Patrice Lumumba's Letter to his wife Pauline Lumumba, 1960

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Patrice Lumumba's Letter to Pauline Lumumba, 1960


Patrice_Lumumba.jpg


My beloved companion,

I write you these words not knowing whether you will receive them, when you will receive them, and whether I will still be alive when you read them. Throughout my struggle for the independence of my country, I have never doubted for a single instant that the sacred cause to which my comrades and I have dedicated our entire lives would triumph in the end. But what we wanted for our country — its right to an honorable life, to perfect dignity, to independence with no restrictions — was never wanted by Belgian colonialism and its Western allies, who found direct and indirect, intentional and unintentional support among certain high officials of the United Nations, that body in which we placed all our trust when we called on it for help.

They have corrupted some of our countrymen; they have bought others; they have done their part to distort the truth and defile our independence. What else can I say? ‘That whether dead or alive, free or in prison by order of the colonialists, it is not my person that is important. What is important is the Congo, our poor people whose independence has been turned into a cage, with people looking at us from outside the bars, sometimes with charitable compassion, sometimes with glee and delight. But my faith will remain unshakable. I know and feel in my very heart of hearts that sooner or later my people will rid themselves of all their enemies, foreign and domestic, that they will rise up as one to say no to the shame and degradation of colonialism and regain their dignity in the pure light of day.

We are not alone. Africa, Asia, and the free and liberated peoples in every corner of the globe will ever remain at the side of the millions of Congolese who will not abandon the struggle until the day when there will be no more colonizers and no more of their mercenaries in our country. I want my children, whom I leave behind and perhaps will never see again, to be told that the future of the Congo is beautiful and that their country expects them, as it expects every Congolese, to fulfill the sacred task of rebuilding our independence, our sovereignty; for without justice there is no dignity and without independence there are no free men.

Neither brutal assaults, nor cruel mistreatment, nor torture have ever led me to beg for mercy, for I prefer to die with my head held high, unshakable faith, and the greatest confidence in the destiny of my country rather than live in slavery and contempt for sacred principles. History will one day have its say; it will not be the history taught in the United Nations, Washington, Paris, or Brussels, however, but the history taught in the countries that have rid themselves of colonialism and its puppets. Africa will write its own history and both north and south of the Sahara it will be a history full of glory and dignity.

Do not weep for me, my companion; I know that my country, now suffering so much, ‘will be able to defend its independence and its freedom. Long live the Congo! Long live Africa!
PATRICE .
 
Patrice Lumumba's Letter to Pauline Lumumba, 1960


Patrice_Lumumba.jpg


My beloved companion,

I write you these words not knowing whether you will receive them, when you will receive them, and whether I will still be alive when you read them. Throughout my struggle for the independence of my country, I have never doubted for a single instant that the sacred cause to which my comrades and I have dedicated our entire lives would triumph in the end. But what we wanted for our country — its right to an honorable life, to perfect dignity, to independence with no restrictions — was never wanted by Belgian colonialism and its Western allies, who found direct and indirect, intentional and unintentional support among certain high officials of the United Nations, that body in which we placed all our trust when we called on it for help.

They have corrupted some of our countrymen; they have bought others; they have done their part to distort the truth and defile our independence. What else can I say? ‘That whether dead or alive, free or in prison by order of the colonialists, it is not my person that is important. What is important is the Congo, our poor people whose independence has been turned into a cage, with people looking at us from outside the bars, sometimes with charitable compassion, sometimes with glee and delight. But my faith will remain unshakable. I know and feel in my very heart of hearts that sooner or later my people will rid themselves of all their enemies, foreign and domestic, that they will rise up as one to say no to the shame and degradation of colonialism and regain their dignity in the pure light of day.

We are not alone. Africa, Asia, and the free and liberated peoples in every corner of the globe will ever remain at the side of the millions of Congolese who will not abandon the struggle until the day when there will be no more colonizers and no more of their mercenaries in our country. I want my children, whom I leave behind and perhaps will never see again, to be told that the future of the Congo is beautiful and that their country expects them, as it expects every Congolese, to fulfill the sacred task of rebuilding our independence, our sovereignty; for without justice there is no dignity and without independence there are no free men.

Neither brutal assaults, nor cruel mistreatment, nor torture have ever led me to beg for mercy, for I prefer to die with my head held high, unshakable faith, and the greatest confidence in the destiny of my country rather than live in slavery and contempt for sacred principles. History will one day have its say; it will not be the history taught in the United Nations, Washington, Paris, or Brussels, however, but the history taught in the countries that have rid themselves of colonialism and its puppets. Africa will write its own history and both north and south of the Sahara it will be a history full of glory and dignity.

Do not weep for me, my companion; I know that my country, now suffering so much, ‘will be able to defend its independence and its freedom. Long live the Congo! Long live Africa!
PATRICE .
ALIKUWA KIONGOZI mwenye DHAMIRA ya kweli na maono yenye dira sahihi,Rest in Peace P.Lumumba
 
When shall we have patriotic leaders like lumumba...... RIP Patrice but congo still misses you because 50 years since ur death the poverty state of your people does not reflect the amount of riches and wealth found in the country.
 
Laana yake ndio inazidi kuitafuna CONGO kiujumla.

"PAMBANA NA HALI YAKO"
 
One of the greatest statemen of Africa. The letter is beautifuly and persuasively writen. You can taste the love of Africa and Congo this man had. I wish he could be alive. Congo, the beautiful country on earth and the richest of all is falling apart because of greedy politicians.
 
A LETTER TO PATRICE LUMUMBA

Dear brother Patrice:

Mbote. Sango nini?

Sorry to take you back on a memory lane, unpleasant as it will surely be. Yours was an insurmountable struggle against foreign transnational mineral companies on one hand and your fellow Congolese brothers doing the bidding of the foreigners on the other. (The foreign entities were not fighting Communism. No, it was just pure unadulterated greed.)

Strong foreign powers have always used the United Nations to foster their ambition of world domination. You just happened to be at the right place but wrong time like your brothers Saddam, Qaddafi, etc., you know who I am talking about.

Today, we are pushing 60 years since your untimely demise at the hands of your very own brethren who were promised crumbs out of the enormous wealth that still lies under your beautiful country. This wealth, be it oil, gas, precious stones, valuable and rare minerals, etc., is still a curse to all weak nations of the world.

Well brother, I just wanted to let you know (as if you didn't know it already) that the neighbouring country of your pal Nyerere, now called Tanzania (TZ), is currently going through tumultuous times, not unlike the Congo of your time.

Precious minerals and stones have always been sought by these multinational entities, and TZ has plenty of them and then some. These entities have now set shops in the country with very lucrative contracts. These contracts benefit these foreigners and few crumbs are thrown at the big wigs of the country.

Literally, these multinationals are pillaging the country clean. These days they even take dirt in containers and ship it out of the country, leaving huge and deep open pits in the ground.

As if this is not enough, now TZ has gas, yes gas, a lot of it. Maybe soon they will have oil too. This situation has made the country (TZ) a big target for top multinationals of the world.

MAGUFULI
There is one problem though in the impending saga between TZ and these powerful OIL, GAS, MINERAL conglomerates. There is this young man, I call him "young man" because he was only 2 years old (a toddler) when those savages in the Congo excecuted you. His name is John MAGUFULI. Oooh brother, you would have loved him. He is a firebrand, very much like yourself.

This man has embarked on a war against these thieving foreign entities. He has vowed to control the mineral business so that the bulk of the country's wealth benefits the citizens. However, his effort is becoming a Herculean task day by day because his very own sisters and brothers are against him and, apparently, for these thieving foreigners. I dare say, his situation is very much like your situation in the late 50s and early 60s. This worries me a lot. I think the man has very few friends left now and it is only the 2nd year of his (potentially) 10 year rule.

If you get a chance Sir, could you please put a good word to the Almighty for him? He needs His guidance now more than at any other time in his life.

Enchanted talking to you, Sir. May you Rest In Peace.
 
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