BELGIAN CONGO 1940s AFRICA TRAVELOGUE FILM LIP PLATE PEOPLES 75974
Made by filmmaker
Paul L. Hoefler in the early
1940s, this portrait of the peoples of the
Belgian Congo presents views of native
African people, making sure to emphasize their "savage" history and customs. The film starts with members of a tribe Hoefler identifies as formerly being cannibals. The film primarily studies the Bambouri saucer-lipped tribe. The lip plate, also known as a lip plug or lip disc, is a form of body modification.
Increasingly large discs (usually circular, and made from clay or wood) are inserted into a pierced
hole in either the upper or lower lip, or both, thereby stretching it. The term labret denotes all kinds of pierced-lip ornaments, including plates and plugs. The
Mangbettu tribe in the central
Congo is also profiled. people of
Central Africa living to the south of the Niam-Niam in the
Welle district of Belgian Congo. They number about a million. Their country is a table-land at an altitude of
2500 to
2800 ft.
Despite its abundant animal life, luxuriant vegetation and rich crops of plantain and oil-palm, the Mangbettu have been some of the most inveterate cannibals in
Africa; but since the Congo
State established posts in the country (c.
1895) considerable efforts have been made to stamp out cannibalism. Physically the Mangbettu differ greatly from their negro neighbours. They are not so black and their faces are less negroid, many having quite aquiline noses. The beard, too, is fuller than in most negroes. They appear to have imposed their language and customs on the surrounding tribes, the
Mundu, Abisanga, &c.;
Once a considerable power, they have practically disappeared as far as the original stock is concerned; their language and culture, however, remain, maintained by their subjects, with whom they have to a large extent intermixed. The men wear bark cloth, the art of weaving being unknown, the women a simple loin cloth, often not that. Both sexes paint the body in elaborate designs. As potters, sculptors, boatbuilders and masons the Mangbettu have had few rivals in Africa. Their huts, with pointed roofs, were not only larger and better built, but were cleaner than those of their neighbours, and some of their more important buildings were of great size and exhibited some skill in architecture.
Hoefler was a noted
African explorer who headlined the movie
Africa Speaks about an expedition to Africa in 1928, and published a book about it with the same title in 1931.
The Belgian Congo was a
Belgian colony in Central Africa between
1908 and 1960 in what is now the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (
DRC).
Colonial rule in the Congo began in the late
19th century.
King Leopold II of the
Belgians persuaded the government to support colonial expansion around the then-largely unexplored
Congo Basin. Their ambivalence resulted in
Leopold's creating a colony on his own account. With support from a number of
Western countries,
Leopold achieved international recognition for a personal colony, the
Congo Free State, in 1885. By the turn of the century, however, the violence used by
Free State officials against indigenous Congolese[disambiguation needed] and a ruthless system of economic extraction led to intense diplomatic pressure on
Belgium to take official control of the country, which it did in 1908, creating the Belgian Congo.
During the 1940s and
1950s, the Congo had extensive urbanisation, and the colonial administration began various development programmes aimed at making the territory into a "model colony". One of the results was the development of a new middle class of Europeanised African "évolués" in the cities. By the 1950s the Congo had a wage labour force twice as large as that in any other African colony.
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