December 5, 2006 journal, the reality of death in Rwanda as was reported on 60 Minutes. Continued from December 4 the chilling cold blooded genocide told by one of their own. This story aired on CBS 60 Minutes Dec 3rd. and is enough to break your heart forever. "Persuaded the pastor to sneak them there in the middle of the night. They snuck out at 2 in the morning, on the day Immaculee calls "liberation day." Asked how they escaped, she says, "We stood up first of all, never really much standing up. I remember fixing my knees, like I couldn't walk." But they managed to walk, and run, concealed by the night to the French compound. "And when we reached the gate, I was like, 'We are Tutsi, please help us,'" she remembers. "So he said, 'Come in' and we went in, and it was the first time in three months that we saw somebody have pity on us." She was safe, but soon sorry because Immaculee learned that her two brothers, and her mother and father had all been killed. Her father had been shot trying to get food for his neighbors' children. The killers put her father's body on a roadblock. After a hundred days, a Tutsi army formed in exile had captured most of the country and stopped the genocide. Today, Tutsis are still in control and are sharing power with Hutus. The economy is coming back, hundreds of thousands of Tutsis have come back from exile, and the country hopes to attract tourists. The country may be peaceful, but it's still on edge. Some Hutus want to resume the genocide, and some Tutsis still want revenge. Immaculee knows Rwandans can never forget but believes they must forgive. Revenge, she told Simon, only prolongs the pain. "And I don't want it. I don't want them after killing my family to give me this luggage in my heart, in my belly, you know, to hold this anger," she says. So Immaculee has even forgiven Alex, the man who killed two of her relatives and who would have killed her. Asked if she felt angry when she saw him, Immaculee says no. "You weren't tempted to take his head and shake it against a brick wall?" Simon asks. "No, completely in my heart I was aware it won't change anything. It won't change his heart. It won't bring back people he killed. That's the worst thing," she replies. "No but it might've felt good," Simon remarks. "It doesn't. That's the funny thing. It won't. I know well," Immaculee says. Now she's a woman on a mission to spread the story of the genocide hoping it can prevent future atrocities. She has giving lectures; she has written a book; and she is determined to stop the inevitable revisionists who claim the genocide never happened. "You started to hear on radios, people denying that it wasn't genocide. And that almost takes your breath away," Immaculee tells Simon. "Like, what I have lived isn't genocide? What is genocide? Every child, every woman, every man, Tutsi, at least in my village all I have seen is dead". This is not much difference in what we are doing in Iraq to those people. We thought Rumsfeld got fired because of all peoples popular opinion but now we learn he issued a memo saying we are not winning the war and this goes against the pride and joy of the president. This man simply cannot admit his mistakes and will keep on fighting and sending innocent people into battle with our losses already extreme. Not only is he doing it to U.S. but he’s doing it unto them that are born there without options. Believe it or not New York is banning transfats from being served in the city and this is the right direction although it is the tip of the iceberg in all obesed America with failing health. The largest pharmaceutical maker has killed a bunch of people experimenting. They are saying publicly now that they cannot believe what the president says going or coming. Let us set our sights on heaven and be in compliance to laws of the living God. Pat Buchanan and Alan Keyes even though both Catholic, seem to be the most truthful.