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[[Image:Ota Benga 1904.jpg|thumb|230px|right|Ota Benga in 1904.]]
'''Ota Benga''' (c. [[1884]] – [[March 20]], [[1916]]) was a [[Democratic Republic of the Congo|Congolese]] [[pygmy]] who was featured in a 1906 [[Racism#Scientific racism|human zoo]] exhibit at the [[Bronx Zoo]] alongside an [[orangutan]].
==Biography==
Ota Benga
a member of the [[Batwa]] people,<ref>
[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5787947 "From the Belgian Congo to the Bronx Zoo"], ''[[All Things Considered]]'', [[National Public Radio]]. [[September 8]], [[2006]].</ref>
and lived in equatorial forests near the [[Kasai River]] in what was then the [[Belgian Congo]]. Benga had survived the slaughter of much of his village by the [[Force Publique]],<ref name="nyt2006">
{{cite news
|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/06/nyregion/thecity/06zoo.html
|title=The Scandal at the Zoo
|date=August 6, 2006
|publisher=[[New York Times]]
|last = Keller | first=Mitch
}}
</ref> an army of King [[Leopold II of Belgium]].
American missionary Samuel Phillips Verner was sent to [[Africa]] in 1904 under contract from the [[St. Louis World's Fair]] to bring back pygmies for exhibition. Verner met Ota Benga in the Belgian Congo that year and negotiated with a tribal slave trader for the pygmies, returning to the United States with Ota Benga and eight others.
After several months of travel in the U.S., Verner took Ota Benga to the [[Bronx Zoo]] in [[New York City]] in 1906 to find him a place to live, at the suggestion of Hermon Bumpus. Bumpus was the director of the [[American Museum of Natural History]], and had provided a home for Verner's cargo including, briefly, Benga himself. At the zoo, Benga was allowed to roam the zoo grounds and help feed the animals. The events leading to his "exhibition" were gradual:<ref name="nyt2006"/> Benga spent some of his time in the "Monkey House" exhibit, and the zoo encouraged him to hang his [[hammock]] there, and to shoot his bow and arrow at a target. The first day of the "exhibit", [[September 8]], [[1906]], visitors found Benga in the Monkey House.<ref name="nyt2006"/> A sign on the exhibit soon read:
<blockquote><tt>
The African Pigmy, "Ota Benga."<br/>
Age, 23 years. Height, 4 feet 11 inches.<br/>
Weight, 103 pounds. Brought from the<br/>
Kasai River, Congo Free State, South Cen-<br/>
tral Africa, by Dr. Samuel P. Verner. Ex-<br/>
hibited each afternoon during September.
</tt><ref name="nyt1906">"Man and Monkey Show Disapproved by Clergy." ''[[New York Times]]'', [[September 10]], [[1906]], pg. 1.</ref>
</blockquote>
[[Image:Ota Benga at Bronx Zoo.jpg|thumb|230px|Ota Benga in 1906, purportedly at the Bronx Zoo.]]
Bronx Zoo director William Hornaday saw the exhibit as a valuable spectacle for his visitors, and was encouraged by [[Madison Grant]], a prominent [[scientific racism|scientific racist]] and [[eugenics|eugenicist]].
In response to immediate protests from [[African-American]] [[Baptist]] clergymen, Hornaday had Ota Benga removed from the exhibit. Public arguments were that the exhibit was [[racism|racist]]—"Our race, we think, is depressed enough, without exhibiting one of us with the apes," said clergyman James H. Gordon. Its apparent promotion of evolution was also a concern; Gordon stated, "The Darwinian theory is absolutely opposed to Christianity, and a public demonstration in its favor should not be permitted."<ref name="nyt2006"/> Benga was then allowed to roam the grounds of the zoo as a sort of interactive exhibit. In response to his general situation and to verbal and physical prods from the crowds, his behavior became at first mischievous and then somewhat violent.
Toward the end of September 1906, Ota Benga again came under the guardianship of Gordon, who placed him in the Howard Colored Orphan Asylum (of which Gordon was the superintendent), a church-sponsored [[orphanage]]. In January 1910, Gordon arranged for Benga's relocation to [[Lynchburg, Virginia|Lynchburg]], [[Virginia]].
While in Virginia, Ota Benga's teeth, which he had filed to points in the Congo,<ref name="nyt2006"/> were capped, and he was dressed in American-style clothes. He was tutored by Lynchburg poet [[Anne Spencer]] and briefly attended classes at the Virginia Theological Seminary and College. He was much more at home discarding his clothes and roaming the nearby woods with his bow and arrow.
He discontinued his formal education and began working at a Lynchburg [[tobacco]] factory. Despite his small size, he proved a valuable employee because he could climb up the poles to get the [[tobacco]] leaves without having to use a ladder. His fellow workers called him "Bingo" and he would tell his life story in exchange for sandwiches and root beer.
Ota Benga was caught between two worlds, unable to return to Africa, and viewed mainly as a curiosity in the U.S. On [[March 20]], [[1916]], at the age of 32, he built a ceremonial fire, chipped off the caps on his teeth, performed a final tribal dance, and shot himself in the heart with a stolen pistol. The death certificate listed his name as "Otto Bingo."
He was buried in an unmarked grave, records show, in the black section of the Old City Cemetery, near his benefactor, Gregory Hayes. At some point, however, both went missing. Local oral history indicates that Hayes and Ota Benga were eventually moved from the Old Cemetery to White Rock Cemetery, a burial ground that fell into disrepair.
==Legacy==
Phillips Verner Bradford is the grandson of Samuel Phillips Verner, and authored a 1992 book on Ota Benga entitled ''Ota Benga: The Pygmy in the Zoo''.<ref>{{cite book
| last = Phillips Verner
| first = Bradford
| coauthors = Blume, Harvey
| year = 1992
| title = Ota Benga: The Pygmy in the Zoo
| publisher = St. Martins Press
| ___location = New York
}}
</ref> During his research for the book, he visited the American Museum of Natural History in New York, which holds a life mask and body cast of Ota Benga. To this day, the display is still labeled "Pygmy", rather than indicating Benga's name, despite objections that began almost a century ago from Verner himself.<ref>{{cite news
| first = Darrel
| last = Laurent
| url = http://www.newsadvance.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=LNA%2FMGArticle%2FLNA_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031782991730&path=!news!archive
| title = Demeaned in Life, Forgotten in Death
| work =
| publisher = The Lynchburg News & Advance
| date = [[2005-05-29]]
| accessdate = 2006-04-03
}}
</ref>
Ota Benga became the subject of a short film directed by the Brazilian Alfeu França. França recovered and used original movies recorded by Verner himself in the early 20th century to create the 2002 documentary ''Ota Benga: A Pygmy in America''.<ref>{{cite video
| title = Ota Benga:A Pygmy in America
| people = Alfeu França
| date = 2002
| medium = film
}}
</ref> In Brazil the film was shown at the festival É Tudo Verdade ("It's All True").
==References==
<references />
* {{cite book
| last = Smith
| first = Ken
| year = 1998
| title = Raw deal : horrible and ironic stories of forgotten Americans
| publisher = Blast Books, Inc.
| ___location = New York
|
}} ISBN 0-922233-20-9.
== See also ==
*''[[Human zoo]]'': zoo exhibitions of human beings alongside apes and other animals at the end of the 19th century until the mid-20th century.
==External links==
*[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5787947 September 8, 2006 NPR story]
*[http://www.otabenga.org Ota Benga Alliance]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Benga, Ota}}
[[Category:African Pygmies]]
[[Category:1884 births]]
[[Category:1916 deaths]]
[[Category:Suicides by firearm]]
[[Category:Slaves]]
[[tr:Ota Benga]]
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