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| Burundi The Biography Of A Small African Country ColumbiaHurstPosted on May 14, 2011. ![]() IS Burundi Rwanda's twin, a small country in Central Africa With A complex history of ethnic tension Hutu and Tutsi icts Between populations and a deep familiarity With traumatic events, Including The mass killing of over 200.000 people. Burundi WAS trapped in a state of civil war Until 2004, after Which Julius Nyerere and Nelson Mandela has mediated and Lengthy Eventually Successful Movement Towards Peace. Burundi's contemporary era has Brought new institutions to the Country, Including a more open constitution, Which Led To The election of a Hutu Majority Government in 2005. Still, apart from ethnic tensions, Many Problems persist, particularly The Poverty of entrenched MOST Burundians, Which has led NGOs to call one of Burundi The Most Deprived Countries on Earth. Nigel Watt Traces The Origins of Burundi's Political Crisis and illuminates recent Historical Events Through Interviews with Leading Political figures and survivors of atrocity. A unique and rare portrait of Watt's "biography" demystifies Burundi's little-understood "ethnic" divisions and Provides a Thorough Understanding of this beautiful and cultured land, Which Has Produced A Remarkable line of peacemakers, journalists, teachers, and Political and Religious Leaders. CommentsJenniffer Sakoda says... This is one of the most powerful books I've ever read. The first section is beautifully written and fascinating: what it's like for an African immigrant with $200, horrendous wartime memories, and no English to find himself alone in New York City. I learned about an underclass I'd seldom thought about, a war I've never previously understood, and people who help others in ways most of us would never consider. It's a gripping, horrible, and ultimately very inspiring story about not just one hero but many, and how individual acts of kindness can change the world. Posted on May 14, 2011 Lana Renter says... This is the first work of Tracy Kidder that I have read so I cannot compare it to his others but I can see why he won a Pulitzer Prize ~ he is a masterful writer and engaging storyteller. What he vividly gives us in STRENGTH IN WHAT REMAINS is the inspiring story of an extraordinary human being, a story that left an intense and no doubt lasting impression on me.I was so engaged, so completely absorbed, that I read it in one sitting. For me it is a remarkable and unforgettable story of one hero's journey, not just an African refugee's flight from genocide in his war torn, poverty stricken country, but his spiritual journey in survival, healing, forgiveness and compassion. It evoked the spirit of Joseph Campbell and the hero's journey for me, hence the title for my review, for in my mind's eye, Deo is truly a hero of great measure. Deo's story is an important one to be told and Kidder takes us into Deo's very soul to express all the horror and outrage, the pity and fear, the courage and hope, the compassion and sensitivity that lies within and makes the man. Part one is seen through the eyes of Deo himself.It is as brutal and raw as it is poignant and moving. Part two is seen through Kidder's as he observed Deo for the writing of this biography.There is a distinction between the two perspectives and some readers may not appreciate this technique in the telling but for me it was very effective. I felt more connected to Deo, the haunting events which shaped his life and the important characters who changed it. This book also cleared up a great deal of the murky history of Burundi and Rwanda for me and established a relevance for what is currently happening in the Sudan. I feel a bit more in touch with these events now and for that I think this book has added value. I cannot praise this fine biography enough and thank Tracy Kidder for creating an awareness of some very important issues and instilling Deo's beautiful spirit therein. Posted on May 14, 2011 Rena Julander says... I'm not certain what I expected when I ordered this book. I knew that Tracy Kidder was a fine writer having read excerpts of his work in magazines.However, I had never been really 'grabbed" enough previously to read one of his books in toto.Amazon Vine gave me a great opportunity to discover this powerful writer. Kidder has an astonishing way of describing the horror which Deo escaped.Yet, the book is more...much more...than the story of genocide. This is the story of every immigrant who left his country to escape persecution, violence, starvation..and the story of the shattering adjustment that immigrants have to make to survive in a new culture and country.This is the story of everyone who has experienced a trauma which shakes their belief in humanity and their own ability to survive...how victims forge forward, how they seek help or help comes to them, how their upbringing and spiritual beliefs give them the strength to reclaim their lives. There is a Deo everywhere...the guy who barely speaks enough English to give you change when he delivers your pizza, the stooped woman who empties your office trash, the faceless men who manicure our lawns, the families who go through the garbages in affluent neighborhoods in hopes of finding shoes for their kids. I hope that we can now look at each of them as Kidder looked at Deo. Each one of these is a hero and we should honor them. Posted on May 16, 2011 Dahlia Agustine says... I remember listening to NPR's in-depth reports about the genocide in Rwanda and Burundi. Horrified, I turned off the radio, but I couldn't turn off my imagination. Even though I admire other books by Kidder, I wasn't sure I was up to reading this one.I'm glad I took the chance. Although Kidder's book is the story of genocide and the mad rush to survive,it's also a moving character study of Deo's family and life in Burundi and of his life living on the fringes of New York's immigrant population.The story of his arrival in New York City with $200 and a firm conviction that French is the universal language is an amazing journey, one which opens readers' eyes to the people it's all too easy to overlook as they do the jobs no one else wants. Years ago I heard Kurt Vonnegut speak, and I'll never forget him saying that good fiction mirrors real life in that it is impossible to know the ramifications of individual actions in advance. Miss the bus? A Bad Thing in most fiction, but in real life the missed bus might prevent a tragedy.The story of Deo's survival would have been an excellent illustration of his thesis -- small actions, done differently, would almost certainly have led to his death. Had some people not decided to go good in the face of evil it is hard to imagine him living long enough to even reach the United States. Once in the United States, the kindness of strangers, coupled with his own talents and fierce determination, were awe-inspiring. For whimps like me, I will mention that the structure of the book made it a bit easier to read about Deo's past than I had feared. The story is not told chronologically, so there is some small relief -- bits of horror interspersed by other narrative. The second part of the book is less intense, but moving, as we share Deo's return. Deo's story deserves to be heard. How wonderful that Tracy Kidder is alive to tell it. Posted on May 16, 2011 Alvin Greenfelder says... Tracy Kidder's latest triumph follows in the footsteps of his masterwork, Mountains Beyond Mountains.The true story of Deogratias from Burundi to New York and beyond is for everybody, not for any particular special interest.The title, Strength in What Remains, is from Wordsworth's romantic "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Reflections of Early Childhood".There are many other good reviews if you want to hear more of the particulars, so I want to instead introduce the author to those unacquainted. Mr. Tracy, like John PcPhee and precious few others, is at the tiny top tier of journalistic authors of books, as opposed to articles of immediacy.Two years he spent listening to Deogratias tell his story and spent in other research.Years ago at the beginning of my technology career I read his "Soul of a New Machine", the story of the skunkworks of Data General Corp. at the dawn of mini-computers and client-server architecture.From then on I learned just to buy whatever he wrote. You teachers might start with his "Among Schoolchildren". Mr. Kidder is the selfless writer.He does not choose topics to sell books.He has no ideological drum (or horse) to beat.He is not attracted to fads or celebrity, power or the rich.Those are left for the sycophantic, the mediocre, those unencumbered by talent and skill.He uses some sort of dowsing rod for profundity.He is also something of a phenomenologist, letting the truth bubble up from his uncompromising observation of people and circumstances.He does not editorialize or advocate.He does not pretend to understand more than he can show.But he introduces you to all the best people, besides his central figures, taking time to capture them fully. In "Strength in what Remains, Mr. Kidder appreciates that he is is taking us places we do not know.So he includes all things of importance from different points of view.He himself does not appear until Part II, where he is finally comfortable explaining himself and his approach.He has a good historical section and five pages of sources.Here we meet again the sainted star of an earlier landmark opus, Mountains Beyond Mountains, the redoubtable Dr. Paul Farmer of Haiti and Harvard (Kidder's alma mater).Also, cameo appearances by Chaucer, Hanna Arendt, Primo Levi and St. Benedict. It is instructive to point out that nowhere does Mr. Kidder mention his earlier book.He refuses to hawk his own stuff.He describes the episodes of Deogratias and Farmer without any mention of his own connections.He merely mentions Deogratias, Deo as called by others, at the library encountering a work called Infections and Inequalities.Deo must meet the author, I instantly recalled from the prior book.Sure enough, there is the great doctor himself, scourge of the self-absorbed. I almost want to say read Mountains Beyond Mountains first because you will wish you had, once you do.Besides, these monumental gifts do not last long.This is the kind at 3:00 a.m. where you are saying "Just one more chapter, dear" when finally a shovel turns out your lights.When I came to, I found her with the book, "just one more chapter, dearest". I close with a short anecdote he tells of an Auschwitz survivor, who when asked about the blue numerals tattooed on his forearm replies that he always had trouble remembering his phone number.This book is an antidote to the bloated, grasping self-obsession which has infested our America. With so many fine, worthy books we are showing each other in these pages, competing for our limited time, do not let these pass unconsidered. Posted on May 17, 2011 Corie Swehla says... This is the story of Deo, a survivor of the Tutsi-Hutu genocide in Burundi and Rwanda and how he fared after escaping to America. Even though he was a medical student in Burundi, he started life in America as a homeless person living in New York's Central Park, who made a subsistence living delivering groceries. Through a series of almost miraculous encounters, he was able to lift himself up, graduate from Columbia University, and build a medical clinic in his native Burundi. Deo's is a life still in progress, and although his clinic is a triumph, we know he still has great things ahead of him. This is to some extent a sequel to Kidder's earier book Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World, about Dr. Paul Farmer and Partners in Health. Farmer is one of the people who Deo meets, and Deo begins working with PIH. Kidder's writing is very vivid and immediate, and is told from Deo's point of view, so you feel as if you are traveling and experiencing all this with Deo. In particular you feel that he's not much better off as a homeless person in America than he was on the run in Africa, except that in America no one is trying to kill him. On the other hand, because events are presented out of sequence, the vivid writing does not build much tension--the narrative starts in 2006 with Deo's return to Burundi, so we know that he has survived all the events that are detailed later and has prospered in his new country. In Kidder's earlier book The Soul of a New Machine, the action was presented chronologically, and the book was always a cliff-hanger: you never knew until the end whether the team would succeed. In the present book the narrative tension is not in the arc of the story (which we know almost from the beginning) but in the anticipation of learning further, possibly horrifying, details about the kinds of lives most of us know nothing about. Posted on May 18, 2011 Filomena Nienhuis says... Fans of Tracy Kidder's incredible "Moutains beyond Mountains" are likely to be attracted to this book. It tells the harrowing story of Deogratias, a medical student from Burundi, caught up in the horrifying Rwandan genocide of 1994. After a mind-bending six-month escape, he finds himself in New York City, practically penniless, and not speaking the language. With the help of his incredible inner strength and the fortuitous help of some generous souls, he finds work, enters college and begins work on his medical degree. But "Strength" is not a feel-good story about happy endings in spite of difficult beginnings. The subtitle, "A story a rembrance and forgiveness" is only half right. Deo is trapped in his terrible memories and struggles over years to come to terms with them. But forgiveness? If forgiveness is the ability to work alongside your people's killers without murdering them in return, I suppose the book is about forgivenss. But the word never comes from Deo himself. Deo is an extraordinarily intelligent and resilient man. But it's hard to feel that his story is enough to fill this book. Kidder is a gifted writer, but even he seems to struggle. About 2/3 of the way through the book, he inserts himself into the story, as he accompanies Deo on a tour the sites of his youthful trauma. Kidder shares his impressions of people that he spoke about through Deo's eyes in the first half of the book. But the one thing that could bring unity to the book, a glimpse of Deo's inner life, is nearly absent from the writing. Kidder watches Deo from the outside, but cannot inhabit him, and seems not to want to. This is a major shortcoming, especially for such an important topic. In the end, the book is neither about Rwanda, nor about Deo's struggele to become a doctor, nor about living poor in New York, nor about the mindset of genocidal killers. It is not about much beyond a telling, from a safe remove, of one man's story. But in glimpses, it is a book about the pain that must be carried following an absurd encounter with death and horror. And it is about the few human beings who are humane and generous enough to extend a hand to a fellow sufferer. It is about the never-dying face of ethnic violence in central Africa. Aspiring to be paean to the human spirit, "Strength in What Remains" chronicles the daily dilemma of surviving in a world tilted toward death. Posted on May 18, 2011 Mammie Maltz says... I saw them in concert recently and was amazed.The disc is very good but doesn't convey the thunerous drumming you get in person.Recommended highly however! Posted on May 21, 2011 Clifford Henderosn says... Such an inspiring story of an African man's triumph over adversity, hatred and humanity's imperfections!Trouble is it should have been much more inspiring.If you've read this far you know the story's outline so I won't resummarize.The book is well written and the story will hold you transfixed--at least for the first two thirds of its pages.Then with an abrupt change of focus from the indomitable Deogratias to his New York benefactors and then to the author himself, the narrative loses its drive.The circumstances suddenly go from vivid to vague, and the context of Deogratias' return to Burundi is reduced to a series of events more relevant to the writer more than the subject--or even contemporary Africa.The ending arrives as a virtual anticlimax: more a celebration of childhood nostalgia than the summation of a powerfully told story of a truly heroic victory of the human spirit.It's by no means a bad book, it's just poorly organized and reads like something rushed too hastily into print. Posted on May 24, 2011 Marcel Solana says... I just finished this book late last night. It took me only a couple of days to read it and after reading the harrowing journey of Deo, an African forced to flee his homeland, I am still reeling from the story. Like most Americans, I can not imagine life in other countries where one is slaughtered just because you're a member of a different tribe. Nor can I imagine how difficult it would be to go to school, let alone be in medical school, or even to get medical care. Life is vastly different from my corner of the world to other remote parts of the world. I am woefully ignorant and this book has enlightened me just a little bit more of my ignorance. This book is a must-read for all serious readers. It is thoughtful and thought-provoking (which is my favorite kind of book to read). It is inspirational as well. This story is more than about a young man's fight for survival, it is about his home-coming as well, to build a clinic in his homeland in the midst of the fighting that has just stopped. Throughout this book, I can definitely relate to Deo's confusion as to why people are being slaughtered simply because of their tribal heritage. Who is exactly the Tutsi and who is the Hutus? Does it matter to the common folks caught in the middle of the genocide? Did it matter to Deo? Deo is not from Rwanda, but is from the neighboring country Burundi. This book starts out with Deo's journey to New York City, a land so far removed from his country and the war that is ravaging his homeland. He started out as a delivery man for a grocery store, delivering groceries to the richest part of NYC. It was a totally alien world for Deo and I am ashamed to say, definitely the most unfriendliest world for him. One day he met a former nun, who eventually opened the doors for Deo to go back to school, and finding friends among the New Yorkers who can help his cause. This book also dives into his childhood, where he grew up on a mountain with his family, where he went to school and eventually making it to be a medical student. He was getting ready to do rounds when the attacks began. This book tells of his tale in getting out and trying to get back home ... and the confusion he felt, the numbness of watching a baby at its dead mother's breast, seeing hundreds of people being slaughtered, his brief time at the refugee camps, ... and more. This book cannot make the reader experience exactly what Deo felt but it did a good job of trying. The genocide of Rwanda and Burundi is now more real in my mind and it is awful. It makes the war in Sudan and Dafur have a more human face to it ... it is just no words to describe the atrocities of war. This is not a bitter book. Deo is far from being a bitter man. Instead of just living in America and becoming a doctor (so far, in this advanced reader's guide), he put his medical studies on hold and went home to build a medical clinic there, with the help of his friends and co-workers. Deo took Kidder on a tour of his flight as well as a tour of his homeland of where he grew up, his first school and medical school and more ... Kidder did a great job of describing it from Western eyes and conveying the grace that makes Deo a memorable person. Instead of being bitter, Deo is human and graceful and honest. This is definitely a reading that is worthwhile. It is written thoughtfully and Deo's voice comes through loud and clear. His sorrow, confusion and wonder all come through in Kidder's words. It is definitely an unforgettable book and one that I will recommend to everyone. I hope the finished version is just as wonderful as this advanced reader's copy is. One cannot put this book down and not be moved by the story. It is an incredible journey, one not to be forgotten. 6/27/09 Posted on May 26, 2011 Leave a Comment |

