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History in photographs at Bengaluru's Indian Institute of World Culture
History in photographs at Bengaluru's Indian Institute of World Culture

The Hindu

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Hindu

History in photographs at Bengaluru's Indian Institute of World Culture

India's fight for freedom triggered a ripple effect among other nations buckling under colonial oppression; and among these was the African nation of Congo. Patrice Lumumba was a Congolese politician who lead his country to independence and had close ties to Indian leaders of the time. A photo exhibition titled The Undying Flame of Patrice Lumumba, is currently on display in Bengaluru. Organised by the Intercivilizational Dialogue Project and the Indian Institute of World Culture (IIWC) the show not only shines a spotlight on African freedom struggles, but also celebrates Patrice's birth centenary. Curated by Archishman Raju and Nandita Chaturvedi, and organised by Arakali Venkatesh at IIWC, the show is a history lesson in pictures. According to Nandita, the purpose of this show is two-fold: to explore India's connection to the world and understand the exchange of ideas between different civilizations. 'At one point in time, Patrice Lumumba was known everywhere in the world and when he was assassinated in 1961, there were protests in all the major Indian cities. We felt it was important to bring this period in history back in to public awareness.' During that times lost to recent history, the Indian government was involved in the crisis in the Congo and Nehru wrote many letters to the UN Secretary General. Large scale protests were also organised by Aruna Asaf Ali in Delhi. 'Following the assassination of Patrice, Nehru sent the Indian Army to help with the situation there. This was also part of the peace movement to let people all over the world know about the struggles against colonialism going on in different nations,' she says, adding that the Indian freedom movement became a case study for almost all of Africa that was under colonialism in 1947. Ghana was one of the first sub Saharan African country to gain independence, largely through the efforts of Kwame Nkrumah, who employed methods of civil disobedience in their own struggle. Though there are many examples of African leaders taking a page or two out of India's fight for freedom, the exhibition focuses on Patrice Lumumba, Kwame Nkrumah, Oliver Tambo of South Africa and Amilcar Cabral of Guinea Bissau, as well as WEB Du Bois, the father of the Pan African Movement. Though leaders of the African movement studied India's approach, in many areas it took on a different character due to varying conditions. For instance, the Belgians did not train native Congolese in administration, while we had a 100-year-long struggle, which gave us time to prepare unlike many African nations which were left in chaos, says Nandita. 'The exhibition is also dedicated to ES Reddy, an Indian diplomat, who used to be leader of the UN Special Committee Against Apartheid from 1963 to 1965. Though he lived most of his life in the United States, he was deeply involved in the anti-apartheid struggle and may be better known in South Africa than in India today,' she adds. As a student, Reddy participated in the Quit India movement, and while in the United States for higher studies, he met activist Paul Robeson, who got him involved in the African movement. Reddy also developed a close friendship with Oliver Tambo, one of the central figures in the South African movement. 'In a way, Reddy is a bridge between the two nations and the show is dedicated to him too as it was his birth centenary last year,' she adds. The different rooms of the IIWC not only highlights the series of events that stand out during the freedom struggle of these nations, but also documents the alliances and mutual support between world leaders. Needless to say, the 65 photographs on display are mostly in black and white, interspersed with quotes from nation heads and a copy African National Congress Freedom Charter. According to Nandita, a lot of the images on display have been made available by the United Nations and many of the photographers who believed their work served a broader purpose. These images can be accessed at and 'We are living in a time when the world is shifting and political relationships are being remade — both between the West and other nations as well as between nations that were once known as Third World. We feel useful relationships can lift people out of poverty and promote peace,' says Nandita talking about the purpose of behind such events by the Intercivilizational Dialogue Project. The Undying Flame of Patrice Lumumba is on display at the Indian Institute of World Culture till July 25 (will possibly be extended / relocated). Entry free.

Patrice Lumumba's struggle was global, not just African
Patrice Lumumba's struggle was global, not just African

Russia Today

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Russia Today

Patrice Lumumba's struggle was global, not just African

Patrice Lumumba's fight for justice and freedom went beyond Africa and had a global impact, his daughter Juliana has told RT in an exclusive interview. The former minister of culture of the Democratic Republic of the Congo emphasized that her father's fight became – both for the Soviet Union and for Africa – 'an emblem of the anti-colonial struggle and for ideals, in any case also against neocolonialism.' The strength of that solidarity was made visible through symbolic gestures such as 'the naming of avenues in his honor,' she noted. Lumumba's 'struggle for justice and freedom was not limited to Africa and transcended borders,' she added. While many countries condemned Lumumba's assassination in 1961, 'it was strongest in the Soviet Union,' where the Peoples' Friendship University was named after her father, Juliana Lumumba said. That same university in Moscow 'still bears his name today as Patrice Lumumba University' and has produced many African specialists and numerous African leaders, including in the DC Congo, she noted. According to Lumumba, this reflects a form of 'geopolitical continuity… a solidarity that is present, real, and continues.' Turning to Africa's own future, Juliana Lumumba stressed that 'breaking free from neocolonialism can only be accomplished by unity.' Genuine African solidarity, she said, is being translated into action. 'For example, there's more trade between African countries because we have more trade with each other than with foreigners, European countries or the US,' Lumumba added. 'There's this desire which is becoming stronger and stronger.' Juliana Lumumba previously described her father as a 'truly iconic figure' of African dignity, who 'symbolizes... liberation, the Africa that he wanted to see independent, standing on its own feet, united.' Patrice Lumumba was born in 1925 and died in 1961. He was the first democratically elected prime minister of the DR Congo following its liberation from Belgian colonial rule in 1960. His murder was the result of a complex conspiracy involving both domestic Congolese actors and foreign powers, particularly Belgium. On January 17, 1961, Lumumba and his comrades were shot by Katangese soldiers under the command of Belgian officers and buried at the site of the shooting. The following day, the bodies were dug up, dismembered, and dissolved in acid.

Experience the powerful film screenings honouring Lumumba, Fanon, and Kriel in Cape Town
Experience the powerful film screenings honouring Lumumba, Fanon, and Kriel in Cape Town

IOL News

time03-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • IOL News

Experience the powerful film screenings honouring Lumumba, Fanon, and Kriel in Cape Town

The first screening taking place will be that of 'Soundtrack to a Coup d'État' on July 4, at the Africa Unite office located on 6 Spin Street, Cape Town. The film screening is set to begin at 3.30pm. Image: Supplied Cinephiles and pan-African activists are encouraged to attend the forthcoming film screenings reflecting on not only the legacy of Patrice Lumumba but also Frantz Fanon and Ashley Kriel. The first screening taking place will be that of 'Soundtrack to a Coup d'État' on July 4, at the Africa Unite office located on 6 Spin Street, Cape Town. The film screening is set to begin at 3.30pm. The event will include a meet and greet among attendees, as well as a question and answer session. The screening is inviting people to reflect on the life and ideals of Lumumba, the first prime minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo. It will include a gathering of advocacy actors, activists, communities, families, and human rights networks in Cape Town, where they will interrogate the foreign influences on geopolitical instabilities in Africa with the Congo Basin as a focal point. The movie, 'Soundtrack to a Coup d'État', is a powerful documentary by Johan Grimonprez that explores the intersection of jazz, politics, and decolonisation, focusing on jazz legends like Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, and Nina Simone in their roles as cultural ambassadors during the 1960s. With a rich combination of archival footage, historical narrative, and unforgettable musical performances, the film reveals how these artists became unwitting players in the CIA's plot to assassinate Lumumba in 1960. The documentary highlights the important protests of powerful women like singer Abbey Lincoln and activist Andrée Blouin, while probing the murky alliances between Western powers and the local forces behind the assassination. Cinephiles and pan-African activists are encouraged to attend the forthcoming film screenings reflecting on not only the legacy of Patrice Lumumba but also Frantz Fanon and Ashley Kriel. Image: Supplied Adwa Movement PRO and Africa Unite peer educator, Ras Hein, said: 'An awareness of our past is essential to the establishment of our personality and our identity as Africans. 'As young pan-African practitioners, we advance the ideal that 'the People will praxis'. In the context of Congolese independence celebrated on June 30, and Patrice Lumumba, DRC's first prime minister, who turns 100 on July 2. 'We have organised this tribute event as a collective of civil society organisations, practitioners, creatives, and activists. The DRC represents the heart of Africa. In the words of Frantz Fanon, who turns 100 on July 20: 'Let us be sure never to forget it; the fate of all of us is at stake in the Congo'.' In conjunction with the first screening, there will also be the Ashley Kriel Memorial Cypher taking place on July 11 to honour Cape Flats anti-apartheid activist and youth leader Kriel, who was murdered by police. The event, taking place at the Castle of Good Hope at 5pm, is in commemoration of his legacy of leadership and the contribution that youth across South Africa played in the Struggle against apartheid. The Ashley Kriel Memorial Cypher is an autonomous annual initiative that recognises that young progressives today, as in the past, have a critical role to play in the conscientisation of grassroots communities. The event will include the screening of his documentary as well. Cinephiles and pan-African activists are encouraged to attend the forthcoming film screenings reflecting on not only the legacy of Patrice Lumumba but also Frantz Fanon and Ashley Kriel. Image: Supplied Thereafter, there will also be another screening of Göran Hugo Olsson's 2014 documentary 'Concerning Violence' on July 15 to mark the centenary of the birth of psychiatrist, political philosopher, and Marxist Fanon. The film is a 2014 documentary film based on Fanon's essay, "Concerning Violence" from his 1961 book "The Wretched of the Earth". American singer and actor Lauryn Hill narrates this exploration of the anticolonial struggles of the 1960s and 1970s. '2025 presents us with important Africa liberation struggle commemorations: 100 years of Patrice Lumumba, 140 Years of the Berlin conference colonial project, and a 100 years of Fanon, as grassroots community leaders, advocacy space organisers and civil society organisations, we know it is important to create these spaces of alternative education,' Hein said. Cinephiles and pan-African activists are encouraged to attend the forthcoming film screenings reflecting on not only the legacy of Patrice Lumumba but also Frantz Fanon and Ashley Kriel. Image: Supplied Hein said there are strong xenophobic currents in society, and that it is important to combat so that social cohesion can prosper. 'All of these dimensions (Kriel, Fanon and Lumumba) make up proper consciousness… It is different events, but usually it is the same networks (that is) growing and attracting people who want authentic and genuine grassroots initiatives like this.' [email protected]

65 years on, Belgium edges closer to trial over Lumumba's assassination
65 years on, Belgium edges closer to trial over Lumumba's assassination

Yahoo

time22-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

65 years on, Belgium edges closer to trial over Lumumba's assassination

Sixty-five years after the 1961 assassination of Patrice Lumumba, a key figure in the Congolese independence movement, the Belgian federal prosecutor's office hopes that a trial may finally take place – possibly in 2026 – as part of the investigation into 'war crimes' opened in Belgium, the former colonial power. The Belgian federal prosecutor's office announced during the week that it had requested the referral of former Belgian diplomat Étienne Davignon to the Brussels criminal court, as part of the investigation into the 1961 assassination of former prime minister Patrice Lumumba. Aged 92, Étienne Davignon is the only person still alive among the ten suspects named in the 2011 war crimes complaint filed by Lumumba's children. The referral to trial is requested notably for the 'illegal detention and transfer' of Lumumba at the time he was taken prisoner, and for 'humiliating and degrading treatment', a spokesperson for the prosecutor's office, Ann Lukowiak, told French news agency AFP. An 'intent to kill' charge has not been retained - a dismissal is sought on that aspect, she added. Last remains of Congolese independence hero Lumumba to return home Patrice Lumumba was the first prime minister of the former Belgian Congo, after it became independent on 30 June 1960, but he was overthrown in mid-September 1960 by a coup d'état. Reflecting on the conditions of this 'terrible' assassination, De Croo pointed to Belgian officials who at the time 'chose not to see' and 'not to act.' Read more on RFI EnglishRead also:From 1960 to present day, 11 dates that explain the conflict in the DRCBelgium to pay damages for forced separations in Congo during colonial ruleBelgium finally returns murdered DRC leader Lumumba's tooth

Who killed Patrice Lumumba, DR Congo's first prime minister? – DW – 06/18/2025
Who killed Patrice Lumumba, DR Congo's first prime minister? – DW – 06/18/2025

DW

time19-06-2025

  • Politics
  • DW

Who killed Patrice Lumumba, DR Congo's first prime minister? – DW – 06/18/2025

For Juliana Lumumba, Patrice Lumumba wasn't just an independence leader and politician. He has her father. That's why she continues to call for the truth about Lumumba's assassination 64 years ago. For more than 60 years, Juliana Lumumba has had questions. Who murdered her father? How did the Americans help? What did the United Nations do? Did they stand idly by, even though he was under their protection? They are uncomfortable questions, political questions. And Juliana will not rest until she has answers. "You cannot be the child of Patrice Lumumba without this impacting your life" she says. Her gaze is composed as she looks out of the window of her house in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Lumumba murder case could go to trial On June 17, the Belgian federal prosecutor's office announced that it has requested that the case in connection with the assassination of Juliana's father be referred to a Brussels criminal court. It follows more than a decade of investigation. On Congo's independence day in 1960, Patrice Lumumba spoke about the atrocities inflicted on Congolese people under Belgian colonial rule, angering King Baudouin (in white) Image: Belga/IMAGO The Belgian state is partly responsible for the murder. A 2001 parliamentary investigation established that King Baudouin, Belgium's then-monarch, knew about the assassination plan but did nothing to stop it. Juliana's brother Francois, the plaintiff in a 2011 complaint, accused the Belgian state of war crimes and torture, and of having been part of a conspiracy aimed at the political and physical elimination of his father. Lumumba fought for the Congo's independence On June 30, 1960, Patrice Lumumba freed the Congo from Belgian colonial rule and became the country's first prime minister. He promised democracy, prosperity and an end to the exploitation of Congolese minerals by foreign powers. But that never happened. The West – in particular Belgium and the US — opposed Lumumba's plans to nationalize Congo's raw materials and his proximity with the Soviet Union in the midst of the Cold War. On January 17, 1961, half a year after Lumumba was elected the first prime minister of a free Congo, Congolese separatists took him to the hostile province of Katanga – with Belgian and American blessing. Lumumba and two of his aides were shot in the forest under the command of Belgian officers. The facts only came to light thanks to investigations by the likes of Belgian sociologist and writer, Ludo De Witte, whose findings were detailed in his 2003 book, "The Assassination of Lumumba." Patrice Lumumba gives a press conference in Leopoldville in August 1960. He would be dead 5 months later at only 35. Image: AFP Another Belgian officer, Gerard Soete, sawed the bodies in pieces and dissolved them in sulfuric acid. Two teeth were all that remained of Lumumba. Soete kept them as a trophy. Juliana learned about this on television, in a 2000 report on a German broadcaster in which Soete himself recounted the details and held the teeth into the camera. This gruesome memory still angers Juliana. "How would you feel if they told you that your father was not only killed, buried, unburied, cut in pieces but they also took parts of his body?", she asks. "To many, he was the first prime minister of the Congo, a national hero. But for me, he's my father." Still fighting for the truth Years later, Juliana wrote a letter to the Belgian king demanding one of the teeth be returned. No one knows where the second one is. Soete had claimed that he had thrown it into the North Sea. He died shortly after, but later his daughter showed the golden tooth to a journalist. Ludo De Witte then sued her and Belgian authorities confiscated the remains. Lumumba's children at the ceremony in Brussels, receiving the last remains of their father Image: Nicolas Maeterlinck/Belga/AFP In 2022, then prime minister Alexander de Croo returned the tooth to Lumumba's children at a ceremony in Brussels and apologized – unlike King Philippe, a direct descendant of King Baudouin, who did not utter the word "sorry." He merely expressed his "deepest regrets" for the violence inflicted on the Congolese people under Belgian rule. But apologies are not the point for Juliana. "It's not a problem of apology. It's a problem of truth. Verité," she says. "I need to know the truth." Growing up in exile When her father was murdered, Juliana was just five years old. She learned of it while in exile in Egypt. A few months before Lumumba's assassination, she and her siblings were smuggled out of their house in Congo, where their father was placed under house arrest, and taken to Cairo with fake passports. Patrice Lumumba knew he was going to die, Juliana says. He also hinted at it in his last letter to his wife. In Cairo, Lumumba's children grew up with Mohamed Abdel Aziz Ishak, a diplomat and friend of Lumumba. But they couldn't escape their own history. "We are a political family," says Juliana. "We came to Egypt for political reasons, hosted by President Nasser. Politics is the core of our lives, whether we like it or not." The children also entered politics. Juliana held various ministerial posts, and her brother Francois is the leader of the Congolese National Movement, the party his father founded. In 2022, Patrice Lumumba was finally laid to rest in a ceremony in Kinshasa Image: Samy Ntumba Shambuyi/AP Photo/picture alliance Juliana says that she always knew that her father's assassination was political, even when she was still a child in Cairo. The news of Lumumba's death in 1961 spread quickly in the city. "They set fire to the library of the American university and looted the Belgian embassy," she recalls. "People in the streets shouted 'Lumumba, Lumumba.'" Guilt, accountability and colonial continuities It wasn't until 1994, when Congo's Mobutu dictatorship was on the verge of collapse, that Juliana returned to her homeland after years in exile. This had been her father's wish. "He told us, no matter what happens, you have to come back home. So, when it was safe for us again, we came back home, where we belong," she says. Today, Juliana is less active in Congolese politics. She doesn't want to talk about the current situation, the conflict between the Congolese army and the rebel militia M23, or the ongoing exploitation of natural resources by Western nations, China, Rwanda, and other foreign powers. Juliana Lumumba, the daughter of Patrice Lumumba, wants justice for her father. Image: privat Nor does she want to speak about the potential trial in Brussels of the last living suspect who might have been complicit in her father's killing, 92-year-old Etienne Davignon. A former top Belgian diplomat, businessman and former vice-president of the European Commission, Davignon is the last of 10 Belgians who were accused of involvement in the murder in the 2011 lawsuit filed by the Lumumba children. With little progress in over six decades, Juliana is losing hope that someone will finally face justice for her father's death. "No one has been held accountable. No Belgian, no European, no Congolese. No white, no Black. Everybody agrees that there was an assassination. There is a crime. But nobody has done it," she says. On July 2, 2025, Patrice Lumumba would have been 100 years old. Edited by Stuart Braun

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