Namibia
History
Namibia
was, due to its barren coastline, colonised by the Europeans as one of the last African
countries. It was the German merchant and adventurer Adolf Luederitz from Bremen, who
bought in 1883 the bay of Angra Pequeña from Nama Chief Joseph Fredericks from Bethanien.
He also bought the area in a 20 mile radius around the bay. The purchase price was then 10
000 Reichsmark and 260 guns. The bay is today known as Luederitz Bay.
In 1884, the German Empire took over the "protection" of Luederitz' possessions.
A tiny corps of the "Kaiserliche Marine" landed in the bay and raised the German
flag. From 1884 to 1914, Namibia was a "German Protectorate" called
"Deutsch Südwestafrika". The German Empire sent the "Deutsche
Schutztruppe" (Protection Corps). It had the task to transform the area between
Oranje and Kunene into a German colony. German settlers were supposed to buy land and
freely and safely establish farms. For this purpose the indigenous population, mainly Nama
and Herero, was to be subjugated.
Top left: Adolf
Luederitz. Top right: Cannoniers
of the German Schutztruppe, German South-West Africa. Bottom
left: The "Alte Feste" (Old Fort) in Windhoek,
built in 1890 by the colonial soldiers, today a museum.
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Initially the colonisation proceded more or less peacefully. Treaties
were negotiated with Nama and Herero representatives. In these "Protection
Agreements" both groups were assured of military support. In return, the Nama and
Herero agreed to let German settlers take possession of their land and use it
agriculturally.
Eventually the Herero and the Nama realised that the German colonisation threatened their
subsistence and their traditional way of life as free cattle and goat herders so both
population groups rose in armed rebellion. These military conflicts lasted until 1908 and
resulted in the total defeat of the black population.
At the beginning of the First World War, South Africa occupied the area and in 1920, she
was given the country by the League of Nations as a mandate. When this was abolished in
1966 by the UN, South Africa rebelled and the result was many years of military struggle
between South Africa and the Namibian liberation movement SWAPO, which was supported by
the United Nations. On March 21, 1990 the political independence of Namibia was finally
granted and a democratic constitution drawn up. SWAPO won the first free elections and
became the strongest party. Its leader Dr. Sam Nujoma became the first Namibian President. |
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Namibian History
| The Pre-Colonial Period |
Before Europeans ever set foot on Namibian soil, the territory was buzzing with
activity. Unfortunately only little is known about the history of these times, due to the fact that
the Europeans were the first ones who ever sat down and wrote about what was happening.
Traces of the events of this time can however still be found in the rich oral
traditions that circulate in local communities. When the first Europeans settled here
in the early decades of the1800's, they found societies with complex social and cultural
traditions.
Around the same time a group of Oorlams (the descendants of Malay slaves, Khoi-San, Dutch
and English at the Cape) had moved across the Orange River with horses and guns. These
advantages made them powerful in the region, and they soon owned large stock of cattle and
goats. Some say that the livestock were stolen from the Nama and Herero who were rich in
livestock, and others say they were obtained through a form of taxation or tribute. Many
of the stories from this period recount a time much like the `Wild West' with cattle
raiding, ambushes, drinking, smoking of marihuana (which was a major source of income for
some communities) and riding horses through big open landscapes. Very descriptive of the
ethics of the time is the fact that missionaries were engaged in a `guns for converts'
arrangement with the local population.The Oorlams were not only in it for the fun,
however. They established strong trade links with the Cape; they built roads (the back
road to Walvis Bay from Windhoek still follows the route of one of these), and maybe most
importantly established their headquarters in Windhoek - They called it Winterhoek, which
was later corrupted to Windhoek. Some people will tell you that the Germans founded Windhoek
... don't believe a word of it, Windhoek has always been a popular place to stay. |
| The German Period |
| German South West Africa was the very descriptive name given to Namibia
when these northern Europeans staggered ashore in the territory in the early 1880's. At
the Berlin Conference in 1883 Africa had been divided between various European nations -
largely to the surprise of Africans. As a result Germany ended up with this arid desert
land that most Europeans saw little use in claiming. By means of purchase and /or theft (all
depending on your source of information) the Germans gradually gained control of
the central and southern parts of the territory that is now Namibia. One of the methods
the Germans used to gain control was to exchange land for `protection', but this failed
miserably when one of the strong local leaders, Hendrik Witbooi , stole the horses of the
Imperial Commissioner Dr. Heinrich Goring - father of the future Nazi Air Marshall Hermann
Goring. It seemed that the Germans needed protection rather than the opposite.
Subsequently a new method of trying to exert control over the territory had to be
attempted.
History tells us that in 1889 25 German troops under the leadership of Curt Von
FranJoise landed at Walvis Bay disguised, ironically, as 'tourists'. Walvis Bay at the
time was under British control, and the German troops could therefore not simply march
onto British territory in full battle gear. Once the charades were finished, Von FranJoise
and his men arrived in Winterhoek where they immediately began building the fortress that
today hosts the National Museum of Namibia, called 'The Alte Feste'. The building marked
the new militaristic style of the German Colonial presence in Namibia.
The German Colonial Administration was never fully in control of Namibia. The period
between 1890-1908 was marred by many conflicts and rebellions against the Germans by the
pre-colonial Namibian population. Almost a hundred thousand Hereros, Damaras, and Namas,
and about a thousand Germans died because of these wars and the resulting concentration
camps that were used to intern prisoners. In Germany there was a big outcry to stop these
wars and especially to stop the genocide of the Herero. Of these about 60,000 people were
killed, out of a total population of about 80,000.
However `savage' Africans were made out to be in those days, the worst savagery of the
new century surely took place in Europe. As a result of the Sarajevo assassination the
First World War broke out which meant that Germany was at war with the British Empire, in
southern Africa as in Europe. In 1915, after a fast defeat to the Union troops of South
Africa, Germany surrendered the administration of Namibia to the South African Prime
Minister Louis Botha.
Today one can still see many reminders of the German period. Namibia is the only
African country, has a daily German newspaper. There is also an abundance of German
buildings and monuments, erected in the German colonial period. The German language
coexists alongside the many other unofficial languages that are spoken in the country. |
| The Apartheid Era |
| In 1948 the Afrikaner led National Party gained power in South
Africa. Namibia exchanged one colonial experience for another. South Africa saw
Namibia as, potentially, a fifth province for their country. The existing system of
segregation that was widespread in colonial Africa was intensified through the policy of
apartheid. One example of the way in which divisions between communities were created was
the increasingly harsh `Immorality Act", which termed it `immoral' and illegal for
white people to have sex with people defined as having a different skin colour. Strangely
it was not considered illegal to lie in the same bed, but only to be caught having sexual
intercourse. One wonders how the police went about enforcing this curious law. Apartheid
simply means 'living separately'. In the late1950's and early 1960s, as in South Africa,
the living quarters of black and coloured Namibians in towns were torn down. These
residents, according to the principles of Apartheid, now had to be moved out of Windhoek
city which was reserved for whites only or `Slegs blankes' (a term that was to be used
often in the years that followed). So-called `coloured' Namibians were also to be divided
from black Namibians. The task proved very difficult as the gene pool had been thoroughly
mixed between all Namibians (white and black) since the time of the arrival of Europeans
in the country in the early 19th century.
Eventually, though, most `coloured' Namibians in Windhoek where settled in 'Khomasdal',
five kilometres outside of Windhoek, and the black population divided from 'Khomasdal' by
a five hundred meter `buffer zone' in what is known as 'Katatura' - which means
"a place where we don't want to stay". These so-called townships now form parts
of Windhoek, and the buffer zones have been filled to connect these apartheid creations
with the canter of Windhoek.
The Namibian Community Based Tourism Association (NACOBTA) offers tours around
Katatura. The former townships should not be missed by the visitor to Windhoek. They now
stand as monuments of the awkward apartheid legacy, but also as symbols of the future
development envisioned for Namibia. The latter is especially visible in the many changes
that have taken place in Katatura and Khomasdal, as more and more 'shacks' are replaced by
more formal houses.
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| Hidden History |
| It would be easy for a visitor to Namibia to think that the German
period had a huge influence on the country. It did, but proportionally this period
overshadows a lot of other interesting and influential history in Namibia. There are no
monuments remembering the Herero who died at Waterberg, or the prisoners of war who died
in the German prison camps in Swakopmund and Luderitz between 1904 and 1908. There are
also no museums dealing with the apartheid history. It is therefore up to tourists
themselves to find traces of these histories when visiting different historical sites. In
Swakopmund, over a thousand small mounds are still visible at the edge of the desert,
behind the former 'white' cemetery. Although not officially recognised by the Swakopmund
municipality, that is busy auctioning away plots on the site, there is little doubt that
these mounds are the graves of the prisoners who died in the Swakopmund prisoner of war
camp.
Much closer to Windhoek is the Nature Reserve 'Daan Viljoen' which is a popular place
for Windhoek residents to spent their weekends. The place used to be the home of a Damara
community. Many remnants from this time can be found throughout the park. There are
cemeteries dating back to the early part of this century, but there is also evidence to be
found of the residents who were still alive when the community was forced out in 1957.
Walls on the far side of the 'Aukeigas' dam were built for the gardens of the residents,
who grew Maize, pumpkins, melons, tobacco, and other crops. By the dam wall one can still
see a piece of rock art, with good eyesight and a bit of guidance, though. The trained eye
of the archaeologist will surely come across many other interesting things in this
historical oasis.
If you are interested in History Namibia will please you immensely. With a bit of
effort many new stories can be uncovered, and when the right stone is overturned who knows
what piece of history will emerge. Enjoy it. |
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