In 1909 Sir Conan Doyle published a book entitled "Crime of the Congo", in which Doyle not only illuminated the atrocities committed by King Leopold and Belgium, but also implicated the United States to a certain extent in allowing Leopold to take possession of the Congo in the first place. He also makes the case that England will do its part in making sure the Congolese are sufficiently helped out and even compensated. the following is Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's preface for his "Crime of the Congo":
There are many of us in England who consider the crime which
has been wrought in the Congo lands by King Leopold of Belgium and his
followers to be the greatest which has ever been known in human annals.
Personally I am strongly of that opinion. There have been great expropriations
like that of the Normans in England or of the English in Ireland. There have
been massacres of populations like that of the South Americans by the Spaniards
or of subject nations by the Turks. But never before has there been such a
mixture of wholesale expropriation and wholesale massacre all done under an
odious guise of philanthropy and with the lowest commercial motives as a
reason. It is this sordid cause and the unctuous hypocrisy which makes this
crime unparalleled in its horror.
The witnesses of the crime are of all nations, and there is
no possibility of error concerning facts. There are British consuls like
Casement, Thesiger, Mitchell and Armstrong, all writing in their official
capacity with every detail of fact and date. There are Frenchmen like Pierre
Mille and FĂ©licien Challaye, both of whom have written books upon the subject.
There are missionaries of many races—Harris, Weeks and Stannard (British);
Morrison, Clarke and Shepherd (American); Sjoblom (Swedish) and Father
Vermeersch, the Jesuit. There is the eloquent action of the Italian Government,
who refused to allow Italian officers to be employed any longer in such
hangman’s work, and there is the report of the Belgian commission, the evidence
before which was suppressed because it was too dreadful for publication;
finally, there is the incorruptible evidence of the kodak. Any American citizen
who will glance at Mark Twain’s “King Leopold’s Soliloquy” will see some
samples of that. A perusal of all of these sources of information will show
that there is not a grotesque, obscene or ferocious torture which human
ingenuity could invent which has not been used against these harmless and
helpless people.
This would, to my mind, warrant our intervention in any
case. Turkey has several times been interfered with simply on the general
ground of humanity. There is in this instance a very special reason why America
and England should not stand by and see these people done to death. They are,
in a sense, their wards. America was the first to give official recognition to
King Leopold’s enterprise in 1884, and so has the responsibility of having
actually put him into that position which he has so dreadfully abused. She has
been the indirect and innocent cause of the whole tragedy. Surely some
reparation is due. On the other hand England has, with the other European
Powers, signed the treaty of 1885, by which each and all of them make it
responsible for the condition of the native races. The other Powers have so far
shown no desire to live up to this pledge. But the conscience of England is
uneasy and she is slowly rousing herself to act. Will America be behind?
At this moment two American citizens, Shepherd and that
noble Virginian, Morrison, are about to be tried at Boma for telling the truth
about the scoundrels. Morrison in the dock makes a finer Statue of Liberty than
Bartholdi’s in New York harbour.
Attempts will be made in America (for the Congo has its paid
apologists everywhere) to pretend that England wants to oust Belgium from her
colony and take it herself. Such accusations are folly. To run a tropical
colony honestly without enslaving the natives is an expensive process. For
example Nigeria, the nearest English colony, has to be subsidized to the extent
of $2,000,000 a year. Whoever takes over the Congo will, considering its
present demoralized condition, have a certain expense of $10,000,000 a year for
twenty years. Belgium has not run the colony. It has simply sacked it, forcing
the inhabitants without pay to ship everything of value to Antwerp. No decent
European Power could do this. For many years to come the Congo will be a heavy
expense and it will truly be a philanthropic call upon the next owner. I trust
it will not fall to England.
Attempts have been made too (for there is considerable
ingenuity and unlimited money on the other side) to pretend that it is a
question of Protestant missions against Catholic. Any one who thinks this
should read the book, “La Question Kongolaise,” of the eloquent and holy
Jesuit, Father Vermeersch. He lived in the country and, as he says, it was the
sight of the “immeasurable misery,” which drove him to write.
We English who are earnest over this matter look eagerly to
the westward to see some sign of moral support of material leading. It would be
a grand sight to see the banner of humanity and civilization carried forward in
such a cause by the two great English-speaking nations.
Arthur Conan Doyle.
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