As a book for a 21st century reader, I would say The Crime of the Congo is probably in the 3-star range. In its own day it would have been worth 5 stars, as its aims were laudable and it was apparently widely read. My rating is therefore a sort of compromise between the two. It’s a short book that Conan Doyle consciously pitched at a general audience, people who had neither the time nor the means to read a weightier tome. Today it’s most interesting as a period piece, an example of contemporary views of the Congo situation.
I know many people will know the context, but if not, between 1885 and 1908, what we now call the DR Congo was under the personal rule of King Leopold II of Belgium. The administrative entity he ruled was called “The Congo Free State”, an Orwellian name before Orwell. In practice it was a slave-based economy in which the native inhabitants were forced to work for nothing harvesting rubber. Operational control was exercised by Belgian companies who had obtained concessions from the King. Native people who failed to bring in enough rubber were hanged, mutilated, or flogged, and frequently whole villages would be massacred. No-one knows how many Congolese died, but almost all historians agree the figure was in the millions. Conan Doyle refers to it as “the enslavement of a whole people and … twenty years of uninterrupted massacre.” Writing before the time of Hitler, Stalin and Mao, he describes the Congo atrocities as the greatest crime in history, and indeed they should be considered alongside the crimes of those three.
Most of the book is taken up with personal testimony from Europeans who saw the atrocities. Those who spoke out could be jailed for fomenting rebellion, and some were even murdered. It’s hard to explain the conduct of the company officials and officers. They almost seem to have been overcome by a collective bloodlust. The French and British empires were racist but they didn’t engage in the deliberate massacre of millions of their African subjects. Contemporary observers speak of entire regions becoming uninhabited. Black African soldiers employed by the companies could be flogged if they failed to kill enough people. Conan Doyle comments that the grotesque tortures and methods of execution devised “…will not bear printing. The wildest dreams of the Inquisition were outdone.”
The book addresses the arguments used by the Belgians to respond to the allegations against them, and it’s interesting to see how little has changed. One method was what we today call “whataboutism” – deflecting the allegations by referring to misdeeds of the accusers. The Belgians for example referred to the conduct of the British during the Boer War. Whilst such criticisms were legitimate in their own context, pointing out the wrongdoings of others is of course no defence against your own bad behaviour. Unfortunately, “whataboutism” is something I see on a daily basis in political debates today. Another argument advanced was that the internal affairs of the The Congo State were nobody else’s business. Again, this is something we hear today from governments such as that of China.
I would say that The Crime of the Congo would be a good introductory text for the modern reader - in its own time it was intended as exactly that. Undoubtedly though there will be more comprehensive histories available.