Stuff You Should Know - What Were Human Zoos?
Episode Date: April 25, 2019One of the off-putting byproducts of 19th century European colonialism were human zoos, living dioramas of people from far-away places made to be gawked at. Listen in to what the deeper meaning of hum...ans zoos held people on both sides of the glass. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
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Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant
over there, and there's Jerry over there,
and we have a special visitor today, Chuck,
Jerry's miso soup.
Is that what that is?
Yeah.
She's shaking her head now.
You lie, Jerry, that is miso soup.
I don't care what Jerry says, it's miso soup.
Chuck is getting up to sniff it.
One of his beard hairs has dropped into Jerry's soup.
Jerry's miso soup.
It smells like armpits.
I don't know what that is
because miso soup smells good.
I don't think that's miso.
I don't think so.
Miso's generally cloudier.
Now Josh is smelling.
It smells like miso soup mixed with hospital corridor.
If you were smelling,
why did the soup ripple under your nose
as if you were blowing out?
It's so gross.
Did not see this intro coming, Chuck.
Oh, goodness.
So you feeling okay?
Yeah, okay.
Little unwieldy lately.
This is gonna be good.
This is a really interesting one
that a lot of people I think don't know about.
I didn't know much about this.
And I think I came across an article
just randomly somewhere and I was like,
human zoos, what is that?
And then I was like, oh, hello.
Yeah, it's like if you went to an Epcot exhibit
where they were showing like,
hey, this is what this interesting tribe is like
in this part of the world.
Okay, so so far, kind of Epcotty.
Let's say Scandinavians.
That all depends on your approach,
as long as it's not like, look at this weird tribe.
Right.
And it's like, look at this interesting thing.
Right, look at this weird tribe
and maybe like throw money and bananas at them
to get them to dance for you.
Well, we didn't get to that part.
It's like if Epcot used humans
instead of statues.
Sure, and they do use some humans to an extent.
You could actually kind of weirdly trace a line
between Epcotts like around the world thing
and this.
I don't know what that is.
So, you know the big dome at Epcot, the geodesic dome?
Sure.
If you go behind that,
there's a bunch of different countries.
Oh, really?
I went to Epcot when I was like 12.
Oh, oh, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's maybe a dozen countries, maybe 10.
Okay.
And it's staffed with people dressed
like people from those countries.
Oh, sure, but they are from those countries, right?
I would guess a lot of them are, if not all.
Sure.
I think that's the deal.
You're from Sweden, you're Swedish.
Okay, and you're coming out like saying,
hey, I'm from Sweden.
How can I help you today?
Have some food.
Basically the whole point is to go eat.
Sure.
But there are people kind of bringing their culture forth
to be enjoyed and to captivate the people
who are at Epcot, right?
Yeah, there's a right way to do that.
There is.
The human zoos were the exact wrong way to do this.
And not only was it the wrong way to do it,
they were done for all the wrong reasons too.
Yeah, I mean, I wasn't trying to defend this at all
when I was researching it,
but I did think about the time period
and like a Westerners inherent fascination
with other parts of the world,
which at its base is like, that's fine.
Well, it's okay to be fascinated
with another part of the world.
Totally.
But not like, you know, look at how weird that person is
who is different than me.
Let's make fun of them because they, you know,
we'll call them more primitive than we are.
Right, or are inherently inferior to our race,
which is another prevailing idea.
And the whole, the premise of this Chuck started with,
like you said, just pure curiosity.
It was, you know, Europeans traveling around the world
to new areas and were encountering people
that they'd ever encountered before.
And there was a thread of people who were exploring
and like saying, hey, you wanna come back to England with me
or to France with me or to the Netherlands with me.
I can actually introduce you to the king.
And the person would hop along on board
and they would go back and they would be gawked at
and everything, but they were treated as an individual.
They had an identity.
They were a person.
Even though they were different and in other,
they still had some sort of agency.
That was step one.
That didn't last very long.
Well, no, because as we saw,
there was a fine line between you can go meet the king
and you can be the king's pet.
Basically, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So step two was really supported by this whole thing
that happened in about the 1800s,
the early, the first half of the 1800s I gather,
something called like biological anthropology.
And it basically is that thing that I said
about the hierarchy of races,
where one race is superior to another that's inferior.
And that there's a spectrum of human beings
and on the one end are white Europeans,
which under this idea,
this auspice was the pinnacle of humanity.
And on the other end, it just kept going and going
until you basically reached other primates like the apes.
And all other peoples of the world were on the spectrum,
either closer to apes, closer to white Europeans,
but really nothing compared to white Europeans.
And so there was this idea that the people around the world
were to be studied and analyzed and poked at and prodded
and measured to support this burgeoning science, right?
Yeah, in the name of like study by scientists supposedly,
but as far as the general public was concerned,
something to do on the weekend.
Well, that was stage three.
Stage three is when the public is finally brought in fully
and that's when the human zoos really come in.
And that was the peak of colonialism.
You remember our Druids episode?
It's just dropped today.
So do you remember we talked about how like Caesar
and some of these other conquering Romans
were like basically writing propaganda about the Druids.
They committed human sacrifice and cannibalism and all of that.
So they needed to be civilized by the Romans.
This is the same exact thing,
except it was 19th and 20th century Europeans
who were showing their people back home.
Look at how uncivilized these people are.
We need to civilize them.
This is, it's good that we are colonizing
the rest of the world.
Yeah, and obviously this happened in Europe.
It happened in the United States and North America in France
and the 1800s, late 1800s.
There was a place, it was an agricultural site.
And this was sort of like that Epcotty idea,
which was basically like,
let's throw something called the Paris Colonial Exposition
and let's recreate these indigenous villages
from the colonies.
That's always in the background.
Sure.
People can't forget that because it's not Epcot.
It's like, these are places we have conquered basically.
Right.
And see what life was like there.
So they would recreate this with human,
live human beings, not quite human zoos at this point,
but more like acting out like what they did,
wherever they were from.
But also really playing it up to the point
where it was just totally artificial.
Yeah, well, yeah, that might speak more
to just all art back then.
Yeah, but like-
There wasn't a lot of subtlety in performance.
But if you're also, if you're saying,
look at how uncivilized these people are
and then turning around to the people
and be like really kind of like play up the shouting thing.
Oh yeah, of course.
Well, they wanted to sell tickets.
Yeah, but-
Or at least drive people's attention there.
Right.
I don't know if they were selling tickets.
Yes.
To this one specifically.
I believe they were.
To the Paris Colonial.
So the other thing you have to remember
is they weren't just sort of like,
it was sort of like they were carnies.
They weren't treated well.
They had terrible living conditions.
Right.
They would get sick, they would get disease,
they would be left in the cold.
And if they died, they would be buried
in a mass grave rather unceremoniously.
Yeah, so that's another thing like,
okay, so the human zoos are horrific enough,
just the idea that they put on these things.
And then even worse than that,
that people came to see and like throw money
and bananas at people and like mock them and jeer at them.
That's bad enough.
But then the idea that these people lost their lives
as a result of coming over to Europe
to put on these performances or whatever,
and we're just buried in unmarked graves,
that just takes it down just the darkest path.
There is, you know?
Like that you go to Belgium to be in this exhibition
and end up buried in an unmarked grave.
You lost your life because you went to a place
you otherwise wouldn't have gone,
had Belgium not colonized Congo, you know, in 1876.
Right, yeah.
I mean, Belgium, we can get into that a little bit.
What was their exhibit called, Congo Rama?
Well, that was the last one of all of them, but sure.
Yeah.
I mean, the first one they were just on was France.
Belgium, like I said, it was going on all over the place.
And they had Congo Rama spelled with a K even.
Well, I think there's Belgian.
Is it?
I think so.
Okay.
Or maybe they're just trying to sell more tickets.
Who knows?
These were men, women and children once again
put in these basically shows that show
what their daily life was like,
like these living exhibits where white Europeans
would be behind a fence that was always important.
That was always huge.
A fence there to sort of trump up the idea
that like beware of what you're close to.
Not just that, Chuck, it also reinforces
a sense of separateness and otherness too.
Oh yeah.
You know what I mean?
Like there's no mingling.
You weren't meeting the people like,
where you just didn't walk up to somebody
and like introduce yourself to the person
who was putting on the performance.
There wasn't any co-mingling.
It was a fence separated you from them.
And you were there to observe and watch them
and they were there to perform for you.
Yeah.
And this jumping back to 1897,
King Leopold II brought over 267 Congolese,
men, women and children to Brussels.
And this was not even for the Kangorama exhibit.
This was for his own palace basically.
Yeah.
Saying like put them in canoes and lakes
and put them over here in the fields.
And I just want sort of like this stuff going on
all over the place.
Yeah.
He made it like a diversion.
So this is a big deal for the Congo.
And King Leopold also was just a straight up villain.
If you are fascinated by this kind of stuff
and horrified by it,
you should go check out Behind the Bastards
by our colleague Robert Evans.
Yeah, great show.
He's done some work on King Leopold II himself.
But so Belgium gets the Congo during this conference
in Berlin in the 1870s
where basically Europe divided up Africa
and said, this is our colony.
That's your colony.
That's your colony.
And the Congo went to Belgium.
And Belgium is like this little tiny country
and the Congo is something like 60 or 80 times
the size of Belgium.
But Belgium went there and just ran rough shot
over the people who were living there
to exploit it for its rubber
and to make money off of this possession that it now had.
But part of this also was for the king to show,
these people belong to us.
I'm going to have some come live
in their primitive ways on the royal grounds.
And all Belgians are welcome to come see our new possessions.
And they did, like more than a quarter
of Belgian residents, citizens came to see
this display the king put on.
Yeah, and this was in 1897.
But Belgium, like they had one of the last ones,
like you said, in 1958 at the World's Fair in Brussels,
there was a Congolese village there.
And I believe they had almost 600 people.
They were paid and a lot of people will point to that
and say like, they didn't have to be there.
They could leave, they were paid.
But that's sort of, I don't know,
that's a bit of a whitewashing, I think.
Because a lot of them died as well because of the cold summer.
And I think that's really important though
to bring up, Chuck.
Like if you read a lot of stuff on this,
like it's just like these people were victims
and nothing more.
And that removes a lot of agency
from a lot of the people who went there
to make money off of the Westerners
who were gonna come gawk at them or whatever.
And they went back home and they took their money with them.
There were people who were straight up like victims,
who were straight up captives,
who were brought to Europe and America
virtually against their will.
Yeah, we'll talk about them.
Or they were tricked or fooled into signing contracts
whatever.
But there were a lot of people who came on their own accord
and did it because they wanted to
because they wanted to make money or whatever.
And you have to, like the whole thing's more complex
than that.
And you have to recognize that fact
so that the people do have agency still,
the agency that they did have.
But at the same time, you can't point to it and be like,
see, that justifies everything the white Europeans did.
Because it really justifies basically nothing.
Well yeah, and they talk about after 1958,
that was kind of the last,
well, we'll talk about some sort of modern versions of this.
Like EPCOT.
No, no.
We love our friends at Disney.
I love that.
We love our Imagineer friends.
Isn't that what they're called?
Yeah, some of them.
Imagineer.
Sure.
Oh, you gotta earn that rank?
I think it's a specific kind of job at Disney, I think.
I think you really know this,
but you'd have to kill me if you really divulged.
You've got the insider secrets.
So yeah, this is one of the last ones.
And they said that the advent of movies and motion pictures
is what really stopped it.
Because it's not like they said,
we just shouldn't do this anymore.
They were just like, well, now we're just gonna make
degrading racist films portraying these people.
Yeah, like 10 years later.
And have a lot more widespread release.
What was that first documentary called?
Like Mondo Kane or something like that?
Yeah.
I've never known how to pronounce it,
but it was like basically.
Mondo Kane, I don't know if that's right or not.
Yeah, that's how it's spelled.
But it was like the predecessor to things
like faces of death or whatever.
And it was just, they just took their camera
and went around the world and looked at how savage
and weird other people were
who played up everything for the camera.
Just focused on weird rituals and stuff like that.
But it was the exact same thing.
It was a total extension and outgrowth of human zoos.
Yeah, and this isn't us saying weird.
Just wanna clear that up.
Surely that's clear across.
I think so, but we just gotta be careful.
That's true.
You wanna take a break?
Yeah, man, let's take a break
and you wanna come back and talk
about Odabinga after that?
Yeah.
All right.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher
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All right, so I feel like we've kind of given like a good
overview of human Zeus, right?
Like basically from the last quarter of the 19th century,
up to the middle of the 20th century, they had their heyday
and then just became more and more tasteless
to Westerners over time as it became obvious
like what was really going on.
But there's one guy who kind of like had the most tragic life
I've ever encountered ever.
And his name was Otabanga.
Yeah, who was the kid kept in a box?
There've been multiple kids kept in a box.
For that experience, for that experiment.
He was like his father too, wasn't it?
Oh, the Skinner kids?
I think so.
Like these are the two people that come to mind
when I think of like worst human existence.
This is depressing.
It is.
So Otabanga was, he was 103 pounds, he was four foot 11.
He was this, when you reference before the break
about people that were literally sort of captured
and brought over, he fits that bill for sure.
He was brought over to the United States
by a man named Samuel Werner from South Carolina,
proud Gamecock, he was an African missionary
and was commissioned by the St. Louis World's Fair,
which was what, 1904?
So before that, they said,
hey, why don't you go over there
and bring us back a bunch of pygmies.
And he's like, all right,
I know that we're using that word now
and they probably won't in the future,
but you shouldn't even like say that word anymore.
I see it, I've seen it, I've seen both.
I've seen, I've seen it used like it's just, you know,
like calling Native Americans Indians,
like some, some Native Americans are like,
that's what we're used to.
I've seen the same thing with pygmies as well.
Although I've also seen it's extremely derogatory
because it was also back in the 19th century
used as a term for monkey.
Right.
So like if you're calling an African Congolese tribes person
pygmy at the time, you were calling them a monkey.
So yeah, I could see how that would be extremely
derogatory too.
Well, this is certainly the language that you used back
then and they told him to go over there
and he was like, great.
He got letters from the US Secretary of State,
the president of the American Anthropological Association,
the governor of Missouri.
They'll open some doors.
And the Belgian Secretary of State,
great name, Chevalier-Couvalier.
Yeah.
Cause at the time,
Congo was still under the control of Belgium.
Right.
And they were like, yeah, go get,
go round up some people and let's bring them back
for the World's Fair.
And one of the gentlemen they brought back was Otabenga.
Yeah.
So I want to give a little more background on Otabenga
because the fact that he was brought back
to be in a human zoo is pretty, it's bad enough.
Like that's a really dark chapter of anybody's life.
Yeah.
Like everything about his life leading up to that point
predicted that this was going to happen.
Yeah.
When he was a little kid,
he was born into a tribe,
the Umbuti tribe in Congo in about 1883.
And one day he went off on an elephant hunt
and came back and his entire family and village
had been slaughtered by the Belgians.
Because remember we said the Belgians like came to Congo
and just overran the place for rubber production.
Well, the king held a private army called the force public
and they enforced rubber quotas.
So if your village didn't meet its rubber quotas
for the day or the month or the week or whatever,
the force public might come in and kill everyone
or they might hold like some public amputations
to make an example of somebody.
Or do basically any horrible thing you can do
to another human being, all to keep people in line
and to keep the rubber flowing for the king's coffers, right?
This happened to Otabanga's family.
So he finds himself little 100 pound
like less than five foot tall Otabanga
basically wandering the Congo alone.
Yeah.
And he was in short order captured by slave traders
who enslaved him and sold him to a labor camp.
Yeah, if you see pictures of him,
he has these fangs for teeth.
His teeth were filed down per the Congolese customs
and traditions.
So at first I thought that the Americans did that,
but he had already did that, but they were like,
oh yeah, this plays into our narrative perfectly.
This guy's gonna sell so many tickets.
Yeah, so they trot him out at the St. Louis World's Fair.
But that's not where his story ends
because he went from there to the Bronx Zoo in New York.
On display in a literal cage with animals,
with chimpanzees sometimes.
And orangutans I think was his most frequent companion.
Yeah, and it's really, I mean, just devastating.
Like people would poke him and prod him
and throw bananas at him.
And the New York Times wrote about,
I mean, I think their headline was,
Bushman shares a cage with Bronx Park apes.
And the New York Times was just,
it's not like they were writing an article of outrage.
They were saying like, come check this out.
They were actually responding to the outrage.
So in very short order,
the Colored Ministers Convention is what it was called.
Some of the black ministers around New York got together
and were like, dude, this has to end immediately.
There's a black guy in a zoo
and he's being held in a cage on public display with a monkey.
Yeah, and this is like 40-something years
after the end of slavery.
Right, so they banded together and mounted protests
and eventually, in pretty quick short order,
got Otabenga released to their custody and care.
But the New York Times published editorials,
at least one of them saying like,
what's all the hubbub about?
Like the guy's on the low end of the spectrum.
You know, as far as this hierarchy of races is concerned.
So why wouldn't we put him in a cage and study him
and observe him?
Like, of course, there's so much to be learned.
Right, so that really kind of gets at the heart
of what was driving this at the time,
public curiosity, colonization,
but also that completely racist science
that would eventually lead to eugenics,
the eugenics movement in the West and the United States.
Yeah, he was turned over to one of the leaders
of the Colored Baptist Ministers Conference,
Reverend James Gordon.
He was a superintendent of the Howard Colored Orphan
Asylum in Brooklyn.
And his quote is like one of the saddest things
I've ever read.
He said, and this was like,
this is how he tried to explain that it was bad.
He said, our race, we think, is depressed enough
without exhibiting one of us with the apes.
We think we are worthy of being considered
human beings with souls.
Like the very fact that he had to point out
that fundamental so obvious thing is just so sad, you know?
Sure.
I mean, he had to actually make a press statement saying,
by the way, he's a human.
Right.
Like you understand that, right?
Yeah.
And we've got enough problems here
trying to gain agency of this country.
Can you help us out here?
Right.
And so they turned him over to him.
He lived the rest of his life.
He almost went back to Africa in 1914,
but World War I broke out
and that stopped all like passenger ship travel.
He did go back to Africa once.
He visited.
He wanted to move back in 1914.
So this is what I understand that Samuel Werner,
the guy who originally negotiated for Otabenga
to come with him back to the World's Fair.
Negotiated?
Well, he negotiated with the slaves traders.
Oh, okay.
He took Otabenga back to the Congo.
Oh, yeah.
And Otabenga from what I read said,
there's no place here for me anymore.
I'll come back with you.
Came back to the States
and didn't feel any more comfortable
or at home in the States.
And decided he did want to go back to Africa
and never made it back that last time.
Yeah.
Thanks to World War I.
He lived in Virginia.
He worked at a tobacco company.
Apparently he was a good worker and a good employee
and killed himself.
Yeah.
Shot himself in the chest.
With a borrowed revolver.
Yeah.
Somehow borrowed makes it even worse.
You know what I mean?
Does it?
Yeah.
Something about it.
I can't quite put my finger on it.
Interesting.
But during this time, so this is,
like think about this.
His whole family and villages slaughtered.
He's captured and sold into slave labor for years,
taken away by an anthropologist
who trades a pound of salt in a bolt of cloth for him,
is forced into a human zoo,
is forced into an actual zoo in a monkey cage.
Yeah.
And then tries to go back home,
doesn't feel at home at home,
comes back to the States,
is just depressed for 10 more years,
and then takes his own life with a borrowed revolver.
Yeah.
That was the life of Oda Banga.
Before Gordon's part,
he tried to help him have a life in the States,
got him like, tried to integrate him
with American clothing.
He got his teeth capped.
Sent him to school.
He was educated.
Yeah, like he wanted to try and fit in,
but he was a man without a home, you know?
He didn't fit in anywhere.
Yeah.
He was probably sad.
Yeah, it's super sad.
So he really kind of demonstrates
like America's involvement in this.
He was prominent in the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair,
and he was put on display in the Bronx Zoo.
And again, like you said,
not just the New York Times was, you know,
arguing in favor of keeping him in there.
The fact that he was in there,
and that zoo attendance doubled
over the previous year, the month he was there,
and that the head of the Zoo Logical Society in New York
was like, let's bring some monkeys in
and put them in with a cage.
Because apparently he was taken to the Bronx Zoo
under the auspices that he would be caring for the animals,
not that he was gonna be put on display.
And once he got there, they're like,
we have a different idea for you.
Yeah, and he would, I mean, if you read accounts
at the time, he would basically
just sort of sit there depressed.
Eventually, after a couple of weeks,
he got a little obviously cagey, like experiencing zucosis
like an animal might, and then they start letting him out
to like walk around the forest some,
he would shoot his bow and arrow some.
But then when people saw that he was in the forest,
they would come after him,
and he was quickly kind of ushered back into his cage.
Right, and awful.
Yeah, so, but yeah, the fact that all this happened
really kind of underscores the complicity
of everybody alive at the time.
I mean, there were people who protested against it.
Obviously, the Colored Baptist Ministers Conference
was very vocal about it and was secured as release.
But they were in the minority,
and like everybody else was just tacitly approving this
just by allowing it to go on and not speaking out about it.
And some people trace this and the fact
that human zoos ever existed directly
to the undercurrent of racism prevalent in the West today,
that like that is the basis of it.
That's certainly part of it.
So let's take another break,
and then we'll come back and we're gonna talk about
St. Louis.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
the stars of the co-classic show Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends, and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
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So 1904, we talked a little bit about the St. Louis World's
Fair, but they had more living exhibits than just Otabenga.
By the way, Otabenga made friends with Geronimo.
Did you know that?
I did not know that.
So the enclosure for the Congolese and the enclosure
for the Native Americans were beside one another.
And Geronimo and Otabenga actually
became pretty good friends from hanging out.
Is that a silver lining?
Sure.
OK.
The Philippines play a large part in this.
There was a 47-acre area at the St. Louis World's Fair
dedicated to more than 1,000 Filipinos of various tribes.
Specifically, this one tribe in the mountains
of the Philippines, the Urgarat, they, in fact,
that means in Tagalog, mountain people.
And they were unique in the world.
And then they successfully defended their land
against colonization forever.
Right.
Like Spain never got to them.
That is exceptional.
So Ergo, they were left largely intact culturally.
Right.
So they had a reputation by the time the St. Louis World's Fair.
And I believe they were billed as such
as being like the most savage tribe in the world,
if not just the Philippines.
But either way.
Which really means white people had not
been able to get to them yet.
So they're just living their nice, peaceful life
as they always have.
One of the things that was like made, like a lot of hay
was made about the Igarats was that they would eat dog.
And that they would, in reality, the Igarats did actually
eat dog, but it was under very specific circumstances.
And if a family sacrificed and ate their dog,
their family dog, it was a really bad sign for the family.
It told the rest of the village that they were in some dire
straits, because the family would sacrifice the dog,
basically like the dog was taking one for the team,
to get this family out of whatever horrible streak of luck
or whatever they had going on.
And then they would eat the dog.
And that ritual process would be done.
It was very, very rare.
It was basically done as a last ditch attempt
to reverse fortunes for this family that
had fallen on hard times.
Or was undergoing illness or whatever.
But that did happen.
It did exist.
If you take the Igarat people and put them in the 1904
St. Louis World's Fair, that happens every morning.
Every morning.
A dog would be sacrificed and eaten by the Igarats.
Yeah, and not only that, they would
take sacred Igarat rituals, like crowning a chief.
And it wasn't enough just to put them on display
and have people look at them, they took their traditions,
their sacred rituals, and used them as dramatic fodder,
basically.
So it's like a theme park schedule
to come see these different quote unquote shows performed
that were really these Igarat rituals that they had held dear
and were untouched by white men until this point.
Right.
And then let's not forget the dogs that were sacrificed,
like every day, because of this.
So here's the other thing, too.
You might say, well, that's crazy.
They used to sacrifice and eat their dogs.
That's weird.
That's other, right?
They sacrificed and ate their dogs every day
for the satisfaction of white crowds who came to see them.
So the Igarat village was the most successful
and lucrative exhibit in the entire 1904 World's Fair.
There were something like 19 something million people
who came to St. Louis for the World's Fair that year.
99% of them paid an extra nickel
to go see the Igarat village.
Everybody went to see the Igarat village.
It's because they wanted to go see someone half dressed,
sacrifice a dog, and then eat it.
That's what people paid to see.
It had nothing to do with learning about their culture.
It had nothing to do with anything.
It was about seeing somebody do something horrific and weird
for your edification.
Yeah, and it was, I mean, there are so many people
that you could pluck out of history
and sort of use as an example,
whether it's Otabinga or this woman, Sarchi Bartman.
Yeah, the hot and taut Venus.
Yeah, she was South African
and she was born somewhere around 1780
and she was brought to London in the early 1800s
and put on display.
And she actually had a genetic characteristic
called steatopagia.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Close enough.
I should tell the audience I'm nodding silently.
But that is when you have a,
I mean, the way it's described here medically
is a protuberant buttocks and elongated labia.
Right, not like genetically protuberant buttocks.
Yeah.
Like very, very big.
Yes, that's clear.
So they brought her over in London,
put her on display.
Later on, she went to Paris.
She was described as having the buttocks of a mandrel.
And then finally in 2002,
her remains were repatriated to South Africa.
And we haven't even mentioned stuff like that.
They would dress up Otabinga's cage with bones and things.
Right.
Like anything just to make him seem more primitive.
And he was probably like,
what are all these bones laying around?
More primitive, more scary, more in need of civilization.
Like if you think about it, that the Igarat exhibit,
the Philippines exhibit and the fact that it was even part
of the 1904 World's Fair, it's the same thing.
That was a colonial possession of America.
The United States had gotten into colonizing itself
and the Philippines was one of its colonial possessions.
So they were bringing the most savage of the savage
from the Philippines over here to basically justify
why America was there to civilize the Filipinos.
And it just followed the same script.
And apparently it always has.
Anytime somebody goes and conquers another land,
they have to basically demonstrate how what they're doing
is actually good for the people they're conquering.
Not that they're being exploited and murdered.
This is actually good for them.
We're going to civilize them.
And it continued all the way up until
that 1958 World's Fair in Belgium.
Well, and some people say it continues today
while they're not rounding people up
and bringing them somewhere else.
You can go to what they call human safaris
when they basically will put you on a bus or on a boat
and drive you to these tribes people
to let you gawk at them from afar.
Notably in India's Andaman Island, the Jarawa.
Jarawa, sounds like I'm saying that wrong,
but it's totally right.
I think you nailed it.
Their tribe basically, there was a video from 2012
that the Guardian dug up that showed these people
just kind of the same thing
except they weren't brought over and put in cages
but they're still gawked at.
And this was what, six years ago?
It's just amazing that this is still going on.
I think it is.
So the Indian Supreme Court outlawed it
but it's still going on as of the most recent article.
So I was like 2017.
So yeah, it's like a human safari.
Yeah.
So, and again, a lot of people directly trace this
to the undercurrents of racism in the West today.
Something like 1.4 billion people saw human zoos
during their heyday from about 1867 to 1958.
1.4 billion people.
That's a lot of people, especially if you're considering
that it was really just people in Europe
and America, right?
And that had to have had an effect.
It clearly had an effect.
The fact that people were like,
oh, I'm gonna go check this out
and maybe throw a banana at somebody
because I want them to dance.
The fact that that was a mindset clearly is still clinging
to the international global psyche,
at least in the West today.
Yeah, I mean, it definitely helped reinforce that idea
of Western white superiority that's still so prevalent.
Right.
So, you got anything else?
Yeah, I mean, we should talk real quick
about this protest art in Oslo
about four years ago, four or five years ago.
There were these artists that did a recreation of,
and this was all to shed light on this.
It was protest art,
but they were recreating the World's Fair of 1914.
In this case, there were Senegalese environments
that they were recreating,
and it sort of had mixed results.
Like some people got it and were on board and saying,
yeah, I see what you guys are doing,
sort of like this meta art approach,
but then other people came out and said,
like it's an abuse of art
and really we're highly critical of it.
Right.
Which is kind of-
They didn't nail it
and it didn't go over very well in all quarters.
Yeah.
One more thing, Chuck, that 1958 World's Fair in Belgium.
Like if everything we've said up to this point
seems like weird and far off
and just past and historical,
go look up the picture of the little girl from Congo
at the 1958 World's Fair being fed
by an older white woman leaning over a fence to theater.
Like it drives home everything.
Everything we just said doesn't even compare to this one picture.
It just, it's really tough to look at,
but it drives the entire thing home.
Yeah.
Because it's recent enough
that it just feels like, oh, this just happened.
Yeah.
You know?
She's in a little American dress.
Yeah.
Little white dress.
Yeah.
Okay, what about now?
You got anything else?
Nothing else.
Well, if you want to know more about human zoos,
just start looking them up around the internet
and prepare to get bummed out.
And since I said that, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm going to call this,
we got another elephant adopted in our name.
Yeah.
If you remember a few weeks ago,
we read one about somebody who adopted an elephant
in our name and sent a little stuffed animal.
It was very kind.
And this one goes a little something like this.
Hey guys, loyal listener going on about 10 years
and I couldn't have been happier
than to see your episode on elephants pop up.
One of the best Christmas gifts I ever was given
was the gift of fostering an orphan elephant
at the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Kenya.
They're an incredible organization
that rescues, rehabilitates and reintegrates
orphan elephants back into the wild in Kenya.
And they also fund anti-poaching teams
and mobile vet units that respond
to and treat injured wild elephants and other wildlife.
I'm a woodturner and I donate 20% of all my sales
to DSWT and I'm thrilled
to be able to foster seven orphans right now.
That's awesome.
So as a massive thank you for raising awareness,
I sent each of you something from my wood shop
and donated what I would have made to the DSWT
and fostered a sweet little Jado in your name.
Jado is pretty cute.
Have you seen him?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Well, he's an elephant.
Yeah.
Thanks for brightening up my commute
and satisfying my insatiable thirst
for new and interesting facts.
Lowell Hutchinson, parentheses, BTDubs, I'm a woman.
Thanks a lot, Lowell.
Exclamation point.
Well, everybody, if you want,
you can go to the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust
and look up Jado and see our adopted elephant
that we're fostering now, thanks to Lowell.
They should call it Joshua.
Or...
Can you get the name changed?
Maybe.
It depends on how much you give, I think.
Probably so.
There's only like five elephants.
They just changed the name for a different picture.
Thanks again, Lowell.
Lowell didn't say where her website is for woodturning,
but if you need some woodturned, look up Lowell Hutchinson
and hopefully her site will come up.
That's right.
And if you want to get in touch with us like Lowell did
or sponsor an elephant for us, that's great too.
You can get in touch with us by going on
to StuffYouShouldKnow.com and looking up our social links
or sending us an email to StuffPodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production
of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
visit the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen
to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast
or wherever you listen to podcasts.