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A Monument to Denial

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  • A Monument to Denial

    Los angeles Times
    March 2, 2005

    A Monument to Denial

    By Adam Hochschild, Adam Hochschild is the author of "King Leopold's Ghost"
    (Mariner Books, 1999) and "Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight
    to Free an Empire's Slaves" (Houghton Mifflin, 2005).


    No country likes to come to terms with embarrassing parts of its past.
    Japanese schoolbooks still whitewash the atrocities of World War II, and the
    Turkish government continues to deny the Armenian genocide. Until about
    1970, the millions of visitors to Colonial Williamsburg saw no indication
    that roughly half the inhabitants of the original town were slaves.

    Until recently, one of the world's more blatant denials of history had been
    taking place at the Royal Museum of Central Africa, an immense, chateau-like
    building on the outskirts of Brussels. It was founded a century ago by
    Belgium's King Leopold II, who, from 1885 to 1908, literally owned the Congo
    as the world's only privately controlled colony. Right through the 1990s,
    the museum's magnificent collection of African art, tools, masks and weapons
    - among the largest and best anywhere, much of it gathered during the 23
    years of Leopold's rule - reflected nothing of what had happened in the
    territory during that period. It was as if a great museum of Jewish art and
    culture in Berlin revealed nothing about the Holocaust.

    The holocaust visited upon the Congo under Leopold was not an attempt at
    deliberate extermination, like the one the Nazis carried out on Europe's
    Jews, but its overall toll was probably higher. Soon after the king got his
    hands on the colony, there was a worldwide rubber boom, and Leopold turned
    much of the Congo's adult male population into forced labor for gathering
    wild rubber. His private army marched into village after village and held
    the women hostage to force the men to go into the rain forest, often for
    weeks out of each month, to tap rubber vines. This went on for nearly two
    decades.

    Though Leopold made a fortune estimated at well over $1 billion in today's
    dollars, the results were catastrophic for Congolese. Laborers were often
    worked to death, and many female hostages starved. With few people to hunt,
    fish or cultivate crops, food grew scarce. Hundreds of thousands of people
    fled the forced-labor regime, but deep in the forest they found little to
    eat and no shelter, and travelers came upon their bones for years afterward.
    Tens of thousands more rose up in rebellion and were shot down. The
    birthrate plummeted. Disease - principally sleeping sickness - took a toll
    in the millions among half-starved and traumatized people who otherwise
    might have survived.

    Leopold's murderous regime was exposed in its own day by a brave band of
    activists: American, British and Swedish missionaries, and a hard-working
    British journalist, E.D. Morel. Any historian of Africa knows the basic
    story, and many have written about parts of it.

    In 1998, I finished a book on the subject, "King Leopold's Ghost," which was
    published in Belgium and drew furious denunciations from royalists and
    conservatives. The foreign minister sent a special message to Belgian
    diplomats abroad, counseling them on how to answer awkward questions from
    readers. Asked if the museum planned changes, a senior official of the Royal
    Museum of Central Africa replied that some were under study, "but absolutely
    not because of the recent disreputable book by an American."

    The museum's current director, Guido Gryseels, caught between pressure from
    human rights activists on the one hand and rumored strong pressure from the
    government and the royal family on the other, several years ago appointed a
    commission of historians to study the Leopold period and determine just what
    did happen. The move won favorable press coverage, but was in essence an odd
    one: Usually commissions take evidence and hear witnesses; they don't study
    the distant past.

    Under Gryseels, the museum has also gradually begun rewording signs on its
    exhibits, and several weeks ago opened a new exhibit, "Memory of Congo: the
    Colonial Era," accompanied by a catalog, a thick, lavishly illustrated
    coffee-table book of several dozen scholarly articles.

    Judging from the latter, the museum has pulled its head out of the sand -
    but only part way. There are a few atrocity photos, but they are far
    outnumbered by pictures of dancers, musicians and happy black and white
    families. The catalog is rife with evasions and denials. The commission of
    historians, for instance, sets the loss of population during the most brutal
    colonial period at 20%. This ignores the fact that in 1919 an official body
    of the Belgian colonial government estimated the toll at 50%. And that the
    Belgian-born Jan Vansina, professor emeritus of history and anthropology at
    the University of Wisconsin-Madison and widely regarded as the greatest
    living student of Central African peoples, makes the same estimate today.

    One wall panel at the new museum exhibit raises - and debunks - the charge,
    "Genocide in the Congo?" But this is a red herring: No reputable scholar of
    the Congo uses the word. Forced labor is different from genocide, though
    both can be fatal. Most of all, it is strange to see the catalog's articles
    on the bus system of Leopoldville, Congo national parks and the Congo visit
    of a Belgian crown prince, but not a single piece on the deadly forced labor
    system.

    Belgium is not alone in failing to face up to its own history. All countries
    mythologize their pasts and confront the worst of it only slowly. But once
    they do, there are positive discoveries as well as painful ones. When I went
    to school in the 1950s, I never heard the name Frederick Douglass, but my
    children, who went in the 1980s, did.

    The Royal Museum of Central Africa has similar figures it could celebrate.
    Stanlislas Lefranc was a devout Catholic and monarchist who went to the
    Congo 100 years ago to work as a magistrate. In pamphlets and newspaper
    articles he later published in Belgium, he spoke out bravely against the
    cruelties he witnessed. Jules Marchal, who died recently, was a Belgian
    diplomat in Africa who, in his spare time, wrote the definitive history of
    forced labor in the Congo, much of it based on years of searching files for
    duplicate copies of documents that King Leopold had ordered destroyed. Both
    men were shunned and ostracized in their time. Confronting the past is not
    just about acknowledging guilt, but rediscovering heroes.

    If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
    latimes.com/archives.
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