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WSWS : History
Belgium's imperialist rape of Africa
King Leopold's GhostA story of greed, terror and
heroism in colonial Africa by Adam Hochschild, Macmillan,
1998, £22.50, ISBN: 0333661265
Book review by Stuart Nolan
6 September 1999
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this version to print
Adam Hochschild's study of King Leopold II of Belgium's creation
of the Congo Free State goes to the essence of the economic and
political systems established in colonial Africa.
Between 1885 and 1908, there were between five and eight million
victims of Leopold's personal rule, under a barbarous system of
forced labour and systematic terror. When reading a reference
by Mark Twain to these deaths, and the world-wide campaign against
slavery in the Congo of which he was a part, Hochschild was surprised
at his own ignorance. Why were these deaths not mentioned
in the standard litany of our century's horrors? And why had I
not heard of them? Pursuing his inquiries he uncovered a
"vast supply of raw material".
His book has ruffled quite a few feathers, particularly in
Belgium. The British Independent newspaper's review calls
Hochschild's comparisons to contemporary imperialism "unhelpful."
But it is such contemporary resonances that place King Leopold's
Ghost above a routine historical work.
One example from the introduction: "...unlike other great
predators of history, from Genghis Khan to the Spanish conquistadors,
King Leopold II never saw a drop of blood spilt in anger. He never
set foot in the Congo. There is something very modern about that,
too, as there is about the bomber pilot in the stratosphere, above
the clouds, who never hears screams or sees shattered homes or
torn flesh." (p4)
Hochschild examines how, in the nineteenth century European
drive for possessions in Africa, the moral rationalisation of
the "civilising" mission was used to justify colonialism.
An example was the founding of Leopold's International African
Association (IAA) in 1876, at a conference of famous explorers
in Brussels. As its first secretary, King Leopold opened the conference
thus: "To open to civilisation the only part of our globe
which it has not yet penetrated, to pierce the darkness which
hangs over entire peoples, is, I dare say, a crusade worthy of
this century of progress...." (p44)
The aim of the conference was proclaimed to be abolishing
the [Arab] slave trade, establishing peace among the chiefs, and
procuring them just and impartial arbitration."
Contrast this with remarks Leopold made to his London minister
on the explorer Henry Morton Stanley, hired by the IAA to explore
the interior of the Congo: "I'm sure if I quite openly charged
Stanley with the task of taking possession in my name of some
part of Africa, the English will stop me... So I think I'll just
give Stanley some job of exploration which would offend no one,
and will give us the bases and headquarters which we can take
over later on." (p58)
Leopold felt squeezed out by the British and French Empires,
and the rising power of Germany. He studied forms of colonialism
from the Dutch East Indies, to the British possessions in India
and Africa. Java or How to Manage a Colony, by English
lawyer JWB Money, appealed to him because it showed how a small
country like Holland had perfected the technique of exploiting
vast colonies. Money concluded that the huge profits made from
Java depended on forced labour. Leopold agreed, commenting that
forced labour was "the only way to civilise and uplift these
indolent and corrupt peoples of the Far East." (p37)
Opposing the prevailing desire of Belgian parliamentarians
to avoid the expense of colonies, he argued, "Belgium doesn't
exploit the world... It's a taste we have got to make her learn."
(p38)
Leopold's land grab
Stanley's murderous descent into the Congo is documented in
his own diaries. The King sent instructions to Stanley to "purchase
as much land as you will be able to obtain, and that you should
place successively under... suzerainty... as soon as possible
and without losing one minute, all the chiefs from the mouth of
the Congo to the Stanley falls..." (p70)
He was to purchase all the available ivory and establish barriers
and tolls on the roads he opened up. Land rights treaties should
be as "brief as possible and in a couple of articles must
grant us everything." (p71) Stanley secured 450 such agreements.
Leopold developed a military dictatorship over a country 76
times the size of Belgium, with only a small number of white officials.
Initially, he paid mercenaries, but in 1888 these were transformed
into the Force Publique. At its peak, there were 19,000
conscripted African soldiers and 420 white officers.
By means of bribes and lobbying, Leopold gained recognition
for the Congo in 1884 by the United States, followed by a similar
deal with France. By making a web of bilateral agreements at the
Berlin conference in February 1885, he carved out the boundaries
for this huge state. Once his ownership of the Congo was secure,
the rubber boom erupted. Rubber sap was in great demand for tyres
and other products, and the Congo was covered with such vines.
Joint ventures ensued between Belgian, British and Dutch firms.
The astronomical profits saved Leopold's colonial empire. An example
given is the 700 percent profits of the Anglo-Belgian India Rubber
and Exploration Company (ABIR).
The race was on to extract as much wild natural rubber as possible
before organised cultivation stole the market. Apart from financing
Leopold's private army and the Force Publique (which took up half
the Congo's budget) to control the slave labourers who gathered
the rubber, capital outlay was non-existent.
Natives had to search out vines through inhospitable jungle.
In Leopold's Congo it was an illegal offence to pay any Africans
with money, so other more brutal forms of exhortation were employed.
The British vice consul in 1899 gave a terrifying example of how
the Force Publique carried out this task:
"An example of what is done was told me up the Ubangi
[River]. This officer['s]... method... was to arrive in canoes
at a village, the inhabitants of which invariably bolted on their
arrival; the soldiers were then landed, and commenced looting,
taking all the chickens, grain etc, out of the houses; after this
they attacked the natives until able to seize their women; these
women were kept as hostages until the chief of the district brought
in the required number of kilograms of rubber. The rubber having
been brought, the women were sold back to their owners for a couple
of goats apiece, and so he continued from village to village until
the requisite amount of rubber had been collected." (p161)
Companies operating in the Congo used prison stockades to keep
hostages. If the men of the village resisted the demands for rubber
it meant the death of their wife, child or chief. The Force Publique
supplied military might under contract and each company had its
own mercenaries.
In the rubber regions, Africans had to gain a state permit
to travel outside their villages. Labourers wore a numbered metal
disk, so a record could be kept of their individual quota. Hundreds
of thousands of desperate and exhausted men carried huge baskets
on their heads for up to twenty miles a day.
An account in 1884 describes the actions of an officer known
as Fievez taken against those who refused to collect rubber or
failed to meet their quota: "I made war against them. One
example was enough: a hundred heads cut off, and there have been
plenty of supplies ever since. My goal is ultimately humanitarian.
I killed a hundred people... but that allowed five hundred others
to live." (p166)
The Force Publique had a combined counter-insurgency role:
as a force to suppress the natives and as a "corporate labour
force." Their murderous assaults against the native population
were described as pacification, as it was during the
Vietnam War. The demand was for labour, and they destroyed all
obstacles in their way.
Hochschild quotes the Governor of the Equatorial District of
the Congo Free State when the demand for rubber became ferocious:
As soon as it was a question of rubber, I wrote to the government,
'To gather rubber in the district... one must cut off hands, noses
and ears'. (p165)
Following tribal wars, state officials would see to it that
the victors severed the hands of dead warriors. During expeditions,
Force Publique soldiers were instructed to bring back a hand or
head for each bullet fired, to make sure that none had been wasted
or hidden for use in rebellions. A soldier with the chilling title
keeper of hands accompanied each expedition. Force
Publique soldiers were slaves who had been press-ganged through
hostage taking, or stolen as children and brought up in child
colonies founded by the King and the Catholic Church.
The Heart of Darkness
In August 1890, a young trainee steamship officer headed for
the Congo basin. His name was Joseph Conrad, the author of the
most famous novel to emerge from the European scramble for Africa,
Heart of Darkness. One of the central characters in the
novel is Kurtz, who is in charge of the inner station.
Kurtz is notorious for having a row of native heads surrounding
his headquarters. He combines pathological cruelty with an interest
in art and philosophy. Hochschild writes that, whilst Conrad must
have met dozens of candidates for Kurtz during his time in the
Congo, Leon Rom, head of the Force Publique, bares his unmistakable
stamp. Rom had a fence round his office with severed native heads
on each slat, and a garden rockery full of rotting heads.
Hochschild comments, "High school teachers and college
professors who have discussed this book in thousands of classrooms
over the years tend to do so in terms of Freud, Jung, and Nietzche;
of classical myth, Victorian innocence, and original sin; of postmodernism,
postcolonialism, and poststructuralism. European and American
readers, not comfortable acknowledging the genocidal scale of
the killing in Africa at the turn of the century, have cast Heart
of Darkness loose from its historical moorings..."
But Conrad himself wrote, ' Heart of Darkness
is experience ... pushed a little (and only very little) beyond
the actual facts of the case'." (p143) It had been Conrad's
boyhood dream to discover the heart of Africanow that he
had arrived he described what he found as "the vilest scramble
for loot that ever disfigured the history of human conscience."
Conrad later added, "All Europe contributed to the making
of Kurtz."
With the industrial scale of murder brought by imperialism,
the use of celebrities, lobbyists and media campaigns raging
in half a dozen countries on both sides of the Atlantic",
the colonisation of Africa seems "strikingly close to our
time, Hochschild writes. Leopold spent hundreds of millions
bribing editors and journalists, and even published his own articles
under a false name. In 1904 he formed his own Press Bureau, which
published pro-Leopold books, pamphlets and attacks on political
opponents. It subsidised a number of Belgian newspapers, and a
magazine entitled New Africa. On its payroll were the Brussels
correspondents of the Times of London and Germany's Kölnische
Zeitung, as well as other editors and reporters from Austria
to Italy.
The latter part of Hochschild's book is taken up with the activities
of those who opposed Leopold's brutal Congo regime. The radical
human rights campaigner E.D. Morel set up the Congo Reform Association
(CRA) in Britain. From the early 1900s until after Leopold's death
in 1909, Morel used information smuggled out of the Congo by missionaries
and Leopold's employees to mount a campaign that won the support
of prominent politicians and churchmen, both in Britain and the
United States. One of these was Roger Casementlater to become
the famous Irish republicanwho for a time was British consul
in the Congo.
Towards the end of his rule, Leopold, desperate to stop the
flow of information about the Congo getting back to the West,
filed a libel suit against the black American missionary William
Sheppard. Morel called on Emile Vandervelde, a socialist lawyer
and president of the Second International, who went to the Congo
to defend Sheppard. Vandervelde made a brilliant defence speech
and the publicity forced Leopold to retreat. One criticism which
can be made of Hochschild's book is that this is virtually the
only reference made to the role of the socialist movement in Europe
in opposing imperialism.
In the conclusion, Hochschild again asks why has the genocidal
rule of Leopold in the Congo made so little impact on popular
consciousness? Did the Congo Reform Association campaign do any
lasting good?
Leopold attempted to destroy the evidence: for eight days in
1908 furnaces in Leopold's Brussels headquarters were at full
blast, as Congo State archives were tuned to ash. He sent word
to his agent in the Congo to do likewise. This, the "politics
of forgetting", was followed by the entire Belgian state.
More important were the limitations of the CRA. The campaign
effectively folded after the Belgian government took over the
colony in 1908, as though the issues were resolved. Yet most of
the brutal state officials deployed under King Leopold were retained
by the Belgian state. With the profits extracted from the Congo,
huge sums in compensation were paid to the King by parliament.
Whilst the policy of holding women and children hostage or burning
villages ended, the Belgians continued to use forced labour.
Hochschild also criticises the almost exclusive focus of the
CRA movement on Belgium, citing comparable brutality by the US
in the Philippines, the British in Australia, the Germans in what
is now Namibia. He points out that joint imperialist ventures
in the Congo all utilised the Force Publique, while the French,
German and Portuguese used the example of King Leopold's Congo
as a template for their own systems of rubber extraction. It was
safe for campaigners to single out the Congo because such outrage
"did not involve British or American misdeeds, nor did it
entail the diplomatic, trade or military consequences of taking
on a major power like France or Germany." (p282)
Finally, in 1914, Britain and then America justified the outbreak
of world war on the need to defend "brave little Belgium"
from German aggression. Falsified stories were put out that German
troops had committed mass rapes of Belgian women and cut off the
hands and feet of children. As Hochschild explains, "...no
one in the Allied countries wanted to be reminded that, only a
decade or two earlier, it was the King of the Belgians whose men
in Africa had cut off hands." (p296)
There can be no wonder that in this reactionary climate, the
very limited critique of imperialism made by the Congo reform
movement was easily swept aside. Casement was executed by the
British state in 1916 for his attempt to win German military support
for the Irish republicans. Morel was sentenced to six months hard
labour on trumped-up charges of sending antiwar literature to
neutral countries. Both were deserted by their former supporters
and admirers.
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