A Time for Machetes

A Time for Machetes

by Linda Coverdale (Translator), Linda Coverdale (Translator), Jean Hatzfeld (Author)

Synopsis

In April-May 1994, 800,000 Rwandan Tutsis were massacred by their Hutu fellow citizens - about 10,000 a day - most of them hacked to death by machete. In the late 1990s, French author and journalist Jean Hatzfeld made several journeys into the hilly, marshy region of Bugesara, one of the areas most devastated by the genocide. He interviewed both killers and survivors and A Time for Machetes is the result of his interviews with nine of the Hutu killers. Most of the men were farmers, ordinary men. They told Hatzfeld how the work was given to them, what they thought about it how they did it, what their responses were to the first time they killed and what they felt when they killed a mother and child or an acquaintance. Hatzfeld's meditation on the banal, horrific testimony of the killers is lucid, humane, and wise. To read this disturbing, enlightening, brave book is to consider human morality and ethics in a new light.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
Edition: Main
Publisher: Serpent's Tail
Published: 08 Sep 2005

ISBN 10: 1852428821
ISBN 13: 9781852428822

Media Reviews
?Hatzfeld has harvested a unique set of avowals that forces us to confront the unthinkable, the unimaginable... To make the effort to understand what happened in Rwanda is a painful task that we have no right to shirk - part of being a moral adult. Everyone should read Hatzfeld's book.? Susan Sontag, from her Preface ?Hatzfeld's harrowing documentation of the voices of Rwandan killers reminds us once again how perfectly human it can be to be perfectly inhumane? Philip Gourevitch ?Only Primo Levi gets closer to what genocide means? Venue ?Weaving in concise background detail to the massacre his writing never strays into cheap polemic. The matter-of-fact detail of the slayings threaded into the cadence and minutiae of a normal day in the life of the killers is sufficient to empower this chilling reportage.? The Glasgow Herald ?Chilling work of oral history... The shock of personal understanding is what makes A Time for Machetes important, bringing home the rude realisation that these people did not start out as evil ideologues or trained killing machines. They were simply told to go and kill - and they did? Irish Independent
Author Bio
Born in Madagascar in1949, novelist and journalist Jean Hatzfeld worked for several years as foreign correspondent for French daily newspaper Liberation, covering both the conflict in Yugoslavia, where he was wounded by machine-gun fire in 1992, and the Rwandan genocide. He lives in Paris. 45