Clemantine Wamariya: Refugee Childhood: A Resilient Life
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- čas přidán 3. 03. 2013
- Wha'ts it like growing up in a refugee camp? Being separated from your family as a child? Hear 24-year-old Rwanda genocide survivor Clemantine Wamariya share her stories of hope, survival and the power of investing in others.
Peace is SWEET. Peace, love and unity brings joy in our society.
She telling the story of many of us.
Am proud of my country Malawi for allowing all nationalities in trouble to have peace and thanks that God is our refuge he cares for his children
@Stephen: May God bless Malawians, they are the kindest people I have ever met in Africa.
i dont mean to be so off topic but does anyone know a tool to log back into an Instagram account..?
I somehow lost the password. I love any tricks you can offer me
@Kameron Leighton instablaster =)
@Samir Ford Thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and im trying it out now.
Takes a while so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Samir Ford It worked and I finally got access to my account again. I am so happy!
Thank you so much, you really help me out!
Thank you so much for sharing your stories Clemantine! I hope to see more of these videos one day maybe?
Just reading your book "The girl who smiled beads".
Before one is identified as human, man or woman, they must first identify that they, regardless of circumstances, are truly greatness. That is the identity in which we are created and that greatness is God, for he is love. Thank you Ms. Wamariya for allowing the world to see the flourishing of your identity because you are greatness. May God continue to bless your foot steps as they are in the foot notes of Gods grace.
Invest in the lives of people. ..raise their spirits. ..love it! !!
IVE READ YOUR BOOK, I THANK YOU FOR TELLING YOUR STORY YOUR MOM PREPARED YOU TO SURVIVE THIS ORDEAL .I HAD NO ONE TO POINT THE WAY TO BE ME YOUR FOND AND LOVED
wow all she said is about me. god know all refugee's life
Africa has many natural resources which are usually the cause of these conflicts but the only resource that matters is THE HUMAN RESOURCE unless we invest in the development of this resource we are destined for a tragic future
1.25 speed is good
geil
why go to Malawi zambia after DRC when people were being encouraged to return to Rwanda around that time?????????????
Because after the war many people died... And till today are still dying... And TILL TODAY PEOPLE NOT EVEN IN RWANDA ARE DYING BY THE RWANDAN GOVERNMENT
kayonga maybe because there were countries where it was not safe to be refugee in. Their only options were Burundi and Tanzania. The latter is safe, but it may have not been possible to go to Rwanda through it for different reasons.
Rwanda is safe today but 1998 it was not safe enough for some people... and those were kids they didn't know what to do or where to go some of them were just following adults. It's clueless to ask her what she was doing in Malawi... she was a kid and didn't know what's going on. Thanks Clementine for sharing ... much love from 🇺🇸
...not from all over Africa. There was no South African, no Namibian, no Mosotho, no Swati, no Morroccan, etc... just use the words... from many African countries...but, hey your story was moving... keep sharing.