Clemantine Wamariya

Joyful Clemantine Wamariya
Clemantine in Berlin, 2017
Born1988 (age 35–36)
Kigali, Rwanda
NationalityRwandan, American
Occupations
  • Author
  • Artist
  • Creative
  • Human-rights Advocate
AwardsWinner of the 2019 ALA/YALSA Alex Award

Joyful Clemantine Wamariya (born 1988)[1] is a Rwandan-American author, speaker, and human rights advocate.[2]

Born in Rwanda, she was forced to leave her home in Kigali and her parents at the age of six due to the Rwandan Genocide. She sought refuge with her extended family in the south of the country but was forced to flee again when the genocidaires targeted the family there. She and her older sister escaped the country and spent several years seeking refuge through Africa before being granted a refugee asylum to the United States.

She settled with a family in the Chicago area and began formal schooling for the first time at the age of thirteen. She gained international attention in 2006 through an appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show which featured a surprise reunion with her parents. After graduating from Yale University, she pursued a career as a storyteller with engagements including a TED talk. In 2018, she published a book recounting her life experiences, titled The Girl Who Smiled Beads. She is a 2019 recipient of the Alex Awards.

  1. ^ Catherine Fruchon-Toussaint (19 January 2019). "LITTÉRATURE SANS FRONTIÈRES: Le témoignage bouleversant de la jeune Rwandaise Clemantine Wamariya" (in French). RFI.
  2. ^ Diane Cole (19 April 2019). "She Fled Rwanda To Survive — But Does Not Like The Words 'Refugee' Or 'Genocide'". NPR.