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list price: $24.95
edition:Paperback
category: Political Science
published: Oct 2004
ISBN:9780679311720
publisher: Random House of Canada
imprint: Vintage Canada

Shake Hands with the Devil

The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda

by Romeo Dallaire

tagged: military, genocide & war crimes
Description

A brave, unforgettable first-hand account of the Rwandan genocide by a man almost literally haunted by the dead and by the spectre of his mission's failure. Marking the twenty-fifth anniversary of this horrific event, this edition includes a new note from Roméo Dallaire.

Serving in Rwanda in 1993, LGen. Roméo Dallaire and his small peacekeeping force found themselves abandoned by the UN in a vortex of civil war and genocide. With meagre resources to stem the killing, General Dallaire was witness to the murder of 800,000 Rwandans in a hundred days, and returned home broken, disillusioned and suicidal. Shake Hands with the Devil is his return to Rwanda: a searing book that is both an eyewitness account of the failure of humanity to stop the genocide, and the story of General Dallaire's own struggle to find a measure of peace, reconciliation and hope.

About the Author

Romeo Dallaire

Contributor Notes

ROMÉO DALLAIRE is a retired lieutenant-general, retired Canadian senator, and celebrated humanitarian. In 1993, LGen Dallaire was appointed force commander for UNAMIR, where he bore witness to the Rwandan genocide. His Governor General's Literary Award-winning book, Shake Hands with the Devil, exposed the failures of the international community to stop that genocide. It has been turned into an Emmy Award-winning documentary as well as a feature film; it has also been entered into evidence in war crimes tribunals trying the perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide. Dallaire has received numerous honours and awards, including Officer of the Order of Canada in 2002 and the United Nations Association in Canada’s Pearson Peace Medal in 2005. His second book, They Fight Like Soldiers, They Die Like Children, was also a national bestseller. Since his retirement, he has become an outspoken advocate for human rights, mental health and war-affected children. He founded the Roméo Dallaire Child Soldiers Initiative, an organization committed to progressively ending the use of child soldiers worldwide through a security sector approach.

Awards
  • Winner, Governor General's Literary Award - Nonfiction
  • Winner, Canadian Booksellers Association Libris Award - Author of the Year
  • Winner, Shaughnessy Cohen Award for Political Writing
Editorial Review

“Lt. General Roméo Dallaire is revered by Canadians everywhere. When I finished the book, I could understand why. Here was a man who screamed into the void. No one listened, no one cared, no one heard. But he never stopped screaming. He valued every human life. He wept for every human loss. He never gave up.”
—Stephen Lewis in The Walrus

“Using the detailed daily notes that were taken by his assistant in the field, Gen. Dallaire painstakingly recreated the events leading up to the genocide and provides a minute-by-minute account of the eruption of bloodshed in April, 1994, as his pleas for reinforcements to UN headquarters in New York were ignored.”
—Stephanie Nolen, The Globe and Mail

“Almost certainly the most important book published in Canada this year.”
The Globe and Mail

Shake Hands with the Devil is both an exorcism and a scathing indictment. With all the powerful immediacy of an open wound, Shake Hands with the Devil is the most important non-fiction book of the year.”
The Vancouver Sun

“It [is] a story of international indifference and political failure, but it [is] also one of the most profoundly disturbing tales of the century.”
The Ottawa Citizen
“With considerable effort, pain and sacrifice, retired Lieutenant-General Romeo Dallaire has provided us with an insider’s account of how he struggled with one of the most horrific events in the 20th century while an indifferent world and an incompetent United Nations looked on. Hopefully, this well written and comprehensive book represents the last chapter in Dallaire’s painful Rwandan journey.”
The National Post

Shake Hands with the Devil [is] one of the year’s, if not the decade’s, most important events in Canadian publishing. . . . Dallaire gives us something to believe in. That he has done so with his eyes and heart wide open to the worst our species has to offer is a monumental achievement. Shake Hands with the Devil delivers this remarkable man and his story to us.”
Vancouver Sun; Times-Colonist (Victoria)

“On the enormously important issue of Third World development and the moral obligation of the Western world to assist the dispossessed, [Shake Hands With The Devil] is a powerful cri de coeur for the powerless, and a gut-wrenching description of what really happened during those awful months 10 years ago.”
Toronto Star

“Dallaire, the proud, dedicated Canadian in charge of that mission, a man of deep humanitarian conviction.”
The Ottawa Citizen

“The very spareness of the prose reflects a supreme effort at self-mastery and heightens the anguish described. . . . He manages to convey the full horror of the genocide in relatively few passages of extraordinary, wrenching lyric power. . . . This is a book to read—to understand what genocide means, to relect on the failure of “humanity,” and to be inspired by the courage of the few in the face of genocidal horror and international indifference.”
The Gazette
“With the best intentions in the world, we asked Romeo Dallaire to inhabit an unspeakable world for us, to witness horrors beyond imagining, to carry a moral burden that no one person should ever have had to shoulder. He has now done us the immeasurable service of setting out in print what price that burden exacted on his mind and his soul.”
The Gazette

“Anyone wondering whether the United Nations still has a role to play ought to be reading Romeo Dallaire’s long-awaited account of the Rwandan massacre. Shake Hands with the Devil is a harsh, uncompromising account of a great catastrophe—one the great powers saw coming and chose not to prevent. This is an important book.”
Edmonton Sun

“As painful as Shake Hands with the Devil is to read, it is impossible to imagine the agony it author had to go through to write it. . . . What he witnessed, what he was incapable of stopping, would have broken anyone. Dallaire’s condemnation of the free world is stark and uncompromising. . . . It is impossible to read this memoir—written in meticulous detail—without feeling sick and without feeling rage.”
Calgary Herald

“[A] powerful story of leadership and sacrifice, of moral and physical courage, and a deep love of humanity. In short, a story of a fine soldier and a hero.”
The Edmonton Journal

“This is an important book because it is a factual record of the genocide of recent times. . . . So we encounter with him the misery and chaos and the sheer unadulterated terror of living through an unnecessary and avoidable atrocity. . . . Read this book and rediscover if you have lost it, your capacity for moral outrage.”
Winnipeg Free Press

Shake Hands with the Devil, Dallaire’ s powerfully eloquent reconstruction of genocide, [is] a haunting story of evil. . . . That he has survived and found a way to write about those events is a triumph. Not a book for the faint of heart, perhaps. But Shake Hands with the Devil should be mandatory reading for Western leaders and citizens of every country that pays lip service to the peacekeeping ideals and the sanctity of human life.”
The Chronicle-Herald (Halifax)

“An almost day-by-day chronology of the horror. . . . Dallaire has written an emotional, often bitter book. . . . Moving and tragic.”
The Telegram (St. John’s)

“[Dallaire’s] passionate, disturbing memoir of those awful days is harrowing reading. . . . It is a savage book. . . . But his humanity shines through, unlike so many others tainted by the blood of innocents.”
The Calgary Sun

“[Shake Hands with the Devil] is an affidavit for an indictment—an indictment of the murderers, the hamstrung, bureaucratized UN, and the self-absorbed developed world. . . . If Shake Hands with the Devil serves as an introduction to the Rwandan genocide, even for those only voyeuristically in what happened to a Canadian general, it has surpassed its original intent. For all this, Romeo Dallaire emerges as our post-Cold War hero.”
Quill & Quire

“To read his soul-searching book is to feel a rush of empathy with its author. It is also to confront uncomfortable truth . . . . Shake Hands with the Devil is an uncommonly courageous work, wrung from the depths of despair and wrought in plain, forthright prose. . . . Abroad in the world, the Canadian humanitarian needs a saint’s compassion, a scholar’s knowledge, and a soldier’s strength. Bravely and passionately, Romeo Dallaire has shown us where to start.”
Literary Review of Canada

“In his book, Shake Hands with the Devil, Dallaire has documented the callousness and inertia that precluded military intervention in Rwanda. The book is a scathing indictment of the United Nations and its member countries and a dire warning of the consequences to be expected when we choose to not get involved.”
The Hamilton Spectator
"Retired Lieutenant General Romeo Dallaire has written a book that is sure to mark all those that read it. . . . Shake Hands With the Devil is a book with a message. . . . LGen Dallaire’s ‘cri du coeur’ is a must read.”
The Edmonton Sun

“There’s something about [Shake Hands With the Devil] that is Shakespearean—this sincere soul with a solid heart who tries to do the right thing while the rest of the world cynically covers their butts.”
—Michael Donovan, interviewed in The Globe and Mail
“A remarkable book. I hope Canadians will read this book. . . . Dallaire does not spare us any of the details, for which, once again, thank you! . . . Read this book! Thank you, again, Dallaire—not just for the book, but also your service to Canada and the world.”
The Guelph Mercury

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