The Berlin Conference: How Africa Was Partitioned — Fexingo History
In this episode, Lucas and Luna uncover a little-known document: Dr. Joseph de Smet's 1897 medical report on the Force Publique in the Congo Free State. De Smet, a Belgian army doctor, documented the horrifying physical toll of forced rubber collection — not just on Congolese workers but on African soldiers forced into the trade. His report, buried in Belgian colonial archives, included detailed clinical observations of mutilations, starvation, and disease, contradicting Leopold II's official narrative of humanitarian progress. The hosts explore how this report was suppressed, how it contrasts with the propaganda of the Comité d'Études du Haut Congo, and why it matters for understanding the systematic brutality of the rubber economy. They also trace de Smet's own conflicted role as a colonial physician torn between duty and conscience. A gripping look at how one man's medical notes became a silent indictment of a king's regime. #BerlinConference #CongoFreeState #JosephdeSmet #ForcePublique #RubberTerror #LeopoldII #MedicalReport #ColonialMedicine #CongoHistory #BelgianColonialism #SuppressedEvidence #RubberEconomy #AtrocityDocumentation #1885GeneralAct #AfricanHistory #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialViolence Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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