Trish's Reviews > King Leopold's Ghost

King Leopold's Ghost by Adam Hochschild
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bookshelves: africa, audio, biography, crime, foreign-affairs, horror, journalism, nonfiction, history

This book begins with the assertion of evil. It made me uneasy. I prefer to hear the facts and draw my own conclusions. But I felt far less willing to grant King Leopold’s side another instant of attention after realizing that the facts had been obscured for a century or more by repression of documents relating to the case in Belgian state archives. Better that we finally uncover the ugly truth and take its lesson: unbridled greed may be the ugliest, most unforgivable, most unnecessary sin of all.

How can we not have known this horrible history? It happened only a hundred years ago. Though I am embarrassed I did not know the anguished history and perpetuation of evil in the Congo, I stand in good company. Hochschild tells us of a Belgian diplomat serving in the 1970’s Congo who learned of the atrocities by a chance remark from a chieftain recalling “the first time” of rubber collection. This diplomat-turned-historian, Jules Marchal, spent decades after his retirement from civil service investigating and documenting King Leopold’s personal fiefdom in the Congo and its long list of crimes there at the beginning of the Twentieth Century.

What does become amply clear from Hochschild’s account is how it is possible to mount a resistance to a great evil. Resistance requires exceptional people willing to bear witness, but also organization and persistence. Edmund Dene Morel, the shipping clerk who recognized in the 1890’s what was happening in the Congo, immediately called out the injustices he saw there and never hesitated in his mission to publicize it in the years that followed. Fortunately, he was an articulate man with a convincing speaking style and he had enormous drive. He managed to gather like-minded folk to himself to voice a larger protest.

The life of Irishman Roger Casement, the gay man knighted by the Queen for his work as a diplomat and later hanged by Britain as a traitor to the crown for his work as an Irish patriot, stands as an example of the strange dissociation countries in power display when someone challenges their economic and political interests. I fell in love with him a little, Sir Roger Casement, as a man of great courage and vision: he saw what men are and did not despair, though one might say that, in the end, he died of it.

Black Americans who spent their adult lives speaking out against the horror happening in Africa, the Reverend William Henry Sheppard and George Washington Williams, have finally found their way back into history. Many Christian missionaries, though notably, not Catholic missionaries, did their part in publicizing crimes in pursuit of endless demand for rubber.

What I liked most about the book was the way Hochschild brought us past the period of the Congo revelations to the present day, telling us how we could have been ignorant of the time and the period. He followed the lives of Morel and Chapman to their ends, and introduced us to Ambassador Marchal of Belgium. He follows the Congo after Leopold through its Belgian colony status to the demand for self-rule and the murder of Patrice Lumumba, the Congo’s first legally-elected prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He tells us of Joseph-Désiré Mobutu, Congolese President who continued crimes against his country that Leopold had begun, this time with American support.

I began to realize that some of the surviving chiefs of Leopold’s crimes were sometimes collaborators. Their behaviors have been perpetuated over the generations until there is nothing but misery left in that place. Now I understand better how a country so rich in natural resources could be so socially impoverished. The crimes continue to the present. What can be the solution to this kind of moral destitution?

I listened to the Random House Audio of this title, read by Geoffrey Howard.
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Reading Progress

August 16, 2014 – Started Reading
August 16, 2014 – Shelved
August 18, 2014 –
page 65
0% "No one else has mentioned this: Hochschild starts with a point of view and proceeds to prove it true. It is disconcerting."
August 18, 2014 –
page 150
0% "Groan."
August 21, 2014 – Finished Reading
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: africa
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: audio
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: biography
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: crime
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: foreign-affairs
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: horror
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: journalism
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: nonfiction
August 23, 2014 – Shelved as: history

Comments Showing 1-9 of 9 (9 new)

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Carol Fascinating review! I've added it to my queue.


Trish Carol wrote: "Fascinating review! I've added it to my queue."

I mentally told myself I needed to read this years ago and only recently bought it from Audible when I realized my library did not have a paper copy nor a downloadable version. That needs to be addressed, now that I have finally realized how much it explains and how important the information is to our greater understanding of African history and of the lives of men.


Carol Trish wrote: "Carol wrote: "Fascinating review! I've added it to my queue."

I mentally told myself I needed to read this years ago and only recently bought it from Audible when I realized my library did not ha..."


I thought that I had this one but I did find an audible too. Thanks for the heads up.


message 4: by Sue (new) - added it

Sue Excellent review of an important book. Earlier this year I read a book on Morel that I received through NetGalley. I really had no knowledge of him before hand and little knowledge of the Congo. I also plan to read this one. Thanks for this great review.


Trish Sue wrote: "Excellent review of an important book. Earlier this year I read a book on Morel that I received through NetGalley...."

Really? Did you review it here? I'd love to see more about Morel or Casement.


message 6: by Jim (new)

Jim Coughenour I read your review yesterday. Coincidentally, today I looked through Joe Sacco’s graphic panorama The Great War, then read the accompanying essay by Adam Hochschild, adapted from To End All Wars – and I thought, isn’t that the guy who wrote King Leopold’s Ghost? So I’ve come back to your review.

Two other random comments: in 1960 my parents were planning to be medical missionaries to the Belgian Congo, as it was known at the time. My dad was a doctor, my mom a medical technician; both were good Methodists). I was old enough to recognize its distinctive shape on the globe. For better (I’d say) or worse, we could not go, as the war of independence happened that year and missionaries were fodder.

Second, the sad story of Roger Casement. I first encountered him in an essay by Colm Tóibín in Love in a Dark Time. More recently I tried to read the novel about him by Vargas Llosa – but found it unreadable. Casement’s is a heroic, cruel story.

Thanks for the review. The horror, the horror.


Trish Jim wrote: "I read your review yesterday. Coincidentally, today I looked through Joe Sacco’s graphic panorama The Great War, then read the accompanying essay by Adam Hochschild, adapted from To End All Wars – ..."

Oh, thank you so much for more references about Casement. I will look for them.

It is hard to know what would make up for the wrongs in the Congo. Certainly missionaries have and would help. But to willingly place oneself in that soup takes an act of courage I can only admire. You would be a different man had you gone. I, too had the chance to work in Africa, but another, later upheaval kept me from it. Ach!


Trish Zakariah wrote: "When the other imperialist nations get together to rebuke you, it's kind of like Al-Qaeda calling ISIS extremists, but it still shows just how brutal the Belgians were."

Hochschild makes clear that the time had its own zeitgeist, and he pointed out that every colonial nation bled their colonies dry, even when the countries were no longer colonies, as in the American period of engagement after Mobutu took power...to get the most for the least I guess is inevitable, but it shows why every country must have a government looking after their interests.


Trish Zakariah wrote: "I agree, though I'd amend it to say the common citizens need to have someone looking out for their interests, not just the vague "national interests" that may or may not benefit the common man. Loo..."

It's just that we may have had vague notions of terrible deeds done, but none of the details. I loved reading about the arc of the protesters lives...and about what happened to them after that ten year period 1895-1905. Yes, definitely worth a look.


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