Full Description:
A supremacist political ideology that asserted the inherent entitlement of the Hutu majority to rule over the Tutsi minority. It framed the Tutsi population not as fellow citizens, but as a foreign, feudal race of oppressors that needed to be eliminated for the “majority” to be free. Hutu Power was the ideological engine of the genocide. It appropriated the language of democracy (“majority rule”) and twisted it into a justification for totalitarianism. Propagated through media outlets like Kangura magazine and radio stations, it published the “Hutu Ten Commandments,” which criminalized social or economic interaction with Tutsis.
Critical Perspective:
Critically, this ideology was not an expression of “ancient tribal hatred,” but a modern political phenomenon mirroring European fascism. It was cultivated by the political elite to maintain power in the face of democratization. By framing the conflict as a struggle for survival against a “Hamitic invader,” the state manipulated the population into viewing mass murder as an act of civic duty and self-defense.
