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Those We Throw Away Are Diamonds
Those We Throw Away Are Diamonds: A Refugee's Search for Home | Mondiant Dogon
1 post | 2 read
A stunning and heartbreaking lens on the global refugee crisis, from a man who faced the very worst of humanity and survived to advocate for displaced people around the world One day when Mondiant Dogon, a Bagogwe Tutsi born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, was only three years old, his father’s lifelong friend, a Hutu man, came to their home with a machete in his hand and warned the family they were to be killed within hours. Dogon’s family fled into the forest, initiating a long and dangerous journey into Rwanda. They made their way to the first of several UN tent cities in which they would spend decades. But their search for a safe haven had just begun. Hideous violence stalked them in the camps. Even though Rwanda famously has a former refugee for a president in Paul Kagame, refugees in that country face enormous prejudice and acute want. For much of his life, Dogon and his family ate barely enough to keep themselves from starving. He fled back to Congo in search of the better life that had been lost, but there he was imprisoned and left without any option but to become a child soldier. For most refugees, the camp starts as an oasis but soon becomes quicksand, impossible to leave. Yet Dogon managed to be one of the few refugees he knew to go to college. Though he hid his status from his fellow students out of shame, eventually he would emerge as an advocate for his people. Rarely do refugees get to tell their own stories. We see them only for a moment, if at all, in flight: Syrians winding through the desert; children searching a Greek shore for their parents; families gathered at the southern border of the United States. But through his writing, Dogon took control of his own narrative and spoke up for forever refugees everywhere. As Dogon once wrote in a poem, “Those we throw away are diamonds.”
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MaggieCarr
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Absolutely eye opening for me to experience life as a refugee in a world of war when becoming a child soldier is just as normal as hiding among dead bodies as a means to escape rebels. Mondiant shares so many memories of life on the run at 5 years old on, from decades in a refugee camp and his continued fight for education and the ability to return to the homeland from which his community fled 20 years prior. It struck me that the humbleness of...

MaggieCarr ...his people would rather lie and justify a death by any other means than hunger when starvation is so clearly to blame. I struggled with so many names and phrases that I know I didn't do pronunciation justice but his story still grabbed at my heart in a way that stay with me. 2y
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