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E. D. Morel

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Edmund Dene Morel, originally Georges Edmond Pierre Achille Morel de Ville (July 10, 1873November 12, 1924) was a British journalist, author and socialist politician. He led a campaign against slavery in Congo Free State through newspapers such as the West African Mail in collaboration with Roger Casement, the Congo Reform Association. He played a large role in British pacifist movement during the First World War, participating in the foundation and becoming secretary of the Union of Democratic Control. On this occasion he broke with the Liberal Party of which he was previously a member, and after the war he joined the Independent Labour Party.

Background

Morels father Edmond Morel de Ville was a French civil servant, and his mother Emmeline de Horne was from an English Quaker family. He was born in the Avenue d'Eylau, Paris. When he was four his father died and he was brought up by his mother who fell out with her late husband's family and in retaliation changed her name to Deville. Desiring to remove her son from their influence she worked as a teacher in order to afford to send him first to board at Madras House school in Eastbourne and later Bedford Modern School.

Naturalisation

When Emmeline Deville fell ill in 1888, the money for school fees was not available and Edmund was forced to return to Paris to work as a bank clerk. However in 1891 he obtained a clerkship with Elder Dempster, a shipping firm in Liverpool, and was able to move his mother back to Britain. Five years later he successfully applied for naturalisation as a British subject and anglicized his name. He married Mary Richardson that same year; they had four children.

Congo activities

To increase his income to support his family, from 1893 Morel began writing articles against French protectionism which were damaging the company's business. He came to be critical of the Foreign Office for not supporting Africa and supportive of African decolonization movements. His vision of Africa was influenced by the books of Mary Kingsley, an English traveller and writer that showed in her book a sympathy for the African people and a respect for different cultures that was very rare at the time.

Elder Dempster had a shipping contract with the Congo Free State for the connection between Antwerp and Boma. Groups such the Aborigenes Protection Society had already begun a campaign against alleged atrocities in Congo. Due to his knowledge of French language Morel was often sent to Belgium where he was able to view the internal accounts of the Congo Free State; the knowledge that the ships leaving Belgium for the Congo carried only guns, gunpowder and explosives, and no commercial goods, while ships arriving from the colony came back full of valuable products such as raw rubber and ivory, led him to the opinion that Belgium's policy was inhuman.

In 1900 Morel began his campaign with a series of articles in the weekly magazine Speaker. He understood that King Léopold II of Belgium, who was the absolute monarch of Congo Free State, must have created a forced labour system of huge dimensions, in effect slave labour. Despite having risen to be Elder Dempster's Head of trade with Congo, Morel resigned in 1902 to further his campaign. Morel became a full-time journalist, first finding a job in the editing of a recently founded periodical, West Africa, then founding in 1903 his own magazine, the West African Mail, with the collaboration of John Holt, a businessman and a friend of Mary Kingsley who feared the application of the Congo Free State system upon the rest of the West Africa. In this period Morel published several pamphlets and his first book, Affairs of West Africa.

In 1903 the British House of Commons passed a resolution on the Congo. Subsequently the British consul in Congo, Roger Casement, was sent for an inspection. His report, that confirmed the accusations of Morel, was issued in 1904 and made a considerable impact. Morel met Casement just before the publication of the report and he understood that he had found the ally he was looking for. Casement convinced Morel to establish an organization for dealing specifically with the Congo, that was called the Congo Reform Association. A branch of the Congo Reform Association was established as far away as the United States.

The Congo Reform Association achieved the support of famous writers such as Joseph Conrad (whose Heart of Darkness was inspired by a voyage to the Belgian Congo), Anatole France, Arthur Conan Doyle and Mark Twain. Conan Doyle wrote The Crime of the Congo in 1908, while Mark Twain gave the most famous contribution with King Leopold's Soliloquy. Morel's best allies were perhaps the missionairies that furnished him eyewitness accounts and photographs of the atrocities, such as the Americans William Morrison and William Sheppard or the British John Harris and Alice Harris. The chocolate millionaire William Cadbury, a quaker, was one of his main contributors. The American civil-rights activist Booker T. Washington participated in the campaign. The French journalist Pierre Mille wrote a book with Morel, while the Belgian socialist leader Emile Vandervelde sent him copies of Belgian parliamentary debates. Morel had secret connections with some agents of the Congo Free State. Even the Church of England and American religious groups backed him.

In 1905 the movement won a victory when a Commission of Enquiry, instituted by King Leopold himself, substantially confirmed the accusations made about the colonial administration. In 1908 the Congo was annexed to Belgium and put under the sovereignty of the Belgian Parliament. Despite this, Morel refused to declare an end to the campaign until 1912 because he wanted to see actual changes in the situation of the country. With Roger Casement he formed the Congo Reform Association in 1904, calling for gunboats to be sent to liberate the people of the Congo. The pressure was too great for the Belgians in 1908 when Léopold relinquished the colony. The Congo Reform Association was wound up after 1911.

Foreign policy

During the Agadir Crisis of 1911, Morel was entirely in sympathy with Germany and opposed to what he regarded as bellicosity by the United Kingdom and France, and secret diplomacy between the states involved. He wrote Morocco in Diplomacy (1912) to express his views on the issue. At this time he was also selected by the Liberal Party as prospective candidate for Birkenhead.

Union of Democratic Control

As the tension grew in the run-up to World War I, Morel was again sympathetic to Germany, disinclined to stand by Belgium under German pressure, and opposed to the United Kingdom and France getting involved in war. He campaigned for neutrality but on the outbreak of war accepted that the fight was lost, and with Charles Trevelyan, Norman Angell and Ramsay MacDonald, formed the Union of Democratic Control to press for a more responsive foreign policy (he also resigned his candidature at this time). He was Secretary of the UDC until his death. The main demands of the UDC were: (1) that in future to prevent secret diplomacy there should be parliamentary control over foreign policy; (2) there should be negotiations after the war with other democratic European countries in an attempt to form an organisation to help prevent future conflicts; (3) that at the end of the war the peace terms should neither humiliate the defeated nation nor artificially rearrange frontiers as this might provide a cause for future wars.

The Union of Democratic Control became the most important of all the anti-war organizations in Britain, with membership reaching 650,000 in 1917. His political courage was praised by people as Bertrand Russell and the writer Romain Rolland, but its leading role in the pacifist movement exposed him to very violent attacks lead by the pro-war press. He was pictured as an agent of Germany on the Daily Express, a newspaper that also listed details of future UDC meetings and encouraged its readers to go and break them up. The accusation gained some credibility when Roger Casement, who was known as a friend and supporter of Morel, was hanged for treason (he had contacted the Germans to look for support for Irish nationalism). Morel was the occasional victim of physical assaults.

Labour Party

On August 22, 1917 Morel's house was searched and evidence was discovered that he had sent a UDC pamphlet to Romain Rolland in Switzerland, a neutral country. This was a technical violation of the Defence of the Realm Act. Morel was sentenced to six months' imprisonment, which he served in Pentonville Prison. Although, along with other pacifists he was placed in the 'second division' with some privileges over the majority of prisoners, conditions were still very hard and Morel's health was seriously damaged. Bertrand Russell described his condition at his release:

His hair is completely white (there was hardly a tinge of white before) when he first came out, he collapsed completely, physically and mentally, largely as the result of insufficient food. He says one only gets three quarters of an hour reading in the whole day - the rest of the time is spent on prison work, etc.

In April 1918 he joined the Independent Labour Party, and began to feed his views into the Labour Party to which it was affiliated and which adopted his critical views of the Treaty of Versailles. Morel explained his decision to join the Independent Labour Party to a friend:

I have long been gravitating towards the Socialist position — of course there is Socialism and Socialism, and mine is of the reasonable and moderate kind. When I look over my public efforts through the years, it seems to me that I have been a Socialist all my life. So far as any Party can express what appears to me to be the country's needs, the ILP approximates nearer to my outlook that any other, although I still look forward to and hope for the day when all really progressive forces can unite under the title of the Democratic Party. But Liberalism as represented by both wings — the Lloyd George wing, and the Asquith wing, is right outside my outlook now.

Morel was severely critical of the Treaty of Versailles, warning that it would lead to another war. He did not give up his career as a journalist, becoming director of the magazine Foreign Affairs which became the most authoritative voice of English left about foreign politics.

Parliament

In the 1922 general election, Morel fought the two-member Dundee constituency as a Labour candidate in harness with Edwin Scrymgeour of the Scottish Prohibition Party, and won the seat defeating both sitting MPs – one of whom was Winston Churchill. Morel regarded Churchill as a warmonger and therefore took pride in having defeated him.

With his foreign affairs specialism, he looked forward to an appointment as a Foreign Office minister during the government of Ramsay Macdonald in 1924, but none was forthcoming as Macdonald decided to serve as his own Foreign Secretary. Macdonald led an attempt to buy Morel off by gathering together a large number of senior Labour politicians to nominate him for the Nobel Prize for Peace, but it did not prevent Morel from quickly becoming a forceful critic of Macdonald's foreign policy. In August 1924 he forced the reopening of what had seemed stalled nominations on the Anglo-Soviet Union trade treaty.

Shortly after his re-election in the 1924 general election, Morel suffered a fatal heart attack at the farm near Bovey Tracey, Devon where he lived.

Books published

  • Affairs of West Africa (1902)
  • The British Case in French Congo
  • King Leopold's Rule in Africa
  • Red Rubber – The story of the rubber slave trade that flourished in Congo in the year of grace 1906 (1906)
  • Great Britain and the Congo
  • Nigeria
  • Morocco and Diplomacy (1912) (reissued as Ten Years of Secret Diplomacy in 1915)
  • Truth and the War
  • Africa and the Peace of Europe
  • The Black Man's Burden
  • Thoughts on the War
  • The Peace, and Prison
  • Pre-War Diplomacy
  • Diplomacy Revealed

See also

External links

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