All this week, βIn A Flashβ will feature images from the ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ groupβs trip to Rwanda.
Mandy Munro-Stasiuk, Ph. D., dean of ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ Stateβs College of Arts and Sciences, and Pacifique Niyonzima, a ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ State alumnus who is now leading ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ Stateβs outreach efforts in Rwanda and its partnership with the , met with students at Έι·Ι²Ή²Τ»ε²Ήβs National Police College. The students will be on the ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ Campus this fall to begin their masterβs degree programs as part of the growing global education partnership between the two institutions.β―
A trek up the mountain
Έι·Ι²Ή²Τ»ε²Ήβs , which includes a range of dormant volcanoes, is located near Έι·Ι²Ή²Τ»ε²Ήβs National Police College. The park is home to 12 troops of endangered mountain gorillas. The Rwandan National Police oversee security for the park and offered the ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ State group a tour as their guests.
Excursions to see the gorillas are available to visitors through carefully controlled and guided mountainside tours, available by limited permit from the park.
Visitors and guides can view the gorillas in close proximity, from just a few feet away. The troop of gorillas the ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ State group visited included two silverback males and two new baby gorillas. Bob Christy, senior coordinator, photography, in ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ Stateβs University Communications and Marketing (UCM) department who captured these images, said, βAs you climb the mountain, the gorillas are all around you. When you find them, they will come very close to you, sometimes even touching you. Itβs amazing.β
ΜμΜμ³ΤΉΟ State is looking toward including tours of the park in future education-abroad programs in Kigali.
A panoramic view, looking down the mountain from Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park.