Throughout the late 19th century, and well into the 1950′s,
Africans and in some cases Native Americans, were kept as exhibits in zoos. Far
from a relic from an unenlightened past, remnants of such exhibits have
continued in Europe as late as the 2000′s.
Throughout the early 20th century, Germany held what was
termed a, “Peoples Show,” or Völkerschau. Africans were brought in as carnival
or zoo exhibits for passers-by to gawk at.
Only decades before, in the late 1800′s, Europe had been
filled with, “human zoos,” in cities like Paris, Hamburg, Antwerp, Barcelona,
London, Milan, and Warsaw. New York too saw these popular exhibits continue
into the 20th century. There was an average of 200,000 to 300,000 visitors who
attended each exhibition in each city.
Carl Hagenbeck of Germany ran exhibits of what he called,
“purely natural,” populations, usually East Asian Islanders, but in 1876, he
also sent a collaborator to the Sudan to bring back, “wild beasts and Nubians.”
The traveling Nubian exhibit was a huge success in cities like Paris, London,
and Berlin.
The World’s Fair, in 1889 was visited by 28 million people,
who lined up to see 400 indigenous people as the major attraction. The 1900
World’s Fair followed suit, as did the Colonial Exhibitions in Marseilles (1906
and 1922) and in Paris (1907 and 1931) which displayed naked or semi-naked
humans in cages. Paris saw 34 million people attend their exhibition in six
months alone.
Just four years shy of the 20th century, the Cincinnati Zoo
kept one hundred Sioux Native Americans in a mock village at the zoo for three
months.
In 1906, the amateur anthropologist Madison Grant, who was
the head of the New York Zoological Society, put a Congolese pygmy Ota Benga,
on display at the Bronx Zoo in New York City. The display was in the primate
exhibit, and Ota was often made to carry around chimpanzees and other apes.
Eugenicist and zoo director William Hornaday labeled Ota, “The Missing Link.”
The public flocked to see the display.
Ota Benga at Bronx Zoo
Benga shot targets with a bow and arrow, wove twine, and
wrestled with an orangutan. Although, according to the New York Times, “few
expressed audible objection to the sight of a human being in a cage with
monkeys as companions,” controversy erupted as black clergymen in the city took
great offense. “Our race, we think, is depressed enough, without exhibiting one
of us with the apes,” said the Reverend James H. Gordon, superintendent of the
Howard Colored Orphan Asylum in Brooklyn. “We think we are worthy of being considered
human beings, with souls.”
In 1906, the Bronx Zoo kept Ota Benga on a human exhibit.
The sign outside of her fenced in area of the primate exhibit read, “Age, 23
years. Height, 4 feet 11 inches. Weight, 103 pounds. Brought from the Kasai
River, Congo Free State, South Central Africa, by Dr. Samuel P. Verner.
Exhibited each afternoon during September.”
These sorts of, “human zoos,” continued even later. The
Brussels 1958 World’s Fair kept a Congolese village on display. Even as late as
April 1994, an Ivory Coast village was kept as part of an African safari in
Port-Saint-Père (Planète Sauvage), near Nantes, France.
In Germany, as late as 2005, Augsburg’s zoo in Germany had
similar exhibits. In August 2005, London Zoo also displayed humans wearing fig
leaves, and in 2007, Adelaide Zoo housed people in a former ape enclosure by
day. They were, of course, allowed to return home at night, unlike many of the
earlier incarnations of these racist displays.
Many people console themselves with the belief that the
racism of yesterday remains safely in the past. But the echoes of the, “human
zoo,” into recent years show that this is far from the case. The racism of the
past continues to bleed through into the present.
(Article by M.B. David)
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