The following is a 1999 book review from the Guardian of the landmark book, "King Leopold's Ghost", by Adam Hochschild, in which Hochschild makes the claim that Leopold's mass murder in the Congo was on par or worse than what Adolph Hitler did to the Jews of Western and Eastern Europe during World War II:
As the sun sank slowly over Brussels, its fading rays glinted off
the glass domes and towers of the magnificent Victorian greenhouses in
the grounds of the royal palace at Laeken. Built to celebrate King
Leopold II's acquisition of the Congo a century ago, the greenhouses
stretch for more than half a mile and are among the most visible and
grandiose remaining symbols of a once enormous African empire, 60 times
the size of Belgium. The colony was the largest private estate ever
acquired by a single man - and one he never saw.
It is said that when
he showed his nephew the greenhouses, the youth gasped that they were
like a little Versailles. 'Little?' snorted the king.
Leopold
always did think big. But the row over the king's notorious stewardship
of his African territories still has the ability to evoke raw emotions
in a country trying to come to terms with a brutal colonial past.
The
question is: was the spade-bearded old reprobate a mass-murderer, the
first genocidalist of modern times, responsible for the death of more
Africans than the Nazis killed Jews? Was his equatorial empire, the
setting for Conrad's Heart of Darkness and the terrible Kurtz with the
human heads dangling round his garden, the scene of a largely forgotten
holocaust? The old wounds have been re-opened by the publication of a
book called King Leopold's Ghost, by the American author Adam
Hochschild, which has brought howls of rage from Belgium's ageing
colonials and some professional historians even as it has climbed the
country's best-seller lists.
The debate over Belgium's colonial
legacy could not be more timely. In the realm beyond the palace walls
where Leopold's great grandson Albert II is now king, the openly racist
extreme rightwing Vlaams Blok, which blames much of the country's ills
on coloured immigrants from Africa, is bidding to become one of the
biggest parties in next month's elections.
And the planes which
soar over the greenhouses as they depart Brussels sometimes carry human
cargo - black asylum seekers being unceremoniously deported,
occasionally naked and still bleeding, back to Africa. Last September,
the Belgian immigration service succeeded in suffocating one of them, a
Nigerian woman called Semira Adamu, 20, on board the plane that was to
take her home, by shoving her head under a pillow. The police videoed
themselves chatting and laughing while they pushed her head down. It
took them 20 minutes to kill her.
The history of Leopold's rule
over the Congo has long been known. It was first exposed by American and
British writers and campaigners at the turn of the century - publicity
which eventually forced the king to hand the country which had been his
private fiefdom over to Belgium.
But Hochschild's book has hit a
raw nerve for a new generation with its vividly drawn picture of a
voracious king anxious to maximise his earnings from the proceeds of
rubber and ivory. It is clear that many of Leopold's officials in
the depots up the Congo river terrorised the local inhabitants, forcing
them to work under the threat of having their hands and feet - or those
of their children - cut off. Women were raped, men were executed and
villages were burned in pursuit of profit for the king.
But what
has stuck in the gut of Belgian historians is Hochschild's claim that 10
million people may have died in a forgotten holocaust. In outrage, the
now ageing Belgian officials who worked in the Congo in later years have
taken to the internet with a 10-page message claiming that maybe only
half a dozen people had their hands chopped off, and that even that was
done by native troops. They argue that American and British
writers have highlighted the Congo to distract attention from the
contemporary massacre of the North American indians and the Boer War.
Under
the headline 'a scandalous book', members of the Royal Belgian Union
for Overseas Territories claim: 'There is nothing that could compare
with the horrors of Hitler and Stalin, or the deliberate massacres of
the Indian, Tasmanian and Aboriginal populations. A black legend has
been created by polemicists and British and American journalists feeding
off the imaginations of novelists and the re-writers of history.'
Professor Jean Stengers, a leading historian of the period, says:
'Terrible things happened, but Hochschild is exaggerating. It is absurd
to say so many millions died. I don't attach so much significance to his
book. In two or three years' time, it will be forgotten.' Leopold's
British biographer, Barbara Emerson, agrees: 'I think it is a very
shoddy piece of work. Leopold did not start genocide. He was greedy for
money and chose not to interest himself when things got out of control.
Part of Belgian society is still very defensive. People with Congo
connections say we were not so awful as that, we reformed the Congo and
had a decent administration there.' Stengers acknowledges that the
population of the Congo shrank dramatically in the 30 years after
Leopold took over, though exact figures are hard to establish since no
one knows how many inhabited the vast jungles in the 1880s.
It is
true too that some of those reporting scandals had their own knives to
grind. Some were Protestant missionaries who were rivals to Belgian
Catholics in the region. Yet Leopold certainly emerges as an
unattractive figure, described as a young man by his cousin Queen
Victoria as an 'unfit, idle and unpromising an heir apparent as ever was
known' and by Disraeli as having 'such a nose as a young prince has in a
fairy tale, who has been banned by a malignant fairy.' As king, he did
not bother to deny charges in a London court that he had sex with child
prostitutes. When the bishop of Ostend told him that people were saying
he had a mistress, he is reputed to have replied benignly: 'People tell
me the same about you, your Grace. But of course I choose not to believe
them.' His wiliness in convincing the world that he had only
humanitarian motives in annexing the Congo, in persuading the Belgian
government essentially to pay for his purchase and in buying up
journalists, including the great explorer Henry Morton Stanley, to
promote his cause show both cunning and skill.
Emerson claims
Leopold was appalled to hear about the atrocities in his domain, but dug
his heels in when he was attacked in the foreign press. He did indeed
apparently write to his secretary of state: 'These horrors must end or I
will retire from the Congo. I will not be splattered with blood and
mud: it is essential that any abuses cease.' But the man who (as Queen
Victoria said) had the habit of saying 'disagreeable things to people'
was also reputed to have snorted: 'Cut off hands - that's idiotic. I'd
cut off all the rest of them, but not hands. That's the one thing I need
in the Congo.' Although few now defend him, strange things happen even
today when the Congo record is challenged. Currently circulating on the
internet is an anguished claim by a student in Brussels called Joseph
Mbeka alleging he his thesis marked a failure when he cited Hochschild's
book: 'My director turned his back on me.' Daniel Vangroenweghe, a
Belgian anthropologist who also published a critical book about the
period 15 years ago, says: 'Senior people tried to get me sacked at the
time. Questions were asked in parliament and my work was subjected to an
official inspection.' At a large chateau outside Brussels in Tervuren
is the Musee Royal de l'Afrique, which Leopold was eventually shamed
into setting up to prove his philanthropic credentials. It contains the
largest African ethnographic collection in the world, rooms full of
stuffed animals and artefacts including shields, spears, deities, drums
and masks, a 60ft-long war canoe, even Stanley's leather suitcase.
There
is one small watercolour of a native being flogged, but a visitor would
be hard-pressed to spot any other reference to the dark side of
Leopold's regime. Dust hangs over the place. A curator has said changes
are under consideration 'but absolutely not because of the recent
disreputable book by an American'.
The real legacy of Leopold and
of the Belgians who ran the country until they were bloodily booted out
in 1960 has been the chaos in the region ever since and a rapacity
among rulers such as Mobutu Sese Seko which outstripped even the king's.
Leopold made £3m in 10 years between 1896 and 1906, Mobutu filched at
least £3bn. When the Belgians left there were only three Africans in
managerial positions in the Congo's administration and fewer than 30
graduates in the entire country.
Vangroenweghe says: 'Talk of
whether Leopold killed 10 million people or five million is beside the
point, it was still too many.' I asked Belgium's prime minister,
Jean-Luc Dehaene, about the Congo legacy this week. 'The colonial past
is completely past,' he said. 'There is really no strong emotional link
any more. It does not move the people. It's part of the past. It's
history.'
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