waiting for you

Jaclyn 2022-04-19 09:01:22

All ethnic groups are rooted in the same root, and they all live in the global village. Who is better and who is worse? Why discriminate against a nation, and then give it an unwarranted charge in order to sanction them. However, not everyone in this nation is sensible, and some people actually took the blame and began to rebel! The result was of course tragic. Those who wanted to sanction them had justified reasons and began to capture the people of this nation (most of them were innocent and did not participate in the rebellion), and the streets were red with war and blood. These scenes are shocking!

There is an oasis in this war! Although he fawned on officials at first, he only cared about himself and his family, and didn't care about the lives of his neighbors. But when he really saw the brutality of his own nation against other nations, and his children almost died from this brutality. He began to change, and in order to save his neighbors, he bribed his officials to let them go. Their houses were burned down, and he put them in the hotel where he worked. Due to the war, the surrounding restaurants were closed. The owner of the hotel where he works also ran away and left the hotel to him to manage. He is just a room manager. How many people below him serve him? At this time, most of the local refugees were sent here, including many orphans. After many setbacks, he finally sent the people out of the hotel safely. In this anti-pacification war, he protected several thousand people.

He is different from the Hutu people, he has feelings and national justice. He saw the Tutsi killed by the machete by the lake. He thought that his wife and friends were all Tutsi. It would be tragic if they also died under the machete of the Hutu. After returning, he doubled down on protecting them, and even said to his wife: "When the Hutu people come, take the children to the top floor. It's really bad, and jump downstairs." What bad thoughts did he have? He saw the Hutu gang-rape the Tutsi women, and saw the Tutsi women being brutally slaughtered. He just didn't want his beloved woman to suffer inhumane treatment. When he could have escaped this disaster to protect his small family, he chose to stay and let more people escape from this war. This is a difficult choice. Not everyone can make such a choice. Among the people who are closely related to them and the people they just know, choose one to protect them. In fact, I have to admit that Paul is neither a hero nor a saint. He always puts his family first when choosing his life. However, as the situation became more severe later, Paul began to work hard for the lives of others from self-preservation. Paul had no guns and no superhuman ability. to save the lives of the Tutsi.

Violence is indeed something that has more right to speak than the right to speak. Barbarians use violence to conquer civilized people, but civilized people cannot use morality to improve barbarism. Ignorance and fearlessness are the most terrible things in human nature. Evil because of ignorance, violent because of fearlessness. Everything seems vulnerable in the face of violence.

The civilization, kindness, and bravery of a country are no match for the annihilated humanity. Paul has always maintained a calm and calm mentality. He is also the spiritual leader of the Tutsi people in the Rwanda hotel. However, when he was out to buy food, he accidentally drove the wrong way. When he got out of the car. Later, when he saw the boundless corpses by the river, he burst into tears in the room where he locked himself after returning to the hotel. At that moment, he collapsed, and he never unfastened the tie on his suit.

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Extended Reading

Hotel Rwanda quotes

  • [last lines]

    Pat Archer: [walking with family towards bus] They said that there wasn't any room.

    Paul Rusesabagina: There's always room.

  • Colonel Oliver: [after telling Paul the West thinks his people are dirt] They're not going to stay, Paul. They're not going to stop the slaughter.