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This video is sponsored by Nord VPN.. (intro music). Burundi and Rwanda, or...officially the Republic of Burundi and the Republic of Rwanda
Two small, bordering, landlocked countries in East Africa. Both in the African Great Lakes region.
Burundi borders Lake Tanganyika, the second-largest and second-oldest freshwater lake in the world.
And Rwanda borders Lake Kivu, a lake that is one of three known lakes to go through limnic eruptions.
A limnic eruption is a rare type of natural disaster in which deep lake waters burst into a gas cloud that can kill any living creature near the lake.
So if that ever happens, Rwanda would be very vulnerable.
Tensions have been high between the two for a few years now.
However, even though the current leaders of both have been talking trash, the two countries have a lot in common.
For starters, they used to be part of the same kingdom.
Ruanda-Urundi, which was once part of German East Africa, a territory ruled by Belgium between 1922 and 1962 and before that ruled by...you guessed it...Germany.
But how about before the Europeans came in? Well let’s go way back.
Humans first occupied the area which would later be Rwanda and Burundi soon after the last ice age.
They were hunter gatherers, of course.. Flash forward thousands of years, and kingdoms had formed.
And yep, there was the Kingdom of Rwanda, which some say sprung up around the year 1000, and later the Kingdom of Burundi, which sprung up in the 1600s.
The group of people in both kingdoms shared a lot of the same characteristics, and yet three subgroups emerged: The Hutu, Tutsi, and Batwa, or Twa.
Well these kingdoms were ruled by Tutsis. By the 1800s, being Tutsi just meant you had more wealth and power than others in the kingdoms.
While the difference between Tutsi and Hutu was not always easily apparent, after the Europeans came in and colonized they created a more rigid hierarchy, giving better treatment to the Tutsis and keeping them in positions of power.
/əˈstabliSHt/
having existed or done something for long time and therefore recognized and generally accepted. To set or create something to last for a long time.
/ˈrez(ə)dənt/
person who lives somewhere permanently or on long-term basis. Trainee doctor who works/lives in a hospital.
/rəˈpəblik/
state in which supreme power is held by people and their elected representatives, and which has elected or nominated president rather than monarch.
/ˌindəˈpendənt/
free from outside control. A person not connected to a political party.
/THro͞o/
From one end or side of something to the other. expressing movement into one side and out of other side of opening etc.. moving in one side and out of other side of.
/kəˈlōnyəl/
Of a system where one country controls another. native or inhabitant of colony.
/ˈfôrwərd/
Toward what is ahead; in front. Toward the front in place; in front. attacking sports player. To send something to another address or person.
/ˈkərənt/
Happening or being in the present time. Movement of water in a river, or air in the sky.
/ˈtôkiNG/
engaging in speech. action of talking. To make a formal speech about something.