Congo's Lost Children
Posted: Thursday, February 14, 2008 11:16 AM by Cynthia Joyce
By Ann Curry, NBC News Anchor

"If we didn't fight, we were beaten."
He looks like a boy any mother would wish for. Gentle, smart, handsome and thoughtful, his brown eyes large and luminous.
You would never guess just a few months ago, he was on the front lines of war here in Congo, killing people, how many he does not even know.
You can see he doesn't know how to handle what he was forced to do. He keeps wringing his hands as he speaks about being kidnapped by soldiers from school and taught to shoot the enemy on sight.
He was just 14 then.
Our new team finds him now two years later in a center funded by Unicef, where he is finally getting to go back to his studies.
When the translator speaks in English, you can see this boy's eyes fall deep into a memory so distant that he is startled when he comes out of it.
For 10 years, a chaos of war has raged in eastern Congo between numerous militias and the government, sparked when the genocide in Rwanda spilled over the border.
More than 30,000 children have been used for war. As you read this, thousands -- some as young as 10 years old -- are out there, on the front lines.
Our 16-year-old interview subject escaped, and feels lucky to be "delivered," as he puts it, from his captors.
Now he wants to be a doctor or a teacher, to help people. But first he himself needs help, making peace with having been at war.
To see a slideshow of photos from producer Antoine Sanfuentes, click here.

To view the first part of Ann's report from the Congo which aired Wednesday on NBC Nightly News, click here.