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Submit ReviewWhen the Kigali Genocide Memorial was first built in 1999, it was a burial site outside the Rwandan capitol city for thousands of victims of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide Against the Tutsi. Rwandans came to visit the final resting place of friends and family. Today, the city has expanded to envelop the memorial, which has also expanded to include a museum and archive.
We talk with Honoré Gatera, the manager of the memorial, about what the center means to the city and country in 2017 and why a museum is the right medium for the center.
This podcast was recorded at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre on March 24th, 2017.
Subscribe to Museum Archipelago for free to never miss an epsiode (http://www.museumarchipelago.com/subscribe).If you like episodes like this one, you’ll love Club Archipelago. Join Club Archipelago today to help me continue making podcasts about museums (and get some fun benefits)!
Guests:Honoré Gatera
Topics Discussed:00:00: Intro00:14: HonorĂ© Gatera, Manager of the Memorial01:00: Burial Site01:45: Visitor Experience / Opening Film04:00: Individual Stories Lead to Community Stories04:50: Video Is In Two Parts05:25: Pre-Colonial Period07:10: Why is a Museum the Right Medium to Tell the Story?09:06: School Groups / Educational Outreach11:07: Photographs in the Museum13:00: Genocide ArchiveÂ
When the Kigali Genocide Memorial was first built in 1999, it was a burial site outside the Rwandan capitol city for thousands of victims of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide Against the Tutsi. Rwandans came to visit the final resting place of friends and family. Today, the city has expanded to envelop the memorial, which has also expanded to include a museum and archive.
We talk with Honoré Gatera, the manager of the memorial, about what the center means to the city and country in 2017 and why a museum is the right medium for the center.
This podcast was recorded at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre on March 24th, 2017.
Subscribe to Museum Archipelago for free to never miss an epsiode.
If you like episodes like this one, you’ll love Club Archipelago. Join Club Archipelago today to help me continue making podcasts about museums (and get some fun benefits)!
Guests:Honoré Gatera
Topics Discussed:00:00: Intro00:14: HonorĂ© Gatera, Manager of the Memorial01:00: Burial Site01:45: Visitor Experience / Opening Film04:00: Individual Stories Lead to Community Stories04:50: Video Is In Two Parts05:25: Pre-Colonial Period07:10: Why is a Museum the Right Medium to Tell the Story?09:06: School Groups / Educational Outreach11:07: Photographs in the Museum13:00: Genocide ArchiveÂ
When the Kigali Genocide Memorial was first built in 1999, it was a burial site outside the Rwandan capitol city for thousands of victims of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide Against the Tutsi. Rwandans came to visit the final resting place of friends and family. Today, the city has expanded to envelop the memorial, which has also expanded to include a museum and archive.
We talk with Honoré Gatera, the manager of the memorial, about what the center means to the city and country in 2017 and why a museum is the right medium for the center.
This podcast was recorded at the Kigali Genocide Memorial Centre on March 24th, 2017.
Subscribe to Museum Archipelago for free to never miss an epsiode.
If you like episodes like this one, you’ll love Club Archipelago. Join Club Archipelago today to help me continue making podcasts about museums (and get some fun benefits)!
Guests:Honoré Gatera
Topics Discussed:00:00: Intro00:14: HonorĂ© Gatera, Manager of the Memorial01:00: Burial Site01:45: Visitor Experience / Opening Film04:00: Individual Stories Lead to Community Stories04:50: Video Is In Two Parts05:25: Pre-Colonial Period07:10: Why is a Museum the Right Medium to Tell the Story?09:06: School Groups / Educational Outreach11:07: Photographs in the Museum13:00: Genocide ArchiveÂ
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