When You Kill Ten Million Africans You Aren’t Called ‘Hitler’
Most people haven’t heard of him.
But you should have. When you see his
face or hear his name you should get as sick in your stomach as when you
read about Mussolini or Hitler or see one of their pictures. You see,
he killed over 10 million people in the Congo.
His name is King Leopold II of Belgium.
He “owned” the Congo during his reign as
the constitutional monarch of Belgium. After several failed colonial
attempts in Asia and Africa, he settled on the Congo. He “bought” it and
enslaved its people, turning the entire country into his own personal
slave plantation. He disguised his business transactions as
“philanthropic” and “scientific” efforts under the banner of the International African Society.
He used their enslaved labor to extract Congolese resources and
services. His reign was enforced through work camps, body mutilations,
torture, executions, and his own private army.
Most of us aren’t taught about him in
school. We don’t hear about him in the media. He’s not part of the
widely-repeated narrative of oppression (which includes things like the
Holocaust during World War II). He’s part of a long history of
colonialism, imperialism, slavery, and genocide in Africa that would
clash with the social construction of a white supremacist narrative in
our schools. It doesn’t fit neatly into school curriculums in a
capitalist society. Making overtly racist remarks is (sometimes) frowned
upon in ‘polite’ society, but it’s quite fine not to talk about
genocide in Africa perpetrated by European capitalist monarchs.
Mark Twain wrote a satire about Leopold called “King Leopold’s Soliloquy; A Defense of His Congo Rule”,
where he mocked the King’s defense of his reign of terror, largely
through Leopold’s own words. It’s an easy read at 49 pages. Mark Twain
is a popular author in American public schools. But like most political
authors, we will often read some of their least political writings or
read them without learning why the author wrote them in the first place.
Orwell’s Animal Farm, for example, serves to reinforce
American anti-socialist propaganda about how egalitarian societies are
doomed to turn into their dystopian opposites. But Orwell was an
anti-capitalist revolutionary of a different kind—and that is never
pointed out. We can read about Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, but “King
Leopold’s Soliloquy” isn’t on the reading list. This isn’t by accident.
Reading lists are created by boards of education in order to prepare
students to follow orders and endure boredom. From the point of view of
the Department of Education, Africans have no history.
When we learn about Africa, we learn
about a caricatured Egypt, about the HIV epidemic (but never its
causes), about the surface level effects of the slave trade, and maybe
about South African Apartheid (the effects of which, we are taught, are
now long, long over). We also see lots of pictures of starving children
on Christian Ministry commercials, we see safaris on animal shows, and
we see pictures of deserts in films and movies. But we don’t learn about
the Great African War or Leopold’s Reign of Terror during the Congolese
Genocide. Nor do we learn about what the United States has done in Iraq
and Afghanistan, killing millions of people through bombs, sanctions,
disease, and starvation. Body counts are important. And the United
States Government doesn’t count Afghan, Iraqi, or Congolese people.
Though the Congolese Genocide isn’t
included on Wikipedia’s “Genocides in History” page, it does mention the
Congo. What’s now called the Democratic Republic of the Congo is listed
in reference to the Second Congo War (also called Africa’s World War
and the Great War of Africa), where both sides of the multinational
conflict hunted down Bambenga people—a regional ethnic group—and
cannibalized them. Cannibalism and slavery are horrendous evils which
must be entered into history for sure, but I couldn’t help thinking
whose interests were served when the only mention of the Congo on the
page was in reference to multinational incidents where a tiny minority
of people in Africa were eating each other (completely devoid of the
conditions which created the conflict). Stories which support the white
supremacist narrative about the subhumanness of people in Africa are
allowed to be entered into the records of history. The white guy who
turned the Congo into his own personal part-plantation,
part-concentration camp, part-Christian ministry—and killed 10 to 15
million Congolese people in the process—doesn’t make the cut.
You see, when you kill ten million
Africans, you aren’t called ‘Hitler’. That is, your name doesn’t come to
symbolize the living incarnation of evil. Your name and your picture
don’t produce fear, hatred, and sorrow. Your victims aren’t talked about
and your name isn’t remembered.
Leopold was just one of thousands of things that helped construct
white supremacy as both an ideological narrative and material reality. I
don’t pretend that he was the source of all evil in the Congo. He had
generals, and foot soldiers, and managers who did his bidding and
enforced his laws. He was at the head of a system. But that doesn’t
negate the need to talk about the individuals who are symbolic of the
system. But we don’t even get that. And since it isn’t talked about,
what capitalism did to Africa, all the privileges that rich white people
gained from the Congolese genocide, remain hidden. The victims of
imperialism are made, like they usually are, invisible.
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