The Genocide.
""How old were you?" I asked hesitantly. I mean, I had just met him....but somehow it seemed ok to ask.
"I was 13 years old" His face become very serious. We were at the ariport now. "It was bad. It was very bad. Never again. Never Never Never again."
"I am so sorry. I can't imagine. I can't imagine what that must have been like. I hear so much about forgiveness in Rwanda. I don't understand how the people have learned to forgive each other. How can you forgive after such killings?"
"Yes. Yes - we forgive." He said. His eyes actually started to light up a bit. "But how?" I asked.
"We must. If we don't - it will just continue. There will be no peace. The killing and the fighting will go and go. The Peace will not come. We must Forgive."
Still trying to understand. Asking more questions. Getting more answers. He said, "If you kill my mother and you come to me and say 'I have killed your mother' and you ask forgiveness. Then I must forgive you. We sit together. We must do this so we can be a new country. So it will never happen again."
If he said that once, he said it 20 times. He talked of the need to confess your wrongs. He talked of the need to ask for forgiveness. To "judge ourselves." He talked of "Gacaca." A term I had heard before, but never really understood. The goal: Reconciliation.
"I believe we can learn from you. I believe that the rest of the world can learn how to forgive from Rwanda. If the people of Rwanda can forgive and become ONE after such killing - I believe we all can learn to Forgive. To Forgive ourselves and others."
He smiled brightly. As if he were being honored. He was.....and so was his country. We were at the end of the conversation and the end of the time I had. Although I could have talked to him for hours. I asked for his email address so I might write to him and learn more. Then I had the realization that often comes at the end of conversations with strangers. I had failed to ask his name.
"I'm sorry....what was your name?"
He answered as if he did not make the connection at all. Like it was just a name.
"My name is Innocent."
"I stood still. Looking at him.......as if looking into the eyes of someone else. A moment of wondering. Are you? Are you God in the form of a taxidriver? But he was more than a taxi driver. He was a survivor. He was a living breathing testimony. What had he seen at 13? Had he run? Had he hid? Had he killed? At that moment - it didn't mattter.
Amazing.
Grace.