Belgian Congo

in #history7 years ago

Belgian Congo;

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In the period from 1885 to 1908, a number of well-documented atrocities were perpetrated in the Congo Free State (today the Democratic Republic of the Congo) which, at the time, was a colony under the personal rule of King Leopold II of Belgium. These atrocities were sometimes collectively referred to by European contemporaries as the "Congo Horrors", and were particularly associated with the labour policies used to collect natural rubber for export. Together with epidemic disease, famine, and a falling birth rate caused by these disruptions, the atrocities contributed to a sharp decline in the Congolese population. The magnitude of the population fall over the period is disputed, but it is thought to be between one and 15 million people.1.png416.jpg
King Leopold II of Belgium

One of the enduring images of the Free State was the severed hands which became "the most potent symbol of colonial brutality".The practice was comparatively common in colonial Africa and originated in connection with the rubber industry. Suspected of indiscipline, Force Publique soldiers were expected to provide proof that they had not stolen ammunition or used their military equipment for hunting purposes. The practice of hacking the hands off corpses in the aftermath of punitive expeditions became common as evidence that government supplies had not been misused. When soldiers did misuse their equipment, they cut hands from living people to cover their activities.Photographs of victims, taken by missionaries, were among the most potent propaganda for opponents of Leopold's regime in Belgium and the United Kingdom. Other practices used to force workers to collect rubber were taking women and family members hostage.
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Even little girls were not spared from the abomination and horror!
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Eventually, growing scrutiny of Leopold's regime led to a popular campaign movement, centered in the United Kingdom and the United States, to force Leopold to renounce his ownership of the Congo. In many cases, the campaigns based their information on reports from British and Swedish missionaries working in the Congo.
The first international protest occurred in 1890 when George Washington Williams, an American, published an open letter to Leopold about abuses he had witnessed.Public interest in the abuses in the Congo Free State grew sharply from 1895, when the Stokes Affair and reports of mutilations reached the European and American public which began to discuss the "Congo Question".To appease public opinion, Leopold instigated a Commission for the Protection of Natives (Commission pour la Protection des Indigènes), composed of foreign missionaries, but made few serious efforts at substantive reform.
In Britain, the campaign was led by the activist and pamphleteer E. D. Morel after 1900, whose book Red Rubber (1906) reached a mass audience. Notable members of the campaign included the novelists Mark Twain, Joseph Conrad and Arthur Conan Doyle as well as Belgian socialists such as Emile Vandervelde.Campaigning groups, especially the Congo Reform Association, did not oppose colonialism and instead sought to end the excesses of the Free State by encouraging Belgium to annex the colony officially. This would avoid damaging the delicate balance of power between France and Britain on the continent. While supporters of the Free State regime attempted to argue against claims of atrocities, a Commission of Enquiry, appointed by the regime in 1904, confirmed the stories of atrocities and pressure on the Belgian government increased.414.jpg
As a Belgian myself, I am truly ashamed of this dark page in our history!
We must never forget what happened, so it can never happen again!!
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:'-(

(source ; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atrocities_in_the_Congo_Free_State)

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Thank you very much for sharing the information about this hidden part of european history! I would have loved if you had also included the economical background to this whole crime, as european industrialization would have never taken off the way it did without letting the congolese people bleed for it.

(The rubber was at Leopold's time crucial for the upcoming car industry/tires AND even more crucial for cables to ensure access to the electricity net by more and more companies and people. )

I personally would argue that almost 80% of belgiums wealth is based stolen ressources from the congo and that reparations are long overdue, although europeans try to make excuses like "oh it was by the king himself, not in our name" similar to all other european genocides worldwide, where non-white-people got exterminated...

The prefer to rob the whole planet, but when the robbed people come knocking on their doors they be like "You dirty refugee... You are too dumb to build your own country and now you wanna steal from us..." :D

Thank you anyway barber78 for your post!

Thankyou for sharing @barber78, help upvote my post.

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