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15/09/2021 22:08 Lomboto of Bolumboloko · Antislavery Usable Past

Antislavery Usable Past

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15/09/2021 22:08 Lomboto of Bolumboloko · Antislavery Usable Past

Lomboto of Bolumboloko

Antislavery International, 1911-1912

Lomboto of Bolumboloko shot in the wrist and hand by ABIR Anglo-Belgian India Rubber Company sentries.
Information taken from the Special Congo supplement to the West African Mail Sept 1905. This image formed part of
the Harris Lantern Slide Collection. Under King Leopold II the Congo Free State used mass forced labour to extract
rubber from the jungle for the European market. As consumer demand grew King Leopold II's private army - the Force
Publique - used violent means to coerce the population into meeting quotas, including murder, mutilation, rape, village
burning, starvation and hostage taking. Alice Seeley Harris and her husband Reverend John H. Harris were missionaries
in the Congo Free State from the late 1890s. Alice produced a collection of images documenting the horrific abuses of the
African rubber labourers. Her photographs are considered to be an important development in the history of humanitarian
campaigning. The images were used in a number of publications. The Harrises also used the photographs to develop the
Congo Atrocity Lantern Lecture which toured Britain and the the USA raising awareness of the issue of colonial abuses
under King Leopold II's regime. Source: Antislavery International. This is possibly the same Lomboto whose experiences
were documented in Evidence laid before the Congo Commission of Inquiry at Bwembu, Bolobo, Lulanga, Baringa,
Bongandanga, Ikau, Bonginda, and Monsembe. Together with a summary of events (and documents connected
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therewith) on the A.B.I.R. concession since the Commission visited that territory (Liverpool, J. Richardson & Sons,1905),
pp. 23-24.

Organisation

Antislavery International

Country

Congo

Theme

Photography,
Colonialism

Location

Congo

Tags

Abir, African man, Alice Seeley Harris, Anglo-Belgian India, Anglo-Belgian India Rubber Company,
colonialism, lecture, missionary, photography, rubber, trade, violence

Congo Atrocity Lantern Lecture

Background

About the Collection


 

The ‘Congo Atrocity Lantern Lecture’ was a campaigning devise used by the Congo Reform Association to raise
awareness in Britain of the brutal labour regime which took place when the Congo Free State was the personal possession
of King Leopold II during the period 1884-1908. The lantern slides included a range of images which represented
different experiences of enslavement from transatlantic slavery through to conditions in the Congo Free State. Some of the
lantern slides reproduced photographs taken by the British missionary Alice Seeley Harris which depicted the violence
and mutilation inflicted on the local population in pursuit of rubber.

The Congo Reform Association was founded in 1904 by Edmund Dene Morel and Roger Casement to highlight the issue
of exploitation in the Congo Free State. Despite their efforts the initial public success of the campaign had started to wane.
In 1905 Alice Seeley Harris and her husband John returned from the Congo Balolo Mission where they had been posted
and began to take an active role in the Congo Reform Association. The Harrises offered a solution for reanimating the
campaign – a lantern lecture tour that would showcase Alice’s photography and incorporate elements of the popular
missionary speaking tours that had been used to evangelise across Britain and the United States.

The lantern lecture shows utilized the popularity of the genre as a form of mass entertainment. Using missionary networks
it was shown in chapels and meeting houses across Britain. The lantern slides were accompanied by a lecture which was
delivered by the Congo missionaries. As the shows grew in popularity it became necessary to develop a standard narration
that could be delivered by any speaker. The standard lecture focused on the idea that the Congo Free State represented a
corruption of the spirit of empire rather than an acute symptom of a structure that was inherently unjust. The
accompanying lecture notes made it clear that African people and their culture should not to be regarded as equal to that
of the Europeans. The lecture expressed sentiments framed by a belief in Britain’s empire as part of the ‘civilising
mission’ – this was an attempt to remake colonised people in the image of the coloniser. Far from anti-colonial the lecture
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reinforced the need to participate in the imperial project, particularly in relation to spreading Christianity through the
establishment of more mission outposts.

Guide for users


 

You can search the images using geographic location. The original spelling of the place names contained within the
caption have been used for the title of the image, however, some place names have changed their spelling over time e.g.
‘Loanda’ and ‘Luanda’. ‘Tags’ have used the modern spelling of the place name. Items are tagged with place names from
the period as well as the modern place name e.g. ‘Leopoldville’ and ‘Kinshasa’. You can search via ‘Country’ - the place
where the image was produced e.g. ‘Angola’. You can search the ‘Tags’ for a particular region, city, or village e.g. ‘Kasai’.

The images have been tagged using generalised description of the individuals who feature in them e.g. ‘African child’ or
‘European man’. These terms are inadequate as they do not allow for the specificity that should be attributed to individual
subjectivity, they also remove peoples’ right to self-definition. The captions for the images do not contain the detailed
information about the sitters which would allow for a greater degree of clarity. Judging a person’s race or ethnicity based
on a photograph risks wrongly attributing or imposing meaning, however, in order to make the archive searchable these
terms have been used.

Each image has a zoom function will allows the viewer to examine the photograph in detail. If you click on the image you
can navigate with the zoom to look at an individual’s stance, expression, and other details. Humanitarian photography has
employed techniques which have tended to erase the individual and present a suffering mass. The zoom function has
been included so that viewers can engage with the people represented as individuals.

The ‘Congo Atrocity Lantern Lecture’ used a selection of photographs from a wider collection of 509 images created by
Alice Seeley Harris. To view the full collection you can search ‘Related Items’ or you can click through to the ‘Alice
Seeley Harris Archive’.

Both the original ‘Alice Seeley Harris Archive’ and the ‘Congo Atrocity Lantern Lecture’ represented African people
through the colonial gaze. In replicating these archives we are very aware of the potential to reinstate that particular way of
seeing difference. In order to make sure that this mode of representation is balanced by material which is self-
representative we have commissioned two projects ‘Decomposing the Colonial Gaze: Yole!Africa’ and ‘You Should Know
Me: Photography and the Congolese Diaspora’. You can search ‘Alternative Tags’, or you can click through to these
collections to find new material which has been inspired by and critically engages with the historic archive.

The project has also collaborated closely with the Antislavery Knowledge Network, which is based at the University of
Liverpool, and seeks community-led strategies for creative and heritage-based interventions in sub-Saharan Africa.

Copyright and takedown policy

Copyrights to all resources are retained by Antislavery International, who have kindly made their collections available for
educational and non-commercial use only. All efforts have been made to obtain copyright permission for materials
featured on this site. If you are aware of instances where the rights holder(s) has not been given an appropriate credit,
please let us know. If you hold the rights to any item(s) included in this resource and oppose to its use, please contact us to
request its removal from the website.

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Contact
 

Email: antislaveryusablepast@gmail.com

Acknowledgements
 

This archive would not have been possible without the generous access given to the project by Antislavery International.
In particular we would like to thank Dr Aidan McQuade and Dr Anna Shepherd. The digitisation was completed by
Autograph ABP. Thanks to the London School of Economics for their kind permission to reproduce the lantern lecture
notes. Discussions about this project were greatly enhanced by conversations with Dr Mark Sealy (Director, Autograph
ABP) and Dr Richard Benjamin (International Slavery Museum). Congolese artist Sammy Baloji offered unique insights
into the relationship between past and present forms of representation. This project was supported by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council. Further thanks go to the Antislavery Knowledge Network, based at the University of
Liverpool.

Further reading
 

Kevin Grant, ‘Christian critics of empire: Missionaries, lantern lectures, and the Congo reform campaign in Britain’,
Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 29:2, (2001), pp. 27-58

Dean Pavlakis, British humanitarianism and the Congo reform movement, 1896-1913 (Surrey: Ashgate, 2015)

Andrew Porter, ‘Sir Roger Casement and the international humanitarian movement’, Journal of Imperial and
Commonwealth History, 29:2 (2001), pp. 59-74

Links
 

Archive of Edmund Dene Morel held at the London School of Economics

Antislavery Knowledge Network, University of Liverpool

More in this collection...

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