Rwandan orphans find hope in village
Topics: From the Wires, News
This photo provided by DKC Public Relations, Marketing & Government Affairs, shows Innocent Nkundiye and Claude Irankunda, residents of the Agahozo Shalom Youth Village in rural Rwanda, performing at the offices of Liquidnet Holdings in New York, on Tuesday, May 22, 2012. Their village is modeled after youth villages established in Israel to help World War II orphans. About 500 young people live in "families" _ 16 to a house, with a house mother or father, and big sister or brother. (AP Photo/DKC Public Relations, Marketing & Government Affairs)(Credit: AP)NEW YORK (AP) — From a teenager who was a month old when her parents were killed in Rwanda’s genocide to a young man inspired to become a doctor, hundreds of orphans have found hope for the future in a special village outside the Rwandan capital.
Now, the South African-born, New York woman who founded Agahozo Shalom hopes the village can be a model for orphans around Rwanda and the rest of the world. Anne Heyman brought five of the young people from the village to New York this week, where they helped raise money and met with Rwanda’s U.N. Ambassador Eugene-Richard Gasana.
“The dream is that others will come and see what we are doing and understand that there is a systemic solution to the orphan problem that plagues much of the developing world,” Heyman said.
Heyman got the idea for the village at a 2005 dinner when she and her husband were seated at a table with Paul Rusesabagina, the Rwandan hotel manager made famous in the movie “Hotel Rwanda” for trying to protect Tutsis and moderate Hutus targeted in the 1994 slaughter of at least 500,000 people.
Her husband asked Rusesabagina what Rwanda’s biggest problem was.
Orphans, he replied.
Heyman, a former New York assistant district attorney and mother of three, thought of the thousands of Jewish children orphaned by the Holocaust who were resettled in youth villages in Israel. She believed that model could work in Rwanda, where there are more than 610,000 orphans, including 95,000 orphaned by the genocide, according to the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF.
So after that dinner conversation, Heyman started raising money and making contacts in Rwanda and Israel. She founded Agahozo Shalom, which combines the Kinyarwanda word agahoza meaning “tears are dried” with the Hebrew word shalom which means “peace.”
She collected donations from Liquidnet Holdings, the electronic stock-trading firm founded by her husband Seth Merrin, and other foundations, companies and individuals. With $12 million and help from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, the first 125 high school students arrived at the 144-acre (58-hectare) village in January 2009.
The village, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the capital Kigali, is now home to 500 young people who live in “families” — 16 to a house, with a house mother or father, and big sister or brother. They get health care and plenty of emotional support, Heyman said.




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