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Women In Congo

Decent Essays

The legacy of colonization in the African country of Congo has been incredibly destructive. In the past, the Congo has been dealt a low blow by King Leopold of Belgium’s invidious, violent regime. This lasted from 1885 to 1908, not including the Belgian government’s takeover until 1960. The colonial governments committed acts so barbaric towards the Congolese that other Europeans did not believe reports of it at first. The Congo gained independence from Belgium in 1960, but still has a long way to go in order to become strong again. This is due to the country’s evidently distressing past, which created multiple fractures in both the social hierarchy and economy. In the short term, women in Congo lost much of their power and respect through …show more content…

An excerpt from the Watson Institute for International Studies’ Colonization and Independence in Africa text includes a description of the authority women lost in colonization. “Prior to colonialism, many African societies had female representation in government, and women played important roles. African women lost a great deal… European officials treated men as the power brokers and leaders… and passed laws that limited women’s economic independence.” In other words, Congolese women used to hold important roles in the office, and had the right to vote, as well as to handle their own money. This was snatched away when …show more content…

From a similar Watson’s Institute report in the Colonization and Independence in Africa publication, a statement from a Congolese refugee informs of the brutality their family were subject to by the colonists. He recounted that “Women had to give up cultivating the fields and gardens… we could get no more rubber.” This quote then goes on to describe the horrors natives faced every day trying to locate more rubber for Europeans. Indigenous people were beaten, had their hands cut off, or got shot, simply for not finding enough rubber. In the long run, this forced greater poverty to befall the people of Congo: the meager wages paid to the Congolese could not be collected while the worker was recovering from injury. Moreover, a main source of food for families was farming. Farmers were primarily women. With them forced to cease cultivation of their crops, thousands starved to death. In modern day, poverty still plays a leading role in Congo. According to a report from the World Bank in 2015, “the poverty rate remains high in the DRC. The country is among the poorest countries in the world and was ranked 176 out of 187 countries on the Human Development in 2015.” Over half a century later, Congo is an acutely poor nation. This is a direct result of the over-harvesting of rubber, ivory, charcoal, and more that was ordered during colonization. If the natural resources in Congo were reaped and

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