Dimmed in April 1994, I Rise.

The red crosses mark my 4 angels, now watching over me. The only photo of us all together—my Catholic First Communion.

💜

I Rise.

April—the month my world went silent,
laughter stolen, love torn from my grasp.
The embrace of my parents and two siblings—
now a memory I hold but can never touch.

April 1994 did not just take them;
it tried to take me too—
my voice, my light, my innocence, my will to exist.
Darkness swallowed my paradise,
grief clung like a shadow,
but even then, something within refused to fade.

So I Rise.

Not only on April 7th for my little sister Marie Claudine,
or April 17th for Papa,
or April 24th for Mama and my big brother Jean Félix
I Rise every day.

I rise for forgiveness—I do it for me.
I rise for love; hatred is too heavy a burden to bear.

I rise for my parents’ three surviving gifts,
my first rays of sunshine, whose existence gave my life meaning.

I rise for the little loves they blossomed, —my precious pearls
treasures my parents never got to hold, spoil or adore.
I rise for their other halves, who cherish and are deeply cherished.

I rise for the scars I bear— a testament to survival.
I rise for the journey I have walked.
For the life I built far from home,
Rooted in love, standing on solid ground.

I rise for the child I once was—
orphaned, lost, abandoned, poor.
Now, a proof that hope survives.

I rise beyond trauma, beyond nightmares.
My story is no longer just my own.
I rise for the children who walk the road I once did,
for those unseen, unheard, alone.

Rising Above the Storms, a whisper:
“You are not alone, your pain does not define you. You are seen, you are worthy, you too can rise.”

I carry wounds neither time nor any human can heal,
yet still, I rise—undefeated.
When strength fails, faith lifts me.
And one day, beyond sorrow,
I will see and hold them again—forever.

For my light that dimmed in April 1994
I am Here. I Remember. I Grieve. I Speak. I Forgive. I Hope. I Love.

31 Years.

Still. I Rise.

💜

🕊️💜 In loving memory of my four angels perished during the Genocide against the Tutsi in April 1994. May their memories remain a blessing.❤️ 🕊️

Indulge Me, World!

In this tender month of April,
Grant me the moment to entreat.
For within this season’s embrace,
Memories abundantly flow.
A path through trials, battles faced anew,
Life’s tapestry woven, by pain and strength tried.

In ’94, hell engulfed Rwanda,
The land of a thousand hills that once gleamed with light.
Rolling hills and lush green, a paradise’s hymn,
Now veiled in the blood of my kin, a tragic tale.
Silent world, their crime?
Physical features they couldn’t curtail.

I harbor no grudge, my word stands strong,
Bitterness won’t mend the past.
No victim’s stance, I claim my place,
Resilience carries on, a path unmarred.
From the ashes rising, steadfast in my stand,
Forgiveness, not vengeance, a lighter hand.

Three decades on, wounds still tender and raw,
Their memories revered, a pledge of eternal splendor.
Their absence echoes, a void within my heart,
Their journey truncated, a poignant call to persevere.
Allow me, O world, to unveil my story arc,
Of valor, endurance, and transcending the dark.

I vow, no tale of despair shall you find,
Instead, one of strength against fate’s bind.
From shadows, a journey to illuminate,
Survivor by name, warrior within.
Carving purpose from chaos,
A new life to behold, another chance to cherish.

Each trial conceals a lesson’s profound lore,
And within every warrior, hope eternally soars.
In brokenness, faith endures in tranquil sway,
In this April’s remembrance, my heart doesn’t tarry.
Allow me to raise this resounding anthem high,
To honor, to unite, in hope’s enduring embrace.

💓


Paying tribute to my dad, mom, brother, and sister who were taken from me so soon, during the 1994 genocide against Tutsi, in Rwanda (4/7, 4/17, 4/24).
💓May their memories forever remain a blessing💓