“We're going to stay to bear witness to what the rest of the world doesn't want to see.”
Shake Hands with the Devil is a realistic tale of Romeo Dallaire’s tireless efforts towards stopping the Rwandan genocide of 1994. Against insurmountable odds, Dallaire and his marginal peacekeeping force did all they could to prevent the mass slaughter of the Tutsi people.
When the UN sent Dallaire in as commanding officer of the UNAMIR force, they believed it was a cheap and easy fix to end the conflict in Rwanda. They entered the country believing this peace treaty was a realistic goal, and that the government was committed to executing this plan, instead of its plan to rid the country of the Tutsi people.
The UN back in New York City were running on a tight budget, and saving a whole ethnic group was apparently out of their price range at this point. As well, international politics and bureaucracy caused certain countries to refuse UN troop requests and to refuse, as well, to call what was happening in Rwanda genocide. Their refusal to call this atrocity a genocide was due to two factors: the confusion (mainly stemming from ignorance) about the fact that there was a civil war going on at the same time, and that all of these deaths were part of the fighting, and that if countries labeled this conflict as a genocide, they would have been forced to act under the Geneva Convention which was established after the Holocaust. This Convention decreed that we would never forget the acts that were committed against the Jews, and that we would not let that level of hatred and horror be repeated. This was fairly useless, as the most simple way to get around this decree was to simply avoid using the term genocide. Of course, this is the kind of bureaucracy that the Convention never accounted for, but has proved to be very detrimental to world issues since.
The brave but unarmed peacekeepers with dwindling supplies stayed to save the few civilians that they could. However, their orders were not to shoot unless shot at, and they were forced to stand by as almost a million people were butchered in 100 days.
This film was very moving, as it followed Dallaire in his efforts to save Rwanda and the terrible aftermath and mental illness he suffered because of his time as commanding officer. In the psychologist’s office, the lighting was very harsh and it conveyed a sense of the separation between his experiences and the rest of the world, including his psychologist. The blue colour of the room represents the immense sadness and depression that Dallaire is going through.
The camera moves with Romeo as he drives past bodies strewn on the road; we get a very documentary-like view of the aftermath of the conflict. As the camera looks from side to side on the road, we realize how it must have felt to be surrounded by this level of conflict and desperation.
The dialogue in this movie is engaging and serves to illustrate the difference in character between many of the UN peacekeepers and Romeo Dallaire. For example, when Tutsi refugees were trying to get into one of the UN stadium area, one of the peacekeepers was obviously confused and did not know how to handle the crowd. When Dallaire arrived, he said ‘they want you to help them. Why don’t you act like it’, and gave these Tutsis refuge in thee stadium controlled by the UN. His force of personality and commanding voice inspired the other peacekeepers to save whoever they could, even if the higher-ups would not send help.