Congo: Sapology and Oil
Congo-Brazzaville — not to be confused with its giant neighbour the DRC — is a small country of 6 million inhabitants with two obsessions: oil and elegance. Oil accounts for 90% of exports and funds a clientelist state. Elegance means the SAPE — the Société des Ambianceurs et des Personnes Élégantes (Society of Ambiance-Makers and Elegant People) — a sartorial philosophy that transforms poor men into resplendent dandies.
Sassou-Nguesso and Oil
Denis Sassou-Nguesso has been in power since 1979 (with an interruption from 1992 to 1997). He is one of the world's longest-serving leaders. Oil from Pointe-Noire funds his regime, but revenues are poorly distributed. Brazzaville contrasts with the neglected interior. The civil war of 1997–1999 killed thousands. Since then, it has been an authoritarian stability.
The Ubuntu Strength: SAPE and Rumba
The SAPE is far more than fashion — it is a philosophy. To be a sapeur is to assert one's dignity through elegance, to transform poverty into an art of living. The sapeurs of Bacongo, in three-piece suits and Weston shoes, parade on Sundays as if on a catwalk. Congolese rumba — Franco, Papa Wemba (who was also a sapeur) — was born on both banks of the Congo River. Literature (Sony Labou Tansi, Alain Mabanckou) shines internationally.
« Muntu ni muntu na bantu »
A person is a person because of others
— Proverb kikongo
Congo teaches us that elegance is a form of resistance, and that beauty can be born even when pockets are empty.