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In Congo, embroidery artist stitches an archive of war

Needle grasped in her wrinkled fingers and tongue between her lips, Lucie Kamuswekera pulls a length of green string in and out of a piece of burlap, stitching a soldier’s uniform the color of pine needles. 

From her small workshop in the city of Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, she is working on a tapestry depicting a clash between Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters.

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Embroidery artist Lucie Kamuswekera stitches vast tapestries depicting the human toll of Congo’s wars. She says she wants this history to be remembered so that it will not be repeated.

For 30 years, the artist has documented war in eastern Congo this way, with her needle and thread. Her works, which have been exhibited in museums and galleries around the world, depict the staggering human toll of a generation of unbroken conflict. 

“I wanted to preserve [these moments] for the future,” she says. “People will come after many years, and they will see. They will learn the history of our country.” 

But constantly reliving Congo’s conflicts has also taken its toll on the artist. One day, Ms. Kamuswekera says, she hopes to make art celebrating peace instead. 

“Today I am making pictures of war, because we are in a war,” she says. “When the war ends, I will make pictures of peace.”

Needle grasped in her wrinkled fingers and tongue between her lips, Lucie Kamuswekera pulls a length of green string in and out of a piece of burlap, stitching a soldier’s uniform the color of pine needles. 

She is working on a tapestry depicting a clash between Congolese soldiers and rebel fighters. In the background, civilians flee beneath the spray of gunfire. 

For 30 years, the artist has documented war in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo this way, with her needle and thread. Her works, which have been exhibited in museums and galleries around the world, depict the staggering human toll of a generation of unbroken conflict. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Embroidery artist Lucie Kamuswekera stitches vast tapestries depicting the human toll of Congo’s wars. She says she wants this history to be remembered so that it will not be repeated.

From colonial rule to attacks by armed groups, Ms. Kamuswekera stitches images of events that many around her long to forget. She does so, she says, because she believes ignoring the past will allow it to repeat itself. 

“I wanted to preserve [these moments] for the future,” she says. “People will come after many years, and they will see. They will learn the history of our country.” 

Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/Special to The Christian Science Monitor

Tapestry art pieces are displayed in the studio of artist Lucie Kamuswekera, July 1, 2024, in Goma, Congo.

A vibrant archive

Ms. Kamuswekera, who is 80 years old, learned embroidery as a young girl in missionary school, when Congo was still a Belgian colony. 

The nuns taught her to stitch delicate flowers and birds, and for decades, as she built her career as a nurse, that was all she thought to make.

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