Wednesday, 31 October 2007

King Leopold's Ghost - Adam Hochschild

If you come to read King Leopold’s Ghost, knowing little of the history of the Congo and the atrocities committed there some 120 years ago, rest assured you are not alone. The only association many will have with this period is Joseph Conrad’s 1902 novella Heart of Darkness. The title is apt since the entire history of the region has always been shrouded in darkness. Hochschild himself recounts in his introduction that he “knew almost nothing about the history of the Congo" until he stumbled upon “a footnote in a book [he] happened to be reading”. The footnote was to a quotation by Mark Twain, referring to Twain’s membership of a worldwide movement against slave labour in the Congo which had claimed 8 to 10 million lives. (It is interesting to note, then, that the claim of up to 10 million deaths in the Congo had been circulated before King Leopold’s Ghost was published and was not, as so many critics have implied, a figure first promulgated by Hochschild.) Hochschild was not only startled by the enormity of the figure, but by the fact that only now, so late in his academic career, had he come across it and this realisation set in motion the years of research which culminated in King Leopold’s Ghost. When he embarked on his research for the book, he leaned heavily on an exhaustive 4 volume work by the Belgian historian Jules Marchel and the moment which had triggered Marchal’s interest in the Congo was remarkably similar to Hochschild’s. Marchal had noticed a story in a Liberian newspaper which referred, in passing, to 10 million deaths in the Congo Free State during the time of Leopold II’s rule. He too had never previously heard such a claim and at first dismissed it as an outrageous slander on his country, until a few questions to the Belgian foreign ministry went unanswered and his suspicions were aroused. 26 years later, Marchal’s work would corroborate this claim.

If the Belgian political establishment have been careful to mask the magnitude of the crimes committed in the Congo between 1885 and 1908, it is perhaps only a continuation of the way in which the system of forced labour, kidnapping and abuse was concealed at the time. The man who first detected that something was terribly amiss in the late 1890s, shipping clerk E.D. Morel, began to notice that while plentiful supplies of rubber and ivory were arriving daily from the Congo, nothing was being sent back in return, save guns and soldiers. His discovery was as sudden and as unexpected as it was for those historians who would later document his campaign and it would take years of tireless lobbying to force the world to confront the scale of Leopold's crimes. Of course, there is nothing novel or surprising about a regime seeking to hide its murderous behaviour, but perhaps no other regime in history hid its actions with such brazen duplicity as Leopold's. The Nazis may have concealed the existence of the gas chambers, but Hitler never made any secret of his hatred for the Jews. King Leopold's murderous administration of the Congo, on the other hand, was presented as a great humanitarian exercise, as a way to protect the African from the dreaded Arab slave-dealer, "under one flag", as one contemporary American supporter gushed "which offers freedom to commerce and prohibits the slave trade".

Hochschild's book is undeniably a depressing read and the writer makes a sensible and necessary decision to focus not only on the depravity of the crimes of the regime but the heroism and bravery of those who sought to bring about its downfall. Yet perhaps the most tragic and deflating aspect of the story comes late in the book, when the writer reminds us that the conduct of Le Force Publique soldiers and Belgian governors in the Congo was not uniquely savage but broadly representative of the practices of European colonialism throughout the continent. Other European empires competed with the Belgians in terms of brutality; 50 years before the Holocaust, Germany was pursuing an openly genocidal policy against the Hereros of present-day Namibia, the French imposed a similar system of slave labour and mass murder on the other side of the Congo river and the British were decimating the Aboriginal population of Australia. Hochschild is explicit in this, and it is this part of his work which seems to have been overlooked by the horrified Belgian critics who savaged it. In fact Hochschild goes as far as to identify why it was the Belgian Congo that became the object of worldwide protest and not, say, areas of French or Portuguese Africa where the rubber terror slashed the populations of some areas by up to a half. His conclusions are unpalatable but logical; as the private empire of a ridiculed and increasingly marginalised monarch, the Congo Free State was an easy target and governments could be rallied to confront it without incurring dangerous political consequences. After all, the Congo Free State was an anomaly; not the property of a nation but of one man. This was not proper colonialism but its perverted and unworkable cousin. For this reason it had to be dismantled. It is interesting to note that not even the most radical opponents of the regime at the time ever called for the region to be handed back to the native population and in the end the administration of the Congo Free State passed into the hands of the Belgian government - at a price, of course. King Leopold, tenacious to the last, sold it back to his countrymen for around 50 million francs.

In his afterword to the 2006 edition, Hochschild expounds an idea, previously expressed in his interviews and other writings, that has still to gain acceptance in contemporary European thinking; that European colonialism has shaped the world we live in today as profoundly and drastically as Communism and Fascism and was equal to both of them in terms of brutality, tyranny and cost to human life. It is an idea which sits uncomfortably with many people, perhaps for good reason. The equating of political regimes with the Nazis or Bolsheviks has long been the shrill war-cry of misguided sociopaths (as demonstrated by the hysterical nature of anti-Israel sentiment which frequently compares the conduct of Israeli soldiers in the occupied territories with the worst excesses of the Nazis). Yet it is a sentiment which seems to be self-evident. Hochschild draws stark parallels. Like the two ideologies of the 20th century, the colonialism of Europeans was rooted in quasi-religious ideology with notions of manifest destiny (and, like Nazism, held a violent claim to racial superiority). It was similarly totalitarian, with a suppression of all political opposition by terror and a belief in the subordination of the individual to the greater goals of the state. Lastly, its death toll was comparably obscene.

It is this last point that raises the greatest questions and provokes the strongest ire. Hochschild's opponents have ridiculed his figure of between 8 to 10 million deaths. It is worth noting that Hochschild's figure was not his own but based on other scholarly estimates and that it falls short of more radical estimates; Isidore Ndaywel e Nziem, a Congolese scholar whose Histoire Générale du Congo was published the same year as King Leopold's Ghost, estimated the death toll in the Léopold era and its immediate aftermath at roughly 13 million. I am in no position to dispute or verify Hochschild's claim, yet there are aspects of it which are questionable. The author explains that contemporary data is hard to find and that most estimates are based on a reading of the Congolese population before the Leopold era and in the imediate aftermath. A number of his sources revealed that the population of the Congo was reduced by a half during the Leopold period and that its population at around 1920, some years after Leopold's relinquishing of control, stood at around 10 million. Therefore it is concluded that the Congo lost up to 10 million people during these times and Hochschild gives four main reasons for this; murder, starvation, disease and, consequently, a plummeting birth rate. It is this last factor which is problematic. A falling birth rate does not automaticaly equate to mass extermination and if a population is reduced by 10 million, that is not to say that 10 million lives were taken. To put it crudely, not being born is not the same as being killed. And yet it is dangerous and distracting to be absorbed by arguments over the exact figure for Congolese deaths. Belgian nationalists seized on the idea that Hochschild's figures may have been overstated and concluded that all criticism of its colonial history had been similarly misguided. Clearly, Hochschild and his self-righteous brand of history could not be trusted, they said, but they were of course missing a fundamental point. The debate over the exact number of deaths was in essence an admission that mass murder did take place. If we cannot even peg the figure to its nearest million, we are admitting that millions were killed. As Hochschild himself remarks, "sifting such figures today" may not reveal "precise death tolls, but they reek of mass murder". An obsession with discovering exactly how many Africans were killed in the Congo (a near impossible task) should not blind us to the crimes and injustices of this period or the abhorrence of the ideas that underlined it.

There is another facet to the arguments of those who defend the crimes of colonialism, one that I have heard countless times. It is the one which dismisses all criticism of colonialism as liberal nonsense that lays the blame for all the world's ills at the feet of the white man and conveniently overlooks the massacres and wars perpetrated by Africans over the centuries. Perhaps one of the most over-used lines brandished in defence of colonialism is the argument that the slave trade existed in Africa long before the arrival of the white man. Of course it did, but the argument ignores the fact that this was an entirely different form of slavery; a system where, in the aftermath of tribal battles and skirmishes, the surviving members of vanquished armies would be taken into captivity and used as forced labour or as bargaining tools in future negotiations. It was a system practised in all reaches of the world, by all races and tribes, from biblical times and beyond. What the European did in Africa and the Americas was to transform slavery into a mass industry. And while Africans continued to be involved in its implementation, often serving as middlemen, it was a system overseen and orchestrated by Europeans, whose economy demanded it.

Certainly noone can deny the extraordinary crimes visited upon Africans by Africans in post-colonial times, yet it is fair to say that corruption, ethnic and tribal hatred, conflict and war are better served in lands which have been granted political independence but denied economic autonomy, as has been the fate of almost all sub-Saharan Africa. Neither of course has this political independence been free from Western interference. Congo, for one, has been in a state of almost constant warfare since the deposition and murder of its first democratically elected leader, Patrice Lumumba, 1n 1961, in which Belgium, and the CIA, played a pivotal role. As war has ravaged the country, refugees have poured into Europe and today in the UK, the Medical Foundation for the Victims of Torture has more referrals from the Democratic Republic of Congo than any other country except Iran. Almost a hundred years on, King Leopold's ghost continues to haunt a beleaguered nation.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

I read a book once.

It were shit.

Jon P said...

Thanks, Colin, you're quite right. I watched a film once and it was also shit. I mean, why watch the whole of Goodfellas when there's a perfectly good advert on the TV for Heineken, starring Ray Liotta, which clocks in at a much more sensible one and a half minutes?

Anonymous said...

Now then Jon lad I think Goodfellas is class me but who said owt about films? I were only saying I read a book and it were rubbish so why tha's bletherin' on about Ray Liotta like it's got owt to do with books? Get thi' sen down the funny farm, I do know!

Anonymous said...

An interesting piece, passionate and well-written. Unfortunately I will not have time to read Hochschild's book for myself anytime soon so I thank you for succinctly presenting his work thus for my consideration.

I have a number of comments to make:

1 You mention that one of the arguments put forward by apologists for colonialism progresses by dismissing '... all criticism of colonialism as liberal nonsense that lays the blame for all the world's ills at the feet of the white man and conveniently overlooks the massacres and wars perpetrated by Africans over the centuries.' Although I regard what you say here as true, the version of the argument in question you present is rather extreme, and thus your article is susceptible to criticism of the 'straw man' variety. Indeed, I do think that there are versions of the argument in question that are not only plausible, but also compatible with negative critical viewpoints of colonialism. That you make an association between the argument in question and colonialism apologists makes possible the (to my mind incorrect) inference that anyone asserting this view necessarily is an apologist for colonialism. And the fact that you do nothing to block this inference is, in my view, a mistake.

2. Later in the same paragraph you state that '...one of the most over-used lines brandished in defence of colonialism is the argument that the slave trade existed in Africa long before the arrival of the white man', and you go on to suggest that what the colonial powers did was far worse because they '...transform[ed] slavery into a mass industry.' However, it does not follow (prima facie at least) from the fact that a certain form of slavery is a mass industry, that it is any more or less evil than a form of slavery that isn't a mass industry. Thus your statement is ineffective against the defender of colonialism's 'burden of proof' argument.

3. As I said at the start of my comment, your article is passionate and well-written. However, it fails to address the following issues:

a) Now that the (purported) explanation for the tragic state of the Congolese nation has been presented, what should be done to remedy the situation?
b) Given the ubiquity of human suffering across the globe, spanning every continent and falling upon peoples of many different races cultures etc., what reasons (if any) are there for choosing to devote one's time and energy to offering aid and support to the Congolese rather than the natives of a different 'beleaguered nation'?
c) Is there a connection between the causes of the problems that currently beset the Congo, and the solution to these problems? If so, what is it? If not, then is it not the case that any exercise of finger-pointing (carried out by Hochschild or anyone else) is just as much of a 'dangerous and distracting' enterprise as the quest for an accurate death toll, distracting as it is from the real issue at hand (rehabilitating the Congo)?

4. You state that '...the Congo Free State was an anomoly' - presumably this is a spelling mistake and you intended to describe the Congo Free State as an 'anomaly', not as comparable to the Microsoft Word typeface?

I hope these comments have been of some use. I looking forward to your responses. Goodbye for now.

JM

Jon P said...

Thanks for your comments Jefferson. I agree with a lot of what you say and perhaps some of my original piece was phrased badly. As far as point 2 goes, my objection really is to those people (and I have heard their argument many times) who seem to think that because the slave trade existed in Africa before colonial times, then it is Africans, and not Europeans, who were somehow responsible for the whole colonial slave trade (you probably know the kind of people; they tend to learn history in the pub and are prone to making claims about Hitler driving around Berlin shouting "beaver" at anyone with a beard). However I would dispute your assertion that slavery as a mass industry is no better or worse than any other form of slavery. Surely we can differentiate between a practice (albeit thoroughly unpleasant) of indentured servitude (as most tribal slavery was) and one that set out to capture, export and permanently enslave hundreds of thousands as a means of sustaining prosperity and power.

I would also venture to say that point 3 is a little harsh. What should be done about the Congo? I have no idea. But does that mean it is invalid to write a (pretty sketchy) historical account of the region? Should people be barred from writing about the history of the Arab-Israeli conflict unless they can find a solution to the problem which has eluded politicians, diplomats and social scientists for the last 50 years or more? And what reaons are there for devoting "one's time and energy to offering aid and support to the Congolese rather than the natives of a different 'beleaguered nation'?" Absolutely none. I read a book about the region and felt sufficiently moved to write about it. It was not intended as an appeal on behalf of the Congolese people.

Once again, thanks for your comments and for pointing out my spelling mistake which I have now corrected.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for your reply. I wish to point out that my previous comment was not meant as an attack on your article or its sentiment, but was merely a set of suggestions as to how your article could be made more resistant to attack from opponents of your views.

We may indeed be able to make factual distinctions between localised slavery on the one hand and large-scale slavery on the other, but its the moral distinction that is crucial here. Given that both forms of slavery are straightforwardly immoral, there is no manifest moral distinction between the two, and if there is one then it needs to be elucidated.

I don't think it is too harsh to demand an opinion on appropriate action regarding the current state of the Congo, especially since in its final paragraph you article ceases to be solely historical and enters the domain of current affairs in virtue of its reference to present-day Congolese torture victims. I think it is reasonable to assume that someone who expresses moral outrage about certain abhorrent past and present states of affairs both desires and has ideas about how to achieve the prevention of similar states of affairs in the future (that is, unless we also assume that this person has some rather perverse desire to be in a constant state of moral outrage).

That said, I'm a little surprised and even disappointed that you didn't stick up for yourself more on this point. Despite being of the opinion that you have no idea what to do about the Congo, you yourself have done more than most by make public aspects of the nation's plight via your blog. Your article is a contribution to an essential component of any campaign for justice, aid etc. for the Congo - that is, raising awareness of the past and present oppression of the Congolese. I had hoped you would provide an appropriately self-confident response to the question raised.

'And what reaons are there for devoting "one's time and energy to offering aid and support to the Congolese rather than the natives of a different 'beleaguered nation'?" Absolutely none.'

Do you really think this?? I can think of plenty of reasons for why a person might work to help one group of people in need at the expense of the other. Someone might, for whatever reason, be more angered by one group's plight than the other, and might find that this greater anger provides greater drive to help. Or perhaps one might reason that it's impossible to help everyone, so a choice as to who to help and who not to, however arbitrary, must be made at some point, or else our only option is helping no one at all.

I maintain that your article is impoverished by the absence of any comment on how the history of the Congo bears on any proposed solution to its current plight. I would be very interested to read your view on this point.

JM

Anonymous said...

What was so bad about the slave trade anyway?! Without it we would never have had Chubby Checker!!

Jon P said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jon P said...

JM, there seems to be a contradiction here. On the one hand you state that there can be no moral distinction between any form of slavery, be it localised or industrialised, but maintain that I must state a reason as to why the oppression and suffering of the Congolese people is more important than the oppression and suffering of any other people. This is a moral distinction that I do not wish to make.

Jon P said...

Secondly, Jefferson, could it not be said that certain features of the colonial slave trade, such as the mass expulsion of people from their own homeland, do make this form of slavery more morally reprehensible than the tribal systems which preceded it? (This is a genuine question and not a rhetorical one)

Anonymous said...

Firstly, I didn't state that there is not or cannot be a moral distinction, only that no moral distinction is manifest in what you say. Secondly, I did not maintain that the reason/s I wish you to state must be moral in character (or that they must justify the assertion that helping one group is more important than helping the other). The reasons given in my example were morality-free, and its quite possible that such reasons need to be devoid of a moral dimension. However, they still constitute reasons, and I think that such reasons should be given for any focusing of one's philanthropic efforts, so as to provide justificatory support for one's choice of action.

The answer to your (genuine) question is 'Yes'. The colonial slave trade, in comparison with the previous tribal system, is more morally reprehensible - if we regard them both as concrete particular instances and not as tokens of abstract moral categories. That the colonial slave trade caused greater suffering quantitatively (and, arguably, qualitatively) is ample support for this conclusion. My initial point was in no way disputing this; I was simply pressing you on a point that was inferable from your article - namely, that you regarded industrialised slavery as worse than localised slavery, in all instances.

I think that basically we are in agreement as to the moral judgments that should be made regarding the Congo's past and present. I intended my comments as suggestions on how the logic of your article could be tightened. You write with passion and I think it's fair to say that you tend to be lead with your heart. This is by no means a bad thing, although very often authors with this disposition are prone to a certain logical fuzziness. Having said that, this is, to my mind, a far better state of affairs than the opposite (presenting 'moral' arguments that are nothing more than clever logic-games and devoid of any moral sustenance).

Jon P said...

Right, I'm glad that's cleared up then. Now, where's that confounded manservant of mine? I'm still waiting for my tea.

Anonymous said...

I is sorry sir jus' drinkin' me Um Bongo in da Congo ya gonna get served wi' da brew right now bwah!

Anonymous said...

Look I dunno who u r but ur well out of order allowin racist comments like that.