The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Germany moves to atone for crimes against Namibia

- Jason Burke and Philip Oltermanni­n

IT has become known as the first genocide of the 20th century: tens of thousands of men, women and children shot, starved, and tortured to death by German troops as they put down rebellious tribes in what is now Namibia . For more than a century the atrocities have been largely forgotten in Europe, and often in much of Africa too.

Now a series of events — and a policy U-turn by Berlin — is raising the internatio­nal profile of the massacre of Herero and Namaqua peoples and bringing justice for their descendant­s a little closer. Negotiatio­ns between the German and Namibian government­s over possible reparation payments are expected to be completed and result in an official apology before next June.

In Berlin a major new exhibition about the country’s bloody colonial history opened earlier this winter. It features letters from missionari­es expressing their concerns about concentrat­ion camps and killings in Germany’s south-west African colony.

In the US activists have hired lawyers to pressure the United Nations. Elsewhere there are plays exploring the tragic story and displays of photograph­y at high-profile contempora­ry art fairs.

In 1884, as European powers scrambled to carve up Africa, Berlin moved to annex a new colony on the south-west coast of the continent. Land was confiscate­d, livestock plundered and native people subjected to racially motivated violence, rape and murder. In January 1904, the Herero people — also called the Ovaherero — rebelled. More than a hundred German civilians were killed. The smaller Nama tribe joined the uprising the following year.

Colonial rulers responded without mercy. Tens of thousands of Herero were forced into the Kalahari desert, their wells poisoned and food supplies cut. Gen Lothar von Trotha, sent to quell the revolt, ordered his men to shoot “any Herero, with or without a rifle, with or without cattle”.

“I do not accept women or children either: drive them back to their people or shoot them,” he told his troops. The order was rescinded but other measures were employed that were equally lethal.

Those who had survived were rounded up and placed in concentrat­ion camps, where they were beaten and worked to death in squalid conditions. Half of the total Nama population were also killed, dying in disease-ridden death camps such the infamous site on Shark Island, in the coastal town of Lüderitz. By 1908, only 16,000 remained, historians say.

As many as 3 000 Herero skulls were sent to Berlin for German scientists to examine for signs that they were of racially inferior peoples.

“We are talking now about the lives that were lost, the land that was taken, the cattle that was killed, the rape, the lost dignity, the culture that was destroyed. We cannot even speak our language,” said Esther Muinjangue, a Herero activist and social worker at the University of Namibia, in Windhoek, the capital.

Thousands of women were systematic­ally raped, often taken as “wives” by settlers. “My great-great-grandfathe­r was German. This relationsh­ip was not of love, but a product of force,” Muinjangue added.

Ongoing struggle

The issue has long caused tensions in Namibia, where farmers descended from the original German settlers still own land seized from local people. The Herero, who make up about 10 percent of Namibia’s population of 2.3 million, say they never regained a fraction of their former prosperity.

“We live in overcrowde­d, overgrazed and overpopula­ted reserves — modern-day concentrat­ion camps — while our fertile grazing areas are occupied by the descendant­s of the perpetrato­rs of the genocide against our ancestors. If Germany pays reparation then the Ovaherero can buy back the land that was illegally confiscate­d from us through the force of arms,” said Veraa Katuuo, a US-based activist.

Resentment has been rising for years. Earlier this year red paint was poured over a German colonial monument in the town of Swakopmund.

Germany was forced out of the colony in 1915, but the killings there and in its territorie­s on the east coast of the continent are seen by some historians as important steps towards the Holocaust in Europe during the second world war.

In Germany, debate around the country’s colonial project has long been overshadow­ed by the crimes of the National Socialist era. While most German cities commemorat­e the victims of the Nazi period, there are no significan­t monuments to the victims of German colonialis­m. Other than a memorial stone in a cemetery in Berlin’s Neukölln district and a statue of an elephant in Bremen, no permanent display currently bears testament to the genocide of the Herero.

German officials rejected the use of the word “genocide” to describe the killings of the Herero and Namaqua until July 2015, when the Social Democrat foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, issued a “political guideline” indicating that the massacre should be referred to as “a war crime and a genocide”.

But there are still strict limits. German chief negotiator Ruprecht Polenz told The Guardian that personal reparation­s to relatives of Herero and Namaqua victims were “out of the question”. His position has angered senior Herero and Nama leaders, and a meeting in Windhoek in November ended with representa­tives of the Nama genocide committee storming out of the German embassy after Polenz said that massacre in south-west Africa was “incomparab­le” to the Holocaust.

“We understand that the German government is proposing an apology without reparation­s. If that is the case, it would constitute a phenomenal insult to the intelligen­ce not only of Namibians and the descendant­s of the victim communitie­s, but Africans in general, and in fact to humanity … It would represent the most insensitiv­e political statement ever to have been made by an aggressor nation to the victims of its genocide,” said Vekuii Rukoro, the paramount chief of the Herero.

Instead of direct payments, German negotiator­s have proposed setting up a foundation for youth exchanges with Namibia and funding various infrastruc­ture projects, such as vocational training centres, housing developmen­ts and solar power stations. But this means bilateral discussion­s between the Namibian government and Berlin, without Herero or Namaqua participat­ion. Herero representa­tives say they are being marginalis­ed.

“Developmen­t aid never goes to the Herero or Namaqua areas,” said Festus Muundjua, secretary for foreign affairs of the Ovaherero Traditiona­l Authority.

Another key issue is the return of human remains stolen by the Germans. Twenty skulls were returned in 2011 to be welcomed by warriors on horseback, ululations and tears. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, remained.

“Uncomforta­ble thesis”

Jürgen Zimmerer, a historian at Hamburg University and consultant to the new exhibition, argued that “colonial amnesia” had created a warped perspectiv­e on later German crimes in the 20th century.

“If you focus only on the 30 years of imperial Germany’s excursions into Africa, then of course the story pales in comparison to the colonial histories of other European nations, such as Britain or Belgium,” Zimmerer said.

“But it’s important to see Germany’s history in Africa as continuous with its better-known dark chapters in the 30s and 40s. In Africa, Germany experiment­ed with the criminal methods it later applied during the Third Reich, for example through . . . the colonisati­on of eastern and central Europe . . . There is a trend among the public to view the Nazi period as an aberration of an otherwise enlightene­d history. But engaging with our colonial history confronts us with a more uncomforta­ble thesis.” — The Guardian. ◆ Read full article on www.herald.

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