US – Tuesday, March 16
The Senate’s Weak Health Care Bill
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid “got to 60” at 1:08 yesterday morning, clearing a key Republican hurdle and keeping the Senate’s version of a health care reform bill on track for passage before Christmas.
 
Cabbies, patrons fight over plastic
Pub crawlers rejoiced when city officials mandated credit card machines in all taxicabs last year, putting an end to late-night ATM visits. But as they try to pay with plastic, many riders report being told the machine is broken, only to find it magically fixed when the driver learns the customer’s last dollar bill went to the bartender.
 
Rains spur state of emergency call
The weekend nor’easter that left thousands without power in Boston continued its relentless assault yesterday, forcing several road closures and service shutdowns on the MBTA as Gov. Deval Patrick declared a state of emergency. 
 
Exchanging the red lights for a blackout
Is it possible that Hub residents pine for the good old days of the Combat Zone. Most would probably not go that far, however many have been drawn to a recent photography exhibit at the Howard Yezerski Gallery exploring those once-seedy streets, if to just have an image to associate with a bawdy relic of Boston’s urban folklore.

 
A ‘Fly’ new play at the Huntington
The magic of live theater has never been more evident than in the Huntington’s production of “Stick Fly.” In lesser hands, playwright Lydia Diamond’s tale of familial dysfunction could easily be pedestrian, but director Kenny Leon finds everything that’s good about it and encourages his talented cast to run with it.
 
Going in for some ‘Light’ comedy
Physics meets chick flicks in “Legacy of Light,” the latest production of the Lyric Stage Co.
 
No Dance, but they’re playing
Tommy Amaker was surely something just south of exhausted yesterday afternoon, but the Harvard men’s basketball coach was still smiling. 
 
SPRING ASIDE, PROSPECT NOT REDD-Y
Red Sox prospect Josh Reddick has gotten plenty of playing time during spring training – and he’s made the most of it.
 
T Time: Week of February 26, 2010
Where to go and what to see
 
Published 19:08, November the 15th, 2009
 
Clementine IgilibambeClementine Igilibambe
Photo: NICOLAUS CZARNECKI/METRO
 

Surviving to thriving

Igilibambe started the Clémentine Refugee Scholarship Fund in her second year of college intended to help a refugee attend college. She has had many people apply, but has not yet awarded a refugee the opportunity to attend college. She is working on getting more speeches together to raise more money.

How/why did you start the Clémentine Refugee Scholarship Fund?

I get paid for speeches and put the money in the refugee fund. It’s still new. Spoke to refugees. They were telling me how hard it was for them to go to school because they had to work two to three jobs in order to feed their families here and to pay rent. They also have families back home that they need to take care of. A lot of young people, such as myself, were not able to attend the education they need. We all have this chance to be in a country with freedom and so many possibilities but we cant take advantage of them just because of our past. We are just victims of political corruption. I felt like something needed to be done for these people to have a second chance of having a great life and help people back home after they get their education.

I feel like I’m suffering from survivor guilt. Every time I go to bed I think what have I done to follow up with what I promised I was going to do when I left those kids back in Africa.

What are your objectives/goals?

In the future I would like to do more work for refugees. I want to own an NGO that specifically works with Refugees. Now I think that educating them is what’s really important.

 
Clémentine Igilibambe is a local survivor of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. She left Rwanda when she was eight years old, on foot, to the Congo. Several months later she and her family moved to a refugee camp in Kenya where they spent five years struggling to survive until they moved to Dayton, Ohio. After attending the University of Dayton and graduating last May, Igilibambe moved to Boston and now works with the Cambridge Economic Opportunity Committee where she does community organizing mainly for people in public housing.

What was it like when you got to America?

Living in a place where you get to have freedom, and go to school without looking behind your back, and your parents will come home from work alive, and there will be food on your table every day that was huge for me and my family. That was something you’re not guaranteed to have when we lived back in Africa.

How/Why did you come to America?

Because America is the land of opportunity. My uncle lived here, he went to school here, moved in 1989 or 1990, moved here before the genocide took place in our country. He helped us to apply. It’s really, really hard to get accepted to go to America, we applied five times, every year we got rejected. Kept praying and hoping and applying, finally they told us if you apply again we are going to send you back to Rwanda. Thought maybe this is not going to work. Because going to Rwanda meant you were basically done. We kept praying and never applied again. After two days of receiving a rejection letter we received an acceptance letter. Don’t know how it worked. We were going to America in two days. It was so fast we don’t even know how that happened, but we made it.

So many refugees are still trying to get in the US but it is really, really hard. What’s sad is that they get here and still can’t afford to go to school. We have all these expectations and dreams when we are told we are going to the US. Then you get here and life isn’t really that easy. People back home think that as soon as you get here you’re a millionaire.

What was Rwanda like? Your most vivid memories?

I haven’t really forgotten anything. I remember everything that happened in Rwanda. The movie, “Hotel Rwanda,” is a replica of everything I went through.

I remember everything from when I was in bed and one of my maids came to wake me up and told me I had to leave and I said “no” today’s Saturday I’m not going to school; to hearing bombs; to getting up and going outside and seeing body parts all over the place. I remember walking from Rwanda to Congo on foot for two days, not knowing where my parents were for two weeks when I lived in a forest, to finding them and moving to a refugee camp; to getting cholera, and all my friends that I left during the war.

I don’t have any childhood best friends. They all died. I had to start a new first life when I left Rwanda.

I could hear bullets and bombs but I thought it was all a dream so I kept sleeping. Then (my maid) came and dragged me outside. My mom was already outside, she was pregnant. The rest of my family was outside with a few things packed. My dad was out of the country at that time.

I could see bullets coming through our compound, that’s when I was like, something is really, really wrong. A couple of weeks before that the president of Rwanda had been assassinated. Since then things were dangerous but no to the point where my mom and my other siblings were outside waiting for me to come.

Then we left. As soon as I stepped outside of our gate you see all of these people running all over the place, bullets flying on top of our heads, bombs exploding everywhere. You’d see people running and a bullet would cut them and they’d fall down and die. You didn’t even care, you didn’t know you had family, you were just running for my life. Being 8, I knew this was going to be a life changing experience. What really scared me was when a bomb exploded right next to us and my mom disappeared. My mom was in a car and I was walking beside it with my brothers.

When the bomb exploded they disappeared and we thought they were dead but we just kept moving, we just thought you had to save myself.

Then we came across this forest and found all these kids, about 30.

It was about two weeks, for me, it felt like months. We just tried to survive. Ate anything from snails to worms to grass anything to keep you from dying. Started to pray, thought I’m going to die, there’s no way I’m going to survive this. I prayed my heart out I cried my heart out. I used to sit outside on this rock and just cry all day and wait and think maybe my parents were alive.

After a time I said you know what, this isn’t going to work. The other kids, no one came for them so I thought why should my parents come for me? I just kept my hopes high, finally when I was sitting outside, this car pulled over, we never used to have cars driving past, but one day this car pulled over as I got closer to it, I saw something familiar. It was my mom and dad and younger siblings, they had heard about a group of kids that were missing on the radio, and they came and we were one of the kids.

Unfortunately I had met a few friends there, a couple of the kids there died, out of hunger malnutrition and diseases. Me and my brothers made it out. When my parents got there I really wanted to take the kids. Leaving them there to die was not a humane thing to do, but we couldn’t fit all of us in there. That’s something that really, really broke my heart. That’s when I devoted myself to work tirelessly to reach kids like this. To tell people about things that are happening in the world and refugee problems and people who still live in these situations and do things for them. I believe god did not protect me for no reason.

What were the refugee camps like?

When we got to Kenya we had to deal with racism. It’s funny because we are all African but when you’re a refugee a lot of people don’t care you don’t have any rights. No one is there to speak for you. So in Kenya we used to go hungry all the time, my parents would stop eating for a week so that we could survive. I have eight brothers and sisters so you can understand how hard it was for them to feed all of us and keep us alive and still take us to school.

Do you think that the United Nations International Criminal Tribunals after the Rwandan genocide were fair?

To be honest, I think that people who crafted it, the people who set them up meant the best. They really had good intentions to try to bring peace and reconciliation. But the outcome, I’m not too happy about it. It’s going to be a really, really long road. There’s no way that a country that’s gone through so much every time they put up a process that’s going to bring peace and reconciliation no way it’s going to be one hundred percent perfect. I believe during the genocide both parties were guilty.

In documents, the UN said Hutu’s and Tutsi’s committed crimes and should be tried. No Tutsi rebels have been tried so far. I don’t think that’s fair. Not pessimistic about it. I want to be optimistic. Don’t know if I’m going to live to see Rwanda be a peaceful nation, but I know it will happen one day. And I really command the UN for putting up such measures to try to bring peace in Rwanda.

Do you think that America’s role in Rwanda was appropriate? Do you think we acted too late?

Bill Clinton came to apologize. So that does mean that he knew something should have been done to prevent as many deaths as there were. I feel like something could have been done sooner, 800,000 people did not have to die before any help could arrive.

We usually feel forgotten the fact that we lost so many people and we are from Africa and are refugees. The fact that bill Clinton went and apologized we though that maybe we’re not strangers.

But then something happened in Darfur, so I don’t know.

Do you think more action should be taken in Darfur?

I really think they should, but the problem is the UN can’t do everything. African countries have to want the need for the UN troops to come and help, the UN tried to send people there but the peacekeepers who are being targeted by the forces in Sudan, they’re not even being given a safe haven to go and operate in and try to restore peace. The African Union was given the assignment to try to bring peace in that region, but it doesn’t have the resources it doesn’t have the money, not enough equipment not enough troops.

Both parties have to really want it. It’s not fair for member states of the UN to send in their troops when they know they’re likely to get killed. Nobody is going to volunteer their troops to go. Not like going to fight in Iraq where your troops are fighting for your country.

 
 
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MMMpod
The March MMMpod features conversation and music from Surfer Blood and The Allman Brothers Band (There's a double-bill you're not too likely to see. However, Gregg Allman does mention Hannah Montana!). We also speak with Vampire Weekend and the Dropkick Murphys.