"If advancing in the world is viewed as a form of treason, then we are all in truoble."
As happy as Ruse was in the last post, he and his wife split while he attended the college of hospitality. He legally got custody of their three kids and once he was working at the hotel Mille Collines again, remarried and had another child. Soon thereafter, he was moved to general manager at the Hotel Diplomates, which is a smaller, but no less prestigious branch of the hotel Mille Collines.
The end of the chapter serves to tell how Ruse became acquainted with many of his upstanding business buddies.
Chapter three for the most part, I feel served the purpose of getting the reader to a point of understanding Ruse's life before the main events of his story. Without this grasp, the rest of the stroy might not make any sense.
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1 comment:
I just have a few questions: Did Ruse’s split with his wife involve the country’s problems in any way (the divide between the Hutus and Tutsis)? Who were these “upstanding business buddies?”
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