Friday, 7 December 2012

Tintin War's Final Episode: Brussels Appellate Court rules "Tintin in the Congo" not racist

(IMAGE 1: A frame from "Tintin in the Congo")



(PHOTO 2: Belgium-based Congolese Bienvenu Mbutu Mondondo, anti-Tintin

in the Congo crusader)



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I have time and again denounced on this blog the frivolous crusade

against "Tintin in the Congo" launched about 4 years ago by the

fame-seeking mercurial Congolese student Bienvenu Mbutu Mondondo.



Mondondo had filed a lawsuit against the Tintin series Belgian

publisher Casteman and SA Moulinsart, the company holding the

exclusive rights of the author known as Hergé (Rémi Georges).



Soon enough, the French government-funded

"anti-defamation-league"-like group called CRAN--Conseil Représentatif

des Associations Noires (the Representative Council of Black

Associations)--jumped into the bandwagon as co-plaintiff.



Mondondo and CRAN were suing "Tintin in the Congo," published in 1930,

on the basis of a 1981 Belgian law against racism.



They wanted Casterman and Moulinsart to "cease any commercial

exploitation" of the comic book, to have it removed from kids' library

bookshelves, and for copies of it in adult libraries to carry a

warning to readers about its alleged virulent racist content.



As their lawyer argued in lower court in a florid display of

political- correctness amok coupled with undigested psychobabble:



"The stereotypes contained in this book read by a countless number of

children have still consequences on their behavior currently."



(Last year I ranted at great length on this blog against another

instance of political-correcteness run amok in the form of the "recent

assault on Mark Twain in the U.S. where some wacky editors have just

taken upon themselves to replace in his "Huckleberry Finn" the words

"nigger(s)" and "Injian(s)" with respectively "slave(s)" and

"Indian(s)". And I linked the assault on "Huckleberry Finn" to

Mondondo's attacks against "Tintin in the Congo.")



Last year a Begian lower court ruled that "Tintin in the Congo" was

not racist, a ruling the plaintiffs immediately appealed.



And Wednesday, December 5, the Brussels Appellate Court affirmed the

trial court.



The opinion of the Appellate Court reads in part:



"If we were to follow the appellants, for whom it would suffice to

take into account the simple intent of publishing a book, that would

require banning today, for instance, the publication of some of the

works of Voltaire, whose racism, notably toward Blacks and Jews, was

inherent to his thought, as well as whole segments of literature,

which cannot be accepted [as] the passage of time must be taken into

account."



The Appellate Court further stated that Hergé didn't create a comic

strip in order to convey ideas of a"racist, hurtful, humiliating or

degrading nature toward Congolese."



Adding:



"Hergé limited himself to producing a work of fiction with the sole

objective of entertaining his readers. He carries out therein candid

and gentle humor."



The Appellate Court finally debunks the "new historicist" argument of

the plaintiffs by reminding them that Hergé, who never set foot in the

Congo to begin with, researched his subject--the Congo of the time--at

the Tervuren Colonial Museum and was therefore only reproducing the

stereotypes conveyed by the bourgeois Catholic milieu of that

Zeitgeist.



"It is above all a testament to the common history of Belgium and the

Congo at a given epoch," the Appellate Court concluded.



As the Congolese painter Tshibumba

Kanda Matulu--"disappeared" by Mobutu in Lubumbashi--once quipped in a

fieldwork interview with anthropologist Johannes Fabian on one of the

most vivid subplots in "Tintin au Congo":



"The leopard man should grab Tintin Instead a snake grabs the leopard

man."



Let's just hope that henceforth the leopard man Bienvenu Mbutu

Mondondo will leave Tintin alone and find another conspiracy theory to

waste his time on...



---With levif.be; lemonde.fr; & lefigaro.fr--



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CREDITS: Image 1: lemonde.fr; & Photo 2: Internet sources.

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