On May 12, 1915, the Committee on Alleged German
Outrages, chaired by Viscount James
Bryce (1838-1922), published "Report of the Committee
on Alleged German Outrages."
The report claimed that the evil Germans occupying
Belgium, were
in the practice of cutting off people's, often
children's, hands:
A third form of mutilation, the cutting of
one or both hands, is frequently said to
have taken place. In some cases where this
form of mutilation is alleged to have
occurred it may be the consequence of a
cavalry charge up a village street, hacking
and slashing at everything in the way; in
others the victim may possibly have held a
weapon, in others the motive may have been
the theft of rings.
We find many well-established cases of the
slaughter (often accompanied by mutilation)
of whole families, including not
infrequently that of quite small children.
The cutting-off-of-hands did occur, but not by the
Germans in Belgium,
but was a deliberately policy of the Belgian
colonialists in the Congo.
American journalist Adam Hochschild's
award-winning 1998 book King
Leopold's Ghost, is about the
efforts of Belgian
King Leopold II (1835 - 1909) to make the Congo
into a colonial empire. Hochschild
describes how even high officials
of the regime, later admitted the severing of hands
was deliberate policy in the Congo, and thanks
largely to the efforts of William
Henry Shepphard (1865 - 1927), an African
American Presbyterian missionary,
it soon became common knowledge in both Europe
and the United States.
William Henry Shepphard (in the white suit) was
posted to a region of the Congo bordering the
Kasai river, where the resistance of the
indigenous people to the rule of King Leopold
was some of the strongest. The region was also
rich in rubber, the chief interest of the
colonialists.
Shepphard described how in 1899, men armed with
guns, belonging to a tribe whose chief had
allied himself with the Belgian regime, rampage
through his region, plundering and burning more
than a dozen villages. Shepphard was ordered by
his superiors to travel into the bush, putting
him at a severe risk, and to investigate the
cause of the fighting. He found bloodstained
ground, many bodies and the stench of rotting
flesh.
On the day he reached the camp of the
perpetrators of the massacres, he saw many items
being smoked over a fire. He was taken to the
fire by the chief of the marauders, where
Shepphard saw that the items were actually human
hands, he counted 81 of them. The chief said to
Shepphard:
See! here is our evidence. I always have
to cut off the right hands of those we
kill in order to show the State how many
we have killed.
The smoking of the hands helped preserve the
evidence, as it was sometimes weeks before they
were able to collect their credits for the hands
from a official of the regime.
If a village refused to submit to the Belgian's
rubber regime, the troops, or often their allies
would shoot everyone in that village to send a
message to the neighbouring villages. But in the
case of the allies teaching the lesson, the
Belgians were mistrustful and demanded that
evidence of a human killed must be produced for
each bullet given to their allies, and therefore
bullets wouldn't be wasted on hunting, or worse;
saved to be used in an uprising against the
Belgians themselves.
A severed right hand, was the standard proof of
a kill, but often, very often it appears, a
right hand would be taken from a live person, as
the bullets had been used for hunting.
William Henry Shepphard's writings, detailing
the severed hands and many other atrocities
appeared in the American
Presbyterian Congo
Mission newsletter. For
this, in 1908 Shepphard was sued for libel by
the Kasai Rubber Company. Shepphard was defended
in a court in the Congo, by Belgian
lawyer/politician Emile Vandevelde.
Shepphard was acquitted.
Belgian socialist politician Emile Vandevelde
(1866 - 1938), was not Jewish, but he was a
Freemason, and an outspoken supporter of
Zionism. He has been hailed as being highly
influential in gathering European support for
Zionism before and after WW1.
Only a few weeks before the Committee on Alleged
German Outrages published the allegations
that the Germans were cutting off people's
hands, Vandevelde, by then a Belgium government
minister, had again criticised Belgium crimes in
the Congo. This resulted in a public spate with
his fellow Belgian minister.
click image to enlarge
It has been alleged,
the Report of Committee on Alleged German
Outrages, was
rushed to be finished, being printed just days
five days after the Lusitania was sunk, in a
hope to further garner support for United State
entry into the war. Not a single witness was
interviewed by the committee, they merely
examined some 1,300 affidavits from Belgian
refugees. These affidavits were subsequently
lost, later found, then presumed destroyed by a
German rocket in WWII, ie they've never been
examined by anyone other than the committee. So
how many of the Belgians, if any, claimed the
Germans cut off people's hands
Belgian-Congo-style, will never be known.
Sources