This fall the
Oklahoma Christian will provide five full scholarships for Rwandan students, on
the condition that they return home after graduation to help their country. The university plans to add two scholarships each year
until the total reaches 11 students and will offer additional half-tuition
scholarships for Rwandans.
Kagame thanked the
school for its decision to “actively support our drive toward our vision.”
“Oklahoma Christian
is an institution known for academic excellence, anchored in Christian faith
... and service to its students,” he said.
Kagame, who won a
landslide victory in 2003 to become Rwanda’s
first democratically elected president since the genocide, visited the
2,000-student school after attending an education conference in Montreal, Quebec.
Kagame accompanied his wife, Jeannette, Rwandan ambassador to the U.S. Dr. Zac
Nsenga and a number of cabinet members from the African nation.
The president answered questions from students about how Rwanda is
promoting unity after the devastating, ethnically charged genocide that claimed
an estimated 800,000 lives 12 years ago. Kagame’s government has attempted to
redraw lines of political districts and downplay the distinction between ethnic
Hutus and Tutsis that sparked the conflict.
One student asked what steps the president has taken to avoid the
corruption that plagues other African nations. Kagame said that Rwandan law now
requires everyone — including the president — to disclose their income and its
sources.
"Corruption has been a very serious problem in countries on
my continent," he said. "It has hindered economic development in
other countries and we recognize that."
After speaking at a
luncheon and receiving an honorary degree from the school, Kagame addressed a
joint session of the Oklahoma Legislature and met with the state’s governor. Gary
Bishop, president of church-supported World
Bible Translation
Center in Fort Worth, Texas,
and his wife Donna presented Kagame and the First Lady with embossed Bibles.
Kagame said he chose
the school as a stop during his visit to North America at the invitation of O'Neal, who visited Rwanda in November 2004.
Richard Lawson, an
Oklahoma Christian graduate and founder of St. Paul, Minn.-based Lawson
Software Inc., and his wife, Pat, made initial contact with the Rwandan
government and invited O’Neal and his wife, Nancy. Dave Jenkins, then a visiting missionary at the school, joined the
group.
Jenkins now serves as
the first full-time missionary from Churches of Christ to Rwanda. From
his home in the capital, Kigali,
he read reports of the visit in Rwandan newspapers. “The Lord is doing
something far beyond what any of us could anticipate,” he said in an e-mail
message from the African country.
In the summer of
2005, 12 students worked as a mission team to Rwanda. Six more students will
travel there this summer, accompanied by Oklahoma Christian faculty members
Bryan and Holly Hixson. David Johnson, a faculty member at Faulkner University,
Montgomery, Ala.,
and his wife, Marlea, will teach in Kigali
this summer. Kyle and Luz Beard plan to move to Rwanda as missionaries later this
year.
Sam Shewmaker,
longtime missionary to Africa and facilitator for African church planting for
Missions Resource Network in Bedford, Texas, offered Kagame “a belated — though deeply felt —
apology that the government of the United States
did not come to the aid of the people of Rwanda in their darkest hour.”
“This fact is a stain
on our national honor for which we are deeply sorry,” said Shewmaker, who has
visited Rwanda
and plans to assist church members in future mission work there.
“We look forward to a
harmonious working relationship with Rwanda that expresses Christ’s
spirit of compassion and service,” he said.
The Rwandan president
said that he hopes the scholarship program will be the first step in ongoing
cultural exchanges between the Christian school and his country.
“We in Rwanda value
these continuing contributions,” he said. “We trust that this is only the
beginning of the road that we are to travel together.”