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As the world watches conflict unfold again in the Middle East, it’s impossible not to ask the same difficult question humanity keeps returning to: how do you rebuild a nation once trust has been shattered? A few years ago, our family travelled through Rwanda. It is a country that understands this question more than most. In 1994, nearly one million people were killed in just 100 days. Neighbours turned on neighbours. Families were torn apart. Every household was affected. The scale of devastation is almost impossible to comprehend until you stand in Kigali and visit the Genocide Memorial. And yet, Rwanda today feels defined not by what was destroyed, but by what has been rebuilt. There is a word you hear often there: Umuganda. Umuganda means coming together for a common purpose to achieve an outcome. On the fourth Saturday of every month, the entire country pauses. Communities gather to clean streets, build schools, dig drainage, plant trees, repair homes. It is structured, intentional, and deeply symbolic. Not just rebuilding infrastructure, but rebuilding trust. We rode through the rolling green hills outside Musanze with members of Team Rwanda, athletes who now compete on the world stage. Not long ago, riders here raced on wooden bikes. Today they ride Pinarellos. That transformation mirrors the country itself. At the border, plastic bags are confiscated. Streets are spotless. Solar lights line the highways. Parliament is majority female. Once a month the roads close so citizens can exercise together. These are not isolated policies. They are signs of long-term thinking. Of choosing discipline over division. Standing in the mist before a silverback gorilla, aware that he was completely in control of the next few minutes of my life, I felt something profound. Power does not have to destroy. Strength can coexist with restraint. Rwanda made a decision to play the long game. Faith over fear. Community over vengeance. Future over fury. In a world that feels increasingly fractured, Umuganda offers a quiet but powerful lesson. Healing doesn’t begin with rhetoric. It begins with showing up. Shoulder to shoulder. Doing something tangible together. Rwanda rose from ashes not by forgetting, but by committing to a shared future. When conflict ends, as it eventually must, the real work begins.