
On 30 September 2011 the Berlin Charité restituted 20 human skulls to an official delegation of the Republic of Namibia. They are a fraction of the many thousands of human remains of Herero and Nama victims of the genocide perpetrated by the German troups in 1904-1908 which were smuggled to Germany in view of proving racist theories. The German Government - against all diplomatic rules - did not welcome the delegation and the accompanying Namibian Minister of Youth, National Services, Sports and Culture Kazenambo officially, rejected the participation in a podium discussion on 28 September 2011 and caused a scandal when Minister of State Cornelia Pieper ommitted to acknowledge the genocide and apologise for it in the name of the German nation and State. The topic is closely related to the hitherto unresolved land issue in Namibia, in which the descendants of the victims of the German genocide, whose land and cattle have been expropiated by the white colonial settlers, still today in their vast majority live in poverty.
For more than 100 years, the human remains of which it is supposed thousands still lie in the collections and archives of pathological institutes, universities and other German institutions, have been looted and smuggled from the many German concentration camps established in "German South-West-Africa" in view of serving for "scientific" experimentations in view of proving the racial inferiority of Black people. “By using shards of glass,” so says the original subtitle of the contemporary photography pictured above, the skulls had to be “freed of flesh and made ready” by the wives of those murdered before being sent off. In Spring 2012, the restitution of another 14 skulls from the collection of the Freiburg University has been announced.
In November 2011 the German Government accused the Namibian delegation
to have "compromised the good bi-lateral relations with Germany" and to
have pursued a "hidden agenda". Two victim’s committees reacted sharply
to this allegation (|+| OGC-1904 and |+| Nama Technical Committee). Dr.
Werner Hoyer, State Minister in the German Ministry of Forein Affairs
then had to answer some inconvenient |+| questions in the German Parliament
(Bundestag). He pointed out the claim for restorative justice being the
“hidden agenda” and accused “organizations in Germany” to have appeared
as “joint hosts” and of having “openly incited” the Namibian delegation
to put this issue on the agenda.
For many years, non-governmental organizations have been demanding that Germany unequivocally acknowledges its historical responsibility for the genocide and makes both material and non-material reparations. To mark the occasion of the returning of the mortal remains, the guests from Namibia have been presented with a |+| Book of Condolences, in which people from all over the world commemorate the dead. It still is online and open for condolence messages.
|+| Videodocumentation of the delegation before the handing over of the skulls (by AFROTAK TV cyberNomads)
|+| Interview with Israel Kaunatjike of the Alliance "Witnesses of the German Genocide" (AFROTAK TV cyberNomads)
Am Sonntag, den 9. September 2012 zwischen 13 und 18 Uhr findet der 22. Tag der Erinnerung und Mahnung auf dem Tempelhofer Feld | Columbiadamm (ehemaliger Flughafen Tempelhof) statt. Unter dem... |+| read article
The OCD-1904 condemns the CDU/CSU and FDP coalition for voting against the motions tabled by the Left Party and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Greens Party respectively. It was irresponsible for the coalition to vote against the wishes of the... |+| read article
Joint Press Release: AfricAvenir International - Afrika-Rat Berlin-Brandenburg - Arbeitskreis Panafrikanismus München (AKPM) - Artefakte//anti-humboldt - Berlin Postkolonial - Deutsch-Afrikanische Gesellschaft Berlin (DAFRIG) - Initiative Schwarze Menschen in... |+| read article
Gemeinsame Pressemitteilung: AfricAvenir International - Afrika-Rat Berlin-Brandenburg - Arbeitskreis Panafrikanismus München (AKPM) - Artefakte//anti-humboldt - Berlin Postkolonial - Deutsch-Afrikanische Gesellschaft Berlin (DAFRIG) - Initiative Schwarze... |+| read article
Deutschland muss endlich um Entschuldigung bitten für den Genozid in Namibia und die Nachfahren der Opfer entschädigen. Gemeinsame Pressemitteilung von: AfricAvenir International, Afrika-Rat Berlin Brandenburg, Afrika-Rat Nord, AFROTAK TV cyberNomads,... |+| read article
Dear Mr. Kopp, et al.
Thank you so much for your note of support to us of the Ovaherero Genocide Committee and to our other friends in the struggle for justice. I am writing to you and through you also to the members of your NGO... |+| read article
On 22 March 2012, the German parliament will debate a |+| motion to acknowledge its brutal 1904-08 genocide of the Nama and Herero peoples. Germany’s... |+| read article
The repatriation of human remains more than a century after they were taken to Germany from Namibia has evoked painful memories of colonial wars in which primary African resistance was crushed, and genocide perpetrated (1904–08) in what was then the colony of... |+| read article
Former Namibian Ambassador to Germany, Prof. Peter H. Katjavivi, who was instrumental in getting the repatriation process with Charité started, calls upon both Namibians and Germans to confront the past honestly as part of the process of recovering human... |+| read article
Refuting in detail the arguments proffered by Germany on the questions of apology and compensation for the genocide of the Herero and the Nama, Dr Kwame Opoku notes that the Namibia-Germany case is being keenly observed by other African peoples and states... |+| read article
Names, dates, statistics, records, photographs – Namibia-based historian, Casper W. Erichsen, explains some of the factual evidence of the multiple atrocities that were part of the genocide in Namibia. At the end of the 19th century the rediscovery of... |+| read article
Namibian-born Horst Kleinschmidt provides challenging observations and personal family history linked to the colonial era. Urging both Germany and German-speaking Namibians to confront their past honestly, he offers examples of apologies made in similar... |+| read article
In his analysis of the failure over more than two decades to deal with the genocide, Alfredo Tjiurimo Hengari looks at the changing attitudes of Namibia’s SWAPO-led government and the role of the Namibian media as well as Germany’s evasive political... |+| read article
In the critical reading of their exhibition ‘Faces of the African Renaisance’, Adetoun Küppers-Adebisi and Michael Küppers-Adebisi deconstruct German colonial genocide in Africa and contemporary, neo-colonial racism against people of African descent in... |+| read article
Largely unnoticed by most Namibians, the local German-language daily Allgemeine Zeitung provides a forum for colonial apologetics. Reinhart Kössler and Henning Melber examine recent comments and readers’ letters in this newspaper, exposing the reactionary... |+| read article