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W is the Word Of an Englishman true; When given, it means What he says, he will do

W is the Word Of an Englishman true; When given, it means What he says, he will do. “Religious Education” A Catholic missionary priest celebrates mass in Guinea. A “ Seneglese Village” in Paris in the late 1800’s. Set up as part of a “human zoo”.

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W is the Word Of an Englishman true; When given, it means What he says, he will do

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  1. W is the Word Of an Englishman true; When given, it means What he says, he will do

  2. “Religious Education” A Catholic missionary priest celebrates mass in Guinea

  3. A “Seneglese Village” in Paris in the late 1800’s. Set up as part of a “human zoo”

  4. Slaves captured from the Congo aboard an Arab slave ship intercepted by the Royal Navy (1869). One of the chief justifications for the colonization of Africa was the suppression of the slave trade

  5. Force Publique soldiers in the Belgian Congo. At its peak, the FP had 19,000 African soldiers, led by 420 white officers.

  6. “Hostages” of the Belgian rubber quotas

  7. Punishing one's loved ones was a common Belgian practice. Thus the price of not "working rubber" may be the life or safety of one's relatives, spouse, or children. Pictured here is a father who is left to contemplate upon the severed hands and feet of his seven-year-old daughter.

  8. A typical punishment for the Africans was mutilation. Belgian soldiers and sentries often chopped off the hands and feet of men, women and children as warnings and reminders to others. Pictured here is a young girl mutilated by Belgian sentries.

  9. “The Colossus of Rhodes” In 1899 Britain completed its takeover of what is today South Africa. This had begun with the annexation of the Cape in 1795 and continued with the conquest of the Boer Republics in the late 19th century, following the Second Boer War. Cecil Rhodes was the pioneer of British expansion north into Africa with his privately owned British South Africa Company. Rhodes expanded into the land north of South Africa and established Rhodesia. Rhodes' dream of a railway connecting Cape Town to Alexandria passing through a British Africa covering the continent is what led to his company's pressure on the government for further expansion into Africa. British gains in southern and East Africa prompted Rhodes and Alfred Milner, Britain's High Commissioner in South Africa, to urge a "Cape-to-Cairo" empire linking by rail the strategically important Canal to the mineral-rich South, though German occupation of Tanganyika prevented its realisation until the end of World War I. In 1903, the All Red Line telegraph system communicated with the major parts of the Empire.

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