yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

History's deadliest king - by Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja


4m read
·Nov 8, 2024

On December 12, 1904, Chief Lontulu laid 110 twigs in front of a foreign commission. Every twig represented a person in his village who died because of King Leopold’s horrific regime in the Congo—all in the name of rubber. Chief Lontulu separated the twigs into four piles: tribal nobles, men, women, and children—then proceeded to name the dead one by one. His testimony joined hundreds of others to help bring an end to one of the greatest atrocities in history.

Beginning in the late 1800s, European countries participated in the so-called “Scramble for Africa.” They colonized 90% of the continent, exploiting African resources and enriching their countries. Belgium had recently become an independent kingdom. Its ruler, Leopold II, wanted to acquire what he called “a slice of this magnificent African cake.” Meanwhile, he read colonial explorer Henry Morton Stanley’s reports about traveling through Africa. Stanley emphasized the Congo basin’s majesty.

So, in 1879, Leopold contracted him to return to the Congo. There, Stanley deceived leaders into signing some 450 treaties allowing for land use. Leopold persuaded the US and European powers to grant him ownership of the Congo, pledging to protect free trade in the region. And on May 29, 1885, a territory more than 80 times the size of Belgium and home to 20 million people was declared his own private colony—by no one it actually belonged to.

Leopold lost no time consolidating power in what he called the Congo Free State. He claimed land, raised an army, and forced many Congolese men to complete unpaid labor. Things got even worse when, in 1887, a Scottish inventor redeveloped the pneumatic tire, creating a massive international market for rubber. The Congo had one of the world’s largest supplies. Leopold seized the opportunity, requiring villages to meet ever-greater rubber quotas. Congolese men had to harvest the material from wild vines.

As supplies drained, they walked for days to gather enough. Leopold’s army entered villages and held women and children hostage until the impossible quota was met. Soldiers sexually violated women and deprived children of food and water. Congolese people rebelled—they refused to cooperate, fought Leopold’s soldiers, hid in the forests, and destroyed rubber vines.

Leopold’s army responded to resistance or failure to meet quotas with unflinching torture and executions. Because guns and ammunition were expensive, officers ordered soldiers to prove they used their bullets in the line of duty by removing a hand from anyone they killed. However, many soldiers hunted using their guns. To avoid harsh penalties and account for lost bullets, they cut off living people’s hands. They also used this practice as punishment. If rubber quotas weren’t met, soldiers would sever people’s hands and bring them to their commanders instead of rubber.

The regime dramatically upended daily life and agriculture, causing widespread starvation and disease. Meanwhile, King Leopold built monuments and private estates with the wealth he extracted. Soon, people brought international attention to the horrific abuses of Leopold’s Congo Free State. In 1890, American journalist George Washington Williams accused King Leopold of “deceit, fraud, robberies, arson, murder, slave-raiding, and [a] general policy of cruelty.”

In 1903, Diplomat Roger Casement wrote a report that corroborated the nature and scale of the atrocities. It was published the following year. In response, Leopold appointed his own commission to investigate the accusations. They heard numerous witness statements in the Congo—Chief Lontulu’s included. The report only confirmed the worst. Facing pressure, Leopold relinquished control of the Congo to the Belgian government in 1908. But this did not mean justice. The Belgian state awarded Leopold 50 million francs “in testimony for his great sacrifice in favor of the Congo.” He died the following year. Crowds booed his funeral procession.

For more than 50 years following, the Congo remained a Belgian colony, until declaring independence in 1960. That year, the Congo elected its first prime minister, Patrice Lumumba. But months later, he was unseated in a US and Belgium backed coup. In early 1961, Lumumba was assassinated under Belgian supervision. The coup launched the country into a decades-long dictatorship.

Around 10 million Congolese people are thought to have died during Leopold’s occupation and looting of the Congo. Despite this devastation, calls for reparations have gone unanswered. To this day, throughout Belgium can be found the monuments King Leopold built on a foundation of inconceivable cruelty.

More Articles

View All
Taoism: The Philosophy of Flow
Your alarm rings, waking you up from an unrestful sleep. You stretch across the bed and tap your phone to silence the disturbing noise. You’re tempted to pick it up and see what’s going on in the world, but you try really hard to stay away from it. Remind…
Interpreting picture graphs (notebook) | Math | 3rd grade | Khan Academy
Maria has 70 pages in her notebook. She made a graph of the kinds of writing on all the pages she has used so far. How many pages are left in Maria’s notebook? So down here, we have a picture graph or pictograph showing all the pages Maria’s used so far …
Your Brain on Tech
[Music] Oh hello, technology isn’t just changing our lives; it’s changing our brains. Not just how they think, but how they look. It’s been shown that playing certain video games for hours can improve your memory for details, your ability to navigate spac…
Summer of Soul | National Geographic
(Fast-paced drumming music) [Man] What time is it? ♪ This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius ♪ “Summer of Soul” is about the Harlem Cultural Festival in 1969. With so many greats of music in the day, Tony Lawrence and Hal Tulchin came up with an ide…
The 5 Things Successful People Do In Their 20’s
What’s up you guys? It’s Graham here. So your 20s are really such an important time. I honestly believe that it’s these early years that best form the foundation for everything else you do later in life. Much like it’s the easiest to learn a second langua…
What If You Just Keep Digging?
If you’ve ever thought, “What if I just dug a really, really deep hole?”, that’s what the USSR did right here! That hole is deeper than the deepest part of the ocean. It’s deeper than Mount Everest is tall. They started digging it in the 1970s as part of …