Slam: d’ou viennent nos malheurs?

A tale by Faustin Muliri: https://www.facebook.com/HabariRDC/videos/674231188314835/

“Once upon a time, in a forgotten village, there was a place called Kangerlussuak, a fertile spot bathed by the Ruberezina River. The inhabitants of this village, nearly a hundred households, lived in great harmony, although separated from their neighbors by the river. At the head of the village was Eteni, an imposing man with an impetuous character, whose life seemed marked by a constant desire for revenge. His wife, Kajur, came from the neighboring village on the other bank of the river, and their union symbolized peace between the two peoples, once at war. But this peace was shattered by an ancestral murder, an event that engendered deep resentment between the two villages.

The inhabitants of Kangerlussuak attributed all their misfortunes to the inhabitants of the left bank, believing that it was their rivals on the other side of the river who were the cause. “The misfortunes that strike Kangerlussuak always come, over there, to our left,” they said. Eteni, Above all, he swore that any threat from the left bank had to be eliminated, convinced that only an act of war could put an end to the village's misfortunes.

This clip is broadcast as part of the Slameurs fédérateurs program run by the NGO La Benevolencija.

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C'est le ton qui fait la panique