Ndugu M’Hali (c. 1865 – March 28, 1877), widely known as Kalulu, was an enslaved African boy who became the close companion, servant, and adopted son of the famous Victorian explorer Henry Morton Stanley. Despite his short life, he traveled across three continents and became a minor celebrity in the Western world before his tragic death at age 12.
M’Hali was born around 1865 in what is now Tanzania. As a young child, he was captured during a slave raid and sold in a market in Tabora. In 1871, the famous explorer Henry Morton Stanley “purchased” him (though Stanley later framed this as “freeing” him). Stanley gave the boy the name Kalulu, which means “young antelope” in the Swahili language, because of his perceived speed and grace.
Stanley grew deeply attached to Kalulu, though the relationship was inherently one of unequal power. Stanley took the boy back to Europe and America, treating him as a protégé, a valet, and a living symbol of his “civilizing” missions. Kalulu accompanied Stanley to London, New York, and Paris. He sat for professional portraits in expensive Victorian suits and attended prestigious dinners.
Stanley even wrote a fictionalized adventure book titled My Kalulu, Prince, King and Slave: A Story of Central Africa (1873), which turned the boy into a household name in England. For a brief period, Stanley enrolled Kalulu in a school in Wandsworth, London, hoping he would eventually return to Africa as a colonial intermediary.
In 1874, Kalulu joined Stanley on the Trans-Africa Expedition, a massive and brutal journey to map the Congo River.
On March 28, 1877, tragedy struck at the Livingstone Falls. Kalulu was in one of the canoes that was swept over a massive waterfall. He and five other crew members drowned. Stanley was devastated by the loss and renamed that specific stretch of water Kalulu Falls in his honor.
Historians view Kalulu’s life through a more critical lens today. While Stanley described their bond as one of father and son, modern analysis highlights the colonial exploitation at play. Kalulu was a child who was uprooted from his culture, renamed, and used as a prop for Stanley’s public image, only to die in his early teens serving the very man who “owned” him.



































