Immaculée
Ilibagiza
September 15, 2008
Rwandan holocaust survivor and author of Left to Tell: Discovering God Amidst the Rwandan
Holocaust


About Immaculée
Immaculée Ilibagiza is a living example of faith put into action.
Immaculée's life was transformed dramatically during the 1994
Rwandan genocide where she and seven other women spent 91 days huddled
silently together in the cramped bathroom of a local pastor's house.
Immaculée entered the bathroom a vibrant, 115-pound university
student with a loving family - she emerged weighing just 65 pounds to
find her entire family had been brutally murdered (with the exception
of one brother who had been studying out of the country).
Immaculée credits her salvage mostly to prayer and to a set of
rosary beads given to her by her devout Catholic father prior to going
into hiding. Anger and resentment about her situation were literally
eating her alive and destroying her faith, but rather than succumbing
to the rage that she felt, Immaculée instead turned to prayer.
She began to pray the rosary as a way of drowning out the negativity
that was building up inside her. Immaculée found solace and peace
in prayer and began to pray from the time she opened her eyes in the
morning to the time she closed her eyes at night. Through prayer, she
eventually found it possible, and in fact imperative, to forgive her
tormentors and her family's murderers.
Immaculée's strength in her faith empowered her to stare down
a man armed with a machete threatening to kill her during her escape.
She also later came face to face with the killer of her mother and her
brother and said the unthinkable, "I forgive you." Immaculée
knew, while in hiding, that she would have to overcome immeasurable
odds without her family and with her country destroyed. Fortunately,
Immaculée utilized her time in that tiny bathroom to teach herself
English with only The Bible and a dictionary; once freed she was able
to secure a job with the United Nations.
In 1998, Immaculée immigrated to the United States where she
continued her work with the UN. During this time she shared her story
with co-workers and friends, who were so impacted they insisted she
write it down in book form. Three days after finishing her manuscript
she met best selling author, Dr. Wayne W. Dyer, who, within minutes
of meeting her, offered to publish her book. Dyer is quoted as saying,
"There is something much more than charisma at work here - Immaculée
not only writes and speaks about unconditional love and forgiveness,
but she radiates it wherever she goes."
Immaculée's first book, Left to Tell; Discovering God Amidst
the Rwandan Holocaust (Hay House) was released in March of 2006. Left
to Tell quickly became a New York Times Best Seller. To date it has
been translated into fifteen languages worldwide. Immaculée's
story has also been made into a documentary titled "The Diary of
Immaculée." She has appeared in numerous media including
60 Minutes, CNN, EWTN, The Aljazeera Network, The New York Times, USA
Today, Newsday, and many other domestic and international outlets. She
was recently featured in Michael Collopy's "Architects of Peace"
project, which has honored legendary people like Mother Teresa, Jimmy
Carter, Nelson Mandela, and the Dalai Lama.
Immaculée has received honorary doctoral degrees from The University
of Notre Dame and Saint John's University. She has been recognized and
honored with numerous humanitarian awards including: The Mahatma Gandhi
International Award for Reconciliation and Peace 2007; a finalist as
one of Belifnet.com's "Most Inspiring People of the Year 2006,"
and a recipient of the American Legacy's Women of Strength & Courage
Award. Left to Tell has received a Christopher Award "affirming
the highest values of human spirit," and been chosen as Outreach
Magazine's selection for "Best Outreach Testimony/Biography Resource
of 2007." Left to Tell has been adopted into the curriculum of
dozens of high schools and universities, including Villanova University,
which selected it for the 2007-2008 "One Book Program," making
Left to Tell mandatory reading for 6,000 students.
Immaculée recently hosted a documentary titled "Ready to
Forgive, An African Story of Grace," a project sponsored by The
Evangelical Lutheran Church of America. The film focuses on the Acholi
people of Northern Uganda and their desire to forgive their tormentors.
“Ready to Forgive” has been broadcasted on NBC and the Hallmark
Channel.
Immaculée recently signed a contract with MPower Pictures to
produce a major motion picture about her story.
Today Immaculée is regarded as one of world's leading speakers
on peace, faith, and forgiveness. She has shared her universal message
with world dignitaries, school children, multinational corporations,
churches, and at many conferences. Immaculée works hard to spread
her message and to raise money for her Left to Tell Charitable Fund
which directly benefits the children orphaned by the genocide.