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thehistoryofthecongo

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) enjoys vast deposits of precious minerals and metals. Diamonds are found in the south and center of the country and the land holds 80% of the world’s Coltan, needed in all our mobile phones. It should be one of the richest countries on Earth, but it is not. This Podcast explores why, from the very beginning. A new podcast will be released each Monday every two weeks, the website is https://www.thehistoryofthecongo.com Starting in prehistoric times, we talk through the topography and the Bantu migrations. We meet the famous empires of Central Africa. Firstly we meet the The Kingdom of the Kongo which posted diplomats throughout Europe and whose Kings corresponded with the superpowers of the day, and with the Vatican. This Kingdom was able to ally with International forces and militarily confront the initial European expansions. We are introduced to the Luba peoples who developed the Bulopwe system of government which spread through central Africa and sat as the bedrock for the adjacent Lunda Empire. We see these Kingdoms, and other peoples meeting with the European powers and explorers as Europe wanted to complete its map of Central Africa. Here the peoples and the country were wrapped up in the eddies of 19th and 20th century international politics. The Congolese voice in these is under-represented and the Congo was the catalyst for the colonial expansion of the late 19th Century and, at the behest of a new Superpower, the USA, became the personal property of one man. The borders were created through opportunistic expansion, geo-political negotiation and a Belgo-Arab war in central Africa. The DRC borders were never drawn up with reference to the people, the legacy of which still sits with us today. Under a Belgian King, the horrors the people were subjected to were the catalyst for a vast human rights movement spreading throughout Britain and America. Celebrities such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Mark Twain helped force the Belgian King to cede the country to the Belgian State. The people living there experienced a unique development and supported the allies in World War 1. In World War 2 the Congo provided the Uranium for the Manhattan project and became an arena for spies in which the Allies and the Nazis vied for sole use of this in the as yet finished Atomic Bomb. All this against the backdrop of conflicted loyalties between some of the Belgian elite who sympathized with the Nazi cause and were willing, all too easily, to accept the Nazi Victory over the free world. After the allied victory the Congolese had shared the conflict with their European rulers, had seen their value, and a new confidence was born. Congolese music and culture flourished, and the colony achieved new highs in living standards. But in the winds of change decolonization spread rapidly throughout Africa. The Belgians struggled with the pace of change and panicking at unrest and conflicts in the rest if the continent effectively gave 6 months’ notice of exit after 52 years. The Congolese were independent without the history of rule of the country as a whole. Tribal loyalties challenged unity and the country was embroiled in the Cold War with its democratically elected leader, Patrice Lumumba, murdered in a murky agreement concocted in the global geopolitics and the desires of one region which had an eye on independence. This ushered in Mobutu, one of infamous dictators of post colonial Africa, who implemented a Kleptocratic form of governance which led to a fragile state. As the cold war ended and the support of the USA subsided the DRC unraveled and was weakened to external pressures. In the 1990’s the repercussions of the Rwandan genocide spread through the region and was a catalyst for the Central African War, fought largely in the Congo by rebel groups and neighboring states, in which 5 million people died. Regions of the country unwittingly hosted refuges and the fighting but a new President emerged after his predecessor and father was gunned down. He managed to gain the trust of the international community to help slow the hemorrhaging of the countries wealth to its neighbors. The country now stands as a cultural powerhouse through music and fashion, and the people watch as their government negotiates foreign aid from the West and development opportunities with the new superpower – China. With a young and rapidly growing population, a new sense of confidence, and still recovering from continuing conflict in the East the DRC stands looking at an uncertain future. The world has been involved in the countries past and will be in the future. But to understand this, and to start to make a difference, we must look at the road that got the DRC where it is today. Starting New Year 2021 this podcast will travel through this journey. Episodes will be released each fortnight starting January, after an initial burst of releases to provide the bedrock. Join us as we go follow a unique and hidden story. Welcome to the History of the Congo.

info_outline Season 3: Episode 4: The end of the First Republic 06/17/2023
info_outline Season 3: Episode 3: Lumumba's Final Campaign 06/02/2023
info_outline Season 3: Episode 2: Katangan Independence and the Cold War 05/19/2023
info_outline Season 3: Episode 1: Independence Day 05/01/2023
info_outline Season 2 Episode 9: Independence Immediate Part 2 05/29/2022
info_outline Season 2 Episode 8: Independence Immediate part 1 04/11/2022
info_outline Season 2 Episode 7: The Congo in the 1950s, urbanisation and the rise of political parties 03/21/2022
info_outline Season 2: Episode 6: World War II, Einstein and Spies 02/28/2022
info_outline Season 2, Episode 5 The Belgian Congo in the 1920s and 1930s. 02/14/2022
info_outline Season 2, Episode 4 World War One comes to the Belgian Congo 01/31/2022
info_outline Season 2, Episode 3 The Start of the Belgian Congo 01/17/2022
info_outline Season 2, Episode 2 Reaction to Leopolds Congo - The Congo Reform Association 01/03/2022
info_outline Season 2: Episode 1 - Leopolds Congo Free State 01/01/2022
info_outline 13. The Takeover of Msiri and Katanga 05/10/2021
info_outline 12. The Belgian Arab War in the Eastern Congo 04/26/2021
info_outline 11. The limits to Belgian expansion to the East 04/12/2021
info_outline 10. Claiming the Congo by planting flags 03/29/2021
info_outline 9. Summary of pre-colonial Congo and the rise of foreign interest 03/15/2021
info_outline 8c. Stanley's Congo River Expedition pt 2 03/01/2021
info_outline 8b. Interval - Stanley's Early Life 03/01/2021
info_outline 8a. Stanley's Congo River Expedition pt 1 03/01/2021
info_outline 7. Arab incursions into the Eastern Congo 02/15/2021
info_outline 6. The peoples of the Eastern Congo meet travellers and explorers 02/01/2021
info_outline 5. The early history of Eastern Congo 01/18/2021
info_outline 4. The Kingdom of the Kongo - at its best, and at its worst 01/04/2021
info_outline 3. The Kingdom of the Kongo greets the European explorers 12/31/2020
info_outline 2. The Kingdom of the Kongo 12/30/2020
info_outline 1: Introduction to Prehistoric Central Africa, the Congo, the Bantu Migration and the Democratic Republic of the Congo 12/28/2020
 
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