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                    		| Born in Burundi,  a small mountainous country in east central Africa,  Gilbert Tuhabonye loved to run everywhere.  He ran to the valley's edge to get water for  his family.  He ran to school, five miles  away, and he loved to race his friends.   His favorite thing to do was to chase his family's cows. Running barefoot, he won  an 8K race while only a freshman.  Gilbert  became the national champion in the 400 and 800 meters as an 11th grader.   Now, 12 years later and more than 8,000 miles from Burundi,  Gilbert  is a celebrity in the world of running.  He  graduated from Abilene Christian University  where, despite being covered with scar tissue from his extensive burns, he was  a national champion runner. In addition to coaching and training runners, Gilbert enjoys  speaking to groups of all ages and backgrounds.   He is also training for the 2007 World Championships and the 2008  Olympics. He lives in Austin, Texas, with his wife Triphine and daughter Emma.  |  
                    		|  |  |  NEW BOOKRunning to the Arms of God 
 CBN.com  From amid the ashes  and charred bones of his murdered friends, Burundi runner Gilbert Tuhabonye  recounts how he pulled his burning body free from the carnage to run his most  important race—the race for his own life.  Twelve years ago, the  centuries-old battle between the Hutu and Tutsi tribes, spurred by the  government-sponsored ethnic genocide of neighboring Rwanda, came to Gilbert’s high school.   Fueled by deep hate and the political upheaval that wracked the country, the  Hutus who attended the Kibimba high school, joined by their parents and other  Hutu tribesmen, forced more than a hundred of the Tutsi children and teachers  into a small room and used machetes and clubs to cut and beat most of them to  death.  The unfortunate few who survived were set on fire along with the  dead.  The Hutu tribesmen, many of whom were classmates and lifelong  friends of Gilbert, spent the next nine hours outside the room laughing,  dancing and taunting the ones left smoldering and moaning inside the room.  After hours of  incomprehensible pain, Gilbert alone escaped.  On scorched feet and with  his body burning, Gilbert used the charred bone of one of his  classmates to break a window, jump free of the fire, and run into the dark of  the night as the lone survivor of one of the most horrific massacres in the  long, bloody history of the Hutu-Tutsi war.   In his book, This Voice in My  Heart: A Genocide Survivor’s Story of Escape, Faith and Forgiveness (Amistad,  2006), Gilbert, an inspirational speaker and a well-known and beloved member of  the world-wide running community, tells the harrowing tale of his courageous  escape from the horrific inferno of the Burundi massacre.   The author recently discussed his experiences.      What was your life like in Burundi when you were a child?  Burundi is a very beautiful country and I grew up  surrounded by family. We were farmers, and from an early age I had to do a lot  of work in the fields and to tend our cows. I loved being outside and I got  into a great deal of mischief with my friends while playing games. We lived  very peacefully with the Hutu and got along well with everyone. I had to walk  several miles to get to the nearest town and to my primary school. Only my  wealthy uncle lived in the city and drove a car. For the rest of us, our feet  and legs were our only vehicle. I loved to run from the time I was very young. I always thought of  the place where I grew up in the mountain highlands as a kind of paradise. We  weren’t wealthy nor were we poor. The land was very fertile, and, besides the  crops we grew, I could go out and find fresh fruits growing on the trees to  enjoy whenever I wanted. Despite all that has happened, I still look back on my  childhood as a wonderful and innocent time. How did you end up in a private school so far away from  your home?  The education  system in Burundi is very  different than it is in the United    States. Here, the local school districts  seem to have the most control over a student’s life. The state has oversight  over each school. In Burundi,  the national government has control over all the schools—public and private. At  the end of what is the equivalent of your junior high school, every student in Burundi takes a  national test to determine what type of school and where in the country they  will attend secondary school. This is a very important test in the life of all  students. Based on my scores, I was sent to Kibimba  School in a province far from my home  in Comina Songa (Songa   County) where I was fortunate  to receive an education that would prepare me to enter the university. Many of  classmates did not pass the exam, or their scores sent them to vocational or  technical secondary schools to prepare them for various jobs. I had very little  say in where I was going to go to secondary school, but my parents and family  kept telling me that education was so important. Being away from home was  difficult at first, but all students had similar experiences to mine, so we  quickly adjusted. Tell us what happened to you, your classmates, and  teachers in October 1993.  In June of that  year, Melchior Ndadaye of the FRODEBU Party won a multiparty presidential  election with 64.8 percent of the vote—the Hutu majority had its way. In late  October, Tutsi soldiers assassinated Ndadaye in an attempted coup. Angered by  the assassination, the Hutu people in the city near our school gathered  together all of the Tutsi students and faculty at the Kibimba School.  We spent hours surrounded by an angry mob, and then they struck. Those that  survived the initial attack by machete and club were roped together and led to  a building near the school grounds. I was among that bound group. We were  beaten and slashed, and then forced inside the building. Eventually that  building was set on fire. I was trapped inside with my classmates and teachers.  I watched them all die. I was the only one to escape. After your escape, you ended up in America.   How did that happen?  It took me some  time to recover from my burns, but eventually I began to run again. I was able  to return to my past form and ran in national and international competitions in  places like Rome and Japan. When it came time for the  1996 games in Atlanta, I was selected to  represent Burundi  at a training camp for developing nations. Through the grace of God and the  generosity of a large number of people, I stayed in the U.S. hoping to  earn a track scholarship to a university and to be granted political asylum.  Because of the civil war that raged following the 1993 violence, more than  100,000 Burundians lost their lives. Since I had been a victim of the attack, I  was granted political asylum and earned a scholarship to attend Abilene Christian University.  Tell us about your Olympic experiences. First of all, I  want to be clear about one thing—I did not run fast enough to qualify for the  Olympics, and I didn’t run any Olympic races. Some people have misunderstood  what my Olympic experience consisted of, and I don’t want anyone to believe  something that is not true.  Second, I did come  to Atlanta for  the 1996 games. Along with several other athletes from Burundi, I was  brought here to be a part of the Olympic development training program. The  International Olympic Committee assists developing countries in creating  programs for athletes in many sports. They believe that by being exposed to  better facilities, training programs, coaches, and equipment, we can compete  with more affluent nations in the future. The hope is that what we learn, and  what our coaches learn from more successful athletes, coaches, and programs, we  will pass on to others. I loved my time at  the games. I got to meet with, train with, and become friends with other  athletes from around the world. I even got to carry the Olympic torch in the  relay. I was especially pleased that my segment of the relay was in Birmingham, Alabama.  I so greatly admire Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and being in that city meant a  great deal to me. I also got to meet some runners who I consider to be  wonderful role models, both for what they’ve accomplished on the track and off  it. Two people especially come to mind: Abde Bile, who at the age of  thirty-seven managed to qualify to compete, and Hicham El Guerrouj. Known as the “King of the Mile,” he holds the  world record in the 1,500, 2,000, and the mile. Since we both spoke French, we  were able to speak to one another. What impressed me the most about him was how  normal he seemed. The guy was recognized around the world as perhaps the  greatest middle distance runner ever, and you would have never known that by how  he carried himself. Just to show you what kind of guy he is, the same year as  the Atlanta  games, the International Association of Athletic Federation honored him for his  humanitarian efforts and he remains a UNICEF ambassador. Along with Gerrouj, I  got to know Frankie Fredericks of Nimibia, Driss Mazouse also from Morroco, and  a whole host of other medal winners.  The  highlights of the Olympics for me were attending the opening ceremonies and  being in the stands when Venuste won the gold medal in the 5,000 meters. It was  awesome! Venuste was in the middle of the pack with 600 meters to go and put on  a finishing kick that had him breaking the tape and winning the gold for Burundi. It was  a thrill to hear our national anthem being played in the Olympic Stadium and  watching our flag rise above the Kenyan and Moroccan. Venuste was the only  winner and medalist from Burundi,  though Aloise Nizigama did finish fourth in the 10,000, narrowly missing a  medal. The title of your book is This Voice in My Heart.  What is the voice in your heart  and what does it tell you?  The book’s title refers to a voice that I  heard when I was inside the building that had been set on fire. Though I’m not  proud to say this, I thought of killing myself to avoid the heat and the  flames. Everyone else around me was dead or dying, and I didn’t want to suffer  as I had seen them do so. I had climbed up on a counter and dove off of it,  hoping that I would break my neck. I couldn’t do it successfully the first  time. When I was thinking of doing it again, I heard a voice. Even at the time,  I knew it was the voice of God. He was telling me that I was going to be okay.  That I was going to be spared. Up to that point in my life, I had been a person  of faith, but not to the degree that I am today as a result of hearing that  voice and feeling its presence. More than just  telling me that I was going to survive that ordeal, the voice in my heart told  me that God was an active presence in my life. He wasn’t just someone who I  could visit on a Sunday. The voice also let me know that He has a plan for me.  At the time of the attack, I was so wrapped up in exams, my running, and  worrying about my future that I had let God slip in my priorities. Imagine this  though—God had not let me slip from His view.  That voice has  remained a guiding force in my life. It leads me and inspires me, and makes me  want to spread the good news that it shared with me with the rest of the world.  If I just listened to my heart, to what I knew to be true, to what God had to  say to me about my salvation, I was going to be okay. What is the significance of the role your faith and  spiritual beliefs play in your ability to overcome such horrible circumstances  in your life?  Tell us about your faith.  Faith was always a  major part of my life. The missionaries had converted many in my family, but it  was grandmother who had an especially enduring and powerful faith. I can still  hear her singing to me these words: O victory in Jesus, my Savior foreverHe saved me and I love him and all my love is due to Him
 He suffered for me at Calvary  and shed his redeeming blood.
 Like many young people, as I got older I  lapsed a bit in my church attendance and was not tending to my faith as I  should have. My experience in the fire and God’s voice coming to me and  assuring me in the time of my most dire need shored up the foundation of faith  that I had as a youngster and allowed me to have a much sturdier and more  stable platform upon which God has built a stronger, more resilient me.  I  always knew that my faith would be tested, and it certainly was in those hours  when my school was attacked. My belief in God never faltered. I never blamed  Him or wondered how He could have let such a thing happen to me or to my  classmates and teachers. I accepted what was taking place and knew that it was  all part of a plan much larger than me. When God intervened on my behalf and  spoke to me, I knew then that one day I would want to add my own voice to the  chorus proclaiming God’s mastery and power. He saw fit to spare my life and I  was forever changed. I began the book with a proverb from my country, “It is  easy to start a fire and difficult to extinguish it.” That has many meanings in  the context of my story, but primarily it means that the light that God put in  me is something precious and resilient. It is never too late for that smallest  of embers to be revived. God’s faith in me is like that, and He chose me again as  a reminder to others how infinite His faith is. How would  you encourage others who have endured great tragedy in their lives? What words  of advice would you share with them to help them move forward as you have? It took me some time to recover physically,  mentally, emotionally, and spiritually from the attack. I’d like to be able to  say that my faith in God and man never wavered, but that wouldn’t be true. I  had an especially difficult time trusting people again. I grew suspicious of  those around me, thinking that anyone could hurt me. In time, my defensiveness  weakened. God’s healing words  of forgiveness eventually came easily to me. I saw that there was evil in  world, but, more importantly, I saw how much good there was as well. So many  people came to visit me in the hospital when I was first recovering from the  attack—Hutu and Tutsi alike. They gave me so much hope.  If I have any  advice for anyone who has suffered a tragedy it is to find those glimmers of  hope. They are there, and no matter how small or insignificant they may seem in  face of the pain of the tragedy you’ve endured, they are far more powerful and  more enduring than anything you will face.  I’ve seen the  horror that people can inflict on one another, and I’ve also experienced the  generosity of hundreds if not thousands of other people. Those who attacked me  and hated me could not defeat me. I survived through the grace of God and the  support of many people. Once you’ve  experienced that kind of love and support in your life, all you want to do is  give those feelings back to others. I became determined to survive that violent  attack because I wanted the world to know that the darkness can never  extinguish the light. 
 Courtesy of The B&B Media Group. Used by permission.    
 
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