
The Documentary Podcast Befriending the man who killed my family
5 snips
May 8, 2026 
Guest
Bishop John Ruchahana

Guest
Viateur Ruribikiye

Guest
Steven (Stephen) Ngabonziza

Guest
Daniel Gasangwa
Bishop John Ruchahana, a religious leader working on reconciliation; Viateur Ruribikiye, a former perpetrator who confessed and joined faith-based community work; Steven Ngabonziza, ex-combatant turned prison guard involved in reconciliation; Daniel Gasangwa, a survivor who confronted those who killed his family. They discuss returned perpetrators, visits between survivors and those released, faith and discipline in forgiveness, and community reintegration.
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Survivor Visits His Family's Killers And Befriends Them
- Daniel Gasangwa visited the men who had killed members of his family after they were released from prison and told them they should be strong because they had been forgiven.
- He lost his wife and four of eight children in 1994 yet still shared food, attended weddings, and receives bananas from a former perpetrator turned neighbour.
Reconciliation Is Practical Spiritual Work
- Bishop John Ruchahana frames reconciliation as a practical, spiritual project that must be lived daily, not just a word or policy.
- He points to reconciliation villages, intermarriage, shared businesses and church life as concrete evidence of rebuilding social fabric.
Support Released Perpetrators With Practical Reintegration
- Help released perpetrators adjust to a changed society by offering rehabilitation, skill-building and community support to avoid marginalization and inferiority complexes.
- Prison Fellowship and local programs provide training, community service (TIG), and reintegration to make them productive citizens.
