The Barefoot Woman

Paperback, 152 pages

Published Dec. 18, 2018 by Archipelago.

ISBN:
978-1-939810-04-5
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4 stars (2 reviews)

2 editions

An inspirational memoir

4 stars

Reading The Barefoot Woman allowed me to gain a different perspective on traditional Rwandan life to that of the other Rwandan books I have read so far because this memoir does not focus upon the the horrific 1994 genocide. The book was written over a decade later so the author's awareness that this would occur is very much in evidence, but she tells us of her family's daily life in the preceding decades. I got a sense of normality from the memoir because events are told from Mukasonga's child viewpoint and she has only really known their Bugesera existence so vividly described these customs and society. In truth however, Mukasonga's Tutsi family has already been exiled from their homeland and, despite making the best of Bugesera, her mother does not see this place as home.

Mukasonga's mother must have been a wonderfully strong woman to have kept herself and her …

On Living

3 stars

This memoir is my introduction to author Scholastique Mukasonga, instead of one of her more famous works of fiction. It is a book about life, and about lives lived. It is written about her childhood, before the massacre in Rwanda in 1967, at a time when her family was living essentially in a labour camp.

Despite the heartbreaking backdrop, the moments of happiness shine through. Mukasonga also manages a critique of western principles and a conversation on the myths of progress and tradition. In the end it is short and touching, and ultimately sad.