WCR logo
 

Thursday - 09/02/2010

Click for Edmonton City Centre, Alberta Forecast

WCR Site Search


Catholic Search Engine

Powered by Google
twitter.com/westcath Follow Us
on Twitter -
twitter.com/westcath
A Sneek Preview A Sneak Preview
Glen Argan
St. Paul - Mundare St. Paul
Jubilee
2008-2009
Catechism Logo Exploring the
Catholic Catechism
Compendium-Cover
Compendium
of the
Social Doctrine
of the Church

Last Updated: Tuesday - 07/13/2010


Week of December 1, 2008


Rwandan Marian apparitions foretold genocide

Just released book tells of Mary's appearances to three African schoolgirls in the 1980s


BY REGINA LINSKEY
CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE


Like many stories from Africa, the story of Mary appearing to three young girls in Rwanda “wasn’t told” beyond the continent, said best-selling author Immaculee Ilibagiza.

So Ilibagiza wrote the first English-language book about Mary’s apparitions in the 1980s at an all-girls Catholic high school in the remote Rwandan village of Kibeho, the only Vatican-recognized Marian apparitions in Africa.

Our Lady of Kibeho was to be released Nov. 28, the anniversary of the first apparition in 1981.

Tales from the dinner table

Calling Our Lady of Kibeho “the most important book I will write,” Ilibagiza told Catholic News Service in a telephone interview that she can remember hearing about the apparitions from her father at the dinner table, a place where her close family gathered nightly to share the stories of the day and talk about religion.

“My dad said, ‘You won’t believe what happened; the Virgin Mary appeared to a girl in Kibeho,’” Ilibagiza recalled.

“In my heart as a child, I believed it 100 per cent.”

She said she learned the details of the Marian apparitions from family talk, village chatter and the tape recordings of the visionaries and Kibeho onlookers that the local priest recorded and played to his parish.

But Ilibagiza said she wasn’t exactly thrilled at the time that another girl saw Mary before she did.

That year, Ilibagiza’s fourth-grade teacher had told her class the story of Our Lady of Fatima, and the young Ilibagiza made it her mission to become a visionary.

Childhood fantasy

Ilibagiza, her best friend and her best friend’s little brother pretended to be shepherds, just like the Fatima visionaries, and prayed that Mary would appear to them.

Initially, the local Kibeho priest, villagers and even some members of the Ilibagiza family thought the first visionary, Alphonsine Mumureke, was a liar.

“In my heart as a child, I believed it 100 per cent,” said Ilibagiza.

Then Mary appeared at the school to Anathalie Mukamazimpaka and another young girl known only as Marie-Clare, who had tormented Alphonsine after the first apparitions.

Medical and Church officials rigorously tested the three visionaries. In 2001, the Vatican recognized the apparitions to the three girls.

Crowds gathered to witness the mysterious rains that would fall unpredictably from clear skies and to hear Mary’s messages to the visionaries from 1981 to 1989.

The visionaries said Mary asked Rwandans to pray, fill their hearts with love, and reject sin and evil deeds.

Mary’s warnings

The visions were joyful until one day in 1984 when all the visionaries reported seeing violence, dismembered corpses and destruction, the book says. Mary warned that if Rwandans did not renew their hearts and dispel evil, there would be genocide, it says.

Mary also requested that a church and a basilica, which Mary named in the visions as Seven Sorrows Church and Reunion of the Dispersed Basilica, be built at Kibeho, Ilibagiza told CNS.

During 100 days in 1994-95, Rwandans from the majority Hutu tribe hacked to death nearly one million minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus. Corpses clogged the roadways and littered the countryside. More than 5,000 refugees were shot by soldiers in Kibeho’s church in 1995.

Most of Ilibagiza’s family, including her brothers, mother and father, were murdered during the war. For 91 days, Ilibagiza hid with six other women in a three-foot-by-four-foot bathroom at a neighbour’s house.

Survival by prayer

Ilibagiza’s best-selling book, Left to Tell, was about how she got through those horrific days with prayer.

“Nothing can ever be difficult to endure if you know Our Lady loves you,” she told CNS.

In the months that followed the Rwandan holocaust, the Marian visions were forgotten, the book says.

But as time went on, pilgrims gradually returned.

Ilibagiza told CNS she expects 50,000 people to visit Kibeho for the anniversary this year.

When asked if Ilibagiza knew as a young girl that she would become an author, she said such an idea was “a far-away dream.

“People in my country didn’t write things down”; they told stories, she said. Our Lady of Kibeho is told as a Rwandan would share a story. It’s about her personal memories and an account of the effect the apparitions had on her and her country.


Copyright © 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 -- Western Catholic Reporter


Our mission: To serve our readers by bringing the Gospel to bear on current issues in the Church and in secular culture through accurate news coverage and reflective commentary.