海角视频

鈥淎s much as my story is important,鈥 Chikwanine said, 鈥渢aking action and ending the issue is just as important.鈥 (image via Youtube)

Child Soldier: graphic novel tells real-life story of U of T student

Michel Chikwanine says he hopes his debut work will draw children into important conversations

At the age of five, University of Toronto student Michel Chikwanine was kidnapped from a village football field in his home country of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

He was drugged, blindfolded and forced to kill his best friend as initiation into becoming a child soldier.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know I had killed him,鈥 Chikwanine told Marci Ien of Canada AM on Oct. 2. 鈥淚 remember looking at him on the ground, bleeding.鈥
 
鈥淚 thought that he was doing what we were told when we were kids, which is, 鈥榊ou hear a gun shot, you drop to the ground,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淓xcept I found out later that he just wasn鈥檛 breathing.鈥
 
The Woodsworth College student says he hopes a new graphic novel he co-authored with writer Jessica Dee Humphreys will spin his story of trauma into something valuable 鈥 a tool sparking conversations between parents, teachers and children about the sometimes difficult realities of life for kids around the world. Child Soldier: When Boys and Girls Are Used in War launched on Oct. 6 as part of Kids Can Press鈥檚 CitizenKid series of books.
 
鈥淚鈥檝e never written for pity or to feel sorry for myself,鈥 he told Matt Galloway of CBC Radio鈥檚 Metro Morning on Oct. 6. 鈥淚鈥檝e written this because I know there are young people all around the world going through many difficult situations, like I am, but all of us have the ability and the responsibility to care. It鈥檚 important for us to care for other human beings. And that鈥檚 why this was written, for us to have that conversation.鈥
 
A feature in Macleans explained that Chikwanine came to write the book after former senator and retired general Rom茅o Dallaire 鈥 an advocate for child soldiers 鈥 was unable to himself write a book on the issue.
 
Macleans quoted Chikwanine describing how his experiences in North America helped him see the need to share the story of child soldiers in Africa: a girl in Canada complaining about the colour of her mobile phone 鈥渄idn鈥檛 know her cellphone was causing the war in the Congo, a war over minerals.鈥
 
鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I realized people need to know what鈥檚 causing conflict and atrocities across the world. They have no idea what being a refugee means. It means you鈥檙e a nobody 鈥 because you have no papers, you have no say in your life.鈥
 
Chikwanine is now an undergraduate focusing on African Studies. 

鈥淎s much as my story is important,鈥 he said in the book trailer for Child Soldier, 鈥渢aking action and ending the issue is just as important.鈥

Topics

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief

UTC