Regional
The Hamitic Myth -A theological anthropology that contributed to the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi
IN
ORDER TO UNDERSTAND any aspect of the genocide against the Tutsis in 1994, it
is important to first acknowledge that there is a history behind it. For the
case of this article, we ought to look back at the mid to late 19th century,
during the colonial and missionary period, to better understand how the Church
abetted a genocide that claimed the lives of over one million Tutsi.
The
glorious years of the spread of Christianity to Rwanda came through devoted
missionaries who arrived at the end of the 19th century, with patronage from
explorers and colonizers who had preceded them. One of the men who was sent on
an expedition to Africa to explore it before the deployment of missionaries was
an army officer in the British Indian Army called John Hanning Speke. During
his expeditions to Eastern Africa, Speke traveled to the Kingdom of Rwanda as
he searched for novel discoveries on account of his Sovereign. On arrival,
Speke was greatly surprised by how structured, orderly, and capable this kingdom
was. As a European, his image of sub-Saharan Africa was grounded in false
preconceptions that this continent was untamed and that nothing good could ever
come of it. Because of these preconceptions, he pitifully posited a theory –
now known as the Hamitic hypothesis - to try and explain how the kingdom of
Rwanda could be advanced and progressive despite no prior presence of Europeans
in this land.
The
Hamitic hypothesis was named after Ham, Noah’s son, to whom a curse (upon his
offspring Canaan) was directed in Genesis 9:20-27. Whereas there are variations
of this Hamitic hypothesis, one that tends to grasp the most attention, which
is accredited to Speke, postulates that after his curse, Ham and his family
conveniently found their way down to Africa and ended up settling amongst the
African people of the North. However, being pastoralists, an offshoot of these
Hamites (those who came to be known as the Tutsi), traveled south and finally
settled in a kingdom called Rwanda. On arrival, the Tutsi found a native group
known as the Hutus, who were Bantu speaking and ended up usurping them and
taking power and land via authoritarian rule. Being of a superior race
due to their ancestral blood, the Tutsi dominated and suppressed the Hutus to
begin their regal reign. Essentially, Speke came to a rather inane conclusion
that the Tutsi were a superior race primarily because of their “supposed”
ancestral lineage to Noah, and the Caucasoid race.
When,
the missionaries arrived, they continued the trend set by Speke and the Belgian
colonialists, who had accepted this myth as gospel truth. They utilized the
Hamitic myth in their missional work to elevate Tutsis to positions of power
(pulpit) while condemning the Hutus to menial jobs (servants). The missionaries
somehow believed the narrative that Tutsis could not have been native to the
land because of the advanced nature of the Rwandan kingdom. Sadly, by advancing
this anthropological myth, they categorically challenged the history of Rwanda
as it had always been, as one that did not purposefully segregate on account of
clanship. They supplanted our history with Speke’s myth in order to further
their colonial agendas.
Ultimately,
this myth gained much traction through the Belgian Catholic Flemish priests,
who themselves had been victims of hate by the French and saw the Hutus as
victims who needed to be saved from the hatred of the “Hamite pastoralists”
called Tutsi. The Flemish priests took this myth and made it “gospel” truth.
Not only did they preach about how the Tutsis were foreigners, but they also
used this narrative to instill racial ideologies into the Hutu majority group,
by preaching a history that was false. They used Speke’s myth to divide a
nation that had not been divided on this front before.
Paul
Rutayisire, a Rwandan historian, scholar, and co-author of the report on Unity
of Rwandans before the Colonial Period, writes that prior to the colonial
period and advent of western missionaries, there is no evidence whatsoever of
tension, wars, or bad blood between the Tutsis and Hutus. He writes that only
after the arrival of those who adhered to, and embraced the Hamitic myth, who
came with preconceptions about the origins of the Tutsis, did tensions begin to
brew.
Speke’s
assertion that the Tutsi were descendants of Ham is the principal theory that
was ultimately built upon by those who first brought Christianity to Rwanda, to
racialize, ethnicize, and create a theology that was tainted in false
anthropology. This myth was solidly integrated into all sectors of governance,
especially through the church, to spew dangerous ideology and create a
fragmented society. Speke’s Hamitic myth aimed at usurping the creation
narrative, which states that all men and women are created in the image and
likeness of God, in favor of one of a theory that ultimately led to the
slaughter of millions of innocent men, women, and children.
This
was the genesis of the story of the complicity of Christianity in the massacre
of millions.
Having
been raised in the church, Darius has always had a passion to study
theology/Christianity and its effects in an African context. He is currently a
pastoral assistant at Christ Anglican Church in Phoenix, Arizona as he pursues
a Masters Degree in Divinity. Darius is married to Diane K Kayiteta, and they
live in the phoenix area.
Source:
www.newtimes.co.rw