Bingo, Bango, Bongo (Congo)
By Marty Jezer
In recent weeks the Democratic Republic of the Congo, formerly known as Zaire, and before that the Belgian Congo, has
been in the news: A brutal civil war, an horrendous AIDS epidemic, the assassination of its dictator, Laurent Kabila,
and now a new President, Kabila's son Joseph, who is in Washington for talks with the Bush Administration. These events
are usually described in the media without historic context. We in the West shrug in bemusement and wonder why these
Africans can't get it together.
Most of us know little about the Congo except, perhaps, if we are old enough, from the little ditty, "Bingo, Bango,
Bongo, I don't want to leave the Congo, oh no no no no no." Then there's Joseph Conrad's novel, Heart of Darkness. The
main character, Kurtz, is a white trader who surrounds his home in the Congo with shrunken heads. The barbarity that
Conrad describes is considered a metap hor for man's capacity for evil, too horrendous to be anything but fiction.
But Conrad, who was witness to the colonization of the Congo, has said that his novel "is experience . . . pushed a
little (and only very little) beyond the actual facts of the case."
As individuals and peoples we are products of our past. Events don't unfold in a vacuum. What happens today is an
outgrowth of history. To learn the facts of Conrad's case, one can turn to Adam Hochschild's book, King Leopold's Ghost:
A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa (Houghton Mifflin, 1998).
Hochschild's book is a history of Belgium's King Leopold's crimes against humanity in the rainforest of equatorial
Africa. Leopold felt stifled by his country's parliamentary democracy, as Hochschild tells it. He wanted to rule; if he
couldn't rule his own people, he could at least rule over a colony. In 1877 he sent an agent, the American explorer
Henry Morton Stanley, into the African rainforest with orders "to purchase as much land as you will be able to obtainS"
Stanley thereupon negotiated "treaties" with 450 tribal chiefs, documents that were meaningless to the chiefs who agreed
to them. Leopold then used the treaties to convince other Western colonial powers that he had legal right to the Congo
River basin, an area more than fifty times the size of Belgium. Thus was the Belgian Congo created.
Leopold spoke of bringing civilization to the Africans and sent a small but heavily armed Belgian force into the Congo.
This army forcibly conscripted African youth to fill its ranks. It then went from village to village taking the women
hostage and forcing the men to go deep into the jungle to tap the indigenous rubber trees. Those who resisted were mowed
down by machine-gun fire. Many were beheaded or had their hands cut off. One of the King's officers wrote, "My goal is
ultimately humanitarian. I killed a hundred people but that allowed five hundred others to live." Another wrote, "To
gather rubber in the district Sone must cut off hands, noses, and ears."
Those not gunned-down or mutilated were worked as slaves to maximize the rubber harvest. With the men doing forced labor
and the women held hostage (and being raped and otherwise brutalized), the native social structure was destroyed. Since
there was no one free to hunt game or grow crops, starvation resulted, and with it disease. Between 1880 and 1920, the
Congo lost approximately half of its population. An estimated eight to ten million Africans died as victims of King
Leopold's "rubber-terror"
International outrage forced Belgium to take over the King's fiefdom, but forced labor continued. Belgium extracted
rubber, ivory, diamonds, and uranium from the Congo and gave back nothing: no schools, no hospitals, no infrastructure
except that which facilitated the export of resources. The uranium used to make the atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki came from mines in the Congo.
In 1960 Belgium gave the Congo independence, but, with other western countries, continued to maintain economic power.
One excuse was the Cold War. In 1961 Patrice Lumumba, the Prime Minister in the Congo's first elected government, was
seized, tortured, and murdered by a Colonel named Joseph Mobuto. Lumumba was considered the most brilliant of the
Congolese leaders. He also spoke out against Western control of the Congo's resources and was thus considered a
"communist." Belgian historians have uncovered compelling evidence showing that Mobuto was acting under instructions
from the CIA and the Belgian government. In 1965 Mobuto himself seized power and, with the backing of the United States,
ruled as an absolute dictator until his overthrow by Kabila. Like King Leopold, Mobuto, who re-named the country Zaire,
ran the economy for his own personal profit and, like the Belgians before him, left the Congo impoverished.
On top of all this came AIDS. While most of us have been lead to believe that the AIDS epidemic beganwhen an African
was infected by contact with an HIV- carrying chimpanzee, this theory has been challenged by author and AIDS researcher
Steve Minkin, who tells a much more realistic story. According to Minkin "European male sexual promiscuity and paid sex
with men and women brought AIDS into Africa along with HIV-infected blood products collected in the USA and exported
from Europe." And so the West continues to bring death to the Congo and to blame the Congolese for their own misfortune.
Now a new Congolese President is seeking American and Western help. While there is no simple solution to the civil
strife in the Congo, the U.S. can commit American resources to fighting the AIDS epidemic. As Minkin says, "In the U.S.
we have been most successful in fighting AIDS by preventing the spread of HIV infection in hospitals and clinics. We
invested heavily in universal precautions and blood screening, but poor Africa is being told to fight AIDS without the
benefits of these wise investments." The West, including the United States, has inflicted more than a century of pain on
the Congolese and other Africans. We can begin making amends by heavily investing in safe, quality health care in the
Congo and the rest of Africa to deal not only with AIDS but with the other diseases of poverty that our policies have
helped bring about.
Marty Jezer is author of Stuttering: A Life Bound Up in Words; biographies of Abbie Hoffman and Rachel Carson, and The
Dark Ages: Life in the USA, 1945-1960. He lives in Brattleboro, Vermont and welcomes comments at mjez@sover.net
Copyright © 2001, by Marty Jezer
ENDS