Students being trained by Aegis facilitators

Saving lives through peace-building in the Central African Republic

Posted in News

The Aegis Trust’s peace-building work in the Central African Republic (CAR) is already helping to change hearts and minds in communities on the fault line of the conflict there, as our education specialists – many of them survivors of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide against the Tutsi – share their own experiences and work with Central African colleagues to develop a CAR-specific peace-building education programme.

Lambert Kanamugire, a member of Aegis’ education team working in the Central African Republic, has offered a brief insight on camera in Kigali, Rwanda, ahead of his return to CAR later this week. Captured in the short video above, here’s what he had to say:

“My name is Lambert Kanamugire. I am Rwandan. I work for the Aegis Trust as an education specialist. My work consists in restoring social cohesion in Central African Republic through peace education.”

How can Central African Republic citizens rebuild peace despite the serious consequences they faced after violence? “As a survivor [of the genocide against the Tutsi], I suffered, and I don’t want that what I faced, what I saw, can happen to the future generations.”

“My experience can help them say, “Even if we suffered, someone else from Rwanda suffered the same. So we can rebuild, we can overcome. It is, for me, another kind of healing, to help rebuild peace in a country which is ravaged by violence.”

“The most memorable moment – we organised a workshop and invited 26 chiefs of different villages. At the end, one of the chiefs, on his way going home, he met a person who made him suffer [in the crisis], who robbed his properties, who also beat him.

“After seeing the man, the chief of that village said, “It would be the end of your life, I would have committed revenge, I would have killed you, if I hadn’t yet attended the peace education workshop that I attended today. So please feel safe, I’m not going to kill you, but I invite you to come and attend the second day of the workshop”.

“So that testimony shows how our programming can help people realise their fellow citizens were not born evil; they can change. So, what is to come will be very productive.”

Aegis Trust manages the Kigali Genocide Memorial on behalf of the National Commission for the Fight against Genocide.

Latest Articles

Gz2bvlwWwAEcYx8

2 months ago

Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh pays tribute at Kigali Genocide Memorial

54751853181_dde941815e_o

2 months ago

Mozambique’s President Daniel Chapo honours victims at Kigali Genocide Memorial

WhatsApp Image 2025-08-15 at 13.01.24

3 months ago

African UN Peacekeepers Return to Rwanda 31 years on

54588845854_3c97645f23_o

5 months ago

Rwanda Peace Partnership marks Kwibuka31 with call to uphold memory and build lasting Peace

54535580743_3cb7bfb245_o

6 months ago

“This has definitely changed my life”: NBA star reflects on Kigali Genocide Memorial

news-placeholder-image

10 months ago

Marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day 2025 at the Kigali Genocide Memorial

news-placeholder-image

2 years ago

Yahaya Nsengiyumva – a hero who risked his life to save others during Genocide against the Tutsi

53133187123_61bddb265c_o

2 years ago

Israel’s Ambassador-designate pays tribute to victims of the Genocide against the Tutsi

Keep Reading

Related Articles

Kim Simon – formerly Managing Director of the USC Shoah Foundation – has passed away following a battle with Multiple System Atrophy, a rare degenerative disease.
A three-day Youth Champions workshop on Peace and Values Education was held by Aegis at the Kigali Genocide Memorial