The next two posts will be about the
visit of my parents. They came to visit me in May, which already feels like a
lifetime ago. The anticipation for their trip was very emotional; I was
extremely anxious and nervous. It had felt like I hadn’t seen them in years. At
least that is what I thought before they arrived. But the moment they stepped
out of the airport it was like we had only been apart briefly, because we fell
right back together like we had never been separated. (Remember that thing I
said from my last post about time being weird- yeah, I still can’t explain it).
Anyways, we had a lovely week and a half where they permitted me to drag them
all over the country. I don’t think we ever spent more than 48 hours in one
place. Their visit meant a lot to me and even though I don’t say it enough, I
love you both so much.
And who better to tell you about the
trip than Barbie and Ricky themselves?
Dad's Summary of their Trip
A Trip of Extremes:
Our first evening was on one of the hills overlooking Kigali
and experiencing the beauty of the city at night. Kigali is modern, it sparkles
and it rolls across many hills – what a welcome to Rwanda. The land of a thousand hills can only be
appreciated by driving them and that we did. My observation was this encounter
is and will continue to be a tour of extremes.
The Genocide Memorial in Kigali gave us a quick glimpse into
the not so distant past and was in direct contrast to the peace and beauty of
the countryside. So our first extreme
was going from the Genocide Memorial to Momma and Poppa Kimberly. This was the host family that taught Kimberly
Kinyarwanda and gave her a family home far away from us in America. Parents
have innate ability to communicate even in the absence of a common
language. They shared with us a
wonderful Rwandan lunch – the peacefulness and beauty was such a contrast to
the Genocide Memorial we had just visited.
On to Kimberly’s village – after three hours on a nice paved
road we departed on a hard packed clay bumpy ride for over an hour to reach Mamba.
-- A jewel on the side of the hills near the Burundian border. Upon entering her compound we were greeted by
her neighbors and instantly felt at home and comfortable. This was my first sense of confidence in
Kimberly’s safety – these were good people and she was a part of their
community. This first glimpse was a
relief and further enjoyed by such a wonderful dinner two nights later in the
compound with over 70 of Kimberly’s closest Rwandan friends. Having a traditional Rwandan dinner and
enjoying the kind words spoken about Kimberly and how she fit so well into the
texture of Mamba was the next extreme of our trip. I could tell you of shopping
the market and a freshly made shirt tailored from material given to us by
Kimberly’s host family – but that is a different story.
On our way to Nyungwe National Forest we stopped at a second
Genocide memorial in Murambi. The tour
started much as the Memorial in Kigali until we were escorted to the classrooms
behind the main school building to give tribute to over a hundred corpses on
display. What an impact this had on me –
the strongest reminder to me to never let this happen again. I asked our guide
how could he give this tour everyday and he responded that it was the way he gave
a voice for his family from heaven – he was the sole Genocide survivor from his
family. This was a testimony to grace
and forgiveness.
After trekking for Columbus monkeys in Nyungwe and then
across a swinging bridge spanning the rainforest we were off to the Kings
Palace en-route to our destiny with Mountain Gorillas. After an hour and half
trek up the side of the mountain in Volcanoes National Park we faced the
magnificent mountain gorilla family enjoying their mid-morning breakfast in the
bush. What magnificent animals and
merely six feet away from our camera lens.
Frankly I am not going to try to put words to such a momentous visit –
but yet an experience so extreme from our visit to the King’s Palace in Nyanza
to the Genocide Memorial in Murambi, and the dinner with 70 in Mamba.
We rolled over more hills to Lake Kivu and enjoyed two days
on this most serene lake. As we had
breakfast on the waters edge we watched fishermen push out on to the lake on
traditional dug out fishing boats returning the next morning after fishing all
night. It is difficult to imagine that in one place there can be 3G cell phone
coverage and yet fishermen in dug out canoes propelling themselves by oars. Is that not an extreme?
We finished our trip back in Kigali enjoying one more
evening with our daughter. The next morning she was off on the bus to return to
Mamba and we a taxi to the airport. Everyday of our two-week trip was
invigorating and so divergent from one day to the next. I left Rwanda knowing my daughter was safe
and fit into the day-to-day lives of Mamba.
I left with a wealth of memories that ranged like the land of a thousand
hills – peaceful hospitality with Rwandans, the tragic history of the Genocide
to the natural beauty and grace of mountain gorillas and Lake Kivu.
Love you Daddy, glad you enjoyed the trip.






I had to come back to this TWO TIMES b/c it made me tear up and I couldn't get through it. Beautifully written!!!!
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