Brought from his homeland in central Africa and displayed like an animal in New York City, New York. Ota Benga
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Brought from his homeland in central Africa and displayed like an animal in New York City, New York. Ota Benga
Ota Benga was a teenage boy brought from his homeland in
central Africa and displayed like an animal at the Bronx Zoo in New York
City, New York.
Benga was born sometime in 1883 in the Ituri Forest in what would soon
become the Congo Free State (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo).
He was born into the Mbuti Pygmy colony, one of many small bands of
extended family groups of between 15 to 20 people. These colonies were
nomadic, moving from one temporary village or camp to another as
dictated by the seasons and hunting opportunities throughout the year.
At the 1885 Berlin Conference that partitioned Africa, King Leopold II
of Belgium was allowed to take possession of the Congo Free State. In
order to make his possession profitable, Leopold began to exploit the
region’s resources including rubber and imposed forced labor on the
inhabitants including the Mbuti Pygmies which often were reinforced by
beatings, amputations, and murder.
When Benga, a teenager, returned from an elephant hunt and found his
entire family and village had been slaughtered by Force Publique, the
private army of King Leopold created to enforce rubber production
quotas. Benga now alone and defenseless, was kidnapped by slave traders
and put to work as a laborer in an agricultural village.
In 1904, Benga was freed by an American missionary and amateur
anthropologist Samuel Phillips Verner who was under contract from
the Louisiana Purchase Exposition to bring back pygmies to be part of a
human exhibition at the fair. Verner found Benga and negotiated his
release from the slave traders for a pound of salt and a bolt of cloth.
Verner recruited other Africans for the exhibit as well and the group
was brought to St. Louis in June 1904.
The Africans were displayed and Ota Benga became a particularly popular
“performer” who attracted huge crowds. On exhibit at the same time with
the Apache chief Geronimo, the two became friends. For his efforts,
Verner was awarded a gold medal in anthropology at the close of the
Expedition.
Verner and Benga returned to central Africa at the end of the Exposition
but Benga, feeling he no longer belonged, chose to come back with the
anthropologist to the United States in 1906. Verner took Benga to the
Bronx Zoo where he was initially hired to help with the animals. Zoo
officials however began to exhibit him in the Monkey House where again
he attracted large crowds. While Benga proved a popular “attraction,” a
group of black New York clergymen led by Rev.
James
H. Gordon, demanded that he be freed. By the end of 1906, 23-year-old
Benga was released to the custody of Rev. Gordon who placed him in the
New York City’s Howard Colored Orphan Asylum.
In 1910 Gordon arranged for Benga to relocate to
Lynchburg, Virginia where he received formal schooling and religious
training for the first time. Benga began working at a local tobacco
factory to pay for his journey back to Central Africa. By 1914,
however World War I began and severely limited passenger ship travel. On
March 20, 1916, most likely overcome with depression and heartbreak,
Ota Benga committed suicide in Lynchburg, Virginia. He was about 33
years of age at the time of his death.
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