Description
Agatha, a Rwandan woman who was raped during the 1994 genocide and Agnes, her daughter born following her mother's ordeal, share some of their painful memories of that traumatic period and the years since, as Rwanda prepares to mark 30 years since those bloody 100 days which left over 800,000 dead. "Nobody believed that we would continue to live because we had experienced something terrible," says Agatha. "My mother's side (Tutsi) called me Interahahmwe, "a genocidal", and my father's side (Hutu) called me a snake. Between the two, I didn't know who I was," Agnes says. IMAGES AND SOUNDBITES ARRANGED IN SEQUENCES