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Cutting the Flesh: Surgery, Autopsy and Cannibalism in the Belgian Congo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2017

Sokhieng Au*
Affiliation:
Department of History, KU Leuven, Blijde-Inkomststraat 21 – Box 3307, 3000 Leuven, Belgium
*
*Email address for correspondence: sokhieng.au@kuleuven.be
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Abstract

Within the colonial setting of the Belgian Congo, the process of cutting the body, whether living or dead, lent itself to conflation with cannibalism and other fantastic consumption stories by both Congolese and Belgian observers. In part this was due to the instability of the meaning of the human body and the human corpse in the colonial setting. This essay maps out different views of the cadaver and personhood through medical technologies of opening the body in the Belgian Congo. The attempt to impose a specific reading of the human body on the Congolese populations through anatomy and related Western medical disciplines was unsuccessful. Ultimately, practices such as surgery and autopsy were reinterpreted and reshaped in the colonial context, as were the definitions of social and medical death. By examining the conflicts that arose around medical technologies of cutting human flesh, this essay traces multiple parallel narratives on acceptable use and representation of the human body (Congolese or Belgian) beyond its medical assignation.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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© The Author 2017. Published by Cambridge University Press.

In 1923, the medical chief of the Belgium Congo stated after observing the abysmal failure of colonial training programmes for indigenous medical assistants, ‘One needs not be too surprised that ignorant students, some of whom are direct descendants of anthropophagous parents, do not have the moral qualities…needed to be a good indigenous medical assistant.’Footnote 1 A few years later one of the earliest indigenous converts to Protestantism, a man named Nlevmo, related the story of his conversion to Christianity in the Baptist Missionary Herald. As a young boy Nlevmo was ‘given’ to pioneer missionary W. Holman Bentley in 1881 upon his arrival at the Stanley Pool (now Malebo Pool). Nlevmo became an important translator and assistant for Bentley, travelling with him to England and Holland before returning to Bolobo Congo to work at the British Baptist mission. When his father told him as a young boy that he would be going to live with Bentley, Nlevmo was terrified, as it was thought ‘the white men sometimes ate the Congo people’.Footnote 2 As these two anecdotes reveal, the imagined threat of cannibalism often lingered just beneath the surface of both sides of the colonial interchange.

Luise White has intensively studied rumours of arcane creatures such as vampires and cannibals in colonial Africa, arguing that such stories reveal ‘all the messy categories and meandering epistemologies many Africans used to describe the extractions and invasions with which they lived’.Footnote 3 In a similar vein to vampire stories, cannibal stories can tell us about the experiences and understandings of Africans under colonial exploitation. But fantastic myths were not the exclusive domain of Africans; colonial writing is rich in fables presented as fact, with one of the most common tropes being that of the savage African cannibal. Thus, such rumours cannot be reduced solely to allegories of extraction and exploitation since both coloniser and colonised propagated stories of the other’s cannibalism. Stories of cannibalism are linked to specific acts on the body, and understandings and misunderstandings linked to these acts.

This essay looks at the narratives surrounding the specific act of cutting the body in the Belgian Congo – the internal bits and pieces made visible – to reveal what Congolese peopleFootnote 4 or colonisers understood of the body when its insides were exposed. This research is part of a larger project on anatomy and the body in the Belgian Congo, conceived on a wide scale. During my search for data on cutting and obtaining bodily samples, intriguingly, references to anthropophagy unexpectedly continued to surface in various types of archives: official government reports, medical school records, ethnographic studies, medical missionary correspondence, etc. In many cases, it was an exercise in alterity, but these references were neither confined to exoticising accounts nor to colonial observers. They were, however, always associated with specific practices on human bodies. Within the colonial setting, where plural societiesFootnote 5 co-existed and co-mingled in sporadic ways, the process of cutting the body in particular, whether living or dead, lent itself to conflation with cannibalism and other fantastic consumption stories by both Congolese and Belgian observers.

Historians rarely bring together ‘fantastic consumption’ stories by colonised populations and those by colonisers, although these are often linked phenomena, as this article will show. While intimately tied to issues of alterity and deontology, such tales also reveal crossed readings relating to the natural world and ontology. Further, nothing confuses the nature/culture divide and the myriad analytical constructions to understand this divide more than the human body. It is both natural and cultural, thing and representation. The human body at the point near or after death is even more intractable as an analytical subject/object. This essay will map out different views of human materiality and personhood through medical technologies of opening the body. These disparate readings of the body make visible epistemological conflicts that arise when a person cuts the flesh of another in the space between life and death.

The focus here on specific bodily practices has two main goals. The first goal is to sideline, for a moment, what ‘medicine’ is, and examine the related, but somewhat distinct, question of what the body is and what makes it ‘dis-eased’. This is, primarily, methodological experimentation with a framework that permits analytical parity in comparing medical practices by groups with grossly unequal socio-political power. In the field of colonial medicine, the ever-troubled question of the relationship between biomedicine and traditional/indigenous medicine has been treated either by showing how biomedicine was constituted from traditional medicines, how biomedicine is culture-bound (presumably like traditional medicine), or how traditional medicine is rational and objective (like biomedicine). To use the language of Science and Technology studies (STS), comparative parity is often achieved by reading traditional medicine as more ‘objectivist’ or biomedicine as more ‘constructivist’. Both are both, clearly. But they are also very different. The second goal of this paper is to map the nuances of these similarities and differences, but beyond the objectivist-constructivist dipole. Readings of the body, colonial and Congolese, are both culturally determined and empirically based. In relating these readings, the narrative also sketches new perspectives on a particular historical moment (arguably the primordial goal of historical research). Like the histoire croisée framework, the methodological approach of this paper attempts to avoid the weakness of the over-synchronic framework of comparative studies and the inherently diachronic nature of transfer studies by looking at the intersecting of the historicity of the object and the approach to the object.Footnote 6

The Belgian Congo had several indigenous political chiefdoms incorporating numerous ethnic groups, with a wide range of practices and understandings of the human body, the corpse, and death. Even given this diversity, we can still delineate a broad shared understanding of death and the afterlife in central and west Africa where: the corpse was not entirely deprived of agency after recent death, the recently dead had an active role in the lives of the living, and certain body parts had power separate from the integrated whole that lingered after death.Footnote 7 These views are not unique to the African world, as religious scholars in Western contexts are well aware. But, scientists coming in to work in Africa at the very least aspired to have a contrary view, and to proselytise this view to their African workers, patients, and converts. (This proselytisation was often a conversion in the religious sense as well, as the work of medicine in the Congo was confided to various religious orders along with trained secular medical doctors – but this is another story.)

I am focusing on the field of medicine, where attempted conversion was largely flowing in one direction, from the colonist to the colonised.Footnote 8 We will look first at a theoretical/ideational view of anatomy before moving to concrete practices of surgery and autopsy. Western medicine primarily existed in the Belgian Congo in three forms: state medical programmes and institutions with large numbers of Catholic missionary auxiliaries, Protestant missionary medicine, and private industrial medical provisioning for company workers. Public health was the realm of state medicine; surgical interventions were common in Protestant missionary hospitals as well as state hospitals, and to a lesser extent within private concerns. Medical establishments were central to the colonial project, and medical staff constantly strove to convert the indigenous population to a specific conception of health and hygiene. Convert is a deliberate term, as colonial educators knew that they were not simply sharing their knowledge with the local populations but rather attempting to eliminate and replace existing ontological understandings with another way of valuing the human body and the human being. As in religious conversion, doctors and other health workers and officials could not accept that a convert to medical science could also continue to believe in witchcraft or rituals.

1 Anatomy

A dependence on the truism that ‘seeing is believing’ can be found in the early medical proselytisation in the Congo. Early medical officials had great faith in the self-evident visibility of the natural fact. This was expressed most clearly in a general reliance on the optical research instrument du jour, the microscope. One doctor wrote, ‘the native who has seen the causes of disease in the microscope…will be able to convince natives of the uselessness of fetishism, and put an end to the pernicious practices of sorcerers’.Footnote 9 Indeed, there was a sort of mini microscope mania in the 1910s and 1920s in the Belgian Congo, with dozens of missionaries and many an administrator, along with the medical staff, trained in seeing diseases (particularly the sleeping sickness trypanosome) under the lens and sent into the field with their government-supplied microscope.Footnote 10

However, the microscope would not be the path to converting indigenous peoples to modern medicine and Christianity. To ‘see’ correctly with a microscope required expertise in preparing samples and in interpreting what was seen. Although there was much talk about how the microscope would convince indigenous people through the incontrovertible evidence that was seen, different users saw different things under the microscope. Even of the European men and women trained in the microscope, few learned to see much more than the infamous sleeping sickness trypanosome during their month-long laboratory training. Further, seeing the micro-organism did not mean that the truth of microbiology became evident: ‘believing’ did not so easily come from ‘seeing’. Gross human anatomy, as an order of magnitude greater in size and unmediated by a scientific instrument, would on the surface appear to lend itself more to being seen in the correct way. Western medical culture claims to visualise the human body in a de-sacralised manner, particularly its internal workings.Footnote 11 Anatomical figures represent the human body, but they represent the human body to a specific audience that has learned to see what it is seeing in the intended way. Much like a geographical map, these representations require a shared semiotic code to be read correctly.Footnote 12 In other words, viewing the anatomical model as an ‘objective rendering of the body’ depends on a vast array of cultural assumptions.Footnote 13 Nonetheless, this particular visual reading of the human body, a Western anatomical understanding, was considered crucial to effective medical training. When the Belgian colonial government began training its first generation of indigenous medical assistants, it provided top-of-the-line microscopes and anatomical models to facilitate a Western visual understanding of the human body, to little avail.

The first training school of indigenous medical assistants (école d’infirmiers) was created in Boma the year after the transfer of the Congo Free State from King Leopold II to Belgium in 1907. This school was equipped with microscopes, as well as a ‘natural’ life-sized mounted skeleton, a collection of 13 anatomical plates mounted on wood, and a headless paper maché trunk with removable lung, heart and organs, showing the stomach, liver, spleen and intestines. In 1920–21, under the urging of the Minister of Colonies, the system was organised and expanded to five schools (with Boma being transferred to Leopoldville): Leopoldville, Coquilhatville, Stanleyville, Ibembo and Elisabethville. The training programme lasted three years, with the first two years focusing on deontology,Footnote 14 hospital service, parasitology and hygiene. Human anatomy was taught in the second and third year.Footnote 15 Even in this early period, one instructor noted that ‘an education entering into details of physiology and human anatomy…will not have the slightest chance of being understood by Negros [noirs] who are already frustrated, many of whom can barely read or write’.Footnote 16

A basic medical instruction book was commissioned and written by a Dr David, and translated into Kiswahili in 1925. This handbook was carefully designed for the Congolese infirmier,Footnote 17 with 250 pages of text and a blank page between each for note-taking. The introduction informs the student that to become a doctor in Europe required many years of learning, and ‘[t]he infirmier can’t learn all of this; he isn’t a doctor, he helps the doctor, he does what the doctor tells him to do’. David belabours the fact that the infirmier must have many exceptional qualities and he ‘should understand that he was chosen to be a student because he is more intelligent than his fellow natives and will use his knowledge to help them’.Footnote 18 The book then passes on to a lesson in anatomy, replete with mechanical analogies. The textbook introduces the nervous system by explaining that ‘our body is like a machine, but our machine doesn’t need anyone to turn it on or direct it. It is the most perfect part of our body that commands the other parts. This superior part is called the nervous system’.Footnote 19 Or, for digestion, ‘to run, a machine needs fuel, coal. Our body needs various types of fuel’.Footnote 20 As for respiration, ‘in order for a machine to run, it is not enough to fill it with wood; the wood won’t burn if no air is around. This is the same in our body; air is as necessary for life as food is’.Footnote 21 Whether intentional or not, the textbook presents the body in a similar way to contemporary hygiene textbooks for children in the Belgian metropole. Further, it presents the body-as-machine metaphor as evident. But this metaphor, central to the mechanical philosophy that predominated the modern era in Europe, is highly contingent on a particular moment in European history. While considerable literature exists on the rise of mechanical philosophyFootnote 22 in the European context and the subsequent decline of other ways of understanding nature and human biology in the early modern era, the particularity of such views can be overlooked when historians analyse the spread of Western science in the imperial domain, as if the dynamics of colonialism overshadow the contested nature of epistemological understanding. But, the Western world did not become ‘disenchanted’ because mechanical philosophy was the most effective or true way of explaining the natural order of things; disenchantment in the colonial world was another thing altogether. In the end, David’s book, alienating in both tone and presentation, was the only commissioned handbook for indigenous medical training by the state in the early colonial period.Footnote 23

The colonial government ordered anatomical plates for each of the five new infirmier training schools, at a considerable price (12 500 francs). These pieces included, for each school, a full-sized human écorché (anatomical model with skin removed to display musculature) with removable organs and an opening heart, a varnished plate on canvas of insects that were vectors of tropical diseases and four additional anatomical plates of the human digestive system, the circulatory system, the respiratory system and the nervous system. Students were also to assist with autopsies whenever possible, ‘to show them pathological legions that can explain certain morbid symptoms for them. [T]hese autopsies will also serve as an occasion for an anatomy lesson’.Footnote 24 The anatomical section of David’s handbook served as a narrative companion to the anatomical plates.

Initially, the push for medical training and the presumed accessibility of scientific knowledge came more from administrators than medical personnel, but colonial medical staff were enthusiastic collaborators in this early stage. This quickly changed, when the medical staff found their role as both supervisors and teachers to the Congolese workers more difficult than anticipated. A standard litany of complaints arose in the medical reports of lazy, illiterate and dishonest students. Very few students could pass the exams of the first year, much less arrive at obtaining a certificate.Footnote 25 Doctors grumbled that the ‘feeders’ into this system, the missionary fathers, gave them the worst students and sent the better ones into clerical service.Footnote 26 In the second year, 10 of 13 students failed. The instructor noted that this was despite a well-equipped classroom, with an homme ecorché, a skeleton, several anatomical plates and four microscopes. He grumbled further that Dr David’s instruction booklet was ‘still for most of them an incomprehensible gibberish that they are unable to understand or translate into their own language’.Footnote 27 Within three years, the Governor General sent a deeply pessimistic report on these schools to Brussels, prompting the Minister of Colonies to rebuff this negativity. He emphasised the absolute need for the colonial service to continue to improve their functioning.Footnote 28 Belgium had neither enough men nor money to staff the entire Congo medical service with expatriates. Still, two of the schools were shut in the first few years. After a decade, results were so dismal that another re-organisation was attempted, with no improvement in outcome.

The medical chief observed after proctoring the end of year exam in 1923:

[I] …was disappointed to see how many students memorised by heart without understanding. They recite these litanies that mean nothing to them. The anatomical murals, however suitable, represent nothing to their objective brains [cerveaux objectifs]. Dr Van Diest of Buta, struck by this fact, began teaching them anatomy with freshly killed animals. In terms of splanchnology, I believe this is the best way to proceed.Footnote 29

It is interesting to note that the possibility of human dissection for pedagogical purposes is not considered. This may be because autopsy was already available as a tool of training, or health regulations were in place that mirrored those in the metropole favouring autopsies over dissections.Footnote 30 But it also may be due to the political climate and desire to avoid further speculation on exploitation of the black corpse, the tropical climate itself and quick spoilage of any corpse, or the belief that such a resource would ultimately be wasted on students of such low capabilities.

The medical chief’s comment gives us a glimpse of what the medical personnel did not see directly, namely the vast epistemological disconnect in anatomical knowledge. For him and others like him, the ‘objective brains’ of the indigenous people were the problem.Footnote 31 They had not learned to take conceptual leaps and could not conceive of an anatomical model as analogous to the human body. Because the ethnic make-up was quite mixed in Stanleyville, we cannot be certain to which ethnic groups these students belong. However, as observed in by Steve Feierman, medical systems in sub-Saharan Africa do not map neatly onto ethnic identities.Footnote 32 We have a study of indigenous healers (nganga) of the Kongo ethnic groups from which we can extrapolate some parallels. While this study was undertaken in the 1960s, we can assume that there is considerable conservation of some theoretical notions from twenty years earlier. This study describes Kongo anatomical knowledge as ‘a symbolism that references across domains (natural, social, cosmological) that amplify and explain experience’.Footnote 33 Further:

It is difficult, if not impossible, to abstract a simple physical ‘anatomy’ from the nganga’s thinking, because… organs, functions, and bodily symptoms are related to a more expansive unit than is the case in Occidental medicine, philosophy, or religion… [Nganga] ideas about the body… actually embrace constant reference to social relations, plants, and medicines. As has been suggested, the heart stands in analogous relationship to organs and functions, foods, medicines, human beings, spirits, and the whole universe, like a signal – calm in health, agitated in illness – for the nganga.Footnote 34

As an example, the author describes the concept of the abdomen:

The vumu, abdomen,… is analogous to the lineage house in society, just as the heart is analogous to the chief. Vumu thus embraces both physical and social referents. It denotes vulva, uterus, pregnancy, mother’s breast, lactation, and abdomen, as well as family, or descents of the same mother… it is a verbal category of congruent ideas, both physical and social, drawn from a dominant idea about subsistence, identity, and well-being.Footnote 35

This is a referential and reverential anatomy that does not easily align with the anatomical plate. Roland Barthes observed that ‘no sooner is a form seen than it must resemble something: humanity seems doomed to analogy’.Footnote 36 But the analogy is structured by the context. The anatomical plate is not a self-evident fact. If the health of the body is never entirely reducible to the material, and vital qualities of the living linger in the ’newly dead’, how does a paper mâché figure represent a human body? If disease is linked to the relations of power within the body itself and not the material substance, studying the plastic, paper mâché, or wooden object serves little purpose. Further, the anatomical plates artificially separate different functional systems (digestive, circulatory, etc.), excluding parts not central to that particular system. If indigenous anatomy was more expansive than its biological counterpart, Western anatomical models were radically more reductive. Linking the two through the freshly killed animal was perhaps the best compromise in reaching an understanding between two systems of representation in a context where human dissection for instructional purposes was not practicable.

These epistemological issues are also complicated by language, and questions of interpretation and translation. There were dozens of major and minor languages in the Belgian Congo. While the medical textbook for students was translated into Kiswahili, this language would have been as incomprehensible as French or Dutch for many students. Even between two languages, a translation of a simple term could be extremely complicated. As an example, in a British Baptist missionary station in Upoto, a nurse recounted in the mission newsletter the history of a village woman coming into the dispensary complaining of pain. This village woman was also one of the students in the new hygiene and physiology courses offered by the mission. When the nurse asked her where the pain was, she pointed vaguely to her body and said ‘there in my heart’. The nurse replied, ‘But haven’t I been telling you this morning that your heart is not there but your likundu’. Likundu, the only word in the nurse’s letter written in the vernacular Bolobo, is parenthetically defined as the ‘stomach’. When the nurse told her she had a likundu, the villager panicked and ‘gave a wild look of terror round the waiting room and gasped, ‘Mama, you surely don’t say that I have a stomach’. The nurse went on to explain, ‘The native belief is that only witches have stomachs and in the old days the unfortunate victim convicted of witchcraft was opened up to prove the statement’.Footnote 37

Here, we must question how the villagers could misinterpret the hygiene training to conflate the Bolobo word (likundu) for stomach with the word for witchcraft substance (to be discussed shortly), which was, according to one scholar, likundu libe.Footnote 38 However, a contemporary Protestant missionary who published extensive ethnographic studies on the Boloki and Ba-Kongo ethnic groups translated likundu as an adjective for witchcraft or craftiness, with attributes such as ‘nganga ya likundu’ (witchcraft doctor), likundu charm (cleverness charm), or ‘awi na likundu’ (to die by ones’ own witchcraft).Footnote 39 In the Bateke region of the Belgian Congo, some 100 kilometres to the west, the Tio word for stomach and witchcraft substance were sometimes both referred to as ifi and sometimes as ifi and impfiri respectively.Footnote 40 Perhaps a similar sort of conflation occurred in Bolobo. Thus, the villager’s confusion could be either an issue of translation or interpretation, depending on how the stomach was explained (both geographically and functionally) to the class and how the conversation in the dispensary was actually conducted. Did the villager misunderstand the medical lesson, or did the nurse misunderstand the villager? It is also important to note that the nurse failed to explain that the ‘opening up’ of the suspected witch was done after death, as we will see. The narration confuses and omits to make this particular exchange more exotic for the imperial reader, but it is also likely that confusion and omission was unavoidable in the complicated reconfigurations of the human body occurring in the Belgian Congo.

2 Surgery

With some absurdity, a Catholic Father would observe of his Congolese charges in 1891, ‘Anatomy, as they say, has largely fallen into disuse since the arrival of the white man bringing civilisation…. From the moment when one could no longer eat people, how could one learn to dissect them?’Footnote 41 While such a statement was clearly spurious, cutting into human flesh was known before the arrival of European surgeons, but its extent and purposes were radically different. African cutting rituals existed for purification, as well as for medical treatment involving small incisions on patients with ritual removal of offending objects (which could range from stones or dried spiders to live worms).Footnote 42 Scarification and tattooage, or body inscriptions, fall into another category of cutting, because of their non-therapeutic ascription and their superficiality (they do not break the surface of the skin), and are excluded here.Footnote 43 While African surgery to repair physical injury was known, it seemed to be rarely used.Footnote 44

What was biomedical surgery to the Congolese? It was certainly new, and it was fascinating. Early on, it was a public spectacle, whether the surgeon desired it or not. In some cases, surgery was staged as a public performance to awe the local populations.Footnote 45 In other cases, it was public to make the actions of the surgeons transparent, and thus dispel any nefarious rumours of cannibalism or witchcraft.Footnote 46 In most cases however, early surgery was public only because privacy could not be enforced. A Protestant missionary doctor describes to his American audience the ‘syringe-boy’, a uniquely Congolese staff member of his surgical team in Banza Manteke in 1919:

A visitor to my clinic seemed to be interested in a student doctor that seemed to have little else to do during the operation than holding a glass piston syringe in his hand, the syringe being filled with water. My friend soon had his curiosity rewarded for all at once, quickly and silently, the student stepped to the wall and inserting the business end of the instrument into one of the many spaces between the clap-boards that afford fine opportunities to curious outsiders to see what is going on in-side, pushed the piston home, this water being forcibly expelled into the eye of the peeper…we could not enjoy any sort of privacy were it not for the syringe-boy.Footnote 47

Even as late as 1936, in the newly constructed hospital at Pimu, a British Baptist missionary doctor described his first surgery of a man gored through the abdomen after an elephant hunt gone wrong:

They have brought him to hospital and I operated but I felt he was past any aid we could give him except that of the control of his pain with morphia. He died three hours later. That was my surgical debut here. It was a dramatic operation done in a very primitive and elementary style with 60 or 70 spectators all standing round in dead silence, watching.Footnote 48

We need not question too much why surgery would draw spectators. Seeing the inside of a human being, and a living human being at that, was an exceptional event, and exceptional events attract interest. A more complicated question is how patients approached undergoing surgery.

As minor interventions often radically improved medical conditions that seemed hopeless, surgery’s popularity grew rapidly in the colonial period, even if it was also suspected of having a cannibalistic aspect.Footnote 49 But, some of this demand was linked quite closely to the conditions of the colonial state, as in the case of hernia surgery. The distribution of types of surgeries varied between the Protestant missionary and the state operating theatres, but hernias represented from half to the majority of major operations by the state in most years, and in some cases representing over 80% of all major operations.Footnote 50 While hernias may have had a high prevalence in some populations because it could exist as a chronic condition, it seems likely that the strenuous demands of colonial labour contributed to this widespread health problem in the Belgian Congo. In the region of Pawa (Province Orientale), in 1934, an initiative to screen and treat hernias in the area unearthed thousands of cases, deriving from the demands of work in the cotton fields and cotton transport under the colonial plantation system.Footnote 51 The sole surgeon of the Red Cross decried the screening initiative, as he could not come close to meeting the demand for reparative surgery, and almost all diagnosed cases were left untreated.Footnote 52

Whether all surgeries were entirely voluntary is unclear, but colonial medical officials commented repeatedly, and in different contexts of the Congo, that once the proof of surgery’s efficacy was seen, its popularity grew rapidly. This was also affirmed further with missionary hospital correspondence, where intermittently visiting surgeons had waiting lists for patients that reached six or eight months.Footnote 53 One doctor even called surgery ‘bait’ [appât] to draw recalcitrant indigenous people to Western medicine.Footnote 54 Ultimately, more surgery was desired than could actually be provided. It was possible that the technical spectacle of surgery inspired awe, and surgical interventions could be seen as analogous to African rituals: purificatory as in some African cutting rituals, or proof of innocence as in survival in a witchcraft poisoning ordeal.Footnote 55 However, we cannot lose sight of the fact that the Congolese also assessed empirical evidence. Certainly surgery was not popular everywhere it was introduced in colonial Africa.Footnote 56 Undoubtedly, surgery in the Congo was in demand (and awe-inspiring) not merely because of its theatricality but also because of its results. As one missionary wrote, ‘the wonders wrought by surgery are truly a marvel to these people. In July last, … a doctor performed a slight operation upon a boy who had shot himself in the eye. The people around looked in wonderment upon it, and called him ‘Great Doctor’ and crowded to see him.’Footnote 57 As another doctor noted, ‘Surgery is perhaps the most spectacular department of medical works…If surgery effects a cure, the result is very apparent. When someone who previously had a large and obvious lump returns to his village without it, the power of European medicine cannot be gainsaid’.Footnote 58

Surgery in both the Congolese and Belgian context was done to prolong life. If there was extraction of physical objects from the body, it was not metaphorical in either context. An actual object, be it bullet, tumour, appendix, worm, bone or charcoal, was withdrawn with the – ideally – concomitant reduction in the suffering of the patient. In the Congolese context, it may have been ‘trickery’ on the part of the practitioner, but the patient may not have viewed it as such. There is no mention of ostracisation, adulation or indeed any sort of special status attributed to post-operative patients beyond the status of a newly healed patient. What is clear is that Western surgery was seen as offering a possibility for the treatment of ailments that were previously not effectively treated by indigenous medicine. A belief in the healing power of surgery did not mean abandonment of faith in the healing power of ritual, as the resort to indigenous medicine continued unabated among those who sought surgery. Western surgery could be understood in ways aligned to indigenous knowledge of the human body and disease. New representations of the body syncretised with rather than replaced existing ones.

3 Autopsy

Cutting into the living was done to prolong life (biopsies were arguably an exception to this) both for Congolese people and for Belgians; cutting into the dead was another story. The dead were cut open for a variety of reasons. Most notably the profanation of the corpse could be used for post-mortem punishment of the deceased or as a means of warning the living of their potential fate in following the path of the deceased. Until very recently, the dissection or autopsy of criminals in Europe served in part this same purpose.Footnote 59 Bodies were sometimes mutilated to obtain trophies, a common practice during many colonial military campaigns in early twentieth-century Africa, often justified on the grounds of scientific collecting.Footnote 60 During the wars of conquest near Lake Tumba in the Belgian Congo, thousands of corpses were systematically mutilated for the very practical purpose of assuring that ammunition cartridges were not being wasted, as baskets of severed (and smoked) right hands of fallen Congolese people were presented to commanding European officers as proof of efficacy.Footnote 61 Although these sorts of cuttings no doubt influenced local interpretations of other sorts of manipulations of the dead, here we focus on cutting the corpse to obtain information. In the West, the cutting of the corpse to retrieve information from it as an epistemic object falls under the purview of post-mortem examination in the form of autopsy or dissection. But the cutting of the recently deceased to reveal or inform is also known in the colonial Congolese context. This is best described in the well-known ethnology of Evans-Pritchard on the Azande, an ethnic group living on the frontiers of Uganda, Sudan and the Belgian Congo in the 1930s. Evans-Pritchard describes a procedure he calls ‘autopsy’ performed on the corpses of suspected witches to find ‘witchcraft substance’. This autopsy was performed in public at the edge of the grave:

Two lateral gashes are made in the belly and one end of the intestines is placed in a cleft branch and they are wound round it. After the other end has been severed from the body another man takes it and unwinds the intestines as he walks away from the man holding the cleft branch. The old men walk alongside the entrails as they are stretched in the air and examine them for witchcraft-substance.Footnote 62

This witchcraft substance was described as lumpy black material found in the intestines. Elderly men, experienced in identifying such substance, were present to adjudicate findings. When the autopsy was completed, the entrails were replaced in the body, and the performer of the autopsy was ritually cleansed.Footnote 63 Although the exact process likely varied between ethnic groups and regions, the examination of the corpse for proof of witchcraft was commonplace through the Congo during this time.Footnote 64

Witchcraft substance, or another part of the witch’s body, could be powerful in itself. Thus, the living could obtain this substance and use it to harm others. More generally, the recently dead, whether witches or not, in their liminal not-truly-dead state could still have power through the materiality of their own corpse. As one observer wrote in 1930:

Someone was sick, the witch doctor was called in and after a time he said the man who had recently died was the cause; he wanted a companion. So the body was taken out of the grave, burnt & the bones thrown on the plain where some of my boys found them. Now that the body has been destroyed the spirit cannot play any more tricks!Footnote 65

Florence Bernault argues that there is a divide between Western European and Equatorial African perceptions of the relationship of the body and power. Western Europeans perceive a metaphoric relationship between the two. In the African context,

people perceived a direct, unmediated relationship between the body and authority, as the former represented the privileged location of procedures and institutions that crafted, channeled, and controlled power. In doing so, the body was not seen as a physical reality whose existence derived from biological integrity, but as a multiple and fragmentable entity that retained power beyond death and dismemberment.Footnote 66

Bernault further argues that this distinction is exaggerated, as Westerners actually still fetishise the body in various ways after death. One of the ways that this sort of fetishisation can be seen is through the treatment of the ‘resting place’ of the dead. In the West, the tombstone marks the resting place of the body even when it has decomposed to dust. As such, the tombstone is ‘an index’, as one scholar called it, as opposed to a sign, in that the material presence of the body gives meaning to the grave marker.Footnote 67 In Central Africa, the grave was often not marked in a notable way, even if it was tended to and attended with some frequency, as the doorway between the visible and invisible worlds.Footnote 68 While the Western tomb served to prolong the social role of the (recently) dead, the African grave was often a less obvious feature of the landscape, serving in a way that was much more discursive and symbolic yet still incorporating the dead in community life in various ways.Footnote 69

Cutting of the recently dead must be read with a consideration of this strong distinction in Central Africa between what Mahaniah calls the morts-vivants and the vivants-morts, or what we can perhaps call as the recently dead and the ancestors.Footnote 70 How were autopsies on these ‘not-quite-dead’ corpses performed and perceived in the Belgian Congo? Vansina notes that the recently dead are greatly respected, much like elders, but not particularly subject to awe or piety because they are conceived as commonplace, active participants in the world of the living.Footnote 71 It is unclear if this would make autopsy more, or less, of a violation. It is clear, though, that the Congolese only cut the dead who were already morally suspect in some fashion – whether witch or enemy or murderer. Innocents were not autopsied.

In contrast, general autopsy was a common practice in the Belgian Congo, for both medical and juridical purposes. The larger hospitals were all equipped with an autopsy room, and assisting at autopsies was one of the reasons that infirmier training was unpopular, along with the necessity of touching and moving the dead.Footnote 72 We find no similar objections to surgeries (i.e. cutting into the living) by indigenous assistants. Autopsies on Europeans are occasionally mentioned after a suspicious or puzzling death. Protestant missionary doctors were also required to perform autopsies for the colonial state.Footnote 73 Autopsies on blacks, as opposed to whites, were often for more general research purposes on tropical diseases, as ‘harvested materials …permit necessary comparative research and the reconstruction of certain anatomical pathologies’.Footnote 74 From 1915 to 1921 in Elisabethville, 421 autopsies were performed for the purpose of establishing a local nosological profile. The doctor noted with some pride that up to 1918 almost every deceased patient at Lubumbashi hospital (of the Union Minière du Haut-Katanga) was systematically autopsied. Also of note was that most of the deceased were men between the ages of 20 and 35 who had succumbed to pneumonia or other normally non-lethal diseases for this age group.Footnote 75 In the laboratory of Stanleyville, 65 indigenous autopsies were performed in six months of 1929, an average number, and again most were performed for general research purposes.Footnote 76 Like surgeries, autopsies could be forcible public performances. As one doctor wrote of the deceased, ‘without a morgue, bodies remain in the room where they died until the time they are transported… and even if an autopsy is required by the law, I am obliged to perform it in the open’.Footnote 77 One can only imagine the effect on living patients in the same room, and the sorts of apocrypha that would arise from such an event.

The European decried the fetishism of the African, where pieces of the corpse could be kept in sacred objects made powerful by this fragment of human material. But a parallel practice existed among the Belgians, the very specific practice of cutting and taking bits of the living and dead and sending them away. With the panic over the spread of sleeping sickness in Central Africa, tens of thousands of Congolese people submitted to lumbar punctures, had their fluid removed and sent off to be studied under the microscope.Footnote 78 Some suspected that this palpating and puncturing was in fact a way of putting sleeping sickness into their bodies.Footnote 79 Many others had bits and pieces cut off or extracted and mailed to the School of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp, and then often sent further on to research institutes in Europe or America.Footnote 80 Such extractions, common throughout colonial Africa, led to an entire genre of stories of blood-sucking and cannibalistic white men.Footnote 81 In any single year, hundreds of pieces of ‘human material’ were examined in the colonial laboratories. As an example, in six months of 1929, the laboratory of Stanleyville examined 309 pieces of ‘human material’ sent from 273 necropsies at the black hospital and 26 biopsies in the field.Footnote 82 Serious epidemics could require mass forced autopsies, as was the case with a plague epidemic near Lake Albert in this same year. During this epidemic, autopsies were performed on suspected dead until the supply of gloves ran out, with several bodies exhumed and autopsied after ‘unauthorised’ burial.Footnote 83

Administrators exasperatedly recorded ‘irrational’ rumours circulating when they explained to their superiors the recalcitrance of indigenous populations towards colonial medicine, never allowing that these rumours could have any basis in reality. However, rumour could be made true. In a case reported in the early post-colonial period ‘One nurse’s aide and pathology assistant in a mission hospital… sold small pieces of cadaver as a power fetish, reinforcing the fear that in performing autopsies (i.e., tampering with the dead), the missionaries ‘ate’ parts of the body to strengthen themselves’.Footnote 84 Here was a rumour that was true, with acts partially driven by indigenous beliefs, which furthered a particular narrative of foreign, medical consumption of the body.

Autopsies were not done for the good of its subjects (who are dead and thus presumably according to Western science beyond aid), but for medical or juridical research. The material body was being opened up to further knowledge. But that knowledge itself was also the basis of a certain type of power (to paraphrase Francis Bacon) and authority: scientific authority. The recently dead human body, while it maintains its ‘thingness’, is useful because of its similitude to the living human body. A badly decomposed body provided little useful information on what it was or what caused its death, and bones were not autopsied (although they were collected). Among the Congolese, a similar logic was at work, as the corpse remained a powerful social actor while it maintained its human appearance. The more life-like it was, the more it could act in the ‘visible world’. Destroying the body mitigated the means by which the recently dead could act in the world. The category of ‘recently dead’ was not stable for either the Belgians or the Congolese. The colonial government ‘knew’ that indigenous tampering with the human body was not for scientific purposes, and thus labelled it profanation of the corpse and declared it illegal. Indigenous populations ‘knew’ that what the colonial doctors did was also profanation of the corpse, as the new corpse was still human, still a part of culture, still sacred. Colonial doctors would have protested that the dead body as they used it could not be profaned. It is a ‘thing’ alone, and thus already ‘profane’. They rejected the perception of the ‘not-quite-dead’ body as preposterous. Still, Congolese manipulations of the dead body, or pieces thereof, were immoral violations of the dead. In this reading, the dead become sacred again. Through the double standards of colonialism and Western science, the acceptable, moral treatment of the corpse became contingent on both Christian morality and biomedical exigency.

4 Consumption stories

In Central Africa, it is common knowledge that a witch from a distance ‘eats’ the soul of the various organs of his or her victim’s body, these organs die, and eventually the body dies. It is not metaphorical, even though it is not tangible.Footnote 85 This act cannot be seen; only its secondary effects can be viewed in the illness of the individual being consumed from the inside. Again, it is literally cannibalism, but not a physical cannibalism. But to understand it as such is to understand that the body is something more than material. European stories of indigenous stories of cannibalism fail to realise this. Did the eating of the physical body exist? Most certainly to some extent, but I suspect many of the stories of cannibalism circulating in colonial circles in the early twentieth century were of the non-physical variety, misinterpreted by colonial observers. Did the European ‘eat’ pieces of the colonised? No. But they did cut off, extract and send away blood, lumbar fluid, tumours and so forth, consuming them in the process of medical research. This was done on the dying and the dead, thus the correlation between such extraction and death was a close one for the Congolese. Further, the related European project of collecting bones, and ethnographic fascination with cannibalism itself fuelled such rumours. These rumours then fuelled competing myths of the others’ cannibalism. For example, in the late nineteenth century, avid skull collector and Congo explorer Georg Schweinfurth found skulls so easily attainable in the Congo that, for him, this was ample proof of African cannibalism. At the same time, he spent considerable effort attempting to explain phrenology to the very populations he collected from, to allay the growing rumours that he himself was a cannibal.Footnote 86 The example of scientists creating their truth could be seen even more clearly in the case of Scottish naturalist James S. Jameson. This enthusiastic naturalist bought a slave child and paid Zappo Zapp’s men to kill and eat her (at a total cost of ten handkerchiefs) as part of a ‘scientific’ fact-collecting process.Footnote 87 European cannibal-seekers both created the cannibals they sought and became cannibals themselves. Cannibal tales can be about humans literally eating humans, but they are also stories of humans consuming each other in many other ways.Footnote 88

There was a deep disconnect between epistemological understandings of the body, ontologies of the human self, and subsequent interpretations of the practices surrounding the body, as it moved from living to dead in the Belgian Congo. In a context where social and medical death are defined so differently, terms such as ‘desecration’, ‘biopsy’, ‘fetishism’, ‘cannibalism’ and so on are meaningless without careful contextualisation. Technologies of cutting the flesh were interpreted in fantastic and nefarious ways by both coloniser and colonised. This is not an issue of compare/contrast, but rather a problem of multiple parallel narratives on acceptable use and representation of the human body. These multiple narratives allow us to understand the value of such techniques (Congolese or Belgian) beyond their medical assignation.

The human body is powerful. To label this power as symbolic or objective is, sometimes, an irrelevant distinction, as this power has concrete effects on social relations. Both intruders and indigenous people used the tools that they had available to either syncretise or delegitimise alternative readings of the body. For the Congolese, rumour was key. Rumour, as James Scott and others have shown, is one of the classic ‘weapons of the weak’ to fight against hegemonic impositions by the powerful.Footnote 89 Rumour-mongering may not be conceived as a political act by those who relayed these stories in the Congo, and it is not deliberately undertaken to undermine the official narrative. But rumours provide counter-narratives that are often more satisfying explanations of unusual events than the official narrative. Congolese people accepted some acts on the body, such as some surgeries or biopsies, without having to accept alternative meta-narratives around the act. It was from the acts that they could not accept but could not prevent, such as autopsies, that the greatest rumours arose. In the Belgian context though, the consumption stories that proliferated about the Congolese were often more deliberate. These stories justified the colonisation, dehumanisation and exploitation of a people who were narrated as inferior, in a variety of ways. In contrast to the Congolese, the Belgians also had legal, political, military and economic techniques to enforce their readings. Despite this arsenal, the majority of the population did not abandon their understanding of disease and its relation to the human body. Biomedicine and witchcraft continue their co-existence to this day in West Africa, because both continue to serve important objective and symbolic functions in society. Acts on the human body – visualising, repairing or dismembering – are always purposeful. An examination of these practices allows a clearer vision of how the body is read as a social or a biological text.

It is not argued here that biomedicine and witchcraft are equally efficacious or even equally robust as rational explanations for human functioning. But they both have their mythologies, assumptions and failings. Catherine Mabie, a missionary doctor who spent over forty years in the Congo, told a story of her arrival in Banze Manteke in 1898. She performed a successful surgery on a minor chief who had been wounded by a wild buffalo. He was wearing a fetish on his arm that protected him from attack by wild animals, and she was interested in collecting it as an ethnographical piece. Not wanting him to think she believed in it, she asked him what it did, and observed that apparently, it did not work and was thus worthless. Would it not be better to discard it? To which the chief responded, ‘No…they don’t always work. But neither does your medicine. A man died here in the hospital yesterday’.Footnote 90

4.1 Archives

AA –Archives Africaines, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Brussels

ABHS – American Baptist Historical Society, Atlanta, Georgia

BMS – Baptist Missionary Society, Oxford

ITM – Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp

RMCA – Royal Museum of Central Africa, Tervuren

Footnotes

This research was made possible by a FWO Pegasus Marie Curie grant. The author is greatly indebted to the two anonymous reviewers as well as my colleagues Kaat Wils and Raf Bont for their comments and suggestions on previous versions of this essay. Any remaining errors and shortcomings are entirely the responsibility of the author.

References

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