Documenting
THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE
On the 7th April 1994, the murder of over 1 million Rwandan Tutsi began in a blood bath spanning just 100 days.
With gratitude to Dr. Stephen Smith MBE & Dr. James Smith CBE for the opportunity which has lead to over a decade working in Rwanda and East Africa as a whole.
With gratitude to Dr. Stephen Smith MBE & Dr. James Smith CBE for the opportunity which has lead to over a decade working in Rwanda and East Africa as a whole.

A bullet hole in the window of a room containing the belongings of victims. Ntarama, Rwanda

A wall peppered with bullet holes - the site on which many people fleeing to the safety of a church died. Nyamata, Rwanda

Artefacts owned by victims of the genocide. Ntarama, Rwanda

Artefacts owned by victims of the genocide. Ntarama, Rwanda

The scar where a survivor was shot in the arm. A permanent and poignant reminder of their past.

Nyamata Church where around 50,000 victims were killed and are buried.

A smashed stain glass window in Ntarama Church, Rwanda

A blood stained bible in Ntarama Church - the translation - The Word Of God For Everyday

The smashed skulls of Tutsi victims of the Rwandan Genocide in 1994 in their thousands.

The blood stained altar cloth at Nyamata Memorial, Rwanda

A rose in the gardens of Kigali Genocide Memorial

A perpetrator of genocide at Murambi Genocide Memorial Centre, Gikongoro, Rwanda.

One of the school buildings at Murambi Genocide Memorial Site, Gikongoro, Rwanda

A perpetrator of genocide at Murambi Genocide Memorial Centre, Gikongoro, Rwanda.

Moth eaten exercise books littering the floor of the crypt at Ntarama Church

The smashed skulls of Tutsi victims of the Rwandan Genocide in 1994 in their thousands.

Artefacts owned by victims of the genocide. Ntarama, Rwanda

Ricochet bullet holes in the gates of Ntarama Church

At a site of genocide in Rwanda, a survivor gives details of the crimes which took place there in 1994.
