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Survive, She Said
A Tutsi endures the Rwandan Genocide
by John Beer
April 24th, 2007 2:18 PM
The 1994 massacre of Rwanda's Tutsis by their Hutu neighbors may have earned the country a horrific place in the media, but it has
so far garnered relatively little theatrical attention. Leslie Lewis Sword and director Edward Vilga focus on the remarkable story of
Immaculée Ilibagiza, a young Tutsi woman who survived the event by hiding, along with seven other women, in a Hutu pastor's extra
bathroom for 91 days. Ilibagiza, who now lives in the United States, gives her ordeal a strongly religious interpretation, which can
occasionally be off-putting; if, as she presents it, God protected the room in which she and her companions were huddled, one might
wish he'd done something similar for the 400,000 Tutsi outside. At the same time, it's clear that Ilibagiza's faith gave her the strength
to endure an unimaginable situation, and her posture of forgiveness toward the Hutu militia leader responsible, at least indirectly, for
her family's death is a genuine inspiration. Sword's one-woman performance makes riveting theater of Ilibagiza's plight; morphing from
aged priest to frenzied Hutu to frightened young girl, she drives home both the outward terror of the situation and Ilibagiza's inner
spiritual growth. In this, she's aided immensely by Paul Hudson's elegant lighting design, the primary ornament of this spare production.
Miracle in Rwanda
By Leslie Lewis Sword
with Edward Vilga
The Ohio Theater
66 Wooster Street
212-868-4444
Tickets to Miracle in Rwanda May be purchased online through
www.SmartTix.com, or by calling the
Box Office at 212-868-4444.
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