Through the 1950s, Africans and Native Americans Were Kept In Zoos As Exhibit
By M.B. David
Political Blindspot, February 13, 2013
Throughout the early 20th century, Germany held what was termed a, “Peoples Show,” or Völkerschau. Africans were brought in as carnival or zoo exhibits for passers-by to gawk at.
Brussels, Belgium in 1958
Only decades before, in the late 1800′s, Europe had been filled with,
“human zoos,” in cities like Paris, Hamburg, Antwerp, Barcelona,
London, Milan, and Warsaw. New York too saw these popular exhibits
continue into the 20th century. There was an average of 200,000 to
300,000 visitors who attended each exhibition in each city.
Carl Hagenbeck of Germany ran exhibits of what he called, “purely
natural,” populations, usually East Asian Islanders, but in 1876, he
also sent a collaborator to the Sudan to bring back, “wild beasts and
Nubians.” The traveling Nubian exhibit was a huge success in cities like
Paris, London, and Berlin.
The World’s Fair, in 1889 was visited by 28 million people, who lined
up to see 400 indigenous people as the major attraction. The 1900
World’s Fair followed suit, as did the Colonial Exhibitions in
Marseilles (1906 and 1922) and in Paris (1907 and 1931) which displayed
naked or semi-naked humans in cages. Paris saw 34 million people attend
their exhibition in six months alone.
Just four years shy of the 20th century, the Cincinnati Zoo kept one
hundred Sioux Native Americans in a mock village at the zoo for three
months.
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