• Home
  • popular
  • Events
  • Submit New Event
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • News
  • Restaurants + Bars
  • City Life
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Arts
  • Society
  • Home + Design
  • Fashion + Beauty
  • Innovation
  • Sports
  • Charity Guide
  • children
  • education
  • health
  • veterans
  • SOCIAL SERVICES
  • ARTS + CULTURE
  • animals
  • lgbtq
  • New Charity
  • Series
  • Delivery Limited
  • DTX Giveaway 2012
  • DTX Ski Magic
  • dtx woodford reserve manhattans
  • Your Home in the Sky
  • DTX Best of 2013
  • DTX Trailblazers
  • Tastemakers Dallas 2017
  • Healthy Perspectives
  • Neighborhood Eats 2015
  • The Art of Making Whiskey
  • DTX International Film Festival
  • DTX Tatum Brown
  • Tastemaker Awards 2016 Dallas
  • DTX McCurley 2014
  • DTX Cars in Lifestyle
  • DTX Beyond presents Party Perfect
  • DTX Texas Health Resources
  • DART 2018
  • Alexan Central
  • State Fair 2018
  • Formula 1 Giveaway
  • Zatar
  • CityLine
  • Vision Veritas
  • Okay to Say
  • Hearts on the Trinity
  • DFW Auto Show 2015
  • Northpark 50
  • Anteks Curated
  • Red Bull Cliff Diving
  • Maggie Louise Confections Dallas
  • Gaia
  • Red Bull Global Rally Cross
  • NorthPark Holiday 2015
  • Ethan's View Dallas
  • DTX City Centre 2013
  • Galleria Dallas
  • Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty Luxury Homes in Dallas Texas
  • DTX Island Time
  • Simpson Property Group SkyHouse
  • DIFFA
  • Lotus Shop
  • Holiday Pop Up Shop Dallas
  • Clothes Circuit
  • DTX Tastemakers 2014
  • Elite Dental
  • Elan City Lights
  • Dallas Charity Guide
  • DTX Music Scene 2013
  • One Arts Party at the Plaza
  • J.R. Ewing
  • AMLI Design District Vibrant Living
  • Crest at Oak Park
  • Braun Enterprises Dallas
  • NorthPark
  • Victory Park
  • DTX Common Desk
  • DTX Osborne Advisors
  • DTX Comforts of Home 2012
  • DFW Showcase Tour of Homes
  • DTX Neighborhood Eats
  • DTX Comforts of Home 2013
  • DTX Auto Awards
  • Cottonwood Art Festival 2017
  • Nasher Store
  • Guardian of The Glenlivet
  • Zyn22
  • Dallas Rx
  • Yellow Rose Gala
  • Opendoor
  • DTX Sun and Ski
  • Crow Collection
  • DTX Tastes of the Season
  • Skye of Turtle Creek Dallas
  • Cottonwood Art Festival
  • DTX Charity Challenge
  • DTX Culture Motive
  • DTX Good Eats 2012
  • DTX_15Winks
  • St. Bernard Sports
  • Jose
  • DTX SMU 2014
  • DTX Up to Speed
  • st bernard
  • Ardan West Village
  • DTX New York Fashion Week spring 2016
  • Taste the Difference
  • Parktoberfest 2016
  • Bob's Steak and Chop House
  • DTX Smart Luxury
  • DTX Earth Day
  • DTX_Gaylord_Promoted_Series
  • IIDA Lavish
  • Huffhines Art Trails 2017
  • Red Bull Flying Bach Dallas
  • Y+A Real Estate
  • Beauty Basics
  • DTX Pet of the Week
  • Long Cove
  • Charity Challenge 2014
  • Legacy West
  • Wildflower
  • Stillwater Capital
  • Tulum
  • DTX Texas Traveler
  • Dallas DART
  • Soldiers' Angels
  • Alexan Riveredge
  • Ebby Halliday Realtors
  • Zephyr Gin
  • Sixty Five Hundred Scene
  • Christy Berry
  • Entertainment Destination
  • Dallas Art Fair 2015
  • St. Bernard Sports Duck Head
  • Jameson DTX
  • Alara Uptown Dallas
  • Cottonwood Art Festival fall 2017
  • DTX Tastemakers 2015
  • Cottonwood Arts Festival
  • The Taylor
  • Decks in the Park
  • Alexan Henderson
  • Gallery at Turtle Creek
  • Omni Hotel DTX
  • Red on the Runway
  • Whole Foods Dallas 2018
  • Artizone Essential Eats
  • Galleria Dallas Runway Revue
  • State Fair 2016 Promoted
  • Trigger's Toys Ultimate Cocktail Experience
  • Dean's Texas Cuisine
  • Real Weddings Dallas
  • Real Housewives of Dallas
  • Jan Barboglio
  • Wildflower Arts and Music Festival
  • Hearts for Hounds
  • Okay to Say Dallas
  • Indochino Dallas
  • Old Forester Dallas
  • Dallas Apartment Locators
  • Dallas Summer Musicals
  • PSW Real Estate Dallas
  • Paintzen
  • DTX Dave Perry-Miller
  • DTX Reliant
  • Get in the Spirit
  • Bachendorf's
  • Holiday Wonder
  • Village on the Parkway
  • City Lifestyle
  • opportunity knox villa-o restaurant
  • Nasher Summer Sale
  • Simpson Property Group
  • Holiday Gift Guide 2017 Dallas
  • Carlisle & Vine
  • DTX New Beginnings
  • Get in the Game
  • Red Bull Air Race
  • Dallas DanceFest
  • 2015 Dallas Stylemaker
  • Youth With Faces
  • Energy Ogre
  • DTX Renewable You
  • Galleria Dallas Decadence
  • Bella MD
  • Tractorbeam
  • Young Texans Against Cancer
  • Fresh Start Dallas
  • Dallas Farmers Market
  • Soldier's Angels Dallas
  • Shipt
  • Elite Dental
  • Texas Restaurant Association 2017
  • State Fair 2017
  • Scottish Rite
  • Brooklyn Brewery
  • DTX_Stylemakers
  • Alexan Crossings
  • Ascent Victory Park
  • Top Texans Under 30 Dallas
  • Discover Downtown Dallas
  • San Luis Resort Dallas
  • Greystar The Collection
  • FIG Finale
  • Greystar M Line Tower
  • Lincoln Motor Company
  • The Shelby
  • Jonathan Goldwater Events
  • Windrose Tower
  • Gift Guide 2016
  • State Fair of Texas 2016
  • Choctaw Dallas
  • TodayTix Dallas promoted
  • Whole Foods
  • Unbranded 2014
  • Frisco Square
  • Unbranded 2016
  • Circuit of the Americas 2018
  • The Katy
  • Snap Kitchen
  • Partners Card
  • Omni Hotels Dallas
  • Landmark on Lovers
  • Harwood Herd
  • Galveston.com Dallas
  • Holiday Happenings Dallas 2018
  • TenantBase
  • Cottonwood Art Festival 2018
  • Hawkins-Welwood Homes
  • The Inner Circle Dallas
  • Eating in Season Dallas
  • ATTPAC Behind the Curtain
  • TodayTix Dallas
  • The Alexan
  • Toyota Music Factory
  • Nosh Box Eatery
  • Wildflower 2018
  • Society Style Dallas 2018
  • Texas Scottish Rite Hospital 2018
  • 5 Mockingbird
  • 4110 Fairmount
  • Visit Taos
  • Allegro Addison
  • Dallas Tastemakers 2018
  • The Village apartments
  • City of Burleson Dallas

    One in a Million

    Humanitarian Carl Wilkens on the genocide in Rwanda and the power of women

    Jonathan Rienstra
    May 17, 2013 | 9:51 am

    It’s not often that one can claim to be “the only.” But Carl Wilkens can. When the Rwandan genocide of the Tutsis by the Hutus began in the spring of 1994, Wilkens was the only American to stay in the country. For nearly 100 days, Wilkens worked to protect and supply Tutsis and sympathetic Hutus as the government and militias systematically massacred an estimated 600,000 to 1 million citizens.

    Wilkens, now the director of World Outside My Shoes, a nonprofit for educating people on how to stand up to genocide, racism and intolerance, spoke at the Dallas Holocaust Museum on May 16. He shared his experiences in 1994 and Rwanda’s attempts to recover in the wake of what has been called the “pure genocide.”

    In 1994, after his wife, Teresa, and their three children left on the last American envoy out of the country, he maneuvered through battle zones and bombings to bring food and medical aid to those most in need. At one point he worked to save a group of hiding Tutsis from slaughter by the militia. They were hiding in an orphanage in Gisimba.

    Wilkens maneuvered through battle zones and bombings to bring food and medical aid to those most in need, including saving a group of hiding Tutsis from slaughter.

    He says that for all the times he spent dodging bullets and reacting to violence around him, it was that orphanage that proved the most harrowing.

    “The militia had sent a message the day before that they were coming to kill everyone in the morning,” he says. “It didn’t matter if they were Tutsi or Hutu in the orphanage. The people had nowhere to go, and the militia actually arrived earlier than they said they would. If I had arrived 20 minutes later, I would’ve walked in on the middle of a massacre.”

    Instead, Wilkens’ presence gave the militia pause, because they didn’t want to kill a foreign aid worker. He says that the three-hour standoff was tougher than anything else because it allowed for so much time to think.

    “It was terrifying, really, because it allowed us time to figure something out,” he says, “But you realize that there doesn’t seem to be a 'best thing to do.'”

    Eventually, he reached the prime minister, Jean Kambanda, and convinced him to spare the orphanage.

    Wilkens left Rwanda in July, after the genocide ended, but he and his family returned in 1995 to help the recovery process. They moved back to the United States in ’96, but he has gone back to Rwanda several times, as recently as January.

    It seems impossible that Hutus and Tutsis went back to living next to one another almost immediately after the genocide, but what almost defies reason is how quickly they began working on recovery. Wilkens says that Rwanda made the concentrated effort on both sides to not forget but to forgive, and to work so that something similar never happens again.

    “A lot of people ask, ‘How do you get accountability? How do you fight corruption?’ and I say, ‘Women.’” — Carl Wilkens

    Students are taught in schools that they are Rwandan, not Hutu or Tutsi, and the government enacted laws to fight ethnic and gender discrimination. Wilkens says that Rwandan youths are working to make a stronger Rwanda for everyone.

    “It’s not like the young people are trying to breed movements of peace in opposition to the establishment,” he says. “It’s not like it is in other countries working for resolution. They are doing it in unison.”

    Today, Rwanda is growing, both culturally and economically. Paved roads with working lights now connect many of the capitals of the agricultural regions. The government, working under a law that requires 30 percent of its decision makers be women, now has a parliament that is 56 percent female.

    “One of the thing you can point to in the recovery is the women,” Wilkens says. “A lot of people ask, ‘How do you get accountability? How do you fight corruption?’ and I say, ‘Women.’”

    He says the same movement is taking place in the private sector, but that the religious sector is lagging. All three areas were part of the failures leading up to the genocide. “You have a country where, if it was a three-legged stool, all three legs were knocked out from under them,” he says.

    Perhaps the most inspiring part, Wilkens says, is that there was only a short period of time after the genocide when people focused on vengeance instead of forgiveness.

    “You see these legacies of dysfunctional governments and the attempts to turn them around, and Rwanda is proving an example of that,” he says. “It’s very inspiring each time you go back. People go and all they think about, understandably, is the genocide, but you come away with the feeling that Rwanda is doing a lot.”

    Today, Wilkens tours the country speaking about his experience in the genocide and the Rwandan recovery that followed.

    Dallas Holocaust Museum presents Carl Wilkens
      
    Photo courtesy of Dallas Holocaust Museum
    Today, Wilkens tours the country speaking about his experience in the genocide and the Rwandan recovery that followed.
    unspecified
    news/city-life
    CULTUREMAP EMAILS ARE AWESOME
    Get Dallas intel delivered daily.

    Animal News

    Hunt County man arrested for animal cruelty to puppy from Dallas

    Teresa Gubbins
    Jun 20, 2025 | 5:33 pm
    Jacob Paul Nichols
    SPCA
    Jacob Paul Nichols arrested for animal cruelty in Hunt County, Texas.

    On Tuesday, June 17, a resident of Greenville, Texas was arrested for animal cruelty after allegedly letting a puppy starve to death.

    According to a release, Jacob Paul Nichols was arrested and charged with Texas Penal Code 42.092, Cruelty to Non-Livestock Animals (b)(1) after allegedly torturing his puppy over a span of several months, causing unjustifiable pain and suffering which ultimately resulted in her death — a felony of the third degree.

    Nichols was located and arrested in Johnson County where he was booked into Johnson County Jail and held on a $200,000 bond.

    On June 6, SPCA of Texas’ Animal Cruelty Investigations (ACI) Unit Chief Investigator was contacted by the ever-diligent Hunt County Sheriff’s Office in reference to a deceased puppy that was discovered inside a dumpster at a Greenville apartment complex.

    The small tan puppy was found lying on her side in a medium-sized crate. She was emaciated and had sharp, overgrown nails.

    An SPCA of Texas Investigator took the puppy to the SPCA's Russell E. Dealey Animal Rescue Center for a forensic necropsy. The exam showed the puppy was 5.5 months old and weighed only 7.6 pounds when she died. She perished due to long-term starvation and dehydration, and had suffered for a prolonged period of time.

    The puppy had a microchip, which revealed that she had been adopted by a Dallas resident from a North Texas animal shelter in January 2025. The puppy, named Sandy, was rehomed to Nichols on February 13 through a rehoming website that allows potential adopters to be screened prior to rehoming. (The release does not identify the adopter or explain why the adopter was dumping the puppy after only a month of ownership.)

    Nichols signed a contract stating that he agreed to “care for the pet in a humane and responsible manner and to provide him/her with clean and adequate shelter, food, water and veterinary care.”

    The SPCA of Texas ACI Unit confirmed with Nichols that the dog had been in his care. Interviews with Nichols and other witnesses revealed evidence that the dog had been neglected over a span of months and left to die in the crate without food or water.

    “No animal deserves to suffer in silence the way this puppy did. The evidence indicates that she was trapped, neglected and ultimately starved to death over a span of months,” said SPCA of Texas’ ACI Unit Chief Investigator Courtney Burns, CAWA. “The level of cruelty in this case is staggering, and the SPCA of Texas and Hunt County Sheriff’s Office are committed to ensuring justice is served.”

    animals
    news/city-life
    CULTUREMAP EMAILS ARE AWESOME
    Get Dallas intel delivered daily.
    Loading...