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📖 Unlock the power of faith and forgiveness in a story that everyone’s talking about!
Left to Tell is Immaculée Ilibagiza’s bestselling memoir recounting her harrowing survival during the Rwandan genocide. Celebrated for its raw emotional depth and spiritual insight, this book ranks #3 in Historical African Biographies and holds a 4.8-star rating from over 5,500 readers. It’s a must-read for those seeking inspiration through resilience, faith, and the transformative power of forgiveness.
| Best Sellers Rank | #19,004 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #4 in Historical African Biographies (Books) #73 in Black & African American Biographies #393 in Memoirs (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 5,575 Reviews |
A**A
A Memoir That Sticks With You
"Left to Tell" is an amazing story told by Immaculée Ilibagiza who survived one of the most unsettling disturbing events known as the Rwandan genocide. This is one of the greatest books I've had ever read that covers the themes of resilience, faith, God, family and forgiveness. There were moments of this book that left me to indescribable thoughts and led me to tears due to how heartbreaking her experiences were. Just the fact that this story was based on real experiences is absolutely mind boggling and nerve-wracking. Her descriptions of her family were so strong and meaningful--revealing heartfelt moments which makes us reader feel emotionally invested. Overall, I highly recommend this book which makes us reader appreciate life moments and understand the importance of forgiveness.
A**A
SUPER SAD
"Left to Tell: Discovering God Amidst the Rwandan Holocaust" by Immaculée Ilibagiza is a profoundly moving and inspirational memoir that recounts the author's harrowing experiences during the Rwandan genocide. Immaculée's storytelling captures the unimaginable horrors of the genocide while also offering a message of faith, hope, and forgiveness. The narrative follows Immaculée's journey from a peaceful and loving childhood to the devastating events of the 1994 Rwandan genocide. The author's ability to convey the intense emotions and challenges she faced during those dark times is both gripping and heart-wrenching. Her survival, both physically and spiritually, becomes a testament to the resilience of the human spirit. What sets "Left to Tell" apart is Immaculée's profound spiritual transformation amidst the horrors she witnesses. The book explores how faith and prayer became essential tools for survival and healing during the darkest moments of her life. Immaculée's discovery of God's presence amid such profound suffering adds a powerful layer to the narrative. The themes of forgiveness and reconciliation are also central to the book. Immaculée's ability to forgive those who committed unspeakable atrocities demonstrates an extraordinary strength of character. Her journey towards forgiveness, despite the unimaginable pain she endured, serves as a powerful example for readers grappling with their understanding of humanity and forgiveness. The writing style is straightforward yet deeply evocative, allowing readers to connect with Immaculée's experiences on a personal level. The memoir not only serves as a historical account of the Rwandan genocide but also imparts important lessons about the human capacity for cruelty and, ultimately, the healing power of forgiveness. In conclusion, "Left to Tell" is a powerful and thought-provoking memoir that goes beyond recounting historical events. Immaculée Ilibagiza's resilience, faith, and capacity for forgiveness make this book a testament to the strength of the human spirit in the face of unimaginable adversity. It is a must-read for those seeking stories of hope and healing in the aftermath of profound tragedy.
J**Y
A delightful woman telling her gruesome story
This is one of those books that everyone should read. It is a hard story to read because of man's unbelievable inhumanity to man being displayed like the holocaust of Rwanda. This story reaches deep into the heart of the reader evoking feelings of horror, shame, and sorrow that leads to penance that friends and neighbors can turn on one another because of prejudice and commit horrible gruesome acts of murder and mayhem that happened in Rwanda. And we cringe in shame that we turned our backs on an innocent Christ loving people who were being hunted and killed by those who hated them for no other reason than that they were just a little different. A repeat of history of the Jewish Holocaust that is so well known. However, the story tells of a beautiful young woman's faith and courage that helped her to survive by hiding in a small bathroom with 7 other women for three months while her enemies called her name just outside her window, looking for her and threatening her very existence. The story tells of that beautiful young woman learning that her family had been murdered and the strength and fortitude it took for her to put her life back together after the killing stopped. It is a story of how she held on to the faith she learned as a child and put it into practice when all else failed her and by the grace of God, she survived and lived to tell her story. Immaculee Ilibagiza is a wonderful storyteller. I have heard her speak in person and she is a beautiful speaker as well. God has greatly blessed her with the grace of telling her story and the story of Rwanda before and after the holocaust. She is very inspirational and really shares her faith and love to those who read her books or hear her tell her story. If you want to grow in your faith and your love for other people who are 'different' from you, read this book. It is powerful and life changing! You might find out those other people aren't so 'different' after all. I know I did and I thank God that he put this book into my hands. I look forward to reading other books written by this delightful Christian woman.
N**✨
A powerful and life-changing story 🙏📖
This book touched my heart deeply. Immaculée’s story of surviving the Rwandan genocide is heartbreaking, inspiring, and full of faith. Her strength, forgiveness, and spiritual journey moved me in ways I didn’t expect. It’s a story everyone should read to understand the power of hope, prayer, and resilience. I couldn’t put it down. Highly recommended!
A**R
Power of A Book
Left to Tell: Discovering God Amidst the Rwandan Holocaust by the author by Immaculee Ilibagiza is a book that we can all learn from. It is a heart wrenching book that recounts what her life was like during the holocaust in Rwanda. She give very graphic details about what happened but in all of it, she was able to find God and forgive. In page 210, she talks about Rwanda healing when the hearts learn how to forgive. It is hard to understand how and why she forgave all the cruelty but she finds a way to get her message across using herself as an example. The book is a great book but it is very sad and tragic. I would not recommend it to those seeking something comedic or happy. The book is very emotional and can make people cry so I would recommend it to those who are trying to find God in the dark. Immaculee doesn’t only focus on forgiveness but she also focuses on how she found God and it is a really inspiring book. It gives people more insight and faith. This can be seen toward the end of the book where we see her help others forgive and have faith. Overall, the book is a very inspiring book that can help a lot of people.
J**R
moving, amazing and inspirational
I read this book during my battle with cancer. It highlighted for me the power of prayer and love for those who we have around us. That where someone has hurt you, do not hang onto the hurt (or hate) but forgive and move on with love and compassion. This has given me tremendous strength and while my battle continues, I know that my trust in the Lord and through the intercession of Our Lady, the hands and minds of my doctors will be Divinely guided in my treatment and ultimately my complete healing.
M**E
Great Book
Powerful story of faith and survival. Immaculee’s strength and trust in God inspired me. A must read.
J**R
Indispensable Document of Triumph Over Human Atrocity
Immaculee Ilibagiza was the only daughter of upstanding, well-educated, charitable, civic-minded and devout Catholic parents living in the Kibuye countryside of Rwanda when an apocalyptic wave of ethnic "cleansing" was unleashed by simmering socio-political forces and government encouragement/complicity in 1994. Being members of the minority Tutsi tribe, Immaculee and her wonderful parents, brothers, neighbors and friends were the targets of the majority Hutu tribespeople who sought to wipe their countrymen out to the very last. Neighbor turned against neighbor, "friend" against friend and, in 100 days' time, 1,000,000 human beings were butchered without mercy. Men, women, children and infants were hacked to death or shot (but mostly hacked to death) and rivers of blood ran red as the bodies were piled into rotting towers of gore or thrown to dogs. Genocide was taking place as the streets and towns of Rwanda were patrolled by roving packs of savage citizens armed with machetes. In a last-ditch effort at survival, Immaculee was sent by her father to hide in a neighbor's house, where she was crammed into a 4ft. X 3ft. bathroom hidden behind a wardrobe for 91 days with six other terrified women. As mobs of killers searched the house sporadically and their voices chanted regularly in the neighborhood, Immaculee clung to her father's rosary and relied upon desperate prayer to get her through unspeakable horror, discomfort, anxiety and the realization that her entire family had been "exterminated." As a personal document from one of the relatively few who survived the Rwandan genocide, Immaculee's straightforward and uncomplicated account is both profound and direct. The agony of the living nightmare that afflicted her day after unending day would have reduced many human beings to madness and, unfortunately, that was indeed the fate suffered by many "lucky enough" to have survived this dark moment in human history. There is nothing in Immaculee's story that lacks verisimilitude, particularly given the copious journalistic documentation that came far, far too late regarding this blight upon the face of modern civilization. Immaculee's faith and frequent accounts of her intense prayer are intrinsic to this book, but even though I do not believe in quite the same kind of God as Immaculee (i.e. a deity that is actively "involved" while human murderers are hacking people to pieces, a busy God picking this one to "spare" by some sort of miracle-power over HERE, while not bothering to help the screaming children over THERE -- please, no wonder we are saddled with so many atheists when such a stupid deity is being "taught") I will not in any way mock Immaculee's desperate and extraordinary faith in the face of horrors that few of us would be lucky to endure visually, much less in the flesh. Immaculee does not preach or proselytize: she testifies to her specific experience of the whole unthinkable episode. In that sense, her book is undeniably a powerful lesson in the durability of the human spirit, the ability of the human person to overcome and even triumph against incomprehensible tragedy through forgiveness and, yes, if you wish, it is also a book that may demonstrate the real power of some kind of God -- namely a God who is an abiding source of love that does NOT interfere, allowing the sun to rise on the just and the unjust, but who remains ever-present and capable of transforming ruin into redemption for those who choose love ... come life or come death. It's a powerful book, a terrifying reminder of how dangerous we become when we dehumanize our neighbors, and it is a disgusting commentary on modern human neglect. Where was the "global community" for 100 days in 1994? Where were the cries of outrage from the great Catholic Church in Rome? Surely, someone there knew what was happening in an overwhelmingly Catholic nation of Africa. Where the heck was Oprah, for that matter? Or all of the other bleeding-heart Hollywood stars who can't wait to get photo-ops opening schools and sundry in Africa because it's fashionable in certain circles these days? The important and ambitious politicians -- where were they? Not bothering with Rwanda, that's for sure. A person does come away wondering how a million people could possibly have been left alone to be sliced apart in cold blood in 1994, with hardly a peep from the glorious powers of the world. Read it, absorb it, ask questions. Never forget. I dare anyone to call me cynical for asking such questions after reading the book himself or herself. But read it you should. Read it and weep.
I**B
Inspirational
I liked that although it’s a very sad story about surviving a genocide it is most inspiring and uplifting. A testament to really having faith and hope in God and power of positive thinking. This story leaves me wanting to be a better human being, to be more forgiving even when the atrocities are beyond my comprehension and most importantly to focus on connecting with God, my creator through prayer, faith and hope. Fantastic easy read. This is a book that everyone needs to read especially in light of the current political and international pandemic crisis.
A**E
Feel gods love
If you are someone to grow in the faith in God , and if you can’t forgive to somebody go for it.
キ**ゲ
1994年にこういった事件があったとは。
ルワンダというアフリカの小さな国で起こった民族虐殺の実話。 フツ族によるツチ族の民族虐殺の(数ヶ月で80万人とも100万人ともいわれる人たちが虐殺されたようです)話なのですが、内容以上にショックだったのが、事件の発生が1994年という、つい最近の出来事であったことです。当時どれほどの報道がなされたのか、国際世論はどのように反応したのか、小生の記憶の中に定かなものがありません。今しばらくは当時を探る旅をしてみたいと考えさせられました。 翻訳本もありますが、原書(といっても英語への翻訳ですが)はきわめて平易ですので、お勧めです。
E**G
An amazing book
This is such an important book specially since another genocide is taking place right now. Immaculee is what I would call a Saint. Due to her tragic circumstances she built this wonderful relationship with God.
E**A
'Left to Tell: Discovering God Amidst the Rwandan Holocaust'
“Left to tell…” should be worked out as a film. It tells better than the Hollywood “Hotel Rwanda”. It talks about compassion, gratitude, forgiveness, reconciliation, real peace. It gives room to God and humankind. Reading the book, I guess what Immaculée Ilibagiza went through to reach to living reconciled with herself, with those who killed her family members and with God whom she felt was deaf at a certain moment. Don’t we all need to live reconciled? The world would be a better place to live. Though I would recommend the book to those who went trough the same experience in Rwanda.
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