To answer your first question, there are a lot of survivors here in Canada, mostly in Montreal because of the French. I'm friends with a number of them. I think in a way they do better when they're here because they're not reminded of it all the time, and they're kept busy just trying to establish their life here, or that's my sense anyway. I'm sure some of them have their moments of trauma.
In terms of NGOs in Rwanda, it's difficult because the Rwandan government has been very strict about which NGOs can operate in Rwanda, which I think is a good thing. Maybe Haiti could take a lesson from that. They are trying very hard to keep it homegrown and culturally sensitive. They don't want NGOs coming in and just telling them what to do and how to do it. I respect that and I think it's a good thing.
There is one woman I am aware of who is working on her master's in public health, who I would definitely support in her efforts. She started an NGO called Living With Happiness. She said that the problem with the government in dealing with this is that they are very institutional. They want studies and statistics. I guess all governments want that. There's very little hands-on. She said that not only do they need help for the people who are suffering, but they also need help for the caregivers. Her goal would be to have a place in the country. She actually has the land for it, which she inherited. Both her parents were killed in the genocide. Her whole family actually was killed. She managed to escape just by luck, but she was raped. She would like to establish a place where people could go and paint, or tell a story. It's a very oral culture. They could do some kind of therapy that way. I don't think the kind of traditional therapy we might see here, where someone goes to see a psychologist and lies on a couch for 50 minutes would work there.