Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat (2024) Movie Script

1
[high-pitched, staticky tone]
[dynamic jazz drumming]
[echoed cymbal crash]
[dynamic jazz drumming]
[vocalizing]
[dynamic jazz drumming]
[vocalizing]
[vocalizing]
[sporadic jazz drumming]
[vocalizing]
[dynamic jazz drumming]
[vocalizing]
[dynamic jazz drumming]
[vocalizing]
[echoed drum flourish]
[man] Can you remember
when you first killed a man?
Sort of like it's so final.
That's what grabbed me, I think.
[man] And did that feeling last
when you had to do it again?
No, it was only for that evening,
I think, before I slept...
that I thought about that.
I've often thought about this.
That's why I can say it so clearly:
"How did I feel about it?"
And that's the score,
because after that, when we moved north,
there was a lot of killing.
And it just happened so fast
that you didn't even realize it.
I think, after you were
there a little while,
you became "callous,"
I think, is the word?
Very hard, you know?
You don't care a damn.
[clears throat]
[eerie, squeaky clattering]
[bandleader] Are you ready? One, two, on
[lively vintage jazz music]
So, the government is thinking
about sending me into Russia.
And anybody who says that the Russians
don't love good jazz...
oh, you send them to me!
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen.
I'm Mr. Armstrong.
[man speaking Russian] I don't
understand those composers.
Nowadays, when I turn on the radio,
-I immediately switch it off.
-[radio clicks off]
It drives me crazy.
It's not music, but a cacophony.
[Louis Armstrong scatting]
[jet engines roar]
[newsman] One of America's
most popular emissaries
gets a warm reception
as he arrives in the troubled Congo
on a State Department-
sponsored goodwill mission.
Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong,
whose golden trumpet
has preached the gospel
of New Orleans jazz on every continent,
arrives in truly royal style.
[swinging jazz music]
[stately music playing]
[woman] This is Radio Moscow.
[newsman] Louie's solid swinging
outraged Radio Moscow,
which blasted Armstrong's
visit as a diversionary tactic.
[lively vintage jazz music]
[man speaking French] Are you
a communist, Mr. Lumumba?
[Patrice Lumumba, in French]
I always have to laugh
when they ask me that question.
I'm not a communist at all.
I'm an African.
[man] Would you agree that
you're on the lunatic fringe
of the American Negro movement?
Well, I think this:
that America's whole situation
is a lunatic fringe.
Anytime you have a country
that refers to itself
as "the Free World" and a democracy,
and at the same time has
22 million of its citizens
who aren't permitted citizenship,
why, that in itself reflects lunacy.
[dramatic jazz music playing]
[train whistle blares]
["Take the 'A' Train" playing]
[announcer] The Voice
of America Jazz Hour.
My name is Willis Conover.
My name is Willis Conover.
My name is Willis Conover.
[announcer] I, Willis Conover,
am a familiar name and a familiar voice.
I broadcast a radio program
which can be heard
in every country in the world
and appeals to the universal
appetite for good jazz
beamed overseas by the Voice of America.
[wind gusting]
[man] We can achieve our great goal
in this most critical of all battles:
the winning of men's minds.
[wind gusting]
[man scatting]
[Louis Armstrong scatting]
[radio static]
[Louis Armstrong]
This is the Voice
[man] Different melody.
[Louis Armstrong] This is
The Voice of America
Washington, D.C.
Number 2, do you know where this program
would be the most jammed?
Behind the Iron Curtain.
-Number... oh!
-[tone sounds]
That's all the time we have.
Number 2's voice is such that
I would defect from Russia,
if I heard it.
[announcer] Will the real
Willis Conover please stand up?
[laughter]
["Take the 'A' Train" playing]
[echoed clattering]
[train roaring]
[train trundling]
How do you remember 1960?
Years from now,
when you tell your children
about this year we've been living throug
what scenes will spring to your mind?
The chief of communism
pounding a table in rage?
What sounds will you hear?
In the U.N., when Khrushchev
took off his shoe
and was beating that shoe,
and the interpreter said
that he was saying,
"I'll bury you,"
talking about America.
Khrushchev wasn't saying,"I'll bury you.
Khrushchev was saying,"I love you."
But it was the interpreter
who hated America.
You understand what I mean?
- But did he have rhythm?
- Yeah! He had rhythm.
[rhythmic clapping, pounding, scatting]
[rhythmic jazz music playing]
Rhythm is my business.
[speaking in Russian] Death
to colonial slavery!
Bury it!
Bury it deep in the ground!
The deeper, the better!
[speaking Russian]
[speaking Russian]
[sinuous jazz music playing]
Africa has brought the U.N.
its severest test:
the Congo.
[newsman] With its delegation
yet to be seated,
the Congo is the largest state
to be admitted into the U.N. this year.
The only way to keep
the Cold War out of the Congo
is to keep the United Nations
in the Congo.
[newswoman] Africa also
holds the greatest hope
for saving the United Nations
at this critical late hour.
Changing Africa has changed
the United Nations.
[man speaking Dutch] Humanity
has designated 1960
as The Year of Africa.
Never has there been such a year
at the United Nations.
At its 15th session, the General Assembl
has adopted 16 newly
independent African countries.
The wind blowing in Africa
is not an ordinary wind.
It is a raging hurricane.
[frenetic jazz music playing]
[man] We're going to shift
the emphasis to our jazz
and send these artists over
where they can reach
the masses of the people
of Asia and Africa.
One of the people
who we're planning to use,
my friend Dizzy Gillespie.
This is what we might call a Cool War,
rather than a Cold War.
The weapon that we will use...
is the cool one.
[dynamic jazz drumming]
[faint footsteps]
["Wild is the Wind" playing]
[wind rustling leaves]
[raindrops pattering]
[woman speaking French] Placing
the protocol in my hands,
Lumumba said,
"If the Belgians learn of this document,
this would be a death warrant for us."
[Nina Simone]
Love me Love me, Love me
Say you do
Let me fly away
[woman speaking French]
That day, I was wearing
my hair in a bun
in which I hid the secret document.
[Nina Simone]
For my love
[woman speaking French] In
the crowd, a Belgian official
was spying on me.
For seconds, our eyes locked.
Would he arrest me here?
Right now?
I could only think of the
document burning in my neck.
But it gave me the strength
to brave anything.
Even death.
[Nina Simone]
One caress
[woman speaking French]
As I landed in Rome,
journalists were crowding around me.
[flashbulbs popping]
[clamor, shouting]
I read the declaration
denouncing Belgium's plot
to install a puppet government.
[Lumumba, in French] The plot
was already in the make
to impose a government
against the will of its people.
[Andre Blouin, in French]
The revelation of the protocol
created a sensation.
We won!
[radio static]
[radio announcer]
Patrice Lumumba's oratory
helped him win enough votes
from parliament
to make him premier.
He succeeded where
Joseph Kasa-Vubu failed.
Kasa-Vubu took over the largely ceremoni
office of president.
[Blouin, in French] That
evening, I phoned Lumumba
at Leopoldville.
"We know," he shouted.
"Everyone is talking about it.
The Belgians are dumbfounded."
[Nina Simone]
You touched me
[Blouin, in French]
Later that day,
the phone rang in my room.
I was surprised to speak
to the Czech ambassador.
"You must leave now," he said.
"Hurry! Pack your things.
I'll pick you in five minutes.
Your life is in danger."
[jet engine roaring]
He had already booked my flight
to Paris and on to Guinea.
I was rushed onto the plane
feeling death on my heels.
[Nina Simone]
So wild is the wind
Wild is the wind
Wild
Is the wind
[jet engine roaring]
[moody music playing]
[man]
September 15th, 1959.
Nikita S. Khrushchev
arrives in Washington...
[pinging of sonar]
...Dwight D. Eisenhower,
president of the United States.
[Khrushchev speaking Russian]
Diplomacy is like
walking a tightrope.
If you raise your voice
half a note too high,
you can end up soiling your pants.
On the other hand,
if you keep your voice too low,
your opponent will hit you hard.
[pinging of sonar]
And this is America, our biggest enemy.
But once you take a misleading path...
history will not forgive you.
And the memory will haunt you forever.
[jet engines roaring]
[Willis Conover] Our program
this morning is given over
to a man whose name I bet you can't spel
Can you?
Well, it's K-H-R-U-S-H-C-H-E-V.
[mellow jazz music playing]
[man]
Again, he's waving to the crowds,
apparently completely oblivious,
but very few people
in the crowds here wave back.
He said I was a communist
because I was waving.
I'm free to raise my hand up,
if I want to.
I'm in a free country.
[lively jazz music playing]
Did you come up here to New York
just to see Mr. Khrushchev, or...
What? I'm here.
I've been here eight years!
[laughter]
[echoing thuds]
[group chanting] Red murderer!
Red murderer!
[man] The United States
has never before entertained
its potentially most dangerous enemy.
[flashbulbs popping]
Mr. Dulles, when Khrushchev was here,
did you get a chance to talk with him?
Yes, it took place, uh...
at the dinner that, um...
[match clatters]
...President Eisenhower
gave for Khrushchev.
The President introduced me
and said, "This is Mr. Dulles."
He's got a kind of a twinkle
in his eye and he said,
"Oh yes, I know you. I read your reports
[lively jazz music playing]
We all pay the same agents,
and we all get the same reports.
[Khrushchev speaking Russian]
[translator]
Just now, I was told
I couldn't go to Disneyland.
I asked, "Why not?"
[Khrushchev speaking Russian]
[translator]
What is it you have?
Rocket launching pads there?
[laughter]
[newsman]
It would be a shame
if relations between
the giant nuclear nations
which survived the Berlin
Blockade and the Korean War
should now founder on a missed excursion
to the Disneyland amusement park.
[eerie music playing]
[ping of sonar]
[man] But we were ready
for him, the press was ready.
I'd been pointing
to Mr. Khrushchev, saying,
"Well now, Mr. Khrushchev,
here is my Disneyland submarine fleet!"
[helicopter blades whirring]
[indistinct chatter]
- [man 1] Step right up here.
- [man 2] Yes, sir.
[bright piano music playing]
[coughs]
["I'm Confessin'" playing]
[Louis Armstrong]
I'm Confessin' that I love you
[man]
Sing it, Satch.
Tell me do you love me too?
[Khrushchev speaking Russian]
Eisenhower confessed
he was really troubled.
"I've spent my whole life
as a military man,
but I'm absolutely horrified by war."
I replied, "Mr. President,
nothing would make me happier
than to prevent another world war."
[shattering thuds]
[bell dings]
Any fool can start a war
that even a wise man cannot end.
I'm confessin' That I love you
[in Armstrong's style]
I'm Confessin' that I love you
[Louis Armstrong]
Tell me Do you love me too?
Tell me that you love me too, ooh
[Louis Armstrong]
I'm Confessin' that I need you
Honest I do
Oh, baby
[gravelly vocalizing]
[man speaking Spanish] In the
name of the United Nations,
I salute Your Excellency,
Mr. Nikita S. Khrushchev.
[Khrushchev speaking Russian]
[translator]
Over a period of four years,
all states should effect
complete disarmament
and should no longer have
any means of waging war.
The United Nations will continue to have
the most active participant
in all efforts at releasing mankind
from the burden of armaments
and consolidating peace
throughout the world.
[applause]
[man speaking French]
Decisions were hard to take
about these big international questions.
I devoted hours and hours
to the Congolese question.
Days and weeks of effort
and contemplation.
Sure, I'd rather be a poet
than a politician.
I'm suspicious of the written word.
I prefer the spoken word.
I trust it more in the world of politics
[eerie xylophone music playing]
[man] To start the chain reaction,
all we need is one neutron.
Watch!
[escalating clattering]
[high-pitched tone]
[dull rumbling]
[high-pitched tone]
[grim music playing]
[man speaking French]
[eerie xylophone music playing]
[speaking French]
[squeaking noise]
[muffled voices]
[grim music playing]
[gunfire]
[muffled ambient music playing]
[Bofane speaking French]
[vocal techno music playing]
[faint whirring]
[metallic clanking]
["Ata Ndele" playing]
[Adou Elenga singing in Lingala]
[music stops abruptly]
[faint whirring]
[bell tolls]
[parade-like music playing]
[bell tolling]
[in French] How to reconcile
what the Europeans taught us
with what they perpetrated
against the Black people?
[carnivalesque music playing]
[speaking Dutch]
Danger exists that Euratom
won't possess enough uranium.
Mr. Sassen, is there really
need for so much uranium?
Yes. We need loads of uranium.
Depending on how many nuclear plants...
["Cherie" playing on TV]
[singing in Dutch]
[newsman]
Between North Africa,
with its ancient European associations,
and South Africa, with its
established white settlers,
lay all the vastness of Black Africa.
And here were the makings of empire.
By the end of the last century,
European powers had completed
their carving of the continent.
In the heart was the Congo.
[eerie music playing]
[woman] You don't know
anything about anyplace
until the white man gets there.
It's only when he comes and say,
"Boof, I've discovered you.
Now you exist."
It's ridiculous.
["Tin Tin Deo" playing]
[man 1]
We do not believe
that this division of the world into cam
is a good thing.
[man 2]
Don't you think there should be one worl
just one bloc?
[man 1] No. There should be
independent sovereign nations
respecting each other.
[man 2]
Very often, nations which ask
for the respect of other nations
are gobbled up by aggressors.
[man 1] There is a limit
to the usefulness of the past,
because if your argument were true,
then you would absolutely agree
that all history has been written.
We are the architects of history.
We make it.
[sinuous bass music]
[man] This is the first
intercontinental conference
of colored peoples
in the history of mankind.
[cheering]
Small and great nations
are represented here.
Almost every religion under the sun.
Practically every economic doctrine
has its representative in this hall.
Socialism, capitalism, communism...
[lively jazz music playing]
We are not pro-West, we are not pro-East
We are not anti-West,
we are not anti-East.
[Sukarno]
What harmis in diversity
when there is unity in desire?
As far as I know, we don't engage
in assassinations and kidnappings
and things of that kind.
As far as I know, we never have.
[Dizzy Gillespie plays melody]
Unofficial American ambassador of jazz,
Dizzy Gillespie, one of the originators
of that brand of jazz known as bebop.
A month ago, he had toured
a belt of Middle Eastern countries
ranging from Pakistan to Yugoslavia.
[pensive jazz music playing]
I would be a better emissary
than Kissinger.
Is anybody here a communist?
- Are you a communist?
- No, I am a capitalist.
You're a capitalist, eh?
- Are you a communist?
- No. Capitalist.
Do you think that, uh...
Do you think that, uh, Syria is
in danger of going communist?
[Allen Dulles] The idea
that the CIA is always
engaged in overthrowing
governments, that's false.
That's for the birds.
[liner's horn blares]
[newsman] Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser says
that the foreign-owned Suez Canal has be
taken over by Egypt.
[sultry jazz music playing]
[applause]
[Nasser speaking Arabic]
The British called me,
Gamal Abdel Nasser, a dog.
[wind gusting]
Remember the insults written
on the walls of Port Said?
You said your queen is what?
[crowd yelling in Arabic]
A bitch!
[Gamal Abdel Nasser] And today,
Port Said toppled
the Prime Minister of Britain.
The world has turned upside down.
The world has changed.
[percolating jazz music playing]
Neither the United Kingdom nor France
had the right to use arms against Egypt,
because they were not attacked.
There is nothing in the charter,
and nothing in any moral principles
of international law and practice
which places upon any country,
however great, however mighty,
however steeped in the traditions
on domination by force.
The most powerful bloc in the U.N.
is the African-Asian bloc.
These are the poor nations.
Yet they carry more weight
than the nations do
who have all the money.
Why? Because no matter
how wealthy America is,
she only has one vote.
No matter how wealthy Russia is,
she only has one vote.
Whereas all the poor nations in Africa
who have just emerged into independence,
they have each a vote, too.
And they stick together
and are able to outmaneuver
the rich nations.
You and I have to look at this
and understand this,
that the ballot is
as powerful as the bullet.
[playful music playing]
United States? Yes.
United Kingdom? No.
Uruguay? Yes.
Venezuela? Yes.
Yemen? Yes.
Yugoslavia? Yes.
Afghanistan? Yes.
Albania? Yes.
Argentina? Yes.
Australia? No.
Austria? Yes.
Belgium?
Abstain.
Bolivia? Yes.
Brazil? Yes.
Cambodia? Yes.
Canada? Abstain.
Chile? Yes.
El Salvador? Yes.
Ethiopia? Yes.
- France?
- [in French] Yes... no!
[official] No?
[laughter]
[man] Quiet!
When I came here,
several people asked me how
I really do pronounce my name.
Well, I pronounce it myself
in Swedish: Hammarskjold.
But if you say "hammer-shield,"
that's all right with me.
Welcome to the most
impossible job on Earth.
[Dag Hammarskjold]
As members of the United Nations
emergency force,
you are taking part in an experience
that is new in history.
You are soldiers of peace
in the first international
force of its kind.
["We Insist! Freedom Now Suite" playing]
I think Suez helped
many of the African countries
to be sure of themselves
and insist about independence.
Whisper, listen
Whisper, listen
Whisper say we're free
Rumors flying must be lying
Can it really be?
Can't conceive it. Don't believe it
But that's what they say
Slave no longer, Slave no longer
This is Freedom Day
This decade is the decade
of African independence.
Forward, then, to independence!
[Lumumba, in French]
Nobody wanted to follow
the colonials any longer.
Men, women and children...
the whole population demanded
immediate independence.
Freedom Day, Freedom Day
Free to vote and earn our pay
Dim the path And hide the way
But we made it, Freedom Day
[cheers, applause]
Brothers and sisters!
We got off the plane,
they had a little tune.
Nine trumpets playing so beautifully.
"All for you, Louis," la-la-la.
Come on, fellas!
So I pulled mine out and played with 'em
[jaunty jazz music playing]
[newsman] Armstrong played to
an audience of 100,000 people,
the world record
in the entire history of music.
[Louis Armstrong]
You could walk on heads
for five blocks and never fall.
Oh yes
[laughing]
Ladies and gentlemen,
it's lovely to be down here
playing with you...
We'd like to lay this next one
on the Prime Minister.
"Black and Blue."
["(What Did I Do To Be So)
Black and Blue" playing]
[Louis Armstrong]
Cold empty bed
Springs hard as lead
Feel like old Ned
Wished I was dead
What did I do
To be so black and blue Mmm
I'm white inside
But that don't help my case
'Cause I can't hide
What is in my face
[scatting]
How would it end?
Ain't got a friend
My only sin is in my skin
What did I do
To be so black and blue?
[man speaking Russian]
Uganda Premier Milton Obote
calls out American racists:
"How can we believe America's sincerity
towards African people,
when inside the U.S. itself,
'Negroes' are still subjected
to terrible racial discrimination?"
[siren wailing]
[rousing music playing]
[reporter] What are you gonna
tell the Russians?
It all depends what time
they send me over there.
I don't think they should send me now,
unless they straighten
that mess down South.
[in Russian] Black children
cannot attend school
together with white children!
Isn't this embarrassing
for such a civilized country?
In America, Blacks get lynched.
They get hanged.
Is that democracy?
Is that respect for man? No!
[lively jazz music playing]
[man]
Ladies and gentlemen,
the Dizzy Gillespie Campaign for Preside
needs a campaign song.
It is entitled,"Vote Dizzy."
Let the good times roll!
[brief trumpet melody]
[robust laugh]
[applause]
[man scatting]
[cheers]
[bright music playing]
[man speaking Dutch] Mr. Vloer,
beer plays a central role
in a Black person's life?
Yes. This has now turned
political, of course.
But when talking politics,
they like to drink a pint of beer.
Just like in Belgium.
[Lumumba speaking French]
[soft, taut jazz music playing]
[Blouin, in French] One day,
driving my Deux Chevaux...
[echoing slam]
...a truck was heading straight at us.
[train trundling]
I stepped on the gas.
We shot past,
but the rear end of my car was hit,
making us skid crazy out of control.
[creaking and clanging]
Right then...
we saw who was in the truck.
Our political opponents.
The rats have got your flour
Bad blood has got your mare
Rats have got your flour
Bad blood has got your mare
[Blouin, in French] Days later,
when crossing the Savannah,
a brush fire was moving towards us.
I slowed down and looked behind,
but the road we just passed
was now engulfed in flames.
The severity of my situation
suddenly hit me.
Twice...
[music stops abruptly]
Twice, I was nearly murdered.
But this did not deter me from my purpos
On the contrary,
I felt an extraordinary
sense of being alive.
It only reinforced the will
to fight for my people.
The rats have got your flour
Bad blood has got your mare
The rats have got your flour
Bad blood has got your mare
Is there anyone who knows
Is there anyone who cares?
So you prayed to the Lord above
Please send you a friend
Oh, ya prayed to the Lord above
Please send you a friend
But your empty pockets Tell ya
That you ain't got no friends
So your baby's Screamin' loud now
It's poundin' in your brain
Your baby's screamin' Louder now
It's poundin' In your brain
[abrupt clunk]
[Blouin, in French] It's
Kwame Nkrumah who asked me
to call upon Africa's women...
to unify the continent...
envisioning a new political entity:
The United States of Africa.
[spare, eerie music playing]
[newsman]
We continue with our report
on Soviet penetration in Africa.
We shall have to compete with both
Russians and Chinese.
They will take advantage
of every opportunity they get,
as they have already
in Guinea and in Ghana.
Nkrumah already created a federation
with Sekou Tour's Guinea.
His goal: freedom for all Africa,
and the creation
of a United States of Africa.
["Mbube" playing]
[Miriam Makeba vocalizing]
[Patrice Lumumba] At our
national congress in December,
a woman spoke up:
"If we're not allowed to vote,
we will sabotage these elections."
[Blouin, in French]
The frenzy of the electoral
campaign across the country made me forg
that I was the only woman in the team.
[Miriam Makeba vocalizing]
[Blouin] I was presented
as a woman from Guinea,
a country that had gained independence.
People sat down in a circle,
asking me questions:
How is it there?
What did people do to gain independence?
If Guinea is independent,
why aren't the Congolese?
[singing in Zulu]
[Blouin, in French] As we
talked about the need
to free our continent,
I saw that the women actually needed
to liberate themselves.
[Miriam Makeba singing in Zulu]
[Blouin, in French] As they
started to tell their story,
I realized that these women
had really suffered.
I understood we could not separate
the problem of Africa's resources
from that of the African women.
[Miriam Makeba singing in Zulu]
[Miriam Makeba] I ask all
the leaders of the world:
Would you keep silent and do nothing
if you were allowed
no rights in your own country
because the color of your skin
is different to that of the rulers?
[Blouin, in French] If they
wished, these women
could become the first
bearers of independence.
[Miriam Makeba vocalizing]
[newsman] Madame Blouin,
whom Guinea's Sekou Tour sent
to guide Lumumba.
[Blouin, in French] By May 1960,
I had enrolled 45,000 members
for the Association
of African Women of Solidarity.
Never have I felt so alive.
[clamor]
But our movement sounded
threatening to the colonials.
[eerie music playing]
[Lumumba, in French] When you
defend the cause of freedom,
they immediately label you.
The officials claimed:
"Lumumba is dangerous.
Because people follow him everywhere,
we must arrest him."
[grim music playing]
So, they threw me in jail...
[wind blowing]
[soft, eerie music playing]
I was brutally assaulted.
Locked into a pitch dark cell.
I was scoffed at, vilified,
and dragged through the mud...
[indistinct singing]
...simply because I claimed
freedom for our country.
[man]
Let the wind
[soft, discordant music playing]
[plodding piano music playing]
[Mbuyi speaking in French]
[applause]
[man speaking in French]
[applause]
Oh, that's Thelonious Monk, he's crazy!
[mellow music playing]
[airplane engine humming]
[singing in French]
[Lumumba in French] I was
released from prison
to head for Brussels.
But I was left with nothing.
No clothes.
No shoes.Absolutely nothing.
The authorities had to get me a suit.
And Africans collected money
to buy the rest of my clothes.
- [applause]
- [cheering]
Upon arrival at the airport,
10,000 Congolese were shouting:
Down with the colonialists!
Down with colonialism!
We want independence right now!
And it was a whole other ballgame...
[singing in French]
[woman] For your next trip,
be sure you choose SABENA
and fly on the Belgian World Airlines.
[bright musical flourish]
[soft, grim music playing]
- [gunfire]
- [commotion]
[Lumumba in French]
We heard rifle shots.
Right after, we saw bodies
laying all over.
People asked: "Why?
What have we done?"
[chimes twinkling]
[airplane engine humming]
I was sentenced to six months in prison
because no one would point
at the colonials.
Thirty Congolese murdered
for no plausible reason.
["Wild Is the Wind"
by Nina Simone playing]
[Nina Simone]
Love me Love me, love me
Say you do
Let me fly away with you
For my loves like the wind
[lively music playing]
[singing in Spanish]
[Rolin in French] A challenging
adventure lies ahead of you.
[Lumumba in French] I'm Patrice Lumumba.
I'm delighted with the results
of the Round Table conference.
On June 30th,
the Congolese people
will gain their freedom.
Let me assure the Belgians
that a lasting friendship
will remain between our countries.
[singing in Lingala]
[Armondo in French] We needed
a song to make everybody dance
and kick off our independence
that was so hard to achieve.
- [chatter]
- [laughter]
[whirring]
[soft music playing]
TELEMEMORIES
THIS EVENING, FREDERIC VANDEWALLE,
CHIEF OF SECURITY
[in French] Colonel Vandewalle,
you were head of Intelligence
in the Belgian Congo:
When you saw the list of ministers
of Lumumba's government
you smiled as you discovered
that some had been
your intelligence assets?
[in French]
Yes, correct.
Within his cabinet
at least three guys were ours.
[bright music playing]
[children shrieking playfully]
[Lumumba in French]
Backstage deals by elite circles
conspired during the Round Table.
So, what does this independence mean
if tomorrow we're sucked dry
by new masters?
What is the significance
of this independence
if tomorrow, it is to set us
against each other?
[singing in Lingala]
[soft, eerie music playing]
Now, before we go any further
we'd like to take this opportunity
to introduce the musicians.
- [indistinct chatter]
- [laughter]
[energetic music playing]
[soft piano music playing]
[energetic trumpet music playing]
[abrupt drum strikes]
[mellow upright bass music playing]
[scat singing]
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[Malcolm X]
The ballot or the bullet.
[scat singing]
[laughing]
[scat singing]
[applause]
Vote Dizzy, vote Dizzy!
[Bofane in French]
All my life I kept wondering:
"I was in a hole.
But what was that hole?"
Only 50 years later
I realized that it was a chicken coop.
[mellow music playing]
It was right after Congo's Independence.
We got independent on June 30th.
We were all living at Karawa at the time
in the northeast of Congo.
Shortly after they sent
the Belgian paratroopers in.
So the war started.
My mother had married Mr. Casse.
A Belgian man.
And he had a 19-year-old son
with the ex-wife of my stepdad
and he was in military service.
But the Congolese soldiers
discovered Mr. Casse had a son
among the Belgian paratroopers.
"This guy married our Congolese sister
and now he's sending his son to kill us.
So let's kill his children."
[engine humming]
That's how the soldiers arrived
at our place.
I grabbed my brother Claude
and my sister Jacqueline
and rushed to hide in a hole.
Strange that it all came back
to me 50 years later.
I was walking in a street of Brussels.
The sun was shining.
I could smell chicken poop.
[wind rustling in trees]
The inside of a chicken coop is magical.
There are feathers all around.
They shine, they look like diamonds.
Feathers everywhere...
[soft, eerie music playing]
My little brother was a bit boisterous
and started moving so they caught us.
[laughs]
[wings flapping]
Then everybody screamed:
"Kill them! Kill the whites!
Kill the kids of the whites."
Then, a soldier entered my stepdad's sto
and came out with a brand new machete.
When my mother saw the machete,
something clicked in her mind.
She looked at him and said,
"Hey you! Where are you going
with this machete?
You took this machete
from my husband's store.
You didn't pay for it!"
My mom was very fond of money.
"You didn't pay for it
and you want to kill his kids with it.
Are you not ashamed?"
So he froze, holding his machete.
And the soldiers left.
[jazzy music playing]
Thanks to my mom's words,
who taught me that in life
one should never remain silent.
Never!
[hooves clopping]
[energetic bass clarinet music playing]
[lively music playing]
[man in French] It's 16:03 here
at Leopoldville airport.
A hectic activity is on display
with the arrival
of his Majesty King Baudouin.
[energetic bass clarinet music playing]
[airplane engine humming]
[majestic music playing]
[man in French]
And the King appears
in his ivory-white uniform.
[energetic bass clarinet music playing]
[majestic music playing]
He shakes hands with Chief
of State Joseph Kasa-Vubu.
He shakes hands
with Prime Minister Lumumba.
[man] Hey, can you splice it up to tape,
you know what I mean?
One, two...
[energetic bass clarinet music playing]
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[cheering]
[in French]
The independence of the Congo
crowned the work,
initiated by the genius of King Leopold
undertaken by his undaunted courage
and carried on
with perseverance by Belgium.
[energetic jazz music playing]
[applause]
[speaking in French]
[energetic jazz music playing]
[speaking in French]
[energetic jazz music playing]
[Lumumba speaking in French]
[music stops]
[awkward silence]
[soft coughing]
[speaking in Dutch]
[energetic music playing]
[Lumumba speaking in French]
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[Lumumba speaking in French]
[applause]
[lively music playing]
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[in French] Mr. Lumumba's speech
indeed took us by surprise.
And...
one cannot deny
that his speech has caused...
a huge disappointment.
And this speech was seen
as very distasteful.
[dramatic musical flourish]
[creatures chirping]
[man in French] What role will
the Congolese Army play
in the newly independent Congo?
[in French] In the newly
independent Congo,
the role of the Congolese Army
will remain the same role
it always played since 1886
when Leopold II created this army.
[man] But do you see
any break with the past,
or will the situation
really remain the same?
There will be no break
whatsoever with the past.
- [gunfire]
- [shouting]
[energetic music playing]
I was General Janssens.
But now, not anymore.
[waves lapping softly]
We've got an interesting
situation in Africa today
where the articulate few politicians
in the newly emerged countries
are aware of the fact that
fifty well-trained and ruthless
mercenary soldiers
could overthrow a government.
Consequently, they see
the opportunities for a coup.
Do you have a mercenary force
available to you
on short notice?
I suppose I could get together
100 men within seven days.
[soft music playing]
Today, Africa is one
of the most vital links
in the Soviet chain of world conquest.
Its untouched natural wealth
has perhaps a greater potential
than that of the rest
of the world combined.
Strategically, the key
to Africa is the Congo.
And the key to the Congo
is the state of Katanga.
But the prize catch for the communists
is Katanga's mighty Union Minire,
an internationally owned mine
which supplies the United States
with element U-235,
an ingredient vital in the production
of the first atomic bomb.
- [bomb whistles]
- [bomb explodes]
[soft music playing]
[indistinct radio chatter]
[helicopter blades whirring]
[soft, majestic music playing]
[Tshombe in French]
Sirs, here we are! Isn't it?
We have decided to declare
the independence of Katanga.
[cheering]
[music stops]
[conductor baton whizzing]
[soft music playing]
[man in French]
Behind us, is the chimney.
As long as it still smokes,
all seems well in Katanga.
[man in Dutch]
Everything super-duper!
We won't let it get to our hearts!
Indeed super-duper here in Katanga!
For now at least.
[soft music playing]
[man]
Cherie
[Khrushchev in Russian] The
interests of mighty monopolies
pushed Belgium to snatch away
the richest province, Katanga.
Securing raw materials
for nuclear weapons,
uranium, cobalt, titanium, cheap labor,
that's why they plot against the Congo..
[growling]
[laughing]
...whose strings extend from Brussels
to the major NATO capitals.
[children screaming]
[muffled explosion]
[siren wailing]
- [gunshot]
- [camera shutter clicks]
[man] Belgium promptly
dispatched troops to the Congo
to try to restore order.
Was the dispatch of troops
merely to protect the lives
of nationals?
Or did the Belgians hope
the former Master of the Congo
could seize the opportunity
to pose its control of the colony?
- [gunshot]
- [chicken clucking]
[airplane engine humming]
[soft music playing]
[Lumumba in French] I'm visiting
the United States
to meet the UN Secretary-General
and ask for his support
to remove the Belgian troops
from the territory of our republic.
The coup was plotted
by the Belgian government
who sent a general
to command the Katangese army.
The Belgian government has no right
to install its military in our country.
Just as the Belgian government
has no right
to invade the U.S.
with its military bases.
[speaking in French]
[Lumumba in French]
In Washington I stayed
at the presidential guest house.
But the Belgian government protested:
"Why had the U.S. government
extended such a distinguished
welcome to a dirty nigger?"
[eerie music playing]
[energetic music playing]
[man] It's a very strange thing
how someone says,
"Okay, nigger, play."
Or, "Okay, nigger, get off the sidewalk.
[soft music playing]
And it didn't make any sense for me
to be what I thought I was,
that they had made me
what I thought I wasn't.
[somber string music playing]
[reporter]
This is Harlem Square.
125th Street and 7th Avenue.
The hot corner of Black nationalism.
[siren wailing]
[man]
Twenty million Black people
asking for civil rights.
Chinese don't have to ask
for civil rights.
Russia! Even Khrushchev can go
anywhere he want in America
and he got a bomb.
[soft piano music playing]
[Malcolm X] Harlem has
the largest concentration
of people of African descent.
Because that's what you and I
are, Africans.
[applause]
[woman] I was downtown
at one of Malcolm X's speeches,
and who should plop down
on the seat next to me
but John Coltrane.
[Coltrane laughing]
[mellow music playing]
[Coltrane]
I thought I had to see the man.
You know?
I was quite impressed.
[woman] Some musicians have said
there's a relationship
between some of Malcolm's ideas
and the music.
[Coltrane] I think music can
create the initial change
in the thinking of the people.
[Lumumba in French]
[applause]
[siren wailing]
[Lumumba in French]
[ball thuds]
[wind whistling softly]
[rain pattering]
[man] The Soviet Union joined
the rest of the council to give
the Congolese government
military assistance.
We are at the turn of the road,
not only for the future
of this organization,
but also for the future of Africa.
And Africa may well,
in present circumstances,
mean the world.
[bright music playing]
The world must answer
the African question.
And it must answer it our way.
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[in French] The Congo should
take center stage
in the movement for a free Africa.
We've made it Freedom Day
[reporter]
Within five weeks,
nearly 20,000 UN troops were in the Cong
[applause]
[majestic bagpipe music playing]
[music stops]
[footsteps]
[majestic music playing]
[man in French]
Mr. Hammarskjold has accepted
the invitation of the Belgian government
He then had an audience with the King.
[man in Dutch] I've explained once more
to the UN Secretary-General
the situation of Katanga
where the economy has resumed.
Totally impossible
in the rest of the Congo
where so much is destroyed
which was built with so many sacrifices
not to satisfy colonial
or imperial aspirations
but to complete a mission of civilizatio
for the benefit of a less developed peop
that for its salvation and ascension
so much depends on the white people
and the Belgians.
[soft, eerie music playing]
[low rumbling]
[airplane engine humming]
[man]
Once Hammarskjold decided
to fly to Elisabethvilleto meet Tshombe
over Lumumba's head, almost literally.
The downfall of Lumumba
was inscribed in that event.
[reporter]
Today in Katanga
a plane load of Belgium-sent arms arrive
[mellow music playing]
[airplane taking off]
[low rumbling]
[twinkling sounds]
- [rattling]
- [register chime]
[cracking sounds]
[man]
Someone said once
that the study of history
was like sitting on the cat.
Meaning, I suppose,
that its surprises
left their scars.
There was no one in the United Nations
who did not give a damn
what Washington said.
Washington wielded tremendous
influence in the UN.
Americans had always been kept in
and Russians always kept out.
If there was any "Cabinet"
for the Congo operation,
it was not the Security Council
but the highly informal Congo Club
on the 38th Floor.
The Russians, however,
were not part of that Club.
The story of our times
is the story of revolution.
This is the Museum of Modern Art
in New York City.
But the most vivid records
of the triumphs and the ironies
of this 20th Century are kept right here
[in French]
The Treachery of Images
is the title of a painting
representing a pipe
with a caption:
"This is not a pipe."
Because the image of a pipe is not a pip
[airplane engine humming]
[applause]
[energetic drum music playing]
[man]
Say these English words after me:
Pipe.
[static radio chatter]
-Tobacco.
-[group] Tobacco.
[energetic music playing]
- [music stops]
- [radio buzzing]
[Kasa-Vubu in French] The 5th
of September, 1960,
we have revoked Premier Patrice Lumumba.
[energetic drum music playing]
[lively music playing]
[Lumumba in French] Today,
without consulting Parliament,
without asking advice
of the elected government,
Mr. Kasa-Vubu has betrayed us.
[radio static]
I proclaim that Kasa-Vubu,
who plotted with the Belgians,
is no longer Chief of State.
[energetic music playing]
[beeping]
[suspenseful music playing]
This is Leopoldville the morning after
President Kasa-Vubu's
sensational announcement
on the Congo radio
that he had dismissed
Prime Minister Lumumba.
Meanwhile, airports were closed
and Lumumba was denied
the use of the radio station
which was shut down by UN troops.
[energetic music playing]
[beeping]
[in Russian] This is shameful.
The UN forces invited
by the legal government of Patrice Lumum
took over the airports
and the radio station.
They made it possible
for a treacherous puppet regime
to take over the Congo...
[vehicle engine humming]
[energetic drumming]
[reporter] Next day an emergency
session of Parliament.
The members of Parliament
here are discussing
whether Mr. Kasa-Vubu
or Mr. Lumumba's government
is the authority in the Congo.
[indistinct chatter]
Once you get really good
inside intelligence
about any group,
you are able to learn
what the levers of power are
and what each man fears from another.
And what each man will credit another ma
to be capable of doing.
It's all a matter of inside knowledge.
[man] You're talking in riddles.
What do you mean by that?
You set people very discretely
against one another.
[man] Right.
They destroy each other.
[reporter] At the end
of the chaotic debate,
Lumumba went to the rostrum.
[applause]
He spoke quietly and skillfully.
[in French] We reject any intervention.
The Congo will never become
a colony of the United Nations.
This is a reconquest!
[reporter]
After hearing Lumumba's speech,
the MPs voted to invalidate
the decrees of both Kasa-Vubuand Lumumba
dismissing one another.
[indistinct shouting]
The night before the vote,
we counted heads, going down everyone.
We had the election.
[man] Did you buy votes?
I'm not gonna answer that one, I'm sorry
Don't comment, put it that way.
[energetic music playing]
The following day...
we had two votes.
[mellow music playing]
I lost.
[reporter] The senate had given
Lumumba a vote of confidence
by 41 votes to 2.
[speaking in French]
[applause]
[Lumumba in French] The coup d'tat,
this whole campaign against me
is conceived by the Congolese people
as a campaign against
the independence we had achieved.
[singing in French]
[applause]
[beeping]
[energetic music playing]
[applause]
[man in Russian]
Lumumba addressed
the international press:
"Hammarskjold has lost our trust."
[man] Lumumba demanded
the immediate withdrawal
of UN troops
if they continued interfering
with his government.
Hammarskjold started out before the Cong
with an extraordinary degree of confiden
from African and Asian countries.
Part of the tragedy
is the destruction of that
reservoir of confidence.
[in Arabic] The United Nations
is failing in the Congo.
Who is responsible?
What is the role of the United Nations
in the Congo?
Destructive forces have been let loose
by people who do not wish well
to this newly independent state.
Up till now, the United Nations
has failed in the Congo.
Any wound inflicted upon the Congo,
is a wound to the whole of Africa.
[O'Brien] Nasser and Nkrumah
threatened to withdraw
their troops from the UN force.
Hammarskjold had to make a serious effor
to recover their confidence.
But he was opposed by the Western powers
who feared that he would bring
Lumumba back into the picture.
[man]
How much money do you suppose
the Central Intelligence Agency
has poured into the Congo?
I don't know.Are you prepared to say?
I certainly, of course, don't know.
I wonder if it's quite honest
to represent our policy
as completely angelic?
[Larry Devlin] The one name
that kept coming up
was Joseph-Dsir Mobutu.
[reporter]
Colonel Mobutu's loyalty
has been swinging between
Lumumba and Kasa-Vubu.
[man] You say that A
is sleeping with B's wife?
Yes, what a pity that so-and-so
is so in discrete.
Not much more.
Of course, there are much more
sophisticated operations.
[man] What kind
of sophisticated operation?
Ah, that I couldn't possibly tell you.
[applause]
Darling,
are you enjoying the good things in life
Why am I so interested in pipe tobacco?
Darling...
[explosion]
[radio static]
[Mobutu in French]
Hello, hello.
This is Colonel Mobutu
speaking from Leopoldville.
The Congolese Army
has decided to neutralize
the Head of State.
[Mobutu in French]
[man in French]
It's obvious...
It's obvious that the image
of a pipe is not a pipe.
[reporter] The CIA tended to support
very extreme right-wing groups
in foreign countries
because of an obsession with communism
and set back democratic possibilities
in foreign countries?
I think just the opposite is the case.
- [cheering]
- [applause]
[soft music playing]
[in Dutch] Life is often
monotonous and tedious...
That's why television
offers you a distraction.
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[singing in French]
[Tshombe in French] If I return
to Belgium today
it's in the first place
to show my respect to the King.
[singing in French]
[purse thuds]
[soft, eerie music playing]
- [applause]
- [cheering]
[hooves clopping]
[bells tolling]
[crowd shouts in French,
"Long live the Queen!"]
[majestic music playing]
[soft, eerie music playing]
[airplane engine humming]
[soft music playing]
[Blouin in French] For days
our house had been surrounded
by troops armed with machine guns.
We expected the dreaded
knock on the door any time.
Then, one early morning...
[engine revving]
...two jeeps stopped
in front of the house.
Gilbert M'Pongo, government deputy,
delivered my expulsion order.
[reporter] An intimate adviser
to the Lumumba government,
Madame Andre Blouinfrom Guinea,
the glamorous half-French "mulatto"
with communist tendencies
whose influence behind the scenes
is being attacked by Lumumba's opponents
[Blouin in French] The soldiers
crowded into the house,
making themselves at home...
asking for food and drinks.
Playing with my children,
Eve-Sylviane and Patrick,
allowing them to handle their weapons
to the children's delight.
[wings flapping]
I had anticipated this goodbye.
Still, at the last moment,
I couldn't really accept
what was happening.
The order specified:"Madame Blouin."
"My children," I begged.
"No, your children and husband
can't join you,"
replied M'Pongo.
[wind blowing softly]
At the airport, before departure,
he reminded me that my loved ones
were being held hostage.
"Don't forget!
Not a word to the international press
or it will cost them dearly!"
[Bofane speaking in Kituba]
[Bofane speaking in French]
[soft, eerie music playing]
[footsteps]
[energetic music playing]
[Khrushchev in Russian]
We announced that I would head
the Soviet delegation.
[footsteps]
[speaking in Russian]
That poured oil on the fire.
The American press was furious.
Cursing the Soviet Union
at the top of their lungs.
- [cheering]
- [applause]
Nehru would come from India.
Tito from Yugoslavia.
And Macmillan from Great Britain.
[resounding thud]
[man in Spanish] I declare the opening
of the 15th UN General Assembly.
There is Nasser.
There is Nehru.
There is Skou Tour.
There is Nkrumah.
There is Mao Zedong in Peking.
[water splashes]
[upbeat jazz music playing]
People say imperialism is dead.
No!
Imperialism is not yet dead.
It is dying.
[music resumes]
[O'Brien]
The U.S. still held
the necessary two-thirds
majority in the Assembly,
but the influx of newly independent
Afro-Asian countries
Transformed the General Assembly
from being little more
than a U.S. propaganda tool
into a genuine organ of negotiations.
[woman]
If the African-Asian states
all vote together, which they seldom do,
they could produce 46
out of the 99 possible votes.
This, therefore, is a bloc
which must be reckoned with.
[O'Brien]
There was always a danger that
the Afro-Asian opinion
might swing over to Mr. Khrushchev's sid
Ambassador Stevenson,
if the United Nation should
fail in this undertaking,
what hope is there for mankind?
Well, that's a very gloomy prospect.
[Morse code beeping]
[Morse code beeping]
[Morse code beeping]
[Morse code beeping]
[soft music playing]
[cars whooshing]
FIDEL AT THE U.N.
[man in Spanish] To attend
the 15th U.N. General Assembly
the Cuban delegation travels to New York
headed by the Prime Minister
and leader of the revolution:
Fidel Castro.
[mellow jazz music playing]
[unintelligible]
These are funny feet.
Funny, funny.
When I look at my feet,
I get messed up myself.
[mimicking rhythmic beat]
[dramatic music playing]
[man]
At least 16 African nations
ought to be admitted for the opening
of the United Nations
15th General Assembly
already momentous on the Congo issue.
A score of heads of government
will be present.
A dramatic setting
with global stakes at issue.
[audio warbling]
[Khrushchev in Russian]
Castro was throwing
thunder and lightning
when he was kicked out of his hotel.
Being a former guerrillero,
he threatened to pitch his tent
in front of the U.N.!
[shouting]
["Que Rico Mambo" playing]
[grunting]
[siren wailing]
[shouting]
[grunting]
[siren wailing]
[Prez Prado shouting]
I want to salute the people
of the United States.
[singing in Spanish]
[Khrushchev in Russian] It was
crucial to pay Castro a visit
to expose America's policy
towards both the Afro-Americans
and the Cuban delegation.
[man] ...the Theresa Hotel:
lots of cops here.
A great jam of cameramen here now.
We're trying to push our way in.
An absolute madhouse here.
[Khrushchev in Russian]
When I encountered Castro
for the first time,
he made a deep impression:
here was this huge, tall person
with a black beard.
We embraced each other.
"Embrace" is perhaps an understatement.
[Prez Prado shouts, grunts]
[Khrushchev] He literally
bent down to envelop me
with his whole body!
[man in Spanish]
By hugging, Fidel and Nikita
bring Cubans and Soviets closer.
[man] What did you discuss in there?
Don't worry about that!
["My Reverie" playing]
[man]
Let me ask you, Mr. X,
why did you visit Fidel Castro
this morning?
[Malcolm X] Well, because of
the trouble in Africa,
in the Congo, and other places,
it has caused a great deal
of tension in Harlem.
We were led up to the 9th floor
and into Dr. Castro's room.
He greeted us very cordially, we sat dow
the room wasn't so big.
My impression of Fidel Castro
was that he was a man
who seemed to have the genuine interest
of his people at heart.
It's been suggested that there might be
some international intrigue here
because of Malcolm's travels to Africa,
his contacts with Nasser.
[man] The CIA was indeed
very closely watching Malcolm.
Of special concern
was his effectiveness in Africa.
He had submitted an eight-page
memorandum to a meeting
of the heads of 33 African nations
calling for their support
in his pending move
to take America before the United Nation
for violating the
Afro-Americans' human rights.
[Malcolm X]
It's a human problem,
not an American problem
or a Negro problem.
And as a world problem,
we feel that it should be taken
out of the jurisdiction
of the United States government
and the United States courts
in the same manner that the problems
of the Black man in South Africa, Angola
and other parts of the world
are taken into the United Nations
because of violations of human rights.
We believe that our problem
is one not of violation
of civil rights but
of violation of human rights.
Not only are we denied the right
to be a citizen in the United States,
we're denied the right
to be a human being.
I would suggest
that when the charter
of the United Nations
comes to be revised,
a permanent seat should be created
for Africa on the Security Council.
In view, not only of the growing number
of African members of the United Nations
but also of the increasing importance
of the African continent in world affair
[train whooshing]
["Blue in Green" playing]
[O'Brien] Within a few days
of taking my seat in the U.N.,
I was contacted
by the American "arm-twister."
Arm-twisters was a concept little heard
in public discussions
of the United Nations
but absolutely central
to its actual workings.
Arm-twisters were usually
American delegates
whose function was
to influence crucial votes
smell out possible recalcitrance,
and deal with it.
[O'Brien] Dealing with it could
include bribery or blackmail.
Countries in which there were
corporate interests
would receive less subtle hints.
[man in French] In my capacity
as President
of the Republic of Congo,
I hereby announce the make-up
of my delegation.
[train clanging]
[man] The legitimate
government of the Congo
is the government of Mr. Patrice Lumumba
The decision to seat
the delegation of Mr. Kasa-Vubu
came to us as a great shock.
[Menon] This is the worst humiliation
that the United Nations ever suffered.
And we from Asia would be the people
who'll be deeply shocked and grieved.
There cannot be one African
in this Assembly, sir,
there cannot be one African
in this Assembly
who'd not be moved to shame
by the situation that has arisen.
[train clanging]
[O'Brien] Over a strong protest
by Afro-Asian neutrals,
the Assembly,
under pressure from the U.S.,
seated a Kasa-Vubu delegation.
[Khrushchev in Russian]
The dirty job in the Congo
was carried out
by U.N. Secretary-General Hammarskjold.
History will not forgive you.
A man who has trampled down
elementary justice has no place
at such an important position
as that of the Secretary-General.
[man] I call now on the Secretary-Genera
in exercise of the right of reply.
By resigning, I would throw
the organization to the winds.
I have no right to do so.
It is not the Soviet Union,
or indeed any other big powers
who need the United Nations
for their protection.
It is all the others.
The organization is, first of all,
their organization.
I shall remain in my post
during the term of my office
as a servant of the organization
in the interest...
[applause]
I shall remain in my post
during the term of my office
as a servant of the organization
in the interest of all those other natio
as long as they wish me to do so.
[applause]
[pounding]
Oh, man, I got a million dreams.
It's all I do, is dream.
All the time.
[man] I heard you played the piano.
No, no, this is not piano,
this is dreaming.
[mellow piano music playing]
[Malcolm X]
Along about 1955,
they had the Bandung Conference
in Indonesia.
And at that time, the Africans,
the Asians, the Arabs,
all of the non-white people got together
and agreed to de-emphasize
their differences
and emphasize what they had in common.
[man]
In New York, the dramatic parade
of major world figures
across the stage of history continues.
[dramatic music playing]
At Harlem's Hotel Theresa,
in a heavy presence of security guards
holding back throngs of demonstrators,
Nasser and Fidel Castro
begin a 90-minute talk.
[Malcolm X]
And it was the spirit of Bandung
that made it possible for nations
that didn't have a chance
to become independent.
[man in Spanish]
...welcoming Nehru from India.
Welcoming Nkrumah from Ghana.
Fidel Castro embarks
on his historical speech
personifying for the first time
the rebel voice of Latin America.
[Castro in Spanish]
The case of Cuba
is like that of the Congo.
The colonialist intrusion was obvious.
We condemn
how the U.N. forces
intervened in the Congo.
[mellow piano music playing]
The only true leader who kept defending
the interests of his country, is...
Lumumba.
[applause]
[bright music playing]
[man]
President Eisenhower arrives
at the 1960 session
of the United Nations General Assembly.
One of the most momentous
diplomatic gatherings
in modern history.
[fanciful music playing]
[applause]
Ah, here's a little French tune
we're gonna swing for you.
Hold me close and hold me fast
The magic spell you cast
This is "La vie en rose"
[man] It had become clear
that there could be
no Congolese government
with Lumumba at its head.
[Louis Armstrong]
Heaven sighs
[man]
With the international commitments
of Ghana, Guinea,
of Cairo, Moscow, and Delhi,
all on Lumumba's side,
one wonders whether they can
afford to do nothing about it.
[Louis Armstrong]
To your heart
I'm in a world apart
A world where roses
[soft clunking]
[no audio]
[man] Have you brought with you
some of those devices
which would have enabled
the CIA to use this poison
for killing people?
[man] We have indeed.
[man] Don't point it at me.
[tapping of typewriter keys]
[music resumes]
Now...
Does this... does this pistol
fire the dart?
[man] Yes, it does, Mr. Chairman.
[chairman] Does the target know
he has been hit
and about to die?
[man] A special dart was developed
which potentially would be
able to enter the target
without perception.
[woman] Let's talk
about this tour of Africa.
Was it your idea?
No, it was the State Department.
[woman] Mind you don't get
kidnapped in the Congo.
Why? Nobody gonna kidnap me.
What was the connection between
the activities of the CIA
and the higher levels of the government?
And how much the president may have know
concerning CIA complicity
in assassination attempts?
The people of the Congo are entitled
to build up their country
in peace and freedom.
Intervention by other nations
in their internal affairs
would create a focus of conflict
in the heart of Africa.
[Louis Armstrong] Hold me
Close and hold me fast
The magic spell you cast
This is "La vie en rose"
When you kiss me Heaven sighs
[Devlin] Catty-cornered from the embassy
was Caf de la Presse.
And seated out on the terrace
was a man I recognized.
He said, "I'm Joe from Paris.
We have a lot to talk about."
[Louis Armstrong]
When you press me
[Devlin] I said, "Well, what is it?"
He said, "Well, you'll have
to assassinate Lumumba."
[interviewer] He used those words?
Yes.
[interviewer] Just as clearly
as you say it to me now?
Yes.
[Louis Armstrong] When you
Press me to your heart
I'm in a world apart
[Devlin] He said, "I have been instructe
to provide you with some poisons."
[interviewer] But who ordered him?
He said, "President Eisenhower."
The report says it is reasonable to infe
that President Eisenhower ordered the CI
to try to kill Lumumbaof the Congo.
I propose to refrain from intervening
in these new nation's
internal affairs by subversion,
force, propaganda, or any other means.
Thank you and God bless you.
[Louis Armstrong vocalizing]
[music stops]
How do you do?
This is Willis Conover in Washington, DC
The Voice of America:Jazz Hour.
Howdy, folks, this is
old Satchmo, Louis Armstrong
taking over the next 15 minutes
from my old friend Willis Conover.
[man]
Armstrong was officially declared
America's "Ambassador of Love"
by the federal government
and was sent to tour
the civil-war-torn Congo
in October of 1960.
[plane whizzing]
[man] America's weapon was
a blue note in a minor key.
["La Vie en Rose" playing]
Mr. Louis Armstrong,
the greatest "King of Jazz."
Welcome, Mr. Armstrong.
[glockenspiel tinkling]
[Lumumba speaking French]
[instrumental cacophony]
[frantic jazz music playing]
[man in French] The U.N.
Secretary-General claimed:
"Katanga is basically kept alive by mone
from Union Minire?"
[in French] Don't forget
that I'm a politician.
And many of my enemies
call me the "Cash Register."
In fact, Union Minire is not paying us,
we're actually supporting them.
[soft music playing]
[plane droning]
[Louis Armstrong]
When You kiss me, heaven sighs
And though I close my eyes
And see la vie en rose
[Morse code beeping]
When you press me to your heart
[Devlin] We were to go to Elisabethville
to attend a concert
given by Louis Armstrong.
I went and Ambassador Timberlake
and Julie, his wife.
The wives were there to make it appear
that this was a social thing.
[typewriter clicking]
[upbeat music playing]
[cheering]
[man singing in Zulu]
[xylophone tones ascending and descendin
[soft music playing]
[Blouin in French] Patrice
Lumumba continued to fight.
No one dared execute him yet, as planned
[shouting]
Not for lack of hatred,
but because Patrice Lumumba
still impressed his enemies.
He knew that he was still
the legal prime minister
but invisible hands were strangling him,
and those hands came from far away.
[mellow music playing]
Very far.
[man singing in Lingala]
[man]
Lumumba's power had grown steadily
and troops loyal to him
controlled vast areas of the Congo.
[O'Brien]
Lumumbists were about to recapture
two-thirds of the country.
[soft music playing]
[wind howling]
[man] Do you see any quick
employment for your talents?
Yes, there is something
coming up fairly soon.
Obviously, we can't talk about that,
but I think we might be back in business
[chaotic jazz music playing]
[man]
The Belgians get a man named Tshombe
who is a murderer
and the first thing he does
is go to South Africa
and hire more killers.
They give them the glorious
name of "mercenary."
They are dropping bombs on villages.
Blowing to bits Congolese women.
Congolese babies.
This is extremism.
[in French] The Belgian government
is completely opposed
to the use of mercenaries.
There is not one Belgian
mercenary in Katanga.
Belgium is neither colonialist
nor neo-colonialist
nor imperialist.
[thunder rumbling]
[dark music playing]
[speaking French]
[muffled jazz music playing]
[chaotic jazz music playing]
[music stops]
[music resumes]
[train clanging]
[somber music playing]
[man]
We toured the area in light aircraft
over a long stretch of railway
from Kobongo towards Kabala.
I was losing count of the number
of burnt-out villages.
However much you may distrust
the emotion of moral indignation,
there will be times when it hits you.
It hit me.
Not at the sight of the roofless village
but at the friendly wave
of the white officer
in charge of these operations.
[train clanging]
[no audible saxophone]
[thrum of helicopter blades]
[distant thrum of helicopter blades]
[in French] You are what we call a Simba
Yes. I'm a Simba.
- [man] How old are you?
- I'm 20 years old.
- [man] Exactly 20 years old.
- Exactly.
[thrum of helicopter blades]
[Malcolm X] How do you think
you would you feel right now
if some Congolese brother
walked up to you?
They look just like you.
Don't think you don't look Congolese.
You look as much Congolese
as a Congolese does.
[laughing]
How would you feel
if one of them walked up to you
and asked you about what your government
is doing in the Congo?
I was asked that when I was over there.
- ["Alabama" playing]
- [gunfire]
But you have no explanation.
Your tongue stays in your mouth.
[woman in French] Independence
was never achieved.
Independence came with
very limited sovereignty...
- [steam hissing]
- [train whistle shrilling]
[train chuffing]
[somber music playing]
...but economically speaking,
we were nowhere.
Why were we colonized?
Where is our wealth going?
We have diamonds, gold,
copper, tin, all you know...
["Alabama" playing]
[Malcolm X]
They take these hired killers,
put them in American planes
with American bombs,
and drop them on African villages.
And you Black people
sitting over here "cool,"
like it doesn't even involve you.
[man in French] Were they really hostage
or were you planning to kill them?
They were hostages.
They were there to keep planes away.
To prevent the planes from bombing us.
When we kept the hostages under threat,
there were no more bombings.
[Malcolm X]
When the white public
uses its press to magnify
that the lives of
white hostages are at stake,
they give me the impression
that they attach more importance
to a white hostage
than they do to the death of a human bei
despite the color of his skin.
[in French] We'll make
this work at all costs.
We'll make a pact with the devil
to reunite the Congo.
End of story.
[man in French] Would you
personally have killed
the European hostages?
Yes, I would have executed them.
Considering how we were bombed.
It's like...
being killed as wild animals.
But when a Black man strikes back,
he's an extremist.
He's supposed to sit passively
and have no feelings,
be non-violent, and love his enemy.
No matter what kind of attack,
be it verbal or otherwise,
he's supposed to take it.
But if he stands up and in any way
tries to defend himself...
[chuckles]
...then he is an extremist.
[Abo in French] At times, the military
would capture villagers.
They would encircle them like this
and call them out:
"Is this your daughter? Or your son?"
Parents were then forced
to have sex with their own children
in front of everybody.
[soft music playing]
[man in German] I'm fighting in Africa
for freedom and democracy.
Our operation in the Congo
is a NATO operation.
Jacopetti arrived.
I received information from General Mobu
that he was authorized to take pictures.
Jacopetti is a good movie director.
Perhaps he said, "Listen,
here's a man being shot,
put him a bit more to the left,
so the sun shines better."
[somber music playing]
When I stayed in Leopoldville,
I often visited
the Goethe-Institute.
Certainly, it's an institute
of the Federal Republic.
But I have to say
we were running things along two lines.
We're running an "official"
and an "unofficial" politics.
I've attended piano concerts
at the Goethe-Institute.
I'm not a man who just kills niggers.
It is my privilege once again
to welcome you on this occasion.
To the outstanding artists
who speak to us today of those things
that can be told
in music's universal tongue,
I offer our homage and our thanks.
[applause]
[Abo in French] We didn't
know how to advance.
We had to build a bridge to cross a rive
It was dark and we decided
to wait till morning to cross.
But the next morning,
the military attacked us by surprise.
Some escaped along the river.
Some were killed on the spot.
Mulele, me, and a few partisans
fell into the river.
We stayed in the water
from morning till eight at night.
The water up till here.
While holding our bags
and our rifles above the water.
[singing in Lingala]
The song tells:
"They lied when we were told
that women aren't strong.
But through what we lived,
we realized that women are strong."
[Dulles] I think we overrated
the Soviet danger in the Congo.
CONGO
[in Russian]
Mobutu's bandits brutally tortured
their prisoners.
With the support of American
and Belgian colonizers,
the legally elected prime minister
of the Congo, Patrice Lumumba,
and his comrades were arrested.
[Khrushchev in Russian]
The colonialists say
that Lumumba is a communist.
Clearly, Lumumba is not
a communist, but a patriot.
But isn't it time to end colonialism?
[drum solo playing]
Some have yet to recognize
their strength and truth.
They still follow yesterday's
lynchers, their colonizers.
Perhaps today, but not tomorrow.
It just won't happen!
The people will rise
and straighten their backs
to become their own masters
instead of being lackeys
and slaves of the colonizers.
[moody music playing]
Keep this in mind, gentlemen.
This day will come sooner than you think
Death to colonial slavery!
Bury it!
Bury it deep in the ground!
The deeper, the better!
[applause]
["The Ballad Of Hollis Brown" playing]
We knew the U.S. would vote
for our resolution with grinding teeth.
So we put the U.S. in a real dilemma.
If they would vote against us,
they would look like the colonizers.
The rats have got your flour
Bad blood it got your mare
And one of the things
that is going to help
to bring this about
is the independence of Africa.
[Nina Simone]
The rats Have got your flour
Bad blood it got your mare
[Malcolm X]
We began to identify with it.
And your Western imperialists
and colonialists
consider this to be a grave threat.
More of a threat than communism
or Marxism or socialism.
Africanism is what they consider
to be the real threat.
[man] A soldier tries
to stuff into Lumumba's mouth
the crumbled speech...
The rats have got your flour
Bad blood it got your mare
[man]
United Arab Republic? Yes.
Ethiopia? Yes.
Bad blood it got your mare
[man]
Soviet Union? Yes.
India? Yes.
Nigeria? Yes.
Is there anyone who cares
[man]
Belgium? Abstained.
United States? Abstained.
So you prayed to the Lord above
Please send you a friend
[applause]
[woman] And there was
Asian-African unanimity
in the United Nations General Assembly
on the "Declaration Against Colonialism"
which won 89 votes.
[somber piano music playing]
[Bofane in French] We owe it to ourselve
to write our own story.
[dark music playing]
Look at "the opening of
the Zaire border" at the time
decided by Westerners.
It's U.N. Resolution 929.
I know it by heart.
I could describe how from then onwards
it's genocide after genocide
after genocide
and finally the Congo War.
In five minutes.
[alarm ringing]
[upbeat music playing]
[indistinct lyrics]
[somber music playing]
[muffled thrum of helicopter blades]
[Bofane in French] Everyone looks away.
The U.N. only observes.
It costs $2 billion per month.
They're in the DR Congo
for almost 25 years.
They were able to capture Lumumba
because of the U.N.
[gunshot]
Lumumba was under U.N. protection.
Today it's the same thing.
[exploding]
[man in French] On January 17, 1961,
you were at the Elisabethville airport
when Lumumba, Mpolo, and Okito arrived.
How come you were
at the Elisabethville airport?
I was told an important package
would arrive:
the three persons in question.
How were they at that moment?
They were alive, but in what condition?
They were alive.
As far as I can tell from where I stood.
they were not necessarily
in a state of "dying."
We have all learned this morning
by the Katanga authorities
of the reported death of Patrice Lumumba
and two of his colleagues.
["We Insist! Freedom Now Suite" playing]
[Abbey Lincoln vocalizing]
The issue then is simply this:
Shall the United Nations survive?
Shall the attempt to bring about peace
by the considered power
of international understanding
be discarded?
[music resumes]
[Abbey Lincoln vocalizing]
[Abbey Lincoln vocalizing]
[cheering]
[Abbey Lincoln vocalizing]
[vocalizing]
[screaming]
[shouting]
[whooshing]
[vocalizing]
[shouting]
[vocalizing continues]
[music stops]
[radio static]
[somber music playing]
[muffled lively music playing]