A river remembers everything.
In 1878, a fourteen-year-old girl named Mwila stands at the banks of the Congo and feels what is coming. She cannot stop it. She does not try. Instead she begins to prepare - through song, through network, through the quiet fierce preservation of everything that the arriving world will try to erase.
Echoes of the Congo follows six generations of one family from the rubber terror of Leopold's Congo Free State to the chambers of the International Court of Justice, tracing a single unbroken act of resistance across a hundred and twenty-eight years of colonialism, independence, betrayal, and war. From Kiala writing testimony by firelight with cramped hands, to L on Nsimba drafting forbidden essays in the margins survival permitted, to Thomas - exiled in Brussels for forty-two years, building the archive that cost him his country - to Amina, who inherits everything her family preserved and carries it into the courts that were never designed to hear it.
Narrated in part by the river itself - ancient, sardonic, carrying the names of the dead and the work of the living with equal patience - this is a novel about what it costs to remember when forgetting would be easier, and what it means to carry a truth forward across generations without knowing whether it will ever arrive.
Told in the tradition of the African griot, Echoes of the Congo is at once an intimate family story and an unflinching reckoning with history that has never been adequately told.