Sifa was born on December 24, 1988, in a village in Eastern Province, Rwanda to a middle-class family. His father sold plastic industrial products, and his family owned a car and employed servants to tend their coffee plantation.[1][2] When Sifa was five years old, his father and older brother were murdered in the Rwandan genocide.[3] Sifa and his younger brother were separated from their mother and baby sister and avoided the violence by fleeing to the jungle where they remained for three months.[4] After facing starvation in the jungle, Sifa decided to risk being murdered and reentered the village where he and his brother were reunited with their mother and sister at a Red Cross station.[3] When they returned to their house, they discovered a corrupt official had seized their property, so they lived in a small hut for several years until Sifa's mother obtained the necessary papers from the Rwandan government to reclaim her property.[4] When she approached the government official about her property, he hired a gang to beat her and she died two weeks later from the beatings.[3]

Sifa continued to sing his mother's songs to comfort himself and other boys, and he valued music so highly that he would sneak into dance clubs although he was legally too young. One night after hopping a fence to gain access to a night club, the bouncers beat him, and Sifa felt he heard God instructing him to longer go to dance clubs. The next morning he went to a church and became a Christian.[6]


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The Horned Frogs (7-3), who beat No. 15 Cal Poly 3-2 Thursday night at Pismo Beach, Calif., got wins by Ariah Palter and Sarita Mikals (21-13, 21-16) over Katie Cross and Kaetlyn Carballo, and Claire Doyle and Shane Peters (21-19, 21-17) over Bethany Wedepohl and Sydney Palmer before Avery Arellano and Jillian Bergeson closed out the nationally ranked Sun Devils with a 21-17, 21-15 win over Cassidy Pickrell and Ellyson Lundberg.

Against Cal State Los Angeles, Amy Neal and Jaelyn Greene beat CSLA's Iona Lofano and Lauren Gomez (21-14, 21-10); Molly Scheel and Haven Hill dispatched Alma Serna and Kelsey Molnar (21-7, 21-13); Arellano and Bergeson beat Cynthia Giron and JamieAnn Hero (21-8, 21-6); Palter and Mikals defeated Daisia LaBrie and Taylor Kushner (21-6, 21-8); and Claire Doyle and Shane Peters beat Sifa Faaiu and Caitlyn Bato (21-17, 21-11).

We\u2019re left to ask what transforms \u201CPlastic Off the Sofa\u201D from a song that could have appeared on Broken Hearts Club or Based on a Feeling into a track worthy of the Queen. It\u2019s a question that gets to the heart of Beyonc\u00E9\u2019s artistry, and I think there are a few valid answers. When the beat comes in after roughly 20 seconds, there\u2019s an immediate sense of fullness and complexity (the bass melody!) that suggests a different level of craftsmanship. Her singing stands out for its control and intricacy even on an album full of remarkable vocal work. I hear it and think about Mariah Carey doing \u201CUnderneath the Stars\u201D or even further back to someone like Minnie Riperton. 006ab0faaa

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