The depiction of Simba and his men basking in triumph before the bodies of two dead mercenaries symbolizes the moment when the myth that white soldiers were invincible was shattered. Believing themselves to be impervious to bullets through a magical ritual, Simba and his men demonstrated their legitimacy and power by publicly displaying the corpses of their enemies—particularly those of the much-feared white mercenaries.
This is the caption for a photograph capturing a harrowing scene from the Congo Crisis of the 1960s. It encapsulates the geopolitics of the Cold War, the decolonization of Africa, and the insane aspects inherent in the very existence of “mercenaries.” The attack on Albertville (now Kalemie) marked the first deployment of the mercenary forces sent to suppress this Simba rebellion.
The Congo Crisis and the Simba Rebellion: In 1960, immediately after gaining independence from Belgium, the Republic of the Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) plunged into a fierce civil war, marking the outbreak of the Congo Crisis. In 1964, armed forces advocating Lumumbism (leftist and anti-Western) rose up in the east. Known as “Simba” (meaning “lion” in Swahili), they seized control of much of eastern Congo under a banner of radical anti-imperialism.
Many of the mercenaries at the time were former soldiers who had fought in World War II, as well as white men from apartheid-era South Africa and Rhodesia. Under the pretext of “preventing the spread of communism,” they went to the battlefield in pursuit of high pay. However, their conduct was largely chaotic, and they were notorious for repeatedly committing massacres and looting against the local population.
The defeat at Albertville and “The Rejoicing Simba” refer to the “Lakebourne Attack” mentioned earlier, an operation that attempted to retake Albertville by crossing Lake Tanganyika. However, this initial battle ended in a disastrous failure for the mercenaries.
“Siegfried Müller,” who appears in the latter half of the caption, is one of the most iconic and sinister figures of the Congo Crisis. He was always seen wearing his World War II “Iron Cross” on his chest, and his image—drinking beer while coldly recounting the state of the war—was featured in the documentary film *Africa Addio* and shocked the world.
The description that he “dug and decorated the graves of his dead subordinates himself” reveals his peculiar chivalric spirit on the battlefield, or perhaps a morbid fascination with death. He attempted to portray his mercenaries not as a mere group of money-grubbers, but as a kind of “elite warrior corps”; in reality, however, their actions amounted to a relentless series of brutal massacres.
Credits such as “The Photo Source” and “Agence Dalmas” indicate that this scene was distributed worldwide through the media. The Congo Crisis was also one of the earliest conflicts in which war photographers captured gruesome corpses and execution scenes at close range, and these images were consumed by Western society through weekly magazines and other outlets—part entertainment, part horror. These images capture a moment in post-colonial Africa where a proxy war of the Cold War, racial hatred, and the madness of mercenaries who called themselves “professionals of war” collided. Their story, which began with the defeat at Albertville, would subsequently escalate into a brutal mop-up operation that bathed the entire Congo in blood.













