CLCWeb:
Comparative Literature and Culture: A WWWeb Journal ISSN
1481-4374
CLCWeb Library of Research and Information ... CLCWeb Contents 5.3 (2003)
Thematic Issue Comparative Cultural Studies and Popular Culture. Ed. Benton Jay Komins
<http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb03-3/gross03-3.html>
© Purdue University
Press
Joan GROSS
Author's profile: Joan Gross <http://oregonstate.edu/dept/anthropology/faculty/gross/joan.htm> teaches anthropology at Oregon State University. She has had
a long interest in popular puppet theater and lesser-used languages and she published
a book on the puppet theater of Liège, Belgium, entitled Speaking in Other Voices:
An Ethnography of Walloon Puppet Theaters (John Benjamins, 2001). Gross's
articles on other aspects of language and popular culture include "Regional Accents
of Global Music: The Occitan Rap of Les Fabulous Trobadors" (co-authored with
Vera Mark) in French Cultural Studies (2001), "Arab Noise and Ramadan
Nights: Rai, Rap and Franco-Maghrebi Identity" (co-authored with David McMurray
and Ted Swedenburg) in Diaspora (1994), and "The Politics of Unofficial
Language Use: Walloon in Belgium, Tamazight in Morocco" in Critique of Anthropology
(1993). E-mail: <jgross@oregonstate.edu>.
Symbolism, Popular Drama, and Politics and Art in Belgium, 1886-1910
Introduction
1. The Nativity Play, about the birth of Jesus Christ, is commonly performed in
puppet theaters throughout Belgium. The crèche scene of local peasants
offering gifts to the new baby is perhaps the most refracted scene in the Christian
world, and living in that world, it did not seem unusual to see it portrayed in
a theater full of families with small children during the Christmas season. I
was not quite prepared, however, for the following scene of the Massacre of the
Innocents when King Herod, threatened by the rumor that a new king had been born,
orders all male children under age two to be killed. Soldier puppets barging through
the doors of private residences emerged with small plastic dolls shish-kebabbed
onto their swords. Cries pierced the heavy theater air as other baby dolls were
tossed roughly onto the stage.
2. After being introduced to the Massacre of the Innocents in the contemporary
puppet theater, other Belgian versions of it came to my attention. I examine three
of these texts in the present paper. Two of them are called The Massacre of
the Innocents. One of these is a transcription of a puppet show performed
by Léopold Leloup sometime before 1910 that depicts King Herod's biblical massacre
of children. The other is Maurice Maeterlinck's 1886 allegorical narrative about
the sixteenth-century invasion of Flanders by the Spanish Duke of Alba.
The final text, the only one that depicts contemporary massacres, is not called
The Massacre of the Innocents, but it describes situations in which innocents
were massacred. It is a transcript of a parliamentary speech made by Émile Vandervelde
in 1903 denouncing atrocities in the Congo. None of these texts refer directly
to each other and each is of a different genre, but the connections are intriguing,
and lead one to question whether The Massacre of the Innocents actually masked
another massacre, more disturbingly present in the Belgian cultural unconscious.
3. In King Leopold's Ghost, Adam Hochschild wrote how Belgians were encouraged
to "actively forget" the death of five to ten million Africans in the course of
Belgian colonization (292-300). Traces of the horrific events brought to light
by Vandervelde seem to appear in the other texts, though applied to different
massacres in different historical periods. The two massacre texts that people
listened to or read for their leisure treated events perpetrated on people who
could be considered pre-Christians and pre-Belgians, rather than those perpetrated
by contemporary Belgians and those in their employ. As something that could not
be revealed, but also something that could not be completely silenced, images
of the culture of terror reigning in the Congo appear to have invaded the Belgian
psyche, only to find their way to expression through folk narratives.
4. The Massacre of the Innocents has been a solid part of Catholic European folk
theater since the tenth century and puppets were often used to communicate biblical
stories to the masses. Catholicism quickly became a central pillar of identity
in the new Belgian state that came into being in 1830. It provided rare grounds
for unity to this small country that was split in two by linguistic differences
and ruled over the years by the Spanish Habsburgs, Austrian Habsburgs, German
princes, France and Holland. Belgium's fractured past was smoothed over in history
books by concentrating on the centrality of Catholicism. Charlemagne, Godefroid
de Bouillon and Charles V, all defenders of the Catholic church and born on what
became Belgian territory, offered a way to project the civilization of this newly
imagined community back in time.
5. The nineteenth century was the heyday of racist discourses and of an evolutionary
scheme that ranked the people of the world along a scale of savagery, barbarism
and civilization. This "scientific" discourse served colonialism as a loyal handmaiden
and enabled Europeans and Americans (the keepers of civilization) to subjugate
and eliminate millions of people around the world (by the turn of the century
Europe had colonized approximately 85% of the world). Belgium was late to join
the ranks of colonialists, but when its king Leopold II plunged into Africa, he
constructed a culture of terror that horrified people around the world (see <http://www.cobelco.org/Histoire/congo1text.htm#Haut>). In the 1880s, King Leopold's ventures in Africa were of less
note in Belgium, where only about 120,000 well-off, landholding men had the right
to vote, than the burgeoning socialist movement. This captured the imagination
of many young intellectuals including both Vandervelde and Maeterlinck. Vandervelde
became the first leader of the Belgian Workers' Party which was formed in 1885
and he and Maeterlinck were founding members of the Circle of Socialist Students
in Brussels where they were both studying law. The socialists began militating
for universal suffrage and better working conditions. Liège, where Leloup was
performing puppet plays, erupted in riots in 1886 and 20,000 people marched on
Brussels. A series of improvements in the lives of the working class followed.
At the same time, conditions for workers in the Congo became increasingly worse.
6 . Vandervelde led the Belgian Worker's Party for many years and stayed active
in Belgian politics until his death in 1938. Maeterlinck turned away from politics
and became part of the symbolist literary group, winning the Nobel Prize for literature
in 1911. The puppeteer Leloup probably never met Maeterlinck or Vandervelde. Not
only was their class standing different, but also they were from Flanders and
he was a Walloon from Liège. Yet both Maeterlinck and Vandervelde had certainly
attended plays like Leloup's. Vandervelde strongly supported working class performance
traditions and helped form the Art Section of the Brussels Maison du Peuple
where puppeteers often performed. Symbolists like Maeterlinck found themselves
drawn to the aesthetics of the puppet theater, and wrote the first descriptions
of puppet shows in Liège. Maeterlinck even wrote plays for puppets. All three
men produced texts that echoed each other. It is to these texts that we will now
turn, examining in particular, race, class, and terror.
Massacre of the Innocents in the Puppet Theater
7. Leloup's Massacre of the Innocents script was published in 1910, but
I contend that it is very similar in structure to Nativity plays performed for
decades before that. I know of one Nativity script that was written in about 1884
by the father of Victor Verrées and was still performed in a very similar form
by Joseph Ficarrotta four generations of performers later, even though the Massacre
of the Innocents scene is only indicated by a title (see Gross 188-96). Puppet
theaters were primary sites of working class entertainment from the middle of
the nineteenth century in both Belgium and Northern France. By 1899, Rodolphe
de Warsage counted 50 puppet theaters in the working class neighborhoods of Liège
(de Warsage 21). Four of them were on the 200-yard-long street of Roture where
Leloup had his theater. Forty puppet theaters were counted by a lawyer in Antwerp
as early as 1839 (Thijs 15). Ghent and Brussels had at least 31 and 22 respectively.
The numbers reported quite likely fall far under the actual number since the small
theaters were located in people's houses in the poorest neighborhoods. The puppet
theater was on the rise at the same time as the Belgian Workers' Party and class
consciousness pervades puppet performances, indicating the intertextuality of
these discourse arenas. In fact, the author of the 1884 script mentioned above
turned to puppetry after being banned from the mines for organizing workers. The
physical and linguistic aspects of these puppets clearly divide the social classes.
Noble puppets stand head and shoulders above the lower class characters and they
speak in the nineteenth cntury declamatory French while the lower class characters
speak Walloon or Flemish dialects. Lower class characters, called tchantchès,
when given an order to perform some task will sometimes turn to the audience and
say, "Have you noticed that it's always the same ones who do the work?"
8. In addition to the fundamental social class divisions, puppets were divided
racially, primarily between light-skinned Christians and darker-skinned Muslims.
By the 1890s Leopold's men were at war with the "Arabs." This was described as
a humanitarian gesture, not as an important step in imperial expansion. Calling
on medieval Christian wars against the Muslims that were widely portrayed in puppet
theaters, Leopold dubbed his men in the Congo "crusaders" who battled against
the cruel Arab slave traders. In actuality, the Arabs were islamicized Africans
(from Zanzibar for the most part) who were Leopold's chief economic competitors
(Fabian 35). The slaves "freed" by Leopold's crusaders simply were called "freed"
as they continued slaving for their new European masters. Very few Belgians were
aware of what was happening in the Congo at the end of the nineteenth century,
but from 1900 to 1910 a campaign against abuses there raged in the international
press (Hochschild 297). King Leopold, with his long white beard, was shown in
political cartoons surrounded by African heads and handless Congolese. The terrible
images of forced labor, mutilations and massacres were roundly denied by the king
who waged his own media campaign countering with stories of humanitarian aid and
"healthy" economic development. The popularity of recounting ancient wars between
Christians and Muslims indirectly supported Leopold's wars against the "Arabs." At the same time, the ruthless extraction of natural resources from the Congo
and the concomitant loss of Congolese life did not find its expression on the
popular puppet stage, at least not in any retrievable way.
9. One frustrating aspect of studying the history of working class ephemeral art
forms is that we only know about them once richer literate people begin to take
notice. Symbolists grouped around Albert Mockel were some of the first class-crossers
to attend puppet shows in Liège. Mockel, who published Maeterlinck's work in his
journal, La Wallonie (1886-1892), wrote about his experience at a local
puppet theater in about 1887 (Piron 77-79). Leloup was among the most popular
performers for this crowd and soon he began putting on shows especially for "Messieurs les Étudiants." The new bourgeois audience reshaped the structure
of the puppet shows, insisting on complete performances rather than nightly installments
of an epic play. One play that seems to have been already in this format was the
Nativity Play, including the Massacre of the Innocents. This play rose in popularity
and by 1898 it had become a bourgeois tradition to attend Nativity plays at the
puppet theater on Christmas Eve. The earliest published "script" of a Nativity
Play was "scrupulously taken down in shorthand" during a performance of Leloup's
on Roture Street sometime before 1910 (Dietz 403-19). The scene of the Massacre
of the Innocents begins with Herod's order and a march of soldiers who come to
"execute" his order. The captain knocks consecutively at the doors of three commoners
and demands to see their youngest children. In each case there is a misunderstanding,
or perhaps a conscious thwarting of understanding, on the part of the commoner.
In each case, the soldier uses his power to make the commoner obey and then kills
the commoner's child. The first two distraught fathers say that they will complain
to the king, not understanding that he gave the order.
10. The third door that the captain comes to belongs to Gnouf Gnouf. The soldier
asks him how old his son is, and he answers "66 years." "What!" says the captain.
"Well, I meant to say 13 months" retorts Gnouf Gnouf in Walloon. "What does it
matter to you? Even if my wife did have him 3 months after I returned from the
Congo." The comment ostensibly referred to adultery committed by the woman back
home, rather than to adultery and slaughter in the Congo. Still, when the play
was performed in the early 1900s, there must have been some people in the audience
who caught their breath at the mere mention of the Congo in the middle of the
Massacre of the Innocents. The mix of humorous and serious discourse is a trademark
of the popular puppet theater. One common source of humor involves misunderstandings
between the elevated French of the soldiers and the language of the peasants which
ranges from Walloon to regional French. In Victor Verrées's 1957 performance one
of Herod's soldiers asks "Have you not children of the masculine sex at your house?"
His elevated register of French is treated like a foreign tongue by the peasant,
Nicolas, who asks the audience, "What language is that guy speaking?"
11. Another humorous technique amply used in the Massacre of the Innocents is
the insertion of contemporary material creating anachronistic juxtapositions that
lead the audience to see parallels between two different historic periods. In
the scene just referred to, Nicolas then turns to the soldier and says, "Are you
Algerian or Italian, you?" In 1957, new immigrants were arriving daily to work
in the mines and steel industries of the Liège basin. It is the strategic mixing
of time frames that allows puppeteers to make references to the present while
performing the past. "The present" is relative since successful jokes may become
part of the tradition, as the following one that several generations in one family
of puppeteers have used in their Massacre of the Innocents: When a soldier
asks the commoner if he has sons under age two, the father responds that he has
a black one and a white one. The soldier asks how that could be and the father
answers that the white one always stays in his crib, but the black one gets out
and plays in the coal bin. This was probably meant to elicit laughter from the
audience as they were tricked into thinking one child was of African descent,
only to find out that he had simply physically engaged with that very local product
and the basis for the industrial revolution in Belgium, coal. Neither one of these
references to "blackness" or the Congo directly address Belgian colonization in
Africa. Other references to contemporary life and politics are far more direct.
These references appear more like Freudian slips into the national subconscious.
Maeterlinck's Massacre of the Innocents
12. Marianne Muylle wrote that symbolists saw the night as a door to a dream world
where the unconscious is liberated. They rejected rigid formal constraints in
their desire to suggest the inexpressible through symbols (71). Mockel, who became
a leader of the movement, urged writers to look to their own folklore to find
legends and heroes elevated by the popular soul (Gorceix 74-77). As with the earlier
German Romantics, this was thought to lead authors and artists away from artificiality.
Also like the German Romantics, symbolists found their way to the puppet theater.
Puppets were held to be pure symbols and were, therefore, preferred over live
actors by symbolists like Maeterlinck. In 1897, he wrote three plays specifically
for puppets.
13. Maurice Maeterlinck was born into a bourgeois family 1862 in Ghent. He had
an early interest in poetry, but enrolled in the University of Ghent as a law
student. In 1886 he moved to Paris, supposedly to study for his law exams. He
only stayed for about 7 months, but in that time he joined the vibrant literary
world of Paris, helped found the journal La Pléiade, and published The
Massacre of the Innocents. He returned to practice law in Ghent, but did not
like it and left the profession after a year or so. While Maeterlinck flirted
with socialism, he never was a proponent of placing art at the mercy of social
projects. He once said, "To create durable works is it not necessary precisely
to raise oneself above one's epoch, to free oneself from the accidents of a civilization
and the contingencies of the immediate actuality?" (Herbert 98). No one could
argue that Maeterlinck's Massacre of the Innocents was not removed from
the present in time, but was it removed in form? Colonial massacres similar to
the one Maeterlinck describes were very much a part of his world. Humans are shaped
by the discourses that surround them, and, whether or not they choose to address
contemporary events directly, they are never "above their epoch" or "freed from
their immediate actuality."
14. So, let us examine the first prose publication by the young writer who would
win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1911. Most of the literary criticism I have
read concerning Maeterlinck does not know quite what to make of this piece, treating
it as a youthful experiment that did not work. He himself seemed to be ambivalent
about it, signing his first name differently and discarding the entire piece at
one point. Its title comes from the biblical story, but Maeterlinck scholars seem
to agree that his inspiration came not from the Bible, but from the composition
that Brueghel the Elder painted circa 1564, a reproduction of which was found
in Maeterlinck's study in Flanders. These two cultural representations are thought
to be related because in both the painting and Maeterlinck's story, Bethlehem
is transformed into a sixteenth-century Flemish village. However, as we have seen,
this type of anachronism is common fare in the puppet theater as well, and Ghent
had at least 31 theaters to choose from (Vandenbroucke 15-16). Just as Maeterlinck
saw Brueghel's painting, he probably also saw the play performed in a puppet theater.
In fact, given that Nativity Plays were already popular in the sixteenth-century,
Brueghel himself might have been inspired by a popular drama (see Schmidt 223-24).
15. Maeterlinck's Massacre of the Innocents begins on 26 December with
a little boy running to tell the peasants at the tavern that the Spaniards have
come and hung his mother and tied his nine sisters to a tree. The peasants ambush
the guards, but the following week armed men arrive again, looking for children,
and tying up resistant adults. Maeterlinck mentions more than once that the soldiers
could not understand Flemish (this is similar to the Walloon peasant puppet characters
who cannot understand the French-speaking soldiers). When the priest pleads with
a soldier in both Flemish and Latin, he "shrugged his shoulders lazily to show
he could make nothing of it" (17) and then holding the child "by the leg, sliced
off its head with his sword" (18). In both the puppet play and in Maeterlinck's
narrative, linguistic misunderstanding or non-comprehension between the soldiers
and the victims is clearly pointed out. Three more children are murdered by swords
at the soldiers' next stop. Then they move on to a third house where they have
to climb in an upper window, carrying the children out and killing them. Children
bathing in a tub are the next ones murdered. The soldiers indicate that it is
not their fault... only a job perhaps. They dutifully bring the children to the
man with a white beard who ordered the massacre and kill them in front of him.
Is it mere coincidence that this man shares the trademark white beard of Leopold
II?
16. The slaughter spreads. Women run for the open country, men drag themselves
on their knees after the soldiers who are carrying off their children. Maeterlinck's
scene is one of horror and chaos, typified in the following excerpt: "(a) woman,
in red, was kissing her little girl, who had no hands now, and kept lifting up
the two stumps, first one and then the other, to see if she would not move" (24).
Then the villagers spot the Baron leaning over the battlements of his tower and
with uplifted hands they "made supplication to him as to a king in heaven," "But
he only threw up his arms and shrugged his shoulders, as if to say he could do
nothing" (29). "When all the children were killed, the tired soldiers wiped their
swords on the grass and supped under the pear-trees" (30). The villagers held
their dead children and sobbed.
17. With reference to this piece, in 1918 the critic Gladys Rosaleen Turquet-Milnes
brings up the doctrine of "premonition" that was "so dear to Maeterlinck's heart"
(25). She writes "This little prose narrative of the Massacre of the Innocents, though the scene is laid in Nazareth, reads singularly like a poignant page
from Lord Bryce's Report on the German Atrocities in Belgium" (25). That
a literary critic would leap mystically forward to an intra-European massacre
in which the Belgians were victims, rather than invoking contemporary massacres
of Africans by Belgians is typical of the racial politics of the time. Let us
shift our gaze south at this moment and try to reconstruct what was going on in
the Congo and how this might be known in Belgium because while things were certainly
in the international press by the time Leloup performed, it is not clear how much
Maeterlinck could have known in 1886.
18. Prior to any Belgian interest in central Africa, we should note that between
1700 and the 1860s 3.8 million slaves were taken out of the Congo and Angolan
coasts, constituting 40% of the total Atlantic slave trade. From 1700 to 1820,
Africa's major export was human beings (Klein 126). European slavers stayed close
to the coast, buying slaves that were chased down in the interior forests by African
traders. Forms of domestic slavery in Africa predated the European slave trade,
but as the international slave trade declined, slavery within Africa increased
and by 1850 there were more slaves in Africa than in America, probably close to
ten million (Klein 129). In addition to the social disruption caused by the slave
trade, European diseases like smallpox had been introduced that decimated native
populations. By the 1870s the European outposts, called "factories," that dotted
the shore of Central Africa were exporting ivory, not slaves. They used slaves,
however, for transporting ivory and for agricultural work (Vansina 209).
19. In the 1870s Africa was in the news in Europe and Leopold II watched it closely.
Leopold's father had made initial forays into acquiring Crete, Cuba, Guatemala,
part of China, the Faroe Islands, and even part of Texas, but all these attempts
were unsuccessful. The son was even more intent on obtaining a colony. By the
1870s he had set his sights on Central Africa and his cabinet went about gathering
information for him. At the 1876 Brussels Geographic Conference, The International
African Association was formed with Leopold at its head. The stated goal was to
open up medical and scientific stations in the interior from which the slave trade
could be abolished. Soon afterwards, Leopold wrote, "I do not want to miss the
opportunity of our obtaining a share in this magnificent African cake" (Emerson
78-79). Leopold had been reading about Henry Morton Stanley's explorations in
Africa and wanted him in his hire. In January 1878, Leopold sent two emissaries
to meet Stanley in Marseilles upon his return from his second exploration. By
November a new commercial organization was set up called the Study Committee of
the Upper Congo which three years later morphed into the International Congo Association.
In 1879, as Stanley's much-read book Through the Dark Continent was published,
he left on his third voyage to the Congo, this one financed by King Leopold. En
route Stanley was given a more precise mission: he was to establish stations over
as wide an area as possible and at each station a white man would become the absolute
commander of the natives of the region (Emerson 89). Stanley and the French explorer
De Brazza raced to see how many chiefs they could get to sign treaties with them.
The French and British press reported on a public feud between the two explorers.
Reading some of these articles, one could begin to get an image of the type of
society that was developing in the Congo. Here, for instance, are excerpts from
an article published July 10, 1883 in the influential French paper Le Journal
des débats: "Mr. Stanley and his assistants... signed treaties with the black
chiefs on the two banks of the Congo River... But these rights Mr. Stanley exercises
in the Congo with a brutality that lacks the odor of sanctity.... It was easy
to scare the various Black chiefs into signing treaties because they have no more
value to them than a scrap of paper since they don't know how to read or write."
"The terrorized blacks don't work any more, don't plant anymore; commerce is paralyzed
and the indigenous people only look for a good occasion to attack Mr. Stanley
and his escorts, enveloping all the whites, without distinction of nationality,
in a communal hatred. ... This international association, that is only international
in name, has soldiers in its employ, and what troops? Zanzibaris, armed with rapid
fire rifles, as savage as the savages they are going to civilize" (qtd. in Marchal
62).
20. On 21 September 1883 in the Brussels journal La Chronique, Maeterlinck
could have read: "The American Stanley is in the process of terrorizing the Congo.
This meteoric reporter guns down and burns everything that is in his way... We
sent Stanley to Africa to open communications and the only thing he opens is stomachs...
It's not the Congolese that are savages, but the false Leather Bottoms that hawk
assassination in the name of civilization" (qtd. in Marchal 63-64). This type
of reporting was certainly outweighed by descriptions of the great philanthropic
mission in the Congo. In 1884, Leopold got the United States and Germany to recognize
the Congo Free State. Soon afterwards (25 February 1885) Leopold's position was
strengthened enormously when thirteen countries signed the Berlin Act, recognizing
the new state with Leopold II as its sovereign. It was to be a free trade zone
where all powers were to seek to improve native conditions, to protect missions,
to allow liberty of conscience and to suppress the slave-trade. Leopold (who never
appeared at the conference) was lauded for his virtuous work in bringing civilization
to darkest Africa. He was now the absolute ruler of a country eighty times larger
than Belgium in Central Africa.
21. The anti-bourgeois sentiment and the desire to delve beneath the surface would
seem to naturally lead the young symbolists to pay attention at some level to
the dark underbelly of colonization. The socialist party which they supported
certainly alerted them to the exploitation of the laboring classes, but the symbolists
chose to only see the exploitation within the boundaries of Europe. While the
socialist party was generally anti-colonial and the later surrealist movement
which some symbolists joined made a public stance against colonialism, there was
no direct denunciation of colonialism among the symbolists. It was the interior
of their own minds and symbols that were not firmly rooted in time that attracted
their attention. We should not forget that it was also an era when the Belgian
intelligentsia was searching for its identity. Perhaps stories of colonial atrocities
led some people to remember stories about Belgium being viciously attacked by
foreign governments throughout the centuries. Maeterlinck had surely read the
widely popular books of Henri Conscience that told of Flemish peasants throwing
off foreign yokes. Nationalist historians saw the usefulness of such stories in
creating a sense of Belgian nationality and had begun to construct history texts
around Belgians throwing off one foreign dominator after another until they achieved
independence. The fact that Maeterlinck chose to write about Belgian victims of
colonial massacres in the sixteenth century within the framework of the Christian
Bible played into the project of Belgian identity formation, but the scene he
described honed a bit too closely to contemporary scenes in the Congo.
Massacre of the Innocents: Colonial Politics: Rubber and Cut-off Hands
22. Largely through the hard work of the socialist deputy Vandervelde, the
Belgian government was finally convinced that the image of the Congo projected
by the king and his entourage "whitewashed" the brutal reality experienced by
many Congolese. While "Massacre of the Innocents" does not appear in the title
of Vandervelde's 1903 speech to the Belgian parliament, it seems to loom above
it. Vandervelde was at the forefront of the political liberation of the working
class in Belgium. He states in his autobiography that at the time that the first
protests against forced labor in the Congo appeared, the socialists were working
tirelessly for universal suffrage in Belgium. He admits that they were much more
interested in white slaves than in black ones (1939, 70). Still, he was one of
the very few public figures in Belgium who did not totally disregard the international
protests. The fact that most of the protests were coming from across the channel
led Belgians to slough off the complaints as mere inventions by the Liverpudlian
merchants who wanted the Congo for themselves. It was true that things were not
horrible everywhere in the Congo. Visitors were given itineraries that skirted
the most heavily afflicted regions and then they could declare that the stories
about massacres were a pack of lies. However, even reading these accounts gives
one insight into the system that was in place in the Congo and it certainly did
not follow the tenets of socialism that were bandied about in Belgium. Even without
eye-witness accounts, anyone could have seen what Edmund D. Morel saw in the Antwerp
harbor: ships arriving from the Congo laden with ivory and rubber and ships leaving
for the Congo packed with firearms and ammunition. The Congo was not instantly
profitable for Leopold, but after 1888 when rubber tires were patented, things
began to change. In 1890 the suggestion was made to give the state a monopoly
on ivory and rubber in order to provide the income for the war against the Arabs
and for northern expansion. The suggestion was made by Captain Vankerkhoven and
Commandant Coquilhat (Vandervelde 1911, 37). This is the same Vankerkoven who
told Roger Casement in 1887 that he paid his black soldiers 5 brass rods per human
head to stimulate their prowess (Casement i). The American anthropologist, Frederick
Starr was told that Vankerkhoven's expedition needlessly destroyed whole towns
in the district of Chumbiri and Bolobo, estimating that the population of that
region was only a quarter of what it had been (Starr 102). Leopold's men consulted
lawyers about how to legally create a monopoly in a free-trade zone. Among the
jurists who were consulted on this matter we find none other than Edmond Picard.
23. Picard, lawyer, author, and literary critic, was the center of intellectual
life in Belgium. He hosted the cultural elite, including Maeterlinck and Vandervelde,
in high style at his house in Brussels every Tuesday. Picard was deeply involved
in both socialism and the literary battle between social art and art for art's
sake. When he took over the direction of the journal L'Art Moderne in 1881,
Picard came out in favor of art being social, national and original, but by 1886
he had accepted the symbolist argument that called for art to be abstracted away
from the present world. The indefinable itself was the proper subject of art,
not the meaningless fragments of everyday life. Anyway, these lawyers decided
that the state had the right to incorporate "vacant" lands and in that case they
were acting as landowners, not merchants, and were not in violation of free-trade.
"Vacant" land was defined as all the land unless it was privately owned (by Europeans,
of course) or physically occupied by indigenous tribes. This decision might strike
one as being diametrically opposed to the socialist teachings to which Picard
was so attached, but for him there was no contradiction. He regarded socialism
as idiosyncratic to the Aryan race and, therefore, it should not be imposed on
others. Picard believed in the equality of people within a "race," but for him,
"Semites, Mongols, and Negroes" should follow their own way of doing things (see L'Aryano-sémitisme). He does not reflect on the impossibility of this within the structure
of colonialism. Picard wrote in L'Aryano-sémitisme that he was not interested
in establishing superior and inferior races, only in demonstrating their essential
differences, but in his earlier writings he clearly depicts Africans as an inferior
race, comparing their behavior to that of monkeys (see En Congolie 78).
24. If life had been difficult for the natives of the Congo before, as explorers
forced them into submission and merchants swindled them out of their just returns,
now Leopold's reign of terror really began. This is the situation described in
Vandervelde's speech. Along with almost all of the land being considered vacant
and claimed by the state, the fruits of the land also belonged to the state. The
only thing still needed was the labor necessary to extract the fruits of the land,
a lack that was quickly remedied. Reasoning that every state had the right to
impose taxes and that the native Congolese had nothing to tax, then the only tax
that could be imposed was the conscription of labor. One further colonial practice
sealed the fate of the Congolese. Colonial agents were given bonuses for the most
product delivered at the least price. So, if one could obtain rubber for nothing,
that person was doubly rewarded. The natives resisted being coerced to work, so
force had to be used; whipping, arresting the chiefs, taking the women hostage,
installing armed sentinels in the villages, and organizing punitive expeditions
against refractory populations. In order that the soldiers did not waste the ammunition,
they were told to cut off the right hand of each victim. These were supposed to
be cut off of dead people, but sometimes the living lost appendages as well --
either as a cover for spent ammunition, or simply to create terror.
25. These surgical removals were carried out by African soldiers of the Force
Publique which was established in the Congo Free State in 1886 and by 1898
had grown to 19,028 (Stengers and Vansina 331). In that same year, Félicien Cattier,
a professor of colonial law at the Free University of Brussels, published a book
in which he states the folly in trying to maintain order with three whites in
charge of 1500 native soldiers (plus their wives and children) spread over 10
villages. He then criticizes the excessive length of mandatory military service
-- twelve years during which men are robbed of their liberty and taken far from
their homes. After such a long estrangement, they become permanently alienated
from their tribes, Cattier reasoned. Of course, many of these soldiers were already
removed from their tribes. They were kidnapped, abandoned, or orphaned children
of previous massacres who had been handed over to the missions. The missions were
entitled to put the children to work, taking care of mission lands for a certain
number of years. In exchange for this legal favor, the missions were also supposed
to supply a certain number of young men to the Force publique (for further
discussion on this, see Cattier; Nelson; Samarin.)
26. Cattier was not the only Belgian to criticize colonial policy. The priest
Arthur Vermeersch came out with the first Catholic protest and in 1900 Georges
Lorand made a speech to parliament. Vandervelde states in Souvenirs d'un militant
socialiste that he was there but did not intervene because he did not have
sufficient documentation (72). By 1903, he was totally behind Lorand and began
his parliamentary speech in that year by stating his opposition to colonialism
as it reinforces the military, augments the power of governments over the sovereignty
of the people, and can only be fruitful by subjecting the indigenous population
to servitude (1903, 3). While the Congo was not technically a colony of Belgium,
Vandervelde claimed that the Belgian government had a moral obligation to intervene
because Belgium had signed the Act of Berlin, because Leopold was using the Belgian
military to exploit the region, and because the Belgian state had financed the
King's venture (4-5). So far, nothing evokes the Massacre of the Innocents,
but when Vandervelde turns to describing life for the Congolese, the similarity
begins. In La Politique coloniale he talks of "the acts of diabolical cruelty" which forced thousands of natives to leave their villages: men fleeing into the
forests, and women and children seeking refuge in mission posts. One eyewitness
found 80 human hands set to dry slowly above a fire (4). Vandervelde cites a letter
written by a captain of the Force Publique in 1898 which talks of having
to find 1,500 native porters knowing that many would die of poor nourishment and
fatigue. The chiefs knew this too, but if they resisted sending their men, war
was waged against them: "an atrocious war of perfected firearms against primitive
lances and shields," says the author, emphasizing their childlike helplessness
(15). The letter continues saying that the village chiefs cannot keep their men
from running into the forest as they prefer to die of hunger than to work as porters.
In this case, the captain says "I am obliged to put these sad little kings in
chains," liberating them only after they procured one or two hundred porters from
their area. "Very often my soldiers find the village deserted: then they take
the women and the children, the innocents" (16). Helpless and innocent, like the
children in the Massacre of the Innocents. Photographs sent back by Protestant
missionaries showed women in chains, handless children who survived, and a man
staring at the severed hand and foot of his five-year-old daughter (<http://www.cobelco.org/Histoire/congo1text.htm#Haut>). One thinks of Maeterlinck's image of the mother trying to
revive her small, handless daughter. Could this be a mere coincidence?
27. As the rubber quota was raised, colonial agents were given carte blanche to
use force. More prisoners were taken, more murders committed. The same captain
in another letter to his commanding officer, wrote that he expected a general
uprising, saying that the blacks were tired of being forced to carry loads, harvest
rubber, provide the food for themselves and all the government agents, serve as
soldiers, and maintain the roads. The captain was not enjoying his work. He wrote: "It's been 3 months that I've been at war, with a rest of about 10 days and I
don't understand why I haven't fallen sick given what I've had to endure and the
lack of creature comforts. The rainy season is upon us and all the roads have
been transformed into deep and dangerous swamps. I have 152 prisoners up to now
and I hope to return to the post mid June. I will let you guess whether my slaughtered
soldiers would have made the enemy's blood run" (Vandervelde 1903, 18). Vandervelde
tells us that this man was later found guilty of torturing women prisoners to
death, of paying auxiliary soldiers with captured women, of torturing and killing
porters who tried to escape into the forest, and of having his soldiers bring
back cut-off hands of their recalcitrant victims. His punishment was a fine equal
to the retirement bonus he received for providing loyal service. Vandervelde ends
his speech citing the contempt in which they held France during the Dreyfus Affair
and England during the Transvaal War: "Well Sirs, at the present time we see in
France as in England, men who place the interests of their conscience above all
other interests and in doing so, stand up for the innocence of Dreyfus and for
the victims of the concentration camps.... My wish is that we can also find in
Belgium men who seek enlightenment, all the light, and who with sentiments of
true patriotism, force themselves to obtain for the poor indigenous populations
of equatorial Africa a social regime that respects them as humans and that grants
them rights" (22-23).
28. Would that I could stop on this high moral note, trusting the Belgian elite
to seek the light of reality and bring the economic system in the Congo to an
end. But systems are not easily dismantled (as shown in Marie-Benedicte Dembour's
oral history of colonial agents). The slowness in reacting to what was happening
in the Congo was due to the lucrative nature of the project and to the racialist
discourse of the time. Conditions improved only slightly when Parliament finally
voted to take the Congo from Leopold in 1908. When Albert I took the throne
December 21, 1909, his first official act was to promise reform in the Congo (Clafin
311). That same year, Vandervelde made his first trip to the Congo. His mission
was to defend two American presbyterian ministers who had brought abuses against
the Congolese to light (Hochschild 263-64).
Conclusion
29. In my exploration of the linkages between these Belgian texts, two colonial
themes arose: the extermination of innocent people, often deemed members of "inferior
races" and the role of terror in extracting submission and labor. Sven Lindqvist
wrote that during the nineteenth-century European expansion, genocide came
to be seen as the inevitable byproduct of progress. Savage and barbarian races
would necessarily die out as the civilized ones expanded. Following this law of
anthropological evolution, one could not avoid wanting to hurry inferior races
on their way to oblivion. The genocides in the Congo were not unique. They were
repeated by the British in East Africa, the Germans in Southwest Africa, and the
French in West and North Africa. Lindqvist ties colonial conquests in with the
development of better firearms. Each "improvement" coincided with the submission
of new peoples to European governments, from the use of nitroglycerin in 1885
which improved accuracy, to waterproof ammunition and automatic rifles, and eventually
to the development of the dum dum bullet in 1897. These bullets were banned between
"civilized" states since they exploded their casings and created large painful
wounds. Consequently, they were reserved for big-game hunting and colonial wars
(Lindqvist 52). Territorial expansion was seen as the very sign of civilization.
The German anthropologist Friedrich Ratzel writing in the 1890s called it Lebensraum:
Hitler was given Ratzel's book to read when he was in prison writing Mein Kampf
in 1924. So, in Exterminate All the Brutes Lindqvist contends that
genocide in the colonies provided a historical model for the extermination of
Jews in World War II.
30. The British consul Roger Casement published a report based on a trip to the
Congo in 1903 that appeared soon after Vandervelde's parliamentary speech and
had a great effect on international public opinion (<http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~jobrien/reference/ob73.html>). Ten years later, Casement produced another report on colonial
atrocities associated with the rubber trade, only this time the setting was the
Putumayo region bordering Peru and Colombia. Michael Taussig bases his study of
the use of terror in colonial regimes on this report. What led Taussig to examine
the culture of terror was that, at first glance, it seems counter-intuitive. Why
such slaughter in a political economy defined by labor scarcity? Leopold himself
used this argument to refute the discourse about handless Africans, saying "their
hands are the one thing I do need." There were even plans at one point to bring
workers from India to the Congo. Taussig solves the mystery by looking into the
mysterious power of terror. He writes of the ineffability of the space of death
in which officialdom strives to create a magical reality. The central point he
makes in "Culture of Terror" is that Terror -- as well as being a physiological
state -- is also a social one whose special features allow it to serve as the
mediator par excellence of colonial hegemony. In the Belgian Congo, business transformed
terror from a means to an end in itself. It was the means by which racial separation
and hierarchy was maintained.
31. Johannes Fabian goes a step further in helping us understand the culture of
terror by looking at the diaries of early explorers in Central Africa. They were
also terrorized -- by fear of wild animals and people who they believed were cannibals,
by tropical sicknesses, and by the knowledge that one out of three Europeans who
went to the Congo died there. A hint of this terror is voiced in the captain's
letter quoted by Vandervelde. Europeans in Africa passed many a sleepless night
and tried to calm themselves with opiates and alcohol which sometimes led them
farther into hallucinatory states. States of terror arise when humans feel preyed
upon. This can lead to their becoming predators (Ehrenreich 46-47). States of
terror -- whether induced by drugs, sleeplessness, sickness, or overactive imaginations
-- most likely led to many of the atrocities described in these texts, as they
do in every war. It is very easy for the terrorized to become terrorists. In this,
we must also think of the African soldiers of the Forces Publiques whose
early lives were defined by violence done to their families.
32. How does a population that wants to think of itself as doing good in the world
process information about atrocities and massacres perpetuated or encouraged by
their fellow citizens? We know the psychological toll such practices can have
on the practitioners, but what about the effect on other members of the imagined
community? When the truth is too painful to be told, or not allowed to be told,
the multivocality of traditional genres may serve a purpose. The Massacre of the
Innocents is reported rather perfunctorily in the Bible, but over the centuries,
the popular imagination has elaborated it into a horrific parable of the abuse
of power. When power is threatened, official culture lashes out, and even the
most innocent are not safe. It is not the King himself (Herod, Phillip II, Leopold)
who commits the atrocities, but people who work for him, people who are only carrying
out orders and trying to succeed in the system. The banality of evil, as described
by Hannah Arendt, is stated to various degrees in all three texts examined here.
Taussig explains how this banality leads into a culture of terror whereby the
torturers simply act in concert with large-scale economic strategies and the exigencies
of production. They have to control massive populations and do so through the
cultural elaboration of fear (469). "Cultures of terror are based on and nourished
by silence and myth in which the fanatical stress on the mysterious side of the
mysterious flourishes by means of rumor and fantasy woven in a dense web of magical
realism" (469). This is the defining feature of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness
(<http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/ConDark.html>), Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (<http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/irvinem/english016/conrad/conrad.htm>), and the three texts examined here.
33. I suggest that symbolism was a literary response to colonial massacres. Perhaps
it became a far more important movement in Belgium than in France because of the
particular hallucinatory experience of Belgian colonization of the Congo and the
gap between that whispered reality and official Belgian discourse. Writers fled
from the "contingencies of the immediate actuality" and into dreams and symbols.
It is in dreams, however, that the unconscious is liberated and in Belgium it
appears that the Congo loomed large in that unconscious. Growing Belgian nationalism
in combination with a racialized view of the world inhibited these authors from
critiquing colonial practices. Yet at the same time, contemporary massacres did
leave a mark on their writing/performance.
34. The Massacre of the Innocents offered a traditional vehicle through
which the puppeteers and Maeterlinck could depict horrible abuses of power without
making any direct reference to contemporary massacres. But were these allusions
intentional? The allusion in the puppet theater is much more subtle than political
commentary normally is on the puppet stage and Maeterlinck does not appear to
critique the Congo system elsewhere. Silence was imposed on Belgium, but the well-known
horror of the traditional scene of the Massacre of the Innocents allowed one to
say without saying. Rather than intentional counter-hegemonic moves, these veiled
allusions can be seen as repressed images bubbling up through the Belgian unconscious.
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