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Bokwala: The Story of a Congo Victim (1910) is an extraordinary first-person narrative of survival and suffering told through the eyes of a Congolese man whose life was shaped - and shattered - by slavery and colonial rule. Written by "a Congo Resident," this early twentieth-century work stands as one of the most vivid and humane testimonies of Africa's colonial tragedy. In clear, unembellished prose, Bokwala recalls his youth in the peaceful village of Ekaka, where he lived as the son of a local chief. His idyllic childhood, filled with family warmth and tribal tradition, is suddenly broken when warnings of cannibal raids go unheeded and he is captured.The story that follows traces his descent into bondage - first enslaved by cannibals, and later trapped under the ruthless machinery of European exploitation. Through Bokwala's eyes, readers witness the dual horrors of indigenous and imperial violence: the fear, hunger, and despair of captivity, and the systematic degradation of the Congo's people under the notorious rubber trade. Yet even amid the cruelty, there are glimmers of resilience - in his memories of home, his will to endure, and his belief that freedom and justice may one day return to his land.At once memoir, ethnographic record, and moral indictment, Bokwala exposes the human cost of greed and empire in the Congo Free State. Its realism and emotional clarity make it a rare and vital voice from a time when African perspectives were largely silenced. This powerful narrative stands not merely as a story of one man's ordeal, but as a universal appeal for compassion, dignity, and the end of oppression.