D.R. Congo

D.R. Congo by Loso Kiteti Boya, published by Xlibris Corporation in 2010, offers a detailed exploration of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s complex history from the perspective of a Congolese native. Spanning 198 pages, this book recounts a five-hundred-year journey, analyzing the turbulent events that have shaped the lives of modern-day Congolese. It delves into the paradox of a resource-rich nation grappling with poverty, while also revisiting the ancient kingdom of Congo and its cultural heritage.
Readers will find an in-depth examination of the social, political, and economic challenges facing the DR Congo, alongside a discussion of its rich natural resources, including the Congo River and vast mineral wealth. The narrative traverses historical events, including the impact of foreign invasions and the legacy of slavery, while also addressing the internal struggles of Congolese leaders throughout history. This edition invites readers to reflect on the connections between past and present, aiming to identify strategies for a renaissance in the region.
Official synopsis Publisher
Book Synopsis: This book recounts from the perspective of a Congolese native the five-hundred-year journey of the people of the Democratic Republic of Congo. It analyzes dispassionately the facts of the turbulent history of the country and its continuing impact on the life of the modern-day Congolese. In the book, we set out to begin the search for the “Congolese” answers to the DR Congo’s historical paradox of a very rich country living a very poor life in a neighborhood in which it is the biggest and yet the weakest country. We travel back five hundred years to rediscover the ancient kingdom of Congo and look closely at its people, institutions, value and belief systems, customs and practices and try to establish the linkages between the present cultural values, belief system, and practices of the modern-day Congolese with those of their past. Through the revisiting of the past, we try to identify the ways and means of a more effective strategy for social, political, and economic renaissance in the DR Congo. Although a diary, the book is not a chronological presentation of the Congo’s history. The reader can expect to travel back and forth on the meandering road of the Congolese journey. The DR Congo is a land of ecological gigantism and an environmental Garden of Eden. It has the second largest freshwater river in the world, the Congo River, a powerful source of clean energy, and the second largest tropical rain forest in the world; the largest number of big lakes in Africa, including Lake Tanganyika; one of the largest assortment of minerals and precious metals and gems in the world, including uranium; and a large landmass of 906,000 square miles stretching over two time zones with a population of less than seventy million, translating into one the lowest population densities in the world. Such an array of diverse and rich natural resources and the extraordinary economic power potential of DR Congo have always attracted envy and invasions from foreign countries, multinational companies, and individuals over the centuries, the latest being the attack of the combined armies of Rwanda, Uganda, and Burundi in August 1998. The history of the DR Congo is also the history of the darkness of the human heart, extreme cruelty and violence, greed and selfishness by the early European explorers, the slave traders, the Zanzibari Arab slave merchants of the last centuries, and the neocolonialists and cold warriors of the twentieth century. It is the history of treason of the Congo by the Congolese, the betrayal of the public trust of the people, and of the pursuit of power at all costs and bad management of the economy by the Congolese leaders and the politicians, from the medieval kings of the kingdom of the Congo to the present-day ruling class. The book follows the less publicized but crucial journeys of the numerous Congolese slaves to the Americas, documenting their early settlements in the United States, the Caribbean Islands, and Brazil and reconnecting their present-day descendants in the Americas to their Congolese roots and ancestry.
Publisher
Topics
FAQ
What is “D.R. Congo” about?
Who is the author of “D.R. Congo”?
When was “D.R. Congo” published?
What is the ISBN for “D.R. Congo”?
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
