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- Essay Name : 855.txt
- Uploader :
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- Language : english
- Subject : Social Studies
- Title : colonization of Mongo basin :Effects
- Grade : 70
- School System : University
- Country : Canada
- Author Comments : About social changes after colonization
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : Nov. 7, 1996
- Site found at : links
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- The Congo basin is a vast area of land in Africa which straddles the Equator. Its
- historical records begin with the "discovery of the Congo River by the Potugese".(Nelson
- 1994:2) This land was inhabited long before European arrival, the Mongo and other indigenous
- people of this area already lived in this area. This essay will delineate the short term and lasting
- effects of European Imperialism in the Congo basin in regard mostly to the Mongo.
- To evaluate the changes which took place with the arrival of Europeans, first one must
- learn about the Mongo prior to colonization. The Mongo lived in the segmentary lineage model.
- They were arranged in small-scale villages, with kinship and seniority being large social
- determinants. These were not the only factors involved, personal achievement played a very
- important role in the Mongo. The result was a complex, competitive and dynamic
- society.(Nelson 1994:13) The economy of the Mongo was based on the idea of subsistence but
- in some areas specialization occurred and the result was trade among groups. This dates back to
- the first settlers of the Congo basin. The first migrants moved to the most favorable living areas,
- mainly by the water. These groups would fish for their food. Other groups would settle inland
- and take up hunting and gathering as their main sources of food. These groups eventually started
- to trade and a market system began.(Nelson 1994: 18) The Mongo were an inland group whose
- main food producing activities included hunting, gathering, fishing and agriculture. No one activity
- was dominant, each was equally important and was used according to the natural factors,
- including season, and local interests.(Nelson 1994:19) The Europeans came to this part of
- Africa and did not understand these people at all. This misconception led to much ignorance of
- the native groups. The lifestyle of the Mongo and others were soon to change.
- The ignorance on the part of the Belgians, on first arrival, to the Mongo way of life led to
- many misconceptions on the part of Europeans. Firstly, the colonialists viewed the forest and its
- inhabitants as uniform and stagnant.(Nelson 1995:15) Two ideas grew out of the Mongo's
- relationship to the forest. The first made the forest seem impenetrable and a cause of the
- Mongo's "non-development". The second interpretation made the forest into a resource with
- unlimited supply and the Mongo as the beneficiaries. Supposedly the forest made life easy for
- the Mongo and they had become lazy.(Nelson 1994:15) The idea that Africans were lazy was
- very common among colonizers. This gave them the right, in their minds, to force the Africans to
- work so as to educate the natives in "proper" work habits.
-
- The African has not our notions of work. His ideal is a
- lazy existence typical of inhabitants of tropical
- countries...The lure of wealth does not exist for him,
- for he is content merely to live. The more [the African]
- gains by working, the faster he will rest.(Leplae
- 1920:14)
- The Belgian government, like any colonizer, used the Congo basin for its resources.
- These resources included people, in the form of slaves, ivory from elephants and rubber.
- Europeans did not actually go to collect these resources on their own, they had the natives bring
- the goods to them. "Fishermen abandoned their traditional ways of life to become professional
- slave and ivory traders."(Nelson 1994:43) The Belgian government set up outposts all down the
- Congo river as trading posts. With this increase in trade came an increase with contact between
- the Mongo and Europeans. Trade had previously existed in this region but the new markets built
- upon these trading routes making them more generalized and larger. As well an alteration to
- these networks occurred introducing new patterns and relations of work and commerce. These
- changes were not even throughout the basin. Communities which lived along the river were much
- more affected by this new trading than were inland communities.(Nelson 1994:57) Belgium's
- relationship with the colony was definitely not mutually beneficial. Belgium bought the raw
- materials at extremely low p prices and could then sell the goods at market prices and make a
- considerable profit. Although many resources were taken from the Congo basin, the basis for
- choice was always the major European market. As the price of one good fell, the government
- would change their policy and concentrate their efforts on another good. This policy led to many
- problems as it only considered the short-term and completely ignored the long-term
- repercussions. The repercussions were the exhaustion of some resources. An example of this is
- a village headman speaking to a British missionary:
-
- Tell them [the rubber agents} that we cannot and
- therefore will not find rubber; we are willing to spend
- our strength at any work possible, but the rubber is
- finished. If we must either be massacred or bring
- rubber, well, let them kill us; then we suppose they will
- be satisfied.(Harms 1975:85)
- Not all natives simply worked as the Europeans told them to, many revolts against the
- colonists occurred. An example is from the 1960's where in Vanuata, islands in the Pacific
- Ocean, a local man actually paid people to join a militia against the colonizers. Eventually the
- group disbanded but many people joined in the fight against oppresion.(Jolly 1994:51-2) In
- Africa however the earliest and most violent confrontations with the Europeans include the
- African middlemen whose control of the river trade was in danger. Outposts were burned and
- raided and two employees were murdered. This incident however was met with punishment by
- the Europeans. An example was made of some groups in the form of slashing and burning of full
- villages and killing all inhabitants. This "pacification campaign" did not work in shutting down
- opposition but the large companies did take control anyway.(Nelson 1994:54) The revolts were
- unsuccessful in stopping the Europeans but many times it succeeded in stalling operations.
- Until the 1930's, life in the Congo had changed but the social structure within the
- communities had not. The great economic crisis of the 1930's saw the collapse of all commodity
- prices. Belgium had to change it's colonization structure to increase profits once again. The result
- was a plan called Total Civilization. It comprised many plantations on which crops would be
- grown as well as social development programs for the African workers. Not surprisingly the
- social development part of the Total Civilization plan never actually took effect and the new
- system was little more than a new system to increase profits by increasing output. Compulsory
- quotas were produced and control over the population increased through the issuance of
- passbooks and the appointment of chiefs.(Nelson 1994:152-3) This new plan simply angered
- the natives even more because not only did it disrupt their way of life as colonialism had from the
- start but now they were forced out of their home and made to work even harder. The new
- system simply fronted for an enlargement of the colonial oppression. Additional legislation was
- passed which limited the power an itinerant trader could achieve. These laws showed the real
- involvement in the economy of the Africans was limited to the feeding of raw materials,
- foodstuffs, and labor to European centers.(Nelson 1994:160) This plan did not start off as
- misguided as it end up. The Duke of Brabant and heir to the Belgium throne at the time returned
- from a trip to the Congo with the goal of bettering the lives of the Africans. The idea behind the
- plan is stated by on of the plan's proponents, "Local production is best assured by the native
- who is no longer a salaried worker but a free peasant, the proprietor of his own land."(Hostelet
- 1954:267-9) Although this seems like the right course of action to the European who has no
- other experience with development other than their own, the African would not necessarily want
- this. The natives of this area had lived and would have continued to live in the same style as they
- always had and did not seem to want their own piece of land to harvest. They already had a
- system and the Europeans were trying to force another system upon them. The Europeans
- thought that by giving the natives more technology they would immediately want it, but this
- technology was not of use to the Mongo or the other communities because they had no reason
- before the European arrival to grow more food than they already did.
-
- The policies of Total Civilization contributed to a
- fundamental and permanent split in Mongo society, a
- division between the world of the village and a new,
- more individualistic society evolving in the plantations
- and in the urban centers of the Congo basin.(Nelson
- 1994:154)
- On the plantations this new division was most noticeable. The companies hired African
- capita's to be an intermediary between the European owner's and the African worker. This was
- beneficial to the European because firstly the African would receive less pay and secondly the
- white owner would not have to have as much contact with the workers. This new position is
- quite important in Mongo history because for the first time one African is in charge of another
- African. Classes started to develop even among the Africans themselves. Work on the
- plantations was contracted for periods of a few months. This allowed the burden of subsistence
- to be left with the local communities and not with the Belgium employers. In some cases entire
- villages were moved closer to the plantations once again contradicting the stated Belgium goals
- of not affecting traditional life.(Nelson 1994:185) Every aspect of work at the plantation was
- arranged to maximize production and to minimize cost but with no regard for the actual human
- involvement in the process.
- The colonizer's relationship with the Africans was a result of the European's attitude
- towards the colony. Although officially their motive was to bring development to a perceived
- "primitive" culture, their actions contradicted their words. Forced labor and quotas made the
- working environment a harsh and dreary place. The Africans worked out of fear of death or
- imprisonment more than for the opportunity to "learn'. The economy was based on profit
- maximization and not cultural maximization. The Mongo and the other indigenous groups of that
- area were forced to change their entire way of life to accommodate the Europeans.
- Although the colonial period is only a short time in the long history of the Mongo, many
- significant changes took place as a result of the colonial rule. Many social, economic and political
- changes have resulted from the colonial experience. Firstly the main social changes have been in
- the way of life including their Western style of dress, the French language and the entertainment
- which resembles the European model.(Nelson 1994:194) As well the social organization of the
- communities has changed. A large portion of people now work on plantations which operate
- much the same way as they did under colonialism. Economically since the plantations still exist
- the common worker is still exploited to the full extent possible for the purpose of maximizing
- profits. The political organization is now an autocratic dictatorship but instead of Belgians being
- in charge Africans are in charge. Not much has changed except for the people in charge.
- Workers are still exploited for an increased profit. Some regions of the basin are still the same
- fundamentally as before colonization, but the legacy still lives on.
- Although the Mongo suffered greatly during the colonial period they have survived and
- continue to exist. They have not lost their traditional values, even if the values have changed
- slightly. This set of values and their ability to perserverence have made them stronger and will
- continue to do so as long as they can emphasize the importance of these values to the future
- generations. Hopefully these generations will not have to face the atrocities which their ancestors
- faced.
-
- Bibliography
-
- Harms, Robert.
- 1975 "The End of Red Rubber: A Reassessment." Journal of African History16: 73-88.
-
- Hostelet, Georges
- 1954 L'Oeuvre civilisatrice de la Belgique au Congo de 1885 a 1953. Brussels:ARSC.
-
- Jolly, Margaret
- 1994 Women of the Past. Chur: Harwood Academic Publishers.
-
- Leplae, Edmond
- 1920 "La situation agriculture au Congo belge en 1919." Bulletin Agricole du Congo.10: 1-23.
-
- Nelson, Samuel H.
- 1994 Colonialism in the Congo Basin 1880-1940. Athens: Center for International Studies.
-
-
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