Pierre-Claver Ndacyayisenga was teaching history in Kigali, Rwanda, when
he was forced to flee to the neighboring Congo with his wife and three
children. Thus began a harrowing five-year voyage of survival during
which they travelled thousands of miles on foot from one refugee camp to
another. Lacking food and water, they were often robbed, sometimes
raped, and constantly pursued and bombed by shadowy armed soldiers with
sophisticated weapons and aerial surveillance information. This
brilliant and touching book is the story of one family among the more
than 300,000 refugees--many of whom did not survive. For those wishing
to understand the war in the Congo, this must-read will restore the
humanity and the right to mourn for hundreds of thousands of Rwandans
dispersed throughout the world.