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amazing information about Belgium
Dan, 2 August 2001
I have found out amazing information about Belgium. When Belgium ruled
the
Congo. They killed between 8 million to 10 million Black Congo people.
Thats
right, 8 million to 10 million innocent people, were killed by the
Belgiums.
Ariel Sharon should bring the entire nation of Belgium on trial, for
genocide
against the Congo people. There is a book written by Adam Hochschild,
called
King Leopold's Ghost. It was reviewed by NY Times book reviews in
August 98.
Whats unbelievable, in the book, Hochschild says how Belgium wanted to
thwart
off Arab slave-traders, who wanted to control Belgium for slaves. Here
is the
link and the story.
http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/08/30/daily/leopold-book-review.html
King Leopold's Ghost': Genocide With Spin Control
By MICHIKO KAKUTANI
KING LEOPOLD'S GHOST
A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa
By Adam Hochschild
Illustrated. 366 pages. Houghton Mifflin. $26.
Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" is frequently read as an
allegorical or
Freudian parable, while its murderous hero, Kurtz -- the renegade white
trader, who lives deep in the Congo jungle behind a fence adorned with
shrunken heads -- is regarded as a Nietzschean madman or avatar of
colonial
ambition run dangerously amok.
As Adam Hochschild's disturbing new book on the Belgian Congo makes
clear,
however, Kurtz was based on several historical figures, and the horror
Conrad
described was all too real. In fact, Hochschild suggests, "Heart of
Darkness"
stands as a remarkably "precise and detailed" portrait of King
Leopold's
Congo in 1890, just as one of history's most heinous acts of mass
killing was
getting under way.
Under the reign of terror instituted by King Leopold II of Belgium (who
ran
the Congo Free State as his personal fief from 1885 to 1908), the
population
of the Congo was reduced by half -- as many as 8 million Africans
(perhaps
even 10 million, in Hochschild's opinion) lost their lives.
Some were beaten or whipped to death for failing to meet the rigid
production
quotas for ivory and rubber harvests, imposed by Leopold's agents. Some
were
worked to death, forced to labor in slavelike conditions as porters,
rubber
gatherers or miners for little or no pay.
Some died of the diseases introduced to (and spread throughout) the
Congo by
Europeans. And still others died from the increasingly frequent famines
that
swept the Congo basin as Leopold's army rampaged through the
countryside,
appropriating food and crops for its own use while destroying villages
and
fields.
Although much of the material in "King Leopold's Ghost" is secondhand
-- the
author has drawn heavily from Jules Marchal's scholarly four-volume
history
of turn-of-the-century Congo and from "The Scramble for Africa," Thomas
Pakenham's wide-ranging 1991 study of the European conquest of the
continent
-- Hochschild has stitched it together into a vivid, novelistic
narrative
that makes the reader acutely aware of the magnitude of the horror
perpetrated by King Leopold and his minions.
It is a book that situates Leopold's crimes in a wider context of
European
and African history while at the same time underscoring the peculiarly
modern
nature of his efforts to exert "spin control" over his actions.
Mikhail Lemkhin/ Houghton Mifflin
Adam Hochschild
As depicted by Hochschild, the people in "Ghost" emerge as
larger-than-life
figures, the sort of characters who might easily populate a Victorian
melodrama were it not for the tragic and very real consequences of
their
actions.
Leopold himself comes across as a cartoon-strip megalomaniac -- a mad,
greedy
king obsessed since adolescence with the idea of running a colony of
his own
and intent throughout his career on covering his lust for money and
real
estate in honeyed talk of philanthropy and human rights.
As for Henry Morton Stanley, the world-famous explorer whom Leopold
retained
as his agent, he is depicted as a Dickensian bully and chronic liar who
allowed his own monumental celebrity to be used by Leopold for the
worst
possible ends. He eventually persuaded hundreds of Congo basin chiefs
to sign
over their land and their rights to the king of the Belgians.
With the sheaf of treaties Stanley had acquired firmly in hand, King
Leopold
embarked on a worldwide lobbying campaign to win diplomatic recognition
of
his new colony.
He succeeded in winning this recognition, Hochschild argues, by playing
one
great European power against another and by portraying his control of
the
Congo as a kind of benevolent protectorship that would bring a
civilizing
influence to the continent while thwarting the malign designs of Arab
slave-traders eager to exploit the same region.
In actuality, Leopold saw the Congo as his personal domain (his power
as
sovereign of the colony was not shared with the Belgian government) and
as a
rich source of rubber, ivory and other natural resources that could
fatten
his coffers at home.
Marchal, the Belgian scholar, estimates that Leopold drew some 220
million
francs (or $1.1 billion in today's dollars) in profits from the Congo
during
his lifetime. Much of that money, Hochschild suggests, went to buying
Leopold's teen-age mistress, a former call girl named Caroline,
expensive
dresses and villas, and building ever grander monuments, museums and
triumphal arches in honor of the king.
Those profits came at the price of terrible suffering by the Congolese
people. Not only was their land summarily annexed -- most of the chiefs
who
signed Stanley's "treaties" had no idea what they were signing -- but
they
were also coerced into the arduous job of gathering rubber for
Leopold's men
as well.
Those who refused or failed to meet their quotas were brutally whipped,
tortured or shot, Hochschild reports; others saw their wives and
children
taken hostage by Leopold's soldiers.
According to Hochschild, hostage-taking and the grisly severing of
hands
(from corpses or from living human beings) were part of the
government's
deliberate policy -- a means of terrorizing others into submission.
As the "rubber terror" spread through the Congolese rain forest,
Hochschild
adds, entire villages were wiped out: Hundreds of dead bodies were
dumped in
rivers and lakes, while baskets of severed hands were routinely
presented to
white officers as evidence of how many people had been killed.
Hochschild writes about these horrifying events with tightly controlled
anger, and he brings equal passion to his account of the small band of
protesters who orchestrated resistance to Leopold's rule.
Those protesters include Edmund Dene Morel, a British shipping-company
employee, who brought the king's crimes to world attention; George
Washington
Williams, a black American journalist who chronicled the grisly
conditions in
the Congo in an open letter to King Leopold; and Roger Casement, an
Irish
member of the British consular service, who sent home a torrent of
dispatches
condemning specific atrocities and the entire way the colony was run.
The efforts of these men and others helped bring international pressure
to
bear on Leopold, and in 1908 he turned over the Congo -- in effect,
sold it
-- to the Belgian government.
Leopold, in the meantime, tried to ensure that his crimes would never
make it
into the history books. Shortly after the turnover of the colony,
Hochschild
writes, the furnaces near Leopold's palace burned for eight days,
"turning
most of the Congo state records to ash and smoke." "I will give them my
Congo," the king is reported saying, "but they have no right to know
what I
did there."
With this book, Hochschild, like other historians before him, ensures
that
King Leopold has not gotten away with his efforts to erase the memory
of his
brutal acts.
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