
2009 • 1h 20m • Documentary
Availability
Available Worldwide
Available Worldwide
Available Worldwide
Speakers Available
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About the film
Could you ever forgive the people who slaughtered your family? In 1994, hundreds of thousands of Rwandan Hutus were incited to wipe out the country's Tutsi minority. From the crowded capital to the smallest village, local patrols massacred lifelong friends and family members, most often with machetes and improvised weapons.
Announced in 2001, the government put in place the Gacaca Tribunals, open-air hearings with citizen-judges meant to try their neighbors and rebuild the nation. As part of this experiment in reconciliation, confessed genocide killers are sent home from prison, while traumatized survivors are asked to forgive them and resume living side-by-side.
Filming for close to a decade in a tiny hamlet, award-winning filmmaker Anne Aghion has charted the impact of Gacaca on survivors and perpetrators alike. Through their fear and anger, accusations and defenses, blurry truths, inconsolable sadness, and hope for life renewed, she captures the emotional journey to coexistence.
Stay Engaged
To learn more about the film: https://gacacafilms.com/my-neighbor-my-killer/
To learn more about Anne: https://anneaghionfilms.com/filmography/
Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/anneaghion/
Crew
Anne Aghion, Nadia Ben Rachid, James Kakwerere, Linette Frewin, Claire Bailly du Bois, Mathieu Hagnery, Simon Rittmeier, Richard Fleming, Pierre Camus, Roland Duboué, Dolorès Jordi, Nathalie Vidal, Yves Servagent, Assumpta Mugiraneza
Awards & recognition
Official Selection Cannes Film Festival 2009
Official Selection
Best Documentary Nominee Gotham Awards 2009
Nomination
Winner Human Rights Watch Nestor Almendros Award for Courage in Filmmaking 2009
Award
Best Documentary Montréal Black Film Festival 2010
Award
What people are saying
‘An historic document of incalculable value, but also a superbly shot work of cinema‘
Agence France Presse
‘Anne Aghion asks a lot of tough questions in My Neighbor My Killer, the fourth and last in her series of films about the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. But the most difficult, posed on the posters for her new film, may be this: after the killing has ceased, and order has been restored, ‘How do you make it right again?'‘
Larry Rohter
Gallery