The first
genocide of the 20th century occurred not in Europe but in South West Africa
(now Namibia), a colony that had been annexed by Germany in the early 1880s.
Now, a
debate has emerged regarding the genocide and its meaning within German
20th-century history, particularly the extent to which it can be seen as a
precursor to Nazi crimes.
Most
people know that Belgium, France, Great Britain, and Portugal controlled
massive empires in Africa from the late 19th century until the
1970s.
Less well
known is the fact that Germany, though a latecomer to colonialism, also managed
to acquire a number of African possessions, but lost them all after its defeat
in the First World War.
Its colonies included what are now Burundi, Cameroun, Namibia, Rwanda, Tanganyika, and Togo.
Germany
came late to the scramble for colonial territory. But many Germans viewed
colonial acquisitions as a true indication of having achieved nationhood, and
demanded their so-called “place in the sun.”
So
Germany joined other European powers in the so-called “scramble for Africa,”
and in fact hosted the Berlin Conference of 1884-1885, which carved up the
continent.
Rebellions
in the newly-acquired German colonies when they took place were brutally
crushed.
The
uprising in South West Africa by the Herero people, known as the Maji-Maji
rebellion, in retaliation against land seizures by German colonists, began in
1904. The Nama people joined the uprising in 1905.
As a
result, between 1904 and 1908, as many as 80 per cent of the Herero, believed
to number around 100,000 a century ago, perished, either killed by German
soldiers or left to die of thirst and starvation in the desert.
Some
20,000 members of the Nama tribe were also murdered.
Lothar
von Trotha, the German commander in Namibia, in an infamous “extermination
order,” declared that “every Herero, with or without rifles, with or without
cattle, will be shot.”
Dozens
were beheaded after their deaths, their skulls sent to researchers in Germany
for discredited “scientific” experiments that purported to prove the racial
superiority of white Europeans.
By 1908,
as David Olusoga and Casper Erichsen write in The Kaiser’s Holocaust: Germany’s
Forgotten Genocide and the Colonial Roots of Nazism, only 16,000 Hereros and
10,000 Namas were left alive.
“Our
understanding of what Nazism was and where its underlying ideas and
philosophies came from,” they contend, “is perhaps incomplete unless we explore
what happened in Africa under Kaiser Wilhelm II.”
Germany
has rightly concentrated its critical energies on the Holocaust, according to
German historian Jurgen Zimmerer. “But
that has also meant that there has been much less awareness of the crimes of
colonialism.”
Zimmerer,
a professor of history at the University of Hamburg, in his book From Windhoek
to Asuschwitz: On the Relationship Between Colonialism and the Holocaust,
examines the relationship between colonialism and the Holocaust. He situates
Nazi crimes firmly within the global history of mass violence.
The
German colonial wars against the Herero and Nama represent,
he argues, a “decisive link to the crimes of the Nazis” and were an “important
source of ideas” for Germany’s war of annihilation in eastern Europe after
1939.
One
scientist who studied race in South West Africa was a professor of Josef
Mengele, the doctor who conducted experiments on Jews in Auschwitz. Heinrich
Goering, the father of Hitler’s commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe, was the
colony’s first governor.
The most
influential interpretation of the connections between the era of imperialism
and Nazism was actually offered decades ago in Hannah Arendt’s masterpiece, The
Origins of Totalitarianism, published in 1951.
According
to Arendt, European imperialism served as a laboratory of racial doctrines and
anonymous bureaucratic policies that were based on “decrees” rather than the
rule of law.
This
past August, skulls and other remains of massacred people used in colonial-era
experiments were handed over by Germany to Namibia at a church ceremony in
Berlin.
Michelle
Muentefering, a minister of state for international cultural policies in the
German foreign ministry, asked “for forgiveness from the bottom of my heart” to
Namibia’s culture minister, Katrina Hanse-Himarwa.
Negotiations
are now focusing on how Germany will compensate and apologize to Namibia.
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