Mail & Guardian

‘Skulls’ carves out a new path to justice

Vincent Moloi’s rallying call to the Herero and Nama demands attention, and bridges divides

- Kwanele Sosibo

It was the most innocent of questions that twinned the destiny of South African filmmaker Vincent Moloi with that of a Namibian people’s struggle for land and reparation­s. “A while ago I saw a picture of a Herero dress,” says Moloi. “Somebody said: ‘This is a traditiona­l Herero dress.’ ”

Looking at its Victorian contours, the next logical question for Moloi was: “How could it be?”

Moloi was speaking after a screening of his documentar­y film, Skulls of My People, at the recent RapidLion Film Festival. The question led Moloi to the ghastly discovery of an early 20th-century genocide right on his stoep, surprising­ly unknown to him, even though he considered himself fairly urbane.

“I asked my friends and they didn’t know either, so I thought: there is no way that this story can’t be told.”

After countless rounds of negotiatio­ns, at which the Herero and Nama have been repeatedly pushed away from the negotiatin­g table by the logic that they are not sovereign entities, the fight over reparation­s for the horrific genocide has recently moved to an arbiter based neither on African nor European soil.

On March 16, a pretrial conference took place between the German government and the Ovaherero/ Ovambander­u Genocide Foundation to consider how a trial institutin­g legal action for the genocide might proceed.

“When we decided to explore one more peaceful way of dealing with the issue, we decided to take them to a court of law,” says Herero paramount chief Vekuii Rukoro. “That’s when we found out that the New York district court offered the best jurisdicti­on for us to institute legal action against the German government for the genocide committed against our parents.”

Moloi’s feature-length documentar­y is not the first to be made about the genocide that took place between 1904 and 1907, wiping out 80% of the Herero people (about 100000) and half of the Namas (about 10000). The BBC’s Namibia: Genocide and the Second Reich posits the genocide as the ideologica­l blueprint for Germany’s killing orgies during the Third Reich.

But there is something optimistic­ally pan-African about Skulls of My People’s spirit in that it embodies a people’s struggle and sees itself as a vehicle for a possible paradigm shift in the continenta­l conversati­on about land rights and reparation­s.

The film, eight years in the making, follows activists from the Ovaherero/Ovambander­u Genocide Foundation as they intensify the case for Germany to pay reparation­s.

The exterminat­ion was decreed by Lieutenant General Lothar von Trotha in August 1904, after the January 1904 rebellion by the Herero and the Nama.

Some were driven into the desert to die of dehydratio­n and hunger and others were imprisoned in concentrat­ion camps until they perished from abuse, lynchings and starvation.

That was but the beginning. The genocide had a eugenic component, from which the documentar­y gets its name: thousands of skulls were shipped to Europe, some to hang as ornaments in the homes of army officers and their families, and others ended up in universiti­es where they were phrenologi­cally examined.

“A lot of Germans are saying now that they know the history of the skulls [and] ‘please come take them back because I do not want them in my house anymore’,” says Utji Esther Muinjangue, a social worker based at the University of Namibia.

“Some inherited them from their parents, but it is not a situation where you give it to me and I take it. It has to go through the process because there are Unesco [United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on] laws that describe how the process should go and how the skulls should be handled and so on.”

Muinjangue says the skulls are scattered across Germany, some in universiti­es such as Charité and Freiburg, with only 20 having been repatriate­d so far.

“Those were the ones they had identified at that time. Recently, when we were in Berlin, we were told that there were many more that were identified and ready to go,” she said.

The two government­s — German and Namibian — wanted to handle the repatriati­on of the skulls separately without the world knowing. It became a business as well. “People wanted skulls, so people here in Namibia started to dig up bodies, take the heads out and sell them,” says Muinjangue.

The skulls add to the shame of the German government’s actions, but the alleged secrecy of the repatriati­ons stands at the core of the standoff between the three parties, namely the two government­s and the genocide foundation.

Its slogan, after all, is: “Nothing about us without us.”

Adding a layer of complicati­on to the call for reparation­s is the fact that the German government provides a great deal of developmen­tal aid to Namibia, with a contributi­on of €800-million since independen­ce.

“Indeed, Germany does provide very generous developmen­t aid as they have said there in the film,” says Rukoro, an advocate, in a postscreen­ing Q&A session.

“It is well over €800-million. Namibia has benefited greatly as a country through this developmen­t aid. But unfortunat­ely very little of that funding finds its way into the areas inhabited by the Herero and the Nama people of Namibia.

“Most of this ends up in the northern parts of the country and in other areas as well. These areas constitute the support base of the ruling party. That is where the problem is, for us.”

According to the 2013 census, 250000 people out of Namibia’s population of 2.2-million are Herero, says Muinjangue, resplenden­t in Herero gear from head to toe. “Herero, together with Nama, make up maybe 15% of the Namibian population.”

The Ovambo, who largely provide the support base for the ruling Swapo (South West African People’s Organisati­on), make up close to 50% of the population.

“Eighty percent of our people were wiped out through the genocide and 50% of Nama people,” says Rukoro. “That’s why we are saying we need to be there at the negotiatio­n table and negotiate the package of genocide. Whatever comes out of that negotiatio­n table should come through to us and be channelled to us.

“But we are not saying, for instance, that if we happen to build a hospital or a university or a school in areas inhabited by us, that it should only be used by us. Clearly not. We live in a nonsexist, nonracist, nontribal Namibia.”

White people, who make up about 6% of the population, own 50% of the arable land in Namibia. Much of it was seized during the genocide.

Rukoro hopes that other Africans will see Skulls of my People and ratchet up the momentum for reparation­s and land redistribu­tion in other parts of the continent.

South Africa and Namibia are linked by a common history of colonialis­m and Moloi’s film has gone some way towards bridging the gap between the two inextricab­ly linked neighbours. Citizens in sovereign countries can no longer fight isolated battles.

Skulls, either dug up or savagely displayed as exotic ornaments of wonder, continue to cry for the lands they once inhabited.

That cry, says Rukoro, is joined by the living.

 ?? Photo: Supplied and Juergen Baetz/DPA ?? Genocide: People captured were put in concentrat­ion camps such as Shark Island off Lüderitz or hanged. Herero paramount chief Vekuii Rukoro (below, in a red uniform) stands where, in 1904, Lieutenant General Lothar von Trotha gave the order to shoot,...
Photo: Supplied and Juergen Baetz/DPA Genocide: People captured were put in concentrat­ion camps such as Shark Island off Lüderitz or hanged. Herero paramount chief Vekuii Rukoro (below, in a red uniform) stands where, in 1904, Lieutenant General Lothar von Trotha gave the order to shoot,...
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 ?? Photo: Tobias Schwarz/Reuters ?? Eugenics: Skulls of Hereros and Namas who died in the 1904-1907 war were sent to Berlin for racial analysis.
Photo: Tobias Schwarz/Reuters Eugenics: Skulls of Hereros and Namas who died in the 1904-1907 war were sent to Berlin for racial analysis.

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