Skip to main content

The Quiet 25-Year Long Genocide That Destroyed The Congolese People

African colonialism is replete with stories of mass elimination and horrific acts of aggression committed in the name of European imperialism. The Congo Free State history is not unique in that regard, but it is one of the worst, yet lesser-known, exterminations in history. The Congo Free State was formed in 1885 after Belgian King Leopold II, one of the cruelest leaders in history, convinced his European peers that he should be in charge of a territory over 70 times the size of his own country. Leopold promised that he would civilize the Congo while also exploiting its natural resources and trading with the region. 

However, the civilization that Leopold had in mind was a grotesque vision that ended in human tragedy. The Europeans forced the Africans to work without pay, justifying their actions by claiming that the labor was in exchange for civilizing the natives. Far from creating the trappings of what was considered civilized, the modern world committed grave injustices against the people living in the Congo for nearly 25 years. The result was mass loss of life and separation of families on an unimaginable scale. 

  • Photo: 


The Congo Free State Was Created Without The Actual, Informed Consent Of The People Of The Congo

The Congo Free State Was Created Without The Actual, Informed Consent Of The People Of The Congo

The Congo Free State was founded under the claim of colonialism, an arrangement where a stronger country imposes itself on a weaker one for economic and political gain. King Leopold II of Belgium sent British explorer Henry Morton Stanley to the Congo to create treaties with the rulers of the region. From 1879 to 1884, Stanley traveled up and down the Congo River basin establishing trading posts and making deals with local rulers–many of whom could not read written languages and, therefore, probably didn't understand the terms of the agreements that they made. He brought these documents back to Leopold, who then doctored them to achieve his agenda. 

The Congo Free State was officially founded when the Berlin West Africa Conference of 1884-85 sanctioned the formation of the state with Leopold as its ruler. There was no period of time when the people he had sovereignty over elected him. Leopold also never visited the Congo. 

Soldiers Had To Prove Their Kills With Severed Body Parts

Soldiers Had To Prove Their Kills With Severed Body Parts

A boom in the rubber industry in the 1890s gave birth to gruesome practices in the Congo Free State. Out of greed, King Leopold imposed higher and higher quotas of wild rubber to be gathered throughout the villages in the country. If a village failed to meet the quota, some of its members were taken away and shot. Other times, Leopold's army would take women as hostages to "encourage" men to fill the rubber quotas even faster. Because of the countless losses endured by the people of the Congo and cruelty associated with the profitable resource, it became known as "red rubber." 

Leopold was in the business of making money. Because bullets cost money, he imposed strict rules about the use of ammunition. Soldiers had to prove that they were shooting to terminate and not just wasting their bullets. They were required to bring severed body parts as proof that they had been completed their mission. Often times, soldiers would cut off the hands of their victims to show that their ammunition was used to catch fleeing villagers. 

Villages Were Severely Punished If The Rubber They Offered Was Not The Best

Even when villages met the rubber quotas, they were sometimes still punished. In 1896, the town of Bandakea Wijiko was severely punished because the rubber they collected was deemed to be less than perfect. Congo State soldiers went into the village and wiped out 50 of its inhabitants, taking 28 people as prisoners. The right hand of each of the dead bodies was severed and collected by the soldiers. 


A Legendary Explorer's Legacy Became Dark Through His Association With Leopold

A Legendary Explorer's Legacy Became Dark Through His Association With Leopold

Henry Morton Stanley is known for exploring Africa through various expeditions. His stories and journeys "enthralled the public," with figures like Mark Twain commenting: 

"When I contrast what I have achieved in my measurably brief life with what [Stanley] has achieved in his possibly briefer one, the effect is to sweep utterly away the ten-story edifice of my own self-appreciation and leave nothing behind but the cellar."

By 1887, Stanley was on his third expedition to Africa, which was ordered by King Leopold II. At some point, Stanley and a few other men pushed ahead, leaving a group of others behind. The men left behind were slowly bringing up the rear and committing horrific acts of aggression along the way. They were accused of violating women's bodies, starving their African workers, beating locals, buying women, and shooting people for minor crimes. Stanley's reputation and popularity steadily began plummeting into darkness over the next century as he was criticized for his association with Leopold and colonialism. 

Leopold Enslaved The Entire Population

King Leopold II ran the Congo Free State as a business and sought to have the lowest labor costs possible. At first, Leopold bought slaves from human traffickers for the rubber gathering operation. However, this practice didn't last long as Leopold realized he could just enslave virtually the whole population. He chased Muslim slavers away from the Congo and announced it to the world as a humanitarian act.

He then created a system of forced labor, where women and children of the villages throughout the Congo were kept hostage as men were required to fill harsh quotas of wild rubber. 

Locals Were Often Flogged To Their Last Breath

Locals Were Often Flogged To Their Last Breath

The consequences of not reaching rubber and ivory quotas were harsh. Slaves who failed to gather the requisite amount of resources were severely whipped. Reports noted that a typical flogging was 25 lashes for just minor infractions. People who committed more serious crimes in the eyes of their masters would face 100 lashes, and those who received such a sentence often perished as a result.

The tool of choice for whippings was a chicotte, a hippopotamus-hide whip that was so sharp it could easily break the skin with a few strokes. 


you can click here to watch the video

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Naked Jewish women from the Mizocz ghetto wait in a line before their execution by the German Order Police with the assistance of Ukrainian auxiliaries, 1942. They are carrying their children Literally to the grave. Damn

Naked Jewish women from the Mizocz ghetto wait in a line before their execution by the German Order Police with the assistance of Ukrainian auxiliaries, 1942. They are carrying their children Literally to the grave. Damn. Between East and West Germany, the west was much more Nazi. Prominent Nazis made a concerted effort toward the end of the war to surrender to the Western allies who would treat them better, and were then incorporated into government and military command. You didn't have people like Adolf Heusinger, Franz Halder, or Hans Speidel running around in East Germany. You didn't have leadership like Adenauer pushing to halt denazification in East Germany. Saying all the nazis "switched hats and went to communist East Germany" is like saying males produce estrogen. Sure they do a tiny bit, but is that really the gender you associate with estrogen? One of the facts that I learned about the Holocaust from my grandfather that has stuck with me even up throug...

Popular posts from this blog

How common were instances of sexual abuse in Nazi concentration camps

How common were instances of sexual abuse in Nazi concentration camps. The accounts that rap£ or prostitution was common, Were the guards were given "free reign" over the prisoners given view of them as subhuman The Nazis sort of developed a network of state-controlled brothels during the war. This included both the civilian and military brothels. The Nazis even set up brothels for the forced labor inmates that helped with the German war effort as incentives for higher production from prisoners in camps. Back then these brothels were suppose to serving several needs. For the soldiers that were far away from home, the Nazis thought that having these brothels would reduce the possibility of rape in occupied lands and reducing the sexual relations with impure local women or forced laborer's, as well. Heck, the Nazis tried to use these brothel women to cure homosexuality as a treatment with male prisoners that were gay. Regular German women were exempt from serving in these b...

The prisoners in concentration camps have sex with each other

 The prisoners in concentration camps have sex with each other Steady on. Nearly all concentration camps were single-sex, and at those that held both men and women the sexes were usually kept separate, though at Auschwitz III (Monowitz) and possibly also some other sub-camps they worked together. At extermination camps (where the sexes were not separated) most of the prisoners were killed within 24 hours of arrival. Prisoners did not have privacy. Remember that at the time most people had a horror of same-sex relations, especially between men. However, some Kapos and even guards forced prisoners to have sex with them. In Night Elie Wiesel relates how he found his Kapo having sex with a female prisoner, and he (Wiesel) was given 25 lashes for finding them having sex.* In the Women’s Camp at least one guard forced another woman to have sex with her, and at many camps there was a piepel (camp bum boy). *He also describes the hanging of the piepel of a Blockältester ( ‘block senior’). ...