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Last photo taken of Patrice Lumumba. On 17 Jan 1961 Patrice Lumumba was executed by a firing squad

Last photo taken of Patrice Lumumba. On 17 Jan 1961 Patrice Lumumba was executed by a firing squad


Last photo taken of Patrice Lumumba. On 17 Jan 1961 Patrice Lumumba was executed by a firing squad

Last photo taken of Patrice Lumumba. On 17 Jan 1961 Patrice Lumumba was executed by a firing squad. His body was dissolved in acid. His bones were ground up and scattered to the winds to make sure nothing was left of him.

A single tooth is all that remains of the young scholar and nationalist politician whose life and career were cut short in a dark struggle for leadership and control of resources in the central African country.

After resting in his native village, the coffin of the former Belgian Congo's first post-independence prime minister pursued its memorial pilgrimage further. It was here in this town that Lumumba was executed in January 1961, four months after the end of his brief term in office.

"Shilatembo is a place of drama, as his Excellency the Prime Minister said. All the time we were on the road I had tears in my eyes, I was crying, this is the place where they decided to finish him (Patrice Lumumba), to kill him because he had his ideas but they did not disappear, these people were wrong." says Kumel kumelundu Kasongo, a resident of Lubumbashi

For Josaphat Sungu, another resident of Lubumbashi, "... what we can remember about Lumumba is that he is a national hero and he taught us unity and peaceful cohesion, ....

Lumumba's body was dissolved in acid after he was killed, but a Belgian police officer kept the tooth as a trophy. Belgian authorities in 2016 seized the relic from his daughter. The symbolic burial ceremony in Kinshasa is planned for June 30, which is Independence Day.

Patrice Émery Lumumba[e] (/lʊˈmʊmbə/; 2 July 1925 – 17 January 1961) was a Congolese politician and independence leader who served as the first prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (then known as the Republic of the Congo) from June until September 1960, following the May 1960 election. He was the leader of the Congolese National Movement (MNC) from 1958 until his execution in January 1961.

 Ideologically an African nationalist and pan-Africanist, he played a significant role in the transformation of the Congo from a colony of Belgium into an independent republic. Continue reading

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