Tea and Talk with Eric Murangwa - “How being a footballer saved me from death”
Date: Tuesday 26th March
Time: 5.30pm onwards Refreshments, 6pm to 7pm talk, 7pm to 7.30pm Q&A
Venue: The Abbey Stadium, Newmarket Road, Cambridge, CB5 8LN
Tickets: This event is free and unticketed. All Welcome!
Hosted by: Ben Szreter, CEO, Cambridge United Community Trust
An illustrated talk by Eric Murangwa, MBE, survivor of the Genocide in Rwanda against the Tutsis, hosted by Cambridge United Community Trust and organized in partnership with HistoryWorks and Cambridge Ethnic Community Forum.
Eric Murangwa Eugene is a survivor of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, a former international footballer, a genocide education campaigner and a sport for development and peace advocate.
Eric’s vision brought together Football for Hope, Peace and Unity and Survivors Tribune into one organisation, The Ishami Foundation. Ishami is a Kinyarwanda word meaning ‘branch’ symbolizing resilience, recovery and connection. It is these features which also offer a shared common humanity in sport, and Eric teaches with his colleagues at the foundation, to become engaged and responsible citizens, respectful of each other’s differences. In short his motto is “Changing Lives Through Football and StoryTelling” because it was football that meant that his life was saved in 1994, and this is the story which Eric will share with us in the illustrated talk of how he became an activist and educator against prejudice and racism, instead instilling among young people values to make the world a better place.
In 2018 Eric was awarded an MBE for his outstanding service to the community through sport and genocide education.