Blue Book PDF
Blue Book PDF
Blue Book PDF
SOURCES FOR
AFRICAN HISTORY
Volume 1
WORDS
CANNOT BE
FOUND
BY
BRILL
LEIDEN • BOSTON
2003
SAH-1-silvester.qxd 4/29/2003 3:08 PM Page iv
This co-publication with the National Archives of Namibia in the Republic of Namibia was made
possible by the African Studies Centre in Leiden, The Netherlands.
19
Text design by Vocking in Vorm (Utrecht); cover photography by Ivo Romein (Gouda).
Series.
DT1603.S68 2003
323.1’6881’09034–dc21
2003044435
ISSN 1570–8721
ISBN 90 04 12981 2
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in
a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written
permission from the publisher.
SOURCES FOR
AFRICAN HISTORY
1. J. Silvester and J.-B. Gewald. Words Cannot be Found. German Colonial Rule in
Namibia: An Annotated Reprint of the 1918 Blue Book. 2003.
ISBN 90 04 12981 2
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CONTENTS
Preface vii
Acknowledgements ix
List of Illustrations xi
Preface 7
Appendices 321
Bibliography 357
Index 361
PREFACE
The re-publication of the Blue Book of 1918 is an invaluable gift from a period
in which we have mostly one-sided or vague accounts of what really happened
during that time. This book offers a better and more comprehensive under-
standing of the liberation struggle and the suffering of the Namibian people.
What it clearly shows is that the brave struggle for liberation started in 1904
against a very brutal, imperial, and savage power. It is the continuation of this
very same struggle, which erupted at different times during the course of the
last century, that resumed in 1959 and culminated in independence in 1990. It
is important that when this very important aspect in the history of our country
is recounted and taught, that we start from the very beginning.
For the sake of the present and the future it is important to know where we are
coming from. The foundation of our independence lies in the tears and blood,
the determination, bravery and vision of our forbearers. The railway on which
we today comfortably travel in our trains was literally built with and on the
blood, suffering and death of our mothers and fathers. People who know this
will jealously protect what they have today. Racism, corruption, crime and
violence cannot be tolerated with such an invaluable heritage for which we paid
so dearly. The vision for justice, peace and a harmonious society is not only
ours but also that of the many thousands who were brutally wiped out by the
colonial powers. I firmly believe that, in honour of these brave women and men
whose blood waters our freedom, we should completely reject racism,
tribalism, corruption, crime and any form of violence, and stand up together in
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viii PREFACE
a concerted effort to remove all of these evils from the face of Namibia, as we
did with colonialism.
In the name of the many people in Namibia and elsewhere who will appreciate
the re-publication of the Blue Book and also on behalf of our children and the
coming generations, I wholeheartedly thank Dr. Jan-Bart Gewald (University
of Leiden) and Dr. Jeremy Silvester (University of Namibia) for the work they
did to uncover “the footprints and tears, blown over by the sand.” The
Introduction to the Construction and context of the 1918 “Blue Book”, and
their extensive research in this regard is very helpful to the understanding and
support of this remarkable book. In the same vein I also pay homage and
respect to the spirit of Major T.L. O’Reilly, the Military Magistrate based in
Omaruru at that time, for his commitment to justice and for his tireless efforts
to provide humane treatment for the devastated people of Namibia during that
period.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The re-publication of the Blue Book has taken far more time than we ever
anticipated, and it would have taken even more time if a number of people had
not provided the selfless help and assistance which they did.
We would also like to thank the Publications Committee of the African Studies
Centre for generously providing a guaranteed subsidy which allowed for the
co-publication at a reasonable price of this re-publication in the Republic of
Namibia.
Time and again the students that we have taught, in Germany, Namibia, and the
Netherlands, have urged us to carry on, to bring to the fore the past. A past
which had become obscured and all but lost. Thus, in conclusion we would
wish to dedicate this re-publication to the young historians of Namibia. They
hold within their hands the key to a better future.
ILLUSTRATIONS*
TO TEXT
flogging 282
TO APPENDIX I
C1. Native convicts in prison clothing with leg and arm fetters 329
C2. Native convicts in prison clothing with leg and arm fetters 330
* This is the original list of illustrations and captions, as used in the original
Blue Book
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Jan Kubas was an eyewitness of the events that took place following the defeat
of Herero combatants at the battle of Hamakari in 1904 and the German pursuit
of the Herero community into the parched Omaheke and Kalahari Desert.
When interviewed thirteen years later he struggled to articulate his memories
complaining that “Words cannot be found to relate what happened; it was too
terrible”.2 A Herero woman who survived the thirst and hardship refused to
describe her experience to a concerned missionary in 1907 arguing that ‘the
wind has blown sand over the footprints and tears’.3 Whilst the Herero and
Nama communities have a strong legacy of oral history and tradition, these
stress historical victories and praise wealthy and successful leaders.4 An oral
heritage that describes the horror that Herero and other communities
experienced during the war can, it seems, no longer be found.5
Yet the words of Jan Kubas and forty-six other eye-witnesses of events
which have been described as ‘war atrocities’ (and even ‘genocide’) that took
place during the German colonial period in Namibia were recorded and
published in an official British ‘Blue Book’ in 1918. These statements form a
rare documentation of African voices describing the encounter of African
communities with a colonial power. However, in 1926, only a few years after
its publication, the Blue Book, was withdrawn from the public domain and
orders given for its destruction. An active attempt was made to ensure that the
words which relate what happened from an African perspective would also no
longer be found and preserved in a written form. The Blue Book was removed
from circulation as an official act to consciously remove a critical account of
the German colonial period of Namibian history. Copies of the report were
1
The Report is known colloquially as the ‘Blue Book’. A Blue Book was a published British
Government report.
2
Great Britain, Report on the Natives of South West Africa and their Treatment by Germany,
HMSO, London, August, 1918: p. 65
3
Neitz, J. Die Herero betreffend. Reise zu Samuel Maharero, Makapaanspoort on 8 November,
1907, ELCIN II.5.14. quoted in Nils Ole Oermann Mission, Church and State Relations in South
West Africa under German Rule (1884-1915), Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, 1999.
4
Sundermeier, Theo; H. Tjituka; H. Hengari; A. Kajovi; H. Kavari; P. Katjivikua & E.
Ketjipota, The Mbanderu, MSORP, Windhoek, 1985.
5
Kirsten Alnaes, an anthropologist who worked among the descendents of Herero refugees in
the the Republic of Botswana in the 1970s, noted that few examples of the war and flight could be
found in Herero orature. Alnaes, K. Oral Tradition and Identity; the Herero in Botswana, in The
Societies of Southern Africa in the 19th and 20th Centuries, vol. 11 (1981), pp. 15 – 23 & Living with
the past: The songs of the Herero in Botswana, in Africa, 59.3. (1989), pp. 267 – 299.
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destroyed with the aim of achieving reconciliation within the white settler
community between the remaining German community and a new wave of,
mainly Afrikaner, settlers. African voices were forgotten and their written
statements actively erased.
It has recently been argued that this silencing of African accounts of the
events which took place in Namibia during this period extends to Germany
itself as a “… new permanent exhibit of German history in Berlin passes over
the near genocide without a word.6” This brief introduction will attempt to
contextualise this republication of the 1918 Blue Book within the broader
context of ‘colonial amnesia’. It will discuss the motivation behind the
compilation of such an unusual document by imperial authorities and the
reasons why it was subsequently suppressed. It will also seek to make an initial
assessment of the criticisms that were made of the Blue Book and suggest some
of the larger issues that are raised by the text and which the current editors hope
can be addressed in greater detail in the future.
It has been argued that in Southern Africa there is a particularly strong case
of ‘dissonant heritage’, where the legacy of monuments that celebrate a
particular perspective of the colonial past are in conflict with the ‘values of
post-colonial majority rule’.7 In Namibia it is certainly true that at
independence all national monuments that related to the conflicts of the
German colonial period celebrated the sacrifice and victories of the German
Schutztruppe (colonial army).8 In addition the processes of documentary
production that created colonial archives also tended to exclude indigenous
accounts of events.9 The papers of Hendrik Witbooi are the only archival
documents to have been published that present an African perspective on the
German colonial period.10
In Namibia the post-colonial state has recently taken major initiatives to
address the perceived visual and archival gaps in an attempt to weave a
nationalist narrative that is inclusive of different voices. Whilst monuments
that celebrate German colonial heroes, such as the statue of Colonel Curt von
Francoise that stands outside the offices of Windhoek Municipality, have been
allowed to remain, a massive ‘Heroes Acre’ has recently been opened that
embodies a visual counter-narrative celebrating leaders of anti-colonial
resistance. Six of the first nine heroes celebrated at the site played leading roles
in resisting German colonial rule.11 In addition a large-scale project has been
6
Smith, Helmut ‘The Talk of Genocide, the Rhetoric of Miscegenation: Notes on Debates in
the German Reichstag concerning South West Africa, 1904-1914’ in Sara Friedrichsmeyer, Sara
Lennox and Susane Zantop (eds), Ann Arbor, University of Michigan, 2000: p. 109.
7
Tunbridge, J.E. and Ashworth, G.J., Dissonant Heritage: The Management of the Past as a
Resource in Conflict, John Wiley & Sons, 1996.
8
Jeremy Silvester ‘Monumental Questions: The Rider’, The Namibian 18th July, 1997;
‘Monumental Questions: The Old Location Graveyard Part 2’, The Namibian 25th July, 1997;
‘Monumental Questions: Part 3’, The Namibian 31st August, 1997.
9
For a more extensive discussion of the shaping of the archives of southern Africa see
Hamilton, Conolyn (ed.), Refiguring the Archive, London 2002 and Christof Maletsky ‘9 heroes
honoured’, The Namibian, 23rd August, 2002, pp. 1-2.
10
The Hendrik Witbooi Papers, National Archives of Namibia, Windhoek, 1989.
11
The Namibian, “Heroes Day Supplement: August 26 2002”, 23 August 2002, pp. 2 – 3.
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At the outbreak of the First World War South African forces, under British
command invaded ‘German South West Africa’ (as Namibia was known at the
time) and successfully defeated the German army. Between 1915 and 1920
Namibia therefore fell under the control of a military administration run by the
Union of South Africa. As the war continued, the United States of America
entered the war, and it became increasingly likely that Imperial Germany
would be defeated, and serious consideration began to be given to the fate of
the captured German colonies.
Lord Buxton, the Governor-General of South Africa, openly claimed that
the participation of the Union of South Africa in the invasion of Namibia was
welcomed by the Union Government which sought to remove ‘the German
menace from its borders.13’ By the end of April 1917 the Imperial War Cabinet,
within which General Smuts played a prominent role, had already determined
that “The restoration to Germany of South West Africa is incompatible with the
security and peaceful development of the Union of South Africa, and should in
no circumstances be contemplated.14” It is clear that senior South African
politicians were aware of the importance of building a strong case to avoid the
possibility that German control over its colonies would be restored as part of
the peace settlement. John X Merriman, the last Prime Minister in the Cape
Colony prior to Union in 1910, wrote to his close friend Jan Smuts on 6th
September, 1915 advocating the collection of evidence to support the Union’s
case: “We must have the case of the Natives presented with the utmost care and
fullness – ab ovo – with all written evidence that you can get hold of. This is
our strong point, our sheet anchor in any diplomatic storm. Above all let it be
accurate.”15 The suggestion therefore emphasised the importance of ‘written
12
For details see Jeremy Silvester ‘The Politics of Reconciliation: Destroying the Blue Book’,
Paper presented at the ‘Public History, Forgotten History’ Conference, University of Namibia,
August, 2000.
13
The Times, 5th August, 1915 quoted in Swanson, Maynard ‘South West Africa in Trust, 1915-
1939’, Ch. 21 in Prosser Gifford and Roger Louis, Britain and Germany in Africa: Imperial Rivalry
and Colonial Rule, YUP, New Haven/London, 1967 p. 635.
14
‘Report of Committee on Territorial Desiderata’, Imperial War Cabinet, 28th April, 1917
quoted in Louis, Roger, ‘Great Britain & German Expansion in Africa, 1884-1919’ in Gifford and
Louis.
15
Cited in Hancock, W.K. and Jean van der Poel (eds), Selections from the Smuts Papers, Vol.
III, June 1910-November, 1918, CUP, Cambridge, 1966: pp. 311-312.
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evidence’ and accuracy, rather than fanciful propaganda with Merriman urging
the gathering of any ‘authentic documents bearing on this subject’.16
Yet even before Merriman had written his letter, officials in Namibia had
done substantial work on the translation of key German documents. For
example, within a month of the German surrender on 9th July, 1915 two Native
Affairs officials had produced a 108 page document containing an English
translation of the German laws in force in the Protectorate and other relevant
reports.17 In 1917 Captain Gage and Crown Prosecutor Waters published an
English translation of the Imperial German Criminal Code.18 English trans-
lations were also made of important documents such as the ‘Protection
Treaties’ made between the ‘German Empire’ and various local traditional
leaders and the proceedings of German criminal cases, such as the notorious
case of Ludwig Cramer.19
Whilst it seems that the initiative for the collection of evidence in Namibia
came from the Union, it also seems likely that General Smuts, in his capacity
as a leading member of the Imperial Cabinet, encouraged a broader investi-
gation into German policies and practices throughout its former colonies.
On 4th January, 1918 a confidential telegram was dispatched to the
authorities in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, stating that:
It is the firm conviction of His Majesty’s Government that, for security of Empire
after the War, it is necessary to retain possession of German Colonies, but it has
not been possible to secure general acceptance of this view owing to divergence
of opinion among Allies. Great stress was laid by Russians during recent
negotiations with Germans on right of population of country to determine its
future, and proposal was made to apply this to German Colonies. There are
indications in French newspapers, for instance, that this line of argument will be
pressed in other quarters. I should, therefore, be glad if could be furnished with a
statement suitable for publication, if necessary, containing evidence of anxiety of
natives of (German New Guinea) (Samoa) (South-West Africa) to live under
British rule …20”
A fortnight after this telegram was received the Administrator for South West
Africa, E.H.L. Gorges, was writing a preface to a substantial report which
initially consisted of around 400 double-spaced typed foolscap pages. The
explanation for the efficiency and speed with which the report was submitted
was that a collection of translated German documents was already available,
whilst an initiative had also already been taken to gather further information in
the territory. The Minister of Public Works and the Interior, J. Watts had
suggested to Gorges in August, 1917 that ‘a full historical account should be
16
Ibid.
17
Pretoria Archives NTS 266 4349/1910/7 639 ‘The Laws of the Protectorate … translated and
compiled by J.J.R. Coetzee & R. Dickman’, Native Affairs Dept, August, 1915.
18
Gage, R.H and A.J. Waters Imperial German Criminal Code Translated into English, W.E.
Horton & Co. Ltd, Johannesburg, 1917. NAN, ADM 147 contains the translations of the protection
treaties.
19
Contained in NAN A312 1/2 ‘Preparation of Imperial Blue Book cd. 9146’.
20
PRO CO 537/1-17 Telegram from Mr Long to Australia, New Zealand and South Africa,
4th January, 1918 quoted in ‘Memo. For War Cabinet’, 15th October, 1918.
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The official letter authorising Major O’Reilly to start work on the Report was
sent on 17th September, 1917. It is clear that O’Reilly drew heavily on the
library of Major Herbst which contained a number of key texts, such as the
autobiography of the former German Governor, Theodor Leutwein. The
German colonial regime had also left behind an extremely well organised and
detailed administrative archive. Apart from files dealing in detail with the
incarceration of ‘rebel’ communities in ‘concentration camps’, the archives
also contained a series of files dealing with the concerns raised in Berlin about
the excessive flogging that was taking place in the territory.22 Similarly glass
plate negatives, of hangings and displaying the torn and rotting backs of
victims of excessive ‘paternal correction’, were found by the incoming South
African forces.
Major Thomas Leslie O’Reilly was to be the prime compiler of the Blue
Book and author of the entire first section (150 pages of the original 212 page
published report). Originally section one had twenty-six chapters with the final
chapter consisting of statements concerning the wishes of Africans in Namibia
as to the future form of government for the territory. Statements from a total of
seventy-five witnesses were featured in the chapter which was later withdrawn
and included in another Blue Book which was published in November, 1918.23
The second section was the responsibility of Mr A.J. Waters who had served as
the Crown Prosecutor for Namibia since October, 1915.24 The final pages of the
21
Senator Theo L. Schreiner brother of the famous South African author Olive Schreiner.
Speaking in the South African senate in Cape Town, shortly after the South African invasion,
Schreiner noted that merely because Germany had defeated the Herero and taken their land, this
did not mean that they, as the new victors need do the same. NAN, ADM 156, Native Reserves,
Speech of Senator Theo L. Schreiner in the senate in the debate on the question of the second
reading of the treaty of peace and South West Africa mandate bill, 17 September 1919. Exeter Hall
was a hall in London where the anti-slavery society held meetings.
22
NAN, A 41, Translation of German Records re: Infliction of Corporal punishment on
Natives..
23
Great Britain, Correspondence relating to the Wishes of the Natives of the German Colonies
as to their Future Government, HMSO, London, 1918, Cd. 9210. Thanks are due to Reinhart
Koessler for pointing out the existence of a ‘missing chapter’ to the Blue Book.
24
Waters was already familiar with the laws of the territory. See Gage, Capt. R.H. and A.J.
Waters Imperial German Criminal Code: Translated into English, W.E. Hortor & Co. Ltd.,
Johannesburg, 1917.
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25
The Administrator’s ‘Preface’ is dated 19th January, 1918 and the report was presented to
Parliament in August, 1918.
26
See National Archives of Namibia, Finding Aid, Special Criminal Court SCC1-SCC11.
27
South Africa, Union of. Papers relating to Certain Trials in German South West Africa,
HMSO, London, October, 1916.
28
Gewald, Jan-Bart, Herero Heroes, James Currey, Oxford, 1999, pp. 305-308.
29
See NAN ADM 39 351/5 ‘Investigations conducted by Major O’Reilly’ and NAN ADM 157
‘Gorges to Botha’, 23rd November, 1917.
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were still common practice. He warned the Administrator that the people that
he had interviewed had expressed concern about “… the treatment meted out
by the Constabulary who were by some natives described as ‘just the same as
the German police’. At the very time that the Blue Book was being finalised
O’Reilly was complaining that his local police chief, Lt. Col. Fourie was ‘unfit
for police work’ as he had repeatedly expressed the view that corporal punish-
ment was ‘what the natives require’.30 When an internal inquiry failed to take
action against Fourie, O’Reilly resigned on 26th November, 1918 and travelled
to Cape Town.31 Within a year Major O’Reilly was dead (possibly as a late
victim of the Spanish Influenza which had decimated communities throughout
the world during 1918).32
Shortly before his resignation he had been working on a report involving
concessions that had been made to the Otavi Minen und Eisenbahn Gesell-
schaft. After his death, Major O’Reilly’s brother, J.A. O’Reilly, a solicitor,
quoted from confidential documents which had been in Major O’Reilly’s
possession for the purposes of writing the report. The Crown Prosecutor (Mr
Waters, the co-author of the Blue Book) and the Secretary of the Concessions
Commission both made visits to O’Reilly’s brother to reclaim the documents.
During the search an ‘iron box’ containing the handwritten notes and state-
ments that had been gathered to produce the 1918 Blue Book was searched.
Unfortunately the papers were returned to Major O’Reilly’s brother and were
never deposited in the National Archives of Namibia.33
It is beyond doubt that the events and issues presented so clearly in the Blue
Book served to scuttle any attempt by Germany to retain control over Namibia.
In the event Namibia was classified as a ‘C’ Class Mandate of the League of
Nations and placed under the administrative jurisdiction of the Union of South
Africa.34 In the aftermath of the humiliations of Versailles, and in direct
response to the Blue Book, the Germans published a White Book that dwelt
largely on atrocities committed by Britain in its colonies.35
One of the criticisms expressed in the German White Book of 1919 with
regard to the Blue Book was that it did not refer to contemporary German
sources commenting on the atrocities allegedly being perpetrated in Namibia.
In this manner the White Book sought to suggest that, in the absence of
contemporary German accounts, the atrocities did not take place. Thus the
compilers of the White Book noted:
30
Gorges, Windhoek to Botha, Cape Town, 23rd November, 1917. ADM 157 – W41.
31
O’Reilly to Sec. Prot., 26th November, 1918; 14th February, 1919 NAN LOM 3/1/1 – 1K/1916.
32
Spanish Influenza struck Omaruru ‘like a thunderbolt’ on 12th November 1918, ‘Annual
Report, Omaruru’, 25th January, 1919 ADM 108 3370/3; O’Reilly was dead by the middle of 1919
‘Estate of the late T. O’Reilly’ ADM 144 202
33
‘ Statement of Ernest David Richardson’, 12th July, 1920; ‘Statement of Alfred John Waters,
12th July, 1920, ADM 144 – C202.
34
Du Pisani, Andre, South West Africa/Namibia, Windhoek, 1982: p. 76.
35
German Colonial Office, The Treatment of Native and other Populations in the Colonial
Possessions of Germany and England, Engelman, Berlin, 1919
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The authors of the Blue Book rely for the greater part on “sworn” utterances of
the Natives... It is remarkable that apparently only a few White witnesses were
examined in the matter of the Herero rising.36
Furthermore the German compilers of the White Book argued that the authors
of the Blue Book should have “recognised the plain fact that the natives were
lying” 37
In response to the criticisms levelled by the compilers of the White Book, it
must be noted that, though it is true that Major O’Reilly, as the prime author of
the Blue Book, did not directly interview German officers or missionaries,
O’Reilly depended to a large extent on published German accounts, most
notably those of Schwabe and Leutwein, as well as the documents from the
local German archives. It must be borne in mind that in 1917, the writings,
letters, chronicles, and so forth, (which would later come to form the core of
the archives of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Republic of Namibia)
were scattered amongst the numerous Rhenish Mission stations in the territory,
and as yet not collected into a single and accessible archive. Indeed, if O’Reilly
had had access to these papers and been able to make use of the German
missionary archives he would have found much to substantiate the statements
of his African respondents. Recent historical research has shown, that there
were numerous contemporary German observers who commented explicitly on
what they saw happening at first hand.38 Most notable amongst these observers
were the missionaries of the Rhenish missionary society, although there were
also German officers who made explicit mention of the abuses being commit-
ted. For example, one such missionary was the young Heinrich Vedder, later to
become the doyen of settler history in Namibia, who recorded the fact that
initially there were few Herero prisoners in the harbour town of Swakopmund
when he arrived to start his mission work, but:
Shortly thereafter vast transports of prisoners of war arrived. They were placed
behind double rows of barbed wire fencing, which surrounded all the buildings of
the harbour department quarters [Hafenamtswerft], and housed in pathetic
[jammerlichen], structures constructed out of simple sacking and planks, in such
a manner that in one structure 30 - 50 people were forced to stay without
distinction as to age and sex. From early morning until late at night, on weekdays
as well as on Sundays and holidays, they had to work under the clubs of raw
overseers [Knutteln roher Aufseher], until they broke down [zusammenbrachen].
Added to this the food was extremely scarce: Rice without any necessary
additions was not enough to support their bodies, already weakened by life in the
field [as refugees] and used to the hot sun of the interior, from the cold and
restless exertion of all their powers in the prison conditions of Swakopmund. Like
cattle hundreds were driven to death and like cattle they were buried. This opinion
may appear hard or exaggerated, lots changed and became milder during the
Ibid, p. 70
36
Ibid, p. 71
37
38
In this regard see in particular the detailed work conducted by Nils Ole Oermann, Mission,
church and state relations in South West Africa under German rule (1884-1915), D.Phil.
University of Oxford 1998, chp. 5.
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course of the imprisonment (...) but the chronicles are not permitted to suppress
that such a remorseless rawness [rucksichtslose Roheit], randy sensuality [geile
Sinnlichkeit], brutish overlordship [brutales Herrentum] was to be found amongst
the troops and civilians here that a full description is hardly possible.39
In 1904, following the battles at Hamakari, Major Ludwig von Estorff, an offi-
cer with substantial experience in Namibia, was ordered to pursue the Herero
ever further into the Omaheke. In later years Estorff noted of this pursuit that:
It was a policy which was equally gruesome as senseless, to hammer the people
so much, we could have still saved many of them and their rich herds, if we had
pardoned and taken them up again, they had been punished enough. I suggested
this to General von Trotha but he wanted their total extermination.40
In April 1907, when von Estorff was in command of German forces in the
southern Namibian port town of Lüderitz, he ordered that prisoners be taken off
Shark Island and reported:
Since September 1906, 1,032 out of 1,795 natives have died on Shark Island. I am
not prepared to assume responsibility for the killing nor can I expect my officers
to do so...41
In the event Oskar Hintrager, the Deputy Governor, reprimanded von Estorff
for his action.
It has also been alleged by the late Brigitte Lau that, due to the wartime
context in which the Blue Book was written (when Allied leaders were already
debating the terms of the post-war settlement) that it should be dismissed as “an
English piece of war propaganda with no credibility whatsoever”.42 The sug-
gestion that the contents of the Blue Book had been fabricated as a propaganda
exercise echoed the original German response to its publication which had
argued, in 1919, that “The text and illustrations of this specious document have
no other purpose in view than to make propaganda for the idea that South-West
Africa should be incorporated in the colonial empire of Great Britain”.43 It is
evident that Britain and its imperial subject, the Union of South Africa, did
39
Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Republic of Namibia (ELCRN), V. Ortschroniken
Swakopmund. Translation by J-B Gewald. The author of the text, Dr. Heinrich Vedder, would later
become an acclaimed national socialist, anthropologist and historian of Namibian affairs. After
World War II Vedder was appointed to the South African senate as representative of the black
population of Namibia
40
Ludwig von Estorff, Wanderungen und Kämpfe in Südwestafrika, Ostafrika und Südafrika:
1894 - 1910, (Windhoek 1979) p. 117. Translation by J-B Gewald.
41
Cited in, Horst Drechsler, “Let us Die Fighting“: The struggle of the Herero and Nama
against German Imperialism (1884 - 1915), London: Zed Press 1980, p. 212.
42
Lau, Brigitte, ‘Uncertain Certainties: The Herero-German war of 1904’, Mibagus, no. 2,
April, 1989, p. 5. For a critical response to Lau see Tilmann Dedering, ‘The German-Herero War
of 1904: Revisionism of Genocide or Imaginary Historiography?’, Journal of Southern African
Studies, Vol. 19, no 1, 1993.
43
German Colonial Office, The Treatment of Native and Other Populations in the Colonial
Possessions of Germany and England: An Answer to the English Blue Book of August, 1918
‘Report on the Natives of South-West Africa and their Treatment by Germany, Hans Robert
Engelmann, Berlin, 1919, p. 17.
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have a clear ulterior motivation for presenting evidence that showed German
colonial rule in a bad light, their shared desire to persuade the international
community that the German colonies should not be returned to Germany as
part of the peace settlement. However the editors of this volume would argue
that whilst this context obviously determined the particular selection of
evidence and timing of the compilation of a highly critical evaluation of
German colonial rule in Namibia, this does not mean nor suggest that the
evidence presented in the Blue Book should be judged to be false. The evidence
should, instead, be judged on its own merits.
It has further been alleged that the Blue Book was compiled by a man
directly involved in the nascent British Ministry of Information (Propaganda)
with the implication that it was therefore a work of fiction. Gail-Maryse
Cockram has claimed that the Blue Book was subsequently “compiled under
the editorship of John Buchan, whose literary inventiveness was given full
rein”.44 John Buchan was a popular contemporary novelist, most famous for his
novel The Thirty-nine Steps which was set against a backdrop of German
espionage. The British Government did establish official mechanisms for the
production of propaganda during the First World War, mainly through the War
Propaganda Bureau. On 9th February, 1917 a new Department of Information
was established under the auspices of the Foreign Office. Its first Director was
the author, John Buchan. 45 However, strangely, Cockram cites no reference that
shows the source of her claim that Buchan was involved in the writing of the
Blue Book, despite the fact that her book is, otherwise, well referenced
throughout. Indeed the list of publications produced by Wellington House, the
Bureau’s headquarters, does not include the 1918 Blue Book and only lists two
publications attributed directly to Buchan whose main energy went into the
production of the 24 volume ‘Nelson’s History of the War’.46 Currently
available evidence indicates that the Blue Book was based largely on existing
materials available in Namibia and compiled by local officials with access to
those materials. An original carbon copy of the typed manuscript was held by
the National Archives of Namibia and showed no substantial differences to the
report that was later published strongly suggesting that the report was not
rewritten in London.47
It is interesting to note that one of the most disputed publications of the War
Propaganda Bureau, the Report of the Committee on Alleged German Outrages
of 1915 which claimed that human rights abuses were committed by German
troops in Belgium in 1914 has been substantially supported by recent research
44
Cockram, Gail-Maryse, South West African Mandate, Juta and Co., Cape Town/Wynberg/
Johannesburg, 1976, p. 11.
45
Sanders, Michael and Philip Taylor British Propaganda during the First World War, 1914-18,
Macmillan, London and Basingstoke, 1982, p. 63.
46
Grieves, Keith ‘Nelson’s History of the War: John Buchan as a Contemporary Military
Historian, 1915-22’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 28, 1993, p. 550.
47
See NAN ADM 255.
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by historians of the First World War.48 The British approach to propaganda was
to present ‘a generally cautious and academic [text], seeking to present a mass
of evidently factual material without recourse to emotional overstatement”.49
This Report was produced by Viscount James Bryce who was a worker at
Wellington House. Viscount James Bryce was also responsible, as the co-
compiler, for a Blue Book that dealt with the Armenian genocide perpetrated
during 1915 by Germany’s wartime ally, Turkey.50 The evidence in this Blue
Book has been used to provide further evidence on the genocide perpetrated by
the Ottoman Empire on its Armenian subjects.
To be sure, there are those who have sought to discredit the work of James
Bryce, most notably the Turkish authorities. Interestingly, the dispute parallels
the debate that has surrounded allegations of German genocidal intent in
Namibia. As with the White Book of 1919, which sought to dispute the
genocide in Namibia, the Turkish authorities criticise the evidence presented in
the Blue Book on two grounds. Firstly the credibility of the witnesses quoted,
alleging that as there were no Turks quoted, the evidence presented was bound
to be biased. Secondly that the Armenians were also guilty of human rights
abuses and that these were ignored in the report. 51 The lengthy German
response to the Blue Book also sought to accuse Britain of hypocrisy and to
raise doubts about the credibility of the witnesses – apparently because they
were African, rather than European!52
One of the other original criticisms of the Blue Book made by the German
Government when it was first published was that the British had not been
critical of German colonialism at the time that the atrocities were, allegedly,
actually taking place and, it was suggested, this cast doubt on statements made
by witnesses years after the events had taken place:
48
See Trevor Wilson ‘Lord Bryce’s Investigation into Alleged German Atrocities in Belgium,
1914-1915’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 14, 1979. For recent substantiating research
see John Horne and Allan Kramer, German Atrocities, 1914: A History of Denial, Yale University
Press, Yale, 2001.
49
Description of a ‘typical’ pamphlet given in Michael Sanders and Philip Taylor, British
Propaganda during the First World War, 1914-18’, Macmillan, London and Basingstoke, 1982. p.
142.
50
Bryce, James and Arnold Toynbee, The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire,
1915-1916 (original, HMSO, London, 1916; new edition edited by Ara Sarafian, Gomidas
Institute, Princeton, 2000)
51
Bryce, James and Arnold Toynbee The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, 1915-
1916 (Uncensored Edition), Reprint, Gomidal Institute, Princeton, 2000 (Original, HMSO,
London, 1916). See ‘Introduction’ by Ara Sarafian for a discussion of the politics of the debate
surrounding the authenticity of the material. For a response to the republication of this Blue Book
see the notes on a lecture given by Prof. Justin McCarthy on 21st January, 2001 on the web site
of the Turkish Embassy in London, ‘Armenian Allegations’, http://www.turkishembassy_
london.com/new_page_62.htm
52
Silvester, Jeremy ‘The Politics of Reconciliation: Destroying the Blue Book’, Paper
presented at the ‘Public History, Forgotten History’ Conference, University of Namibia, August,
2000.
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Many of the additional annotations included in our new edition of the Blue
Book contain contemporary evidence from the German colonial period which
support statements made in the report. It is clear that concerns about German
actions in ‘German South West Africa’ were raised at the time in both the media
and through official channels. A few examples will briefly be presented in this
introduction to support this point.
In September, 1905 the Cape Argus ran three substantial articles based on
statements taken from transport riders who had been hired to help carry
German military supplies from the coastal ports to the interior (copies of these
letters and the response to them are provided in an additional appendix to this
volume). A Mr F. Wepener had reportedly been hired in Johannesburg on 13
September 1904, and had told the paper that “At Okanjiso about February 12,
I saw a number of women and children executed. There were eight women and
six children. They were all strung up to trees by the neck and then shot.” He
went on to argue that the execution of non-combatants was common. “All the
women and children we captured while I was on the march were treated in the
same way. I have seen at least twenty-five of them with my own eyes hanged
and shot.54” Several letters were published in response to such allegations,
denying that ‘ill-treatment’ of prisoners had taken place, although one, by Karl
Brehmer, stated that he believed that captured women prisoners had been shot,
but justified this on the basis of the German belief that Herero women often
mutilated and ‘roasted’ flesh from the corpses of German soldiers. Therefore,
according to Brehmer, “one will hardly wonder that the soldiers can sometimes
not be constrained from killing such bestial creatures”. In disputing the
allegation Brehmer therefore actually seems to support it.
Another important theme in the statements made by African witnesses in the
Blue Book are the conditions in the military-run concentration camps
[Konzentrationslagern].55 The most deadly camps described in the Blue Book
were those at Lüderitzbucht and Swakopmund. Yet once again such allegations
were not new, but were similar to those made by the transport-riders at the time.
It was reported that:
The women who are captured and not executed are set to work for the military as
prisoners. They saw numbers of them at Angra Pequena [Luderitzbucht] put to
the hardest work, and so starved that they were nothing but skin and bones.
“You will see them,” said one, “carrying very heavy loads on their heads along
53
An answer to the Blue Book, p. 9.
54
‘The German Operations: British Subjects as Combatants: Further Evidence: Women and
Children Hanged and Shot: Sensational Allegations’, 25th September, 1905, Cape Argus
55
The German authorities used the term Konzentrationslager. NAN, ZBU 454 DIV 1.3. Band
1, Telegramm des Reichskanzlers an das Gouvernement, eingegangen am 14 Januar 1905.
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the shore in connection with the harbour works, and they are made to work until
they fall down. While I was there, there were five or six deaths every day. The
other women have to bury them. They are made to work till they die. All they
have on is a blanket. If one falls down of sheer exhaustion as they constantly do,
they are sjambokked.56
56
‘In German S.W. Africa: Further Startling Allegations: Horrible Cruelty: British Subjects as
Combatants, 28th September, 1905 Cape Argus.
57
‘The German Operations: British Subjects as Combatants: Further Evidence: Women and
Children Hanged and Shot: Sensational Allegations’, 25th September, 1905, Cape Argus The names
given were C. Hughes, T. Petzer, A.J. Hammond, F.H. Windle, M.J. Pretorius, P. Griffith, F.H.
Smith, F.S. Cooke and O. McLeod, Letter, 28th September, 1905, Cape Argus
58
Mackenzie, Kenneth, ‘Some British Reactions to German Colonial Methods, 1885 – 1907’,
The Historical Journal, Vol. 17, no. 1 (1974).
59
Magistrate, Walvis Bay to Rose-Innes, London, 9th May, 1893 quoted in Ronald Dreyer The
Mind of Official Imperialism: Britain and Cape Government Perceptions of German rule in
Namibia from the Heligoland-Zanzibar Treaty to the Kruger Telegarm (1890-1896), Reimar
Hobbing Verlag, Essen, 1987: p. 173
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attack, travelled to Walvis Bay and made sworn statements to the Magistrate
there. Ronald Dreyer has argued that the Cape Colony Government expressed
concern about German actions, but that this reflected their unease about the
proximity to South Africa of a rival colonial power. However the failure of the
British Government to intervene (through their ability to control the flow of
arms and ammunition to the two sides) was a result of the Foreign Office’s
policy of seeking co-operation, rather than confict, with Germany in the
imperial sphere. This attitude was best summed up by the comment made by
foreign minister Lord Rosebery, later to become prime minister, that “It won’t
be easy to tell a great military power that its troops wage war like barbarians.”60
In reports concerning the actions of the German military during the 1904-
1908 war officials also expressed particular concern about the treatment of
women. The Magistrate at Walvis Bay stated that “I have heard myself,
Germans who were in action describing boastfully how their troopers bayonet-
ed Herero women.61” A report from a Colonel Neylan of the Cape Police, who
had spent time gathering information in southern Namibia in 1905, focussed on
detailed descriptions of troop deployment, but mentioned, in passing, that
‘The Germans have shot a great many women.62’ Another intelligence report
described women who were ‘weak’ and ‘badly fed’ being forced to do heavy
labour unloading ships in Luderitz and breaking stones for the construction of
the railway line.63 A British Military Attaché, Colonel Trench, travelled
extensively in Namibia during the war and produced a series of detailed reports
on German troop movements. Comments on the treatment of prisoners were
also incidental to the main focus of his reports, but, for this very reason telling.
Trench referred to the particularly harsh conditions in the prison camp on Shark
Island at Luderitz. The survivors of Hendrik Witbooi’s guerrilla unit had been
sent there and Trench argued that the nature of the camp indicated that “… if
they still exist, it is not easy to avoid the impression that the extinction of the
tribe would be welcomed by the authorities.64” An official Foreign Office report
dating from 1909 clearly states that “The war against the Hereros, conducted
60
Letter from Rosebery to Ripon, 7th June, 1897 quoted in Ronald Dreyer, The Mind of Official
Imperialism: Britain and Cape Government Perceptions of German rule in Namibia from the
Heligoland-Zanzibar Treaty to the Kruger Telegram (1890-1896), PhD Thesis, University of
Geneva, p. 197.
61
Magistrate, Walvis Bay to Secretary of Native Affairs, Cape Town, 18th May, 1904 in Colonial
Office, South Africa. Further Correspondence [1903-1904] relating to the Affairs of Walfisch Bay
and the German South-West African Protectorate, No. 723, HMSO, London, June, 1908, p. 107
62
‘Memo on interview with Col. Neylan, Cape Police to Mr Lyttelton,’ 21 June, 1905 in
Colonial Office, South Africa. Further Correspondence [1905] relating to the Affairs of Walfisch
Bay and the German South-West African Protectorate,’ No. 766, HMSO, London, September,
1906, p. 79
63
Major Berrange, Upington to Commissioner, Cape Mounted Police, Cape Town, 18
November, 1905 in Colonial Office, South Africa. Further Correspondence [1905] relating to the
Affairs of Walfisch Bay and the German South-West African Protectorate,’ No. 766, HMSO,
London, September, 1906, pp. 217-218.
64
PMO 227 – 35/07 British Military Attaché, Col. F. Trench to British Embassy, Berlin, 21
November, 1906.
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65
‘Report on German SWA’, Capt. H.S.P. Simon, 6 April, 1909 quoted in Louis. p. 34.
66
The Hague Conventions of 1899, and 1907 marked an effort by the major European powers
to draw up mutually acceptable rules for ‘civilised’ warfare. During the 1899 Conference it was
actually the British delegation who were amongst the strongest opponents of the clause banning
the use of ‘dum dum’ bullets as ‘nothing less would stop “savages”’, Mark Levine ‘Introduction’
in Mark Levine and Penny Roberts (eds), The Massacre in History, Berghahn Books, New
York/Oxford, 1999.
67
Pretoria Archives GG276 ‘Status of natives in German South West Africa: Report by HM
Consul on.’, 13 July, 1911.
68
‘Minute’, F.E.F. Adam, Foreign Office, 20 August, 1912 quoted in Louis. p. 38.
69
See Dreyer, Ronald The Mind of Official Imperialism: Britain and Cape Government
Perceptions of German rule in Namibia from the Heligoland-Zanzibar Treaty to the Kruger
Telegarm (1890-1896), Reimar Hobbing Verlag, Essen, 1987.
70
Pretoria Archives NTS 266 4349/1910/F639 Sec of State Ripon to High Commissioner, Sir
H.B. Loch, 14th December, 1892.
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All this shows that officials in the Cape and in London were cognisant of the
evidence of human rights abuses in German, but unwilling to take action within
the context of international economic rivalry and the chessboard politics of
imperial consolidation. In 1907 Great Britain had been party to the Second
Hague Conference which had revised the 1899 ‘Convention concerning the
Laws and Custom of War on Land’. Article 23c of the convention stated that
“It is particularly forbidden … To kill or wound an enemy who, having laid
down his arms, or no longer having means of defence, has surrendered.71” Yet,
despite this noble rhetoric, one might surmise that the recent heated inter-
national criticism of the high death rates in the ‘concentration camps’ run by
Britain from September, 1900 during the South African War (1899-1902) made
the British Government sensitive about raising concerns about high death rates
in ‘concentration camps’ or other human rights abuses in a neighbouring
colony.72 The reluctance of Great Britain to criticise its colonial rivals at this
time was, perhaps, most neatly summarised in a minute prepared by the Head
of the Africa Desk at the Foreign Office who in 1906 argued that “France and
Germany are boys too big to interfere with.73” The extent to which Britain was
prepared to publicly criticise other colonial powers was clearly largely
determined by the Foreign Office.
In 1904, the very year in which German forces were pursuing genocidal
policies in Namibia, the British Government did publish a highly critical report
on human rights abuses in the Congo Free State. The report of a British Consul,
Roger Casement, on alleged atrocities in the Congo Free State fuelled a human
rights campaign that led in 1908 to international intervention to end King
Leopold’s control of the territory.74 The Report was circulated to a number of
imperial powers who were challenged to investigate the alleged atrocities as
being in conflict with the 1885 Berlin Act that they had signed. Instrumental in
the campaign to end the abuses taking place in the Congo Free States was the
work of E. D. Morel, who, following the transfer of the Congo as the personal
possession of Leopold to Belgium as a colony, remained a dedicated anti-
colonial campaigner for the rest of his life.
71
The convention was repeatedly cited during the propaganda war over the conduct of the
competing armies during operations in the European field during World War One. For example, see
Great Britain, Evidence and Documents laid before the Committee on Alleged German Outrages,
HMSO, London, 1915.
72
It is calculated that 27,927 people (10% of the Afrikaner population) died in the camps and a
further 18,003 ‘verifiable deaths’ occurred in the separate ‘black and coloured concentration
camps’ See Albert Grundlingh ‘The Anglo-Boer War in 20th century Afrikaner consciousness’, p.
244 and Stowell Kessler ‘The black and coloured concentration camps’, p. 148, both in Fransjohan
Pretorius (ed.), Scorched Earth, Cape Town: Human & Rousseau 1999.
73
Minute by E.A.W. Clarke, 21 December, 1906 FO 367/5 in Louis. p 38.
74
Casement, Roger ‘Report on the Administration of the Congo Free State’, British
Parliamentary Papers, 1904, LXII, Cd. 1933. Hochschild, Adam King Leopold’s Ghost, Papermac,
London, 2000: pp. 200-206.
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In the aftermath of World War I, Morel published, The Black Man’s Burden,75
which discusses critically the activities of European colonial powers in Africa.
In his book, Morel devoted a full chapter to the role of Imperial Germany in
Namibia, and referred directly to the 1918 Blue Book. At the outset Morel
noted that the Blue Book needed to be read with a ‘sense of perspective’, as it
was, he stated ‘more in the nature of a ‘War Aims’ publication’. However, as
Morel cautioned his readers:
Without minimising in the slightest degree the action of the Germans in South
West Africa, we should do well to have at the back of our minds the sort of
indictment which would have been drawn up by a succesful enemy in occupation
of Rhodesia and Bechuanaland, desirous of demonstrating our iniquities to the
world in order to make out a case for retaining those territories for himself.
Dealing with events that took place in the so-called Bechuanaland rebellion of
1895, Morel in no way sought to play down atrocities committed by British
authorities. Indeed, Morel refered to the ‘wholesale confication of native
lands... and the fate which overtook the 3,000 odd ‘rebels’ who surrendered’
and noted that these events would also have made ‘other than excellent reading
for a world audience sitting in judgment upon our sins’. Morel concluded by
noting that:
Between the decrees of a von Lindequist or a Leutwein, the brayings of a Schlett-
wein et hoc genus omne, and the pompous pronouncements of certain leading
South African statesmen there is fundamentally little difference.
75
E.D. Morel, The Black Man’s Burden: The White Man in Africa from the Fifteenth Century to
World War I (Manchester: National Labour Press, 1920).
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The formal German response to the Blue Book had dismissed it as ‘a bulky bit
of propaganda’ and argued that “No efforts are being spared in the attempt to
lull the world into the belief that England is actuated not by selfish ends, but by
lofty moral motives”.76 It is certainly true that, whilst a number of prosecutions
took place in a ‘Special Criminal Court’ in the four and a half years of South
African military rule that immediately followed the defeat of the German
forces in 1915 there were no detailed investigations into specific allegations
contained in the Blue Book (such as the alleged massacre at Ombakaha or the
extraordinarily death rates at the coastal prisoner-of-war camps) and certainly
no attempt to put German officers on trial for war crimes. Such inaction might
be contrasted with the official investigations that followed public concern
regarding for instance civilian death rates in British concentration camps in
South Africa and the massacre of civilians in Amritsar.77 Once the mandate for
Namibia was awarded to the Union of South Africa in 1920 it became clear that
a new agenda was becoming important, the building of a unified white settler
community. General Smuts himself visited Namibia in September, 1920 and
stated very clearly that “… in my opinion the future of South-West lies in co-
operation between the old German community and the new Union community
that was settling her.78” Despite the heavy criticism that had been contained in
the Blue Book the emphasis was now placed on reconciliation, rather than
retribution.
The publication of the Blue Book and proposals to produce an Afrikaans
edition provoked early opposition to its contents in South Africa. Mr Malan, of
the National Party, argued that the ‘statements on oath’ should not be published
at all, but only a short summary of the Blue Book.79 When a ‘German
delegation’ from Namibia travelled to Cape Town for talks with the South
African Prime Minister, General Smuts, on 24th January, 1924 they noted with
‘particular satisfaction’ the assurance they were given that there would be ‘no
further official reference to the Blue Book’.80 A few months later, General
Hertzog (the leader of the National Party) became the new leader of the country
at the head of the Pact Government.81 On 10th November, 1924 during a visit to
76
German Colonial Office The Treatment of Native and Other Populations in the Colonial
Possessions of Germany and England: An Answer to the English Blue Book of August, 1918
‘Report on the Natives of South-West Africa and their Treatment by Germany, Hans Robert
Engelmann, Berlin, 1919, p. 1
77
Great Britain, Report on the Concentration Camps in South Africa by the Committee of bodies
appointed by the Secretary of State for War, containing reports on the camps in Natal, the Orange
River Colony and the Transvaal, HMSO, Cd. 893, London, 1902. Great Britain Report of the
Committee Appointed by the Government of India to Investigate the Disturbances in the Punjab,
etc, HMSO, Parliamentary Papers, 1920, vol. 14;
78
Quoted in Steer, G.L. Judgement on German Africa, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1939:
p. 340
79
‘Memo.’ P. Horsfall to Governor-General, 13th December, 1918. Pretoria Archives, GG 728.
80
Steer, G.L. Judgement on German Africa, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1939: p. 340
81
Walker, Eric A History of South Africa, Longman, Green & Co., London, New York, Toronto,
1947 p. 600.
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Namibia the newly elected South African Prime Minister, expressed his view
that “… as to the historical Blue Book, he doubted whether anyone believed its
contents. It was considered a war pamphlet – one among many that had gone
into oblivion or soon would do so”.82 The leaders of the mandatory power had
clearly stated their view that the accusations supported by the statements
contained in the Blue Book would no longer be pursued and the Report itself
would be forgotten. The lid had been taken off the dustbin and it only remained
for the mechanisms of limited settler self-government to be put in place and the
demands of the local white community to be articulated before the Blue Book
would be literally consigned to the dustbin of history.
The year 1926 saw the first election campaign in Namibia since the South
African conquest of the territory – under a franchise that was limited to white
males. In a campaign speech made at Keetmanshoop, Mr Jooste, the local
Chairperson of the National Party, argued strongly for: “The co-operation of all
sections of the community – the farmers must work together whether they were
German, Dutch or English.83” The editorial of the local English-language
newspaper argued that “South Africans should not engage in a racial quarrel
with a people who are bowed down by a recent defeat” and advocated
‘reconciliation’ that could deal with the “race hatred … [that] … has eaten like
a cancer into the nation.84 “ The ‘racial hatred’ that was causing so much
concern was not associated with any of the allegations that had been printed in
the Blue Book or German accounts of the 1904-1908 war, but rather that which
it was claimed existed between German-speaking white residents of the
territory and the influx of new white immigrants from the Union.
In 1926 the first all-white legislative assembly for ‘South West Africa’
assembled and one of the first motions to be tabled, by Mr August Stauch,
concerned the destruction of the Blue Book. Stauch stated that the Blue Book:
… only has the meaning of a war-instrument and that the time has come, to put
this instrument out of operation and to impound and destroy all copies of this
Bluebook, which may be found in the official records and in public libraries of
this Territory.
That the administration be requested to make representations to the Union
Government and to the British Government to have this Bluebook [sic] expunged
from the official records of those Governments.
That the Administration be requested to take into consideration the advisability of
making representations to the Union Government and the British Government to
impound and destroy all copies of the Bluebook, which may be found in the
public libraries in the respective Countries and with the official booksellers
mentioned on the title-sheet of the Bluebook …85”
82
Cockram, Gail-Maryse, South West African Mandate, Juta and Co., Cape Town/Wynberg/
Johannesburg, 1976, p. 32
83
‘Nationalists at Keetmanshoop’, Windhoek Advertiser, 6th March, 1926, p5.
84
‘Mr Ballot and the Mandate’, Windhoek Advertiser, 20th March, 1926, p2.
85
NAN, ADM 255 ‘Memorandum on the Blue Book, Annexure A’.
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Copies of the Blue Book were systematically removed from public libraries
throughout South Africa and Namibia and destroyed. In Windhoek in 1935, Mr.
Ballot, member of the executive committee, Advisory Council and the
Legislative Assembly since 1921, reported that, “all known copies of the Blue
Book” had been destroyed.86 In the rest of the British Empire copies were
transferred to the Foreign Office and, as late as 1941, it was noted that ‘no copy
may be issued without authority of the librarian’.87
Stauch had motivated his motion with the claim that it “would … remove
one of the most serious obstacles to mutual trust and cooperation in this
country.” In his view “the honour of Germany had been attacked in the most
public manner and it was right that the attack should be repudiated in an equally
public fashion … The defence of the honour of one’s country was a solemn
duty imposed upon all sons of that country.” The validity of Stauch’s claim was
not questioned by any member of the assembly, instead the prospect of
nurturing political and social unity proved paramount.88 Stauch’s claim that
“the Germans were ready and anxious to cooperate in the building up of South
West but they could not do so fully until the stigma imposed by the publication
of the Bluebook … had been removed from their name”, was considered to be
more important that historical veracity or any sort of investigation into the
charges made by Namibia’s African inhabitants. The dead of the Herero
genocide and other atrocities were dismissed and forgotten in the interests of
white settler reconciliation.
The aim of this publication is to make the 1918 Blue Book available to a wider
public. In republishing the 1918 Blue Book as a historical source we are well
aware of the historical context in which the report will once again circulate. Its
republication is bound to stimulate comments, criticisms and debate that go
way beyond the scope of this short introduction. Nevertheless, in republishing
the 1918 Blue Book we believe that the text is likely to provoke debate in
relation to three specific areas of academic and popular interest as it raises
questions about genocide, comparative colonialism and the relationship
between violence and memory.
It is our belief that the Namibian genocide can only be fully understood in
the context of the phenomena of genocide as a whole and that the genocides
committed in the course of the twentieth century, after 1904, need to be dealt
with in the context of preceeding genocides, including the Namibian genocide.
Furthermore, we would contend that genocides do not take place in a vaccum.
86
NAN, KSW 2, Evidence to SWA Committe, Windhoek, 24 July 1935, p. 76.
87
PRO FO 371/26574 ‘Minute’, Foreign Office, 20th June, 1940.
88
Twenty years later a South African MP would suggest that the motivation behind the
destruction of the Blue Book had been ‘political’, Steenkamp,W.P. Is the South-West African
Herero Committing Race Suicide?, 1944.
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89
Mark Cocker, Rivers of Blood Rivers of Gold: Europe’s conflict with tribal peoples, London:
Pimlico, 1999; Alison Palmer, Colonial Genocide, London: Seahurst, 2000.
90
Report on the Natives, pp. XXXX
91
Ann Stoler has argued about the dangers of assuming ‘a shared European mentality’ and
failing to analyse the complexity of ‘the colonial state’ in ‘Rethinking colonial categories:
European commmunities and the boundaries of rule’, Comparative Studies in Society and History,
Vol. 31, 1989, p. 135. For a range of perspectives on the role of law in defining models of colonial
rule see Mann, Kristin and Richard Roberts (eds), Law in Colonial Africa, James Currey, Oxford,
1991.
JAJ 009 boek Words cannot be … 26-04-2003 16:06 Pagina xxxiv
92
William Beinart ‘Political and Collective Violence in Southern African Historiography’,
Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 18, no. 3, 1992; Jocelyn Alexander, JoAnn McGregor
and Terence Ranger, Violence & Memory: One Hundred Years in the ‘Dark Forests’ of
Matabeleland, James Currey, Oxford, 2000; Inge Brinkman, ‘Ways of Death: Accounts of Terror
from Angolan Refugees in Namibia’, Africa, Vol. 70, no. 1, 2000.
93
Beinart, p. 459.
94
NBC News (English), 23rd August, 2002. J.B. Gewald, “Presenting the past to fight the
present: an overview of the manner in which the Herero Genocide has been used for political
purposes in the course of the 20th Century“, presented to the African Studies Centre Conference,
Revolt and Resistance in African History, 11 and 12 October 2001, Leiden.
95
John Grobler, Still no redress for Hereros, Mail & Guardian March 13-19, 1998, and letters
published subsequently to the article.
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96
In a sense this is no different from a country like Kenya which gains substantial tourist
revenues through emphasising its ‘great white hunter’ and ‘happy valley’ past.
97
In 1991 one of the co-editors participated in a journey by steam train to Luderitz which was
heavy with nostalgia for the German colonial period and included a visit to the ruins of the camp
at Aus where thousands of Germans were interned during the First World War.
98
Jeremy Silvester ‘A Living Cemetery in Swakopmund’, The Namibian Weekender, 21st
November, 1997, p. 9.
99
Jeremy Silvester ‘Death on the Rocks’, The Namibian Weekender, 22nd August, 1997, p. 9;
Casper Erichsen and Jeremy Silvester ‘Luderitz’s Forgotten Concentration Camp’, The Namibian
Weekender, 16th February, 2001, pp. 1-3.
100
Jeremy Silvester ‘Layers of History at the Place of the Calabashes’, The Namibian
Weekender 23rd June, 2000, p. 4
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marked heritage sites really leaves the past ‘a foreign country’ and transforms
Namibians into tourists in their own historical landscape.101 Indeed, Namibians
currently walk through a colonial German reading of their own history.
Stanley Cohen has argued that “Whole societies have an astonishing ability
to deny the past – not really forgetting, but maintaining a public culture that
seems to have forgotten”.102 In Namibia after independence there was, in
contrast to South Africa, a policy of ‘national reconciliation’ which initially
sought to avoid reopening the ‘wounds of the past’, rather than confront them.
However recent years have seen a number of major initiatives in the heritage
sector which show an active willingness by the state to engage with the past,
although, as in South Africa, this has been firmly linked to efforts to strengthen
a nationalist historical narrative.103 It is within this context that we must return
to the theme of ‘violence and memory’.
The year 2004 will mark the centenary of the outbreak of the Namibian war
against German rule. It is our intention that this republication of the Blue Book
will, in some measure, be a memorial to those that died. Through its republi-
cation voices hidden and obscured for too long will, once again be heard. In the
run-up to the centenary of the war there will be other forms of commemoration,
planned both in Germany and Namibia. It is to be hoped that this republished
Blue Book will contribute and inform the manner in which they choose to
commemorate the war. The challenge to both Namibians and Germans is
whether they choose a national or a sectional commemoration.104
Does Germany, as it clearly did with the Berlin exhibition, choose to see the
Namibian war as a colonial aberration, or as an integral part of twentieth
century German history? Does Namibia, as many Namibians have done in the
past, seek to emphasise ethnically based claims for redress, or will Namibians
seek to acknowledge and commemorate the national character of the war? That
is, that the Namibian War affected and determined the course of Namibian
history as a whole, and not just sectors of Namibian society. We would contend
that the war and its consequences had a fundamental impact on the subsequent
history of Namibia. Access to land, population distribution, economic power,
101
D. Lowenthal, The Past is a Foreign Country, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
1985.
102
Stanley Cohen, States of Denial: Knowing About Atrocities and Suffering, Polity,
Cambridge, 2001, p 138.
103
For a discussion of the role of heritage projects in the effort to promote new forms of national
identity in South Africa see Ciraj Rassool, ‘The Rise of Heritage and the Reconstitution of History
in South Africa’, Kronos, August, 2000.
104
The difficulties created through a revision of heritage sites that attempts to incorporate
‘missing’ perspectives in the context of the centenary of the ‘Anglo-Boer War’ of 1899-1902 are
explored in Leslie Witz, Gary Minkley and Ciraj Rassool, ‘No End of a [History] Lesson:
Preparations for the Anglo-Boer War Centenary Commemorations’, South African Historical
Journal, Vol. 41, November, 1991. For an attempt ‘to provide guidelines for the commemoration
of controversial events’ in the same context see Graham Dominy and Luli Callinicos, ‘”Is There
Anything to Celebrate?” Paradoxes of Policy: An Examination of the State’s Approach to
Commemorating South Africa’s Most Ambiguous Struggle’, South African Historical Journal,
Vol. 41, November, 1991.
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urbanisation and political power, have all been shaped, and are only under-
standable, in terms of the Namibian War.105
As historians we believe that the evaluation of stories/histories about the
past are an important way of engaging with contemporary debates about the
legacy of the colonial state and the actions of the post-colonial state. The
accounts contained in the Blue Book should be read. Readers may accept them
or wish to challenge them, but they should no longer be ignored or silenced.
Though words can never be found to describe the full horror of genocide, the
Blue Book does provide us with African voices that will enable us to come
some way to a shared realisation and understanding of the horrors of colonial
rule.
105
For further arguments on this theme see Henning Melber, ‘Namibia: The German roots of
Apartheid’, Race and Class, Vol. 27, no. 1, 1985.
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CONTENTS
PART ONE
Herero customs 89
of the Herero 99
XXII The policy of Germany after the great rising of the natives
4 CONTENTS
PART TWO
Method of executing a number of natives. Note the boxes. The victims were
made to stand on these while the ropes were adjusted. They were then kicked
or pulled away.
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PREFACE
1
Agreement between Great Britain and Germany respecting, Heligoland, and the spheres of
influence of the two countries in Africa. United Nations Institute for Namibia, Independent
Nambia: Succession to Treaty Rights and Obligations: Incorporating Namibian Treaty Calendar,
(Lusaka 1989) p. 63
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8 PREFACE
2
At equal pace
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PREFACE 9
appearing in that chapter. The presiding judge of the German Appeal Court
characterized the acts of the offending farmer as being reminiscent of the
blackest deeds of the slave days, and then reduced the sentence of 21 months’
imprisonment which had been imposed in the lower court on seven separate
counts of cruelty of the most terrible nature to a sentence of four months’
imprisonment altogether and a fine of 2,700 marks. Two of the victims – they
were both women – in this case died shortly afterwards. If the photographs are
examined it will be wondered how it was they did not expire under the lash.
It was a matter of constant remark amongst the British element now here
how little was known outside this territory – at all events in South Africa – of
the dreadful occurrences that were taking place herein. Germany, however,
always kept the country, as far as she was able, a close preserve, and persons
of alien nationality were neither assisted nor encouraged to settle here.3 When
the worst of these deeds – the massacre of the Hereros – was taking place, the
diamond fileds of Luderitzbucht had not yet been discovered, and the
somewhat considerable foreign population, which on the opening of those
fields was attracted to that coast, whether the Germans willed it or not, was not
yet present. Residents of the Union at the time will recall that in those days but
little, if any, interest was evinced in affairs here. The rights of the case between
the opposing parties were not understood, and no opportunity was lost by
Germans either here or in the neighbouring colonies of showing the natives in
the worse light. It is reasonable to surmise that, had the facts been known as we
have now, by careful examination of documentary evidence and by interro-
gation of the survivors, ascertained them, a protest would have been addressed
to Germany by the Powers who subscribed to the Resolutions of 1885 and
1890.4
It is known that the facts commenced to leak out in Germany after 1905,
with the result that laws dealing with natives, their rights, obligations, and
treatment were promulgated. There is no doubt that, viewed from the standards
to which we are accustomed in South Africa, portions of these laws, on paper
at least, are satisfactory; but it is generally conceded that in very few instances
was proper effect given to their provisions. The occasions where the natives
obtained the rights to which they were entitled under those laws are found to
have been few in number. The authority delegated to minor officials to flog or
3
The distribution of land was primarily intended to consolidate the territory as a German settler
colony. German citizens were charged roughly half the price of others wishing to buy farms. The
consistency of black resistence to German rule and the high cost of transporting expeditionary
forces from Germany meant that preferential conditions for farm purchase were offered to those
liable to military service. Farms of up to 5,000 hectare were made available to this special category
of German settler for just 30 pfennig per hectare. Many of the German soldiers who traveled to
Namibia to fight in the 1904 - 1907 war took the opportunity to obtain land.
4
The discussions of the Berlin Conference of 1884 were embodied in the General Act with was
signed in February 1885 and ratified by all except for the United States. Article VI of the Act
referred to the Preservation and Improvement of Native Tribes, and stated inter alia “All the
powers... bind themselves to watch over the preservation of the native tribes“. Bruce Fetter, editor,
Colonial Rule in Africa: Readings from Primary Sources, (University of Wisconsin, Madison
1979) pp. 34 - 38.
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10 PREFACE
chain natives for certain offences was indulged in to the extreme by practically
every member of the police force in the most trivial cases of complaint by
masters, and it is known that numerous assaults were committed on native
women, and, for the most part, went unnoticed or unpunished. The natives were
thus kept in a state of abject fear, and no opportunity of redress was open to
them, as they dared not go to the police with their complaints. They had been
dispossessed of such cattle as survived the rebellion of 1904, and of their lands.
The law forbade them possessing great stock; and deprived of their accustomed
form of sustenance, they were forced to accept work at a wage which was
ridiculously inadequate and which was often never paid. They were subjected
to forced labour of the worst kind, and the masters regarded their native
servants as slaves without rights and amenable only to the lash. The servants
regarded their German masters as their inveterate enemies from whom there
was no escape.
This was the position as I found it when, in July 1915, I was entrusted with
the task of putting the affairs of this Protectorate in order. The endeavour to
secure the establishment of better relations between white and black has been
uphill work indeed. All the obnoxious provisions in the German native code
have been repealed by me and others more in keeping with the practice in force
in the Union of South Africa have been substituted. The love of inflicting
severe corporal punishment on their native servants is, however, strongly
retained by the German farmers, and though clearly diminishing as the result
of numerous convictions obtained in our courts, cases still occur with far too
much frequency. I am satisfied that, owing to the wide extent of the country, the
scattered situation of the farms, and the fact that here and there natives are still
terrorized, and therefore reluctant to lodge complaints, many cases never reach
the courts.
The natives, freed from the oppression under which they had suffered for 25
years before our advent into this country, and in their simple way of thinking
unable to understand why after having conquered the Germans here we did not
utterly despoil them of their property, have also since the Occupation provided
a considerable amount of difficulty for the Administration. The terms under
which the German forces of South-West Africa capitulated in July 1915
provided that the civil population and the reservists then under arms would be
allowed to resume their normal avocations, and at once there arose throughout
the Protectorate a strong demand for native labour.5 The natives, after the ill-
treatment to which they had been subjected by their former employers, were in
a very large number of cases most reluctant to accept service, and much
patience has been required to teach them that it is necessary to work to live and
that the liberties they now enjoy also carry obligations, and that while our
officials afford protection to all and assist every labourer to secure fair
5
For more detail see Gerald L’Ange, Urgent Imperial Service: South African Forces in German
South West Africa: 1914 - 1915, (Ashanti Publishing: Rivonia 1991) pp. 322 - 329.
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PREFACE 11
6
Following the German surrender there were consistent rumours amongst the settler population
that the Herero and Nama were planning an insurrection. J.B. Gewald, Herero Heroes (James
Currey: Oxford 1999) pp. 237.
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12 PREFACE
and description of serious cases (i.e., cases necessitating trial before the chief
tribunal of the Protectorate, the Special Criminal Court) of murders of, and
assaults on, natives by Europeans since our Occupation. On the other hand,
there have been but two cases of a similar kind where natives were involved
with Europeans, and in one of those cases there was a suggestion that the
Europeans ahd been tampering with the natives’ womenfolk.
In the lower courts no fewer than 310 cases of ill-treatment of native
servants by their masters have been heard and penalties imposed since the
establishment of those courts on 20th September, 1915.
A letter full of interest on this question of native treatment in the event of
the return of Germany to power in South-West Africa came into my hands some
time ago. It was addressed to the late Governor of this country, who is a present
on parole, by one of the principal ex-officials (also on parole) of the late
Administration, and it contained a number of speculations as to the future of
the Protectorate and the measures to be adopted “on resumption of control by
the German Government.” A considerable portion of it was devoted to the
discussion of future native policy. The writer urged the need for the organi-
zation as soon as peace is declared of a strong force of police to cope with the
natives, and ventured the opinion “that it is an open question what impression
will be made on the natives by the re-transfer of power to the German author-
ities.” He strongly blamed the present German inhabitants for frightening the
natives with constant threats of thrashings and hangings as soon as German
rule is restored.
It is common knowledge to the officials of the Administration that such
threats are often made, as they have formed the subject of frequent complaints
by natives and numerous convictions in our courts.
He went on to advocate the limitation to the utmost of the movement of
natives from farm to farm or district to district, and, in order to improve the
native labour supply, that Ovamboland should be effectively occupied.
To that country the Germans had never really penetrated. The climate is
malarious, and between Outjo, Tsumeb, and Grootfontein lies a wide stretch of
waterless country difficult to pass.
He added that if Germany failed to do this her prestige amongst those tribes
(which it should be noted are still intact) in the north and north-east would
cease. He concluded by stating —
It is a well-known fact that some of our countrymen have not always acted in
manner free from objection. Unreliable men of this kind in an out-of-the-way
colony of the German Empire are not merely insufferable but they are a danger.
Such persons must be removed without any consideration. If no criminal
proceedings can be instituted against them banishment should be the punishment
… The Government should refuse them assistance, and it is precisely in the
rendering of assistance in procuring native labour, to which a blunt refusal must
be given and may be given, that a weapon is available to make them tired of the
country.
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PREFACE 13
He had been learning the lesson of the past; but I fear that however heartily the
German colonists would endorse his views on the subject of the control of the
natives and the anticipated spoliation of Ovamboland, but few supporters
would rally to his cry for the ejection of farmers who ill-treat their servants.
Their sole idea is complete domination over every one who has a dusky skin.
In the suggestion that farmers who are guilty of constant ill-treatment of
their native servants should be denied native labour he is, apparently
unconsciously, merely repeating what His Excellency the German Governor
had already, so long ago as 1912, threatened to do. This threat was contained in
a secret letter, now in my possession, from the Governor to all the District
Heads, and a translation is reproduced in Chapter XXII. The words of the
Governor in that letter contain what will probably be considered as the most
damning piece of evidence of all that has been collected as to the point to which
the ill-treatment of natives had been carried.
He admitted therein that the natives did not obtain justice in the courts,
expressed his regret that he was powerless to influence the courts to improve
matters, and threatened by administrative means to stop the native labour
supply of persons who continually ill-treat their servants.
His Excellency was then new to the country, and as the threatened rising of
the natives of which he had fears did not take place he seems to a certain extent
to have accommodated himself to local conditions, for on 20th April 1914 we
find that he presided over a meeting of the District Heads and other principal
officials of the colony at Windhuk, whereat inter alia the following exchange
of views took place. These are taken from the confidential minutes of the
meeting:–
The Governor: By virtue of the von Lindequist Ordinances we have at present a kind of
compulsory labour. An extension of this compulsion as desired by the
Landesrat7 would hardly have any prospects of fulfilment at home …
The question arises whether any alteration of the von Lindequist
Ordinances is necessary and if such alteration would serve any purpose.
In my opinion an improvement in the present conditions is not possible.
Bezirksamtmannen8 Schultze and Boehmer and Court Assessor Weber declare the
Ordinance to be sufficient.
Bezirksamtmann Wasserfall: … In the district the continuous increase in the number of
native stock has proved very detrimental. (Note. He obviously means
that through the increase in the sheep and goats which the natives were
allowed in special cases to own, the natives are becoming independent
again).
The Governor: It will become necessary to force the natives to sell small stock which
they possess beyond a certain number …
The Governor: It is far more necessary to enforce strict adherence to the existing
provisions of the Ordinances than to issue new provisions. I declare it
to be the general opinion of this meeting that nothing should be altered,
but strict adherence should be enforced; especially in the case of natives
7
Legislative Council.
8
‘Magistrates’ They are also referred to in the text as District Heads
14 PREFACE
These extracts from the discussion do not betoken much desire to improve the
lot of the natives of the country, though there is a note of alarm at the suggestion
to bring the Ovambos under the labour contract system and an indication of
some solicitude for the unfortunate Bushmen who were being sent to their
deaths on the cold and bleak sand wastes of Swakopmund.
Of almost equal interst and value to Governor Seitz’s secret letter are the
letters reproduced in Part II., Chapter II,. From Bezirksamtmann Boehmer, of
Luderitzbucht, and Acting Bezirksamtmann Heilingbrunnner, the first written
9
From 1878 Walfish Bay was administered by the Cape Colony and from 1910 the South
African Union, as such it provided a safe haven for refugees fleeing German rule. Gewald, Herero
Heroes, pp. 177 - 8, 181, 190.
10
For more details see: Robert Gordon, The Bushman Myth: The Making of a Namibian
Underclass, (Westview Press: Boulder 1992) pp. 49 - 98, particularly pp. 70 - 72 & 82.
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PREFACE 15
on 31st January, 1908, the second on 14th June 1911, and the third on the 21st
April 1913. These are contained with a number of other letters in a dossier in
the German records, marked Misshandlungen von Eingeborenen durch Weise
(Specialia).11 (“Ill-treatment of natives by white men – Particulars) Matters had
evidently reached a climax when in 1913 Herr Boehmer was forced to write to
the Imperial Governor that “the law courts are utterly useless”.
Another extremely objectionable feature in the social fabric of the
Protectorate moulded by the Germans has been the licentiousness in the
relations between the European male population – soldiers, police, and others
– and native women, regardless of objections to such intercourse on the part of
the women themselves and their male relatives. With the destruction of the
tribal system which followed the events of 1904-1905, and the distribution of
the surviving population as labourers amongst the European settlers, native
women in large numbers were forced into concubinage with Europeans, with
the inevitable result that the natives speedily acquired a contempt for their
masters, who in turn have endeavoured to maintain their positions by a policy
of severity often amounting, as a perusal of the report will show, to the grossest
brutality.
As a colonist, the German in South-West Africa, speaking generally, has
been a failure. He has never shown the slightest disposition to learn the natives’
point of view, to adapt his ideas to the long-established customs and habits of
the people, or to fall in with the ways of the country. When he arrived here he
found the natives both rich and comparatively numerous. His sole object
seemed, as soon as he felt strong enough, to take the fullest advantage possible
of the simplicity of these people and despoil them utterly. When the process did
not, by means of the system of trading that sprang up, k which in itself was
often but a thinly disguised form of chicanery and knavery, go quickly enough,
rapine, murder, and lust were given full play with the disastrous results of
which we see evidences every day around us.
This is all the more strange, as in the Cape of Good Hope and Natal German
settlers have proved themselves, at all events in years past, adaptable and
successful colonists. Possibly the reason may be found in the fact that in those
British possessions the German emigrant found a clean-cut line and well-
defined understanding between the European element and the aborigines. As a
pioneer on his own account in savage lands, and as a colonist left to his own
devices without the influence and advice of persons of other nationality who
have had longer colonial experience than he has had, he has proved himself, at
all events in South-West Africa, to be utterly incapable and unsuitable.
The land here, when colonizing was decided on in earnest in Berlin, and
after the missions, companies, and traders had been allotted their selected
portions, was at first given out, for the most part, to soldiers who had taken their
11
The three files under this title are still held in the National Archives of Namibia and contain
details of investigations covered 1908-1914 (NAN ZBU 2054).
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16 PREFACE
discharges in this country and had expressed a desire to settle her; rough men
who, when released from the military organization under which they had been
trained, carried with them to their new possessions the militarist methods and
aggressive ideas towards the natives with which they had become imbued
during their term of active service here. In their view the native was an out-and-
out barbarian, little better than the baboons, which frequent the kopjes, and to
be treated and disposed of at the sweet will of the master. The police, too,
brought up in the same environment and drawn from the same organization,
were no different. If anything they were worse, as they were principally
selected from the non-commissioned ranks of an army in which the severity of
the sergeant is proverbial.
Later, when the rough work was deemed to have been completed, official-
dom in Berlin bethought itself of a German colonial aristocracy. It is said
locally that the Kaiser took a deep personal interest in the matter, and that to his
influence we owe the presence of the large number of persons of rank who are
settled in the better portions of the Protectorate. If one can believe the tales that
are circulated by the less favoured portion of the Germancommunity about
their more distinguished brethren, amongst the latter were included no
inconsiderable proportion of persons who were no ornament to the caste to
which they belonged.
It is interestingto read what Leutwein, who was Governor of this territory
for 11 years, has to say on the attempts of Germany to establish colonies. In
Chapter XV., pages 542,543 and 544 of the book he published after his recall
to Germany, he remarks, referring the earlier avowed policy of Germany,
which was one of attempting to “reconcilethe original inhabitants to their
fate”:–
I have personally assisted in conducting this policy in perfect unanimity with the
original population, all the more for the reason that the war with Witbooi had
openedmy eyes at the very beginning of my colonial activity concerning the
difficulties experienced in suppressing native risings in South-West Africa. Since
that time I have used my best endeavour to make thenative tribes serve our cause
and to play them off one against the other. Even an adversary of this poicy must
concede to me that it was more difficult, but also more serviceable, to influence
the natives to kill each other for us than to expect streams of blood and streams
of money from the Old Fatherland for their suppression. That this policy has
proved itself impossible of being carried through uninterruptedly for reasons
which will be found in my forgoing expositions is, however, no proof that it
should not have been tried at all.
In this connection it will be interesting to review for a moment the British
world-wide Empire. A census of the population in the same which was ordered in
1901, and the results which have been published a short while ago, has elicited
the fact that of approximately 400 million subjects of the King of England, only
54 millions or 131/2 per cent. Are whites, i.e., that the latter are even less in
numbers than the white subjects of the German Empire. In truth, it would
certainly be worth while studying in what manner these 54 million whites within
the British Empire succeed in dominating over the 350 millions natives. It
appears impossible that this should be done on the whole by a policy of force and
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PREFACE 17
I must in fairness say that there are notable exceptions to the general rule as we
have found it here, men who take a keen and intelligent interest in their pursuits
and in the welfare of the natives and who treat their natives reasonably; but
their numbers, according to the information at my disposal, are relatively few.
It is difficult to eradicate the pernicious influence of the adventurers who seem
to have dominated the policy of this country in the earlier days of the establish-
ment of German influence.
Enough should be found in this report to convince the most confirmed
sceptic of the unsuitability of the Germans to control natives, and also to show
i
He reproduces in a footnote a letter, dated Banksdrift (Transvaal), 25th January 1904, from a
Herero, who had been recruited for the mines at Johannesburg, containing the following sentences,
which he says proves that the writer has very quickly recognized the difference between English
and German treatment of natives:
“I inform you that the country of the Englishman is really a good country; there is no ill-
treatment; whites and blacks stand on the same level, and if he strikes you (unreadable) everywhere
you like. And there is plenty of work and plenty of money, and even if your Baas is there, he does
not hit you, but in case he hits you and has contravened the Law, he is punished accordingly.
12
For more on the Koranna see: T. Strauss, War Along the Orange, (Cape Town 1979); Robert
Ross, Adam Kok’s Griqua, (Cambridge 1976) & M. Legassick, ‘The Northern Frontier to c. 1840:
The Rise and Decline of the Griqua People,’ in R. Elphick and H.B. Giliomee, eds, The Shaping of
South African Society, 1652 - 1840, 2nd ed., Cape Town, 1989)
13
Page numbers as in original report.
14
Basutoland is the present day Republic of Lesotho which is geographically situated within
the Republic of South Africa. In 1868 the territory was annexed to the British Crown, in 1966
Basutoland ceased to exist and the independent Republic of Lesotho came into being. Richard P.
Stevens, Lesotho, Botswana, & Swaziland: The former High Commission Territories in southern
Africa, (Pall Mall Press: London 1967)
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18 PREFACE
him what can be expected if the unfortunate natives of this part of Africa are
ever again handed back to the former régime. For their pains in making the
statements and for their share in furnishing the information that has been
brought together herein, those whose names are mentioned and their associates
would become – if, indeed, they have not already become – marked men, and
their “removal” would only be matter of time. A campaign of smelling-out, the
police sergeant as the witch-doctor, with all its attendant evils and horrors
would most assuredly be inaugurated.
Native opinion here is unanimously against any idea of ever being handed
back to the tender mercies of Germany, and any suggestion of the possibility of
an act of that kind on the part of Great Britain produces the utmost conster-
nation.
Before closing these introductory remarks, I desire to express my obliga-
tions to the compilers of the accompanying chapters for the assistance they
have rendered. The framer of Part I. is Major T.L. O’Reilly (Attorney of the
Supreme Court of South Africa, Transvaal Provincial Division), Military
Magistrate of Omaruru in this Protectorate, to whom, owing to the extent of the
ground to be covered, has fallen the larger share. Major O’Reilly has been here
in an official capacity for nearly three years past and is well acquainted with
the country and its inhabitants. Part II. Has been prepared by Mr. A.J. Waters,
B.A., Crown Prosecutor for the Protectorate, who has been stationed here since
October 1915. Both have attacked the tasks assigned to them with much
assiduity, and beyond indicating to them the lines on which I wished them to
proceed and exercising a general supervision over the work, the credit for any
value this report may possess will be theirs.
E.H.M. Gorges15
Administrator
Government House,
Windhoek
South-West Africa
19th January, 1918
15
Served as the first South African civilian Administrator of South West Africa from 1st
November, 1915 to 30th September, 1920 (Taylor 1985: 4)
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PART ONE
CHAPTER ONE
In her colonies the missionary has always been Germany’s advance agent, and
the pioneer of her trade. Later on, the missionary and the merchant have, hand
in hand, paved the way for German influence, ascendancy, annexation, and
government. It was a favourite saying of Prince Bismarck’s that “the mission-
ary and the trader must precede the soldier.” Of this system South-West Africa
is a striking example.
So long ago as the year 1814, the British Government (of the Cape of Good
Hope) sent one Von Schmelen, a German missionary, to carry on mission work
among the Hottentots16, living across the Orange River, in Great Namaqualand.
Von Schemelen settled at Bethany and, later on, having attached himself to the
then rising clan of Afrikaner Hottentots, under Jager Afrikaner, he moved north
with them. Jager Afrikaner made his headquarters in Southern Damaraland; his
village was named Schemelen’s Hope, in honour of this most adaptable of
missionaries, who, having taken a Hottentot girl to wife, became an influential
member of the tribe. The present town of Okahandja, near Windhuk, is said to
be on the site of Schmelen’s Hope.
Once he was firmly established, Von Schmelen appears to have forgotten all
about the Cape Government. He placed himself in direct communication with
Berlin. His reports on the country and its inhabitants, which, from time to time,
reached Germany, had the result of attracting other German missionaries to
South-West Africa.
Eventually, about 1840, the Rhenish Mission Society of Berlin began to
take official notice of this new field for missionary labour and enterprise.17 By
the year 1867 thriving mission stations had been established at nearly every
important centre in Great Namaqualand and Damaraland.
These good missionaries had to support and maintain themselves and fami-
lies. They could only do so by combining religion with business. Accordingly,
16
This term was used by early European travellers ‘to refer to the indigenous people at the Cape
of Good Hope’. The term is now seen as extremely offensive and the name ‘Khoikhoi’ is more
commonly used. In the Namibian context the term ‘Hottentot’ was commonly used in historical
texts to refer to people from various ‘Nama’ communities (Boonzaier, Emile, Candy Malherbe,
Penny Berens and Andy Smith, The Cape Herders: A History of the Khoikhoi of Southern Africa,
David Phillip/Ohio University Press, Cape Town & Johannesburg, Athens, 1996, pp. 1-2).
17
The Rhenish Mission Society was established in 1828. Its first three missionaries to Namibia
arrived at Jonker Afrikaner’s capital at /Ai//Gams in December, 1842 (Dedering, Tilman ‘Southern
Namibia c. 1780-c.1840: Khoikhoi, missionaries and the advancing frontier’. PhD, University of
Cape Town, 1989, p. 135; Hellberg, Carl-J. Mission Colonialism and Liberation: The Lutheran
Church in Namibia, 1840-1966, New Namibia Books, Windhoek, 1997, p. 49.
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22 CHAPTER ONE
18
The first European missionaries, from the London Missionary Society settled in southern
Namibia as early as 1806. The work of the Rhenish mission amongst the Herero is usuallly dated
from 1844. By 1871 the mission claimed to have baptised 69 Herero converts (Dedering ‘Southern
Namibia’, p. 149; Lau, Brigitte ‘”Thank God the Germans Came”: Vedder and Namibian Historio-
graphy’ in Brigitte Lau, History and Historiography (Discourse/MSORP, Windhoek, 1995, p. 54).
19
To trek means to move around, especially by ox-wagon. To ‘smouse’ was to travel around
trading. The word originally derived from Yiddish. In Afrikaans the word smouse means ‘trader’.
20
‘largely English traders’.
21
The production of brandy in the Cape Colony doubled between 1865 and 1871 when a million
gallons of brandy were being produced every year. Pamela Scully, ‘Liquor and Labor in the
Western Cape, 1870-1900’, Ch. 2 in Jonathan Cruch and Charles Ambler (eds) Liquor and Labor
in Southern Africa, Ohio University Press/University of Natal Press, Athens, Pietermaritzburg,
1992, p. 76
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CHAPTER ONE 23
won. In this way it was hoped that the “thieving and lawless dealings”ii of the
English traders would be effectively checked.
It was at this juncture that an inspired missionary suggested that, in addition
to converting the natives, they should be taught “useful trades and handi-
crafts.”iii The sympathetic Society thereupon arranged for certain competent
artisans to migrate from Germany with their families and to settle at Otjim-
bingwe, the headquarters of the Mission.
The wagon-maker Tamm from Thuringen and the blacksmith Hälbich from
Schlesien are worthy of a niche in history. They were the first real colonists of
South-West Africa. Not as missionaries to convert, not as profit-seeking traders
to exploit the native, but as honest workmen did they come with hammer and
saw in hand, prepared to earn their daily bread by the sweat of the brow, to
teach the dusky savage the dignity of labour, the usefulness of honest work, that
laborare est orare.22 Tamm and Halbich were followed shortly afterwards by
two other tradesmen, whose names are not obtainable, and also by the
merchant Redecker. The latter took over the general management of the
Mission’s stores. In due course wagons were built. Then it was found necessary
to allow the colonists (Tamm, Hälbich and the unnamed two) to travel with
loaded wagons among the natives and open up an opposition trade, under the
auspices and with the blessing of the Rhenish Mission Society. They sold, so
the records of the Mission inform us, “all things which the English traders sold
except liquor.” Yet, notwithstanding this, they could make little headway. The
Cape traders more than held their own, and large droves of cattle found a yearly
market in Cape Town and elsewhere.
The irritated missionaries ascribed their failure to the reason that their motto
was “genuine goods and no humbug and cheating.”
In 1864 war broke out between the Hereros and the Hottentots. The Hereros,
led in battle by the English traders Frederick Green and Haybittel and the
traveler Andersson, signally defeated the dominant Afrikaner Hottentots, under
Jonker Afrikaner, and freed Hereroland (Damaraland) from Hottentot oppres-
sion.23 As a result of this war the Hereros regained their territory and the
independence which they had partially lost to the Hottentots over 25 years
previously.
The war dragged on, however, and peace was not restored before 1870. In the
ii
P. Rohrbach and German Mission Records.
iii
P. Rohrbach and German Mission Records.
22
‘To work is to be revered’.
23
Jonker Afrikaner actually died on 18th August, 1861. His son and successor, Christian
Afrikaner, died in an attack on Otjimbingwe on 15th July, 1863. Jan Jonker Afrikaner, another son,
became the new leader. According to Brigitte Lau it was Andersson who gathered Herero at
Otjimbingwe, insisted on the election of a Herero ‘Paramount Chief’ and even designed a flag for
the ‘Herero Nation’ (Lau, Brigitte Namibia in Jonker Afrikaner’s Time, Archea 8, Windhoek 1987,
pp. 127, 129, 131, 133). An interesting insight into Andersson’s perspectives on events during this
period can be found in his diaries published as Trade and Politics in Central Namibia, 1860-1864,
National Archives of Namibia, Windhoek, 1989.
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24 CHAPTER ONE
meantime the missionaries, like their secular opponents from the Cape,
specialized in the sale of arms and ammunition, and there is reason to believe
that a very brisk trade was carried on.
The active intervention of Green and other traders on the side of the Hereros
was resented by the Hottentots. In 1868 a Hottentot raiding party plundered
Andersson’s store at Otjimbingwe, and also that of the Rhenish Mission. This
sent the Mission’s representatives post haste to Berlin, and in 1869 the Society
petitioned the King of Prussia for protection. They asked for the establishment
of a Prussian Naval Station at Walfish Bay. The King assured the missionaries
of his warmest interst; but the outbreak of the Franco-Prussina war distracted
further attention for the time being.
In 1870 peace between the Hottentots and Hereros was once more restored,
and this stimulated the Mission to fresh interest in its trading ventures.24
It was then recommended by the missionary in charge that a special
merchant should be appointed to trade “as a branch of the Rhenish Mission.”
This, however, did not look nice, and a Limited Liability Company (ostensibly
a separate and entirely independent concern) was floated in Germany in 1873
for the purpose of trading “in the Mission fields of the Rhenish Mission
Society.” The Society undertook to give this company all the assistance and
support possible, and in return therefore was to receive fifty per cent. (50%) of
the net profits. A special proviso was also made to the effect that only devout
persons (Christlich gesinnte) were to be sent out for work as managers and
traders.
The Rev. Hugo Hahn, one of the prominent missionaries who had controlled
the Otjimbingwe Station for some years, resigned on the establishment of this
company. He also disbanded the labour colony and closed down the Industrial
School. Mr. Hahn’s contention was that the Mission could more strongly
influence the natives by keeping trade under direct control.
The main object of the newly formed company was to develop the cattle
business and open up an export trade to Europe. Owing, however, to the
inevitable transport difficulties, the incapacity and, sad to relate, the dishonesty
of the “Christianly minded” folk, who had come out to manage the business,
very heavy losses were sustained. In six years these totaled over 200,000 marks
(10,000l.), and the outbreak in 1880 of another Herero-Hottentot war ruined all
hopes of recovery.25 The company was hopelessly insolvent and went into
liquidation.
24
Lau argues that the Treaty is significant because it embodied the absolute decline of the earlier
Afrikaner hegemony. It clearly stated “… that Kaptain Jan Jonker Afrikaner has obtained no right
whatsoever to interfere or meddle with the affairs of the Herero people or their land, nor with
foreigners living in or travelling among them” (Lau, Namibia in: pp. 140-141)
25
In her introduction to The Hendrik Witbooi Papers, Brigitte Lau makes the point that the 1880
war is under-researched, but that to reduce the war to ‘ethnicity’ ie. ‘another Herero-Hottentot war’
is too simplistic. She argues that the period was actually marked by ‘a very complex pattern of
shifting, cross-ethnic alliances’ (Lau, Brigitte ‘Introduction’ in Annemarie Heywood and Ebeb
Maasdorp (trans), The Hendrik Witbooi Papers, Archeia 13, Windhoek, 1989).
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CHAPTER ONE 25
In the interim an event of great importance had taken place. In the year 1876,
a British commissioner, Mr. W.C. Palgrave, visited the country with a view to
ascertaining the wishes of the native chiefs in regard to control by Great
Britain, and also for the purpose of reporting to the Cape Government on the
desirability or otherwise of “the extension of the limits of this Colony, on the
West Coast of this continent, so as to include Walfish Bay and such tract of
country inland as may be found expedient and approved of by Her Majesty”
(vide Commission by Sir Henry Barkly, Governor of the Cape of Good Hope,
to William Coates Palgrave, Esq., dated 16th March 1876).26
Palgrave was well received by the Herero people, who, on 9th September
1876, handed him a petition to Sir Henry Barkly, signed by 58 chiefs,27 under
chiefs, and headmen, in the course of which they say:–
We want to live at peace with each other, and with our neighbours, and we want
to have our country kept for us. We wish to see our children grow up more
civilized than we have had any chance of being, and so, after many meetings
amongst ourselves, we have agreed most humbly to ask Your Excellency to send
someone to rule us, and be the head of our country … We also most humbly ask
that Your Excellency will everywhere make it known that the sea boundary to our
country is in your possession, and that we have given you the right to such ground
as may be required for its protection, as well as for the building of towns and
villages in the vicinity of all landing places.
The Bastards of Rehoboth and several Hottentot tribes also asked for British
protection and control.
In his report to the Cape Governor, Mr. Palgrave recommended the
annexation, as British territory, of the whole coastline of Great Namaqualand
and Damaraland, and the appointment of a British Resident in each of these
areas. Instead of following this advice the British Government annexed, in
1878, only Walfish Bay, and a few square miles of desert sand in the immediate
vicinity thereof.
Of this fact, German enterprise was not slow to take advantage. The next
important step towards the extension of German influence and the acquisition
of what Great Britain had apparently definitely discarded as worthless, is
represented by the activites of Adolf Luderitz, a merchant, of Bremen, who
arrived in the country in 1882.
From 1882 to 1890 the merchant missionaries were gradually reinforced by
the professional merchants, and the work of building up German trade and
influence, to the exclusion of Britain and the British, was recommenced with
26
The report was published in 1877 (G50-‘77). It has been reprinted as Palgrave, W.C. Report
of W.C. Palgrave, Esq., on his mission to Damaraland and Great Namaqualand in 1876, State
Library, Pretoria, 1869.
27
At the same meeting, the English trader, Lewis presented the boundaries of Herero territory.
He claimed that the southern boundary of ‘Hereroland’ at that time lay along a line from Rehoboth
to the coast. A copy of the petition can be found in Palgrave’s report (Stals, E.L. P. The
Commissions of W.C. Palgrave, Special Emissary to South West Africa, 1876-1885, Van Riebeeck
Society, Cape Town, 1990; Palgrave, Report; pp.41-42)
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26 CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
It did not take Luderitz very long to discover that, after Walfish Bay, the bay at
Angra Pequena (now known as Luderitzbucht) was the best port on the
coastline between the Orange and the Kunene rivers.
By deeds of sale, dated 1st May and 25th August 1883, the chief of the Aman28
Hottentots of Bethany, Joseph Fredericks29, sold to Luderitz that territory
which is situated between the 26th degree of Southern Latitude and the Orange
River, bounded on the west by the sea and on the east by a line running 20 miles
inland from north to south.
Early in 1884 a party of German scientists and prospectors visited Damara-
land and Great Namaqualand, and inquired into the mineral and agricultural
possibilities.
On the 24th April in the same year,Prince Bismarck, by telegram, formally
sanctioned the hoisting of the German flag at Angra Pequena and placed
Luderitz and his acquisition under the protection of the German Empire.
Greatly encouraged by these special marks of Imperial recognition, Lude-
ritz went further afield, and on the 19th August 1884 he entered into another
deed of purchase with the captain of the Topnaar Hottentots30, who lived near
Walfish Bay, whereby he acquired from that half-starved and improvident
chieftain the proprietary rights in the remained of the coast belt from Degree
26 South to Cape Frio (hundreds of miles to the north), near the Kunene mouth.
To avoid complications the area already annexed by the British at Walfish Bay
was specially excluded. It is interesting to observe that the agent for Luderitz
28
The agreement between Lüderitz and Josef Frederiks led to the sale of a coastal strip of 20
miles wide. Where Lüderitz took the mile to be a geographical or ‘German’ mile which is 7.4
kilometres in length, Frederiks took the mile to be 1.5 kilometres in length. Horst Drechsler, Let
Us Die Fighting, (Akademie-Verlag: Berlin 1966) p. 23.
29
Joseph Fredericks did on 20th October, 1890. His father (also named Joseph) had married a
woman from the Witbooi community at Gibeon. When he had died, she married David Christian
Fredericks who served as the leader at Bethanie whilst the young Joseph Fredericks was still
young. David Christian Fredericks led a delegation from Bethanie on a year long visit to Britain
and met Queen Victoria. An ongoing leadership dispute seems to have taken place between the
descendents of Joseph Fredericks and the descendents of David Christian Fredericks. The second
son of Joseph Fredericks, Paul Fredericks, was elected as ‘Headman’ following the death of his
father in 1890 and remained ‘loyal’ to the German Administration during the 1904-1908 War. In
contrast, Cornelius Fredericks, the grandson of David Christian Fredericks, led a guerilla unit that
fought against the Germans [ADM 71 - 1341/2 ‘Acting Magistrate Bethanie to Secreatary for
South West Africa, 28th August, 1922]
30
Piet Haibib, sold a strip of land 20 geographical miles wide between 26 and 22 degrees.
Drechsler, Let Us Die Fighting, p. 24.
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28 CHAPTER TWO
However true Rohrbach’s statement may be, the fact remains that Luderitz
received all the help he required from the German Government. On the 21st
October 1885 the Government Controller of the newly formed company, Dr.
Goering, arrived with the Secretary Nels, and the Police Superintendent
Goldammer. Goering was a kind of commercial agent, with certain limited
powers and jurisdiction over German settlers in the country, but with not the
slightest authority to promise the protection of Germany to the natives. Aided
by the missionary, Carl Büttner, Dr. Goering immediately proceeded, however,
to make “Protection Agreements” with such native chiefs as he had persuaded
to ask for the protection and good will of the Emperor. In return for such
protection the chierfs were required to give Germans favoured-nation treat-
ment, and they undertook to give no facilities or rights to others than Germans,
without the Emperor’s consent. Amongst these, Kamaherero, the chief of the
Okahandja Hereros, styled “Chief Captain of the Hereros in Damaraland,”
iv
The Hereros, hearing of this, on 29th December 1884 made a Deed of Cession of Hereroland
to the British Crown (See Cape Blue Book, A.5-85).
v
Deutsche Kolonial-Wirtschaft
31
For more details see: Drechsler, Let Us Die Fighting, pp. 30 - 39.
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CHAPTER TWO 29
entered into such an agreement on the 21st October 1885.32 Writing of these
agreements (which, owing to their importance, will be more fully dealt with
later on) Governor Leutwein remarks, “those persons who promised this
protection in the name of the German Emperor had not the slightest authority
to do so.” (Elf Jahre Gouverneur, page 13.)
It is of more than passing interest to South Africans to note that, in the very
same year when the German flag was hoisted at Angra Pequena, a party of
Transvaalers and Cape colonists, under the leadership of Willem Jordaan,
purchased the whole of the vast area in the north which is now known as
Grootfontein District, from the Paramount Chief of Ovamboland. At Groot-
fontein, Jordaan, in 1884, founded the Republic of Upingtonia, distributed
farms to his burghers, drew up a constitution, had a Volksraad election, and
became the first President.33 In addition to the land rights, Jordaan had, with the
approval of his people, acquired personal rights to all minerals in the rich area
where the Tsumeb Copper Mine now is. In olden days the Bushmen had
worked these mines on tribute to the Ovambo ruler, and their existence was
well known. It is hardly necessary to state that this move greatly upset the
ambitions of Luderitz and his associates, and that Jordaan’s achievements were
viewed with grave apprehension and distrust. The problem was solved in 1886
by the murder of Jordaan while on a journey through Ovamboland to Mossa-
medes. The Ovambo chief Nechale was responsible for this murder, but it was
done, so Germans allege, at the instigation of Kamaherero, the Herero Chief of
Okahandja, who nursed a grudge against Jordaan for having, some years
before, helped the Hottentots against the Hereros. This may or may not be so.
It is difficult to prove who was the instigator; but others had even greater interst
than Kamaherero in the removal of Jordaan. The ever candid Dr. Rohrbach
says, referring to Jordaan’s death and the break up of the Republic, “Jordaan’s
settlement failed not for natural but for political reasons … the political
situation was unfavourable.”
As soon as Jordaan’s death (1886) became known, Dr. Goering took steps
to advise his followers at Grootfontein that the German Emperor could not for
one moment tolerate the idea of a Boer Republic in “his territory.” The awed
and embarrassed Republicans packed up their goods and chattels and trekked
off in all directions: some went back to the Transvaal and the Cape, while
others joined the Boer colony at Humpata in Angola.34 This was the end of
Upingtonia.
It is not to be imagined that the British traders in the country viewed the
work of Goering and his Gesellschaft with equanimity and indifference. On the
contrary, every obstacle was placed in their way; but persons situated as the
British traders were could not fight the new-comers on equal terms. Never-
32
For further details see Gewald, Herero Heroes, pp. 31-32
33
On the short-lived Republic see Gordon, Bushman Myth, pp. 40 - 42.
34
On the subsequent fortunes of the settlers in Angola see: Gervase Clarence-Smith, Slaves,
30 CHAPTER TWO
theless every effort was made, both by the Cape Government and the traders,
to secure and retain British influence in the hope that the country would
eventually be placed under British rule, thereby ensuring the destruction of
German designs and ambitions not only on South-West Africa, but also on the
whole of the sub-continent. The men on the spot saw the danger clearly, but it
was neither understood nor appreciated in London.
In 1888 matters came to ahead and well nigh ended disastrously for the
German agents. Teutonic writers appear to be unanimous in describing the
event as “almost a political catastrophe.” The prime cause of all the trouble was
an English trader and prospector named Robert Lewis.35 Germans confidently
assert that Lewis was the paid agent and emissary of the late C.J. Rhodes.36 In
any event, Lewis, who had traded extensively throughout Damaraland and
Great Namaqualand, was very popular with the natives and exercised consider-
able influence over the chiefs. In fact, when Mr. Palgrave visited the Hereros
in 1876-1877 and received their request for British protection, Mr. Lewis and
the missionary Brincker acted as interpreters for him at all the principal
discussions. The one aim and object in the life of Lewis was to get the Germans
out of the country.
On a certainday in 1888, at a meeting at the Herero headquarters, Oka-
handja, the old Chief Kamaherero, in the presence of his councillors’ informed
Dr. Goering that he recognized no German claims to control his country and his
people. He gave Goering and his staff to understand that “if they did not wish
to see their heads lying at their feet they should be out of Okahanda and well
on their way to Germany before sunset.”
Goering and company did not stand on the order of their going; they retired
in haste and made for Otjimbingwe. There they hurriedly disposed of or packed
all the copany’s goods and fled in terror to Walfish Bay to the protection of the
British Residency.
From Walfish Bay the fugitives proceeded to Berlin and appealed to the
German Government for protection against the machinations of Lewis, who
has been described as:–
The agent in the country of Cecil Rhodes, who in all mannerof shameless ways
and with matchless impudence carried on activities dangerous to the Common-
wealth (Dove; Deutsch S.W. Afrika, page 14)
35
Trader who worked particularly with Herero communities and was, reportedly, a fluent
speaker of OtjiHerero. He was a close adviser of the Herero leader, Maharero, and even served as
a member of his Council for a period of time. He actively discouraged Maharero from signing
protection agreements with the Germans and instead urged links with the Cape Colony and the
British Empire. He died in 1894 at the age of fifty after being mortally wounded by a leopard
(Tabler 1973: 68-70)
36
Much has been written on the imperial aspirations of Cecil John Rhodes, for example see:
Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher with Alice Denny, Africa and the Victorians: The Official
Mind of Imperialism, Second Edition, (Macmillan Education: London 1992, Chapter VII
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CHAPTER TWO 31
An English trader who had long lived among the Hereros and had from the very
beginning been a most bitter enemy to the Germans. Lewis (continues Rohrbach)
had so long practiced on Kamaherero and his peole with schnapps, promises, and
all sorts of lies that the Hereros repudiated their agreement made three years
previously with Dr. Goering.
It has already been pointed out on the evidence of Governor Leutwein that Dr.
Goering had no authority to bind the German Crown to any agreements, and
that therefore Lewis as a private individual had quite as much right as Goering
to influence or deal with the Hereros.
If there were any question on this point, the reply of the Imperial German
Chancellor to the further appeals for protection removes all possible doubt. The
company and its fugitive representatives appealed for the “practical protection
of the German Empire” to enable the company “to carry out and make effective
their rights and interests in Damaraland.” (At that time they had neither rights
nor interests in Damaraland.)
To this the Chancellor replied (see C. von François, D.S.W.A., page 31):–
That it could not be the function of the Empire, and that it lay outside the adopted
programme of German colonial policy to intervene for the purpose of restoring,
on behalf of the State, organizations among uncivilized peoples; and, by the use
of military power to fight the opposition of native chiefs towards the not yet
established business undertakings of German subjects in oversesea countries. He
could therefore give no promise, on behalf of the Empire, that the peaceful pursuit
of mining and suchlike undertakings in South-West Africa would be ensured by
the military force of the Empire.
This declaration was hotly assailed in the German mercantile press, and the
various companies and missionary societies created a great uproar.
In March 1889 the missionary Brincker of Okahandja (the gentleman who,
with Lewis, had acted as interpreter for Commissioner Palgrave) wrote a strong
letter of protest to the Chancellor, in the course of which he remarked:–
To make agreements with Kamaherero is useless. It is like making agreements
with a baby. Here the rights granted are of value only in proportion to the power
behind the recipient. If a share of the treasure is to be assured a European Power
must be established here, so that each case of arrogance on the part of the natives
and each case of damage to vested interests may be punished. Under such
protection the cattle-farming of the natives will develop, every European
undertaking will be secured and the labour of the missionaries will prosper.vi
In conclusion, the enthusiastic Mr. Brincker ventured the opinion that 400
soldiers and two batteries of artillery would be required to achieve his ideals.
It will be interesting to observe how the cattle-farming of the natives
actually did develop under “such protection.” At the time Brincker wrote, the
vi
Bundesarchiv Berlin, RKA 2105, H. Brincker, 13/3/’89, Reichskanzler Bismarck
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32 CHAPTER TWO
Herero people possessed cattle which could be estimated in tens and, probably,
in hundreds of thousands. Within 12 years after the furnishing of “such
protection,” the surviving Hereros did not possess an ox, a heifer, or a calf
between them. They were forbidden by German laws to own large stock.
In view of the agitation in Germany following on his reply to the petitioners,
the Chancellor somewhat modified his attitude, and later on in the year 1889
the first German soldiers, 21 in number under command of the brothers C. and
H. von François, arrived in South-West Africa and marched to Otjimbingwe.37
Captain C. von François left portion of his command at Otjimbingwe and
hastened in person to Okahandja to pay his respects to Kamaherero. From
Okahandja he proceeded on a similar mission to Omaruru to greet the Herero
chief Manasse. He was, however, so icily received by both potentates that he
returned in haste to Otjimbingwe, evacuated the place and fell back on Tsaobis
on the main transport road to the coast, where he build a fort and awaited
developments.
37
Horst Drechsler points out that as there was no regular German shipping service to Namibia
in 1889 the German troops had to travel on English ships and land at the British-controlled port of
Walvis Bay. For this reason they had to pretend they were a ‘group of explorers’, rather than the
vanguard of a colonial army. Drechsler, Let Us Die, p. 42
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CHAPTER THREE
In the year 1884, shortly after Prince Bismarck had cabled the Emperor’s
blessing and the protection of Germany to the merchant Luderitz at Angra
Pequena38, another event of great importance took place. In November of that
year Prince Bismarck convened the famousBerlin-Congo Conference, which
sat at Berlin until February 1885. Under Bismarck’s guidance the Conference
declared all equatorial Africa to be a kind of free trade area, grated France a
large slice of the lower Congo, and, in addition to other decisions, made it the
duty of all Colonial Powers to come to an agreement with one another on the
occasion of fresh aggrandizements. “English colonial monopoly,” states a
German writer, “was thereby broken and a juster distribution of colonial
possessions was at all events inaugurated.”
The Conference went further, and before breaking up the conferring Powers
solemnly and emphatically pledged themselves and placed on record their
recognition of the sacred duty:–
Of preserving the aboriginal races of Africa.
In July 1890, Germany was again very prominent at the Anti-Slavery Confer-
ence in Brussels, when it was placed on record by solemn pledge and resolution
that it was the emphatic desire of the conferring Powers effectively to protect
the native races of Africa from oppression and slavery.39
It is not to be wondered at, therefore, knowing what Germany’s declared
and avowed native policy was, that the statesmen and people of Great Britain
had no hesitation in welcoming that Power into the arena of world colonisation
as a co-partner in the great work of civilizing and uplifting the heathen races of
the earth. It was apparently in this spirt and on those pledged assurances at
38
The Portuguese name for a ‘Small Bay’. The bay was apparently originally known in
Khoekhoegowab as Nûi-doms. The small European settlement that grew up on the site was later
renamed Lüderitzbucht (Lau, Brigitte Carl Hugo Hahn: A missionary in Nama- and Damaraland,
Part V: Register and Indexes, Archeia 5, Windhoek, 1985, p 1243
39
The Conference involving all the major colonial powers took place over an eight month
period from July 1889 and was particularly concerned with efforts to stop the ‘Arab’ slave trade.
Slavery had only been abolished in Brazil (the destination of many of the slaves exported from the
Angolan coast) in 1888. Hochschild, Adam, King Leopold’s Ghost, Papermac, Basingstoke and
Oxford, 2000, pp.92-94
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34 CHAPTER THREE
Berlin and Brussels that Great Britain allowed Germany to annex the 322,450
square miles of territory in South-West Africa, and by a stroke of the pen placed
the Ovambos, Hereros, Damaras, Hottentots, Bastards, and Bushmen of that
vast land under the guardianship and control of the German Emperor.
Referring to this event a German historian writes:–
In consideration of the increasing expansion of German dominion, the first thing
needful seemed to be a more definite determination of the German and English
spheres of influence, so as to secure a firmer foundation for the civilizing labours
of the two nations. With this object, the much-discussed Anglo-German Agree-
ment was concluded, which extended to Africa and also brought the island of
Heligoland, off the German coast, into the possession of Germany. The great
value of this acquisition to the German Fleet and to the defence of the mouths of
the Elbe, Weser, and Jade in now universally recognized (Historians’ History of
the World: Vol. XV., page 556)
After annexation had become an accomplished fact and German statesmen had
done their work, true German opinion began to reveal itself and, not many years
after annexation, the real German policy was made horribly manifest to the
unfortunate natives of South-West Africa.
Commenting on this policy, the effects of which had never been so strongly
evidenced as just after the second and last Herero rebellion in 1904, Dr. Paul
Rohrbach, the accepted and candid oracle of German colonial policy (who in
1890 was a highly placed official in the German Colonial Office), writes as
follows:–
The decision to colonise in South-West Africa could after all mean nothing else
but this, namely, that the native tribes would have to give up their lands on which
they had previously grazed their stock in order that the white man might have the
land for the grazing of his stock.
When this attitude is questioned from the moral law standpoint, the answer is that
for nations of the “Kultur-position”40 of the South African natives, the loss of their
free national barbarism and their development into a class of labourers in service
of and dependent on the white people is primarily a “law of existence” in the
highest degree.
It is applicable to a nation in the same way as to the individual, that the right
of existence is justified primarily in the degree that such existence is useful for
progress and general development.
By no arguments whatsoever can it be shown that the preservation of any
degree of national independence, national property, and political organization by
the races of South-West Africa, would be of a greater or even of an equal
advantage for the development of manking in general or or the German people in
particular, than the making of such races serviceable in the enjoyment of their
former possessions by the white races. (Deutsche Kolonialwirtshaft, page 286.)41
40
The ‘law of existence’. A specific example of the way such thinking could be applied to
particular ethnic groups in Namibia was recently cited by Robert Gordon. A Prof. Schultze writing
about Namibia in Die Deutsche Kolonialreich in 1910 argued that “If we consider the natives
according to their value as cultural factors in the protectorate, than one race is immediately
eliminated right of: “The Bushmen” (Gordon, Robert, ‘The stat(u)s of Namibian anthropology: a
review’, Cimbebasia Vol. 16, 2000, p. 4)
41
Rohrbach, Paul, Deutsche Kolonialwirtschaft, Buchverlag der ‘Hilfe’, Berlin-Schöneberg,
1907.
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CHAPTER FOUR
42
Lewis engaged in lengthy litigation in an attempt to get his investments back again.
Unfortunately real-politik was such that Lewis never regained his investments. For further details
see Gewald Herero Heroes, pp. 34-5
43
Charismatic, extremely intelligent and talented Nama leader. Opposed to the coming of
Imperial Germany. Attacked in 1893 by German forces. Cooperated with German forces between
1894 and 1904. He was killed in action in 1905. The Hendrik Witbooi Papers, Translated by
Annemarie Heywood and Eben Maasdorp, annotated by Brigitte Lau, Second, revised edition,
(National Archives: Windhoek 1995).
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36 CHAPTER FOUR
Goering immediately after this wrote to Hendrik Witbooi on 20th May 1890,
from Okahandja, as follows:–
44
The original is in the archives of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Republic of
Namibia, V. Politischen Briefe etc., 1879-1892. ‘Hendrik Witbooi at Hornkraans, 30/5/90 to ‘Wel
geliefde Kapitein Maharero Tsamaua’. Gewald Herero Heroes pp. 39-40
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CHAPTER FOUR 37
and each head has his own land and people, over which he alone can rule, so that
no other person or chief can order or compel him … For in this world each Head
of a nation is merely the representative of our Almight God and stands respon-
sible alone to that God, the King of all Kings, the Lord of Lords, before whom we
all, who live under the Heavens, must bend the knee …
But, dear Captain, you have now accepted another Government; you have
surrendered to that Government in order to be protected by another human
Government from all dangers, chiefly and foremost to be protected from me in
this war… You are to br protected and helped by the German Government, but
dear Captain do you appreciate what you have done? … You have looked upon
me as a hindrance and a stumbling block (steen des aanstoots) and so you have
accepted this great Government ir order to destroy me by its might … but it
appears to me that yu have not sufficiently considered the matter, having in view
your land and people, your descendants who will come after you and your
Chieftain’s rights. Do you imaging that you will retain all the rights of your
independent chieftainship after your shall have destroyed me (if you succeed)?
[sic] That is your idea, but dear Captain in the end you will have bitter remorse,
you will have eternal remorse, for this handing of your land and sovereignty over
to the hands of white people.
Moreover, our war is not so desperate that you should have taken this great step
(here Witbooi recapitulates the reasons for the war and the steps which will bring
about peace and points out that he and Maherero are competent to make Peace, in
the same way as they are competent to make war, without “outside interference”),
but notwithstanding all this, I do hope that our war will end and will be succeeded
by Peace? But this thing which you have done, this giving of yourself into the
hands of white people for government, thinking that you have acted wisely, that
will become to you a burden as if you were carrying the sun on your back. I
cannot say whether you have sufficiently pondored over and whether you actually
understand what you have done by giving yourself into German Protection.
I do not know whether you and your Herero nation understand the customs and
laws and policy of this Government, and will long remain in peace and content
thereunder. You will not understand and will be dissatisfied with Dr. Goering’s
doings, because he will not consult your wishes or act in accordance with your
laws and customs. This you will discover too late however as you have already
given him full powers.
Continuing, the old Hottentot statesman adds that the Hereros and Germans
were never friends, and that this agreement between them is made merely “to
destroy me as Herod and Pilate of old banished their differences and enmities
and combined in order to remove the Lord Jesus.” In conclusion, Witbooi
hopes that he will never descend to such “unbelief and little faith” as to rush for
protection for himself and his people to any other than the “Lord of Heaven …
the best Protector.” (This letter is quoted by several German writers, and is
copied into H. Witbooi’s journal, which is in the writer’s possession. There is
no doubt as to its authenticity.)45
45
Witbooi’s notebook containing copies of his correspondence was captured at Hornkranz in
1891 by the Germans. Most recently republished, in an English translation, as The Hendrik Witbooi
Papers. Translated by Annemarie Heywood and Eben Maasdorp, annotated by Brigitte Lau
(Windhoek, 2nd edition, 1995).
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38 CHAPTER FOUR
Lengthy extracts from a lengthy letter are quoted, because the words of the
chief explain the Hottentots’ instinctive mistrust of the Germans and indicate
the only reason why the Hereros accepted German protection.
The independent and liberty-loving Hottentots wished to remain entirely
free and unrestricted by foreign Governments. The proud and peacefully
disposed Hereros, on the other hand, regarded the Hottentots on their suouthern
flank as a standing menace to the security of their large droves of cattle. The
Herero lived for, and practically worshipped, his lowing herds. His traditions,
religious ceremonies, and national rites necessitated that he should own cattle,
the more the better. Cattle spelt power to him in this world and felicity in the
next. It was to preserve his cattle, therefore, tht the Herero accepted German
protection; for was he not told that the mighty German Emperor would send
troops to annihilate the Hottentots and give him peace? This promise, like all
German promises made to the natives, was never kept. It was not seriously
made; it was merely a trick. When, in after years, the German Emperor did send
his armeid to Hereroland, they came for quite another purpose.
Having unburdened his views on the Germans to Kamaherero, Hendrik
Witbooi showed what he though of Dr. Goering’s demands by prosecuting his
warvii against the Hereros with renewed vigour and invincible determination.
The harassed Hereros looked in vain to von François for the promised German
military assistance. What could von François do? He only had sufficient troops
to form a personal bodyguard, and there was no immediate prospect of
reinforcements for offensive purposes; in fact, he could not venture to ask for
any, as his definite instructions from Berlin, when he landed, were “to take no
sides but to remain strictly on the defensive.”
Eventually von François, driven nearly to desperation by the taunts and
recriminations of his Herero allies, decided to pay a personal visit to Hendrik
Witbooi at the latter’s village at Hornkranz. The old chief, who in all his wars
regarded the persons and property of the white people as sacred, received von
François coolly but courteously. With his usual thoroughness, Hendrik Witbooi
caused the minutes of their interview to be carefully entered in his journal by
his secretary. A few extracts from this delightful exchange of views will not be
out of place here.
The meeting took place on 9th June 1892.
vii
It appears that this war originated owing to the murder of certain Hottentot horse-dealers by
the Okahandja Hereros, and that Witbooi was not on this occasion the aggressor.
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CHAPTER FOUR 39
complaints concerning the Hereros on account of their stupid and unlawful acts
…The Government has asked me what should be done, so I replied and said that
first of all I will go to Hendrik Witbooi and speak to him. Therefore have I come
to you, in order to speak. I have come as a friend to give you good advice, and to
ask you if you will not as allviii the other chiefs of this land have done, namely, to
put yourself under German protection … In the next ship Europeans will arrive
and these people must be protected, and the German Government is pledged to
protect all who come under its protection …
viii
This is a deliberate misrepresentation.
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40 CHAPTER FOUR
(8) This news intensely annoyed Hendrik Witbooi, who remarked that he was
quite unable to “praise” such a decision, and a long discussion followed as to
the justice of such a step.
(9) After a time the German Commissioner got a chance to speak again, and
said:–
I think the chief can now, after all is aid and done, make peace with the Hereros.
In the last battle he gave them a severe knock on the head, a fact which greatly
delighted and pleased me, because the war hinders everything… and if, after the
chief makes peace with the Hereros, they again try to do anything wrong to your
people, the German Government will take care to prevent it and it will not take so
long to do that as the chiefs’ war has taken – but it will all be over in 14 days.
In reply to this feeler the chief deftly evaded further discussions by reverting to
the question of arms and ammunition; he resolutely refused to discuss peace.
Shortly afterwards the German Commissioner left, his errand having been
fruitless, he thought. Yet Hendrick Witbooi had received a great shook. For the
first time it dawned upon him that his country had been annexed by Germany
with the consent of England, and that he, the Paramount Chief of Great
Namaqualand, was a German subject.
He was not slow to decide what steps to take in his own interests and those
of his people.
Goering had stated in his letter of May 1890: “I again earnestly request you
to make peace if you wish to preserve yourself, your land and your people.”
And the hint of Von François about the Europeans who would arrive in the next
ship did not fall on deaf ears. Witboot decided to open peace negotiations with
the Hereros through the mediation of Bastard chief at Rehoboth, and by
August1892, a formal treaty of peace had been signed.46 He also decided to
send a protest to the British Government, through the Magistrate at Walvis Bay.
46
See Gewald, Herero Heroes, pp. 52-54
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CHAPTER FIVE
For the first 12 months after the annexation the German Government had left
von François practically to his own resources, and nothing definite was decided
on in regard to the occupation and settlement of South-west Africa. In the
beginning of 1891 the great Kolonialgesellschaft,47 or Colonial Company,
began to move, and inquiries were instituted through the German missionaries
on the spot as to whether it would pay to retain and develop the country.
To this the Mission Inspector, Dr. Buttner, replied …
(Von François, D.S.W.A.)
“Damaraland48 is a key (gate) to South Africa which we should not let pass out of
our hands.” He also went on to advise that “the troops should intervene,” that “the
best the to beat Hendrik Witbooi would be to attack him when, after one of his
usual defeats by the Hereros, he is retreating to the south.” Dr. Hopfner reported
(referring presumably to the Hereros) that “if the German Empire would not or
could not give the guaranteed protection to the natives, and if the troops had to
tolerate the reflections cast upon them (as would appear from reports in the press),
it would be better to surrender the land at once.”
The German Colonial Company decided to follow Buttner’s views, and in May
1891 the following resolution was passed at a meeting held in Berlin:–
That this meeting regards the Colony of South-west Africa as one of the most
valuable German dependencies. Owing to its situation that colony is destined to
secure to German influence its decisive position in South Africa. The favourable
climate and the available uninhabited areas make settlement by German farmers
and agriculturists possible on a large scale. In order to promote the development
of the colony in the right direction and to utilise for the benefit of the
Mother-country all the advantages there to be derived, the Imperial Colonial
Administration should come to the help of the spirit of German enterprise by
securing peace there and the establishment of an organised administration. This
meeting gives utterance to the conviction that the costs of an established
Government on the lines followed by the English in Bechuanaland49 will very
soon be covered by the revenues of the colony.
47
A shortened name for the German South West Africa Company – Deutsche Kolonial
Gesellschaft für Südwestafrika
48
Name previously applied to Hereroland; ‘Dama’ being the Khoekhoegowab word used to
refer to ‘black’ people irrespective of ethnicity
49
The territory of Bechuanaland became a British protectorate in 1885, and in 1966 it became
the independent Republic of Botswana. Stevens, Lesotho, Botswana, & Swaziland, pp. 112 - 172
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42 CHAPTER FIVE
To this the Chancellor, Count von Caprivi (who had succeeded Prince Bis-
marck) replied to the effect that the present position was very unfavourable, but
that, in view of the fact that it was hoped, shortly to form a new and strongly
financed company, and also that the financial resources of the Colonial
Company of South-West Africa would probably be increased before long, he
would hold out a possibility, if the contingencies mentioned came to pass, of
compliance with the wishes of the Kolonialgesellschaft, as expressed in the
resolution.
Early in 1892, in view of the continued war between Witbooi and the
Hereros, the German garrison in the country was increased to 200 troops.
Again the Hereros expected active help in terms of promises made, but none
was forthcoming. Von François preferred to make the personal visit to Witbooi
of which details were given in the preceding chapter to congratulate Witbooi
on his victories and to endeavour to persuade him, like his Herero enemies, to
accept German protection. While resolutely refusing to entertain any German
offers of protection or peace mediation, Hendrik Witbooi and his people were
careful to maintain personal friendship with the new-comers. German traders
came and went; their cattle and goods were never touched; and on official
matters Witbooi invariably sent prompt and civil replies to any communica-
tions from the German Administrator, who by this time was established in the
new headquarters at Windhuk.
While maintaining this correct and amicable attitude, the old chief, in
addition to cherishing his powers as chief, jealously guarded the rights of his
people in their land. He would sanction no German farmers in his country.
Early in 1892, Goering’s rejuvenated colonial company decided to start an
experimental wool farm. Merino sheep were imported and a German farmer
named Hermann placed in charge of the stock. Without in any way consulting
the chief, Hermann established himself at Nomtsas50, in Witbooi’s territory, and
commenced farming operations.
The Herero war did not occupy all Hendrik’s time, so he decided to write to
Hermann. The letter is of interest because it shows the courtly temperament
and dignity of the old warrior
It is as follows:–
Hornkranz, 20th May 1892.
I SEND these few lines to you. We have never yet seen one another, but I now
hear something about you, through reports received from people – namely, that it
50
A farming area situated North of Maltahöhe, occupied against the wishes of Hendrik Witbooi
by Ernst Hermann a trained agriculturalist employed by the Kolonial-Gesellschaft. Hermann
sought the support of German forces to assist him in retaining control of Nomtsas
51
A fortified village in the mountains to the southwest of Windhoek. Occupied by the Witbooi’s
in 1889 until it was destroyed during the German attack in 1893. The remains now lie within the
boundaries of a commercial farm.
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CHAPTER FIVE 43
Your friend
In August 1892, when peace with the Hereros was certain and the treaty was
being considered at Rehoboth by the delegated representatives of Witbooi and
Maharero, Hendrik decided to bring his apprehensions to the notice of the
British Government.
Writing from Hornkranz on 4th August 189252 to the “English Magistrate”
of Walvis Bay, he states:–
I feel obliged and compelled to advise you of the position and circumstances
under which I now live, I mean of the position of the Germans who have come
into our land … for I hear things and I see things which to me are impossible-
things which are neither just, nor good – and therefore I write to you, the English
Magistrate, in the hope and encouragement which is based on the old friendship
which my late grandfather53 had with the English Government … which ancient
friendship I acknowledge to this day … We have seen and have learnt from
experience that we can agree with the English in business and in ordinary life and
if it can be thought or said that any nation should have a preference over this
Africa that can be said of the English because they were the first to come into this
land and we have become acquainted with them in business and personal
friendship that friendship is quite sufficient for us. I require no other sort of
friendship or treaty with a white nation … that is my view of the English
Government and of the old friendship of my grandfather towards you English and
I in my day still rely on that old friendship. But now I see another man who is an
entire stranger to me. His laws and deeds are to me entirely impossible and
unintelligible and untenable. Therefore I write this letter to Your Honour in the
hope that you will, in reply, advise me of the full truth in regard to my questions
concerning the coming of the Germans; because the works of the Germans are
encroaching on my land and now even my life is threatened they come to destroy
52
A file containing correspondence from the British Magistrate for the period 1891-1893 was
ordered sent from Pretoria and contained the original copy of this letter. The original with an
English translation is still held in the National Archives in Pretoria (‘Sec of Interior, Pretoria to Sec.
Native Affairs 15th January, 1918, Hendrik Witbooi, Hornkranz to Magistrate, Walvis Bay, 4th
August, 1892. NTS 266 4349/1910/F639)
53
David Moses Witbooi (Kido, Kwido, Cupido). *c. 1783, + Gibeon 31 December 1875.
Became leader of the Witboois in 1805 in Pela in the northern Cape of South Africa. Led his
followers into Namaland in the first half of the nineteenth century. Forged links with missionaries
of the Rhenish Mission Society. Hendrik Witbooi Papers, pp. 251 - 2.
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44 CHAPTER FIVE
me by War without my knowing what my guilt is … I have been told that it is their
intention to shoot me and ask Your Honour. Perhaps you can tell me why?
Perhaps you will know because you are parties to a treaty and of you English and
Germans the other nation can do nothing without the knowledge of the other;
because as I have heard (and ask Your Honour) that the English Government and
the German Government held a big meeting and discussed to whom this land
Africa should be assigned – for the purpose of concluding Protection Agreements
with the Chiefs of the land; and thereupon you English surrendered the land to the
Germans. But you also said at the meeting that no Chief should be compelled by
force; you said that if a Chief were willing and understood to accept the
Protection he could accept it … That was your decision in your meeting and you
unanimously agreed. So also has it come to pass that some Chiefs have accepted
German protection. Those Chiefs to-day bitterly regret it, however, and are full of
remorse, for they have seen no result from the nice words (lekkere woorden)
which the Germans spoke to them. The Germans told those Chiefs that they
wished to protect them from other strong nations, which intended to come into the
land with armies and deprive the Chiefs, by force, of their lands and farms; and
that therefore it was their (the Germans) desire to protect the Chiefs from such
stupid and unjust people … but so far as I have seen and heard, it appears to me
wholly and entirely the reverse. The German himself is that person of whom he
spoke, he is just what he described those other nations as. He is doing those things
because he rules and is now independent, with his Government’s laws; he makes
no requests according to truth and justice and asks no permission of a chief. He
introduces laws into the land according to his own opinions and those laws are
impossible untenable unbearable unacceptable unmerciful and unfeeling (onge-
voelig)… He personally punishes our people at Windhuk and has already beaten
people to death for debt… It is not just and worthy to beat people to death for that.
They were five people in all.54 Four Bergdamaras and one of my red-men. He
flogs people in a scandalous and cruel manner. We stupid and unintelligent
people, for so he regards us, we have never yet punished a human being in such
a cruel and improper way. He stretches persons on their backs and flogs them on
the stomach and even between the legs, be they male or female, so Your Honour
can imagine that no one can survive such a punishment
Secondly when some Damaras fled to my farm they went to sleep there, being
tired; then there came four white men, who are under the (German) Captain,
accompanied by a Bastard and there on my farm they murdered six of the
Damaras.
So already eleven persons have without reason been murdered by the Germans
… therefore I write and ask Your Honour whether you know of these things and
of the deeds and intentions of the Germans.
The chief then goes on (his letter covers 14 foolscap pages and is too long to
insert in full)55 to assert that his land was conquered by his grandfather from the
Chief Oasib, and that he again, years later, defeated Manasse, the Red Chief,
who disputed his title.
So Namaqualand was purchased by us in blood, twice over, from our
grandfather‘s days even to mine, and it is clear therefore and unquestionable that
Oasib’s territory is mine according to all well-known laws of War and thus,
54
Relates to cases in which men who were alleged to have owed money were beaten to death.
Referring to the executions Witbooi stated that the owing of money was: “not a sufficient and
worthy crime for capital punishment“. Hendrik Witbooi papers, p. 98
55
The full letter can be found in Hendrik Witbooi papers, p. 97 - 102.
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CHAPTER FIVE 45
The quotations are from a copy of the letter in Witbooi’s handwriting recorded
in his journal. Whether or not the Magistrate of Walvis Bay ever received this
letter which was sent by hand by one of my own men – or whether any notice
was taken of it when received cannotix be said, but there is ample food for
reflection and possibly for self-reproach.
Having unburdened his very soul to the Magistrate of Walvis Bay, Hendrik
Witbooi remained at his chief village, Hornkranz, and awaited results. His
conscience was clear; he was at peace with the Hereros and with everyone else.
He ruled his people, settled disputes, conducted Church services, preached and
prayed and wrote letters.
This tranquillity was not to last very long.
In the beginning of 1893 the German garrison had been increased to about
250 soldiers with two batteries of artillery.
The Peace of Rehoboth56 between the Hereros and the Hottentots had
rendered German military intervention unnecessary. Notwithstanding this, the
garrison was reinforced and Captain von François received (says Leutwein):–
The simple instruction to uphold German domination under all circumstances. It
was left to him to do so either by means of attack or defence. The Commissioner
decided, after weighing all the circumstances, for the purpose of intimidating the
others, to give one of the native races an impression of our power. He considered
that the Witboois would be suitable for this purpose… The humiliation of
Hendrik Witbooi would exercise the greatest influence on the others.
ix
(Page 26 in original) Since writing the above it has been ascertained that the letter was duly
received and sent to the Cape Government, and was by them transmitted to the Imperial Govern-
ment in October 1892.
56
For details see: Gewald, Herero Heroes, pp. 53-55.
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46 CHAPTER FIVE
The German ex-Governor may be allowed to continue in his own words his
brief description of this treacherous and most disgraceful piece of business:–
Under preservation of the greatest secrecy, the troops on the morning of 12th
April 1893 attacked Hornkranz, the location of Witbooi. The chief apparently
reckoned on a formal declaration of war, and was completely taken by surprise;
he was peacefully drinking his morning coffee.57 Yet he succeeded, by judicious
flight, in saving himselfx and nearly all his fighting men. Only wives and children
fell into the hands of the troops … The troops were, probably owing to over-
estimation of the achieved results, returned to Windhuk.
x
But they captured his journal and took it to the Archives at Windhuk, and it is now at the
writer’s disposal.
57
A week after the attack Witbooi wrote “Is it a straightforward, or usual way of making war:
that the Germans stop ammunition and then kill me. Without ammunition I am like a beast without
horns. It looks to me like murder.” (Official translation, Hendrik Witbooi, Hornkranz to Magistrate,
Walvis Bay, 20th April, 1893, NTS 26 4349/1910/F639).
58
See Hendrik Witbooi’s own references and letters regarding this attack. Hendrik Witbooi
Papers, pp. 126 - 130
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CHAPTER FIVE 47
because, before long, my father will come down on you like a lion and take his
revenge.”
I estimate the losses of the enemy (continues Schwabe) at about 150 persons,
of which 60 were soldiers, that is, men of the Hottentot race. Unfortunately, there
must be included women and children who had been in the pontoks during the
fight; then, also, there were 50 prisoners, and a number of severely wounded,
which were taken to Windhuk and treated there.59 The booty, a number of rifles,
59
The complete statement made by Hendrik Witbooi’s son is still in the South African Archives
in Pretoria and reads as follows: “After the new German troops arrived at Windhoek our under
Captain Samuel Isaac who was at the time staying there, was told by Captain von François that he
Samuel, must go to his people and tell the Headmen of Witboois’ natin to talk with Captain H.
WItbooi about making a treaty with the Germans.
Captain von François also said that a letter to H. Witbooi would follow on the subject.
When H. Witbooi heard the message he said that the great man must cine together and consult
with him and with each other as to the answer to be given to the letter when it came.
They said ‘let us first wait and see what the letter says, so that we may make an answer when
it comes’. The Captain said ‘Yes, that is best’.
Instead of the letter coming the soldiers followed Samuel and early in the morning before
sunrise the firing woke us. Hendrik Witbooi said to the people round him ‘Who can it be firing on
us, I have made peace with the Damaras [Herero - eds], what is it?’ We did not know who it was,
but Captain Witbooi told all his men to leave the werft as soon as possible. After all the men had
left the German soldiers stormed into the werft. Then we saw it was the Germans. The women and
children were left in the werft, and the soldiers began to shoot at them, they shot little children,
children at the breast, children on their mother’s backs were shot through by the same bullet that
killed the mothers.”
The women saw that the attacking party were white men and sat still as they thought their lives
were safe and that though they might be taken away for servants they would not be killed. So we all
thought. We thought the men would be killed, but not women. Some of the women ran away with
the men, but most remained when they saw that white people came in thinking they would be safe.
The women and children that they shot in the houses, the wounded as well as the dead they did
not bring out, but burnt the houses over them. We know for certain that at least 3 women, a mother
and two daughters, all wounded were burnt alive in the houses. This was seen by some old women
who were not killed and were too crippled to be taken away prisoners with the other survivors.
The Germans stayed in the place till the next midday. On the day of attack the Germans caputed
an old man, a church elder, who was too old and infirm to run away, and who had hidden himself
in the rocks. They tied him up and took him to their wagons and shot him the next morning with 3
bullets.
Some of the women and children, part of whom were wounded the Germans left behind, the
reset a large number they took away to Windhoek. They took more than they left. Two of the
women left behind died of their wounds. Our total loss on the place was 8 old men, 2 young boys
and 78 women and children. Of the two young boys one was Capt. Hendrik Witbooi’s youngest son
about 12 years old, who was paralised on one side. The other Keister Keister’s nephew was about
10 years old.
When the Germans stormed into the palce, there of our men ran into the church and fired on the
troops, a solder called to them to surrender and our magistrate who was one of the three said ‘no’
and shot the soldier dead. The three then escaped after firing several shots. We did not fire first.
The Germans fired before they came into the place. Our men did not fire till the Germans were
inside. Those three men were the only Hottentots who fired at all. The women told us that two
Germans were buried on the place and 3 taken away wounded in their wagons.
We lost one buck wagon of the Captains, two horses, several foals, cows & calves that were
shot down and some cows they took away & also some sheep & goats. We lost also our saddles
about 50 or 60 destroyed and taken away, one good gun & some old ones and some loose powder
and a few cartridges. We had no idea of war and so our cartridges were in our boxes and our
bandoliers were empty. We only got away with our guns.
(Statement by Klein Hendrik Witbooi (son of Captain Hendrik Witbooi) and Keister Keister
(under-Captain) given in presence of Magistrate, Walvis Bay, enclosure with Magistrate, Walfish
Bay to Under-Sec for Native Affairs, 9th May, 1893 NTS 26 4349/1910/F639). The statement and
another by Petrus Jafta have been published in Heywood, Witbooi Papers, p208
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48 CHAPTER FIVE
munitions, saddlery, harness, a herd of cattle, a flock of small stock, and about 20
horses, was not of much value to us; the loss of these was, however, a
considerable blow to the Witboois. The most remarkable piece of loot was an
ox-wagon on which had been fixed a harmonium used by the Witboois at divine
service; unfortunately it was badly damaged by rifle fire.
Hendrik Witbooi might well have cause to return “like a lion”; but the surprise
had deprived him of practically all food and munitions, and he and his
following, living on wild fruits, field mice, lizards, and the larva of ants, took
refuge in the mountain fastnesses of the Naauwkloof.60
Before closing the subject it may be recorded, however, that according to
information given by the chief ‘s son, and namesake, who now lives at Gibeon
and who accompanied his father from Hornkranz, the surprise was so complete
that many of the fugitives escaped only in their shirts. A certain percentage
grabbed rifles and bandoliers; but many had not time even to do that. Hendrik
Witbooi, junior, relates that a few days after the Germans had left on their
return to Windhuk, he and a party of his father’s men came down from the
mountains to see if anything had been spared to them. At the village they found
that the Germans had set a huge land mine, which, if it had exploded, would
have brought further disaster on the visitors. The quick eye of the Hottentot
detected the trap; the spring gun which was to fire the mine was detached and
a sufficient supply of powder was unearthed to enable Witbooi to continue an
obstinate resistance for nearly 18 months longer.
Von François had succeeded in giving the natives “an impression of our
power”; but he had also succeeded in doing more: he had given the natives an
impression of the true German character and of the real worth of German
pretensions. To this massacre at Hornkranz is to be ascribed the fact that the
Ovambos never came under German influence. The news spread like wildfire
and shocked and horrified the natives throughout the country. The Ovambos, in
anticipation of a visit from the Germans, prepared for war; the Hereros grew
sullen and suspicious.
When Major Leutwein took over from von François the next year, he
pretended to feel astonishment at the “aloof and openly hostile bearing of the
natives”; but he was more than astonished when, having written to the Ovambo
chief, Kambonde61, expressing his intention “soon of having the pleasure of
paying you a visit,” that potentate replied. “Personally, I don’t care whether I
ever see you as long as I live.”
All respect for the white man had disappeared. After Hornkranz, Germany’s
prospects of ruling the natives by kindly sympathy and mutual co-operation
(had she ever intended so to do) vanished for ever; her only way to gain
ascendancy was by pitiless severity and brute force. The “mailed fist” had to be
applied. This she proceeded to do without compunction or hesitation.
‘Narrow cleft’, currently known today as the Naukluft. Situated to the south east of Windhoek
60
After the death of Iitana in 1884 there was a succession dispute in the kingdom on Ondonga.
61
Kambonde controlled the western part of the kingdom known as Ontananga and established his
palace at Okaloko. He died in 1909. (Williams 1991: 145-146, 189)
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CHAPTER SIX
The Berlin Government fully approved the steps taken by von François against
Witbooi at Hornkranz, and that gentleman was promoted to the rank of Major.
Towards the end of 1893, namely, on 20th November, Count Caprivi, the
Imperial Chancellor, with the approval of His Majesty the Emperor and King,
wrote a letter of instruction to Major Theodor Leutwein, directing him to
proceed to South-west Africa and to send a report on the situation there as the
result of his own observations. The Chancellor went on to say that, owing to
the difficulty of obtaining regular and frequent communications from the
Acting Commissioner, Major von François, he was unable to get such details
as would enable him, satisfactorily, to control from Berlin military and
administrative work there. Leutwein was specially asked not to interfere in the
military control or administration; but –
His Majesty the Emperor has decided that should Major von François be
prevented during your presence in the territory from carrying out his duties by
death or other permanent causes you are authorised to take over his work in an
acting capacity.
Your task will be to inquire into the relations between the Europeans and the
natives in the central portions of the territory, and particularly into the offensive
measures already taken and to be taken. In this connection you will keep this
point of view before you, namely, that our power over the natives must be main-
tained under all circumstances and must be more and more consolidated. You
must inquire whether the troops are strong enough to accomplish this task.
62
Leutwein, Theodor Elf Jahre Gouverneur in Duetsch-Südwestafrika, (Reprint), Namibia
Scientific Society, Windhoek, 1997.]
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50 CHAPTER SIX
Prince Bismarck, that “In the colonies the merchant must go on ahead and the
soldier and the Administration must follow him; but, nevertheless, especially
with regard to the warlike natives which we found in South-west Africa, people
should not have to wait too long for the soldier … Notwithstanding our lack of
power, we had promulgated Ordinances which the natives treated with contempt.
One of the Ordinances concerning arms and ammunition could be enforced
because these articles were imported mainly by sea … Furthermore, we issued
and ratified concessions over rights and territories which did not belong to us. For
example, in 1892 we established a syndicate for land settlement which was to
dispose of settlements from Windhuk in the direction of Hoachanas and Gobabis.
Yet there sat at Gobabis the robber Khauas Hottentots… Hoachanas was claimed
by Chief Hendrik Witbooi and these claimed that the boundaries of their spheres
of influence were close by the tower of Windhuk.
All this gave rise to the impression at home that we were masters in the
Protectorate. In actual fact up to 1894 the exercise of any governmental powers
outside of the capital, Windhuk, was out of the question… The reinforced troops
were not strong enough to exercise powers in the remainder of the Protectorate
and at the same the to carry on the war against Witbooi.
In the same way little influence or impression of power was created over the
natives by the first white influx.
For 60 years past the whites had come to them (the natives) not as proud
conquerors, but as missionaries, traders, and hunters.
The agreements concluded with the natives were merely trading agreements…
The fact that the so-called protection given to the natives in recompense, was
merely on paper (lediglich auf dem Papier stand) indicates that they gave and we
took.
The growing “respect” for the troops, occasioned by the capture of Hornkranz,
had, in the natives, sunk to zero, on account of the long struggle put up by Witbooi
thereafter. The fact that, in addition to this, we had before our attack made an
agreement with the Hereros would not influence them to understand that this
attack had been made to benefit them. Therefore we could not reckon them as
friend, and Witbooi, on the other hand, had become our embittered enemy, and
thus we had sat between two stools.
As a study of German mentality, apart from their significance on the native
question, these extracts are of interest:–
Already (continues Leutwein), on my journey to Windhuk, I had an opportunity
of coming into contact with the Hereros and to ascertain, with astonishment, their
dark mistrust (finsteres mistrauen) of the German Government, which constituted
a grave danger at the rear of the troops fighting Witbooi.
CHAPTER SIX 51
The total population at that time, according to the various estimates, may
reasonably be fixed at approximately 250,000 to 275,000 souls.
The Ovambos, who lived in the extreme north, had made no Protection
Agreements, and can at no time be said to have come under German control.63
These tribes under their despotic and powerful chiefs –
Nechale of Omandonga
Negumbo of Olukonda64;
Kambonde of Omalonga; and
Uejulu of Onipa;
were numerically the strongest race in the Protectorate, their total population
being between 100,000 and 150,000.
The Hereros occupied the whole area marked on most maps as Damaraland,
and were from 80,000 to 90,000 strong. Palgrave in 1876 estimated the total
Herero population at 85,000. In 1890 the chief tribes or clans were located at
63
When Captain Victor Franke visited northern Namibia in 1908 he made a number of
agreements which he described as Gehorsamserklärung (declarations of obedience), rather than
Protection Treaties. King Iita yaNalitoke of Uukwaluudhi signed a declaration on 26th may, 1908.
King Tshaanika tsaNatshilongo signed on 27th May, 1908. King iipumbu ya Shilongo signed on 28th
May, 1908. King Nande ya Hedimbi of Oukwanyama signed on 2nd June, 1908. King Kambonde
kaMpingane of Ondonga signed on 22nd June, 1908. The declarations stated that each ruler
recognised ‘the supremacy of the German Emperor over my territory’ and gave the rulers agree-
ment ‘to the recruitment of workers by the German Government in my tribe’. However it might be
argued that the real independence of the Ovambo kingdoms only really came to an end with the
death of the defiant Kwanyama ruler, Mandume ya Ndemufayo in 1917. (Eirola, Martti, The
Ovamogefahr: The Ovamboland Reservation in the Making, Historical Association of Northern
Finland, Jyväskylä, 1992, pp. 234-238, 299-300).
64
The Blue Book seems to be incorrect here as there was no known ruler of Oukwanyama with
the name of Negumbo. However, during the 1904-1908 war there was a King with this name ruling
over Uukwambi. Negumbo had spent much of his early life in Ombalantu and Ongandjera before
coming to power in 1875. He was reported to be hostile to German approaches up to his death in
1907 (Williams 1991: 159-161, 191
65
Manasse Tjiseseta was the Chief of the Herero at Omaruru (1884-1898). He was succeeded
by his oldest son, Michael Tjiseseta (de Vries 1999)
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52 CHAPTER SIX
Of these tribes, several of which were again subdivided into groups under
wealthy, powerful, and practically independent minor chiefs, only two, namely,
the tribes of Okahandja and Omaruru, had through their respective chiefs
entered into protection agreements.
The others were not bound, and never considered themselves bound, by any
agreement, until compelled to submit by the power of the German arms. In this
connection the German authorities made a most extraordinary blunder. They
constituted the chief of the Okahandja Hereros as Paramount Chief of all
Herero tribes, and held that all other chiefs were bound by his agreements and
decisions. That this was contrary to all Herero laws and customs, an endeavour
will be made to show later on. But German craft went even further. When
Kamaherero of Okahandja died, his heir was ignored, and the Germans com-
pelled the Herero people to accept the weak and inefficient younger son,
Samuel Maharero, as Chief of Okahandja and Paramount Chief of Herero-
land.66 Samuel, when in his cups, would agree to anything, and sign anything;
and as a keg of rum was to him more than his kingdom the Germans saw to it
that he got his rum, and, eventually, lost his kingdom; and not only his
kingdom, but also 80 per cent of the fine race which he and his German masters
had so villainously exploited and misruled.67
The Hottentots occupied the whole of Great Namaqualand, and were scat-
tered in more or less disjointed groups or clans under chiefs who had waxed
powerful in their perpetual wars with the Hereros in the north.68 Their
population was estimated at about 20,000 souls. Notwithstanding their lack of
numbers, they were always formidable opponents, owing to their ability as
horsemen and riflemen.
The Hottentot chiefs who had entered into the so-called protection agree-
ments only did so out of fear that, as the Germans took care to tell them, the
Boeren or Dutch farmers of South Africa were trekking up to take their country
66
For more detail on the succession dispute see: Pool, Gerhard, Samuel Maharero, Gamsberg
Macmillan, Windhoek, 1990, pp. 77-82; Gewald, Herero Heroes, pp. 29-60.
67
Allegations that Samuel Maharero drunk excessively were widespread amongst contempo-
rary missionary records with Rev. Viehe, for example, describing him as ‘completely given over to
drink’. Gerhard Pool provides a list of the massive quantities of liquor purchased on Samuel
Maharero’s account at Wecke & Voigts over a three year period, 1896-1898. However, there is no
evidence that this alchohol was all for personal consumption (Pool, Samuel, p. 168)
68
Brigitte Lau argued strongly against the reduction of Nineteenth Century conflict to the
simple consequence of ‘ethnic or racial difference’. She described ‘the picture of central Namibia
as a war-ridden zone of ruthless intertribal bloodshed’ as ‘inaccurate’ and ‘improbable’ and largely
blames the work of this image on the work and ‘colonial fantasy’ of the influential local historian,
Heinrich Vedder. The plaque at the entrance to Die Alte Feste (the old fort) in Windhoek (now the
National Museum of Namibia) still reflects this view of the pre-colonial past. It reads “the Alte
Feste was built in 1890 by the Schutztruppe under Captain C. von Francois as a stronghold to
preserve peace and order between the rivalling Namas and Hereros”. The same text is also written
in German and Afrikaans. On the other side of the entrance is a second plaque erected by the Alte
Kameraden (a German war veterans association) in memory of the German soldiers who died
during the military campaign of 1914-1915 when South African forces invaded and conquered the
German colony during World War One. At this date there is still no monument to the Namibians
who died fighting against the German Schutztruppe during their colonial operations.
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CHAPTER SIX 53
away from them. Attention has already been directed to Jordaan and his
Upingtonia Republic of 1884. This trek of the Boers into the south-west was
made the fullest use of by Goering and Buttner, for the attainment of their own
ends.
Of the Berg-Damara and Bushmen – subordinate races – and the Bastards
of Rehoboth, more will be recorded in the separate chapters dealing with those
tribes.
The German pretensions to control were based on eight protection
agreements, namely:–
(1) The Agreement of 28th October 1884, between Dr. Nachtigal (for
Luderitz) and the chief Joseph Fredericks, of Bethany, agreeing to
German protection, granting trade rights, and confirming the acquisitions
by Luderitz in 1883.
(2) The Agreement of 23rd November 1884, between Dr. Nachtigal
and chief Piet Heibib, of the Topenaar Hottentots, whereby the cession of
certain territorial rights (excluding the Walvis Bay area) to Luderitz was
confirmed, and the protection of the German Empire was accepted by the
chief.
(3) The Agreement, at Hoachanas, of 2nd September 1885, between
the missionary Carl Buttner, described as “the Plenipotentiary of His
Majesty the German Emperor,” and Manasse, “the independent Chief
Captain of the Red Nation of Great Namaqualand,” whereby Manasse is
represented as asking the Emperor for “his All-Highest protection,”
which protection Buttner extends and the German flag will be hoisted as
an outward sign of this protection.
Note. – A few years after this “All-Highest protection” was accorded,
chief Hendrik Witbooi came along with a punitive expedition against
Manasse, whom he regarded as one of his subjects. Having suitably dealt
with Manasse, Witbooi seized the German flag and took it with him to
Hornkranz. Arrived at Hornkranz, Hendrik sat down and wrote a letter to
the Commissioner, Dr. Goering, in which the following characteristic
passage appears:–
Further I wish to inform you that I have obtained possession of the flag which you
gave to Manasse is now in my hands at Hornkranz. I should like to know what
you wish me to do with this flag, as to me it is a strange thing (vremdeding). All
Manasse’s possessions belong to me.
54 CHAPTER SIX
There appeared to-day before the undersigned Imperial Commissioner for the
South-West African Protectorate, Dr. jur. Heinrich Ernst Goering, assisted by the
Secretary Louis Nels, the Captain of Omaruru, Manasse Tysiseta, and the under-
signed members of the Council. The Treaty of Protection and Friendship, entered
into with Maharero, was verbally translated to them by the Missionary Diehl,
who acted as interpreter, and explained.
After consultation had taken place amongst themselves they made the follow-
ing declaration:–
We herewith join the treaty of protection and friendship entered into between
His Majesty the German Emperor, King of Prussia, etc., Wilhelm I., and
Maharero Katjimuaha, Chief Captain of the Hereros, dated Okahandja, 31st
October 1885, in all points.
Read out and translated:–
:– G. Diehl, Missionary.
:– The Imperial German Commissioner for the South-west African Protec-
torate, Dr. Heinrich Ernst Goering.
(X) Manasse Tysiseta, Captain of Omaruru.
(X) Mutate.
(X) Hairsa.
(X) Barnaba.
(X) Kanide.
(X) Katyatuma.
(X) Asa.
As Witnesses:–
:–Andreas Purainen
Agent of the Rhenish Mission.
:–Traugott Kanapirura.
:– Nels, Secretary.
(7) The Agreement, dated at Warmbad 21st August 1890, between Dr.
Goering and chief Jan Hendricks, of the Veldschoendrager Hottentots.
(8) The Agreement, dated at Warmbad 21st August 1890, between Dr.
Goering and Willem Christian, the chief of the Bondelswartz Hottentots.
The last two agreements were made after the annexation of the territory by
Germany.
The Witbooi, Tseib (Keetmanshoop), Berseba, Khauas (Gobabis), Swart-
booi, and Afrikaner chiefs had not made agreements.
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CHAPTER SIX 55
The German Emperor, on the other hand through his agents aforementioned –
pledged himself –
(a) To give his All-Highest protection to the chief and his people.
(b) To recognise and support the chief’s jurisdiction and control over
his own people.
(c) To take care that the Europeans respected the laws, customs, and
usages of the natives and paid the usual taxes.
Is it necessary, at this stage, to state that these pledges were observed only in
the breach thereof, and that protests and appeals from the chiefs fell on deaf
ears. These pledges were lediglich auf dem papier merely on paper!
69
For more detail on the structure of the German colonial state in Namibia see Bley, Helmut,
South-West Africa under German Rule, 1894-1914, Heinemann/Evanston, London, 1971 pp.46-
49]
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56 CHAPTER SIX
Governor Leutwein grows very discursive when dealing with these agree-
ments. He writes:–
It is not necessary to believe, however, that the chiefs sat like German law
students over their corpus juris perusing the contents of the agreements with a
view to getting a full knowledge of their contents …
(He knew only too well that this was so, for the reason that the chiefs did not
receive copies, and even if they had could not have read them, as they were in
German.)
The specific provisions of the agreements did not matter (kamen daher nicht an),
the fact of their conclusion was sufficient. The manner of the carrying out of those
agreements thus depended entirely on the power which stood behind the German
makers of the agreements. So long as the German Government in the Protectorate
had no means of enforcing its power (macht-mittel) the agreements were of small
significance. After this state of affairs had been changed the agreements were, in
practice, dealt with uniformly without regard to their stipulated details… So the
native tribes were all in the same way, and as a whole, whether this was arranged
for in the agreements or not, made subject to German laws and German juris-
diction, and received German garrisons …
Taxes and duties due on the part of the Europeans to the natives were, on
the contrary, except in the Rehoboth territory, never collected. (See Elf Jahre
Gouverneur, page 240.)
Leutwein continues:–
Even although the native chiefs could form little idea of the contents of the
protection agreements, they were clearly aware of the actual existence thereof.
That means they knew that the Governor, as Deputy of the German Emperor, had
to exercise a sort of dominion over them as the result of agreements for the most
part voluntarily made (auf grund von meist freiwillig eingegangenen verträgen).
Leutwein has already affirmed that Dr. Goering and Buttner had not the
slightest authority to bind the German Crown. In regard to the subsequent
agreements which he himself made with the chiefs Hendrik Witbooi, Lambert,
Simon Kooper, and others it will be seen to what extent they may be regarded
as having been “voluntarily” entered into.
And this voluntariness (continues Leutwein) was the rock on which the power of
the Governor might be shattered… There were two ways in which the danger
might be met. Either the protection agreements had to be repudiated and in place
of the system of protection-control an actual dominion, based on the force of
arms, substituted; or, alternatively, the representative of the German Government
had to play up to the chiefs, to conciliate them and thus by degrees accustom them
to German control. If, notwithstanding this, there was opposition, the one tribe
could be played off against the other. The adoption by me of the first alternative
was impossible. This the old Fatherland neither understood nor approved of, until
the impracticability of the second course was clearly established, not by mere
conviction, but by actual proved facts. This proof came only in 1904. and then we
had to pay costly blood-money for our tuition.
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CHAPTER SIX 57
Leutwein complains that “people” not only were lacking in patience, but that
some actually worked at cross-purposes and made his conciliation policy – as
above outlined – quite impossible and unworkable.
As an example he quotes the following specific case:–
For example, shortly before the Bondelswartz rebellion70 the German Colonial
Confederation (Deutsche Kolonialbund) imposed the following demands on the
Bondelswartz tribe:–
(1) Every coloured person must regard a white man as a superior being
(Höheres wesen)
(2) In court the evidence of one white man can only be outweighed by the
statements of seven coloured persons.
These demands were nowhere contested in Germany, and in the Protectorate they
were hailed with satisfaction. I will express no opinion as to their utility; but, in
practice, one can apply them only to subjected races (unterworfenen völker-
schaften).
The Hottentot rebellion of 1903 and the Herero rebellion of 1904 gave Germa-
ny her chance of converting the survivors into unterworfenen völkerschaften.
The fact, however, that the German Colonial Confederation could, in this
manner, intervene and override the Governor, the law and the pledges and the
agreements, is one of the unexplained mysteries of the German system.
70
The reference here is obviously to the Bondelswarts rising that started on 25th October, 1903
and not the later, better known, ‘rebellion’ of 1922.
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CHAPTER SEVEN
It will now be advisable to deal with each native race separately, showing
briefly:–
Having done this it will be necessary to indicate what treatment was meted out
to the natives during and after these rebellions. It will be necessary, moreover,
to deal with the German judicial system as applied to the natives, and in
conclusion to voice the views of the native population of South-west Africa in
regard to the future destiny and government of this country.
These views are reflected in voluntary statements made on oath by surviv-
ing chiefs, headmen, and prominent leaders of the aboriginal tribes, and they
represent the unanimous views of the peoples concerned.
At this stage, however, it is necessary to quote certain figures the details of
which should be burnt into the memory, as they are in themselves the best
indicators of the black deeds which, were it possible to record them all, would
require more space than the scope of this report allows.
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60 CHAPTER SEVEN
While there is little difficulty in fixing the areas in which the native tribes lived
and exercised influence, it is not so easy to arrive at an accurate idea of the total
numbers of the population.71
The only guides we have are the considered estimates given by the men,
who after years of residence in the country, extended travel, observation, and
inquiry, were able confidently to place on record certain definite figures.
The British Commissioner, W. C. Palgrave, in his report of 1877, estimated
the native population in 1876 as under:–
(1) Ovamboland:–
Various Ovambo tribes 98,000
121,000
Great Namaqualand:–
Various Hottentot tribes 16,850
71
The demographic history of Namibia has yet to be systematically researched. However, the
debate over the size of pre-1904 population figures of the Herero, Nama and Damara communities
was one of the central areas of dispute in Brigitte Lau’s attack on the claims by Horst Dreschler
that the German forces carried out a policy of genocide against the indigenous population.
Dreschler supported the figures provided by the Blue Book to support his claim that 80% of the
Herero population and 50% of the Nama population were killed by the Germans during the war.
Dreschler accepts the criticism of the statistics given here for the Damara population as stated in
the German response to the Blue Book, but asserts that ‘one-third’ of all Damara were also killed
by the Germans during the conflict. The substance of Lau’s criticism was that the size of the pre-
war and post-war Herero population are ‘not known’ and that all the statistics and percentages
provided were based purely on estimates. It might be argued that the focus on the quantification of
death during the conflict has detracted from the more central question of whether there was racially
inspired genocidal intent. The key contrasting positions in the demographic debate can be found in
Dreschler, Horst Let Us Die Fighting: The Stuggle of the Herero and Nama against German
Imperialism (1884-1915), Akademi-Verlag, Berlin, 1966, pp. 211-214, 229; Lau, Brigitte ‘Un-
certain Certainties: The Herero-German War of 1904’ in Brigitte Lau, History and Historiography,
Discoures/MSORP, Windhoek, 1995, pp. 42-46, German Colonial Office, The Treatment of Native
and other Populations in the Colonial Possessions of Germany and England, Engelman, Berlin,
1919. pp. 43-45. For some preliminary comments on the human cost of the war for the Damara
population of Namibia see Gaseb, Ivan ‘A historical hangover’:The absence of Damara from
accounts of the 1904-08 war’, paper presented at the ‘Public History: Forgotten History’
Conference, University of Namibia, August, 2000.
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CHAPTER SEVEN 61
In his book, Governor Leutwein gives the following estimate of the native
population at the the of his arrival (1894):–
Ovambos 100,000
Hereros 80,000
Hottentots 20,000
Bastards 4,000
Bushmen and Berg-Damaras 40,000
Total 244,000
In the second edition of Mit Schwert und Pflug (published in 1904), Captain K.
Schwabe, of the German Army, while remarking that a correct estimate of the
Berg-Damara and Bushman population is difficult, gives the following figures
in regard to the other tribes, as at 1st January 190372:–
It will be seen that, in regard to the Hereros and Hottentots these authorities
entirely independently, and dealing with the years 1876, 1894, and 1903
respectively, give practically the same estimate.
If Palgrave and Leutwein were at all accurate the later estimate by Schwabe
of
may reasonably be regarded as a minimum figure for the adult native popu-
lation, no allowances having been made from 1876-1894, and 1894-1903 for
natural increases.
The consensus of opinion and evidence goes to show that, if anything, the
population of those races was in 1904 nearer 100,000 and 25,000 respectively.
Palgrave’s estimate of 30,000 Berg-Damaras in 1876 was probably too low,
but it is practically confirmed by Leutwein, and as it is nowhere called into
question by German writers who were conversant with and quoted from his
report, there is no reason why Palgrave’s estimate should not be accepted and,
again discarding natural increases, fixed at the same figure for the adult popu-
lation in 1904, i.e., 30,000.
72
Schwabe comments on population estimates in ‘Mit Schwert und Pflug in Deutsch-Südwest-
afrika. Vier Kriegs- und Wanderjahre Mittler und Sohn, Berlin, 1904’ (2nd ed), 1904, p. 454.]
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62 CHAPTER SEVEN
The minimum estimate of the adult population of the three races in 1904 is
therefore fixed at –
In 1911, after tranquillity had been restored and all rebellions suppressed, the
German Government of South-west Africa had a census taken. A comparison
of the figures speaks for itself.
In other words, 80 per cent. of the Herero people had disappeared, and more
than half of the Hottentot and Berg-Damara races had shared the same fate.
Dr. Paul Rohrbach’s dictum:– “It is applicable to a nation in the same way
as to the individual that the right of existence is primarily justified in the degree
that such existence is useful for progress and general development” comes
forcibly to mind
These natives of South-west Africa had been weighed in the German
balance and had been found wanting. Their “right of existence” was apparently
not justified.
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CHAPTER EIGHT
The Herero tribe is probably a branch of the Great Bantu family, which at one
time occupied approximately one-third of the African Continent from 5° North
to 20° South.
Unlike their black neighbours, the Berg-Damaras, the colour of the Hereros
varies from light brown to a darker hue of chocolate brown. Tall and muscular,
with proud and dignified bearing and a supreme contempt for other people, the
Herero more closely resembles the Zulu than any other of the South-African
races. It is a singular fact, however, that their physical likeness to the Zulu is
confined to the men only. The women are generally undersized, and when tall
are lanky and angular. They compare very unfavourably with the women of the
other Bantu tribes. This may be due to the fact that, unlike the Kaffir and Zulu
woman, the Herero woman, beyond milking the cows and attending to her
children, did little or no manual labour. Instead of being the drudge and slave
of her husband, as is the case with most Bantu tribes, the Herero woman was
his pampered pet. The position and influence of their women and the general
deference and respect shown towards them by the Hereros place this tribe quite
in a class by itself among the Bantu peoples. Their religious beliefs, their
sacred rites, and their laws of inheritance through the mother’s side, combined
with their mythical conceptions of their original descent from female ancestors,
all united to raise the Herero woman far above her other Bantu cousins. In their
courts, the Hereros, before giving evidence, took an oath “by my mother’s
tears” to tell the truth:– this was the usual oath; others were “by my mother’s
hood” and “by the bones of my ancestors.”
In his annual memorandum for 1904, the Imperial German Chancellor
asserted that Mashonaland was the place of origin of the Herero tribe. The
language of several tribes in Angola and Central Africa is said to be similar to
that of the Hereros, but, beyond marking the probable route followed by the
people in their migration southwards from the interior, and giving rise to the
supposition that they were centuries back located in Upper Angola and
Northern Rhodesia, this information does not warrant assertion of any definite
place of origin.74
73
For more on the history and tradition of Herero communities in the region see: Michael Bollig
and Jan-Bart Gewald editors, People, Cattle and Land, (Rüdiger Köppe Verlag: Cologne 2001).
74
Debates relating to Herero origins and society have changed substantially since 1918. For a
more contemporary view on developments see, Bollig & Gewald, People, Cattle and Land. 2001
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64 CHAPTER EIGHT
75
In the nineteenth century a myth developed in academia and later popular discourse that had
it that the Hamites, of the Hamitic races, allegedly the descendents of Ham, had been the prime
instigators for development and change in African societies. Hamites were held to have entered
Africa and travelled towards the south, establishing civilizations as they went. Thus Great
Zimbabwe, the Kingdom of Buganda, and so forth were said to have been established on account
of the Hamitic influence. In the course of the twentieth century, particularly in the aftermath of
World War II, racial theories came to be disproved and the Hamitic hypothesis was shown to be
what it was, a myth. Saul Dubow, Illicit Union: Scientific Racism in Modern South Africa,
(Cambridge 1995) pp. 82 - 90 & E. R. Sanders, ‘The Hamitic Hypothesis: Its Origin and Functions
in Time Perspective’, Journal of African History, 10/4 (1969), 528.
76
Dr Felix Meyer (1851-1925) served as the editor of the Blätter für vergleichende Rechts-
wissenschaft und Volkswirtschaftslehre during the period 1905-1908. He later wrote a dissertation
entitled ‘Skorbuterkrankungen unter den kriegsgefangenen Eingeborenen in Südwestafrika in den
Jahren 1905-07’ (Berlin, 1920). Unfortunately the National Archives of Namibia has been unable
to locate a copy of this work.
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CHAPTER EIGHT 65
At the time of the annexation by Germany the Hereros occupied the heart of
South-west Africa. Their sphere of influence extended from Swakopmund in
the west to the Kalahari border in the east, and from the mountains of Outjo in
the north to Windhuk and Gobabis in the south.
It is certain that, except during the period of their partial and temporary
subjugation by the Afrikaner Hottentots, under Jonker Afrikaner (circa 1830-
64), they had been supreme masters of this area for over 100 years, and that the
Kaokoveld in the north-west of the Protectorate had for two centuries or more
been inhabited by portions of the tribe.
Crossing the Kunene River from Angola about the beginning of the 18th
century and followed at no great distance by their Ovambo neighbours, their
first place of settlement undoubtedly was the Kaokoveld. They remained there
for a generation or two before the steady influx of Ovambos on their eastern
flanks gradually pressed the Hereros and their countless herds of cattle further
westward towards the sand dunes of the arid coast belt. Soon there was in-
sufficient grazing and not enough elbow room, and after defeating the nearest
Ovambo tribe in battle and incidentally annexing more cattle, the squeezed
Herero clans began their gradual movement south and south-east into what are
now known as the Outjo and Grootfontein districts.
This migration from the Kaokoveld appears to have taken place in a
leisurely manner, and the last organised clans to leave the area moved towards
the end of the first quarter of the last century. Grootfontein was then evacuated,
and that area and the belt extending westwards past the Etosha pan became an
unoccupied zone (save for wild Bushmen and fugitive Berg-Damaras) and a
neutral belt between the Ovambos and the Hereros.
It is true that a degenerate and impoverished remnant of the tribe remains in
the Kaokoveld to this day. These people speak the language and retain the
ancient heathen rites and customs of the Herero. But they possess few cattle,
and are little better than the Bushmen. The Hereros gave to their degraded kins-
men the name of Ovatjimba (the “veld beggars”), and by that name they are
known today.77
The name “Herero” itself has been variously derived and explained. Pal-
grave asserts that it comes from HERA = the assegai swingers, and Dr. Hans
Schinz and other inquirers seem to accept this view. The Missionary Dannert,
on the other hand, states that Hereros themselves informed him that it meant
“the joyful people” – the people who take delight in their cattle, thus indicating
their temperament (HERERA = to rejoice). This explanation seems more
probable than Palgrave’s. There is a third contention, however, that the word
Herero is a derivative of ERERO = the past, yesterday – “the ancient people.”
77
For a more complex reading of the history of OtjiHerero-speaking communities in the Kaoko
see, G. Miescher & D. Henrichsen, New Notes on the Kaoko, (Basel 2000) & Michael Bollig
‘Power & Trade in Precolonial & Early Colonial Northern Kaokoland, 1860s-1940s’ in Patricia
Hayes et al. Namibia under South African Rule: Mobility and Containment, 1915-46, James
Currey, Oxford, 1998
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66 CHAPTER EIGHT
Thus the old Chief Kamaherero of Okahandja, when asked the meaning of his
name, proudly replied, “ma-ha-erero” = one who is not of yesterday (i.e., one
of ancient lineage).
Several writers agree in reporting that a favourite remark of the irate Herero,
when smarting under oppression or injustice, was Oami Omuherero ka Omutua
= “I am a Herero no barbarian no stranger.”78 This reminds one of the Civis
Romanus sum of the ancient Roman;79 and it would indicate that the name
Herero has more to do with ancient origin than with “joyfulness” or the
“waging of war.” The Hereros of today can throw no light on the subject. In
religion the Herero paid deference to, and revered, a mystic spirit whom he
called the “Great Magician.”80 The “good spirit,” who had made the world and
peopled it, and who sent good luck and bad luck. Personally he could not hope
to approach this potent being, so he relied on the intercessory prayers and
powerful influence of the spirits of his deceased ancestors. It was the ancestors
who were really worshipped, the holy fire, ever burning on the holy place, the
blessed water, the symbolic wands of Ovampuvu81 and “wild plum tree”
(representing the male and female ancestors). and the sacred gourds filled daily
with milk from the holy cattle were all dedicated to the service of the mighty
dead. This cult of ancestor worship exercised a powerful influence over the life
and family relations of the Herero. It bound the family together in a sacred and
inseparable tie of past, present and future relationship. The Hereros firmly
believed in continued existence of the soul after death. Belief in and terror of
ghosts was universal. Probably here, as elsewhere, ancestor worship had its
real origin in fear of the ghosts of the departed, and was the chief motive, until
eventually deeper religious feeling and real affection for deceased relatives
became the accepted reason.
In addition to being ancestor worshippers, the Hereros were totemists, but
had no totem badges or signs.
The Herero story of the Creation is interesting and must be mentioned,
because the division of the tribe into totemistic groups or families arises
therefrom.
At the behest of the “Great Magician” there emerged one day from the trunk
of an Omborombonga tree82, men and women in pairs, and also all living
78
The proto-Bantu word *Twa, which is found in the Herero word -tua, is generally glossed as
slave or pygmy
79
The dictum that the rule of law/civilisation is what identified a Roman.
80
This appears to be a rendition of the Herero word Ndjambi Karunga. For a discussion on
Herero terms for God, ancestral spirits and related subjects see: Gewald, We Thought We Would be
Free (Cologne 2001) Chp. 6.
81
A series of articles by W.A. Norton writing in the South African Journal of Science in 1919
clearly drew on information contained in the Blue Book. Writing of the Herero he claims “They
worshipped two little sticks called ancestors, the male a wand of Ovampuvu and the female of wild
plum” Norton explicitely thanks the ‘late Magistrate of Omaruru’ ie. Major O’Reilly for providing
this and other information. Norton, W.A. ‘The South-West Protectorate and its Native Population’,
South African Journal of Science, Vol. 16, 1919 p. 458.
82
Van Wyk, Ben-Erik & Nigel Gericke, People’s Plants: A Guide to Useful Plants of Southern
Africa, Briza, Pretoria,2000: 288.
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CHAPTER EIGHT 67
animals, all likewise in pairs. The first parents of the Hereros were there too,
and all other races were represented. Light had not yet been created. All the
world was in darkness, and the people and animals crowded round the parent
tree and pressed against one another in sheer terror; no one knew where to go
to. The stupid Berg-Damara “Adam” lit a fire, whereupon the lion, the tiger,
and all the wild animals of today, and all the wild game, took fright and ran
away. To this day they have remained wild. Then the “Great Magician” sent the
light, and the people saw that the horses, cattle, goats, and other domestic
animals had not taken fright but had stayed. The people then decided to divide
the animals. The Herero ancestors immediately took the bull and cow. The
others violently disputed their right to these animals; but Herero Adam held on
and persisted. He eventually got his own way. The acute differences of opinion
which had arisen and the anger and excitement of all the people, speaking and
shouting at the same the, resulted in so much confusion of tongues that the
different languages were immediately evolved. And thus it came that, owing to
this original fight over the first cattle, the various “Adams and Eves,” no longer
understanding the others, separated in all directions. Away also went the Herero
pair taking their chosen cattle with them in triumph.
Their descendants ever since have loved cattle, and regard the herding,
tending, and accumulation of large herds of cattle as their sole destiny.
The legend goes on to state how the first parents begot only female children.
These virgin daughters were, in due course, mystically influenced by coming
into contact with things of the outside world and bore male and female chil-
dren, from whom the Herero race descended.
It is said that, in this way, the various maternal clans or Eanda originated,
claiming descent, always on the mother’s side, from the traditional progenitress
of the clan.83
The animal or object supposed to have influenced the progenitress was the
totem, and the Hereros called themselves the “marriage relations” of the totem.
Thus, there were the “sun’s brothers,” belonging to the Ejuva Eanda or sun
clan, the family of the “running spring,” the “chameleon,” the “limestone,”
while the silver jackhal, totem of another clan, was called “little brother.” It will
therefore be understood that Herero communities, independently of their local
distribution into tribes, bands, or villages, were composed of several, probably
eight or nine, maternal clans, and these again, in some cases, were divided into
subgroups. At first, as was the case with the totemistic North American Indians,
83
Regarding the the dual descent and inheritance system practised by Herero in the past see,
Eduard Dannert, Zum Rechte der Herero insbesondere über ihr Familien- und Erbrecht, (Berlin
1906); Gordon D. Gibson, The Social Organization of the Southwestern Bantu, Unpublished
D.Phil thesis, University of Chicago (Chicago 1952); Josaphat Hahn, ‘Die Ovaherero’, in
Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin, Verlag von Dietrich Reimer (Berlin 1869); J.
Irle, Die Herero. Ein Beitrag zur Landes-, Volks- und Missionskunde (Gütersloh 1906); Hendrik
Gerhardus Luttig, The religious system and social organisation of the Herero, Published Ph.D.
thesis University of Leiden (Utrecht 1933); I. Schapera, Notes on some Herero Genealogies,
(Johannesburg 1979); Heinrich Vedder, “The Herero”, in The Native Tribes of South West Africa,
compiled by C. Hahn, H. Vedder and L. Fourie (Cape Town 1928).]
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68 CHAPTER EIGHT
the members of a clan never intermarried. The result was that they intermingled
with other clans. Yet, despite marriage, they retained their Eanda membership
and based their descent and rights to Eanda inheritance, always on the mother’s
side. (The object of this will be clear when the Eanda property is dealt with).
Each clan, or “mother group” (as it is preferable to call the Eanda), had a
senior member or head who exercised certain powers over the members, and in
whom were vested fiduciary functions in regard to the administration, control,
and distribution of the property of the group. He alone could dispose of or
alienate the cattle of the group, and he only did so in the interests of the group
to pay debts or acquire other assets; he generally consulted the tribal council
before acting. There is a kind of Socialism about this system of Eanda property.
It was of great benefit to the poorer members, who could always rely on
receiving cows and oxen, on loan, from their Eanda, to support and maintain
themselves therewith. They lived almost solely on milk. This head was not
necessarily the chief. On occasions when the inheritance devolved on the same
person through the mother as Eanda head and the father as tribal head, this was
so, but not often. He was, however, invariably, from the very importance of his
position, a sub-chief or Chief Councillor.
Co-existent and contemporary, but of unknown origin, there was, side by
side the “Mother-group” or Eanda, another division of the tribe into Orders
(Herero = Oruzo), purely paternal and also totemistic in origin. There were
about 16 known orders. Thus a Herero belonged to his Eanda by descent
through his mother and to his Oruzo through his father.
The totems of mother groups and orders were sacred to the members
thereof, and in the case of animals their flesh was “taboo” (Herero Zera =
forbidden). A severe and strict sacrifice-and-diet-law bound the members of the
various groups together.
To the Oruzo belonged certain inalienable assets. It was essentially a
religious order. The head of the order was ex-officio chief or head of the clan
and high priest of his people. The ritualistic articles, such as the emblematic
wands, the holy gourds, the holy place (okurua) were in the chief’’s keeping.
There the holy fire burned perpetually under the devoted care of his chief wife
or eldest daughter. To the Oruzo also belonged the sacred stock, consisting of
specially selected cattle. These animals were the best formed and most
beautiful, and were carefully picked out from the herds. The milk of the sacred
cows was placed daily in the gourds of the ancestors at the holy place, and
never touched. True, indeed, the dogs lapped it up; but, apparently, the
ancestors did not mind that, as the dogs lived on. No Herero would, however,
dare to touch it. On religious occasions some of the sacred cattle would be
sacrificed, but their meat was burnt; it was likewise zera.
Having given this very brief outline of their religious and totemistic
conceptions, the curious division of the cattle into three distinct classes will be
more readily understood.
They were –
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CHAPTER EIGHT 69
(1) the sacred specially selected cattle, which were res sacrae84 and
inalienable even by the chief.
(2) the Eanda or mother-group trust cattle, owned by no particular
individual, but the common property of the family group, and adminis-
tered by a fiduciary head, who was the eldest son or eldest male descen-
dant of the senior mother.
(3) the privately-owned cattle, the property of the individual. These
he could dispose of, during life, at will, and after death his expressed
desires were always given effect to, for fear that his spirit might return
and wreak vengeance. The individual Herero always reserved a number
of his stock, also specially selected, the number being in proportion to his
wealth, for sacrifice at his funeral. The skin of his favourite ox was his
shroud, and at his graveside the selected cows and oxen were slaughtered
so that their master’s spirit might not go unaccompanied into the land of
shades.
When this division of stock is borne in mind, the atrocious treatment of the
Herero people by German traders and the German Government and its effect
on the Herero mind will be more fully understood.
It has already been stated that the chief of the clan derived his rights through
the Oruzo or paternal order to which he belonged. The eldest son of the chief
by his principal wife was his heir; failing this his eldest surviving brother
became chief, and failing him the eldest surviving son of the brother, always,
be it noted, by the chief wife of such brother the idea being that the senior male
member of the Oruzo in the nearest line from the paternal ancestor should be
chief. A younger son by a second or third wife (as Samuel Maharero was) had,
elder heirs being alive, no legal claim to the chieftainship.
The chief of the most powerful clan embodied in his person the functions of
governor and high priest. Under him, and in a lesser degree vested likewise
with powers of government and priestly dignity, were the sub-chiefs or cap-
tains, the heads of non-ruling orders, the heads of the mother-groups, and the
heads even of the individual families.
The Hereros, like all natives, had no conception of the impersonal nature of
government as understood by Europeans. They regarded the person of their
chief as the fons et origo85 of all government. Like the king, he could do no
wrong; he could not be deposed, nor could he be brought to trial before the
council. His person was sacred during lifetime, and after death, when his spirit
had gone to join those of his great ancestors, the burial-place of his body was
a hallowed and consecrated spot. [Note. – The Germans, before the Herero
rebellion, desecrated the sacred burial-place of the great chiefs Tjamuaha and
Kamaharero at Okahandja by turning it into a vegetable garden, despite all
84
‘Sacred objects’
85
‘The source and the origin’
70 CHAPTER EIGHT
protests.86 This will be referred to again later on.] The chief invariably upheld
the laws and usages of his tribe and preserved inviolate their ancient rites and
customs. Herein, like the meanest and poorest of his subjects, he was stimu-
lated and preserved by a wholesome fear of the spirits of his ancestors and. the
power of the Great Magician. It was only when German intrigue and German
policy thrust the ineligible Samuel Maharero into power, merely to use him as
their willing tool, as Paramount Chief of all the Hereros, that the customs of the
people were violated, their tenderest feelings outraged, and their laws and
traditions trodden under foot. And yet the Germans had pledged themselves to
uphold and respect these “laws and traditions.”
In regard to temperament and character, the Hereros of to-day may be
described as an intelligent, honest, and proud people, who have had nearly all
the good crushed out of them by the German oppressor.
Missionary Brincker described them as candid and sincere. Dr. Hahn says
their chief characteristics are self-will, and proneness to fits of depression. Dr.
Goering testifies to their frugality and industry; von François (as may well be
expected) describes them as crafty knaves. Pechual Losche says they are
sincere, reliable, and trustworthy. Mr. Christopher James, the Mining Engineer,
in his report of 1903 to the Otavi Mines, Ltd., says they are willing, good
hearted, diligent, and quick of perception. When the Herero rebellion broke
out, the Hereros under special orders from their chiefs spared the lives of all
German women and children and all missionaries.87 Dr. Felix Meyer says, they
were a proud, liberty-loving race, jealously guarding their independence, and
with very strong family ties. In their favour may also be mentioned the custom
whereby the dying father, his descendants in a circle around him and his
favourite child on his bosom, bestows his last blessing on his loved ones
(okusere ondaja ombua). This proves without doubt the strong affection
existing between parents and children. So also the Herero proverb, “the love of
the parent is blind.” The birth of twins was a great event. The proud father
immediately set out on a tour and called on all his and his wife’s relations
bringing the glad news. It was worth his while because, according to traditional
custom, he was not allowed to depart without a present for the twins.
These are the people who were mercilessly slaughtered by the German, Von
Trotha, and his Prussian soldiers in 1904-6. These are the human beings of
whom von Trotha said, “let not man, woman, or child be spared – kill them all.”
And 80 per cent. of them were actually so killed or died of thirst in the desert
wastes whither they were driven by the merciless German soldiers.
86
The Voigts trading family, which was engaged in horticulture in Okahandja, established
vegetable and tobacco gardens on land purchased by them in the immediate vicinity of the graves.
87
Some of the missionaries who worked with the Herero (such as Eich from Waterberg and
Kuhlmann from Okazeva) were strongly critical of German war-time abuses, on the other hand
Samuel Kutako claimed after the war that missionaries had “… acted as informers against
prominent Hereros, and were the cause of their being hanged by the Germans.” Nils Ole Oermann,
Mission, Church and State Relations in South West Africa under German Rule (1884-1915), Franz
Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, 1999: pp. 108-109, ”Great Britain, ‘Correspondence relating to the
Wishes of the Natives of the German Colonies as to their Future Government’, HMSO, London,
1918: p. 13.
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CHAPTER EIGHT 71
From the moment when the new-born babe was named and touched the head of
a calf, presented as a birthday gift, until the death hour when the skin of the
favourite ox (ongombe ohivirikua) served as his shroud, and the skull of the
beloved animal bleached (as a grave memorial) on a neighbouring tree, the
Herero’s ever-present companions were his cattle. At the graveside, when the
holy cattle were being slaughtered so that they might follow their master, the
remainder of his herd was collected around the spot in order that the spirit of the
deceased might derive pleasure from hearing the lowing and bellowing of his
cherished animals. For the sake of his cattle no labour was too great. For long
hours beneath a scorching tropical sun, the Herero would draw water, bucket by
bucket, from the water-holes or wells for his animals to drink. They dug their
water-holes at cost of infinite labour, the sharp horn of the gemsbuck being the
substitute for a spade, and a gourd serving for a bucket. And for days and weeks
he would persevere, despite terrible hardships and privations, in search of some
lost or strayed animal. His whole object in life was the increase and preservation
of his herds, which, in the favourable environment and climate of Damaraland,
thrived wonderfully. The killing of cattle, except on religious and festive
occasions, or when an ox by its strange or peculiar behavior presaged evil, was
regarded as a criminal waste bordering on sacrilege. Cows were never killed for
food. For nourishment, in addition to wild onions and other roots and herbs and
veld berries, the Herero drank sweet milk (Omaihi) in the mornings and at night
sour milk (Omaere) prepared and preserved in stoppered bottle-gourds. The
oxen were used for transport and riding and for barter and exchange.
When there was scarcity of provisions, the Herero tightened his belt and
held out as long as he could. Hence the belt was called the “hunger killer”
(Etizandjara). He would have to be very hungry before he killed an ox, and
probably a cow would only be sacrificed when death by starvation seemed
imminent. “Gluttony,” said a Herero proverb, “is the great leveller that is why
people become poor”.
In this respect the Hereros were the antithesis of the easy-going and
improvident Hottentot, who would, if necessary, slaughter one animal after
another, until he had none left for breeding purposes.
The earliest available information goes to show that the Hereros were
always very rich in horned cattle. As far back as 1760 the South African hunter,
Jacob Coetzee (probably the first white man to traverse Great Namaqualand)
crossed the Orange River and traveled far north to the vicinity of Rehoboth or
Gibeon.88 He returned to the Cape with reports of Damarasxi living in the north
who possessed great herds of horned cattle.
xi
All early British travelers, such as Alexander, Galton, Green, Andersson and others refer to
the natives as “Damaras.” This accounts for the name Damaraland, which correctly should be
“Hereroland” The word Damara is a corruption of the Hottentot word “Daman.” They called the
Hereros “Buri-Daman” or Cattle Damaras; while the Ovambos and Berg-Damara were called
respectively “Corn-Damaras” and “Dirty-Damaras.” Captain J.E. Alexander, “An Expedition of
Discovery into the Interior of Africa” (1837), was the first writer to refer to “Damaraland” and the
“Damaras.”
88
Coetzee’s account has been republished several times. See, for example, E.C. Godeé
Molsbergen, Reizen in Zuid Afrika in de Hollandse Tijd, (Gravenhage 1916)
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72 CHAPTER EIGHT
Coetzee’s report led to the abortive expedition from the Cape in 1761 under
Captain Hope, the object of which was to open a cattle trade with the Hereros.
The expedition, after undergoing great hardships, turned back somewhere in
the vicinity of the present town of Keetmanshoop.
In 1792, Willem van Renen and Piet Brandt, also South African hunters
from the Cape, traveled right up to Hereroland and returned in a state of great
enthusiasm regarding the countless herds of horned cattle they had seen.
Nothing further appears to have happened until about 1835, when Captain J.E.
Alexander visited the country.89 He confirmed previous reports, and tried to
open up a cattle export trade through Walvis Bay and St. Helena. This venture
likewise failed, owing to transport difficulties.
In 1876 Palgrave wrote (page 54 of Report):–
It is impossible to estimate the Damaras wealth, (Palgrave, like other English
writers, will persist in calling the Hereros “Damaras”), even approximately,
although there is evidence enough to indicate that it is considerable. The poorest
families in a tribe possess something, three or four cows, a few oxen, 20 or 30
sheep.
It has already been mentioned that the Herero socialistic system of Eanda trust
property rendered it impossible for even the poorest Herero to be without
sustenance. If he possessed no stock of his own through disease or misfortune,
he could always call on the head of his Eanda for an issue of stock on loan.
Palgrave mentions one under – chief of Kambazembi’s named Kavingava, who
possessed over 10,000 head of cattle. Kambazembi himself, at his death in
1903, was reported to have possessed no less than 25,000 head of cattle; but
included in this number was probably the Eanda stock, held by him as trustee
for his people. M’Buanjo, an under-chief of Omaruru, possessed in 1903 over
4,000 head of cattle, while the Okahandja and Omaruru chiefs were equally
wealthy. Tjetjoo, the chief of the Eastern Hereros, was reputed to be nearly as
wealthy as his neighbour Kambazembi. A German soldier, now a settler in the
country, who came to the Protectorate with von François in 1890, informed the
writer that, at that time, the Omaruru and Waterberg districts were teeming with
cattle. He relates that at the sound of a rifle shot the vast herds would stampede
in all directions like wild springbok, and that the very earth seemed to quiver
and vibrate as they thundered across the veld.
When Germany annexed the country in 1890 the Herero people must have
possessed well over 150,000 head of cattle. The Rinderpest scourge in 1897,
which destroyed probably half, left, notwithstanding export and slaughter,
89
See Molsbergen (1916) for the accounts by Willem van Reenen (note normal spelling) and
Piet Brandt. See also James Alexander Expedition of Discovery into the Interior of Africa, Vols 1
& 2, 1838
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CHAPTER EIGHT 73
something like 90,000 head.90 By 1902, i.e., in less than 10 years after the
arrival of the first German settlers, the Hereros retained 45,898 head of cattle,
while the 1,051 German traders and farmers then in the country owned 44,487
between them. In 1903 the total value of the live stock exported from the whole
territory was 23,337,682 M., equal to over 1,000,000 stg.
By the end of 1905 the surviving Hereros had been reduced to pauperism
and possessed nothing at all.
In 1907 the Imperial German Government by Ordinance prohibited the
natives of South-west Africa from possessing large stock.
The story of the German traders and how they, with the direct connivance,
sanction, and approval of the German Government, deliberately robbed the
Hereros of their cattle is one of the darkest of the very black pages of German
history in South-west Africa, and will be dealt with in a separate chapter.
90
This devastating disease swept the African continent in the period 1889-1897 and killed
hooved animals within days. The social, cultural and economic impact of the rinderpest, which was
alleged to have killed up to 90% of the cattle belonging to some Herero communities, has yet to be
researched in detail, although it is clear that the disease seriously disrupted the colonial transport
network which relied on ox-wagons and thus encouraged the building of railway lines in Namibia.
However, added tension came from the perception that the inoculation of German herds meant that
there losses were considerably less than Herero losses. Thomas Ofcansky, ‘The 1889-97 Rinder-
pest Epidemic and the Rise of British and German Colonialism in Eastern and Southern Africa’,
Journal of African Studies, Vol. 8, no. 1 (1981).
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CHAPTER NINE
The wholesale and unblushing theft by the Germans of the cattle of the Hereros
was one of the primary causes which led to the Herero rebellion of 1904. There
were other causes, however, all arising out of German oppression and misrule.
It is necessary, therefore, that, before dealing specially with what must for ever
be one of the most shameful incidents in the history of German colonisation,
the other contributory causes should be outlined in brief. In order to do this, it
is necessary to go back to May 1890, when, owing to the death of Kamaharero,
chief of the Okahandja Hereros, the question of his successor arose. In terms of
the agreement of 1885 the Germans had pledged themselves “to respect the
customs and usages existing in the country of Maharero.” Kamaharero was the
leader (under Frederick Green, the English hunter) of the Hereros in their war
of emancipation against the Hottentots in 1864, when the latter were over-
thrown and large herds of cattle captured. As a result of this, Kamaharero styled
himself the great and powerful leader. He was however never acknowledged,
even by his own people, as paramount chief of all the Hereros. As Dr. Felix
Meyer puts it (Wirtschaft und Recht der Herero:– 1905):–
An ordained leader of all the Herero tribes was not known in Herero law at the
the of the German occupation. Only the knowledge of their national community
of origin held the various tribes together.
The German agreement of 1885 was made with Kamaharero, whom the
Germans, to suit their own purposes, were pleased to regard as the paramount
chief over Hereroland; but even they had qualms on the subject, as they went
to Omaruru and got Manasse, as powerful a chief as Kamaharero, to sign a
ratification. The other chiefs were ignored. Nevertheless, as Dr. Meyer clearly
points out, the chiefs Kambazembi, Muretti, Tjetjoo, Zacharias, and others not
mentioned by Meyer, such as Kahimema, Nikodemus, and M’Buanjo, in no
way recognised his (Kamaharero’s) pretensions to paramountcy, and held that
they were not bound by his agreements.
Of this fact the Germans were, in 1890, well aware; but they ignored it on
the plea that it was more convenient to deal with one authority than with the lot
(Es ist bequemer, mit einer Autorität, als mit einer masse zu verhandeln). So
when Kamaherero died, his younger son, Samuel Maharero, described by von
François as a vain, selfish drunkard, and referred to by Leutwein as devoid of
character (he was, states Leutwein, “selfish, had a weakness for alcohol, and
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76 CHAPTER NINE
last, but not least, a fondness for women”), was pitchforked into the chieftain-
ship and declared paramount chief of the Hereros. He was alleged to be a
Christian – 90 per cent. of his people were heathens.91 “As a Christian,” says
Leutwein, “the Mission got little joy out of him, he none out of the Mission.”
Hereros say that the missionaries supported the Government, and told the
Hereros that Samuel was the rightful heir according to the Christian laws,
whatever they may be.
Samuel preferred the cases of rum with which the bounty of the Kaiser und
König kept him liberally supplied; it being well-known that, to such an
individual, the signing of treaties or agreements was not surrounded with much
difficulty as long as rum was plentiful.
This foisting of Samuel on to them as chief immediately to the great joy of
the Germans, split the Hereros into two sections. Here we have the first exam-
ple of the policy of playing off one section against another, or, as Leutwein later
styled it, my divide et impera policy.
The lawful heir to Kamaherero was a sub-chief of the Eastern Hereros
named Nikodemus. He was the eldest son of a predeceased brother to Kama-
herero, and the recognised head of his Oruzo.92 Kamaharero had no sons by his
principal wife, and Samuel, a younger son by another, was not even heir to his
father’s stock; his poverty was also a great recommendation from the German
point of view, as will be seen. Dr. Felix Meyer has no doubts as to the illegality
of the German procedure. Meyer was a Kammergerichtsrat, a kind of judicial
Privy Councilor, so his opinion is worth quoting. In his Wirtschaft und Recht
der Herero, already frequently quoted from herein, he says (at page 24),
referring to this incident –
Thereby the Colonial Administration created not only a new authority (which
probably was in the interests of a simple and centralised system of government);
but it also, as will be indicated, broke into the laws of succession and inheritance
of the Hereros.
Later on (see page 38), referring again to the appointment of Samuel Maharero
as chief in preference to the rightful heir Nikodemus,93 in regard to whom
Samuel was, according to Herero law, only in the position of a younger brother,
Meyer adds:–
It can easily be understood how deeply this illegal interference with their laws
must have aroused the feelings of the Hereros; more particularly when, at the
same the, a hitherto non-existent de jure ruler over the whole nation (i.e., para-
mount chief) was forced upon them. One can appreciate how bitterly disillu-
91
On the development of Christianity in Herero society in the nineteenth century see, Dag
Henrichsen, Herrschaft und Identifikation im vorkolonialen Zentralnamibia: Das Herero- und
Damaraland im 19. Jahrhundert, PhD thesis University of Cologne 1997. On Christianity during
the 1904 - 1908 war see, Gewald, Herero Heroes, chp. 6
92
Patrilineal descent line
93
For a discussion on the succession dispute that accompanied Samuel Maharero’s rise to power
see, Gewald, Herero Heroes, Chp. 2
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CHAPTER NINE 77
sioned Nikodemus and his supporters were, when not only the dignity to which
he aspired, but also the Oruzo assets (i.e., the holy cattle, &c., of the religious
order) of his late uncle, were taken from him and bestowed on a younger and less
worthy person.
(Note. Samuel, being a declared Christian could not exercise the office of high
priest, and to place the holy assets under his charge was, to heathen Herero
thinking, an insult to the ancestors and a sacrilege.)
For the same reason the other chiefs refused to recognise Samuel, whom they
despised as a mere child, as the actual paramount chief of their land. Nikodemus,
in his anger (continues Meyer, whose candid words give much food for
reflection), was at the bottom of the intrigue which resulted in the rebellion of his
sub-clan of Ovambandjera, under his under-chief Kahimema, assisted by the
Khauas Hottentots of Gobabis. It was only the rapid victory at Otyunda, 1896,
which enabled German arms to nip the rebellion in the bud. Of course Nikodemus
and Kahimema were, after sentence by Military Court, shot as rebels at
Okahandja on 12th June 1896. The tribe of Khauas Hottentots was practically
exterminated (zo gut wie vernichtet) and their territory declared Crown land. The
fire was however still glowing under the ashes and it was fed by Asa Riarua, the
half brother of Nikodemus. An undying hatred inspired him and his party against
Samuel and his protectors and it eventually became one of the main causes of the
great rebellion.
Yet Governor Leutwein was astonished at the “dark mistrust” of the Hereros!
Having created a “paramount chief,” it was essential that he should be used
to German advantage. The opportunity came in 1894, when Leutwein was
Governor. As already stated, the Germans had formed a land settlement syndi-
cate and immigrants were coming into the country to settle on the land. The
land however was claimed by the natives, and they declined to give it up.
Thereupon the syndicate (under the auspices of the German Colonial Co.)
formally applied to the Government for grant of 50,000 square kilometres
(approximately 4,500,000 acres), east of Windhuk and stretching towards
Gobabis and Hoachanas. This application was made on the recommendation of
Professor Dr. Karl Dove, of Jena, who had inspected the area. In reply to the
application, the Government informed the syndicate that the land was claimed
by Bastards, Hereros, and Hottentots, and that as the troops in occupation were
not strong enough to occupy and protect the area, the request would have to be
deferred till later. This was in 1892. The more practicable and more honest way
of acquiring land would have been to purchase from the chiefs. The soldiers
were coming however and this idea did not find favour apparently.
In April 1893, von François noticed that the agents of the syndicate were, to
quote his words, “acting recklessly,” giving out land “to which they were not
entitled and making promises which they were unable to fulfil,” so he wrote to
Berlin suggesting that the syndicate’s work should be suspended and that the
Government should control all questions of immigration and land settlement.
The then Kolonial-Direktor at Berlin (Dr. Kayser) refused to accept the
recommendations of Von François, and said that the syndicate should continue
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78 CHAPTER NINE
its work, confining itself, for the present, to the neighbourhood of Windhuk.
Immigrants continued to arrive and were given, or rather sold, farms which
existed only in the imagination of the directors of this precious syndicate.
Rohrbach, to whom we are indebted for most of this information, describes
these farms as luftschwebenden i.e floating in the air,
In 1894, Leutwein decided to solve the problem once and for all. He went
to Okahandja and on the 6th December 1894 drew up an agreement for “Chief-
Captain Samuel Maharero” to sign, whereby the whole southern boundary of
Hereroland from Swakopmund to Gobabis was defined. The astute Leutwein
had described the boundaries in such a way as to secure to the land settlement
syndicate the town and grazing lands of Gobabis (belonging to the Khauas
Hottentots) and some of the finest cattle grazing veld on the White Nosob
River. The Chief-Captain was promised an annual salary of 2,000 marks
(1001.), payable half-yearly, provided that the “Southern boundary line as
determined upon … is respected by the Hereros and that their cattle posts are
withdrawn from the territory now falling with the area of the German
Government.” (Original agreement filed at Windhuk; Records A.1.a.2.Vol.I.).
This boundary line extended over 400 miles. Samuel Maharero was not
recognised by his fellow chiefs. In any event the southern boundary of his own
district, Okahandja, was probably less than a sixth of the whole line. Yet, at a
stroke of Maharero’s pen, chiefs like Zacharias, Tjetjoo, Nikodemus and
Kahimema were, without having so much as even been consulted, deprived of
rights which they had held, through their ancestors, for generations past.
Leutwein writes (page 64): “This difficult agreement for them to assent to
was signed by Samuel, as was always his way, light heartedly and with
pleasure; but his headmen pondered earnestly over it” … Having fixed this
boundary line, it was the easiest thing in the world, for the Germans at any rate,
to decide on measures against trespassers.
This unbeaconed and unfenced boundary line, to the simple Hereros grazing
their cattle along its edges, was not unlike the farms Rohrbach described as
floating in the air.
Nothing could be risked however until more troops arrived, and this
necessitated a wait of nearly 12 months. Towards the end of 1895, Leutwein
was able to make his next move. He entered into an agreement (which must
have been secret and private, as it cannot be found in the records at Windhuk)
with Samuel Maharero whereby the German Government would impound “all
the herds of Herero cattle found trespassing over the boundaries.” There was
no question of fining or warning the owners and then returning their cattle. No.
The settlers and the syndicate were badly in need of cattle, and the “trading
business” had not yet fully developed. “The impounded cattle,” says Leutwein
(page 92), “would then be sold and the proceeds divided between the German
Government and the paramount chief.”
“Whereas, formerly, the confiscation of their cattle in this manner, would
undoubtedly have caused war,” says the self-complacent Leutwein, “we had,
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CHAPTER NINE 79
He told them that “both questions were fraught with the alternative danger of
threatening war” (i.e., if not satisfactorily answered). That such a war would
result “only in the extermination of the one party thereto, and that party could
only be the Hereros.”95 “Even to this day” (1905), says Leutwein, “I can dis-
94
‘Cause for war’ - An act regarding as justifying war
95
Meeting held by Leutwein in Okahandja on 21rst January 1896, Theodor Leutwein, Elf Jahre
Gouverneur in Deutsch-Südwestafrika, (Berlin 1906) p. 95. Original text, Ein solcher könnte nur
mit Vernichtung der einen Partei endigen, und diese Partei könnten nur die Hereros sein. (“Such
a [war] could only end in the extermination of one party, and this party could only be that of the
Herero.”)
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80 CHAPTER NINE
one could say it would have been possible to hear a pin drop.”
(I) That the Seeis River, the water in which was indispensable for their
herds, should be retained by them.
(II) That the paramount chief and the Governor should decide on
punishment for trespass.
“This first demand,” says Leutwein, meant a shifting forward of the boundaries
some 8 kilometres. As the advantages of this change of boundary would have
been of benefit only to the Western Hereros, i.e., those of Okahandja, Nikodemus,
on behalf of the Eastern Hereros, immediately came forward and on behalf of his
people, asked for the return of the Gobabis area to them. This gave me the most
beautiful opportunity (die schonste gelegenheit) to put into force my divide et
impera policy.
Therefore I granted the wish of the Okahandja Hereros and definitely refused
the request of Nikodemus. As a result of this the latter went into rebellion three
months later, while the Okahandja Hereros remained on our side.”
Later on in the same year it was decided to disarm the Eastern Hereros, their
kinsmen the Ovambandjeru and the Khauas Hottentots of Gobabis. They were
called upon to hand in all firearms, and they refused to do so.
The reason for this will now be perfectly clear. The native chiefs disputed
Samuel Maharero’s right to fix their boundary lines, and they were legally
correct in this attitude. The Germans ignored their protests and confiscated all
cattle found over the borders. Fearing that this would lead to reprisals, the
Germans, who were keen not only on the cattle, but also on the land of these
people (it was the area asked for by the land settlement syndicate) decided to
render the people innocuous by depriving them of their arms.
Chiefs Nikodemus and Kahimema of the Hereros and Andreas Lambert96 of
the Khauas Hottentots of Gobabis refused to hand in their arms. An expedition
was sent out from Windhuk and fighting resulted. The chief of the Hottentots
was killed, his land and stock confiscated and his tribe, as Felix Meyer puts it,
practically exterminated (so gut wie vernichtet).
After the first fight, Nikodemus and Kahimema went in to Okahandja
voluntarily and openly to protest against the action of the German forces. There
they were both arrested, tried by court-martial and shot as rebels.
The chief crime against Nikodemus was that he was the lawful heir to the
chieftainship and his continued existence was a nuisance to the Germans.
Leutwein deliberately treated him in such a way as to goad him into doing
something which would give a pretext, even the flimsiest pretext, for removing
96
The Gei-/Khauen were often referred to as the ‘Amraal Oorlam’ after their original leader
Amraal Lambert who had led them from Bethanie in 1820 to settle in the area to the south of
Gobabis. Andries was executed at //Nao-sanabes (Köhler 1959a: 19)
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CHAPTER NINE 81
him altogether. Divide et irnpera. The brave Kahimema died with his chief,
Before leaving the subject a description of the closing scene in the life of
German Army (mit Schwert und Pflug, page 304), may be added:–
“12th June … At 10 a.m. the First Field Company under Estorf arrived to fetch
the condemned men (Nikodemus and Kahimema), to whom, at their request, I
gave some wine. Then they were bound and lifted on to an ox-cart and the
procession started. Mounted police led the way, then followed Estorff and myself
on horseback, a half-company under Kageneck on foot, the cart surrounded by
horsemen and in the rear Ziethen, on foot, with the remaining hall-company.
We had to travel through the entire village. There was no male Herero to be
seen; but the women were rolling about on the ground, and covering their heads
with sand and earth. From every house, every hut, every garden, the long drawn
blood-curdling lamentations accompanied the distinguished chiefs on their last
journey. In silence, and drawn up in a great square, the guns unlimbered at the
sides, the troops received us. Then we went on through the deep sand of the river
bed to the place of execution. Commandos of Hendrik Witbooi’s and Simon
Cooper’s Hottentots guarded the place. Halt! The condemned men were lifted
from the cart. Proudly, and with head erect, Kahimema walked to the tree to
which he was bound; Nikodemus, half dead with fear, had to be carried. The eyes
of the two were then bound, and the firing sections under Lieutenants von Ziethen
and Count Kageneck marched into their places. Captain von Estorff gave the
signal:– Short commands:– Present Fire! The volleys rolled like thunder through
the neighbouring mountains and two traitors had ceased to live.”
CHAPTER TEN
Thus it came about that, when the Hereros no longer trespassed and gave cause
for confiscation, it was found necessary for the German to go out and trade with
him for his cattle and sheep.
In the earlier part of this report mention is made of the views of the German
missionaries and others in regard to the British traders who in the early days
had been their competitors. It is needless to remark that, shortly after German
annexation, the British trader was made to leave and a clear field opened for his
German successor. Here is an instance of how the German traders carried on:–
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84 CHAPTER TEN
It will be of interest to learn from the Hereros themselves how these traders
behaved. The following quotations are taken from sworn affidavits made in the
course of the past three or four months:–
Under-Chief Daniel Kariko97 of Omaruru states (dealing with the reasons why
they rebelled in 1904):–
Our people were being robbed and deceived right and left by German traders,
their cattle were taken by force; they were flogged and ill-treated and got no
redress. In fact the German police assisted the traders instead of protecting us.
Traders would come along and offer goods. When we said that we had no cattle
to spare, as the rinderpest had killed so many, they said they would give us credit.
Often, when we refused to buy goods, even on credit, the trader would simply off-
load goods and leave them, saying that we could pay when we liked, but in a few
weeks he would come back and demand his money or cattle in lieu thereof. He
would then go and pick out our very best cows he could find. Very often one
man’s cattle were taken to pay other people’s debts. If we objected and tried to
resist the police would be sent for and, what with the floggings and the threats of
shooting, it was useless for our poor people to resist. If the traders had been fair
and reasonable like the old English traders of the early days we would never have
complained, but this was not trading at all, it was only theft and robbery. They
fixed their own prices for the goods, but would never let us place our own
valuation on the cattle. They said a cow was worth 20 marks only. For a bag of
meal they took eight cows, which to us were equivalent to 16 oxen, as the Hereros
would always give two oxen for the cow, as she is a breeder, and we loved to
increase our herds. For a pair of boots a cow was taken. Most traders took only
cows, as they were farmers also and wanted to increase their herds. Often when
credit had been given, they came back and claimed what they called interest on
the debt. Once I got a bag of meal on credit, and later on the trader came and took
97
Leader of a Herero force sent in 1880 by Chief Willem Zeraua to defend Okombahe. By 1891
Kariko was reported to be in conflict with the Damara community at Okombahe led by Cornelius
Goreseb. Kariko and his followers left Okombahe shortly after a German garrison was established
there in 1892 and settled at Eharni (!Kawab), but followed a raid moved again to Otujap near
Omikana and!Gorixas. Kariko was reportedly removed from his position as sub-chief by Manasse
of Omaruru. When the Herero rose against the Germans in January, 1904, Kariko wrote several
letters to Cornelius Goreseb unsuccessfully urging him and the Damara community at Okombahe
to join the rising. (Wagner 1957: 33-36)
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CHAPTER TEN 85
eight cows for the debt and two more cows for what he called credit; thus it cost
me 10 cows altogether. Just before the rebellion, in 1903, things got worse than
ever. All traders came round and started to collect debts.
(Note. This arose out of an Ordinance enacted in Berlin whereby outstanding
trading debts were declared prescribed after a lapse of 12 months.)98
Some debts they claimed had never existed; often their claims were quite false,
and they were deliberately stealing our cattle. We complained to the German
police, but were told that we were all liars and that, as a German could never lie,
his word would always be taken even if half a dozen of us had the impudence to
contradict him. This made us feel as if it were just as well not to be alive. Our
people cried and lamented the loss of their stock; our poorer people no longer had
enough milk to drink; all our cows were going and every month saw our property
dwindle away. We saw our chiefs, who complained and complained till they were
tired. No heed was taken of them, and we had no courts of law to which to appeal
for justice.
(N.B. This is actually true. There were no courts before July 1903.)
Headman Moses M Buanjo of Omaruru, whose father M’Buanjo, an under-
chief, was one of the wealthiest Hereros and owned several thousand cattle (he
to-day owns 20 or 30 goats), states:–
Although we all protested and were dissatisfied, Germans came into our country,
soldiers and traders. They soon began to do just what they pleased. They took our
cattle, ill-treated our people, flogged them and we had no protection. It takes too
long for me to tell all that they did. Their traders charged extortionate prices for
goods and undervalued our stock. Our chiefs were powerless; our old laws and
customs were no longer recognised; even the sacred cattle and the cattle of the
tribe which no one could sell (the Eanda stock) were taken by force for real and
bogus claims. Heavy interest was charged. If a debtor disputed the claim, the
police came and assisted the trader.
98
Helmut Bley argues that the new credit regulations and the reaction of German traders to them
were blamed by Governor Leutwein for increasing friction between Herero and German
communities. However he points out that four male German traders were also explicitely protected
by Samuel Maharero at the outbreak of the war. Bley, South-West, pp. 135-138.
99
On account of colouring or horn shapes specific cattle were considered to be ritually
important to individual Herero. This meant that certain cattle could not be traded, sold or
slaughtered, as to do so would be to transgress specific taboos and incur the wrath of ancestors.
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86 CHAPTER TEN
This affidavit by Hosea was made in the presence of the following leading
Hereros, who agreed with Hosea’s statement and signed the affidavit in
corroboration:–
(1) Barmenias Zerua, son of the late chief of the Otjimbingwe Hereros.
(2) Nickanor Kanungatji, nephew of the late chief Kahimema,
(3) Leonard Gautheta, nephew of the late chief Nikodemus,
(4) Hugo Tjetjoo, nephew of the late chief Tjetjoo,
(5) Elias Gorambuka, nephew of the late chief Kamaherero
CHAPTER TEN 87
Let us see what the Germans themselves have to say on the subject. Professor
Pr. Karl Dove, of Jena, sometime Director of Land Settlement at Windhuk, in
his book Deutsche Südwest Afrika100 (at page 10) says:–
The normal price of a good Herero ox was 40 marks. As the traders were in a
position however to regulate prices and place their own valuation on the goods
given by them in exchange for such cattle to the natives, I am of opinion, after
careful inquiry, that one cannot go far wrong in assuming that in actual fact the
value of an ox would not work out at more than 20 marks.
The rebellion broke out in January 1904. Up till about July 1903 (i.e., from
1890), no provision had been made in regard to the administration of civil law.
“It was not necessary to do so” (says Leutwein) “so long as the territory was
inhabited by a small white population. The parties to a dispute endeavoured to
come to a settlement through the mediation of the nearest official or officer. With
the increase of white population and the extension of trade and travel, matters
however assumed a different aspect.”
It will be observed therefore that the unfortunate natives could only rely on the
mediation of the nearest officer or official. They have already stated with what
results.
Did they get common justice? No German will deny that they did not; for,
as Professor Dr. Karl Dove (in his above quoted book) characteristically puts
it, “leniency towards the natives is cruelty to the whites” (milde gegen die
Eingeborenen ist grausamkeit gegen die Weisze). As for justice, the learned
Professor waves it aside, and says:–
As to the ideas of their sense of justice, these are based on false premises. It is
incorrect to view justice, in regard to the natives, as if they were of the same
kultur-position as ourselves. They have no conception of what ownership of
ground means.
It will now be understood how by 1903 more than half of the cattle in Herero-
land had passed into German hands. Even after 1903, when their courts were
established, natives were not allowed to give evidence on oath.
One is here reminded of the demand already referred to, that in court the
evidence of one white man can only be outweighed by the corroborated
statements of seven coloured persons.
100
Karl Dove, Deutsche-SüdWest Afrika, Wilhelm Süsserott, Berlin, 1913.
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CHAPTER ELEVEN
Notwithstanding what has been written in the foregoing chapter, it will be said
by some people that after all this unblushing system of stock theft, which
Germans were pleased to call trading, must have been carried on unknown to
the heads of the German Government and that it could not possibly have been
sanctioned in Berlin.
But what do we find? Not only that it was known and approved, but also that
it was regarded as a desirable and cheap means of attaining an end, i.e., the
displacement of the native in favour of the white immigrant. The white man
was able to acquire stock without financial aid from the State, and having
acquired stock. he could graze it on the land on which the despoiled natives had
formerly grazed it. The natives, reduced to penury and being no longer inde-
pendent, would be compelled to enter into the service of the white man and act
as the herds of the stock which they formerly called their own. Thus Germany
had in mind the solution of the land settlement, stock supply, and native labour
questions. and she considered that the end justified the means.
As early as 19th January 1893, von Lindequist, Government Assessor and
acting Governor, in the absence of Leutwein, wrote to the Imperial Chancellor
in Berlin, reporting on the steps taken by him to preserve the southern boundary
line, as fixed between Samuel Maharero and Leutwein. Referring to the large
Herero population on the Nosob River and remarking on the size of their herds
of cattle, this gentleman (who afterwards became Governor and later Under-
Secretary of State for the Colonies) says:–
Only a continued blood-letting by the German traders. as was done annually by
Witbooi up to three years ago, will again reduce the quantity of their cattle to the
right proportions and enable the Germans to make use of the right bank of the
Nosob.(German Records, Windhuk. Vol. Al., A2, Vol. 1.)
This is a report by the acting Governor to the Imperial Chancellor. Here we find
the Germans emulating the Hottentot chief Hendrik Witbooi, who at any rate
formally declared war before raiding Herero cattle.
To his credit be it said that Governor Leutwein, when the scandal grew to
such great proportions as to forebode war, took steps with a view to suppress-
ing the giving of credit by unscrupulous traders which, as has been indicated,
was generally the preliminary to the robberies. In 1899 he submitted a draft
Ordinance to Berlin, by which he proposed to create courts of law, in which
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90 CHAPTER ELEVEN
claims against natives by traders and others could be adjudicated on. The native
chiefs were to be co-assessors with Germans on the courts and claims based on
credit would after a certain period be illegal and not actionable. Leutwein
points out how he wished to abolish the credit system altogether, and he bitterly
complains of how his proposals were described as “unheard” of and
“monstrous,” and how he was described as lacking in knowledge of the legal
position. The white settlers raised a howl of indignation and “holy-wrath,” and
for five years the struggle continued between Leutwein on the one side and on
the other the Berlin Government, plus the Directors of the Land and Trading
Syndicates (living in Germany, of course), plus the traders – and settlers in
South-west Africa.
In the meantime the blood-letting, after the style of Witbooi, was going on
merrily, and the Herero people were groaning under the weight of the accumu-
lated injustices perpetrated on them. In 1903 Leutwein succeeded in getting
something definite from Berlin. The famous Credit Ordinance was promul-
gated in the middle of that year. Traders were (against Leutwein’s direct advice)
given one year in which to collect outstandings, which would be prescribed
thereafter, and they fell upon the Herero cattle like a pack of ravenous wolves.
The authorities in Germany probably suspected that this would be the last
straw, and that the Hereros would now give them the chance for which they
were ready waiting. Rohrbach says: “For the results of this measure, decided
upon in Berlin, Leutwein rightly repudiated responsibility.” Referring to the
direct results of the 1903 Ordinance, Rohrbach says, “the traders hastened to
notify their outstanding claims against the Hereros, and, where possible, to
collect them personally.” No fewer than 106,000 claims against the Hereros
were filed in terms of the Ordinance.
Apart from the taking of their cattle, there was the gradual appropriation of
their land, a process which went on concurrently with the cattle-lifting and
grew in proportion as the number of cattle acquired by the white “traders”
increased.
On 19th August 1901 the Herero headmen on the White Nosob River
addressed the following letter to the German Governor from Otjinene through
the missionary Lang:–
Most Honoured Governor,
The undersigned Herero headmen have just come to me and have requested me
to convey the following to your Honour: “Kayata of Okatumba declares that in
Easter 1900, a settler, Mr. Westphal, camee to Okatumba, where he built a house
of poles and opened a small store therein. Five weeks ago he has started to build
a house of limestone. Kavata and Muambo forbade him to do this, as he had no
ownership; but Mr. Westphal took no notice of them. They cannot give Mr.
Westphal a settlement at Okatumba. as the place will remain theirs and their
childrens. This treatment has caused them to call the other headmen together for
a council… Last week Mr. Stopke came here, and he told us that he had purchased
the place, between the farm of Mr. Conrad on Orumbo and the farm of Mr.
Schmerenbeck in Onunaudjereke, from the Government at Windhuk, and he
demanded therefore that Mbaratjo and his people who live there should leave the
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CHAPTER ELEVEN 91
place. In Otjivero lives Mr. Heldt. He has been there three years and has made
Herero endeavour to buy the place. In Okamaraere, opposite Orumbo, lives Mr.
Wosillo; in Omitara Mr. Gilers, and in Okahua Mr. von Falkenhausen has settled
lately … Otjipaue has been acquired by Mr. Schmerenbeck and Otjisaesu by Mr.
Voigts.
But now, Honoured Governor, where are we to live when our entire river and all
our land is taken away from us? We annex a sketch showing all werfts (Herero
villages) in the area of Otjitsaesu up to Omitara. These all water their cattle on the
White Nosob, so we again ask, where are all these people to go to?
We see with dismay how one place after another is going into the hands of the
white people and therefore, Honoured Governor, we pray you most respectfully
not to sanction any further sales here in the area of the White Nosob.”
This letter, of which as usual no notice was taken, is, says Rohrbach, “an
example of how the land settlement syndicate managed its settlement work.”
“Every one of these farms,” says he, “as enumerated by the Hereros, were
situated in Herero territory on the White Nosob or near the river, along the
northern boundary of the concession territory of the syndicate.”
Here we see that the Germans, after severely punishing the Hereros for
trespassing over their boundaries, as fixed by agreement, did not hesitate for a
moment to break that agreement, cross the Herero boundaries, and take land
there as soon as it suited their purpose; and again the Hereros got no protection.
Having so appropriated a piece of land in Herero territory, the German fixed
his own boundaries and immediately, in imitation of the example set by the
Government, started to confiscate any suitable Herero cattle found trespassing.
Samuel Kutako in his affidavit, after referring to the cattle thefts, says:–
The next reason for our rebellion was the appropriation of Herero lands by the
traders, who took the ground for their farms and claimed it as their private
property. They used to shoot our dogs if they trespassed on these lands, and they
confiscated any of our cattle which might stray there. If holy cattle trespassed we
were allowed to get them back, if we paid three to four ordinary cattle in exchange
for one holy one. Under the Herero law the ground belonged to the tribe in
common and not even the chief could sell or dispose of it. He could give people
permission to live on the land, but no sales were valid and no chief ever attempted
to sell his people s land. Even the missionaries who settled amongst us, only got
permission to live there. (Note.- This is borne out by the records of the Rhenish
Mission Society). Land was never sold to Germans or anyone else. We did not
have any idea of such a thing.
Despite this statement, it is true that Samuel Maharero, the so-called paramount
chief, did sell land, but this land was nearly all in the territory of Nikodemus
and other chiefs who did not recognise such sales. Samuel had often, as a result
of these dealings, to take refuge in Windhuk and ask for German protection.
Trading on his poverty and his passion for alcoholic liquors, the German
authorities got Samuel to sign deeds of sale of land: but the deponent, Samuel
Kutako, is perfectly correct when he says that “no chief ever attempted to sell
his people s land.” Samuel Maharero was not a lawful chief, and in any event
had no influence or jurisdiction at all outside Okahandja, his own district, and
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92 CHAPTER ELEVEN
even there his position was never safe. In consequence he lived most of his time
at Osona.
In this connection an old friend of Samuel Maharero s has stated:–
I knew Samuel well … he was very fond of liquor and the Germans kept him well
supplied. He used to get cases of rum and brandy… Samuel was afraid of his
life… He told me that the Germans made him drunk and got him to sign papers
he knew nothing of and for which he was sorry afterwards … Samuel, in his better
moments, bitterly complained of how the Germans had taken advantage of his
weakness …
At page 67 of his work, Dr. Felix Meyer, dealing with the land laws of the
Hereros, says:–
Each Herero was free to select the spot where he wished to settle. He could build,
graze, hunt and dig wherever he pleased. Only the burial places of the ancestors,
in the locality of the sacred trees, were prohibited land as at one time the res diis
manibus relictoe. It was zera (forbidden).Notwithstanding this (according to
information given me by the missionary Irle), the holy grove of trees at
Okahandja, which Maharero had allowed to grow around the graves, was cut
down by the Germans, … so that as a result the graves lay bare and exposed and
were eventually taken in by the gardens of the white people.
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CHAPTER TWELVE
From the point of view of the, at that time, comparatively few German settlers
in the country there were far too many Hereros. Once robbed of their land and
their cattle, they could not possibly all be employed as farm labourers, and no
one seemed to look to the future.
Dr. Karl Dove’s “leniency towards the natives is cruelty to the whites”
became generally known as proverbial, and it formed the rule of conduct not
only of the white settler, soldier, trader, and policeman, but it also actually
represented the settled and accepted policy of the Government. Considerations
of justice, honesty, and common humanity never arose, or if they did arise were
brushed aside by the more brutal demands of convenience and utility. It will be
remembered that Leutwein, when referring to the claim that the evidence of
seven coloured persons was necessary to outbalance the statement of one white
man, said: in regard to the utility of this I will express no opinion.
Having settled the point of view, it is easy to understand what Dr. Karl Dove
is hinting at when he writes:–
While however the single Herero cannot be regarded as a very brave person, he
must not be looked upon as harmless. On the contrary the chief danger from them
is their numbers and these numbers are a standing menace to our safety.
Therefore the settler who helped to reduce the number of Hereros was
performing a public service. There can be no doubt that during the period 1890
1904 very many Hereros were done to death in one way or another or died as
the result of brutal floggings and ill-treatment. Despite this, such murders were
treated lightly; where possible they were hushed up entirely, and at worst the
murderer in his own interests was advised, for fear of reprisals, to leave the
country or go to another district. In only four cases during the period 1890-
1904 was a German murderer brought to trial, and then the imposition of
anything like an adequate or commensurate penalty was unheard of. It was
generally endeavoured by the German authorities to compound the offence by
allowing the murderer to pay compensation in the shape of a few dozen goats
to the relatives of the deceased.
When Leutwein was relieved of the Governorship, one of the charges
leveled against him was that he had precipitated the rebellion of 1904 owing to
his excessive leniency towards the natives. To show his difference of treatment
as between natives and white people, Leutwein (page 431) quotes the
following details of murder trials:–
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94 CHAPTER TWELVE
Name Sentences
(a) 1896, Hottentots Jantje and Kurieb – On trial: 5,5 years confinement.
On appeal: reduced to 3
months imprisonment.
(b) 1901, Herero Leonard – 1 year imprisonment.
(c) 1902, Herero Kamawu – 2 years imprisonment.
(d) 1903, The daughter of Zacharias, On trial: acquitted.
Chief of Otjimbingwe. On appeal (by prosecutor):
3 years imprisonment.
101
The killing of Willy Kain is described in great detail in Drechsler, Let Us Die Fighting,
pp. 133 - 135
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CHAPTER TWELVE 95
A full statement has been obtained from Barmenias Zerua, relative to the
murder of his wife above referred to. He states that it took place not 14 days but
a few months after her child was born, and that he was asleep when the shot
was fired and is unable personally to impute a reason for the murder. This is
what Barmenias says:–
In 1899 I married Louisa Kamana, daughter of Kamana, an under-chief of the
Hereros of chief Manasse of Omaruru. My wife was also a Christian and we were
married in the church at Otjimbingwe by the Missionary Meyer. In 1903 my wife
was expecting her first baby, so in accordance with the universal custom of the
Hereros I sent her, by ox-wagon, to her mother’s home at Otjimbingwe for her
confinement. In due course she gave birth to a baby boy. When the news reached
me I rode on horseback from Otjimbingwe to Otjimpaue to bring my wife and
baby back to my home…
We started on our return.journey by ox-wagon. We had to pass through Omaruru
and there rested a few hours. Before leaving Omaruru we met a German named
Dietrich, who asked me whether he would be allowed by me to travel with us my
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96 CHAPTER TWELVE
After relating how the chief of Omaruru then rode up on his way from Karibib
to Omaruru and how at Dietrich’s invitation they had a drink together, Bar-
menias continues:–
Then the chief greeted us and rode away. I said “Good-night” to Dietrich and
went to sleep … suddenly I was awakened from my sleep by the report of a
revolver. I jumped out of the tent of the wagon and saw Dietrich running away on
the road to Omaruru… I went back to the wagon the baby was crying and I shook
my wife to wake her.
As I touched her I felt something wet. I struck a match and saw that she was
covered with blood and quite dead… I took up my baby and found that the bullet
which killed my wife had gone through the fleshy part of its left leg just above the
knee… We were never told what punishment Dietrich received. The chiefs were
not informed and to this day I don t know what the court did. Later on I saw
Dietrich in Karibib. Where he still lives … None of the Hereros really believed
that Dietrich had ever been punished. This murder was one of the chief reasons
which influenced my father Zacharias and Samuel Maharero and Michael
Tjaherani (the chiefs of Okahandja and Omaruru) to go into rebellion the next
year.
They had many other reasons for rising against the Germans, but this event
decided their policy …112
Mentioning this murder, Leutwein (page 222), says:–
In the early part of 1903 an intoxicated white man shot a Herero woman, who was
sleeping peacefully in a wagon, for the reason that he imagined, he was being
attacked by Hereros and fired blindly in all directions. The court rejected the
entirely unfounded story of attack by the Hereros as alleged by the white man.
The case turned entirely on the point of the hallucinations of a no longer sober
person. Notwithstanding this, the judges in the first instance found the white man
not guilty, because they accepted as a fact the defence that he had acted in good
faith (er habe in gutem glauben gehandelt)! This acquittal aroused extraordinary
excitement in Hereroland, especially as the murdered person was the daughter of
a chief. Everywhere the question was asked: Have the white people then got the
right to shoot native women. I thereupon travelled personally to Hereroland to
pacify the people so far as I could, and also to make clear to them that I did not
agree with the judgment of the court, but had no influence thereover. Luckily the
prosecutor had correctly appealed. The accused was then brought before the
Supreme Court at Windhuk and sentenced to three years’ imprisonment. This
event had however contributed its share towards the unrest among the Hereros
which resulted half a year later in the outbreak of the rebellion.
102
The Dietrich case is discussed further in Drechsler, Let Us Die Fighting, pp. 135 - 136
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CHAPTER TWELVE 97
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Governor Leutwein was in the south dealing with the Hottentots when the news
of the Herero rising reached him. He was pained and astonished to learn that
Samuel Maharero (the “Paramount Chief”) had forsaken Germany and her
unlimited supplies of rum for the purpose of going into rebellion, and that not
only was Samuel a rebel, but he was the leader, the life and soul of the move-
ment.
Leutwein immediately wrote an upbraiding letter to “my dear Samuel,”
asking for his reasons for this rash step. The letter was duly delivered by a
missionary, and throughthe same channel Leutwein received the following
reply (printed by Rohrbach at page 333):–
To the Great Ambassador of the Kaiser:
Otjisonjati,
103
The claim that the Germans attempted to assassinate Samuel Maharero is also found in
Herero oral tradition. One oral account claimed that a plot to capture Samuel Maharero was
revealed by a Damara worker. He overheard Hauptmann Franke discuss a plan to invite Samuel for
a drink at the German fort at Okahandja and then capture him. On receiving this intelligence, he
refused to enter the fort. The Germans then tried, unsuccessfully, to assassinate Samuel. For details
see Sundermeier, Theo Die Mbanderu, Anthropos-Institut, St Augustin, 1977 pp. 66-69
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Uanja are making war.” He called me to question me. I answered him truthfully
“No,” but he did not believe. At last he hid soldiers in boxes at the fort and sent
for me so that he might shoot me. I did not go, I saw his intentions and I fled.
Thereupon Lieut. R. sent soldiers with rifles after me to shoot me. For these
reasons I became angry and said “No, I must kill the whitemen, they themselves
have said that I must die.” This – that I must die – was told me by a white man
named X. (Note. The names are suppressed by the German printers..
I am the Chief,
Samuel Maharero
It seems quite true that German settlers did take advantage of Leutwein’s
absence in the south to spread the report that he was dead and also to renew
with vigour their outrages and robberies. They had never forgiven Leutwein for
his open antagonism on the trading and credit question, and appear to have
taken every opportunity of belittling him in the eyes of the natives and of
undermining his authority. It was the desire of the Germans to precipitate a
general rebellion. The extermination of the Hereros and the confiscation of the
cattle and sheep they still possessed was their main objective. Of Governor
Leutwein, whatever his faults may have been, let it be said that he personally
was no party to this miserable plot.
The settlers had achieved their object. The Hereros were in open rebellion
and it remained only to secure the spoils.
Before actually opening hostilities the principal Herero chiefs met and drew
up a strict instruction to all their selected military leaders: It read as follows:–
I am the Chief leader of the Hereros, Samuel Maharero. I have proclaimed a law
and a lawful order and it ordains for all my people that they shall not lay hands
on the following: namely, Englishmen, Boers, Bastards, Berg-Damaras, Namas
(i.e., Hottentots). We must not lay hands on any of these people. I have taken an
oath that their property will not be regarded as enemy property, neither that of the
missionaries. Enough!
A Dutch housewife resident in Omaruru has informed the writer that when the
rising broke out she was living in the village while her husband was on his farm
some 30 miles away. The Germans hastily fled into the fort taking their wives
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and children with them. My informant says she hesitated about going to the fort
for fear that the Hereros might consider her action hostile and take revenge on
her husband. While pondering over what she should do to protect herself and
her small children, the Herero chief, Michael Tysesita called on her. He said:–
I have come to assure you that you and your children will be quite safe in your
own home. You are under my protection. Do not go into the German fort. The
Germans are foolish to take their women and children there as they may be killed
by our bullets, and we are not making war on women and children. Keep calm
and stay indoors when there is fighting, I assure you my people will do you no
harm.
Yes, Chief (replied my informant), but my poor husband is alone on the farm,
surely he has been murdered by this.
The Chief smiled and replied: We are not barbarians. Your husband is our
friend; he is not a German. I have already sent a special messenger to him, to tell
him he is under my protection as long as he remains quietly on his farm. His cattle
and sheep are safe also. In order not to inconvenience your husband, I have
specially ordered my people who are working for him to remain there and do their
work loyally until I send further instructions.
104
The most photographed monument in Namibia today is undoubtably Der Reiter statue that
was unveiled on the birthday of Kaiser Wilhelm II (27th January) in 1914. The statue is a monument
to the 1,633 Germans who died during the war. A plaque at the foot of the statue states “Zum
ehrende angedenken an die tapferen deutschen krieger. Welche für Kaiser und Reich zur erretung
und erhaltung dieses landes waehrent des Herero – und Hottentotten Aufstandes 1903-1907 und
waehrend der Kalahari-Expedition 1908 ihr leben liessen.
Zum Ehrenden angedenken auch an die Deutsche buerger welche den eingeborenen im
aufstande zum opfer fielen.
Gefallen, verscholen, verlunglueckt, ihren wunden erlegen und an krankheiten gestorben.
Im aufstande erschlagen
Maenner 119
Frauen 4
Kinder 1
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It has probably never occurred before in native wars that a definite line was
drawn between combatants and non-combatants, enemies and friends. It speaks
volumes for the humane temperament and mildness of the Hereros.
It cannot possibly have been on account of their barbarity that Germany
exterminated the majority of this fine race.
Having decided on how they should wage the war, the Herero chiefs
decided to notify their neighbours, the Hottentots and the Bastards, and the
following letters are of interest:–
To Chief Hendrik Witbooi, 11.1.1904
I make known to you that the white people have broken their peace with me. Hold
on well as we have heard (you are doing?) And if God so wills it don t let the work
in Namaqualand go backward. It now remains for you to go to Swakopmund and
see what they are doing there. I am without ammunition.105 When you have
acquired ammunition help me and give me two English and two German rifles as
I have none. That is all. Greetings.
A little while later the following undated letter was sent by Samuel Maharero
to Witbooi:–
To Witbooi
Rather let us die together and not die as the result of ill-treatment, prisons, or all
the other ways. Furthermore let all the other chiefs down there know so that they
may rise and work. I close my letter with hearty greetings and the confidence that
the chief will comply with my wishes. Send me four of your men that we may
discuss matters.Also obstruct the operations of the Governor so that he will be
unable to pass. And make haste that we may storm Windhuk then we shall have
ammunition. Furthermore I am not fighting alone, we are all fighting together.
The letters to Witbooi never reached him. The Bastard chief through whose
hands they passed, handed them over to Leutwein!
Basing the total strength of their force of effective fighting men at 10 to 15
per cent. of the population, Leutwein estimates that the total available military
strength of the Hereros was 7,000 to 8,000 men, of whom only 2,500 were
armed with rifles (page 436). These rifles were a varied collection of all sorts
105
The shortage of ammunition can be directly linked to concerted efforts by the colonial
powers to control the arms trade and restrict the access of African leaders to modern military
technology. Sue Miers, ‘Notes on the Arms Trade and Government Policy in Southern Africa
between 1870 and 1890’, Journal of African History Vol 12, no. 4 (1971).
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CHAPTER FOURTEEN
It is now necessary, distasteful as the task may be, to disclose some of the ways
and means by which von Trotha carried out his “extermination policy.”106
As might have been expected, the Hereros, encumbered in their movements
in the field by the presence of their women and children and their cattle and
sheep, and poorly armed and organised, were, from the very outset, no match
for the trained and disciplined soldiers of Germany who were poured into the
country.
What could the Hereros do when faced with the modern rifle, the Maxim
and the quick-firing Krupp gun? By August 1904 the German troops had
defeated the Hereros with great losses and had captured several thousands of
prisoners. The rising was virtually over. Samuel Maharero and several leading
chiefs gathered their cattle and sheep and made a wild dash through the
Kalahari Desert with a view to seeking British protection and that peace and
fair government which had been denied them in their own land.
The bulk of the Herero nation however clinging to their remaining cattle and
small stock, had withdrawn into the mountains of the Waterberg and the
bushveld north of Gobabis. It was about this time that Leutwein, having been
106
In the run up to Namibian independence there was a flurry of activity relating to the term
Vernichten, exterminate. See, Brigitte Lau’s, ‘Uncertain Certainties: The Herero-German war of
1904’, in Mibagus, Nr. 2, April 1989, pp. 4-8; a slightly reworked copy of this article was published
in B. Lau, History and Historiography, edited by A. Heywood, (Windhoek 1995) pp. 39 - 52. Lau’s
article elicited responses from Randolph Vigne and Henning Melber in The South African Review
of Books, Feb/March 1990, June/July 1990, Aug./Oct. 1990; Tilman Dedering, ‘The German-
Herero-War of 1904: Revisionism of Genocide or Imaginary Historiography? in: The Journal of
Southern African Studies, Vol. 19, No. 1, 1993, pp. 80 - 88 and J.B. Gewald, ‘The Great General
of the Kaiser’ in: Botswana Notes and Records, Vol. 26 1994, pp. 67 - 76. Lau’s article followed
on in a series of articles and books which have sought to deny the genocide, or, at the very least,
called for a revision of histories dealing with the war. See in this regard: Horst Kühne, ‘Die
Ausrottungsfeldzüge der’Kaiserlichen Schutztruppen in Afrika’ und die sozialdemokratische
Reichstagsfraktion.’, in Militärgeschichte, Band 18, 1979; Walter Nuhn, Sturm über Südwest: Der
Hereroaufstande von 1904 - Ein düsteres Kapitel der deutschen kolonialen Vergangenheit
Namibias, (Koblenz 1989); Karla Poewe, The Namibian Herero: A History of their Psychosocial
Disintegration and Survival, (Lewiston 1986); Gunter Spraul ‘Der “Völkermord” an den Herero:
Untersuchungen zu einer neuen Kontinuitätsthese’ in Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht,
1988/12, pp. 713-739; Gert Sudholt, Die deutsche Eingeborenenpolitik in Südwestafrika. Von den
Anfängen bis 1904, Georg (Hildesheim, 1975).
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declared too lenient, was superseded by von Trotha.107 This new commander
was noted in Berlin for his merciless severity in dealing with natives. In the
Chinese Boxer rebellion he had carried out his Imperial master’s instructions
to the letter; and no more worthy son of Attila could have been selected for the
work in hand. He had just suppressed the Arab rebellion in German East Africa
by bathing that country in the blood of thousands and thousands of its
inhabitants, men, women and children; and his butchery there ended, he was
ordered by Wilhelm II. To proceed to German South-West Africa and deal with
the rebel natives. Von Trotha was indifferent as to the means by which his
objects should be attained. Treachery and breaches of faith were to him
admissible. No doubt the reason and excuse advanced was as usual the inferior
kultur-position of the natives. Shortly after he took command the Hereros were
given to understand that reasonable terms of peace might be granted if their
leaders came in and treated. The subtle German felt that it would be easier to
dispose of the masses, once their best leaders were gone. In the meantime von
Trotha was drawing his cordon of troops into position and preparing for the
final massacre. Let us read in the words of two Herero eye-witnesses the
manner in which von Trotha initiated his campaign.
Gottlob Karnatoto (who was a servant to one of the officers in the field)
states on oath:–
I accompanied the troops to Ombakaha above Gobabis and near Epikiro in the
Sandveld. At a farm called Otjihaenena the Germans sent out messages to the
Hereros that the war was now over and they were to come in and make peace. As
a result of this message seven Herero leaders came into the German camp to
discuss peace terms. As soon as they came in they were asked where Samuel
Maherero the chief was. They said he had gone towards the desert on his way to
British Bechuanaland. That evening at sunset the seven peace envoys were caught
and tied with ropes. They were led aside and shot. Before being shot they
protested bitterly; but seeing that they were doomed they accepted their fate.
107
General Adrian Dietrich Lothar von Trotha, born in 1848 entered the Prussian army at an
early age, involved in combat in 1866 in the Seven Weeks War against Austria. In 1894 shipped to
German East Africa, where as the German military commander he was involved in the defeat of
the Wahehe. Commanded German forces in the defeat of the Chinese Boxer uprising in 1900.
Personally selected by Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany to command German forces in South West
Africa. Drafted the infamous ‘extermination order’. Memorable for noting that, “I shall annihilate
the revolting tribes with rivers of blood and rivers of gold. Only after a complete uprooting will
something emerge” Mark Cocker, Rivers of Blood Rivers of Gold: Europe’s Conflict with Tribal
Peoples, (London 1998) p. 328.
108
Joel Kavizeri. A letter found on his body claimed that 300 people in his group had died of
thirst. Gerhard Pool Samuel Maharero, Gamsberg Macmillan, Windhoek, 1991: 271.
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said he had come from the German commander at Ombakaha, who had sent him
to tell us to come to Ombakaha and make peace. Joel then sent the schoolmaster
Traugott Tjongarero personally to Ombakaha to confirm the truth of the soldier’s
message and to inquire if peace were intended whether the Herero leaders would
be given safe conduct and protection if they went into Ombakaha. Traugott came
back a few days later and said he had seen the German commander, who had
confirmed the message brought by the soldier. Traugott said that the German
commander had invited us all to come in and make peace; that our lives would all
be spared; that we would be allowed to retain our cattle and other possessions;
and that we would be allowed to go to Okahandja to live. I fell in with the wishes
of the majority and we left for Ombakaha in the evening, and arrived at the
German camp at noon the next day. With me were the chiefs Saul and Joel, and
the under-chiefs Traugott, Elephas, Albanus, Johannes Munqunda, Elephas
Mumpurua and two others whose names I now forget. We had with us 70 Herero
soldiers. The wives and children we had left at our camp. On arrival at Ombakaha
the 70 men who were under my command were halted near the German camp
under some trees, as the sun was hot and we were very tired. Joel and the other
leaders went on to the German commander’s quarters about 100 yards away; they
left their arms with us. The Germans then came to me and said we were to hand
over our arms. I said, “I cannot do so until I know that Joel and the other leaders
who are now in the camp have made peace.” I sat there waiting, when suddenly
the Germans opened fire on us. We were nearly surrounded, and my people tried
to make their escape. I tried to fight my way through, but was shot in the right
shoulder and fell to the ground (I show the wound), and I lay quite still and
pretended to be dead. I was covered with blood. The German soldiers came along
bayoneting the wounded; and as I did not move they thought I was dead already
and left me. The chiefs Saul and Joel and all the other headmen were killed. I got
up in the night and fled back to our camp, where I found our women and children
still safe and also some survivors of my 70 men. We then fled away further
towards the Sandveld and scattered in all directions.
After the departure of von Trotha, the German Governor von Lindequist made
every effort to get the few thousand starving Hereros who survived and were
dying of sheer hunger and thirst in the mountains and bush to come in and
surrender. He had the greatest difficulty in getting them to do so. Dr. Paul
Rohrbach (page 361), in dealing with this strong distrust of the Hereros,
ascribes it mainly to this horrible piece of treachery (worthy of a Dingaan109)
which has just been described. Says Rohrbach:–
It happened during the war that a number of Herero leaders, among them the chief
Saul of Otjonga, were shot down after (in the confidence that negotiations
concerning their surrender were to be opened) they had placed themselves within
reach of German rifles. This incident, which took place at Ombakaha in the
district of Gobabis, had the most unfortunate and difficult consequences, because
all later attempts to open up peace negotiations even in Namaqualand, were
rejected by the distrustful natives, who said, Yes, but Ombakaha?
109
In the early twentieth century in the Union of South Africa, the epitomy of cold-blooded
treachery was held to be the killing of unarmed Voortrekker leader, Piet Retief, and his followers
by the soldiers of the Zulu king Dingane. Reader Digest, Illustrated History of South Africa - The
Real Story, Third edition, Second Printing (Cape Town 1995), p. 121.
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Having completed his plans, von Trotha issued his notorious Vernichtungs
Befehl (or extermination order) in terms of which no Herero man, woman, child
or suckling babe was to receive mercy or quarter.110 “Kill every one of them,”
said von Trotha, “and take no prisoners.” “I wished,” says von Trotha, “to
ensure that never again would there be a Herero rebellion.111”
This order, be it remembered, was made against an already defeated people,
ready to come in and surrender on any terms and entirely without ammunition
or other means of waging war. In his report to Berlin, von Trotha said (see page
359, Rohrbach):–
110
Some debate has taken place about the ‘meaning’ of this order. Karla Poewe for example
claimed that the German word ‘vernichten’ should not be translated as ‘exterminate’, but rather as
‘in the usage of the times, breaking … military, national, or economic resistance’ (The Namibian
Herero 1985). One of the original copies of the Vernichtungsbefehl, ‘extermination’ order
translated into OtjiHerero is still held at the National Archives of Botswana. Jan-Bart Gewald
writes that “The Vernichtungsbefehl, in Otjherero, is printed on the reverse side of stationery which
bears the letterhead, “Kommando der Kaiserlichen Schutztruppe in Windhoek” (headquarters of
the Imperial protection troops in Windhoek). The printed document, which would appear to have
been roneoed, is a little smaller than an A4 and was folded four times. The script on the document
is cursive. The text, which is in Otjiherero, is not punctuated and contains a number of spelling and
grammatical mistakes.” Kovihende Kaotozu translated the OtjiHerero text as follows “I am the
great General of the Germans. I am sending a word to you Hereros, you who are Hereros are no
longer under the Germans. You have stolen, killed and owe white people. You have cut ears and
noses, but now out of cowardice say you will not fight. I am saying to you Herero, you who are
great, anyone who catches and brings a chief will be paid 50 pounds, especially chief Samuel
Maharero shall get 250 pounds. You Hereros must now leave this land it belongs to the Germans.
If you do not do this I shall remove you with the big gun. A person in German land shall be killed
by the gun. I shall not catch women and the sick but I will chase them after their chiefs or I will
kill them with the gun. These are my words to the Herero nation. The Great General of the
Kaiser.Trotha.
The original text – as written in OtjiHerero read as follows:
“Ouami Omuhona omunene ongenerala jo vadeutschi. Metumuembo indi kovaherero ene
mbumuri ovaherero kamutjiri mo vandeotji muavaka nu muazepa nu muazepa ozondja
nezovavapa mua konda omatui no majuru nu nambano muato umumandu nu Kamunokurua Ami
mutja kuene ko vaherero kuene kovahona ngua kambura omuhona umue na eta masninu ovi pona
50 vindano nutjinene ingui ngua eta vimiuhona Samuel Maharero mapeva ovi pondo omasere
jevari nomi rongo 250 ene vaherero nambano ehi etheje orovandoitji nu tjimuhino kuvanga
okutjita otji otji naihi ami meverura kizjatjinene nondjembo onene omundu mehi ro vandoitji matu
no ndjembo hino ku kambura ovakazendu no vavere korukuao meve rambere kovahona vao poo
meve zepa nondjembo. Ono mambo vandje komuhoko uovaherero. Omuhona omunene
ongenerala jomukesere. Trotha.” (Gewald, “The Great General of the Kaiser”, in Botswana Notes
and Records, Vol. 26, 1994, p.72
111
A contemporary account of the context within which the OtjiHerero version of this order was
distributed can be found in a Cape Town newsletter, The Owl, of 18th November, 1904. “At
Osombo-Windimbe, on the morning of 3 October, H.E. General von Trotha consoled himself for
his futile pursuit of the Herero by ordering a number of natives, who had been picked up by patrols
to be hanged … The women were forced to watch every detail of the executions and then chased
away to tell their compatriots about this demonstration of German might.” Quoted in Drechsler,
Let us die, p. 174.
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That the making of terms with the Hereros was impossible, seeing that their chiefs
had nearly all fled, or through their misdeeds during the rebellion had rendered
themselves so liable that the German Government could not treat with them. In
addition to this he regarded the acceptance of a more or less voluntary surrender
as a possible means of building up the old tribal organisations again and, as such,
it would be a great political mistake, which earlier or later would again cause
bloodshed.
It is perfectly clear from this that von Trotha definitely decided not to allow the
Hereros to surrender, even though nearly all their chiefs had fled and he in cold
blood decided to butcher this now disorganised, leaderless, and harmless tribe
in order to ensure that there would be no trouble from the Hereros in the future.
When the spirit in which this order was conceived and given and carried out
is understood, and when the real purport and object of the preliminary acts of
treachery, whereby the chiefs and leaders were murdered, are borne in mind, it
will be easier to understand that the following sad and terrible details as to how
the extermination order was carried out are not figments of the imagination, but
the sworn descriptions of eye-witnesses, and that the ghastly slaughter which
took place was approved of by von Trotha and the master whom he served.
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CHAPTER FIFTEEN
xii
Mrs May Ward’s Translation.
112
The novel was translated into English by Margaret Ward and published in 1908. Dreschler
describes this novel as ‘fiction… [but] … based on reports of persons with first-hand experience
of the war’. Dorian Haarhoff argues that the novel should be read as ‘ambivalent’ and not simply
a glorification of German colonialism. He argues that it reveals ‘… a set of disturbing questions
about colonisation itself’. Frenssen never visited Namibia himself, but claimed to have interviewed
German veterans of the campaign extensively. Frenssen, Gustav Peter Moor’s fahrt nach Südwest:
ein Feldzugsbericht, G. Grote’sche, Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1906; Dreschler, Let us die, p. 173;
Haarhoff, Dorian, ‘A Soldier in Namibia: Gustav Frenssen’s Peter Moor’s Journey to Southwest
Africa’, Logos, Vol. 8 (2), 1988, pp. 81-83. See also John Noyes ‘National Identity, Nomadism, and
Narration in Gustav Frenssen’s Peter Moor’s Journey to Southwest Africa’ in Sara Friedrichs-
meyer, Sara Lennox, and Susanne Zantop, The Imperialist Imagination, Ann Arbor, University of
Michegan Press, 1998
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(Page 186):–
Through the quiet night we heard in the distance the lowing of enormous herds of
thirsty cattle and a dull, confused sound like the movement of a whole people. To
the east there was a gigantic glow of fire. The enemy had fled to the east with their
whole enormous mass – women, children and herds. The next morning we
ventured to pursue the enemy… The ground was trodden down into a floor for a
width of about a hundred yards, for in such a broad, thickly crowded horde had
the enemy and their herds of cattle stormed along. In the path of their flight lay
blankets, skins, ostrich feathers, household utensils, women’s ornaments, cattle
and men, dead and dying and staring blankly… How deeply the wild, proud,
sorrowful people had humbled themselves in the terror of death! wherever I
turned my eyes lay their goods in quantities, oxen and horses, goats and dogs,
blankets and skins. A number of babies lay helplessly languishing by mothers
whose breasts hung down long and flabby. Others were lying alone, still living,
with eyes and nose full of flies. somebody sent out our black drivers and I think
they helped them to die. All this life lay scattered there, both man and beast,
broken in the knees, helpless, still in agony or already motionless, it looked as if
it had all been thrown down out of the air.
At noon we halted by water-holes which were filled to the very brim with
corpses. We pulled them out by means of the ox teams from the field pieces, but
there was only a little stinking bloody water in the depths At some distance
crouched a crowd of old women, who stared in apathy in front of them… In the
last frenzy of despair man and beast will plunge madly into the bush somewhere,
anywhere, to find water, and in the bush they will die of thirst.
(Page 192):–
We chanced to see a Cape wagon behind some bushes, and we heard human
voices. Dismounting, we sneaked up and discovered six of the enemy sitting in
animated conversation around a little campfire. I indicated by signs at which one
of them each of us was to shoot. Four lay still immediately; one escaped; the sixth
stood half erect, severely wounded. I sprang forward swinging my club; he
looked at. me indifferently. I wiped my club clean in the sand and threw the
weapon on its trap over my shoulder hut, I did not like to touch it all that day …
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(Note. These “clubs “ were, with bayonets and rifle butts, the weapons with
which the German soldiers and not the black drivers “helped” the women and
children to die.)
(Page 204):–
One fire was burning not far from us in the thick bush… Before dawn we got up,
discovered the exact place in the bush, and stealthily surrounded it. Five men and
eight or ten women and children, all in rags, were squatting benumbed about their
dismal little fire. Telling them with threats not to move, we looked through the
bundles which were lying near them and found two guns and some underclothing,
probably stolen from our dead. One of the men was wearing a German tunic
which bore the name of one of our officers who had been killed. We then led the
men away to one side and shot them. The women and children, who looked
pitiably starved, we hunted into the bush …
(Page 230):–
The guardsman got up with difficulty and went with bent back down the slope to
one side where there were bushes. I said “What does he want? I believe he is out
of his senses and wants to search for water.”
At that moment there came from the bushes into which he had vanished a noise
of cursing and leaping. Immediately he reappeared holding by the hip a tall thin
negro dressed in European clothing. He tore the negro’s gun from his hand and
swearing at him in a strange language dragged him up to us and said, “The wretch
has a German gun, but no more cartridges.” The guardsman had now become
quite lively and began to talk to his captive, threatening him and kicking him in
the knees. The negro crouched and answered every question with a great flow of
words and with quick, very agile and remarkable gestures of the arms and
hands… Apparently the guardsman at last learned enough, for he said: “The
missionary said to me beloved, don t forget that the blacks are our brothers. Now
I will give my brother his reward.” He pushed the black man off and said, “Run
away.” The man sprang up and tried to get down across the clearing in long,
zigzag jumps, but he had not taken five leaps before the ball hit him and he
pitched forward at full length and lay still … the lieutenant thought I meant it was
not right for the guardsman to shoot the negro, and said in his thoughtful,
scholarly way, “Safe is safe. He can’t raise a gun against us any more nor beget
any children to fight against us. The struggle for South Africa will be a hard one,
whether it is to belong to the Germans or to the blacks.”
The last clause gives von Trotha’s reasons for this no-quarter policy far better
than the writer could describe them.
The following are statements by Hereros as to their treatment during the rising.
Daniel Kariko (Under-Chief of Omaruru):–
The result of this war is known to everyone. Our people, men, women and
children were shot like dogs and wild animals. Our people have disappeared now.
I see only a few left; their cattle and sheep are gone too, and all our land is owned
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by the Germans … after the fight at Waterberg113 we asked for peace; but von
Trotha said there would only be peace when we were all dead, as he intended to
exterminate us. I fled to the desert with a few remnants of my stock and managed
more dead than alive to get away far north.114 I turned to the west and placed
myself under the protection of the Ovambo chief Uejulu, who knew that I was a
big man among the Hereros … in 1915 they told me that the British were in
Hereroland, and I hurried down to meet them… I was allowed to return to
Hereroland after 10 years of exile.
113
The Waterberg is now a tourist resort run by Namibia Wildlife Resorts. The mountain was
known as Omuverumue in OtjiHerero (‘The Pass’) whilst the natural springs at its base were known
as Otjozondjupa (‘The Place of the Calabashes’). The latter name is now used for the whole region.
At present whilst visitors standing on top of the mountain can look across the battlefield of
Ohamakari, the resort does not contain any public display about the events that took place there.
Silvester, Jeremy ‘Layers of History at the Place of the Calabashes’, Namibian, 23rd June, 2000.
114
A significant number of Herero refugees apparently sought shelter with King Tshaanika in
Ongandjera, King Negumbo in Uukwambi and King Kambonde in West Ondonga.. By early 1905
it was estimated by one visiting trader that 400 Herero refugees were also with King Nehale in East
Ondonga.. Herero refugees were also reported in Kaokoland and some travelled as far as southern
Angola, the most famous of these exiles being Harunga, who was often known as ‘Oorlog’ (War).
Eirola, The Ovambogefahr, 181-185; Bollig, Michael and Tjakazapi Mbunguha (trans.) “When
War Came the Cattle Slept …” Himba Oral Traditions, Rüdiger Köppe Verlag, Köln, 1997, pp.
176-177.
115
A translation of an article from the National-Zeitung for 26th August, 1904 claimed that “The
leader of the Ovambandjeru, Tjetjo with his son Traugott and Kajata, the most capable of the
Herero leaders, were already negotiating with the English frontier authorities some weeks ago
when Samuel called them back to Waterberg with the false news of the arrival of quantities of
ammunition from Amboland.” (FO 64/1645).
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A few examples of how the Germans “helped the Hereros to die” now follow.
xiii
In this way thousands of harmless and peaceful Berg-Damaras met the same fate as the
Hereros.
JAJ 009 boek Words cannot be … 26-04-2003 16:06 Pagina 116
in the ground for wild onions. Von Trotha and his staff were present. A soldier
named Konig jumped off his horse and shot the woman through the forehead at
point blank range. Before he shot her, he said, “I am going to kill you.” She
simply looked up and said, “I thank you.” That night we slept at Hamakari. The
next day we moved off again and came across another woman of about 30. She
was also busy digging for wild onions and took no notice of us. A soldier named
Schilling walked up behind her and shot her through the back. I was an eye-
witness of everything I have related. In addition I saw the bleeding bodies of
hundreds of men, women and children, old and young, lying along the roads as
we passed. They had all been killed by our advance guards. I was for nearly two
years with the German troops and always with General von Trotha. I know of no
instance in which prisoners were spared.
116
This originally derogatory word was used at the time to refer particularly to a community
descended largely from white men and Khoisan women who trekked into Namibia and settled at
Rehoboth in 1870. The route taken by the trek and the geneologies of some of the families are on
display in the town’s museum. Today the community proudly refer to themselves as Rehoboth
Basters. See also Rudolf Britz, Hartmut Lang and Cornelia Limpricht, A Concise History of the
Rehoboth Basters until 1990, Klaus Hess Publishers/Verlag, Windhoek/Göttingen (1999).
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117
Three Krueger brothers are believed to have been hunter-traders who operated in the
Waterberg area during the 1850s from a base at Karakobis (Karakuwisa). Krueger fled to the north
after an attack by an Oorlam raiding group, but returned with his allies and defeated them. One of
the brothers married a local woman and they had at least two sons, John and Adam. On 31st August,
1895 the German Government recognised J. Kruger of //Ghaub as ‘Chief’ of various communities
living within the Concession Area that had been granted to the South West Africa Company Ltd in
1892 (Köhler 1959b: 16-19)
118
Burial rituals were particularly important in Herero tradition and the failure to bury the
bodies was seen as particularly offensive. For details of traditional funeral customs see Irle, Jakob,
Die Herero. Ein Beitrag zur Landes-, Volks- und Missionskunds, Bertelsmann, Gütersloh, 1906, pp.
126-130
119
German missionary sources refer to an incident at Ombakaha that took place on 2nd
November, 1904 when around 70 surrendering Herero led by Joel Kavizeri of Okahandja and
‘Saul’ of Otjenga were killed. Gewald, Herero Heroes, p. 182; Dreschler, Let Us Die, pp. 159-160;
Pool, Opstand, p. 256.
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Daniel Esma Dixon (of Omaruru, European, who was a transport driver the
Germans during the rebellion) states under oath:–
I was present at the fight at Gross Barmen, near Okahandja, in 1904. After the
fight the soldiers (marines from the warship Habicht 120) were searching the bush.
I went with them out of curiosity. We came across a wounded Herero lying in the
shade of a tree. He was a very tall, powerful. man and looked like one of their
headmen. He had his Bible next to his head and his hat over his face. I walked up
to him and saw that he was wounded high up in the left hip. I took the hat off his
face and asked him if he felt bad. He replied to me in Herero, “Yes, I feel I am
going to die.” The German marines, whose bayonets were fixed, were looking on.
One of them said to me, “What does he reply?” I told him. “Well.” Remarked the
soldier, “if he is keen on dying he had better have this also.” With that he stooped
down and drove his bayonet into the body of the prostrate Herero, ripping up his
stomach and chest and exposing the intestines. I was so horrified that I returned
to my wagons at once.
In August 1904, I was taking a convoy of provisions to the troops at the front line.
At a place called Ouparakane, in the Waterberg district, we were outspanned for
breakfast when two Hereros, a man and his wife, came walking to us out of the
bush. Under-officer Wolff and a few German soldiers were escort to the wagons
and were with me. The Herero man was a cripple, and walked with difficulty,
leaning on a stick and on his wife s arm. He had a bullet wound through the leg.
They came to my wagon. and I spoke to them in Herero. The man said he had
decided to return to Omaruru and surrender to the authorities, as he could not
possibly keep up with his people who were retreating to the desert, and that his
wife had decided to accompany him. He was quite unarmed and famished. I gave
120
The first German reinforcements to arrive in Namibia after the outbreak of the war consisted
of the sailors of this German warship which landed at Swakopmund on 18th January, 1904. The
marine units that fought in the war are commemmorated by a monument that can still be seen near
the seafront at Swakopmund. Pool, Gerhard Die Herero-Opstand, 1904-1907, Hollandsch
Afrikaansche Uitgevers Maatschappij, Pretoria, 1979, p. 130.
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them some food and coffee and they sat there for over an hour telling me of their
hardships and privations. The German soldiers looked on, but did not interfere. I
then gave the two natives a little food for their journey. They thanked me and then
started to walk along the road slowly to Omaruru. When they had gone about 60
yards away from us I saw Wolff, the under-officer, and a soldier taking aim at
them. I called out, but it was too late. They shot both of them. I said to Wolff,
“How on earth did you have the heart to do such a thing? It is nothing but cruel
murder.” He merely laughed, and said, “Oh! these swine must all be killed; we
are not going to spare a single one.”
I spent a great part of my time during the rebellion at Okahandja, loading stores
at the depot. There the hanging of natives was a common occurrence. A German
officer had the right to order a native to be hanged. No trial or court was
necessary. Many were hanged merely on suspicion. One day alone I saw seven
Hereros hanged in a row, and on other days twos and threes. The Germans did not
worry about rope. They used ordinary fencing wire, and the unfortunate native
was hoisted up by the neck and allowed to die of slow strangulation. This was all
done in public, and the bodies were always allowed to hang for a day or so as an
example to the other natives.121 Natives who were placed in gaol at that time never
came out alive. Many died of sheer starvation and brutal treatment … The
Hereros were far more humane in the field than the Germans. They were once a
fine race. Now we have only a miserable remnant left.
Hendrik Fraser (Bastard), of Keetmanshoop, states under oath:–
In March 1905 I was sent from Karibib and accompanied the troops of Haupt-
mann Kuhne to the Waterberg. I then saw that the Germans no longer took any
prisoners. They killed all men, women and children whom they came across.
Hereros who were exhausted and were unable to go any further were captured and
killed. At one place near Waterberg, in the direction of Gobabis, after the fight at
Okokadi, a large number (I should say about 50) men, women and children and
little babies fell into the hands of the Germans. They killed all the prisoners,
bayoneted them.
0n one occasion I saw about 25 prisoners placed in a small enclosure of thorn
bushes. They were confined in a very small space, and the soldiers cut dry
branches and piled dry logs all round them men, women and childrenand little
girls were there when dry branches had been thickly piled up all round them the
soldiers threw branches also on the top of them. The prisoners were all alive and
unwounded. but half starved. Having piled up the branches, lamp oil was
sprinkled on the heap and it was set on fire. The prisoners were burnt to a cinder.
I saw this personally. The Germans said, we should burn all these dogs and
baboons in this fashion. The officers saw this and made no attempt to prevent it.
From that time.to the end of the rising the killing and hanging of Hereros was
practically a daily occurrence. There was no more fighting. The Hereros were
merely fugitives in the bush. All the water-holes on the desert border were
121
Evidence suggests that the bodies may not even have been buried. A German officer in the
Schutztruppe wrote in 1907 that “A crate with Herero skulls was recently packed by the troops in
German South West Africa and sent to the Pathological Institute in Berlin, where they are going to
be used for scientific measurements. The skulls, whose flesh had been removed by Herero women
with pieces of broken glass before they were put in the mail, belong to Herero who were hanged
or killed in action.” Quoted in Tilman Dedering ‘A Certain Rigourous Treatment of all parts of the
Nation’: The Annihilation of the Herero in German South West Africa, 1904, Ch. 10 in Mark
Levine and Penny Roberts (eds) The Massacre in History, Berghahn Books, New York/Oxford,
1999.
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poisoned by the Germans before they returned. The result was that fugitives who
came to drink the water either died of poisoning or, if they did not taste the water,
they died of thirst.
This gruesome story by eye-witnesses could be continued until the report
would probably require several thick volumes. Enough has been placed on
record to prove how the Germans waged their war, and how von Trotha’s
extermination order was given effect to. Many more statements have been
collected, but these as samples are sufficient. Further instances will be quoted
when dealing further on with the Hottentot wars. Evidence of violation of
women and girls is overwhelming, but so full of filthy and atrocious details as
to render publication undesirable.
When viewed from the point of view of civilisation and common humanity,
what a comparison there is between this German barbarism and the attitude of
the Herero chiefs, who before a shot was fired ordered their people to spare the
lives of all German women and children and non-combatants.
Rohrbach (page 323) says that at the time of the rebellion the Hereros still
possessed approximately 50,000 head of cattle and at least 100,000 small
stock. He says that a valuation of Herero assets at 500,000l. (10,000.000
marks) before their rising is probably much too low (wohl zu gearing). and the
practical and quite unsentimental Rohrbach bitterly rebukes von Trotha
because, owing to the latter’s senseless extermination policy (Vernichtungs
Principe) the cattle and sheep of the Hereros shared the fate of their masters.
All, with the exception of 3,000 head captured before von Trotha’s time, had
perished in the desert. Viewing matters from the economical point of view,
Rohrbach cannot find words strong enough to condemn von Trotha.
Writing in 1906, Leutwein (at page 542) says:–
In this manner it would have been possible to have saved considerable quantities
of stock and above all things to have ended the Herero war in the year 1904.
122
In fact correspondence between Governor Leutwein and Samuel Maharero had taken place
as early as March, 1904. Gewald, Herero Heroes, pp. 167-170.
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Out of between 80,000 and 90,000 souls only about 15,000 starving and
fugitive Hereros were alive at the end of 1905, when von Trotha relinquished
his task.123 What happened to the survivors will be told in the concluding parts
of this report.
123
Gerhard Pool has calculated a higher ‘survival rate’ arguing that up to 11th January, 1905
8,889 Herero had been taken prisoner, that 12,500 more came to the camps run by the missionaries
in the period up to 31st March, 1907, that up to 1,000 refugees found refuge in Walvis Bay and that
1,175 successfully crossed the desert to Botwana. However these calculations do not take account
of the high mortality rates amongst prisoners. Samuel Maharero, Gamsberg Macmillan, Windhoek
(1991): p. 280.
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CHAPTER SIXTEEN
It is now necessary to leave the Hereros for a time and to give a brief outline of
the Hottentots and their history under German rule.
At the time of the German annexation in 1890, the habitable parts of the vast
arid country known as Great Namaqualand were, with the exception of the
Bastard territory of Rehoboth, occupied almost exclusively by various
Hottentot tribes. It is probable that this area had been in their unchallenged
possession for upwards of five centuries.
When Johann van Riebeck and the first Dutch settlers landed at Table Bay
in 1652 the surrounding country was occupied by two distinct races of natives.
By the name “Bushmen”124 the white settlers called the wild and primitive men
who avoided intercourse with the new-comers and lived only in the densest
bush and in the most remote and inaccessible mountain fastnesses. These
brown-skinned pigmies, armed with bows and arrows tipped with a mysterious
and deadly poison, lived only from the products of the chase. They possessed
neither flocks nor herds, they built no villages, cultivated no lands, and
regarded all who ventured into their chosen hunting grounds as intruders and
enemies. The other race, less savage and more intelligent, less primitive and
more amicably disposed, came down to stare, in simple curiosity, at the first
white settlers. From the point of view of physical beauty, nature had been
unkind to them. Small, but well built and wiry, with ashen-brown and yellow
skins, little beady eyes (which peered through narrow almond-shaped slits),
high and prominent cheek-bones, flat bridgeless noses, low foreheads, thick
lips and receding chins, their appearance was anything but attractive. As if to
crown this embodiment of ugliness, nature had distributed little tufted knots of
dark frizzy wool here and there, in lieu of hair, On the hardest of heads. These
weird looking people called themselves Khoi-khoi (or men of men) and their
race Nama. Living in the open, in scattered villages, where water and grazing
were most plentiful, they sheltered under rude huts or “pontoks” made of grass
mats, portable and easily removable from place to place.
From the trading point of view, their large herds of sheep, goats, and horned
cattle were an asset to be cultivated by the new-comers. Their friendliness was
124
In the course of the twentieth century a small battle has been raging within academic circles
regarding the correct terms to be used and applied to people. In southern Africa this debate has
raged particularly stridently around the issue of what to call the first inhabitants of southern Africa.
For an introduction to the terms used see, Emil Boonzaier et al., The Cape Herders: A History of
the Khoikhoi of Southern Africa, (Cape Town 1996) pp. 1 - 3.
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heartily reciprocated – for a time at any rate – and the Dutch East India
Company soon built up a thriving trade.
Van Riebeck’s Hollanders gave them the name”Hottentot.” It is said that their
curious clicking language, sounding so uncanny and strange to European ears,
gave the impression that they all stuttered. According to Dr. Leonard Schultze
(Aus Namaland und Kalihari), the word “Hottentot” was used by Hollanders,
in those days, as a nick-name for a stuttering person. The Rev. Hugo Hahn’s
theory was that the word was a corruption of the low German Huttentut (= a
stupid, muddle-headed person, a fool). That the name was not intended as a
compliment seems clear. Even to this day the more educated and intelligent
Hottentots secretly resent being called what Chief Christian Goliath of Berseba
describes as a spot en veracht naam (i.e., a name of derision and contempt).
However that may be, Europeans in South and South-West Africa have, ever
since the days of Johan Van Riebeck, called these people Hottentot or Hotnots,
and the name is likely to stick to them.
The problem of the origin of this race of dusky yellow-skimmed nomads (or
“red-people,” as they, with delightful disregard for colour, love to call them-
selves) is still unsolved and will probably always remain so. Some ethnologists
fix their place of origin so far north as Upper Egypt; others, like Hahn, allege
that the Hottentots are really the aborigines of South Africa; some claim that
they are the product of an intermingling of some now extinct and unknown
light yellow-skinned nomad race with the aboriginal Bushmen; some argue that
the Hottentot is an evolved and more progressive type of Bushman (but they
cannot get over the difficulty presented by the fact that the Hottentot retains not
the slightest suspicion of knowledge of the primitive arts of rude painting and
sculpture possessed, to this day, by the Bushmen); there are others who go so
far as to claim that they have discovered certain similarities of idiom and
speech, especially in the characteristic clicks, which would indicate origin in
Indo-China. There is no doubt about it that some Hottentots are in appearance
not unlike Chinamen. The same may however be said of some Bushmen. The
writer has seen Bushmen from the Grootfontein district who only required a
pigtail in lieu of “peppercorns” to enable them to pass off as Chinese. These
were probably half-breed Bushman and Hottentot. It is related by German
writers that, when German troops who had participated in the suppression of
the Boxer rising in China, arrived in South-West Africa in 1904 and saw the
Hottentots for the first time, the usual remark was, “Why, here are the Chinese
again!”After all is said and done, these arguments as to origin are based merely
on conjecture. The fact remains that South-West Africa is, to-day, the only part
of the sub-continent where pure remnants of the once numerous and powerful
Hottentot race are still to be found. A few dying clans still live with some
semblance of racialcohesion, respecting their hereditary chiefs and speaking
the wonderful language of their forbears; but of their mysterious past, their
ancestors, their heathen beliefs and customs they know nothing. They are now
all Christianised.
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It is generally believed that the Hottentots are not an aboriginal South African
race. They appear to have migrated long centuries back from the far interior of
north-east Africa, well in advance of the southward moving Bantu hordes.125
According to Stow (“The Native Races of S.A.”), they moved south-west to the
Atlantic coast near the Equator. Then they turned southwards and, traveling
always in a defined zone, parallel to the western seaboard, they traversed
Angola, South-West Africa, and crossed the Orange River into the present
Cape Province. Stow is of opinion that the southward movement must have
commenced about the year 1300 A.D., and that several centuries had elapsed
before the slow moving tribes, encumbered by their flocks and herds, sheltered
in the shadows of Table Mountain.126 He argues, rather unconvincingly, that:–
The relative conditions of the Hottentots and Bushmen in 1652 (i.e., when van
Riebeck landed) may be received as confirmatory evidence of the fact that the
Hottentots had not long settled in those parts of the country. The Bushmen were
still living in the mountains and wooded parts – even Table Mountain was
occupied by them.
As against this, there is historical evidence that 150 years prior to the date
mentioned by Stow, the Hottentots were already settled at the Cape. Vasco da
Gama saw them there in 1497, and so did da Saldanha in 1503. In the year 1510
the first Portuguese Viceroy of India, Francisco D’Almeida, landed at Table
Bay on his way home for water and provisions. His party picked a quarrel with
the Hottentots, and a fight resulted in which the Viceroy and 65 of his followers
were slain. The others only saved their lives by a precipitate retreat to the boats.
On their way from the north a large proportion of the Nama travellers settled
down permanently on the high and healthy plateaux of Damaraland and Great
Namaqualand. These people did not at any time cross the Orange River to the
south and never came into contact with the Dutch settlers at the Cape. The fact
that Damaraland and Great Namaqualand were apparently too small to support
all the immigrants with their flocks and herds would indicate that they
numbered in all probability hundreds of thousands and that they were rich in
cattle and sheep. Before they could settle in Damaraland and Great Namaqua-
land, the Hottentots had to deal with the aboriginal Bushmen and a strange
ebony-skinned negro race – known to-day as the Berg-Damaras. The Bushmen
were driven to the arid marches of the Namib and the Kalihari deserts, while
the Berg-Damaras, heavier and more sluggish of temperament than their Bush-
125
The use of the term ‘Bantu Hordes’ in the text is little in keeping with what probably
happened. It is more likely that small groups of Bantu-speaking people, and aspects of their
material culture slowly trickled down into the southern African region, where over time they came
to be taken over or incorporated within groups already living in the area. Jan Vansina ‘Equatorial
Africa and Angola: Migrations and the emergence of the first states’, Ch. 22 in D. Niane (ed) Africa
from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century, Vol. IV, General History of Africa, Heinemann/
California/UNESCO, 1984: 552-555.
126
Archeaological evidence suggests that people have been living in the Cape for at least the
past 30.000 years. John Parkington, “Changing views of the Late Stone Age of South Africa“ in F.
Wendorf and A.E. Close (eds), Advances in World Archaeology, 3, pp. 89 - 142.
JAJ 009 boek Words cannot be … 26-04-2003 16:06 Pagina 126
men neighbours, were gradually overpowered and enslaved. This accounts for
the fact that the Berg-Damaras of to-day, though an entirely distinct and sepa-
rate race, speak what is considered the purest Nama language, although they
are said even now to find some difficulty in mastering the clicks. Of their own
language, whatever that may have been, they retain neither memory nor the
slightest trace. They called themselves Hau-Khoin (= real men); but this Nama
name, obviously of later origin, gives no clue to their identity. It appears to
have arisen out of a patriotic desire to be uncomplimentary and sarcastic to-
wards their small and lightly built conquerors the Khoi-Khoi or “men of men.”
Judging from the recorded happenings at the Cape, it is not unreasonable to
presume that the Hottentots of South-West Africa had long been settled there
when Vasco da Gama first saw their compatriots a thousand miles further south
in 1497. It is probable also that when van Riebeck landed in 1652 the whole of
Damaraland, Great Namaqualand, and the western and north western districts
of the Cape Province were occupied by these people.
With the landing of the white settler at Table Bay and the gradual spreading
Out of the settlements to the north and north-east, the southern extremities of
the Hottentot zone were slowly absorbed and taken in. Just about this time, too,
the right flank pioneers of the great Bantu hordes, moving south and south-west
from the Equator, began to push the Hottentots in the far north. It was then that
the squeezing and exterminating process started, and it continued for upwards
of two centuries. By the year 1825 the last remnants of the former Hottentot
tribes of the Cape Province had re-crossed the Orange River to the north and
had placed themselves under the protection of the “red chiefs” of Great
Namaqualand. The latter under pressure from the advancing Hereros, had by
that time practically evacuated Damaraland. Under the leadership of the
brigand Jonker Afrikaner, the Afrikaners for a time regained possession of the
southern portion, but by 1867 the Hereros had once more secured the mastery,
and only Great Namaqualand remained in the hands of the Hottentots. There
they were when Germany annexed the area in 1890.
The Hottentots of Great Namaqualand may be classified under two head-
ings or groups:–
(1) The pure Nama group, consisting of tribes which, having remained in Great
Namaqualand from the time of their arrival, were in no way influenced by contact
and intermixture with Europeans and Bastards at the Cape. Speaking only their
own language, they until quite recently retained their ancient customs, religious
beliefs and traditions. They waged war in the primitive style of their ancestors,
and relied mainly on the bow and arrow.
(2) The bi-lingual “Orlams”xiv Hottentot group, consisting of those tribes which
had returned to Great Namaqualand from the Cape areas. Through generations of
contact with Europeans and “coloured people” (as the Bastards at the Cape are
xiv
(Page 70 in original) The word Orlams is of doubtful origin. It is not Dutch. Some allege that
it is of Cape-Malay extraction. However that may be, the accepted meanings are “intelligent,” “old-
fashioned” or in a bad sense “cunning.”
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termed) they no longer retained the pure Nama strain.127 The majority of them
spoke Cape Dutch as well as Nama, and had acquired proficiency in the use of the
rifle and as horsemen. They were nearly all Christians and had in addition got an
elementary idea of the European systems of government, and unfortunately a
more than elementary idea of European weaknesses and failings, which some of
them were not slow to emulate. The Orlams group found that their brethren in the
north would tolerate their presence only on certain conditions, namely, that they
should recognise the jurisdiction of the chiefs in whose territories they settled and
that as an outward sign of submission an annual tribute of cattle or horses should
be paid to these chiefs in return for the right to live and to graze their stock in
Great Namaqualand.
The effect of this restriction may easily be imagined. No sooner had the new-
comers settled down and become accustomed to their surroundings than they
refused to pay any more tribute. In the inevitable wars which followed the
Namas were no match for their better armed and more experienced adversaries.
Before very many years had passed the order of things was reversed and the
Orlams were the ruling clans, while the Nama tribes were (with the exception
of the Bondelswartz) either absorbed or retained their lands on the same terms
of tribute and vassalage which they had formerly exacted. The dreaded
Afrikaner Hottentots under Jager Afrikaner and his son Jonker were for many
years the ruling clan. The chief claimed paramount over the whole of Great
Namaqualand, and from 1840 to 1867 their influence was felt throughout
Damaraland, where the Hereros were partially subjugated and paid tribute, and
even to the far north where at one time raiding parties under Samuel Afrikaner,
brother of Jan Jonker, were the terror of Southern and Central Ovamboland.128
The Hereros, aided by the Nama-Swartboois and led by Frederick Green,
eventually defeated the Afrikaners and their allies in 1864, and from that day
their power began to wane.129 Christian Afrikaner, who succeeded his father
Jonker, was killed in action at Otjimbingwe in 1864, and his brother Jan Jonker
proved too weak to uphold the martial reputation of their father, the
redoubtable Jonker. In the eighties, after years of conflict, the Kowese or
Witbooi Hottentots under Hendrik Witbooi had practically subjugated and
absorbed the Afrikaners, and Hendrik Witbooi claimed that he was Paramount
Chief or King of Great Namaqualand. The Swartboois, owing to their
participation with the Hereros in the sixties against the other Hottentots, were
practically outlawed by their own race. They disposed of their area, Rehoboth,
about 1869 to the Cape Bastards, who had migrated from De Tuin and other
places in the Cape Colony. With the permission of the Herero chiefs, the
127
Oorlam communities emerged on the north-western Cape colonial frontier in the late
eighteenth century around the institution of the Commando, and consisted of an amalgam of Khoi
community remnants, runaway slaves, Basters, Cape Outlaws and others.
128
For an introduction to this period of the history of Cental and Southern Namibia see, Lau,
Nambia
129
For contemporary accounts by two of the European traders directly involved in the conflict
see: Charles John Andersson, The Matchless Copper Mine in 1857, edited by Brigitte Lau
(Windhoek 1987) & Trade and Politics in Central Namibia 1860 - 1864, edited by Brigitte Lau
(Windhoek 1989)
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ORLAMS HOTTENTOTS
PURE NAMAS
(6) Gaminus or Bondelswartz. Willem Christian. Warmbad (old name,
Naochab Nesbit’s Bath)
(7) Khora-gei-Khois or Simon Kooper Gochas
Franzmann. Gomchab
(8) Geikons or Red Nation. Manasse Noreseb Hoachanas.
(9) Khau-Goas or Young Red Abraham Swartbooi Otjitambi and Franzfontein.
Nation (Swartboois).
(10) Kharo-oas or Tseib Tribe. Piet Tseibxv Keetmanshoop (old
name, Zwart-Modder)
(11) Habobes or Jan Hendricks Daberas Hasuur
Veldschoendragers.
(12) Topnaars. Piet Heibib. Zesfontein and portion of
Walvis Bay.
xv
(Page 71 in original) Piet Tseib was really an under-chief to Willem Christian of the
Bondelswartz, the Tseib tribe having been subjugated and their territory declared under jurisdiction
of the Bondelswartz chief
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The total Hottentot population of South-West Africa in 1890 has been fixed by
various authorities at between 20,000 and 25,000. The strongest and most
influential chiefs were, in order:–
Hendrik Witbooi,
Willem Christian,
Joseph Frederiks, and
Simon Kooper.
By 1890 those tribes had ceased to exist as separate organisations and had been
absorbed by the stronger chiefs. The same fate befell the once all-powerful
Afrikaner tribe of Eik-hams (Windhuk). After their defeat, first by the Hereros
and later by Hendrik Witbooi, the survivors of the tribe scattered and mingled
with other friendly tribes, whose chiefs gave them food and protection in return
for their support.
By 1906, that is sixteen years after formal annexation, the only tribes of the
12 enumerated who still retained their chiefs and their territory were:–
(1) The Hei-Khauas of Berseba, who did not participate in the general
rising.
(2) The Topnaars of Zesfontein in the extreme north, who were too
inaccessible to German bayonets and too poor to be worth killing.
Of the others not a vestige of tribal or communal life remained; the chiefs were
all either dead or fugitives in British territory, and the population had been
reduced by more than half. The miserable survivors could beidentified by name
only with their former tribal chiefs; they owned not a square inch of land and
not so much as a scabby goat. They were dumped into “reserves,” and every
person over the age of seven years was compelled to seek work under penalty
of the lash and manacles for vagrancy.
There are no figures available for reference just after the rising, but the
census taken in 1910, that is 20 years after annexation, gives the total number
of adult Hottentots in the whole Protectorate as 9,781. This figure is less than
half of the general minimum estimate for 1890.
It will be seen that, so far as concerns their land and possessions, the
Hottentot had fared no better than the Hereros, and that while the latter race
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was all but exterminated, the Hottentots managed to escape total destruction.
This was due, not to German clemency and humanity, but to the superior skill,
mobility and experience of the Hottentot as an elusive and hardy guerrilla
fighter.
It will be necessary to defer details as to the relations between the Germans
and the Hottentots and their wars, pending a short reference to some of the
characteristic laws and customs of these “red” people.
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CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
The Hottentots had no written laws. Their laws were oral and traditional. Dr.
Theo Hahn divides their laws into two classes:–
(1) Laws based on decided cases. Such laws took their origin from
decisions of the Chief Council duly ratified by the chief.
(2) Customs and superstitions developing in time into accepted rules of
life and conduct and binding as such on the tribe.
The Hottentots were very much attached to their traditional and inherited
customs and manners.
The people were divided into tribes or clans, each under its hereditary chief.
When the chief died, his eldest son was, under normal conditions, the heir to
the chieftainship, and as such he was accepted without question by his subjects.
Failing a son, the chief s eldest surviving brother became his successor. A chief
had the right during his lifetime owing to advancing old age, ill-health, or any
other good reason, to abdicate in favour of his heir. This was, however, an
entirely personal right which he could not be compelled to exercise against his
will. “Our chiefs,” say the Hottentots, “are not made, they are given by God.”
The system of government by the chief was on democratic lines, even if it were
not always in strict accordance with popular views. The chief, though heredi-
tary and as such commanding great respect and influence, was bound to act in
terms of the advice and resolutions of his councillors.
The councillors were elected by the “men” of the tribe. As “men” were
reckoned only those who were married.
Formerly this way of acquiring the vote was not so easy as it may appear.
Some tribes had strict laws by which young men were absolutely prohibited
from marrying until they had reached a certain age. Among the Hei-Khauas of
Berseba the age limit was as high as 30. Chief Christian Goliath explains that
the reason for this was to keep the young people “in their proper place” and to
prevent the elders of the tribe from being outvoted. It appears also that a young
Hottentot who too young married a rich heiress and got, say, 50 ewe goats with
her, soon became an unbearable and indolent “snob.” Moreover, the fixing of
the age limit gave elderly widowers the chance of selecting a young heiress for
the second, and the monopoly of youth was broken. Needless to say there was
no age limit for the woman.
In the council the vote of the chief was of no greater weight or value than
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that of anyone of his councillors, though his expressed opinion bore great
influence and probably ensured a majority for him in most cases.
The council made wars and treaties, rules and regulations, and dealt with the
internal and economic affairs of the tribe and all inter-tribal disputes. Generally
it was composed of the chief and his under-chiefs ex-officio and by the elected
counci1lors. Senior officials, such as the tribal magistrate, war commandant,
and later (as Christians) the elders of the church, were generally members of
the council.
This council was also the supreme court and the final court of appeal to
whichcivil litigants and criminals, who were usually dealt with by the magis-
trate or the Under-chiefs acting as the chief s deputies, could appeal.
Cases of serious import or serious charges involving possibly, a sentence of
capital punishment were generally dealt with by the full tribal council as a court
of first instance. In such cases the appeal lay to the chief in person, and he, in
common with most sovereigns, had the right to exercise his prerogative of
mercy.
No sentence of capital punishment could legally be executed without the
prior express sanction of the chief personally.
To some of the Orlams chiefs, whose military powers had made them feared
and respected throughout the country, the temptation to become autocrats was
very strong. Few could survive it. They generally contrived therefore either to
act quite independently of the council, which was treated as a mere advisory
body, or as was the case with Hendrik Witbooi they dispensed with elections
altogether and nominated their own council and officials. Thereby they ensured
that only their own trusty friends and supporters were placed in power.
Democratic government was very irksome and distasteful to a warrior-chief
like Hendrik Witbooi. At the height of his power he styled himself the “Lord of
the Water and the Head Chief of Great Namaqualand.” Letters addressed to him
as “King of Namaqualand” received immediate and gracious attention and
tohis death he was a firm believer in the “Divine Right of Kings,” claiming that
he owed responsibility to no one except to “God the Father in Heaven.”
The following “Proclamation” by Hendrik Witbooi, dated, 3rd January
1891, is of interest, because it gives an idea of the system existing at the time
of the annexation among all the Hottentots tribes. The only difference was that
while Witbooi was an autocrat to a certain extent, the other chiefs, like Willem
Christian and Simon Kooper, relied more on popular approval and the support
of the councilors than on their royal prerogatives.
taken into full membership. For this reason I have relieved some of the older
officials and have substituted young men in full authority of the laws, in order that
they may publicly perform their authorised duties. I have however re-appointed
some of the old officials as well, so that they may train and teach the younger
team (jongespan). I have also appointed two additional Elders. The names of
those appointed will be read to the community, and are as follows:–
Then follows a list of the names and of the offices to which they have been
appointed. These posts were all honorary, and carried no salaries or emolu-
ments. The seven chief appointments are those of Under-Chief, Magistrate, War
Commandant, Chief Field Cornet, and three senior Councillors. The remainder
(there are 30 in all) include “the Overseer of the whole village,” a “Second
Magistrate,” Second, Third, and Fourth Field Cornets, Elders, Junior Council-
lors, Messengers of the Council and of the Elders, and a “Corporal” and a
“Second Corporal.” It must not be imagined that the Corporal was so humble a
personage as his designation might imply. He was really the Quartermaster-
General in the field!
This is the “beloved Community,” with its Church Elders and Corporals,
which at early dawn on an April day in 1893 was cruelly attacked and lost 150
men, women and children, not because any crimes had been committed, not
because there was war, but because Germany had selected this chief and his
people as a fit object on make “an impression of our power.”
It is clear that, by 1891, the influence of the Orlams Hottentots had spread
throughout Great Namaqualand, and that, although all ancient customs were
still retained and ruled personal conduct, their system of tribal control had
gradually undergone a change, and the old simple ideas of rule and government
were being slowly exchanged for a crude imitation of the European system
which their fore-fathers had seen at the Cape. In addition to this Orlams
influence on the pure Namas, missionary influence on both cannot be
overlooked. By 1890 the Hottentots were nearly all professing Christians. and
there is no denying the fact that the missionaries, some of them at any rate, had
done excellent work towards uplifting and developing the race. The pity of it is
that, after annexation and in the ten years prior thereto, the Rhenish
missionaries, actuated by a deadly hatred for England and all things English,
regarded political propaganda as far more important apparently than church
duties, and prostituted their noble work in order to serve the base ends of a
callous Government, whose soldiers were not patterns of morality and virtue
by any means. In this way the missionaries became merely the tools and agents
of Germany, and the inevitable result was that they lost all prestige and all
control over the natives, besides forfeiting their affection and respect.130 The
natives grew suspicious and distrustful of their missionaries. Hendrik Witbooi
dispensed with his altogether and conducted his own church services.
130
The Rhenish Mission prepared a pastoral letter to all Christian Herero that was issued on 9th
May, 1904 which warned them that they had ‘raised the sword against the Government which God
has placed over you’ Hellberg, Mission, p. 118.
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Better proof of how the missionaries lost caste and influence cannot be given
than the fact that the Herero rising of 1904 and the great Hottentot rising came
like a bolt from the blue and without a word of warning. The missionaries,
living among the natives, preaching and talking and understanding their ways
and customs thoroughly, were not aware of their intentions.
Against these missionaries must it also be recorded that, knowing the native
mind and character so well as they must have known them, and knowing their
cherished customs and laws, they were indifferent onlookers at the violation
and trampling under foot thereof by German soldiers and settlers. They had
neither the courage nor the inclination to stand up boldly and defend the
helpless creatures who looked up to them for guidance and protection. On the
contrary, like the missionary Brisker, they applied for soldiers and guns in
order that the work of the Missions might prosper.
Despite this, the natives, grateful for the mere fact that these people had
brought the Christian religion to them, in Hereroland and Great Namaqualand,
throughout their wars invariably spared the lives of all missionaries and their
families. Their possessions were never touched, and the Mission Station was
regarded as a sanctuary.
A simple nomadic people never burdens its criminal law with a huge
category of crimes. Apart from offences against morality, their chief crimes
were murder and theft.
For wilful murder the penalty was death.
To prevent the possible shielding of rich and influential murderers there
grew up in the Hottentot system a law of vendetta (Kharas – to pay back or
retaliate).
If through favouritism, fear, or for political reasons, a murderer were
acquitted by the council, the next relation in blood of the murdered person had
the right to take the law into his own hands and to kill the murderer. This killing
would in such event be no crime, and neither the chief nor the council had the
right or power to intervene and punish the relative for his act.
There is the case of the well-known traveller Andersson, who about 1861
shot an Afrikaner Hottentot in self-defence, so he alleged, near Windhuk.
Andersson reported the matter to the chief Jonker Afrikaner, and as a result he
was brough before the chief and tribal council for trial. The council, after
hearing the evidence, was, rightly or wrongly, satisfied that Andersson had
exceeded his rights and had gone too far. But, in view of the fact that he was a
European and a British subject, the chief was reluctant to punish him. So
Jonker said: “I release you; but according to our law, the brother of Hartebeest
will kill you and must kill you, so flee for your life.”
Theft was regarded very seriously and was punished by severe fines and
ostracism, and even by flogging. Theo Hahn writes: “There is a deep sense of
justice innate in the Hottentots. To a Hottentot stealing is a disgrace, and
amongst the aborigines of Great Namaqualand a thief is cut by everyone and
becomes almost an outcast.”
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In wartime to take from the enemy Hereros or hostile clans was not theft. If it
could be safely managed even in peace time it was not theft either. In this
theHottentots were not exceptional, however.
To take the goat of a friend for food, even in his absence and without permis-
sion. is not, and never was, regarded by the. Hottentots as unlawful. This is a
general custom arising out of the conditions of the country, where for long
distances food is practically unobtainable. The rule is based on reciprocity, and
no Hottentot need leave a stranger s hut or pontok hungry, especially if they are
of the same tribe; he is welcome, even in the owner’s absence, to help himself
to whatever there is.
Speaking of punishments which would be efficacious under European rule,
Hahn recommends –
Hard labour and spare diet. To people of rank the application of the lash makes a
deep impression. There is nothing more degrading to a Bantu nobleman than to
receive a blow… A Hottentot feels punishment as keenly as a white man. I did not
flog my Hottentot servants if I could help it. Often a private earnest talking to had
a most beneficial effect.
And yet to-day there is in South-West Africa not one adult male in ten, Herero,
Berg-Damara or Hottentot, who does not bear on his body the scars and
indelible marks of the German sjambok. “Flogging,” recently said a Herero
headman, “came to our people more regularly than their meals;” and this view
is endorsed by the Hottentots.
In their court the Hottentots followed strict rules of procedure. No hearsay
evidence was allowed. The circumstances determined what weight should be
given to the evidence of informers or accomplices.
The Hottentots (says Hahn) avoid as far as possible the drawing of a woman in
into court to give evidence. The reason for this is the respect they have for
women. (The word for “woman” in Hottentot is taras = ruler, mistress).131 If the
evidence of a woman, especially one of rank, must be heard, generally two or
three councillors see her privately, cross-examine her, and communicate the
results to the council.
False testimony (says Hahn) is abhorred, lying is disgraceful, and a person
guilty of having given false testimony is punished according to the mischief done
by his false testimony.
It is well to remember that in 1904 the Deutsche Kolonial Bund demanded that
the evidence of one white man should only be upset by the corroborated
131
In an article originally published in 1925 Winifred Hoernlé, a lecturer in Ethnology at the
University of Witwatersrand, argued that traditionally the sister of an individual’s father was given
particular respect in Nama culture and the title Gei Tàras and that this could also be applied to a
man’s eldest sister. The word Tàras would be used by a man speaking about his sister and was ‘…
a person to be respected, not to be spoken to or of lightly’. A word Tarás (with a different inflection)
was used for a wife or by a man to his brother’s wife and her sisters. Hoernlé, Winifred, The Social
Organization of the Nama and other Essays, edited by Peter Carstens, Witwatersrand University
Press, Johannesburg, 1985, pp. 52-55
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132
‘What is first in time, has better rights’ – an early version of the principle ‘First come first
served’
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These laws and rights of the natives (says Hahn, writing in 1882) have been
constantly overlooked by traders, who, considering themselves a superior race of
men, disregard altogether the rights and claims of natives. I know of instances
where traders coolly allowed people to tear away the fence of Hakkies thorn
(Acacia Detinens) and allowed their oxen to rush into the water and make a mud
pool of it.
Originally the Hottentots were not an agricultural people. Since they came into
contact with Europeans they have at mission stations and other suitable spots
cultivated gardens. Here the first comer retained the rights to the soil cultivated,
which he generally fenced in. Tobacco, mealies, pumpkins, and corn are the
chief crops cultivated; but, owing to the scanty rainfall and lack of irrigation
facilities, no family may be said to have grown enough even for its own
consumption.
Tribal boundaries were always carefully fixed between the “brother” chiefs
and encroachments were not allowed but deeply resented. If a tribe wished to
move into the territory of another, application had first to be made to the chief
of the neighbouring tribe. If they were on friendly terms the permission might
be given without charge; but if relations were not too good a tribute of heifers
or horses was generally demanded as an acknowledgement of the resident tribe
s ownership and supremacy over the area.
As an example of their jealous regard for boundary and territorial rights the
following may be mentioned. In 1889 Hendrik Witbooi, the Kowese chief,
while travelling from Keetmanshoop to Gibeon, rather went out of his way, and
with his men passed over a corner of the territory of the Bondelswartz of
Warmbad. In November of that year the chief of the Bondelswartz, Willem
Christian, wrote to Hendrik Witbooi strongly protesting against this. He says,
such circumstances are likely to cause dissatisfaction, and that if the “dear
Captain” required anything in his area, it was only right that he should first
apply for permission to enter and await the reply before doing anything. This,
writes Willem Christian, would have avoided “misunderstandings”; because it
is above my comprehension (boven mij verstand) that one chief should enter
another chief s area without notifying him and making a request.
In large tribes each sub-village or kraal was governed by an under-chief,
appointed by the Chief-in-Council as deputy of the chief of the whole tribe.
This under-chief had his own local councillors, court, and officials. From the
under-chief’’s courts there was always an appeal to the Chief-in-Council. The
chief, however, never dealt with such an appeal without first referring it back
to the under-chief for report.
In all instances the people implicitly obeyed the orders of their chief. For
instance, he could order certain grazing grounds to be vacated in order that they
might be rested; he had also the right to use the labour of his people for public
purposes, such as mending roads, building schools or churches, opening up
water and furrows, and so on. All adult males were liable to be called out for
military duty at any time. The people never paid any taxes. Certain court fees
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were paid, and the fines levied went to the chief as a rule. He could also accept
a share of damages awarded in a civil dispute, but there was no obligation on
the successful litigant to pay. It was regarded merely as a voluntary gift for the
trouble taken.
If a Hottentot could not pay his debts a system of cessio bonorum133 was
known. A trustee took over and divided his assets among the creditors; but he
was allowed to keep a few cows and goats in trust for his creditors merely for
the maintenance of himself and his family. He could not slaughter these
animals, but used their milk. This arrangement with creditors was called ma-
ams (a gift for the mouth).
The total Hottentot population was approximately one quarter that of the
Hereros, and their possessions in cattle, sheep, and goats, proportionately even
less.
The Hottentot never viewed life too seriously. His was more of the “eat,
drink, and be merry” temperament than his Bantu neighbours. No Hottentot
would dream of drawing his belt tighter, as did the Hereros, while fat heifers
and goat ewes were grazing around. The result was that, while the Herero
waxed rich and sat with an empty stomach watching his beloved cattle grazing,
finding therein one of the sweetest pleasures of life, the Hottentot was never so
happy as when, having had a good square meal, he could doze away in the
shade of his pontok, consoled by the fact that the ewe goat just killed and eaten
was one less to tend and therefore more worry off his hands. It would be wrong
to regard the Hottentot as entirely blameless sort of person or as the Rhenish
records described their first trader colonists (the immortal Halbich, Tamm, and
Redecker), to refer to him as a paragon of virtue – (Muster von Sittlichkeit).
Even old Hendrik Witbooi, when in holy wrath he sent a declaration of war
to Maharero informing him that “I am the rod of correction sent by God to
punish you for your sins,” never lost sight of the prospect of capturing a
thousand or two of the sinful Maharero s best cattle and thereby, incidentally,
setting a bad example to the Germans who came after him. They were,
according to von Lindequist only too glad to emulate and carry on “the blood-
letting of Herero cattle by German traders” as it was done “annually by Witbooi
up to three years ago.”
133
‘A surrender of goods’
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CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
In 1890, when annexation took place, only three of the twelve Hottentot tribes
had by the so-called agreements accepted the protection of Germany. They
were –
Of these (1) and (2) were the people who had sold the coast belt to Luderitz.
The Topnaars and Geikous were miserable and powerless remnants of no
weight, influence, or standing. In fact, the former fled shortly afterwards (or
rather the majority fled) to Zesfontein in the extreme north of the Kaokofeld,
while the remainder took refuge under British protection at Walfish Bay. The
latter were a remnant of the once ruling clan under their old Chief Oasib, but
they had been subjugated in turn by the Afrikaners and then by the Witboois.
It will be remembered that when in 1885 Dr. Goering made the agreement
with Chief Manasse he hoisted a German flag as a sign of protection. Hendrik
Witbooi later came along, punished Manasse, removed the flag, and then wrote
to Goering asking what he wished should be done with the flag, as to me it is a
strange thing (een Vreemde ding).
It was on the strength only of these three agreements, the 1885 agreement
with Kamaherero, which had been definitely repudiated by the latter in 1888,
and the agreement with the Bastards of Rehoboth that Germany in 1890 gave
the impression that her sphere of influence had been extended from the Kunene
to the Orange, and from the Western Coast line to the 20th degree of longitude
East, along the borders of the Kalihari. It was under this impression that
annexation was agreed to by Great Britain.
It is outside the scope of this report to detail the protests and humble
remonstrances which the Cape Government in 1884 and 1885 made to Great
Britain, and how, in spite thereof, the declaration of a partial protectorate in
1884 and a final Annexation in 1890 of the whole area of South-West Africa
was not only approved of, but was facilitated by the then Imperial British
Government. The matter need only be mentioned in order to point out that the
late Sir Thomas Upington and the late Sir Gordon Sprigg, the responsible Cape
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statesmen, strained every nerve to protect South Africa from foreign encroach-
ment, but they did so in vain, as their representations were taken no notice of.
It is due to their memory that the unjust criticism which is occasionally heard
to the effect that the Cape Government should never have let South-West
Africa pass into German hands – a criticism based on erroneous and superficial
information and on ignorance of the true facts p should be controverted. The
Chief of the powerful Bondelswartz tribe, Willem Christian, had, since 1870,
been under treaty obligations to the Cape Government. He had co-operated in
every way with the Magistrates of Little Namaqualand (south of Orange) and
had loyally preserved law and order in his territory on the north bank of the
river. He, in common with the majority of the Hottentot Chiefs and the Hereros
had long desired and repeatedly asked for the placing of his territory under a
British Protectorate, but for some reason or other this was withheld.134
Relations between the Bondelswartz and the Cape Government were
definitely broken off in 1885, and all the native races of Great Namaqualand
and Damaraland were, against their own wishes and notwithstanding protests
from Cape Town, definitely abandoned to German influence.
The Cape Government did not act voluntarily, but on definite instructions
from Downing Street.
On 28th April 1885, under Minute 150 to the High Commissioner at Cape
Town Lord Derby stated that the German Ambassador to Great Britain had
expressed the hope
that no endeavour will be made to obtain influence in the country north of the
Orange River and west of the 20th parallel of longitude. This hope continues Lord
Derby, is in conformity with the policy which your Ministers are aware Her
Majesty s Government have adopted iii regard to the portion of South Africa in
question.
134
For a detailed discussion as to the intricacies and the diplomatic wrangling surrounding the
acquisition of Namibia by German see, Brian Wood (editor), Namibia 1884 - 1984: Readings on
Namibia’s history and society (London 1988) chps. 7 - 9.
* (Page 78 in original) See Parliamentary Blue Book. Cape of Good Hope, A5- 85, entitled
Papers, Minutes, and Correspondence relating to the Territories of Great Namaqualand and
Damaraland.
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This withdrawal by the Cape Government left Germany a clear field for opera-
tions, but the first five years were barren of results. It has already been indicat-
ed that by 1890 only three agreements had been secured, and the vast majority
of the natives looked within suspicion on the newcomers and refused to treat
with them. They still hoped that England would annex the country, but the final
annexation by Germany in 1890 astonished and disappointed them. Hendrik
Witbooi was voicing the feelings of his brother Chiefs when in 1891 he wrote
to the Magistrate of Walfish Bay and asked. “Have the English delivered us
over to the Germans?”
German agents were not slow to take advantage of what the Hottentots
regarded as abandonment. They held up the Boers as a bogey, and the Hottentot
Chiefs were told in effect:–
Now that the English have left you, the Boers and other nations will come and
take your land from you. We, the philanthropists, are here to protect you from
such very wicked people. (See Interview between Captain von François and
Hendrik Witbooi referred to in this report.)
This Orlams tribe, formerly under the well-known Chief Amiraal, had lived at
Gobabis and in the vicinity thereof for upwards of 50 years. Originally they had
moved up from the Cape districts early in the 19th century, and after residing
for a generation or so in the south they parted company with their kinsmen the
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This petition, like all the others, was taken no notice of. The tribe had suffered
severe ravages from small-pox some years previously, and at that the Palgrave
estimated its total strength at 600 souls.
In March 1894 Leutwein proceeded to arrange for German protection, for
which they had not asked, to be accepted by the Khauas people.135
His modus operandi was typical of German methods and is worthy of
record only for that reason. He left Windhuk with a strong commando of men
and artillery, and by means of forced night marches he succeeded before dawn
on 7th March 1894 in taking the Khauas Chief quite unawares. The village of
Nossanabis, where the Chief lived, was surrounded and the Chief and his
principal men captured before they were even aware of the Germans approach.
The captives were brought before Leutwein, who immediately expatiated on
the advantages of German protection from other people, a theme which, under
the circumstances, seems rather out of place, and suggested to the Chief and his
councilors that they should in their own best interests sign an agreement. It
does not take much imagination to believe that the Chief and councillors were
not only enthusiastic, but quite unanimous. Incidentally, Leutwein held an
inquiry into the alleged murder of a German trader named Krebs, which had
taken place near Nossanabis about six months previously. Leutwein relates that
he understood as a result of the conference that Andreas Lambert and his
councillors were quite agreeable to sign a protection agreement and, in regard
to the murder, he was prepared to believe that the Chief was not guilty of the
murder of the white trader, and that he could not deliver the murderer on
account of the latter s flight.
If Andreas Lambert had (as he apparently had said he would) signed the
agreement it is perfectly clear from Leutwein s own statement that nothing
more would have been heard or said about the murder of Krebs.
The conference over, it was arranged that the agreement would be drawn up
and signed the next day. The Chief and his councillors were then released and
allowed to return to their village for the night, and Leutwein retained the broth-
er of the Chief and another councillor as hostages. That evening (according to
Leutwein s account):–
135
Leutwein, Elf Jahre, pp. 23-27. Leutwein was well aware of the dubious nature of his
activities, yet as he also noted, this was, in his view necessary were he to retain control over the
territory assigned to him.
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Spies reported that the Chief was taking steps which pointed either to attack or to
flight. In haste the village was again surrounded and searched; the rifles found
there were confiscated; the horses, already saddled, were taken away, and the
Chief again captured.
Thereupon the “former charges,” says Leutwein, “were again gone into,” and
it was found (he does not say by whom) that the Chief had actually
instigated the murder of Krebs in order thereby to escape paying certain debts. As
a result his condemnation to death followed, and the sentence was carried out a
day later.
The shooting of Andreas Lambert was not a judicial proceeding; it. was merely
another impression of German power: it was murder.
Leutwein s statement is suspiciously vague as to Krebs and his murder, and
it is necessary to go elsewhere for the details. Schawabe, in his book Mit
Schwert und Pflug (page 71), writes:–
A German trader named Krebs, who, in spite of the warnings of his friends in
Windhuk, had travelled into the territory of the Khauas Hottentots on the white
Nossob to collect debts, was murdered there.
It is unquestionable (continues Schwabe, who writes after the shooting of
Lambert but, like Leutwein, gives not one tittle of evidence to support what he
alleges) that this treacherous and cowardly deed was carried out at the instigation
of the Chief of the Khauas, Andreas Lambert. who wished to free himself of a
troublesome creditor.
The fatal shot at the peacefully slumbering Krebs was fired by a Witbooi
Hottentot, then of Nossanabis, named Baksteen. The effects of the unfortunate
trader were sent by Lambert, merely to clear himself from suspicion, to Windhuk,
where they were sold by auction.
Krebs was murdered in October 1893. In the previous April the treacherous
attack on the Witboois at Hornkranz had taken place. If the shooting of the
peacefully slumbering Krebs by the Witbooi Baksteen was a treacherous and
cowardly deed, how is one to describe the shooting by von François and his
Germans of 150 peacefully slumbering kinsmen (men, women and children) of
Baksteen at Hornkranz?
Baksteen, a Witbooi, was probably an escaped survivor of the Hornkranz
affair. He came across a German asleep and shot him. The motive was clearly
not robbery, as the “effects” of the trader were not touched. After the deed
Baksteen disappears; the murder comes to the notice of the Chief, Andreas
Lambert, and he at once reports it to Windhuk and sends in the dead man’s
effects. Baksteen is not available to give evidence as to whether or not he was
instigated by Lambert. Is it likely that he, the member of another and not too
friendly tribe, would do any such work for any but his own Chief: is it
reasonable that Andreas Lambert would have gone to a stranger when, had he
wished Krebs murdered, he had dozens of trusty retainers of his own to do his
bidding? According to Schwabe the facts of the murder were well-known in
Windhuk long before Leutwein marched to Nossanabis. Leutwein knew all the
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facts. If it were unquestionable that Andreas Lambert had instigated the murder
and Leutwein knew it, as he must have done, is one to believe that the latter was
prepared to compound the crime on condition that the murderer of a German
made (as Chief) a protection agreement with the German Emperor? No matter
what Leutwein knew or what his suspicious were, he was, on his own showing,
prepared to believe that the Chief had no connection with the murder, so long
as the Chief was willing to sign the agreement. The moment the Chief changed
his mind and tried to escape (he, the murderer, who could avoid death by
merely fixing his name to a beneficial agreement), new facts miraculously
come to light, the murder case is reopened on the spot, and with most indecent
haste and without even the semblance of a trial the Chief is condemned to death
and shot. Naturally a murder of this description had to be explained away if
possible, but the explanation is very feeble, and there appears to be not the
slightest doubt that the Chief Andreas Lambert was one of the many victims
who paid the penalty for refusing to accept German rule. This at any rate was
the feeling of the Khauas Hottentots on the subject.
Living at Windhuk there are three men, the sole elderly survivors of the
tribe. Their names are Jacobus Ghoudab, an elder and nephew of the late Chief,
Cornelius Reiter, and David Beukes. In their joint statement under oath they
say:–
We were at Nossanabis, living at the Chief’s werft, when the Germans under
Major Leutwein came there. Our Chief lived there at the time, Gobabis being
under our Magistrate, Jonathan Fledermuis. The Germans wanted Chief Andreas
to sign an agreement accepting German rule. He refused to do so. Thereupon the
Germans shot him. They trumped up a charge of murder. They said Andreas was
responsible for the murder of Krebs, a German trader. Andreas protested his
innocence. The trader was murdered by a Hottentot (Witbooi) named Baksteen.
The Germans said Andreas should have arrested Baksteen. Andreas said he had
reported the murder to Windhuk and had sent the wagon and goods of Krebs
intact to Windhuk; he could do no more. He could not arrest Baksteen, as lie had
run away to the bush and mountains. The Germans then said that because Andreas
had not arrested Baksteen he was also guilty of the murder. They shot him …
The Germans shot Andreas, not because of the murder of which he was innocent,
but because he refused to sign the agreement.
136
‘Without Which Not’ an essential condition, a necessity
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sufficient, and that in actual practice the Government’s policy was carried out
on general lines, quite regardless of the details in the various agreements.
The new Chief, according to Hottentot laws of succession, was the eldest
son of the Chief’s predeceased elder brother. Andreas Lambert had no son. This
young man, Manasse Lambert, was however some hundreds of miles away at
Berseba. He was living there with his kinsmen. the Hei-Khauas, for the purpose
of attending school. Such a triviality as the absence of the new Chief was not
going to interfere with the plans of the resourceful Leutwein. He sent for the
the murdered Chief’s brother, Eduard Lambert, appointed him Acting Chief,
and demanded that he should sign the agreement forthwith. To Eduard Lambert
this was verily a case of having greatness thrust upon him.
He explained to Leutwein that, according to Hottentot views, “one has to be
a Chief even before you are born,” which was another way of stating the
Hottentot rule: “Our Chiefs are not made, but are given by God.”
Therefore Eduard at first politely declined to be Chief or to sign the agree-
ment. Eventually however he did sign it, and the incident was closed. Leutwein
is significantly silent as to how he induced Eduard to change his mind.
It was now possible for His Imperial Majesty the King and Emperor to
contract with Eduard Lambert, “Acting Chief of the Khauas Hottentots.”
In the contract
the German Emperor promises to afford the Khauas Hottentots all and every
protection within the boundaries of the territory, which will be left to them after
the definition of the boundaries.
Within two years the Khauas had been goaded into rebellion, Eduard Lambert
had fallen in battle, and all the territory, livestock and other possessions of the
people had been confiscated to the German Crown, while the tribe itself was
practically exterminated.137 In this way the Emperor’s promise of protection
within the boundaries was automatically cancelled.
The Khauas Hottentots were the owners of their land. Leutwein admits that
it was “their unquestioned property,” but, despite the agreement and the
Emperor’s promise, it was never from the very outset intended that the rights
137
An attack on Gobabis took place on 6th April, 1896 and it was during this attack that the local
Magistrate, Lt. Lampe, was killed. Eduard was killed by a retaliatory force led by von Estorff at
Spitskop, about 7km to the east of Gobabis (Köhler 1959a: 19).
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of these natives should be recognised. Gobabis and the excellent farming areas
on the White Nosob River were intended for the syndicate. Moreover, says
Leutwein, “Gobabis … was the indispensable key to the East (der unent-
behrliche Schlussel-punkt des Ostens). The “key to the East”!” but the East was
British territory? Regardless of the unquestioned title of the Khauas Hottentots
it will also be remembered that in the following year (1895) Leutwein entered
into the boundary agreement with Samuel Maharero of Oka handja, whereby
Gobabis and the rich grazing land on the White Nosob became Crown land.
This annoyed and irritated the Khauas Hottentots and their northern neigh-
bours, the eastern Hereros (Nikodemus) and the Ovambandjeru Hereros (Kahi-
mema). They refused to recognise imaginary boundaries which they disputed,
and their trespassing cattle and sheep were summarily confiscated. This made
them restive and inclined for war, whereupon it was decided to disarm them by
force. They resisted and were declared rebels. On 6th May 1896 the Hereros
and Hottentots (ancient enemies now united in misery) were defeated at
Otjunda, and the rebellion crushed. Eduard Lambert had already fallen in
action at Gobabis. Let the Khauas people relate in their own words what hap-
pened (statement of Johannes Ghoudab and two others)
The Germans wanted to disarm us by force. The Germans came and fought us.
We were defeated and our Chief killed in battle at Gobabis. The Germans took us
prisoners and confiscated our land, our cattle and sheep, and all our possessions.
The survivors of the tribe were sent to Windhuk as captives and made to work.
We were never allowed to return to our old places.
The Germans treated us with great brutality; many of our people were flogged.
Our people are now nearly all dead, only a few remain. We were not allowed to
have a Chief again. The women and girls were made to work for the German
soldiers, who used them as concubines. The majority of the young girls, even
those who had not vet reached puberty. were violated by the German soldiers.
Some died as a result of this ill-treatment.
After Eduard Lambert had signed the agreement in March 1894, Leutwein left
Nossanibis and marched on Gochas, near Gibeon. There lived Chief Simon
Kooper and the Franzmann tribe. Simon was on friendly terms with Hendrik
Witbooi, and the massacre at Hornkranz had created in his mind, as it did in the
minds of all the natives, a profound hatred and disrespect for all Germans. He
likewise had obstinately refused to believe in the disinterested philanthropy of
the German Emperor. Leutwein made a night march on Simon’s village, and at
dawn on 17th March 1894 the troops had surrounded the place and the artillery
was unlimbered and ready for action. So were the Hottentots. They were in
their rude forts, but had received definite orders from the Chief not to fire the
first shot.
Leutwein writes (page 28):–
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The shooting of Andreas Lambert had made Simon Kooper with his guilty
conscience very nervous, and had created the greatest excitement in him and his
people.
Six hundred armed and desperate Hottentots were however not to be despised,
and Leutwein decided to avoid a collision if possible.
Accordingly, with a few attendants and unarmed, he boldly rode into the
village. There he found the Chief and his staff posted on a knoll overlooking
the positions. “I bade him a friendly ‘Good-morning’ and offered my hand.” A
short discussion followed, during which the Chief explained that he was
determined not to fire the first shot, as he had no desire for war. The energetic
Leutwein thereupon broached the subject of protection, and after inviting the
Chief to meet him at 10 a.m. at the Mission House, he returned to his troops.
Punctually at 10 a.m. Leutwein was waiting at the Mission House, but
Simon Kooper did not appear. Shortly afterwards a messenger arrived from the
Chief and stated that he would not attend as he had nothing to communicate to
Leutwein (er hatte mir nichts mitzuteilen).
The Governor pocketed his pride and again rode down to see the Chief. For
three days he came and went, but always with the same negative results.
Eventually Leuitwein got wrathful; he trained his artillery on the Chief s
headquarters and delivered an ultimatum. Simon signed the document with
unconcealed reluctance and then asked, “For how long is this to hold good?”
“For ever,” said Leutwein. “This,” observes the latter, “he did not like.”
In the agreement
the German Emperor assures the Chief of the Franzmann Hottentots of his All-
Highest protection for his whole country against all enemies amid within the
following boundaries (but no boundaries are even so much as mentioned).
For over ten years Simon Kooper remained loyal to his new masters. In 1905
he joined in the general rising with his old friend and colleague, Hendrik
Witbooi. After Hendrik Witbooi’s death in action, Simon Kooper, with the
remnants of his tribe, crossed over the border into British territory in the
Kalihari. For several years he was the terror of the German settlers and patrols
on the eastern frontier until Captain Surmon, of the Bechuanaland Protectorate
Police, and Mr. Herbst138 (now Major Herbst) the present Secretary for the
South-West Protectorate, then Magistrate of Rietfontein, met the old warrior at
Lehututu in the Kalihari and after a prolonged conference persuaded Simon to
promise to molest no more Germans and to settle down peacefully under
138
Served as Secretary for South West Africa (the senior civil servant in the Administration
below the Administrator) from 13th December, 1916 to April, 1923 (Taylor 1985: 4)
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British protection.139 He died a few years later, but his tribe still lives in British
territory and has never given the authorities any trouble.
The news of what happened to Andreas Lambert spread throughout Great
Namaqualand, and when Simon Kooper capitulated there was no difficulty in
getting the Berseba, Keetmanshoop, and other Chiefs to sign agreements. In
fact, Chief David Swartbooi came down voluntarily to Windhuk, all the way
from Otjitambi beyond Outjo, and offered to sign. This voluntariness on his
part did not, as will be related further on, save his tribe or preserve his rights.
In connection with the other agreements, Leutwein gratefully places on record
his obligations to the Rhenish missionaries for their patriotic assistance and co-
operation.
It now remained to deal with the old septuagenarian who, in his rock-bound
stronghold of Naauwkloof, had since April 1893 defied all the efforts of the
mailed fist to crush him.
In the beginning of May 1894 Leutwein moved against Witbooi with all his
available guns and troops. Leutwein had asked for strong reinforcements from
Germany, and pending their arrival he was not too keen on testing the military
prowess of the most famous Hottentot soldier. Accordingly he wrote to Witbooi
demanding to know whether he desired peace or war. The exchange of letters
which followed discloses such illuminating and interesting views that the
temptation to reproduce extracts therefrom is too great to be resisted. The
letters are all published by Leutwein in his book, page 32, et seq.
The Chief replies (Naauwkloof, 4th May 1894):–
Your Honour inquires whether I desire peace or war. To this I reply: von François
knows full well and so does Your Honour, although you were not here at the the,
that I have of old always kept peace with you, within von François and with all
white people.
139
Reports relating to the surrender of Simon Kooper in Bechuanaland are to be found in the
Botswana National Archives, RC. 12/12, Sub-Inspector Hodson: second visit to Kalahari. (Patrols
to Lehututu to intercept and disarm Damara refugees from South West Africa and investigate
alleged violations of the Protectorate border by Hottentot rebels under Witbooi and Simon
Kooper.) RC.13/6 Sub-Inspector H.V. Eason: patrol to Lehututu (to preserve German South West
Africa border from violation by belligerents in Hottentot rebellion). (Interception of armed
Koranas and of Hottentots under Simon Kooper.) S.36/11, S.37/1 Steps to be taken against Simon
Kooper (and agreement with Protectorate Government for his settlement with his followers from
German South West Africa near Lehututu).
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quietly sleeping in my house when von François came and tried to shoot me, not
because of any misdeed, whether by word or act, of which I may have been guilty,
but only because I refused to surrender that which is mine alone, to which I have
right, I would not surrender my independence … I am unable to understand and
I am astonished and wonder much that I should suffer such sad and terrible
treatment at the hands of a big man like von François …
Your Honour now says in your letter that von François has returned to Germa-
ny. That you have been sent here by the German Emperor with instructions to
exterminate me if I do not agree to peace. To this I reply that if you have now
come to speak to me in a friendly and honest way about peace (which von
François deprived me of) and if you have come prepared to adjust and repair all
the wrong and injustice done to me von François (when he opened fire on us) …
if you have come solely to make peace, I will in that event not oppose Peace …
Witbooi replied asking for time to consult with his councillors and people as to
whether or nor they should submit themselves to the will of His Majesty, and
he requested that in the meantime the German troops should withdraw to
Windhuk Witbooi. of course, only wanted to gain time.
On 7th May 1894, Leutwein answered as follows:–
An out-and-out war is better than a worthless peace. And if I leave this place
merely with your assurances of peace and without at the same the your sub-
mission to the will of His Majesty, the German Emperor, it will be a worthless
peace. Although I have not been long in the land, I know nevertheless that since
1884, that is for ten years, you have lived only from robbery and bloodshed,
although in the meantime you did make peace.
Therefore I will not depart from you until you are defeated and captured or
destroyed, even though it should take months and years to do so. If you personally
find it so hard, and if you yet desire peace for your people, place your son in your
position and he can then conclude the agreement. In such a case I will guarantee
to you your life and the right to reside outside of German territory.
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because your personal ambition has overclouded your understanding. You fail to
understand present-day circumstances. In comparison the German Emperor you
are but a small Chief. To submit yourself to him would not be a disgrace but an
honour.
These Teutonic blandishments were quite wasted on the astute old patriot, who,
on 18th August, replied:–
You say that it grieves you to see that I will not accept the protection of the
German Emperor, and you say that this is a crime for which you intend to punish
me by force of arms. To this I reply as follows: I have never in my whole life seen
the German Emperor: therefore I have never angered him by words or by deeds.
God, the Lord, has established various kingdoms on the earth, and therefore I
know and I believe that it is no sin and no misdeed for me to wish to remain the
independent Chief of my land and my people. If you desire to kill me on account
of my land and without guilt on my part, that is to me no disgrace and no damage,
for then I die honourably for my property… But you say that, “Might is Right,”
and in terms of these words you deal with me, because you are strong in weapons
and all conveniences. I agree that you are indeed strong, and that in comparison
to you I am nothing. But, my dear friend, you have come to me with armed power
and declare that you intend to shoot me. So I think I will shoot back, not in my
name, not in my strength, but in the name of the Lord and under His power. With
His help will I defend myself… So the responsibility for the innocent blood of my
people and of your people which will be shed does not rest upon me, as I have not
started this war …
Leutwein, who was no match for the Chief in a verbal argument and had
repeatedly to change ground, replied (21.8.94):–
The fact that you refuse to submit yourself to the German Empire is no sin and no
crime, but it is dangerous to the existence of the German Protectorate. Therefore,
my dear Chief, all further letters in which you do not offer me your submission
are useless
To this Witbooi did not reply, and on 28th August the Witbooi stronghold was
shelled and stormed by the German troops. Desperate fighting ensued in which
German losses were considerable. Soon however artillery, more modern rifles,
and abundance of ammunition and food began to weigh in the balance. After
three further weeks of stubborn resistance in which they tried in vain to break
through the German cordon, their ammunition ran out and their food was ex-
hausted. For days they had been living on wild roots, gum, field mice, lizards,
and the larvae of ants. “They were famished,” says Leutwein, “and their condi-
tion was pitiful.” Some of their bravest warriors had fallen.
Under the circumstances the old Chief had no alternative but to agree to
Leutwein’s terms. He signed the “Protection Agreement” on 15th September
1894, and remained true to his pledged word for over eleven years. He actively
aided the Germans in their wars against the Hereros and other tribes, and it was
only in 1905 that, goaded by German injustice, ingratitude and tyranny, the old
warrior, then 80 years of age, rose and with him rose the majority of the
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At the the of annexation the Swartboois or “young red nation,” as they called
themselves, were living in the north at Otjitambi and Franzfontein, near Out-
jo.141 In 1895, the Chief David Swartbooi visited Windhuk, and in the absence
of Leutwein on military duties he made a “Protection Agreement” with Acting-
Governor von Lindequist. In terms of this agreement the Swartboois were
taken under the protection of Germany, “pending All-Highest sanction.” In this
agreement also the exact delineation of the tribal boundaries of the territory
was reserved for a future agreement.
The old Chief, David Swartbooi, still lives at Windhuk (whither the
Germans banished him as a captive 21 years ago), with a few survivors of his
tribe. When asked how it was that he was the only Chief who voluntarily came
forward and accepted German protection, he replied:–
The missionary Reichmann told us that it would be good to accept German rule,
as Germany was the Head of the whole world and more powerful than England.
Dr. Hartmann, the Manager of the South-West Africa Company, of Grootfontein,
also said it would be in our best interests to accept German rule. The Germans
promised to respect the laws and customs of my tribe, but that they never did.
Towards the end of 1896 Leutwein visited the Swartbooi tribe at Franzfontein
and there met the Chief. There was at the time a dispute between the Swart-
boois and Omaruru Hereros relative to tribal boundaries. The Swartbooi Chief,
relying on his Protection Agreement, approached Leutwein and asked him to
adjust their difference. This Leutwein avoided. He explains (page 121) that
there was no reason why “we, by our intervention, should remove what would
probably be for us a useful rivalry” (fur uns veilleicht noch nützliche Rivalität).
And this is the same man who attacked Witbooi “for the sake of peace and
rest.” Leutwein was also aware that the Chief s cousin, Lazarus Swartbooi, was
intriguing and plotting to depose David and to secure the Chieftainship. In this
140
The Witbooi survivors were shipped off to Cameroon and Togo where more than half of them
succumbed to intestinal diseases and malaria. Drechsler, Fighting, pp. 184 - 186
141
Very little research has been done, let alone written on the history of Zwartbooi community
that eventually settled at Fransfontein in the Kaokoland in the 1880s. Kuno Budack, Die
Traditionalle Politische Struktur der Khoe Khoen in Südwestafrika, PhD thesis University of
Pretoria 1972, pp. 43, 61, 166, & 247 - 249. N.J. van Warmelo, though terribly dated, did provide
some notes regarding the Zwartbooi community in the Kaokoveld, see, Notes on the Kaokoveld
(South West Africa) and its people, (Pretoria 1962).
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matter he also did not interfere. David Swartbooi also asked for rifles and
ammunition, and “was consoled with hopes for the future.”
Referring to the agreement with the Swartboois, Leutwein remarks (page
238):–
At the close of the Witbooi war this tribe voluntarily offered to enter into an
agreement in the hope that they would get protection from the surrounding
Hereros, if only by supply to them of arms and ammunition. When they were
disappointed in these hopes, they commenced their agitation, which eventually
resulted in the Swartbooi rebellion.
In 1897 the adherents of the two factious came to blows, purely between
themselves. The old Chief s followers represented probably 90 per cent, of the
tribe, and they resented Lazarus s assumption of authority. Headed by Samuel
Swartbooi, the deposed Chief s brother, they took possession of the Chief s
stock, grazing near Franzfontein, which the Germans had illegally and in
breach of all law and custom vested in their “created” Chief, Lazarus. Inciden-
tally some German military horses and mules were grazing with this stock at
the time, and were removed as well. This, remarks Leutwein with astonishing
equanimity, though he makes mention only of German Government stock, was
“rightly regarded” by Captain von Estorff as “an act of war.” Without further
ado, the German troops marched against “the rebels.” The Hottentots retired to
the Grootberg and prepared to defend themselves. In February 1898 their
position was bombarded by troops under Major Mueller. The position was a
very strong one however, and before wasting more German lives an attempt
was made to achieve by treachery and bad faith what was not too attractive for
achievement by force of arms. The German missionary Reichmann afore-
mentioned, he who had told Swartbooi that “Germany was Head of the world
and more powerful than England,” was sent in to the Hottentot camp with a
message to the effect that if the rebels surrendered, their lives and property
would be spared and they would be allowed to return to their former homes.
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I went to work for a German and was sent to Karibib. I was brutally thrashed by
this German, but had to stay with him. I was there for four years, living all the
time like a dog… Before I was sent to this German, I was ordered to receive 75
lashes for having taken part in the objections to Lazarus Witbooi. I got 25 lashes
each month for three months. I will show you the scars on my buttocks (shows
huge scars on buttocks and thighs) – my flesh was cut to ribbons by the sjambok.
That I suffered for standing by my lawful Chief.
The Swartbooi tribe thus, for the reasons given, shared the fate of the Khauas
Hottentots. The survivors, men, women and children, were employed as
labourers on what Leutwein calls public works at Windhuk.
The old Chief, David Swartbooi, referring to his deposition from the
Chieftainship and the subsequent happenings, made the following statement
under oath:–
I was sent to Windhuk and placed in gaol for three months. They made me do hard
labour with the convicts. I was never tried by any court of law, and to this day I
don t know why they did this. After releasing me from gaol they took me, as a
prisoner still, with their troops to the campaign against my people who had
rebelled owing to my removal and the placing by the Germans of Lazarus as
Chief in my stead. When I got there the people had already been beaten and had
surrendered. The Germans tied me to a wagon wheel, and as my people came in
after their surrender they saw me there. My people complained bitterly when the
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Germans ordered us all to march on the road to Windhuk. They all told me that
the missionaryReichmann had come from the Germans and had persuaded them
to surrender on condition that they retained all their stock and that they would be
allowed to return to their old homes at Franzfontein and Otjitambi. As soon as the
people were in their power the Germans broke this promise, took all their stock
and forced us to march to Windhuk.
They drove us before them. Some people died on the journey. We were located
at Windhuk, on the hill where the Government buildings now stand. We were
paupers and got food, that is the old people who could not work. The others had
to work for the Germans and got good pay, 10s a month after a time. At first they
only gave us 3s. a month. They eventually gave me a few goats for my people,
about 50, but they all died of scab and the Germans gave us no more. We have
lived in Windhuk ever since. We have been slaves to the Germans all these years.
I was often thrashed with a sjambok while in gaol in the early days, because I said
I was an innocent man. The rest of my people were treated very cruelly and
harshly. We were helpless and were captives, we could not defend ourselves. Our
women were violated and made to act as concubines. Our daughters were not
safe. The mother and father could protest, but it was in vain. One of my men,
Timotheus Richter, had a daughter Sarah, a young girl. A German lieutenant,
whose name I forget, came to Timotheus and demanded the girl as a concubine.
The lieutenant was told by Timotheus that he would not allow this, whereupon the
lieutenant knocked him down and kicked him in the ribs. He died from his
injuries and the lieutenant forced Sarah to go with him. I complained to another
German officer, who said for peace and quiet s sake I should say nothing more,
but let the girl go. I was afraid and let the matter drop as the other lieutenant also
threatened to thrash me for interfering. The soldiers also took our women in this
way, and we could do nothing for fear of the sjambok and worse things.
Before leaving the Swartboois it may be added that the German-made Chief,
Lazarus Swartbooi who had remained with his remnant of followers at
Franzfontein, got very little thanks in the end.142 When the general rebellion
broke out in 1905 Lazarus was arrested as a precautionary measure and sent in
chains with his school-master and the senior councillor to the Okahandja Gaol.
They died in captivity.
Daniel Esma Dixon at that time in German employ at Okahandja, states on
Oath:–
Natives who were placed in gaol at that time never came out alive. Many died of
sheer starvation and brutal treatment. I remember seeing Lazarus Swartbooi, the
Hottentot Chief of the Swartboois at Franzfontein, brought into Okahandja Gaol.
He was manacled and chained by the neck to another Hottentot. At the same time,
Willem Cloete, a Bastard (the brother of Jan Cloete of Omaruru), was taken to the
gaol and with him was Johannes Honk, an educated Hottentot a schoolmaster. It
was alleged that Lazarus had tried to foment rebellion in the north. They were, the
four of them, so badly treated in the gaol that they all died within a few weeks. I
was present when they were buried.
142
For detailed information regarding German-Swartbooi relations see, Evangelical Lutheran
Church in the Republic of Namibia (ECRN) VII 27.3 Gemeinde Glieder Franzfontein Anfang
1905; VII 27.2 Franzfontein (Alte Akten) Fragmente Ca. 1895 - 1904; & VII 27.1 Alte Akten aus
der Franzfontein Gemeinde 1895 - 1904 Missionar Reichmann.
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A remnant of this once all-powerful Orlams tribe was living at the time of
annexation on the north bank of the Orange River, close to the eastern bound-
ary line below Nakob. In 1897, owing to allegations of stock-theft against
certain individuals, the German lieutenant in charge at Warmbad deemed it
advisable to punish the whole tribe, and he accordingly led a small party
against them. He paid for his temerity by a severe set-back, blood was shed
and, as German honour had now to be vindicated, a strong punitive force was
sent against the rebels. The tribe was not numerically strong, probably not more
than three or four hundred and they could only muster about 60 to 70 rifles. The
German troops inflicted very heavy losses and captured all their stock and
possessions.143 The unfortunate survivors fled through the Orange River to
British territory and surrendered to the Cape Police: who were on posts along
the frontier. The Germans demanded their extradition.This was agreed to by the
Cape Government and the Afrikaners were taken across and handed back to
their German masters. No sooner had this been done when every one of the
poor wretches was shot without mercy (as Leutwein puts it Samtlich er-
erschossen).144
Thus disappeared the last surviving remnant of a tribe which at one time had
dominated South-West Africa from Ovamboland to the Orange River.
It is now necessary to pass on to the Bondelswartz rising of 1903 and the
general Hottentot rising of 1904.
143
A newspaper alleged that “… the whole tribe was practically annihilated. As an instance of
the way in which the Germans treated rebellion, there were at the close of the war twenty odd
prisoners in the hands of the Germans. These were marched to Keetmanshoep [sic] for trial. On the
way any falling out, unable to walk, were shot on the spot, and the remained on arrival at
Keetmanshoep were tried and shot … It was noted not a single native of the district attended the
execution”. ‘German Rule in South-West Africa. Some Interesting Facts’, Cape Times, 18th
November, 1903.
144
“On that occasion fifteen Hottentots, including their Chief Cupido Afrikander fled into this
district when pursued by German troops. After being imprisoned in the local gaol for stock theft
committed in this district, they were extradited in two parties to German South Wet Africa on the
28th March, 1898 and the 16th of June, 1898, respectively, and were all shot at Keetmanshoop with
the exception of one boy, aged about sixteen years.” ‘Acting Resident Magistrate, Gordonia to the
Sec. Law Dept., Cape Town, 17th November, 1903 in Colonial Office, ‘South Africa. Further
Correspondence (1903-1904) relating to the Affairs of Walfisch Bay and the German South-West
African Protectorate’, No. 723, June, 1908.
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158
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Towards the end of 1903 the continued exploitation and robbery of the Hereros
in the north, which had been greatly intensified and increased by the promul-
gation through Berlin of the Credit Ordinance, had brought about a state of
affairs in Damaraland which Leutwein rightly describes as something similar
to a powder magazine, which only required the application of a match to bring
about a terrific upheaval. The robberies, floggings, murders and general
injustices had reduced the Herero people to a state of sullen desperation. They
only wanted a lead.
Unexpectedly, and without a word of warning, this lead came from the
Hottentots in the south. The typically high-handed and overbearing conduct
of a young German officer at Warmbad, followed by the murder of the
Bondelswartz Chief, was the last straw.
The manner in which the Hereros had been treated is known. It is now
necessary, before dealing with the actual rising of the Hottentots, to detail some
of their experiences. It will be of interest to hear the views of those Hottentots
who, as one of them has stated, by the grace and mercy of Almighty God have
survived German rule and are alive to tell the tale.
Abraham Kaffer (a venerable old man of over seventy, who was for many
years “Chief Magistrate” of the Bondelswartz tribe and one of the tribal
councillors) states on oath:–
We in our tribal laws were used to the control of our Chief; he was our “Govern-
ment” and could decide disputes, punish evil-doers, and settle differences… We
have never been able to understand the German Government. It was so different
to our ideas of a Government; because every German officer, sergeant, and
soldier, every German policeman and every German farmer seemed to be the
“Government.” By this we mean that every German seemed to be able to do
towards us just what he pleased, and to make his own laws, and he never got
punished. The police and soldiers might flog us and ill-treat us, the farmers might
do as they pleased towards us and our wives, the soldiers might molest and even
rape our women and young girls, and no one was punished.
If we did complain, we were called liars, and ran the risk of revenge or
punishment. And thus it was that a Hottentot got to take such happenings as the
German custom. It was “Government” to us, and we had to submit.
Joseph Schayer, of Warmbad (who, with Marengo and Morris, was one of the
“Commandants” of the rebel Hottentots, 1903-7), states on oath:–
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Before the rebellion our people were very harshly treated, especially in the
prisons… (Note.- From 1901-1903 Joseph was a native constable in the German
police, and he speaks of his own knowledge). Many people died in prison owing
to cruel treatment, insufficient food, floggings and hardships… The prisoners
were practically allowed to starve, and while in this state of weakness they could
not stand the repeated floggings they received. Prisoners were sent to
Keetmanshoop in gangs. They were marched by road (140 miles). They had iron
rings round their necks, connected by chains to one another. If one of them got
exhausted, the gang was made to walk on and drag him. He was sjambokked and
driven on. Eventually, if he became too weak and fell, he was dragged by the rest,
who were urged on with sjamboks and was kept at a trot to keep pace with the
horses. In this way men were choked to death. I know of many cases like this. On
one of our treks from Warmbad to Keetmanshoop two prisoners were actually
beaten to death with ox reims. This happened at Grundoorns. The officer in
charge was present, and watched the floggings. These prisoners were on their way
to gaol; and they were beaten because they were too weak to walk. I can show
their graves at Grundoorns to this day… On another occasion four prisoners were
sent from Warmbad to Keetmanshoop via Kalkfontein One prisoner got
exhausted at Draaihoek, near Kalkfontein. The German soldiers then beat him to
death with sjamboks. He is buried there. I was present at the time. The escort was
composed of four German soldiers and myself; there was no officer there that day.
One day at Warmbad a German soldier shot one of the prisoners for no reason at
all. For these murders no one was ever punished.
Adam Pienaar (also known as Adam Christian, nephew of the old Chief,
Willem Christian), states on oath:–
The law gave us no protection; the German soldiers did just what they pleased.
We were helpless and powerless. Our Chief complained, but all in vain. I was a
German police-boy for seven years before the rebellion broke out. Many of our
people died in prison through starvation, floggings, and general ill-treatment…
Accused persons were never given a fair trial. They were never allowed to give
evidence, or to open their mouths. The evidence of one white man, conveyed by
means of a letter of complaint, was quite sufficient to secure a conviction for
almost anything. Our people were literally flogged to death. Very many died.
Matters came to a head in 1903, when the Germans murdered our Chief, Jan
Abraham Christian, at Warmbad. We then all rebelled against German tyranny.
The courts gave us no protection, as our word was not accepted and our
complaints were never believed… Prisoners were sent in chains to the central
gaols. They had to walk in gangs ahead of mounted soldiers. If a prisoner became
exhausted on the way he was flogged and driven. His only release was death and
many died. The march from Warmbad to Keetmanshoop was over 140 miles by
road, with water only obtainable at great distances apart. The mounted police
showed the prisoners no mercy. Prisoners were also made to walk in chains from
Ukamas to Warmbad. The country is full of the graves of those who died of
exhaustion or were beaten to death by the German police. I have buried very
many myself. They were made to walk till the blood came through the soles of
their feet. The hot sand burnt their feet, and walking was then impossible. Such
people all died under the sjambok or fell down and died from sheer exhaustion.
Willem Christian (grandson of the Chief Willem Christian, and son of the
late Chief Johannes Christian who died in 1910), states on oath:–
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Before the rebellion many of our people died in gaol owing to insufficient food,
ill-treatment and flogging.
A white man could do as he pleased to us. White men were not punished. Our
word was never taken in a court. If we complained we were not believed. Any
number of us could give the same evidence, but it carried no weight. We were not
allowed to give evidence on oath. On the other hand, a white man was always
believed and his evidence was always accepted. In this way injustice was done
and many innocent people suffered … If any one of our people was arrested on a
farm by the German police, a rope was tied round his neck and it was held in the
hand of the mounted policeman, alongside of whose horse the prisoner had to trot
all the way. If he tired or lagged back, he was flogged and hit and made to go on…
Our women and girls were constantly being molested by German soldiers, and
even officers. We objected to this, but were powerless to prevent it. We were
beaten if we intervened. This is why we lost all respect for the Germans.
On the afternoon of the 25th October 1903, a party of German troops under
Lieutenant Jobst went to the Bondelswartz village at Warmbad and attempted
forcibly to remove the Chief, Jan Abraham Christian, under arrest. The Chief
objected, and was shot dead. The Hottentots retaliated by shooting Lieutenant
Jobst and several of his men. The following sworn statement as to what actually
took place was supplied by an eye-witness:–
Jantje Izaak states on oath:–
I am a Bondelswartz Hottentot and live at Warmbad. I used to be the messenger
of the old Chief, Wihlem Christian. This Chief died and was succeeded by his son,
Jan Abraham Christian.
I remember in October 1903, I was living in the Hottentot werft at Warmbad. A
child of the Chief s sister got very ill with inflammation, and the warm stomach
of a goat was required as medicine.145 Our own goats were all grazing outside
some distance away. A goat was urgently required. The Chief asked some Hereros
who were passing through with goats to let him have one. They refused, where-
upon the Chief ordered his men to take a goat from the Hereros and slaughter it.
This was done. The Hereros went to the German officer in charge (Lieutenant
Jobst) and complained. He sent a message to the Chief, who in reply sent 18s in
payment for the goat. (Leutwein says it was 20s.) This the Hereros were satisfied
with, and they accepted the money.
Lieutenant Jobst was not satisfied and wanted to punish the Chief. He, ordered
the Chief to come over and see him. The Chief sent six of his councillors to
explain the matter and the lieutenant immediately bound them, and put them into
prison. The next day the Chief sent over and asked for the release of his men. He
said that he had already settled the matter of the goat, and as he was a Chief he
could do such things in his own territory. He pointed out that the terms of his
treaty with the Germans allowed him to govern in his own area. The lieutenant
refused to listen to these messages and decided to arrest the Chief. So that
145
For further details on traditional medicine in the Bondelswarts community see Hoernlé,
Winifred ‘Certain Rites of Transition and the Conception of!Nau among the Hottentots’ (1918) in
Winifred Hoernlé The Social Organization of the Nama and other Essays (edited by Peter
Carstens), Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg, 1985: pp.69-71
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afternoon he set out armed and with his armed soldiers, about eight or ten men,
towards the Chief’s werft. When they got there the lieutenant ordered two men to
go into the Chief’s house and arrest him. They did so. We were watching them
from our pontoks. Our people had arms. When the Chief was dragged out of his
house by the two soldiers, he tried to wrench away from their grasp, whereupon
the German sergeant drew his revolver and shot the Chief dead on the spot.
Thereupon the rest of us opened fire on the Germans and killed the lieutenant, the
sergeant, and one man. The others fled back to their fort.
That is how the great rebellion started in 1903, and it lasted until the death of
Marengo in 1907.146
Except as to the reasons for taking the goat and as to who fired the first shot,
this narrative agrees in all essentials with the official German reports. Leutwein
(page 440) agrees that the Chief s attitude was correct, in terms of clause 4 of
the Protection Agreement, wherein he had reserved to himself (after excluding
disputes between Europeans and natives) “the right of jurisdiction in all other
cases. I expect from the European population that they will respect the laws,
customs and usages of my country.”
While agreeing that the Chief was right and the lieutenant was wrong,
Leutwein goes on, however, to blame the Hottentots for the death of their
Chief.
He writes:–
While the two soldiers were dragging the struggling Chief behind them. between
the two positions, the Hottentots opened the fire as a result of which the Chief,
the two soldiers, and the District Commander (Lieutenant Jobst) were killed and
two soldiers wounded.
Leutwein s statement is on the face of it open to grave doubt and his explana-
tion may be dismissed as incorrect. It is absurd to imagine for one moment that
the Hottentots would have jeopardised their own Chief s life by firing in the
manner alleged. All the Bondelswartz leaders who have been questioned laugh
the German version to scorn, and are unanimous in affirming that not a shot
was fired from their side until after the Chief had fallen with a German bullet
through his head. It has been repeatedly pointed out in this report that as an
invariable rule the Hottentots never fired the first shot.
The question arises, why should the Germans conceal the truth then? The
reason is not far to seek. and Leutwein unwittingly reveals it himself. He has
146
It is interesting to note that Izaak cites 1903 as the date on which on which ‘the great
rebellion’ broke out, and sees it as ending in 1907. Historians have, generally, followed the dates
provided in the Official German history of the war which used the dates 1904-1907. Jan-Bart
Gewald has recently argued that the official date given for the end of the war should be
questionned. He argues that the final operation against one of the main guerilla leaders operating
in southern Namibia, Simon Kooper, only took place in March, 1908, whilst the POW camps were
only finally closed in April, 1908. Gewald, Herero Heroes, p. 141; Haacke, Wulf ‘The Kalahari
Expedition, March 1908: The Forgotten Story of the Final battle of the Nama War’, Botwana Notes
and Records, Vol. 24, 1992. Kämpfe der deutschen Truppen in Südwestafrika, bearbeitet nach
Angaben der Kriegsgeschichtlichen abteilung I des Großen Generalstabes, Berlin, 1906-1908.]
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The old Chief Hendrik Witbooi, despite his 80 years, was still active and the
most powerful and influential leader in Namaqualand. Hitherto he had always
loyally stood by his obligations which had been forced on him by the agree-
ment signed after Hornkranz and the fights in the Naauwkloof. His prowess as
a skilful and daring guerrilla fighter was held in the greatest respect by the Ger-
mans, and every effort was necessary, therefore, to keep him loyal and quiet.
This being so, it did not take German officialdom long to declare that the
first shots at Warmbad had been fired by the Bondelswartz.
In view of the fact that the German Commander at Warmbad had deliberate-
ly broken German pledges and obligations under the agreement. and that the
ill-fated Chief had been perfectly correct in his attitude; in view, moreover, of
the actual circumstances, from which it appears clear that the Hottentots had
not premeditated rebellion or attack and that the Germans were the aggressors,
one would have imagined that the events called rather for an inquiry than for
an armed punitive expedition.
What followed is indicative of German policy throughout, public and
private. It seems to have been based on the rule that even where the German is
the aggressor in the wrong, the native who objects to or opposes his conduct
must be punished. Merely a variation of the “Might is Right” theory.
The Bondelswartz were accordingly declared to be in a state of rebellion,
and all available German forces plus Hottentot and Bastard contingents, under
Hendrik Witbooi and the Rehoboth Chief, were sent down to crush the rebels.
During December 1903 and January 1904 a few petty engagements took place
in the mountains near Warmbad and in the Karas range south of Keetmans-
hoop. It was then that the famous guerrilla leader, Jacob Marengo (half
Hottentot, half Herero), came into prominence.
Before the German plans could be co-ordinated news of a general Herero
rising in the north came like a thunderbolt.
Leutwein could not deal with both parties at once, and he decided on a peace
at any price with the Bondelswartz in order that the greater menace in Damara-
land be attacked with all available strength.
It would have been better under the circumstances and in view of the great
147
The reference to Grootfontein is to a small settlement in southern Namibia, not the larger
town in the north-east. In 1901 a German force supported by a group of soldiers provided by
Hendrik Witbooi confiscated the land and property of the comunity who were deported to
Windhoek as forced labour. Dreschler Let Us Die, pp. 104-105; Leutwein, Elf Jahr, pp. 166-169.
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(1) Surrender of all arms and ammunition and restoration of all looted
property.
(2) The delivery of all persons charged with murder.
(3) The cession to the German Crown of the entire territory of Keetmans-
hoop and the Karas Mountains and the confinement of the whole
tribe to a relatively small reserve at Warmbad.
148
‘the previously existing state of affairs’
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In other words, Germany was about to repudiate all pledges and promises made
in the protection agreements, now that she felt strong enough to do so, and in
the general breaking up of the old order the loyal Chieftains amid natives
would suffer the same fate as those who had gone into rebellion.
Chiefs like Hendrik Witbooi, Christian Goliath, and Johannes Christian
read the newspapers and received food for deep and serious thought.
Christian Goliath walked into the Magistrate s office at Keetmanshoop one
day and said to the Magistrate: “The newspapers say that we Chiefs are to be
deposed and our people disarmed. Is this correct?”
The matter was reported to Leutwein, who thereupon wrote a gentle lecture
to the editor of the Windhuk “Zeitung” in which he remarked “You should at
least deal cautiously with such matters in your paper, otherwise the rifles in
Namaqualand will go off of their own accord.
As might have been expected, judging from their records. there were certain
German missionaries too who could not resist the temptation to fulminate from
their pulpits.
The missionary Holzapfel, of Rietmond (in Hendrik Witbooi s territory),
declared from his pulpit that the German Government intended to disarm the
Witbooi tribe as a punishment for their sins. (Page 294: Leutwein).
About the same the a report reached Hendrik Witbooi at Gibeon that the
missionary Wandres had declared from his pulpit at Windhuk: “God will
punish Izaak Witbooi (Chief Witbooi’s son and heir) through the German
149
General Lothar von Trotha arrived in Namibia on 11th June, 1904 to take over command of
the German forces. Dreschler, Let us die, p. 153.
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150
A heated debate took place in the Windhoek Observer at the end of 1997 and beginning of
1998 following the publication of an article by Emil Appolus that questioned the status of Hendrik
Witbooi as a national hero of anti-colonial resistance in Namibia because of the fact that Witbooi
supplied troops to assist German operations over a ten year period. Witbooi’s profile is shown on
many of the denominations of the Namibian dollar. See Appolus, Emil ‘Hendrik Witbooi: Swapo’s
phoney hero’, Windhoek Observer, 20th December, 1997. The debate continued for several weeks
in the Windhoek Observer, see: 27th December, 10th January, 17th January, 31st January and 7th
February.
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The news of the deportation of his warriors to the Cameroons was more than
Witbooi could bear. He decided to rally his tribe and to die fighting.
He issued a manifesto to his brother Chiefs, and by the end of 1904, Simon
Kooper and the Chiefs of the Bethany, Veldschoendrager, Red People of
Hoachanas, and, in fact, all the Hottentots in Great Namaqualand, except those
of Berseba and the town of Keetmanshoop. had joined the veteran s forces.
After some hesitation even the peace-loving Johannes Christian of Warmbad
(despite the peace of Kalkfontein in the previous January) took the field, urged
on by the fearless Marengo and “at all events” (says Leutwein) “not without
contributory guilt on our side.”
Leutwein wrote to Witbooi asking him why he had rebelled. The Chief
replied:–
The reasons go far back … you have written in your letter, I have for ten years
observed your laws … I fear God the Father. The souls of those, who during those
ten years (those of all nations and of all Chiefs) without guilt or cause and without
actual war have fallen in peace the and under agreements of peace press heavily
on me. The account which I have to render to God the Father in Heaven is great
indeed. God in Heaven has cancelled this agreement. Therefore do I depend on
Him and have recourse to Him that He may dry our tears and in His the liberate
us …
And I pray you when you have read this letter sit down quietly and think it over
and reckon out and reckon out the number of souls who, from that day from which
you came into this land to this day for ten years have fallen … Reckon out also
the months of those ten years and the weeks, days, hours and minutes since those
people have died … furthermore I beg of Your Honour do not call me a Rebel.
After a year of desperate fighting, Hendrik Witbooi (then over 80 years of age)
was killed in action near Tses. Von Trotha had offered a reward of 1,000l. for
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Witbooi, alive or dead. To prevent his body falling into the hands of the enemy,
his followers held back the advancing Germans while his son and a few others
hastily dug a grave on the battlefield. His only requiem was the screeching of
shells and the whistling of German bullets. After burial every effort was made
to remove all indications of the presence of a grave, and then the broken-
hearted band retired. Thus fell Hendrik Witbooi, a victim of Germany’s
ambition and a sacrifice to her blood-lust.
“A born leader and ruler,” says Leutwein, “that Witbooi was; a man who
probably might have become world-famous had it not been his fate to be born
to a small African throne.”
After Witbooi’s death the heroic and chivalrous Jacob Marengo took his
place at the head of the rebels, and for nearly two years longer the struggle
continued. Eventually, through sheer exhaustion, the Hottentots began to give
way. The concentrated power of German arms proved too much for them, and
tribe after tribe surrendered (this was only after von Trotha had been recalled).
Previously they had asked for peace on terms, but his blood-lust had not yet
been satiated and the killing continued. Eventually the protraction of the
campaign and the enormous cost created an uproar in Germany. Von Trotha
went home. Marengo had fled into the Kalihari, and with him Simon Kooper
and the survivors of his Franzmann tribe. Those who were left agreed to the
Peace of Ukamas, the terms of which were identical with those settled at
Kalkfontein South in January 1904.151 By the end of 1907 the survivors of the
Hottentot tribes, now reduced, like the Hereros, to penury and starvation, all
their stock having been taken in the course of the campaign, were captives at
the mercy of the conquering German. Early in 1908 Jacob Marengo. who had
refused to return to South-West Africa to the certain death which awaited him,
or to surrender to the British forces and by them be sent back captive to his
German masters, was shot by the Cape Police near Rietfontein. The pity of it
that even one British bullet should have aided in that horrible outpouring of
human blood.
Simon Kooper moved northwards along the Kalihari frontier, and was for
some the the scourge and the terror of the German froZ-Chantier posts.
Eventually, through the mediation of the British Government, he was met at
Lehututu, as already related and persuaded to settle down peacefully in British
territory and to give up molesting his mortal enemies across the frontier. He
died shortly after wards, but his people still live in exile in the arid Kalihari.
151
The Treaty was signed on 23rd December, 1906 and defined the boundaries of Bondelswarts
Territory. These same boundaries formed the basis for their ‘reserve’ during the South African
period. Influential leaders like Jakob Marenga, Abraham Morris and Jacobus Christian remained
in exile in the northern Cape. Jakob Marenga was shot by a South African patrol on 20th September,
1907 whilst, allegedly trying to return to Namibia to continue the struggle. Events surrounding the
return of Abraham Morris from exile in 1922 led to the ‘Bondelswarts Rising’ of that same year
that culminated in the aerial bombing of the Bondelwarts community and the death of Abraham
Morris. Lewis, Gavin ‘The Bondelswarts rebellion of 1922’, MA Thesis, Rhodes University,
Grahamstown, 1977.
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CHAPTER TWENTY
It must not be supposed that as a body the Hottentots continued their resistance
right up to the Peace of Ukamas in the end of 1906.
In the beginning of 1906, after von Trotha had left, the survivors of the
Witbooi tribe, broken and depressed by the death of their leader, had surren-
dered on the terms originally fixed at Kalkfontein. Their submission was
followed by the surrender of the remnant of the Bethany tribe under Cornelius
Fredericks. Only Jacob Marengo with the Bondelswartz and Veldschoen-
dragers, aided by Simon Kooper, continued the struggle until the end of 1906.
So early as April 1905, a general peace would have been possible but for the
obstinate adherence of von Trotha to his extermination policy. It was then that
Marengo signified his willingness to surrender on terms. All that he asked for
was (a) that the lives of all should be spared, (b) that they should be allowed to
retain their own livestock and their own bon fide possessions. (c) that the
reserves into which they were to be put should be large enough for their stock
to find sufficient grazing and water.
Then it was that von Trotha lost all chances of an early peace by replying
that the surrender was to be unconditional, that they would receive no
guarantee as to the sparing of their lives, and that they would have to hand over
all their livestock.152
Little wonder, then, that Marengo decided to fight on to the bitter end.
Rohrbach is very clear on the subject of von Trotha s obstinacy and
vindictiveness. He writes (page 351):–
Not only with regard to the menaced destruction of the most valuable us labour-
material for the carrying on of our farming pursuits or on grounds of humanity
was the policy of General von Trotha loudly and adversely criticised, but also
above all things (vor allen Dingen), because, on account of his so-called exter-
152
Von Trotha’s issued a proclamation on 19th May, 1905 to ‘the war-waging Namaqua tribes’
stating that “The great and powerful Emperor of Germany will be lenient with the Namaqua people
and has ordered that the lives of those who give themselves up will be spared … [But] … If anyone
thinks that after this notice there will be any leniency shown him he had better quit the country,
because if he is agains seen in German territories he will be shot and thus all rebels will be
eliminated”. On 29th May this final line was amended to read “ … had better quit the country
because wherever they are seen in German territory they will be shot at until all the outlaws have
been exterminated.” (Governor Sir Hely-Hutchinson to Mr Lyttelton, Telegram, 19th May, 1905
containing translation of Proclamation in Colonial Office, ‘South Africa. Further Correspondence
[1905] relating to the Affairs of Walfisch Bay and the German South-West African Protectorate,
No. 766, September, 1906).
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mination programme, the restoration of peace was further delayed and the war
costs increased out of all proportion.
In the end of 1905 von Trotha was recalled, but it took a year to persuade all
the Hereros and Hottentots who survived to surrender finally. The new Gover-
nor, von Lindequist. issued a special proclamation to the Hereros offering them
work and promising to spare the lives of all who came in and surrendered
voluntarily.153 On these terms also the Witboois and the Bethany people even-
tually surrendered, and gradually opposition became weaker and weaker until
the general Peace of Ukamas was agreed to in the end of 1905.
The following will show how far their surrender brought peace and
happiness to the natives.
Joseph Schayer (Commandant under Marengo) states under oath:–
I was never captured by the Germans, and remained in the field until peace was
made in end of 1906 or beginning 1907… We were so ordered by our Chief to
spare all women and children. The missionaries and the English and Dutch
settlers were not molested by us if they remained on their farms. When we
captured German soldiers we always released them after taking their arms and
ammunition. We fought fairly, and only killed in battle. The Germans, on the
other hand, killed all who fell into their hands. There was no mercy, even women
and children were killed. When we eventually made peace we had lost
everything. We had nothing to live on. We used to eat the dead horses and mules
of Germans which we found on the veld.
Adam Pienaar (nephew of the old Chief Willem Christian) states on oath:–
I took the field with my people and was a field cornet in the Commando of the
leader Abraham Morris (under Marengo)… I was in the field for nearly three
years. Just before the rebellion ended I was badly wounded in action, in the face
and groin, and my people carried me into British territory. I returned to this
country after everything was settled. Our Commandant ordered us not to molest
women and children in any way. We were all Christians, and did not kill prisoners
or non-combatants. The Germans, on the other hand, spared no one. They killed
all prisoners, wounded and unwounded. Women, girls and little boys were not
spared either. That is why we fought to the bitter end, as we knew that surrender
meant death. It was only after three years of war that the Germans got tired and
made peace with us on terms we could accept.
Owing to their superior mobility and knowledge of the country the Hottentot
losses in actual battle were probably smaller than those of the Germans, and the
people who survived in the field to the bitter end were better off than the
Witboois and Bethany tribes which had surrendered earlier.
After von Trotha had left and surrenders were once more possible, the
Germans decided to use their prisoners (men and women) as labourer on the
153
Upon assuming office in late 1905, the new civilian governor of the territory, Friedrich von
Lindequist, issued a proclamation to the Herero still hiding in the field. In it he urged the Herero
to give themselves up. Gewald, Herero Heroes, p. 195.
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The Hereros and Hottentots were treated alike and in some cases herded
together. These statements refer (except where special mention is made to the
contrary) therefore to the treatment of all captives.
Benjamin Burger (Dutch South African) states on oath:–
In 1904 I was living on the farm Rietkuil, in the Gibeon district. I served as a
guide to the German troops … when the Germans were fighting the Witboois
under Hendrik Witbooi. I accompanied the troops from Gibeon to Koses on the
154
A contemporary intelligence report stated that at Luderitz “Native women break stones for
railroad, work on jetty off-loading, and do other work about camp. They are badly fed and appear
to be weak” (Major Berrange, Upington to Commissioner, Cape Mounted Police, Cape Town, 18th
November, 1905 in Colonial Office, ‘South Africa. Further Correspondence (1905) relating to the
Affairs of Walfisch Bay and the German South-West African Protectorate, No. 766, September,
1906.
155
The 94 mile Lüderitz-Aus railway line was reported to have been built between 27th
December, 1905 and 1st November, 1906 and have employed “250 white engineers, gangers and
workmen, 95 officers and men of No. 2 Railway Company, some 900 prisoners of war (our
emphasis), and a small number of Cape boys (Despatch, Colonel Trench, Military Attaché, British
Embassy, Berlin to Ambassador, Sir F. Lascelles, 22nd April, 1907. Colonial Office, ‘South Africa.
Further Correspondence [1907] relating to the Affairs of Walfisch Bay and the German South-West
African Protectorate’, No. 868, June, 1908.
156
The British Military Attaché in Namibia at the time reported on the ‘exposure and lack of
sanitation’ at Shark Island and wrote of the prisoners (‘if they still exist’) that “it is not easy to avoid
the impression that the extinction of the tribe would be welcomed by the authorities. The hardness
of their fate (anglice, harshness of treatment) excited even the sympathy of two officers who had
known them, and who reminded me that they [the Witbooi – eds] never murdered or ill-treated
civilians or prisoners, but wager war without cruelty, and proved useful allies against the Hereros
… I have observed, however, that a quarter of a century of Colonial Empire has not sufficed to
teach the fact that a black man is a human being (‘British Military Attaché, Col. F. Trench to British
Embassy, Berlin, 21st November, 1906).
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Norop River. We had a fight that morning and took the Hottentot camp. The
Commanding Officer gave instructions to search for natives along the river-bed
near the camp. We found thirteen women and old men in a cave … As they came
out of the cave each native was shot dead. This was done to avoid the trouble of
escorting them to Gibeon… That same day a German soldier raped a young
native girl about 16 to 18 years of age. I came upon him in the veld. After he had
raped her he stuck his bayonet through her stomach and then shot her…
I was in Gibeon when two Hottentots surrendered in terms of a Proclamation
issued by the German Government to the effect that any natives surrendering
would be protected. Ober-Lieutenant Zweinicke, who was in charge, said the two
Hottentots had only come in for the purpose of spying, and without trial he
ordered them to be hanged. I was present the next day when they were hanged by
the soldiers.
Edward Fredericks (son of the old Chief Joseph Fredericks and at present
headman of the Bethany Hottentots) states on oath:–
In 1906 the Germans took me a prisoner after we had made peace, and sent me
with about a thousand other Hottentots to Aus, thence to Luderitzbucht, and
finally to Shark Island.157 We were placed on the island, men, women, and
children. We were beaten daily by the Germans, who used sjamboks. They were
most cruel to us. We lived in tents on the island; food, blankets, and lashes were
given to us in plenty, and the young girls were violated at night by the guards. Six
months later we went by boat to Swakopmund, and thence by train to Karibib.
Lots of my people died on Shark Island. I put in a list of those who died. (Note.
This list comprises 168 males, including the Chief, Cornelius Fredericks, 97
females, 66 children, and also 18 Bushwomen and children) … but it is not
complete. I gave up compiling it, as I was afraid we were all going to die. We
remained at Karibib six months, and were returned to Shark Island for a further
six months, when we were again removed by sea to Karibib and thence to
Okawayo, where we remained till 1915, when the British sent us back by train to
Bethany. We had to work for the troops and received wages and a good deal of
157
No trace of the camp, nor monument to those that died on it can be found on the island today.
Silvester, Jeremy & Erichsen, Casper ‘The Angel of Death: Luderitz’s Forgotten Concentration
Camp’ The Namibian, 16th February, 2001
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lashes with sjamboks. I received l0s. per month, and later 20s. per month, and
other men received 2s. per month for a year, but this only commenced in 1911.
Lots of my people died in Damaraland …
This statement will indicate what the German peace terms were really worth.
In violation thereof these people were kept in captivity under such conditions
that the majority died, and eventually they were permanently exiled in North
Damaraland as forced labourers. It was only after the British conquest that the
survivors returned to their old homes at Bethany.
Fritz Isaac (son of the Under-Chief to the Witboois, Samuel Isaac158) states
on oath):–
After the war I was sent to Shark Island by the Germans. We remained on the
island one year. 3,500 Hottentots and Kaffirs were sent to the island and 193
returned. 3,307 died of the island.
The figures given and the treatment are corroborated by other Hottentots who
survived this deportation.
In addition to the 115 men sent to the Cameroons, a further 93 were sent
with young Hendrik Witbooi later on. Of these 51 died in exile, and of the
survivors some were allowed to return to South-West Africa about 1910, while
the remainder still in exile, were released by the British columns in 1916.
Thomas Alfred Hite (who has lived in South-West Africa since 1881), states
on oath:–
About the the the railway to Aus was completed, I was at Aus waiting to transport
goods. Close to the outspan was the Herero camp, where the Germans had a
number of native prisoners taken in the native rising. I personally saw two
German soldiers in broad daylight grab hold of two little females, about 13 to 15
158
Also described as the ‘scribe’ and ‘Secretary’ to Hendrik Witbooi. The famous Hendrik
Witbooi Diaries might therefore contain Samuel Isaac’s handwriting (Gugelberger 1984: 95, 103)
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years of age, and flog them until they were limp. They then dragged these
children into their quarters and violated them. The screams were so pitiful that I
left.
Johann Noothout159 (a Hollander and a naturalised British subject) states on
oath:–
I left Cape Town during the year 1906, and signed on with the Protectorate troops
in South-West Africa. I arrived at Luderitzbucht, and after staying there a few
minutes I perceived nearly 500 native women lying on the beach, all bearing
indications of being slowly starved to death. Every morning and towards evening
four women carried a stretcher containing about four or five corpses, and they had
also to dig the graves and bury them. I then started to trek to Kubub and Aus, and
on the road I discovered bodies of native women lying between stones and
devoured by birds of prey. Some bore signs of having been beaten to death … If
a prisoner were found outside the Herero prisoners camp, he would be brought
before the Lieutenant and flogged with a sjambok. Fifty lashes were generally
imposed. The manner in which the flogging was carried out was the most cruel
imaginable … pieces of flesh would fly from the victim’s body into the air.
My observations during my stay in the country (in the German time) gave me
the opinion that the Germans are absolutely unfit to colonise, as their atrocious
crimes and cold-bloodied murders were committed with one object to extinguish
the native race.
159
The name ‘J. Noothout’ can be found on an official German list of those employed in the
Luderitz district dated 15th March, 1907. NAN GLU 331 ‘Listen der im dienste der Truppe
befindlichen buren und kapboys’, Aus, 15th March, 1907. Thanks to Casper Erichsen for this
reference.
160
A series of disturbing photographs taken at the camp are displayed and discussed in ‘”Wie
Vieh wurden hunderte zu Tode getrieben und wie Vieh begraben”: Fotodokumente aus dem
duetsche konzentrationslager in Swakopmund/Namibia, 1904-1908’ in Zeitschrift für Geschichts-
wissenschaft Vol. 49 (3), 2001. Jeff Gaydish consulted local German records which showed that in
the period 29th January, 1905 to 6th March, 1906 four-fifths of the 1,224 ‘native deaths’ in
Swakopmund consisted of residents of the prison camp. See Gaydish, Jeff, ‘Fair Treatment is
guaranteed to them’: The Swakopmund Prisoner-of-War Camp, 1905-1908’, paper presented at the
‘Public History, Forgotten History’ Conference, University of Namibia, August, 2000; Gewald,
Herero Heroes, pp. 188 – 190
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to each Scotch-cart and were made to pull like draught animals.161 Many were
half-starved and weak, and died of sheer exhaustion. Those who did not work
well were brutally flogged with sjamboks. I even saw women knocked down with
pick handles. The German soldiers did this. I personally saw six women (Herero
girls) murdered by German soldiers. They were ripped open within bayonets. I
saw the bodies. I was there for six months, and the Hereros died daily in large
numbers as a result of exhaustion, ill-treatment and exposure.162 They were poorly
fed, and often begged me and other Cape boys for a little food… The soldiers
used the young Herero girls to satisfy their passions. Prisoners continued to conic
in while I was there; but I don t think half of them survived the treatment they
received.
After six months at Swakopmund I was sent to Karibib towards the end of
September 1904. (Note. Von Trotha’s extermination order was issued about
August 1904.)163 There I also saw an enclosure with Hereros waiting for transport
to Swakopmund. Many were dying of starvation and exhaustion. They were all
very thin and worn out. They were not made to work so hard at Karibib, and
appeared to be less harshly treated.
161
A statement made by a South African, James Tolibadi, on 11th August, 1906 (after having
spent seven months as a ‘Foreman Labourer’ in Swakopmund) seems to confirm this allegation.
Tolibadi stated – “These unfortunate women are daily compelled to carry heavy iron for
construction work, also big stacks of compressed fodder. I have often noticed cases where women
have fallen under the load and have been made to go on by being thrashed and kicked by the
soldiers and conductors. The rations supplied to the women are insufficient and they are made to
cook the food themselves. They are always hungry, and we, labourers from the Cape Colony, have
frequently thrown food into their camp.
The women in many cases are not properly clothed. It is a common thing to see women going
about in public almost naked … Old women are also made to work and are constantly kicked and
thrashed by soldiers.
This treatment is meted out in the presence of the German officers, and I have never noticed
any officers interfering. (Affidavit attached to ‘Ministers to Governor, 22nd August, 1906 Cape
Archives, GH 23/97, 1906).
162
In 1916 a Doctor visiting Swakopmund noted that “Beyond the European cemetery is what
is said to be the native burial-place. Rows and rows of little heaps of sand occupy about a thousand
yards of desert. Some of these heaps have rude little crosses or sticks placed on them. It was very
puzzling to explain why so many natives were buried near Swakopmund, in a place that was not
even enclosed.” The wind-swept mounds can still be made out today, but are gradually being
eroded by the elements and local people riding ‘dune buggies’ over the site. It seems likely that this
neglected barren memorial contains the graves of many of those who died in the Swakopmund
camp. A student survey found one surviving gravestone on the site that dated from 1903. Walker,
A Doctor’s Diary in Damaraland, quoted in Silvester, Jeremy ‘A Living Cemetery in Swakop’, The
Namibian Weekender, 21st November, 1999. Erichsen, Casper ‘A Legacy of Neglect’, The
Namibian Weekender, 11th December, 1998.
163
The order was actually not issued until 2nd October, 1904 and was officially replaced by an
order from the Kaiser on 8th December, 1904, although new instructions had apparently already
been issued by the new Governor, von Lindequist, at least a week earlier. Oermann, Nils Ole
Mission, Church and State Relations in South West Africa under German Rule, (1884-1915), Franz
Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, 1999: 99
164
According to the Rhenish Mission archives Samuel Kariko was sent to Lüderitz by the
mission to minister to prisoners there. Gewald, Herero Heroes, p. 199
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Plate 3: Condition of Herero on surrender after having been driven into the
desert.
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When von Trotha left, we were advised of a circular which the new Governor, von
Lindequist, had issued, in which he promised to spare the lives of our people if
we came in from the bush and mountains where we lived like hunted game. We
then began to come in. I went to Okambahe, near my old home, and surrendered.
We then had no cattle left, and more than three-quarters of our people had
perished, far more. There were only a few thousands of us left, and we were
walking skeletons, with no flesh, only skin and bones. They collected us in groups
and made us work for the little food we got. I was sent down with others to an
island far in the south, at Luderitzbucht. There on that island were thousands of
Herero and Hottentot prisoners. We had to live there. Men, women and children
were all huddled together. We had no proper clothing, no blankets, and the night
air on the sea was bitterly cold. The wet sea fogs drenched us and made our teeth
chatter. The people died there like flies that had been poisoned. The great majority
died there. The little children and the old people died first, and then the women
and the weaker men. No day passed without many deaths. We begged and prayed
and appealed for leave to go back to our own country, which is warmer, but the
Germans refused. Those men who were fit had to work during the day in the
harbour and railway depots. The younger women were selected by the soldiers
and taken to their camps as concubines.165
Soon the greater majority of the prisoners had died, and then the Germans
began to treat us better. A Captain von Zulow took charge. And he was more
humane than the others. After being there over a year, those of us who had
survived were allowed to return home. After all was over, the survivors of our
race were merely slaves.
165
There are numerous references in the Blue Book to allegations of sexual abuse in the prison
camps. Concerns about the low birth rate in the post-war Herero community led the South African
administration to send Dr Simpson-Wells to Namibia in 1920 to investigate claims that what one
might today call post-traumatic stress syndrome was leading to a high rate of abortion and ‘race
suicide’ (ADM 76 1534/6). A South African MP later interviewed an unidentified ‘group of the
most intelligent and leading Herero’ who blamed the low birth rate on the recent history of sexual
abuse – “‘At Windhoek a house of prostitution was opened for the German military. Our daughters
were placed in it and when they returned from there and got married to Herero men, they were
sterile. Our wives in this way also infected us and we too became sterile’ … they said that before
their tribal life was destroyed … even the name for gonorrhea was unknown in their language. The
word for gonorrhea now is Xgams, a Damara word. Why such a term did not exist in their language
is because the disease was unknown. Another word for it now with them is ‘trepper’, which they
have adopted from the German word for it.” Samuel Kutako in a statement to Major O’Reilly not
included in the Blue Book complained that “The [Herero] girls are interfered with by Germans
when they are quite young … There is a great deal of sexual disease among the people and it
spreads as a result of this immorality.” Great Britain, ‘Correspondence relating to the Wishes of the
Natives of the German Colonies as to their Future Government’, HMSO, London, 1918: p. 13,
Steenkamp, W.P. Is the South-West African Herero Committing Race Suicide?, 1944: pp. 10, 18-
19. For a more detailed discussion of this issue see Wallace, Marion Wallace ‘Health & Society in
Windhoek, Namibia, 1915-45’ (PhD Thesis, University of London, 1997).
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… The young girls were selected and taken as concubines for soldiers; but even
the married women were assaulted and interfered with … it was one continuous
ill-treatment… When the railways were completed and the harbour works, we
were sent out to towns and to farms to work. We were distributed and allocated
to farmers, whether we liked them or not.
weeks from today, no Herero habitations will be searched after and taken, as I
wish to give you time personally to come in peacefully to me and surrender
yourselves. Come to Omburo and Otjihaenena! Your Missionaries will be sent
there by me.166 They will also take provisions with them, so that your first and
great hunger may be appeased. Some small stock will also be left for provisional
use of your wives and children in so far as you still possess such for their support.
Those who are strong and can work will, when they work with exceptional dili-
gence, receive a small wage. No European soldiers will be stationed at Omburo
and Otjihaenena. so that you need not have fear and imagine that further shooting
will take place. The sooner you come in and surrender your arms, the sooner can
the question of amelioration of the present lot of your captive fellow tribesmen be
considered and their freedom later again given to them. If Omburo and Otjihae-
nena are too far away, anyone may hand in the arms at any Military Post and
surrender there. The solders at those stations will not shoot either. In addition, the
soldiers escorting the transport and travelling through the land will not shoot at
you as long as you attempt nothing hostile towards them. Therefore do not be
afraid of them when you see them. So come quickly in Hereros, before it is too
late. In Namaland also there will soon be quiet, as Hendrik Witbooi has been
killed by a German bullet and Samuel Isaac has surrendered and is in our hands.
166
These two collection points, were later increased to four: Otjihaenena, Omburo,
Otjozongombe and Okomitombe. By the time the camps were finally closed on 31st March, 1907
mission records showed that 11,937 Herero had passed through the camps. Oermann, Nils Ole
Mission, Church and State Relations in South West Africa under German Rule (1884-1915), Franz
Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart, 1999: 110
167
The term ‘concentration camp’ was used at the time for any camp where people were
gathered by the authorities. The Germans for example referred to the camps in Botswana where
Herero survivors were ‘concentrated’ as ‘concentration camps’. For a perspective that deals
predominantly with Herero in the camps, Gewald, Herero Heroes. pp. 185-191 & 193 - 204. Very
little work has been done to date on the experience of Nama prisoners in the camps, apart from
Drechsler, Fighting, pp. 210 - 214. Casper Erichsen is currently working on an M.A thesis on the
history of Shark Island in the History Department at the University of Namibia
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CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
168
A popular and widely available anthropological guide to the population groups of Namibia
still argues that the way in which the Damara people came to be in Namibia remains a ‘mystery’.
Malan, J.S. Peoples of Namibia, p. 128. Rhino Publishers, Wingate Park, 1999. It has been argued
that linguistic evidence suggests that ‘proto-Damara’ groups migrated from ‘northern Botswana’
through ‘northern Namibia’ and that Damara communities have not ‘lost’ a language, but are
ancient speakers of Khoekhoegowab. On this, as on many issues concerning pre-colonial Nami-
bian history, there is a need for greater academic debate between the disciplines. Wilfrid Haacke
‘Linguistic Evidence in the Study of Origins: the Case of the Namibian Khoekhoe-speakers’,
Inaugural Lecture, University of Namibia, 2001
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years ago, they were still to a great extent the owners of the mountainous parts of
North Great Namaqualand and the undisputed masters of Hereroland, living in
large and powerful tribes. It can scarcely be doubted that they also, before they
were enslaved, worked in their rude way the different copper places in Great
Namaqualand and Hereroland. Numerous indications prove that such working
was carried on in former centuries.
Hahn held that the Hottentots, as South African aborigines, had moved up from
the south, but this theory is not generally accepted, and his contention that, at
the the of the Herero influx, the Berg-Damaras were still masters of Hereroland
does not find support from the facts. If this were so, a conquest by the Hereros
of the large and powerful tribes would have been necessary, and in that event it
would be quite impossible to explain how it is that the conquered people,
having lost their own language, speak not Herero, but Nama.
The more tenable theory is that the Berg-Damaras had been entirely con-
quered centuries before the Herero influx by the southward-moving Hottentot
hordes. After the stream had passed down to the south it is quite possible, in
fact, it is certain that, here and there, scattered groups came together and settled
down under their tribal chief with some semblance of racial cohesion, but then
they were already speaking Nama, and their period of servitude under the
“Khoi-Khoi” must have been, therefore, even then of considerable duration.
Only thereafter did the resurrected tribe come under Herero influence. Whether
these very black, thick set, but not over tall people are also a branch of the
Bantu group is very doubtful. Their outward appearance presents all the
characteristics of the pure negro.
Dr. Hans Schinz, following the views of the great majority of missionary
students, holds that while the Bushman was the aborigine of South Africa and
South-East Africa, the Berg-Damara was the South-West African aborigine,
and that the great Bantu influx which drove a wedge across Central Africa right
to the western coast line had the effect of isolating the Berg-Damaras in the
south.
This view is probably the correct one. They are not Bantu people. Circum-
cision and other characteristic Bantu customs are not known to them. The
writer has had long discussions with the present hereditary Chief and his older
councillors, but beyond the fact that they are able to give the names of no less
than fifteen Chiefs who at various thes ruled over them, and unhesitatingly
assert that they were the very first people in this land, one can glean very little
of their mysterious past.
In reply to questions, the Chief Judas Goresib169 of Okambahe (the head
169
When Cornelius Goreseb the leader at Okombahe died on 3rd April, 1910, his Council of five
councillors continued to lead the community, but the arrangement was considered unsatisfactory.
In July, 1915 the new South African administration, through the local ‘Native Commissioner’, Maj.
Pearson, appointed Judas Goreseb, as ‘Captain’. Judas Goreseb appointed a new Council of three
to advise and support him. Opposition to the new system was reported to have continued up to the
death of Judas on 26th April, 1923 (Köhler 1959c: 37)
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The Berg-Damaras of today divide themselves into two classes, namely: (a) the
Omene or settled people, and (b) the Chau-Damaras (Hottentot = Dirty Dama-
ras) or wild people.
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The Omene, or settled people, are those living in villages, possessing sheep and
goats and later on even cattle. They have managed, apparently from the days of
Saub, despite the oppression of the Nama and Bantu peoples, to retain some
semblance of tribal unity and identity. They were a conquered people, but
under Saub appear to have emerged from utter slavery and through the ensuing
generation gradually to have rehabilitated themselves to a certain extent.
These people call themselves Berg-Damaras now, or Omene, and strongly
resent the Nama appellation of Chau-Damara, which is a term of utter
contempt, the real translation of which decency forbids. The translation already
given is merely relative. What Palgrave wrote of them in 1877 may with perfect
truth be repeated today.
He writes (referring to their life at Okambahe):–
They make gardens in which they grow mealies, pumpkins and tobacco. In 1875
they had a mile of the river-bed under cultivation and harvested 300 muids of
wheat, the greater part of which was sold for more than 40 shillings a muid. For
people who have been so recently reclaimed from a perfectly savage state the
progress they are making is astonishing. They are a provident people, and are fast
becoming rich in cattle and goats… They have not that love for cattle which
distinguishes the Hereros and Namaqua, and from the fact that so long as they
have been known they have made gardens it is assumed as probable that they
were originally a agricultural people, like the Ovambos … They are industrious
and make good servants.
With this most people who know them will agree, but they are as a rule not
nearly so intelligent as the Hereros, nor are they personally so clean and proud.
The Herero s pride keeps him from committing theft, while the Berg-Damara
will occasionally fail to resist temptation in regard to his neighbour’s or his
master’s goods. As a manual labourer the Berg-Damara far excels the Herero,
who, not unlike some Europeans, is inclined to be too proud to work. It is as
cattle herd and caretaker that the Herero excels. He is probably the finest native
cattle master in the world, and an indispensable assistant to every cattle farmer
in Hereroland.
The Berg-Damara is the hewer of wood and drawer of water, and he rather
likes it! With him the fates have made it constitutional.
It is not necessary to deal with Berg-Damara customs and laws, as they were
not a ruling people at the time of the German annexation, and made no
protection agreement. They speak of having made an agreement with Leut-
wein, but he does not mention it and there is no record of it.
Before giving a few historical details it is necessary to mention that the
second class of Berg-Damara, probably four-fifths of the tribe, known as Chau-
Damaras, was scattered throughout the Protectorate. They either lived as
neighbours of or with the Bushmen in the inaccessible bush or mountains, or
as servants and slaves of Hereros and Hottentots; they were content to exist and
to labour merely for their food and the rude protection afforded them. Some of
them intermixed with Bushmen, and the tall Bushmen of the Kaokoveld and
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the Hei-Kom Bushmen of the Grootfontein area are probably to a certain extent
the result of an ancient intermingling of these two wild and aboriginal races.
It speaks well for the Herero people that quite voluntarily, and many years
before German soldiers came to South-West Africa, they set aside for the Berg-
Damaras the large reserve at Okambahe, probably over 200,000 acres in size,
for the use as residences and grazing grounds of their weaker neighbours. Here
the Omene class of Berg-Damara have lived since about 1866, and had up to
1910 enjoyed their own government under the Chiefs Abraham and Cornelius.
(After the death of Cornelius the German Government refused to allow his heir,
Judas, to rule the tribe, for reasons explained later.)
After the Germans came there was a tendency to scatter again, and today
Omene are to be found all over the country. The majority of the Chau-Damara,
or unsettled class of Berg-Damara, has disappeared. They were either serfs in
the employ of Hottentots and Hereros, or they lived as has already been stated
in the wilds, chiefly round the Omatako and Waterberg areas. When the “iron-
cordon” of von Trotha was stretched from Gobabis to Waterberg, and the
squeezing process in terms of his extermination order began, thousands of
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these wild people met the fate intended for the Hereros. How was the newly
arrived German soldier in the field to distinguish between a Berg-Damara and
a Herero? He had orders to kill all men, women and children without mercy.
Thousands and thousands of Berg-Damara servants went with their Herero
masters towards the desert and died there on the way. The same fate was meted
out to the majority of those who were servants and serfs to the Witboois and
other Hottentot clans.
After all, what did it matter? German policy wished to exterminate the
native races and create a “new Germany,” as Professor Bonn puts it. This goes
far to explain how a minimum estimate of 30,000 Berg-Damaras (probably far
too low) had by 1911 sank to 12,831, according to the official German cen-
sus.170 The Hereros certainly did not massacre them, and the Germans must
explain what became of these people. When the Hereros went into rebellion the
orders of their Chiefs placed Berg-Damaras on the list of those who were to be
spared. The Germans were not so delicately discriminative.
Palgrave, in his Report (1877), writing of the reserve at Okambahe, says
I told the Damaras (i.e., Hereros) that any plan they might have to submit to Your
Excellency for their own protection and the government of their country must
recognise the independence of these Berg-Damaras and provide for their
settlement or it would meet with no favour, and they readily agreed with me that
it should be the first duty of any one Your Excellency sent to them to select
Berg-Damara locations, even if there was no immediate prospect of their being
occupied.
The idea, therefore, that the Berg-Damaras were all slaves of the Hereros is
quite erroneous. The Chau-Damaras, more by reason of their poverty than from
any other cause, were certainly servants and, as such, serfs of their wealthy
masters. Even in regard to these, however, there is this singular and somewhat
extraordinary fact, that they could by becoming Hereros emancipate them-
selves, become adopted members of the “Eanda” and “Oruzu,” and immediate-
ly acquire the dignity and status of a full-blooded Herero. Very few followed
this means of gaining liberty. For this the reasons are probably two. The first is
that, no matter how depraved or subjected a native may become, there remains,
smouldering in the ashes of his self-respect, a glimmer of national pride. He
hates the very idea of losing his nationality. It is one of the characteristics of the
South African native that he is always deeply hurt if by any chance he is
designated as belonging to another tribe. To call a Zulu a Kaffir, or a Kaffir a
170
The official German reply to the Blue Book was particularly critical of the statistics given
for Damara losses during the war. It claimed that the Blue Book bases its post-war Damara
population figures on the German census of 1911 and argues that it, incorrectly, quotes the Damara
population as 12,831. In fact it is claimed that the figure given in the 1911 census should be 19,581
as the figure given by the British excludes 6,750 Damara children. Unfortunately, as Brigitte Lau
points out, it has not been possible, to date, to locate the 1911 census figures. Some initial research
on the impact of the war on the Damara community has recently been carried out by Ivan Gaseb.
German Colonial Office, Treatment, p. 45; Lau, ‘Uncertain’, p. 44, Gaseb, Ivan ‘A historical
hangover’:The absence of Damara from accounts of the 1904-08 war’, paper presented at the
‘Public History: Forgotten History’ Conference, University of Namibia, August, 2000.
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Fingo, and vice versa, is to these people a grave insult. The same applies to
Hereros and Berg-Damaras.
Before the born-Herero male could claim full membership of his family
group and religious order certain things had to happen, viz., circumcision and
the knocking out of the three lower front teeth and the inverted V-shaped filing
of the upper teeth. Hereros who have gone through the ordeal tell, that there
was nothing pleasant about it. There were no dentists with cocaine or gas, and
the instruments used to remove the lower teeth were a piece of iron (like a cold
chisel) and a rock, serving the purpose of a hammer. The filing was also done
with a jagged piece of iron.
To the pain and inconvenience attendant on these steps preliminary to
admission to the Herero “citizenship and full franchise” must be ascribed the
second reason why so many Berg-Damara serfs decided to remain serfs.
When the Germans annexed the country in 1890 they did not worry much about
the Berg-Damaras. Shut away behind the Erongo mountains and bordering on
the waterless Namib desert, Okambahe lay outside the main routes to the inte-
rior It so happened, however, that when Major Leutwein landed at Swakop-
mund in 1894 the Chief Cornelius happened to be there with a wagon to fetch
provisions, and met the Kaiser’s representative. The following account of what
transpired and what resulted therefrom is related in the words of old Gottlieb
Goresib, the brother of Cornelius, who says:–
Cornelius happened to be at Swakopmund on business when Major Leutwein
handed. He invited Cornelius to come to Windhuk and see him there. Cornelius
did so, and ordered his councillors, Mattheus, Lucas, Jonas, Joshua and Solomon
to meet him at Karibib. They all went to Windhuk. There Leutwein got Cornelius
to sign an agreement placing the Berg-Damaras under the German protection.
Cornelius came back and explained matters. He said he had pointed out that the
land belonged to the Hereros, and that we were really under their protection by
verbal agreement with their Chiefs, and that he, Cornelius, could not sign such an
agreement as Leutwein suggested. Leutwein said that he would fix up all disputes
with the Hereros, and that he would protect us from them. Then the agreement
was made. Cornelius had to agree to German protection and the posting of
German troops at Okambahe. He also undertook to supply the Germans with all
Berg – Damaras they required for labour on public roads, & c. In return for this
Cornelius received 25l. and then 751. in gold and silver. Leutwein. also promised
him (a) that the Berg-Damaras would be ruled as an independent nation by their
Chief and his successors, (b) that our laws and usages would be respected, (c) that
all the scattered Berg-Damaras living under the Hottentot and Herero Chiefs
would be collected and one big nation formed at Okambahe, (d) that a big piece
of land extending from Okambahe north up to the Ugab River and beyond would
be allotted to the Berg-Damara nation.
These were the inducements we had, not a single one of these promises was
ever fulfilled. On the contrary, our customs and laws were over-ruled, and the
soldiers at Okambahe became the real governors. Cornelius hardly had any
power. Our people were flogged and beaten, and there were no courts to which
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they could go for justice. When Cornelius died in 1910 the Germans said they did
not recognise him, and they had decided to have no more Chiefs or allow them to
rule their people. They said Judas was no Chief and only an ordinary Berg-
Damara like any one else in the tribe. We were all very angry and upset at this,
and refused to recognise the five men whom the Germans themselves appointed
to rule over us.171 We did not know these people. We only knew the heir of our
Chief. We protested, but the Germans merely laughed at us. Once before his death
Cornelius and his council went to see the German Governor at Windhuk to
complain of the ill-treatment and injustice and to point out that no promises made
had ever been kept. The German Governor refused to see Cornelius. Some of the
Governor’s men saw Cornelius and chased him back to Okambahe. He got no
hearing and no redress. That was in 1909, and Cornelius died the next year. After
that we had to apologise and ask forgiveness for having sent a deputation to
Windhuk. Then the Germans said we were to have no more Chiefs at all.
In the Herero rebellion we remained loyal to the Germans because we were
entirely unarmed. The Germans had taken all our rifles.
After he had made, the agreement, Leutwein, towards the end of 1895, when
he had dealt with the Khauas, Franzmann and Witbooi Hottentots, visited
Omaruru and had a palaver with the Herero Chief, Manasse Tjaherani. Leut-
wein writes:–
About a day’s march below Omaruru, on the river of the same name, is the Berg-
Damara settlement of Okambahe. I declared (to Manasse) that the German
Government required this on account of the labour supply available there.
The Chief, astonished at first that I should have had any knowledge of this
settlement … made over the place to the German Government.
Up to the present day (1905) Okambahe has remained directly under the
German Government, and has remained loyal during the present rebellion.xvi
It seems curious that Leutwein’s account should differ so much from the Berg-
Damara version. Leutwein is silent as to agreements and promises. He does not
make any reference to any payments, and in fact, throughout the rest of his
work beyond a few passing remarks, he is strangely reticent in regard to the
Berg-Damaras.
What the Berg-Damaras thought of this emancipation from “the Herero
yoke” and the change to German control has already been stated. Before
concluding the chapter a few further opinions may be recorded.
xvi
(Page 109 in original) Leutwein desired to pose as the emancipator of the Berg-Damaras. In
a footnote he adds:- “This knowledge I acquired shortly beforehand, as the result of a confidential
visit to me in Windhuk of the Berg-DamaraChief, Cornelius. He had come to me solely with the
object of begging me to free them from the Herero yoke, and for this reason I more readily took
“As against this, continues Leutwein, “Missionary Irle ascribes the emancipation of the Berg-
Damaras of Okambahe to the Mission, and says that it had taken place in 1870.
“However that may be, Cornelius did not, in any event, feel that he was free from the Hereros
in 1895. If he had, he would not have come to me to Windhuk with that request to take advantage
of the opportunity afforded.”
171
Judas, eldest son of Cornelius, was appointed leader on the arrival of invading South African
forces on 18th June, 1915. However the leadership at Okombahe continued to be contested. Köhler,
Oswin A Study of Omaruru District, Govt. Printer, Pretoria, 1959: p. 37
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Simon Tsobasib (an old councillor of the tribe, and a cousin of the Chief’s)
states on oath:–
I was born at Windhuk before the Berg-Damaras came to Okambahe. Old Abra-
ham was the Chief then. I came with old Abraham to this district. and have lived
here ever since under the Berg-Damara Chief at his werft. I know all about the
agreement with the Germans under Leutwein. It is as stated by Gottlieb. The
Germans did not keep any of their promises. They broke their word. They
promised to let us keep our rifles, but after the agreement was signed they
disarmed us all. No one could trust them or place any reliance on their word. I
would a hundred thes prefer to live under and be governed by the Hereros in
preference to the Germans. The Hereros had some mercy, and always respected
our women, even in war-time; but that was never the case with the Germans.
Neither one’s self, one’s wife, nor one’s children were safe under the Germans.
The German soldiers treated us like dogs, every German did; and our young
daughters, even those who had not yet grown to womanhood, were not safe from
them. They are a very bad people. We have not a bit of respect for them. We never
saw such white people. Our natives were shocked at what they saw the Germans
do. As for thrashings and floggings by the police, I don t know where to begin
when I talk about that. We saw no courts, and had no place to go to for justice.
The German police governed us. They were the Government; we knew of no
other Government. They could do as they pleased.
It was only after the British conquest of South-West Africa in 1915 that the
Chief Judas Goresib was recognised and tranquillity and satisfaction restored.
The persons who have made the above statements are all of the Omene or
settled class of Berg-Damara.
The wild Chau-Damaras’ views are also of interest. The writer succeeded in
finding a comparatively tame and intelligent member of this class, Jacob
Dikasip, living at Ghaub, between Grootfontein and Tsumeb under the so-
called Bushman Chief, Johannes Kruger. Johannes is a Bastard who in early
days had hunted with Erickson, Green and others. Eventually he settled down
near Grootfontein, and in 1896 was formally appointed by Governor Leutwein
as Chief of the Bushman Berg-Damaras and other natives in the Grootfontein
area. Jacob Dikasip said:–
I have been under German masters and have been brutally treated. I show you the
scars on my back from the floggings I have received (he was marked like a
zebra)… I look old and worn, but it is from the bad treatment… See! all my teeth
in front are knocked out. A German policeman Grossmann did that. I had been
pulled down for a flogging, and it hurt so much that I tried to get away, whereupon
I was hit on the mouth and lost my teeth. I don t wish to see Germans ruling this
land again, they have been too unjust. They came into the country, and ever since
they came natives have been killed and flogged and beaten nearly to death. We
never got justice or fair treatment… We cannot agree with the Germans, we hate
them. A German has no respect for our women. They have been known to come
into the pontoks and chase married men out of their beds in order that they might
sleep there. We protested, but what could we do? … I have seen this sort of thing
with my own eyes.
Innumerable statements of this nature can be produced, but once again the
details are too indecent and revolting for publication.
The Berg-Damaras never at any the rebelled or gave any trouble to their
German masters, yet it availed them nothing. The treatment meted out to them
seems to have been exactly the same as that received by the other tribes.
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CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
A brief reference to these laws and to their essential provisions will bear out
what is alleged. By 1914 (i.e., from 1890) the following laws having special
references to the native races had been promulgated.172
(1) The law relating to jurisdiction for the purposes of punishments and
disciplinary control, dated 23rd April 1896.
Up to July 1903 this was the only law dealing with natives except the one
immediately following, which does not affect local administration of justice or
control. enacted during the first 13 years of German rule.
(2) The law prohibiting the taking of natives out of the Protectorate for
exhibitions and other purposes, and forbidding natives from
traveling over the borders without prior permission of the Governor.
This law was promulgated on 30th November 1901.
(3) The Ordinance of the Imperial Chancellor regulating legal procedure
and jurisdiction in cases between Europeans and natives, dated 3rd
July 1903.
This law, prescribing claims against natives by traders and others after the lapse
of 12 months, is generally known as the Credit Ordinance. It is also the law by
which the first civil courts, to which natives might have recourse, were consti-
tuted. Its “application” by the purely military men who, at the the, were District
Magistrates, was one of the primary causes of the great Herero rising early in
1904.
After the Herero and Hottentot rising had been finally crushed and two-
thirds of the total native population exterminated, the following laws were
enacted in regard to the now landless and pauperised people, who were entirely
at the mercy of their masters.
172
For a more detailed discussion of the impact of this legislation see Harry Schwirck ‘Violence,
Race and the Law in German South West Africa, 1884-1914’ (PhD Thesis, Cornell University,
1998).
173
On the German pass laws see Krüger, Gesine ‘A pass token in the archives. Traces of the
history of every day life after the German Herero War’, Paper presented at the Symposium ‘Writing
History, Identity and Society in Namibia, University of Hannover, May 1994.
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(6) The Ordinance dated 18th August 1907, relating to work and labour
contracts with natives, whereby all contracts with natives who were
over 14 years of age were only of force after due registration with the
local police.
The aforegoing represent, in brief, what was done from 1890 to 1914, i.e.,
during a period of just on a quarter of a century, by legal enactment with a view
to “uplifting the native,” providing for his “moral and material advancement”
and preserving him from “slavery.”
The conditions arising out of the application of these laws will be best
understood when one allows the natives to describe, in their own language, the
experiences and treatment they underwent.
Before doing so however it is necessary to understand the significance and
underlying principles of a policy which brought these laws into being.
First it was intended, as Professor Bonn has put it, to create a “new
Germany” in South-West Africa.
Secondly, and in order to help to achieve this object, the remaining sources
of native labour supply essential for the development of farming and other
enterprises had to be drawn on and tapped to their fullest possible extent. The
now conquered and thoroughly subjected native had to “be made serviceable
in the enjoyment by the white man of his former possessions” (Rohrbach).
It was this objective which obsessed the Berlin Government in 1907 when,
on 8th August, authority was given to the Imperial Governor of South-West
Africa to promulgate the three laws (4, 5 and 6) dealing with “native passes”,
“measures for control” and “work and labour contracts.”
To all intents and purposes these laws had one main object, and they might
easily have been consolidated into one enactment entitled “a law regulating the
permanent and forced slavery of the natives of South-West Africa, with a view
to ensuring their perpetual degradation into a class of pauperised labourers.”
A brief reference to these laws will make this contention clear.
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In the first place, the Pass Law provided that all natives over the age of seven
years of age (except the Bastards of Rehoboth) should carry passes. This pass
was a numbered metal badge which each native had to display prominently on
his person. It was not intended that any native might merely by getting a permit,
say, to travel or move about or reside in a certain area, thereby be exempted
from labour. The intention was that every native, male and female, over the age
of seven years was liable for and compellable to work. The law was designed
to ensure control and by regulation to make certain that no single native evaded
his or her obligations. It was prohibited to give a passless native any work,
support or assistance, and the law gave to “every white person” the right
summarily to arrest such native and hand him or her over at the nearest police
station.
After the rebellion was over (1906), the Hereros and Hottentots possessed
nothing. A native who tried to evade work could only succeed by avoiding
registration and remaining “passless.” Yet he had to live. For fear that the pos-
session of stock or animals might give him that independence which obviated
the necessity for labour, the law prohibited him from owning cattle or horses
without the consent of the Governor. The prohibition was intended really to
cover future cases. At the time (August 1907) no native possessed anything,
and the idea underlying the enactment was, by controlling future acquisition,
to keep the native always under the necessity of working for his living. The
inhumanity of this measure, apart from its injustice, is emphasised when one
recollects what a blow such a prohibition must have been to the cattle-loving
Hereros. What inducement was there to work? A native might slave for years
and years, but the prospect of having in his old age a few cows and calves of
his own, on which to subsist when labour was no longer possible, did not exist.
His present was slavery and misery, his past was, to most, no doubt, a horrible
nightmare of death and bloodshed, and his future he had no future.
Having ensured that no native would be able to acquire possessions from
which to exist, the law goes on to state that natives wandering about “without
visible means of subsistence” are punishable as “vagrants.”
The third enactment. providing for the form and conditions of labour
contracts. does not need special attention. Were this law based on principles of
voluntary labour and not on slavery, it would probably be the one law for
natives which calls for some commendation, but the underlying principle is a
false and unjust one, and it taints and negatives what might otherwise have
been a useful measure.
In regard to the punishment of the native, this was laid down and provided
for in the 1896 law “relating to jurisdiction for the purposes of punishment and
disciplinary control.”
The most iniquitous aspect of this law is the fact that it was, to an almost
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The powers under the law were vested in the Governor and by him delegated
to the District Officials, who, in their turn, were authorised to sub-delegate to
their subordinate officials (unterstelten beamten), i.e.. the police. Sentence of
death and to imprisonment over six months were subject to confirmation by the
Governor. Corporal punishment might be inflicted all at once or in two
instalments. On no occasion were more than 25 lashes to be inflicted, and the
second application of lashes could only take place after a lapse of at least two
weeks. This would indicate that the maximum authorised was 50 lashes, but the
law does not say so.
When power was delegated to the police by District Officials, the maximum
of lashes was generally fixed at 15, but there is no definite ruling or provision,
and no one (except the native) seemed to have run any risks owing to a
miscount.
The vast majority of recorded punishments under this law are for such
offences as “laziness,” “negligence,” “vagrancy,” “insolence” and “disobedi-
ence,” and the average punishment was 15 lashes, awarded ex parte, merely on
complaint of the master, and inflicted under the police sergeant s supervision.
The native was never tried, he was not called upon to plead, he was simply
flogged and ordered to return to his master.
The procedure was something after this fashion:–
A letter was written by the employer to the local police or the nearest police
post, to the effect that the bearer –
The unfortunate culprit takes the letter and delivers it. After reading it the
Police sergeant orders the native to be stripped, and according to the sergeant s
taste or his sense of the fitness of things 10, 12, 15, and even more lashes are
inflicted with a heavy sjambok. The sergeant makes a note of the complaint and
his sentence, and returns the native to his employer with a note, 15 lashes
given, endorsed on the foot of the letter of complaint.
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More serious cases such, e.g., as the theft of a pair of boots, would come before
the District Head. A case in point, i.e., theft of an officer s boots, was actually
according to the records punished with 12 months imprisonment and twice 25
lashes
Naturally, when a policeman could go up to 15 lashes, a Magistrate could
not well impose less than 25 or double 25 (i.e., 25 administered twice with an
interval between)
174
Became a teacher and was reported, in 1957, to be aged 68 and one of the six members of
the Board responsible for Otjohorongo Reserve (Köhler 1959c: 79)
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result of all this was that our people lost heart and daily grew more despondent.
The Herero loves cattle. Our forefathers possessed great herds of cattle; even
when I was a boy I remember herds so great that we could not say how many there
were. The Germans took all our cattle after the rebellion, and prohibited us from
owning or purchasing cattle. So we had nothing to work for except our food, and
nothing to look forward to except more ill-treatment.
not chained as a rule, though in a few cases this was done. I remember we had one
chained by the neck for about two weeks once, but she made such an ado about it
that we eventually took the chains off.
In addition to the ordinary handcuffed and wristlets. there were three other
kinds of chains used in the gaol. I will try to describe them.
No 1. – Ankle and neck chains. Iron bands or rings were fastened round the
ankles. The bands or rings were joined by a short chain about 18 inches long, and
attached to the middle of this chain was another chain which joined on to an iron
collar round the prisoner’s neck. All convicts wore these chains, and had to work
in them. The cross chain between the legs made it necessary for the wearer to
straddle rather than walk. He also had to regulate his stride carefully. If he stepped
out too far the rings hurt his bare ankles, and if he merely shuffled he ran the risk
of tripping himself over the chain. As it was, the iron rungs used to cut and chafe
the bare skin, and what with flies and dirt the cut parts used to become festering
sores. Many convicts got so bad that they were eventually quite unable to walk.
They used to pick up dirty pieces of rag and sacking and thrust them between their
legs and the rings. Such prisoners were never medically treated by tine Germans,
and if they got too bad we took off the chains until they were well enough to wear
them again. Often when working with a gang out in the veld getting wood or
stones, I used, out of pity, if I had the keys, to unlock the chains.
No. 2.- The neck chain. These chains were made up of neck rings to which
were attached chains about 5 to 6 feet long. They were put on two or more
prisoners at a the, and in that way linked together by the neck collars; the larger
gangs were sent out to work generally inn batches of front four to six. These
chains were worn in addition to those I have already described, and were only for
outside work. They were taken off when the day s work was over, before locking
the convicts up. They were also used by the police on the outside posts for the
purpose of securing two or more prisoners on a journey to town by road or train.
In addition, handcuffs were also used in such cases. If a single prisoner were
brought in by the police he was handcuffed and made to trot in front of the horses.
Often he would be tied to the saddle by a rope fixed round his neck. If he got tired
he was urged on with a sjambok.
No. 3. The third kind of chain used was the rigid arm bar and the leg bar. They
were never used at the same the, and were only put on prisoners or convicts who
had attempted to escape from custody or who had been guilty of stock theft or
some offence more serious than disobedience, laziness, or impertinence. This
chain consisted of a heavy iron bar about 18 inches long with rings at each end.
In the case of the arm bar, it was placed across the wrists and the rings locked;
two heavy anklets were fixed on the legs. And from each anklet a heavy chain was
fastened on the middle of the bar. When wearing this chain, in addition to the
discomfort to his legs, the prisoner, owing to the weight of the iron cross-bar, was
compelled to let his arms hang down as far as possible, and he could not possibly
use his hands so as to touch his face, as the lower chains were too short for that.
When lying down he was compelled to remain on his back. He could not lie either
on his sides or his stomach. A similar chain was the leg bar chain, only in this case
the bar was fixed on the ankles instead of the wrists and the connecting chain
fastened to a ring in the cell wall. While wearing this the prisoner could not walk
at all or move about. He had either to remain seated with his face to the wall, or,
if he wished to rest, to he prone on his back. He could also turn over on his
stomach, but could not lie on his side or cross his legs. If after a severe flogging,
a convict were put in these chains, it was agony and torture to him, as he would
be compelled always to lie on his stomach until his back healed. It was only in
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Willem Christian (son of the last Hottentot Chief of the Bondelswartz) states on
oath:–
When the war broke out in 1914 the Germans did not trust us. They thought we
would rise and help the English. So they collected our tribe and sent us to Tsumeb,
in the extreme north of this country. We lost all our small stock, and when the
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British troops released us at Tsumeb we had again been reduced to poverty. The
British sent us back to our place at Warmbad and had to feed us to keep us alive.
The British Government collected some stock for us and distributed it, but we
have not yet recovered half of what we originally possessed in 1914. We cannot
say what the Germans did with our stock. They must have died of exposure and
disease, and some were slaughtered by the invading troops. The German
Government was very severe and harsh. We got no protection from the law. We
were forced to work for harsh masters who ill-treated us, and for whom we would
not willingly work. We were not allowed to select our own masters. We were
simply ordered to go and work for a man. If we did not go or tried to get
permission to work for a more humane master, the only reply was a kicking or
flogging. Our masters had the right to flog us; the police could flog us if our
masters complained. Cases like this never came to court. The police dealt with
such matters summarily. If our masters did not pay us for our work, or if they
underfed us or ill-treated us and we complained, we got no consideration. We
were not believed, and any excuse or explanation was accepted from a white man.
If we left our masters farms to complain to the authorities, the result was that we
were either flogged and sent back to the master or we were imprisoned for
desertion. Many people died in prison.
charge of the police. Trantemann complained that the native boy was lazy and
shamming sick. The boy was asked no questions, but was promptly stripped and
laid on his stomach over a cement cask and given 25 lashes with a heavy sjambok
by order of Laueras. He was in a state of collapse, but was ordered to start work
at once and promised another 25 if there was the slightest indication of laziness.
The boy staggered away and tried to work, but I could see that he was very ill. He
gradually got worse and shortly afterwards collapsed altogether and was sent to
the hospital. That was the last we saw of him. This is the way the natives were
treated all along.
The aforegoing statements, made on oath in the course of the past four months,
will give some faint idea of the reign of terror which existed amongst the
natives of South-West Africa. Instances of cruelty, injustice, and barbarism
might be multiplied almost indefinitely. Instances of gross and bestial conduct,
which for sheer depravity and immorality are well-night unbelievable, are also
contained in the files of affidavits, but they are hardly fit for publication. The
extracts reproduced have been selectcd almost at random from the affidavits of
natives of all races throughout the country.
This state of affairs continued right, up to the occupation of South-West
Africa by the British troops under General Botha, and the records of the Special
Criminal Court appointed under the British regime will indicate that the
German settlers, not quite appreciating that the old order had changed, took
some time to grasp the fact that under British rule wholesale shootings and
floggings of natives and inhuman brutality towards their defenceless servants
would not for one moment be tolerated.175
The available German records indicate that the complaints of the native
population as to merciless flogging for trivial offences are quite correct.
From the Returns of Crimes and Offences Committed and Punishments and
Penalties inflicted during the period lst January 1913 to 31st March 1914, filed
at Windhuk (German Records, F.V.K.1, 3-18), details may be gleaned which
throw a lurid light on the system of justice practised by the Germans.176 Further
details will appear in the chapter dealing with the native as an accused person
(Chapter 1, Part II.). For present purposes it is sufficient to state
175
A selection of these cases were published as ‘Papers relating to Certain Trials in German
South West Africa’, HMSO, London, 1916, cd. 8371.
176
An English summary of German records (FVK I, 3-18) of ‘Crimes & Punishment &
Penalties’ for the period 1st January, 1913 to 31st March, 1914 can be found in the National Archives
of Namibia (A41). It contains lists of individual crime and punishment for each district in the
Police Zone. These have clearly been used to produce the statistics listed here. For example four
typical entries from the records for Bethany District show that on 1st September, 1913 Friederika,
K.K.F. was given ‘14 days in chains’ for ‘Disobedience and refusal to work’. On the 4th September
three punishments were given. Adam, K.K. was sentenced to two years in chains and fifty lashes
for ‘Bodily harm’, Hakeio, H.M was to serve six months in prison with hard labour and have 15
strokes with the cane (the cane was used on ‘juveniles’) and Rebecka, Ho. F was to spend two
weeks in chains for also having been ‘disobedient and refusing to work’.
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That the total number of native convictions in the whole Protectorate front 1st
January 1913 to 31st March 1914 was 4,356. Of these, 4,039 were males and
317 females.177 The punishments include –
3,167
These offences therefore constitute nearly three-fourths of the total. Under the
compulsory labour system it is only natural that men who were forced to work
for masters whom they did not like, and who treated them with harshness and
brutality, were tempted at times to desert or to be disobedient. Often such
offences arose solely out of the inability of the natives to understand the orders
of their German-speaking masters. In regard to desertion, which, as will be
observed, heads the list of crimes, the report of the officer in control of native
affairs, the Imperial German Native Commissioner at Windhuk, filed with the
records, is significant.
177
In the period from its first session on 28th September, 1915 up to January, 1918 (when the
Blue Book was compiled) the Special Criminal Court that was established by the Union of South
Africa following the surrender of German forces in Namibia on 9th July, 1915, heard 158 cases.
Of these 61 cases are referred to directly in Part 2 of the Blue Book and eighty-five of those directly
accused in these cases are referred to. Details of the relevant cases can be found in Storage Units
SCC1-10. National Archives of Namibia, Finding Aid, Special Criminal Court. Administrator
‘Report of the Administrator of SWA, 9 July 1915-31 March 1916. A 272. Bk. 1.
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But it did not avail the unfortunate native charged with desertion to advance
such pleas. He was dealt with in 99 cases out of a hundred “by summary
procedure.”
The police sergeants gave him his lashes, and he was hurried back to work
for the master whose ill-treatment had made service unbearable.
When considering this list of floggings amid punishments it must be borne
in mind that it represents probably only a fraction of the thrashings actually
meted out. Under the German system there grew up the custom of Väterliche
Züchtigung, or paternal chastisement.178 The German master was regarded as
being in loco parentis179 to the childlike native, and could thrash him whenever
he wished and for any reason whatsoever without risk of punishment for
assault. It was only when the native died or was sent to hospital as a result of
such paternal chastisement that questions might be asked; even then no serious
notice was taken as a rule. As Leutwein put it:–
Beating to death was not regarded as murder; but the natives were unable to
understand such legal subtleties.
If, after what he considered was an unmerited paternal chastisement, the angry
native dragged his aching bones to the nearest police station to report, he
generally got lashes at once for “desertion” and more paternal chastisement on
his return to his master’s farm.
The records given are those compiled shortly before the outbreak of war in
1914. So that up to that time the German system had in no way been altered or
modified.
It is clear too, from a perusal of the Government files, that the German
authorities, from 1910 onwards, were in a constant state of nervous apprehen-
sion. They were always expecting another native rising.
178
The ‘right’ rested on a Supreme Court Judgement which stated “… from a mental and moral
point of view the native on the average are not to be ranked higher than children at home who
require to be educated. It is not feasible for the master forthwith to apply to the State punitive
authorities in every case of shortcoming, insubordination, and disobedience, quite apart from the
fact that the great distances often make it quite impossible. When admonition and reprimand, as is
often the case, fail, then it must be permissible to resort to the energetic educative means of
chastisement. A powerful box in the ears or a good whack across the back or buttocks often has a
better effect than much talk.” ‘Judgement in Supreme Court, Windhoek, 26th January, 1911 re. the
rights of Masters to inflict Corporal Punishment upon Native Servants’ translated from Süd-West
Bote, No. 24 & 25, 1911
179
‘In place of a parent’
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On 31st May 1912, Governor Seitz addressed the following secret circular to
his Magistrates:–
The Imperial Governor of G.S.W.A. Windhuk, 31st May 1912
To all Magistrates
Within recent weeks I have received information from various quarters to the
effect that a desperate feeling is becoming prevalent of late amongst the natives
in certain areas of the country.
The reason which is unanimously given for this fact is that brutal excesses of
Europeans against natives are alarmingly on the increase it is much to be regretted
in this connection that even police officials have become guilty of such offences
in a few cases and that such offences do not find the punishment before the courts
of law which they ought to receive according to the sense of justice of the natives.
In consequence thereof the natives are supposed to despair of the impartiality
of our jurisdiction and to be driven into a blind hatred of every timing that is
white. And as a final result would resort to self-help, that is another native rising.
It is quite evident that such feelings of hatred amongst the natives, if
amelioration of their lot is not energetically provided for, must. lead within a short
space of the to a renewed and desperate native rising, and consequently to the
economic ruin of the country.
It is therefore in the interests of the whole European population that persons
who rage in mad brutality against the natives, and who consider their white skin
a charter of indemnity from punishment for the most brutal crimes, be rendered
innocuous by all possible means.
Because a people, who make a claim to be regarded as a dominant, race. must
first of all keep clean their own ranks.
If the crimes committed by Europeans against natives do not find punishment
at all, or no sufficient punishment, it will become impossible in future to act with
that severity in the cases of crimes committed by natives against Europeans,
which is imperative in the general interest.
I have no influence on the jurisdiction as far as Europeans are concerned. but
I shall, as far as that is possible, take care by administrative measures that the
doubtlessly existing critical conditions are counteracted.
Above all things I intend to order, as such cases arise, that such Europeans who
persist in ill-treating their native servants in a brutal manner shall no longer be
supplied with native labour.
However. an effectual alteration will only be possible if the white population
itself who, as far as I feel. condemns such brutalities of rough elements to the
utmost, does not leave such individuals, who are a danger to the common weal,
in any doubt about its attitude on the question, and actively co-operates to prevent
such crimes or to bring them to justice in cases where they have occurred.
And as I am convinced that it will be possible for the District Councils to
influence their co-citizens in this respect, I request that you will inform the
District Councils in the strictest confidence of the contents of this communication
at their next meeting.
I trust that with the assistance of the European population it will be possible to
create conditions which will reinstate in the natives a confidence that they will
find protection from the Europeans against the brutal excesses of a few
individuals. You are requested to confirm the receipt of this communication.
Seitz
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This letter provides a striking commentary on the partiality and injustice of the
German courts, And on the feebleness and futility of German native policy.
All the responsible Governor of the Protectorate could apparently do was to
record the fact that he will punish “Europeans who continually commit brutal
offences against natives” … by taking care that they “are no longer supplied
with natives as labourers.”
Obnoxious and unjust laws are not amended; new and very necessary laws
are not introduced; the native is thrashed and harshly ill-treated, and all that his
brutal task-master receives as punishment is the threat that if he continues to do
so he will be allowed no more native labourers from the State.
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CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Since 1870 there has lived in the territory of Rehoboth a tribe of coloured
people, persons of mixed blood (the result mainly of early intermingling at the
Cape between the Dutch settlers and their Hottentot servants) who call them-
selves the “Bastard Nation.” A large number of them are like Europeans in
physical appearance except for a darker shade of colour, while others indicate
unmistakably the presence of a strong Hottentot strain. A very small percentage
is practically White, and outside of Rehoboth would probably be taken for
pure-bred Europeans.
The language of these people is “Afrikaans,” the colloquial Dutch of the
Cape; they are all Christians, and their sole occupation appears to be pastoral
farming.
Rehoboth is, taken all round, the finest and most suitable area in the whole
of the South-West Protectorate for farming in large and small stock, and many
Bastards have become very wealthy, while there are very few families who are
entirely without stock of some kind.
When in 1882 Willem Jordaan and his party of Cape and Transvaal farmers
moved into the country through Grootfontein, their intention was to travel
down southwards to Rehoboth and to establish their new republic there.
Jordaan went so far as to approach the Swartbooi Chief at Otjitambi within a
view to obtaining a cession from him of the former tribal land of the Swartboois
at Rehoboth.180 Jordaan was too late, however, as the Bastards had already, over
12 years previously, purchased the area from Abraham Swartbooi. The pur-
chase price was 100 horses at 251. each and 5 wagons at 501. each.
Notwithstanding this, Jordaan intended to move through Damaraland and,
if necessary, oust the Bastards by force of arms. He and his party remained in
the vicinity of Otjitambi and Outjo for nearly two years. waiting for a
favourable opportunity. But this did not present itself. The Bastards had heard
of his intentions and made representations to the Germans and to Kamaharero,
in which they warned the Herero Chief of the grave danger of a Boer Republic
in his immediate neighbourhood. Kamaharero thereupon notified Jordaan that
he would under no circumstances allow a trek southwards through Damara-
land. Seeing that further waiting was only a waste of the, Jordaan, in 1884,
moved back to Grootfontein, purchased that area from the Ovambo Chief, and
180
Otjitambi was the site where the Swartbooi community settled for a while in the second half
of the nineteenth century
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established there his Republic of Upingtonia.181 As has already been related, the
murder of Jordaan in 1886 brought about the collapse of the Republic and the
dispersal of the burghers. After Jordaan had decided to return north, the
Bastards experienced no further trouble. and they were allowed to settle down
and live quietly in their territory. It was only in 1915 that they first tasted an
impression of German power. To this reference will be made further on. There
appears to have been a bitter antagonism in the Cape, in the early days, between
the Dutch frontier farmers and these coloured people, who, bearing Dutch
names, speaking the Dutch language, and having in their veins varying
proportions of Dutch blood, were regarded by the white farmers as “Basters”
(Bastards), and as such legally and socially on the same level and political
plane as the aboriginal native.
Adversity and ostracism gradually drew the Bastard families together into
little groups, the groups eventually joined up, and after a time, under the guid-
ance of public-spirited and intelligent leaders, the foundations of a sort of tribal
cohesion and control were laid. They moved away as far as possible to the
outlying borders of the Cape Colony and settled down in villages at De Tuin,
Pella, and other places on Crown lands on the frontier, and endeavoured to
work out their own destiny.
Their ideals were frustrated in 1865 by the passing of the Land Beacons Act,
an enactment of the Cape Parliament, whereby the occupiers of land were
compelled to prove their title to land on which they lived, and Crown lands
were thrown open for sale or lease to farmers.
In terms of this law the Bastards of De Tuin applied to the Government to
purchase a large farm for themselves. In terms of the law, the application was
gazetted and all persons having objection were called upon to lodge objections
at the office of the Civil Commissioner of Calvinia before a certain date. On the
day fixed the applicants would be heard, in reply to any objections raised.
News of the application was received with open and, one must say,
somewhat ungenerous and narrow-minded hostility by the European farmers.
At the appointed meeting the protesting farmers were present in a body, and
before the Bastards could say a word the spokesman of the opposition made a
bitter and unfounded attack on the applicants and concluded by saying that if
the farm were sold to the Bastards they would become a curse to the country.
The Bastards left the meeting in a body and returned to their homes without
waiting for a decision.
Later on they sent a deputation to Cape Town, but the Government, over-
awed by the agitations and political power of their opponents, was apparently
not able to give any redress, and the deputation returned in disappointment.
It was then decided to migrate from the Cape and to seek fresh fields and
pastures new.
This decision was precipitated by the depredations of bands of Korannas
and marauding Bushmen, who at that time were a great source of annoyance
181
For more on Upingtonia see: Gordon, Bushman Myth, pp. 40 - 42.
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and danger and from whom the Bastards, living as it were on the outer edge of
civilisation, had protection either from the Cape Government or from their
inimically disposed neighbours.
In 1868 two leaders, Hermanus van Wyk and Giel Diergaardt, were sent
over Orange River to spy out the land in the north. As a result of their investiga-
tions a general exodus from the Cape began in 1869. The main body, under
Hermanus van Wyk, found its way to Rehoboth, which was acquired by
purchase from the Hottentot Chief of the Swartboois. Another small party
settled at Gabis, north of Warmbad, while a third and smaller band under the
leadership of Klaas Swartz (or Swart) settled at Grootfontein South in the
Protectorate. Another settlement of the so-called Vilander Bastards was formed
at Rietfontein in the Kalihari, which is, however, in British territory, and needs
no attention in this report.
In 1868, during a temporary halt of the trekkers near Warmbad, a provision-
al constitution was framed and approved of. It was merely a makeshift, and
once the tribe (or “Nation,” as they love to call themselves) had settled at
Rehoboth. a new and permanent constitution was drawn up and approved of by
the burghers.
The system of government created in this constitution was democratic and
on republican lines. The head of the tribe, known as the Chief or Captain
(“Kaptein”), was elected by all who held full burgher rights, and he retained the
office for life. Administrative power was vested in the Chief and his elected
Council, while all legislative functions vested in the “Volksraad” or elected
Parliament. All Bastards and all persons who had married into Bastard families
might become burghers. The franchise was enjoyed by burghers who paid
taxes. A stranger was only admitted to citizenship after six months of proba-
tionary residence and circulation of notice of his application, in order that any
objections might be lodged. After acceptance he was installed as a burgher in
the presence of the Chief s Council and the Chairman of the Volksraad. The
Chief and executive officials did not take an oath of office, but by a “stroke of
the hand” (hand-slag) promised to do their utmost for the State and to suppress
personal interests which might be detrimental to the general welfare.
By 1874 a complete code of laws and regulations had been framed. This
code, a written one, gives very little cause for criticism and indicates that the
framers were actuated by worthy ideals, by a desire to promote the general
morality and welfare of their people and a determination to administer justice
impartially.
The majority of the laws are, as may be supposed, modelled on the Roman-
Dutch and Statute law principles of the Cape. There are others which are,
however, quite original and not unworthy of notice by more enlightened and
advanced communities. Space does not allow an exhaustive reference to these
laws, but one may be quoted as an example:–
D. Marriage and Divorce: (1) If a husband leaves his wife without reason, his
goods shall be confiscated and given to his wife, and vice versa.
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Courts of law were also regulated on the European basis, and provision was
made for civil and criminal appeals.
Every male citizen of military age was liable and compellable to perform
military duty when commandeered by the Chief, who was ex officio Com-
mander of the Forces. Under the Chief the principal military officer was the
War-Commandant, who took charge of operations in the field, and who like-
wise was elected by the burghers.
When Palgrave visited South-West Africa in 1876 he estimated the total
Bastard population at 1,500. Today it is probably between 3,000 and 4,000.
This latter figure was fixed by Leutwein as an estimate for 1892, but it was
probably too high.
Allowance has been made by the writer for those Bastards who were
exterminated or scattered by the Germans at Grootfontein South in 1901.
On 19th October 1876 the British Commissioner, Mr. Palgrave, received a
long letter from the Bastard Chief and his Councillors, from which the
following is an extract:–
The circumstances of the country thus compel all those who are here seeking to
obtain a livelihood and competence in security and peace, to wish for another and
good Government to come into the country and protect it. We shall gladly see,
aye, we long for the day when the Cape Government will undertake to rule the
country and secure protection to us. Should the Government require our
assistance in any way, we shall feel forced to give it with all our power and might.
As has already been explained in another chapter, the Cape Government was
not allowed to extend British influence north of the Orange River, and even-
tually the Bastards, in common with their neighbours the Hottentots and the
Hereros, came under German control.
On 15th September 1885 a Treaty of Protection and Amity was made
between the German Empire and the Bastards of Rehoboth.
It reads as follows:–
TREATY OF PROTECTION AND AMITY between the GERMAN EMPIRE
and the BASTARDS OF REHOBOTH
His Majesty the German Emperor, King of Prussia, Wilhelm I., in the name of the
German Empire on the one part, and the independent Chief of the Bastards of
Rehoboth, Captain Hermanus van Wyk for himself and his heirs and successors,
on the other part, are desirous to enter into a treaty of protection and amity.
For this purpose, the plenipotentiary of the German Emperor, Rev. C. G. Buett-
ner, and the Captain Hermanus van Wyk. together with his councillors. have
agreed on the following terms
I
Captain Hermanus van Wyk requests His Majesty the German Emperor to take
over the protection of his country and people. His Majesty complies with this
request and assures the Captain of his all-highest protection. As an outward sign
of this protection the German flag is to be hoisted.
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II
His Majesty the German Emperor acknowledges the rights and liberties which
have been acquired by the Bastards of Rehoboth. And bids himself to maintain
such treaties and agreements which have been entered into by them with other
nations and the subjects thereof. and also undertakes not to hinder the Captain in
the collection of the revenue to which he is entitled in accordance with the laws
and customs of his country.
III
The Captain of the Bastards of Rehoboth binds himself not to dispose of his
country or any portion thereof to any other nation or the subjects thereof, or to
enter into agreements or treaties with any other Government without the consent
of the German Emperor.
IV
The Captain promises to protect the life and property of all German subjects and
friends. He confers on them the right and liberty to travel, reside, work, buy and
sell within the boundaries of his territory. But the inhabitants of the District of
Rehoboth reserve to themselves the right to stipulate the conditions in each case
under which the foreigners may remain in their country.
On the other hand, the German subjects and friends shall respect the laws and
customs of the country, commit no offence against the laws of their country, and
pay such taxes and dues to the Captain, which have been customary hitherto or
which may be agreed upon in future between the Captain and the German Empire.
The Captain on the other hand binds himself not to concede greater rights and
privileges to any other nation than to German subjects.
V
Within regard to the civil and criminal jurisdiction within the territory of
Rehoboth, it is herewith decided that all disputes of the citizens of Rehoboth
amongst themselves shall be adjudicated by their own judges. In the case of
disputes between citizens of Rehoboth and such persons who are not citizens, a
mixed tribunal shall have jurisdiction, to which judges shall be empowered by
His Majesty the German Emperor and the Captain of Rehoboth. All disputes
between persons who are not citizens of Rehoboth or who are not members of
their families shall be adjudicated by that person who has been empowered by His
Majesty the German Emperor to do so. This also applies to criminal cases.
In all disputes, including those of the citizens of Rehoboth, appeals may be
lodged within the Court of His Majesty the German Emperor, by whom the final
decision shall be given.
VI
The Captain binds himself to maintain as much as possible and assist in the
maintenance of peace in Great Namaqualand and the neighbouring countries.
And in case he should have any dispute with the other Chiefs in Great Namaqua-
land or of the neighbouring countries, he will first ask for the opinion of the
German Government and request that the dispute be settled by the intervention of
the German Government.
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VII
In case there exist any other points which require settlement between the German
Empire and the Captain of the Bastards of Rehoboth, these shall be settled by a
future special agreement between the two Governments.
Rehoboth, 15th September 1885
Signed C. G.
Buettner,
Plenipotentiary of His Majesty the German Emperor
Signed H. van Wyk
(x) Jacobus Moutton
Wilhem Koopman
Johannes Diergard
(x) Dierk van Wyk
(x) Jacobus Moutton
Willem van Wyk
As witness F. Heidmann, Missionary
In terms of this agreement the Bastards remained the loyal allies of the Ger-
mans until the outbreak of the present war in 1914. They rendered valuable
assistance in the field against the Hereros and Hottentots, and lost many of their
best men fighting for the German cause.
Soon after Leutwein arrived he made an arrangement by which the younger
might undergo a period of military training under German supervision every
year.182
Writing of these people, Governor Leutwein states:–
They have rendered us very valuable services both in peace and in war. We must
therefore attach them to us more and more and, in terms of their own expressed
wishes, we should place them as near as possible to the whites.
The fact that they had succeeded so far in gaining the approbation of the
German Governor speaks well for the skill and state craft of their Chief and
Councillors. A time came, however, when their past good services and loyal assis-
tance were entirely forgotten. That was when, in 1915, the Bastards refused to
assist Germany against the oncoming British troops. The story of what happened,
told in their own words, is stated below.
It is necessary to add that while the Bastards of Rehoboth happily preserved
themselves from serious harm, the same cannot be said of the smaller community
under Klaas Swart, which had settled in 1869 at Grootfontein South. In 1901,
owing to a dispute about a census of horses, hostilities opened. The Chief Klaas
Swart and several of his people were killed in action, and the community scat-
tered, their hand and property confiscated. The Germans allege that the Bastards
were the aggressors. The Bastards of Rehoboth deny this. However that may be,
the happy settlement at Grootfontein South was broken up after having existed
there over thirty years, and the few survivors became absorbed into the Rehoboth
tribe.
182
Leutwein became Governor in 1894, German military training in Rehoboth started in 1896.
By 1903 it was reported that 130 men had received training Bayer, Maximilian The Rehoboth
Baster Nation of Namibia, (trans. Peter Carstens), Balser Afrika Bibliographien, Basel, 1984: 28,
30.
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EVIDENCE
183
De Waal included statements from 21 witnesses in his report. Extracts from six of these
statements are reproduced in this Chapter. The complete statements can be found in South Africa,
Union of. Report on the inquiry in regard to the German-Bastard question held at Rehoboth and
other places in the Military Protectorate in June 1915, Pretoria, 1915 [De Waal Report]
184
There is a German colonial monument in Zoo Park in the centre of Windhoek that
commemorates the German attacks on Hendrik Witbooi. The monument also mentions the names
of Basters who died fighting alongside German colonial forces
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trains at kilo. 120, and forty-six of our people were employed to guard the
prisoners. These forty-six men stood under Ober-Leut. Hummnel and certain
other non-commissioned officers. The Council was greatly dissatisfied with this,
as it was contrary to the arrangement that we were not to be employed against the
Union troops.
In March I went to Swakopmund to explain the whole position to General
Botha, and to tell him that it was not in accordance with our wishes that our
burghers were employed to stand guard over Union troops, but that our burghers
were compelled to do so; and also to tell him that should he meet any of my
people in the field with arms, he should feel assured that they were there by
compulsion and not as voluntary soldiers. The German Government was not
aware of my going there. I returned to my farm Garies on 26th April, after our
people had already been fired upon.. Garies is situated 87 kilos, south-west of
Rehoboth. I arrived on my farm and learned that the German troops had fired on
our people. On the 4th May the Germans came to Garies, about 300 men. As I
knew that the Germans had fired on our people, I sent my wife and five children
into the mountain in order that, should the Germans come to Garies, they should
not find my wife and children. Frederick van Wijk, his wife and three children,
and also the wife of Stoffel van Wijk and one child, went along with my wife and
children. I and Gert van Wijk, Frederick van Wijk, and two Hottentots remained
behind on the farm, armed. On the 4th May the Germans came. When I saw the
Germans approach we rushed to our horses to ride to the women, as we saw that
the Germans were going in the direction of the women. When we reached the
horses we were fired upon from all sides. I mounted my horse to try and escape.
I succeeded in this. I could not, however, reach the women, as the Germans
already had the women in their possession. The Germans remained there for two
days, so that I could not reach the women for two days. After the second day the
Germans left. When I came to the women’s camp my wife was away with two
children; also the other two women with their children. In the meantime I was
informed that some had been killed. I then looked for dead bodies, and found
those of two of my children, namely, Johannes, twelve years of age. and Anna,
twenty-three years of age. The people told me that my wife had left with only two
children. I then looked for the body of my other son. I did this during seventeen
days. The Germans took my wife and two children with them as far as Leutwein.
Leutwein is situated about 150 kilos. to the north of Garies, my farm. At Leutwein
the Germans left my wife and two children behind. My wife, my two children,
and the other two women within their children then went on foot to Garies. I met
my wife at Kobus, three and a half hours on horseback from Garies. This was on
the 19th May; up till then I had not found the body of my son. My wife explained
to me where it was the Germans had taken our son away from her. I then went to
the place indicated by her, where I found the body of my other son, Hermanus,
eighteen years old. The body lay unburied. There was still a handkerchief tied
over his eyes. The body lay on its back with the head slightly lower. He had two
bullet holes through the back and two through the head, all from behind. The
blood had flowed on his clothes from above to below, that is, from the head to the
feet. From the position in which the body was lying, that is, with the head lower.
I come to the conclusion that he was shot whilst in a standing position and when
held by the hands. This son of mine was unarmed. Besides my wife and children,
the wife and children of Frederick van Wijk, and the wife and child of Stoffel van
Wijk, there were also others of our people on the mountain when the Germans
attacked them.
In all the fights, including the people murdered by the Germans, there were,
as far as I know, twenty-eight of our people who met their death. Besides, the
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Germans dragged with them to the north twelve Bastard soldiers, two councillors,
one elder, and also several others, including women and children. Up till now no
word has been received from them.
Samuel Beukes, duly sworn, states:–
I was present when Cornelius van Wijk gave his evidence. I am now fifty-three
years of age, and a magistrate under our constitution since 1906. My position as
magistrate is also acknowledged by the Germans. I draw no salary from the
German Government.
I was born in northern Cape Colony, and entered this country with my father
in 1870.
The relations between the Germans and our people were always of a friendly
nature. Civilisation is what we have always aimed at, and we have therefore
always sided with the German Government against rebellion on the part of
natives. This is the reason that we stood on the side of the Government in 1892-
93, and again in 1903-07; moreover, we entered into a treaty of protection and
friendship within the Germans in 1885, and have adhered to it.
These friendly relations the Germans began to encroach upon from the
beginning of 1913. It then began to appear as if the German Government did not
wish to acknowledge our independence any longer. Yet the main reason why they
and we came to a collision was their dissatisfaction regarding our attitude in
regard to the war. We refused from the commencement to take any part in a war
against the Union forces. We refused to fight against the Union because we all
originate from the Cape Colony. When the war broke out, the Government told us
that they did not wish that the coloured people should interfere in the war, but that
we should give 150 men to ward off native attacks on our Bezirk. For this purpose
we agreed to give 150 men. The number was, however, later 176. The most of
these were armed with our rifles. All were clothed in uniforms. With this we were
dissatisfied. By clothing our burghers as soldiers the Government made soldiers
of our men, and we were afraid that they would also be employed later on as
soldiers. When it appeared later, namely, in November 1914, that the Government
had even sent our people to Walvis Bay, I and Albert Mouton were deputed by the
Council to go to Kraaipoort, where the Rehoboth Bezirksamtmann was then
stationed, to confer with him, Von Hiller, regarding the breach of faith. We met
You Hiller and Dr. Von Kleist at Kraaipoort. We drew their attention to their
promise not to take our men outside the Bezirk of Rehoboth. They promised to
confer with the Government at Windhuk. Von Hiller then went with the Bastard
corps as far as Jakhalswater, and from there this corps was later on sent to
Windhuk. From Windhuk they were sent partly to kilo. 120 to guard the English
prisoners, partly left behind at Kraaipoort, and partly posted to police stations
throughout the Bezirk Rehoboth. The employment of our people as a guard over
the English prisoners caused dissatisfaction to our entire community, including
the soldiers. The Chief, Cornelius van Wijk. then went to Swakopmund with our
knowledge and consent.
On the 13th April 1915 we were notified by Von Hiller, Bezirksman, that the
whole of the 176 Bastards who were under arms had to go to Otjiwarongo to
guard the prisoners of war and other political prisoners. This we refused to allow.
We pointed out that it had been the understanding all along that we should remain
neutral and only do duty in our Bezirk. Von Hiller then said that we should meet
Francke (Oberst Leutnant) the following morning, 14th April, at Rehoboth
Station, 12 kilos. from here, and there submit to him our objections. This we did.
We met Francke at Rehoboth Station. Francke again proposed that we should
allow our soldiers to go to the north to guard prisoners. We refused. Francke then
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said that if we refused to allow our people to go to the north we should surrender
our arms. There were at the station besides myself, Pieter Mouton, Martinus
Swart, Daniel Cloete, and Carolus Swart (Carolus Swart was afterwards sent
away by the Germans to the north). What Francke said was this: “Well, if you will
not allow your people to go north you must surrender all your arms, for if the
English or Boers find one man here with a rifle, such a man will be strung up on
the nearest tree.” He further said: “I will give you three days’ time, and then I
expect either your rifles or that your soldiers will go to the north.” Francke spoke
in Dutch. He can speak Dutch well. Francke further said in German to Von Hiller,
who was also at the station: “If they refuse I will shoot them dead in one heap.”
Francke then proceeded to the south. On the second day Francke wired to Von
Hiller asking for our reply. Von Hiller told us of this. Our reply was always the
same: that we would not allow our burghers to go north, and that we would not
surrender our own arms. We had agreed that the rifles with which the Germans
had armed some of our 176 men should be surrendered. Von Hiller then further
proposed that if we were unwilling to deliver our rifles we should hand in the
locks thereof. This we also declined to do. Von Hiller warned us that it would be
better for our “community” if we allowed our burghers to go north. We replied
that we could not allow this. He replied: “This is the last warning.” We then
separated.
The following day we were again requested to meet Francke at the station. We
went to see him about half-past five in the afternoon. Albert Mouton, Mathaeus
Gertze, and Carolus Swart went. I did not go. What took place there they can tell.
I cannot say whether Francke knew that Cornelius van Wijk had gone to
Swakopmund. It appeared, however, later that the missionary knew this. The
name of the missionary is Blecher.
I must mention that Von Hiller and the Secretary Widmann went with Mouton,
Gertze and Swart from here to see Francke at the station.
At 8 o’clock that night the deputation returned and told us what had taken
place with Francke. We took everything quietly and calmly, and went to bed. That
night, about 2 o clock, a shot was fired towards the north in the village, about 300
yards from where we are now sitting in this school building. After a while,
Missionary Blecher with two councillors, Albert Mouton and Carolus Swart,
came to me. I was in bed. Blecher asked me whether I had heard the shot. I
replied, “Yes.” Blecher said: “This is the result of your soldiers deserting at kilo.
120 (about 25 kilos. from here), where they had to guard the English prisoners.”
I said: “But have they deserted?” Blecher replied: “Yes; they left about 1 o’clock
tonight. We were informed of this by wire.” I then asked: “But what has the
desertion of our soldiers at kilo. 120 got to do with the shot being fired here in the
village?” Blecher replied: “One of your soldiers escaped here in the village, and
he was fired upon.” (I must here explain that, in accordance with our agreement
within the Germans, there were here in the village about thirty of our soldiers
performing duty. Amongst other things they looked after German horses. Over
them were placed one officer and five non-commissioned officers.) Blecher
asked me to go to Hauptmann Von Hiller. I refused, as it was night, and I did not
see why I should go. Blecher then left. The following morning, Sunday, Blecher
and Hauptmann Muller, who also happened to be here, came to me. This was just
at sunrise. Blecher asked me: “What does this trekking’ mean that I see going on
here?” (I must here state that, owing to the shot fired the preceding night and the
previous threats of Francke, our people had become afraid, and some had com-
menced to trek from the direction of the station towards the mountain.) I replied:
“Sir, it is the shot which was fired during the night. Gertze, who was also present,
said:”Yes. sir, and also the company of soldiers which came in early this morn-
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ing.” Gertze knew that a company of German soldiers had entered the village
early that morning, but I was until then not aware of this. I asked Blecher: “What
is now really the meaning of the company here?” Muller replied: “They are here
to protect the helpless people, women and children.” (By “helpless people” he
meant German women and children, of whom there was quite a number here.) I
replied: “Yes, but we have protected them so long, I beg you take away the
company; they are the cause of all the alarm and consternation amongst our
people. I give you my hand and my word that not a single shot will be fired here.”
Blecher said: “You had better let the company come in, Beukes; the Government
is bound to protect the white people. I said to Blecher: “I understand I am looked
upon as the cause of all this disturbance, but my conscience is clear before God;
I know I shall get the rope round my neck, but I will face death. My conscience
is clear; there is a just Ruler who will judge. I once more give you my hand, on
my side no shot will be fired in Rehoboth. I beg you once more to take the
company away, if only as far as the railway station.” The reply was: “A telegram
has just, been received that the company had to march into the village at 9
o’clock. You had better let them come in.” Blecher then asked me: “Shall I have
the bell rung for church service?” I replied: “This is impossible.” I was afraid of
treachery, especially as there were all sorts of stories of treachery in circulation.
I then went away to my house. When I came there a report had come in that our
soldiers at Zandputz, where, about 40 kilos. from here, they had been stationed,
had first been disarmed and then fired upon, and that one of them had been shot
dead. I then went out on horseback to urge our soldiers not to come into conflict
with the company when it entered the town. Our people were then terribly
excited. They had then already heard of the Zandputz incident, of the running
away of our soldiers from kilo. 120, of the firing of the shot in the night, and of
the flight of women and children to the mountain. Shortly thereafter Hans van
Wijk arrived here. He was one of the ten whom the Germans the previous night
at Zandputz had first disarmed and then fired upon. Hans came running here on
foot. At that moment Sergeant Maiwalt of the police happened to be there, and
Hans van Wijk called out: “Yes, uncle, he (Maiwalt) is the man who last night at
Zandputz started the firing upon us.” Maiwalt was still at Rehoboth the afternoon
before, but went to Zandputz that night and was back early again at Rehoboth. I
then said to Maiwalt: “Yes, I hear you shot three of our people at Zandputz.” Mai-
walt replied: “No, this is not so. We only fired at three, but only in the air, when
the three refused to surrender their arms.” It was clear that, Maiwalt was greatly
afraid. I then asked Maiwalt: “But why do shoot them?” He said: “Our orders
were to arrest those people, and if they escape then to fire.” I then said: “But why
should the soldiers then be arrested?” He said: “Such were my orders.” It was
then about 8 o’clock in the morning. During all that time our people were
continually trekking out. My wife also had then just gone. These people fled in a
south-westerly direction as far as the Kobus mountains.
On Monday, Secretary Widmann came out to my laager to say that I, Dirk van
Wijk and he (Widmann) should also go to Windhuk to speak within the Governor.
I again refused; I even refused to go to the village Rehoboth. On Tuesdays morn-
ing our people who had been to Windhuk came to us. They told us what had taken
place at Windhuk in their interview with the Governor, namely, that the Governor
wished that the arms which were in our possession and which belonged to the
Government should be surrender. We had ten such, and these were immediately
handled over by us. I then sent a request to Hauptmann Muller that the arms
belonging to our people and which had been taken from our burghers should be
returned to us. Their reply was that they would not for the present return these
arms, and requested total disarmament. The position then was this: The Governor
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requested the return of only those rifles which belonged to the Government,
whilst Von Hiller and Muller demanded total disarmament. Wednesday afternoon
a letter was sent by Hauptmann Muller requesting me whether he could send a
patrol past my laager to repair the telegraph line to Tsumis. I consented. A patrol
came that night. I sent out scouts to see what the patrol was doing. As the patrol
did not however go along the line, but to the rear of my laager, it was clear to me
that, the patrol was sent out to reconnoitre my 1aager from behind and that the
Germans were up to treachery. The result was that I moved my laager that night.
On Thursday morning Gertze came to my laager with a report that at night the
Bastards who remained at Rehoboth had been arrested. Gertze, however, with his
family, escaped in time. I then withdrew my laager as far as Zwartmodder, where
there was water for our horses. I then went about 20 kilos. to the rear to
commander our people who were living there. In this way I got twenty more men.
Before my return to Zwartmodder the Germans fired on one of our outposts.
When I went away from Zwartmodder I left Piet Beukes and Albert Mouton in
command.
The twenty men whom I commandeered I sent in advance to my laager. I
received information that there was a fight going on and first wished to remove
the women and children to Kobus. I remained at Kobus until my laager arrived
there a few days later. All that the Dirk van Wijk was still at Vetkop. He later on
joined us at Kobus. When he joined us our total strength was about 300 men. In
these are included the forty-six men who had fled from kilo. 120. The Germans
continually drove us back as far as Kobus. The 300 men were stationed at Kobus
around the Kobus mountains and our women and children within this circle.
Before our commandos concentrated at Kobus there were small fights on the
27th, 28th, and 29th April; during these small fights none of our people were
killed, but three were wounded. It is difficult to say what the German losses were,
but we know that on the 27th, Leut. Von Melkom and a Wachtmeister and one
soldier was killed. On the 3rd May there was again a small fight; on that day also
the Germans lost one or two men. About the 8th May the German force was
estimated at from 300 to 400 men. They then also had two cannon and three
Maxims. On the 8th May the German force attacked us about dawn.185 The fight
lasted until dark that night. The guns and Maxims all took part in the fight. Our
losses that day were nine dead and twenty-four wounded. It is difficult to say what
the Germans losses were. I, however, saw two buck wagons going off with dead
and wounded. Two of our girls and one child were wounded inside our laager by
gunfire. That evening the Germans withdrew to where their guns were standing,
and there they remained until the following morning. That morning they fired a
few more shells at us. While this was going on they buried some of their dead.
They then drew off in the direction of Rehoboth. This was the last we saw of
them.We, that is to say our laager186, remained at Kobus for eight days longer, and
then we began gradually to trek back to Rehoboth.
We are not responsible for the bloodshed. The Germans are to blame for this.
Between the 23rd April and 8th May we captured several German soldiers and
also women and children. We treated them all well and sent them back unharmed
to Rehoboth, supplying them with food and water for their journey. I can honestly
and truly state that during all the days of the disturbances no German, German
woman, or child was assaulted, robbed, or harmed by us.
185
There is an annual commemmoration held on the 8th of May at Sam-Kubis to commemorate
the battle at which Baster forces fought and held at bay German forces sent to defeat them. For
accounts of the events described here see Britz et al., A Concise History: 22-27; Ivan Gaseb
‘Remembering Rehoboth’, The Namibian Weekender, 28th April, 2000.
186
Afrikaans term for a camp usually associated with ox-wagons
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I am forty years of age. I was born at Omaruru. Here at Rehoboth I am since 1904.
I was not one of the German soldiers.
On the 22nd April 1915 the party of which I was one began its trek from
Bloemputz, 20 kilos. to the east of Rehoboth. The trek was making for Kobus, and
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we had to cross the railway line to the south of Rehoboth. The trek consisted of 32
armed and some unarmed burghers. We had under our protection 42 ox-wagons
with from 16 to 20 oxen before each wagon, upwards of 50 families, consisting
of women and children, and eight Cape carts. We had besides a very large number
of loose stock, large and small; I myself had 95 head of cattle and 447 small stock.
There were at least 1,000 head of cattle besides the cattle inspanned in the wagons
and 3,000 small stock. Horses we had but few. Of all my stock I recovered 47
cattle and 100 sheep and goats.
No leader of ours was with the trek. Each was his own leader. Everyone was
inspired by the one desire to flee across the railway line before the Germans could
attack us. There was not the least intention on our part to attack the Germans. Our
main object was to avoid falling into their hands.
In the afternoon at 6 o clock and while we were crossing the railway line at
kilo. 108 or 109, the Germans attacked us. The Germans came upon us from the
south by train. I cannot say how many there were, but there were three open rail-
way trucks packed with soldiers. The tram first passed us, and then came to a
standstill about 300 yards from where I stood. They jumped down and imme-
diately began to fire upon us. They continued firing for two hours. They chased
us as far as they could. Fortunately, it is thickly wooded and bushy at that place,
and it was therefore difficult for them to shoot our people. Our loss was one Kaffir
woman shot dead. The people fled into the bush and left behind six wagons and
one cart. We also fired, but it is difficult to say with what result. There was a
tremendous amount of dust, much shouting and hopeless confusion. The Ger-
mans also captured two women and took them with them. We escaped with the
other wagons and carts. We however lost most of our loose cattle there.
We trekked that night in a westerly direction as fast as we could. Our object
was to reach Kobus. That night, at 12 o clock, while we were trekking we were
attacked by German troops coming from Heuras. These were the same troops
who had that morning attacked the trek of Draghoender and Cloete. We did not,
however, know anything about that attack. I and Klaas, Sarel, and Abraham van
Wijk were behind the wagons as a rearguard. We were a few kilos. behind when
we heard the firing upon our wagons. It was bright moonlight and quiet. We rode
forward to the wagons as fast as we could. When we came to the wagons our
people had all fled; only the wagons were still there, and these were all in the
possession of the German troops. The Germans were not aware of the presence of
the three of us that night. The three of us remained a few hundred yards from the
wagons in the thick bush. The following morning about sunrise the Germans set
the wagons alight, also the carts. There are now lying there thirty-six wagons and
also some carts – I think six. Before they set the wagons alight they shot dead all
the oxen which were still yoked to the wagons. The carcasses of the oxen can still
be seen lying there today, most of them still in the yokes. It was a terrible sight to
see the oxen being shot dead. After the wagons had been set alight, the three of us
fled. The German then saw us and fired upon us. We also then fired a few shots
at them.
Our women and children all escaped, also the men.
We began to come across these people at noon. They were terribly scattered. I
had my wife and eight children in the trek. I saw my wife and three children eight
days later for the first time at Kobus, and it was only after the fight at Kobus that
I, on the 8th or 9th May, had my wife and all my children together.
Of the whole of our trek, consisting of wagons, carts, draught cattle, loose
cattle, cows, and small stock, not one reached Kobus.
The wagons and carts were burnt, and the stock large and small was either shot
dead or looted by the Germans.
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187
A natural wall of rock.
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tell me that they had shot him, and I never saw him alive again. That night they
put us on a wagon and took us away. Two days later I asked Dietriechs: “What
did you do with my son the day before yesterday? How is it that I do not see him
any longer?” His reply was: ‘I have ordered him to drive on cattle.” They took us
with them as far as Leutwein Station, not far from Windhuk, where they released
us on the 13th May. After they had released us we returned on foot to Garies. On
the 19th May I met my husband at Kubis. I told my husband about Hermanus and
that I thought that he had been shot. I also told him where the spot was. My
daughter Cornelia and I then went with my husband to the place mentioned by
me. There we found the unburied body of my son Hermanus. He was lying
exactly where I had heard the loud shot fired. A handkerchief was still tied over
his eves. Four cartridge cases were lying close to him. He lay on his back with his
head slanting downward. I did not wish to go any nearer and cannot therefore give
further details. That same day he was buried.
I do not know the soldier who murdered the wife of Stoffel van Wijk and the
others on the mountain. The Wachtmeister Dietrichs and the Sergeant Kuhn I,
however, know well.
Sara van Wijk
Cornelia van Wijk, duly sworn, states:–
I am twenty years of age daughter of Cornelius van Wijk, Chief of the Bastard
people, and Katrina van Wijk, the previous witness.
I was present this morning when my mother gave evidence. I confirm her
evidence on all points, and I swear that it is correct in all details.
I was present when the two armed German soldiers murdered our people on
the mountain near my father’s farm. The soldier who shot my brother Johannes
had a sandy beard. He was a fairly tall and fairly stout man. I am certain I will
recognise him when I see him again.
Wachtmeister Dietrichs is a police sergeant. I know him well. I often saw him
at Rehoboth and also at Garies. I also know the policeman Kuhn well. That day
at Garies no shot was fired by anyone on our side as far as I know. Where my
father was. who was with him and whether he or the people with him had fired on
the Germans, I do not know. The shooting of the people mentioned by my mother
in her evidence was nothing less than a cold-blooded murder.
Cornelia van Wijk
Before me:
D. DE WAAL. Lieut.-Col.,
Commissioner
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CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
188
In the initial absence of a standardised othography, the spelling of names relating to the
various Ovambo communities and kingdoms changed continually throughout the twentieth
century. Researchers working on colonial Namibian documents are well advised to search amongst
all possible spelling permutations of the name of the community being searched. The names
commonly used in Namibia today for the kingdoms listed are given in brackets.
Harri Siiskonen, Trade and Socioeconomic Change in Ovamboland, 1850 - 1906, Helsinki
1990; Frieda-Nela Williams, Precolonial Communities of Southwest Africa: A History of Ovambo
Kingdoms 1600 - 1920, Windhoek 1991; Patricia Hayes, A History of the Ovambo of Namibia, c.
1880 - 1935, D.Phil University of Cambridge, 1992. Carlos Estermann The Enthography of
Southwestern Angola Vol. 1, Africana Publishing Co., New York/London, 1976.
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(The last-mentioned four tribes live in the area north of the Etosha pan, along
the Kunene and in the gap between the courses of the Kunene and Okavango
which is traversed by the settled boundary line.)
To the eastward of these tribes along the Okavango
189
See also: Andersson, C.J. Lake Ngami, London, 1856, Andersson, C.J. The Okavango River,
London, 1861, Andersson, C.J. Matchless Copper & Trade and Politics, National Archives,
Windhoek, 1987.
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There are neither towns nor villages in Ondonga. if we except perhaps the Chief’s
werft. which, from its great extent, might almost come under one or other of these
categories. Each family, often consisting of father, grandfather, children, and
servants, resides by itself in a very patriarchal sort of way. Their houses or huts
are circular in form; the lower part consisting of slender poles about 2 feet 6
inches high. firmly driven into the ground, and further secured by withers, or
other bands, the whole being plastered over with clay. The roof, composed of
rushes, is in shape not unlike a beehive. The height of the hut, from the ground to
the apex of the roof, does not much exceed 4 feet, and its circumference
outwardly is about 16. The reason for their thus entombing themselves, as it were,
is probably partly as a protection against the cold and partly on account of the
great distance the wood has to be conveyed from the forest.
Besides the hut in which they themselves dwell, the homestead consists of
various other erections, viz., the “palaver-house,” or that wherein councils are
held; several beehive-topped baskets in which the grain is stored away; pens for
the cattle and goats, &c., the whole being surrounded by a high and strong
palisade and, it may be, a thorn fence in addition, The pathways, or walks, leading
to the several buildings enumerated, which are also lined on both sides with rows
of poles, are exceedingly tortuous and to a stranger perfectly bewildering.
The residences of the great differ but little in design from the home-steads of
the commonalty; but they are on a much more extensive scale that of Chykongo,
the paramount chief, for instance, being something like half a mile in circuit. The
defences, moreover, are very much stronger, the outer palisading, as well as that
on either side of the pathways leading to the several buildings, consisting of two
or more rows of poles or planks instead of single ones, and these so closely placed
together as almost to exclude the light, and consequently impervious to ordinary
fire-arms. Indeed, it would require canon to knock them down; and I have no
doubt it is intended they should prove impregnable, if not to ordnance, at least to
such weapons as are at the command of the natives.
Without fear of being thought to exaggerate, I will venture to affirm that at
least one or two hundred thousand stout poles, together with a great many planks
or rather slabs, for saw-mills have not as yet found their way into Ondonga were
made use of in the construction of the werft in question; and as all the homesteads
in the surrounding country, though on a very much smaller scale, are similarly
constructed, it may readily be conceived what millions upon millions of young
trees must annually be felled for their construction and needful repair.
In the erection of the residence of the Paramount Chief of Ondonga, be he who
he may. I should add the whole population is compelled to assist, each man
contributing his quota of materials and labour, and that without remuneration of
any kind; but on these occasions a great quantity of beer is consumed, and, as I
imagine, at the Chief s expense.
Besides grain, they cultivate small quantities of beans, of which there are also
two sorts – one brown and the other white; both are very palatable, the last quite
a delicacy. But, strange to say, neither kind is much prized by the natives
themselves, who prefer corn. Tobacco is likewise extensively planted, but their
way of preparing it quite destroys any flavour it may possess. If is mashed
together in a hollow piece of wood, by means of a heavy pole, into little round
balls of the size of an orange, which when dry are broken into smaller pieces.
Calabashes are, besides, largely produced, but only to be converted into vessels
for holding food, beer, &c. Pumpkins are rarely seen.
The cultivation of corn is associated with much toil and labour. Indeed, from
the first preparation of the soil until the grain is cut, housed and cleaned, it is one
continuous course of hard work. When the first heavy showers have fallen they
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begin operations. The seed, however, is not sown broadcast as with us, but little
holes are made at regular intervals, into which a few grains are deposited. As soon
as the plants are sufficiently grown these, with the exception of one or two that
are left, are pulled up and transplanted elsewhere. This is going on almost
incessantly, and it is amusing to observe how the area on which the corn was first
sown grows under the process. Thus a field of grain that in the first instance was
only half an acre in extent is eventually converted into one of many acres. As a
matter of course, a large field of corn rarely ripens at one and the same time; but
this is of no consequence, as only the ears are severed from the stalk. The ground,
I should add, is carefully weeded by a small one-handed hoe, the only farming
implement in use amongst these people. From the first dawn of day to dusk the
women, and at times the men also, are employed about the cornfields.
Notwithstanding the care and labour thus bestowed on the cultivation of the
soil, and the uncommonly large yield, still times of great scarcity occasionally
occur. The soil consists, as I have said, of fine loose sand on a clay bottom;
consequently evaporation is always great, and as there is little or no shade the
ground is rapidly exhausted of its moisture, and unless replenished at regular
intervals by copious tropical rains it becomes incapable of yielding the usual
produce. In former times, when the Ovampo possessed many cattle, an occasional
failure of the crop, though always more or less calamitous, was of less conse-
quence, since they could fall back on a meat and milk diet until the return of more
favourable seasons; but such is not the case at present, their enemies having of
late years despoiled them of a large portion of their herds. However, as all the
tribes bordering on Ovampoland are more or less corn producers, and as the rains
are not everywhere equally uncertain, it follows that a supply may in general be
obtained from one or other of their neighbours, sufficient at least “to keep the
wolf from the door.”
A word now in regard to the inhabitants of Ovampoland, who as a race are
fine-looking people, and have nothing of the real negro type in their features. The
men are tall and well-formed, and their upright, manly figures are set off to great
advantage by a broad, stiff leather girdle. This, with a slip of dressed skin (more
frequently the inside of an ox’s stomach) in front, and the apology of a piece of
hide behind, is the only covering they indulge in. Though they have now been for
nearly twenty years in communication with Europeans, and eagerly buy guns,
ammunition, &c., they strictly eschew anything approaching to clothing. They do
not even make use of the skins of wild or domestic animals as coverings during
the night. One can only account for this apparent perverseness of their taste by the
fact that they look on their own lubricious and next-to-naked persons as a far
prettier and more respectable sight than the most dandified Brummel,190 costume;
but let the cause be what it may, their going thus denuded of dress must ill agree
with their constitutions, for during the rainy seasons they evidently suffer much
from the cold. With the exception of ear-rings, composed of beads or shells, the
men display but few ornaments.
Their arms consist of the bow and arrow, a dagger-shaped knife, and the
“knob-keerie,” a short straight stick, or rather club, with a heavy knob at the end:
a most formidable weapon in experienced hands, as a single well-directed blow
is sufficient to fell the strongest man to the ground. The natives of Africa,
moreover, throw it with very great dexterity, seldom failing to hit the object aimed
at. Harris, indeed, when speaking of the Matibili, goes so far as to say: “They
rarely miss a partridge or a guinea fowl when on the wing.”
190
‘Beau Brummell’ was a fashion setter and close friend of King George IV of England in the
early nineteenth century
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The features of the women, though coarse, are not unpleasing, and in early life
many of them are very good-looking. As a rule they are exceedingly plump and
well-fed; and. curiously enough. I have never seen amongst them any of those
thin and scraggy females who are so common in Europe. And though they retain
their roundness even in old age, it. is seldom they become corpulent. As with the
men, they lubricate their persons with grease and red ochre, and are as innocent
of clothing as their lords and masters, wearing only, like them, a belt about the
waist and a slip of skin before and behind. Their persons, however, are profusely
ornamented, or rather loaded, with various coloured beads and strings of round
pieces of ostrich eggs, the latter resting gracefully in front.
But the Ovampo ladies have their fashions as well as those of more civilised
countries. On my first visit to Ondonga they, for instance, wore the hair (the
artificial portion of it, at least) straight down the back, each elf-like lock being
fastened to a sort of comb, as depicted in “Lake N’gami.”
Now all this is changed, and the hair is worn en neglig. Thus a few locks
descend behind, whilst others are thrown coquettishly over the head and part of
the face. Then again, at the period I speak of, it was customary for the fair sex to
wear as ornaments heavy copper rings about the ankles. Now this fashion is
altogether dispensed with, and the rings in question are used for a very different
purpose, viz., to prevent servants and slaves, if suspected of the intention of
running away, from carrying out their purpose for when several of the rings are
attached to the legs, which renders the process of walking somewhat difficult, it
is next to impossible for them to effect their escape. Both men and women, when
grown up, I should add.chip the middle tooth of the under jaw.
The Ovampo are a light-hearted people, and, amongst other amusements,
delight in music and the dance. Almost every evening, indeed, when the labours
of the day are over, there are balls, which, in their way, are remarkable perform-
ances, and in which both sexes take part. The women stand in a ring, singing,
clapping their hands, and keeping time with their feet, whilst the men join in a
kind of chorus.
Their musical instruments are of a very simple kind, consisting of the well-
known African “tom-tom” and a sort of guitar.
The staple food of the Ovampo may be said to consist of a kind of stir-about
and milk, and, though partial to meat, it is seldom they slaughter their own cattle;
chiefly for the reason, I believe, that as man’s wealth and influence are judged of
by the number of his herd, he is loth to make inroads on the latter but on very
special occasions. With the exception of the hyena, and for a reason hereafter
mentioned, they eschew not the flesh of any other animal, whether tame or wild.
That of the dog would appear to be especially welcome to them. What is more
than strange, however, is that both flesh and fish, even when in a high state of
putrefaction, are eaten by them with great gusto; and, singularly enough, no evil
consequences would appear to follow the banquet. What would doctors and
inspectors of meat say if assured that not only putrid but diseased meat was
perfectly healthy; but it must not be forgotten that those who partake of such
dainties with impunity live and breathe in the purest of atmospheres during the
greater part of the year. Beer is the favourite beverage of the Ovampo, and, if they
can afford it, they drink it in large quantities.
These people, so far as I am aware, worship nothing either in heaven above or
on earth beneath, whence one is led to conclude their religion, should they really
possess one, must go in a very small compass. Still, they would appear to have a
dim idea of a future state, as may be inferred from the awe and reverence evinced
by them when the subject of death is mentioned. But, after all, may we not
entertain incorrect notions in this matter as regards the Ovampo, attributable, not
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191
Regarding German-Ovambo relations, with particular reference to the Ondonga Kingdom
see, Martti Eirola, The Ovambogefahr: The Ovamboland Reservation in the Making: Political
responses of the kingdom of Ondonga to the German colonial power, 1884-1910, Rovaniemi,
Punjois-Suomen Historiallinen Yhdistys,1992.
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regret, had been unable, owing to pressure of work, to arrange for the possibility
of a visit to him this time; but that he was to be assured of my friendly disposition
towards him.
Some months later, through the medium of the Finnish missionary, Mr. Rauta-
nen, Leutwein received a reply from Kambonde; but, as with his own letter, and
contrary to his usual custom, the Governor does not give this reply verbatim.
Leutwein says it was to the effect that:–
All that I had written in my letter was very nice, but that, as far as concerned him,
Kambonde did not wish to see me as long as he lived. Because the Germans came
with friendly words, but once they were there they wished to rule, and that he (the
Chief) could alone rule in his country.
This rebuff convinced Leutwein that until German authority had been thor-
oughly established in Hereroland and Namaqualand it would be a mistake to
attempt to deal with the Ovambos in the same way as he had already dealt with
Nikodemus, Kahimema. Hendrik Witbooi, and the other far less powerful
Chiefs in the south.
The giving of the usual impression of German power to the Ovambos was
therefore postponed indefinitely.
Over five years then elapsed before Germany renewed her attentions. Early
in 1900 Captain Franke. who was then District Chief of Outjo. visited the
Chiefs Kambonde and Uejulu and travelled as far as the Portuguese frontier
fort at Humbe. This step annoyed and irritated the Portuguese authorities and,
as the result of diplomatic representations made through Lisbon and Berlin, an
order was issued prohibiting the crossing of the boundaries by German soldiers
in uniform. Later other German officers travelled through the area, but their
work was confined apparently merely to spying out the land.
About this time two German traders were robbed in the territory of the Chief
Negumbo and only saved their lives by speedy flight. When the news reached
Governor Leutwein, he happened to be at Outjo accompanied by his, at that the,
inseparable companion, Samuel Maherero, the so-called “Chief-Captain” of
the Hereros. It seems inconceivable, if he wished to gain any prestige with the
Ovambos, that Leutwein should allow of any interference from Samuel
Maherero. Yet what do we find? The Herero Chief is allowed to send a kind of
ultimatum in his own name to Negumbo. A literal translation of this document
is as follows:
My friend Negumbo Outjo, 15th November 1900
I write these words to you. I and my friend the Governor Leutwein have heard bad
things about your people and your tribe.
And now I say to you, do what we demand of you. Pay the 60 oxen for what has
happened, 50 for the traders and 10 for the children of the killed. If not we will
come and shoot you, but we wish to remain friends. Enough.
Many Greetings.
I am, Samuel Maharero,
The Lord of the Hereros
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This letter was sent through the Missionary Rautanen viâ the Chief Kambonde,
who received a present for his assistance.
In the following January a message was received from Negumbo to Leut-
wein that it was not necessary to come and see him, as he intended to compen-
sate the traders.
By June 1901 Negumbo had, however, not complied with Samuel Mahe-
rero’s demands, and the then District Chief of Outjo, Captain Kliefoth, decided
to visit the Chief in person. He was foolish enough to take with him a piece of
artillery and twenty-five soldiers. On arrival at the Chief s village, Omukuju,
Kliefoth found he had stirred a hornet s nest.
The inhabitants rushed to and fro like a colony of ants, and received the troops
with growling threats and shouts. All Kliefoth s attempts to obtain a hearing
failed. As it appeared fruitless to go to any further trouble, he retired during the
night as he rightly believed that he could not take upon himself the responsibility
for an Ovambo war. (Leutwein.)
The matter of paying compensation by Negumbo to the traders was thereupon
allowed to drop.
The next visit to Ovamboland was that made, towards the end of 1901, by
Dr. Hartmann, who travelled to Port Alexandre and Mossamedes, accompanied
by Lieut. von Winkler. The object of this tour was to report on the possibility
of building a railway from one of these ports to the Tsumeb Copper Mine. They
visited Chief Nechale, Kambonde, and Nejulu. but gave Negumbo a very wide
berth. Again they were able to observe the ominous distrust and unrest (Mis-
trauen und Unruhe) of the Ovambos.
German plans and designs on Ovamboland, and possibly Southern Angola,
were however now beginning to crystallise, and in the end of 1902 another
mission composed of Dr. Gerber and the Architect Laubschat, both officials of
the Administration, accompanied by Under-Officer Gass, as a civilian visited
Nechale, Kambonde, and Uejulu. At first they were coldly received and before
long with open hostility. It was thought that, being in plain clothes, they would
arouse less suspicion than men in uniform. The Chief Uejulu accused them of
being Government “spies,” and their attempts to obtain anything like friendly
treatment failed.
For this attitude of the Ovambo Chiefs the Germans were not slow to impute
intrigue and unwarranted interference to their Portuguese neighbours over the
border.
Feeling however that he had to do something, Dr. Gerber moved eastward
and met Himarua, the most powerful of the Chiefs (living on the north bank of
the Okavango). With this Chief, Dr. Gerber concluded a “most advantageous
agreement” for the establishment of a German Catholic Mission. Other
attempts were made to propitiate, during the period 1902 to 1903, the Ovambos
living in the valley of the Okavango; but with no success.192
192
For a detailed description of the efforts to establish the Catholic Church in northern Namibia
see Adrianus Beris ‘From Mission to Local Church: One Hundred Years of Mission by the Catholic
Church in Namibia’ (D.Theol., UNISA, 1996): pp. 79-87.
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In March 1903 the missionaries who were to open up their labours at Himarua’s
village in terms of his agreement with Dr. Gerber, left for the north. On arrival
at their destination, a post on the southern bank of the Okavango, the mission-
aries met Himarua, who professed to know nothing about any agreement with
Dr. Gerber, and requested the missionaries to return home. In the course of
discussion one of the missionaries was foolish enough to inform Himarua that
he was not in his own territory, but that he was standing on German soil (auf
deutschmem Boden), and they, as Germans, could not be interfered with. This,
as Leutwein puts it, “knocked the bottom out of the cask” and the good mis-
sionaries found it very expedient to retire without delay.
It was then decided by the German authorities to punish Himarua so far as
this could be done “without breach of the Portuguese boundaries.” In July
1903, Lieut. Volkmann with a small party of men and maxims drew up on the
south bank of the Okavango and treated Himarua s village on the north bank
(in Portuguese territory) to an exhibition of volleys and quick firing which
lasted for a day. The Ovambos returned the fire, but while their losses were
reported to have been numerous (zahlreich), there were no German casualties.
The German troops then withdrew, and arrangements were made at Windhuk
for another punitive expedition on a large scale to move against the Ovambos
early in 1904, as soon as the rainy season had passed.
The outbreak of the Herero rising in January 1904 and the subsequent
general rising of the Hottentots in the south distracted attention so effectually
that the Ovambos were left in peace and in the enjoyment of tribal freedom.
After the restoration of peace in Hereroland and Great Namaqualand in
1907, those areas, seeing that practically two-thirds of the population had been
exterminated, were unable to supply a sufficiency of native labour for farming,
mercantile and other pursuits. This compelled Germany to institute the system
of forced labour, bordering on slavery, by which all natives, male and female,
over the age of seven years were (with the one exception of the Rehoboth
Bastards) impressed into service as labourers. The discovery of the diamond
fields near Luderitzbucht a few years later placed the colonial authorities face
to face with a problem which had been created by the inhumanity and short-
sightedness of German soldiers and administrators. There was no labour
available for the exploitation of these newly-found sources of wealth. Then it
was that attention again turned to Ovamboland, and by means of much coaxing
and the offering of tempting inducements such as good pay, good food and fair
treatment, and the disbursement of much money, the Ovambo Chiefs were at
length prevailed upon to allow their men to be engaged as labourers. The result
was that the Ovambos became, and are now, the indispensable labour asset on
which the whole of the mineral development and a great deal of other construc-
tive work in the Protectorate depends. The Germans gradually growing wiser,
now that financial interests were at stake, took every care and pains to cultivate
the Ovambos and to propitiate the Chiefs in every respect. The Chiefs viewed
the matter without sentiment and also purely from the point of view of the
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financial and material advantage such employment brought to them and to their
people. Apart from supplying labour, their official and national bearing to-
wards Germany and the Germans was one of studied suspicion and aloofness.
They still felt towards the German official what Kambonde had stated in his
letter to Leutwein. For fear of losing labour which could not be obtainable
elsewhere in South-West Africa, Germany had to adopt an attitude of humble
acquiescence which must have been galling in the extreme.
So recently as the beginning of 1915, when Colonel Franke led a punitive
expedition against the Portuguese at Naulila, on the northern frontier, he
wished to take a shorter route which would necessitate crossing through the
territory of the Uukuambi tribe. Before making the attempt he sent messengers
conveying a request with presents to the Chief Ipumbu. The Chief refused to
accept the presents, and returned them to the German commander with a reply
to the effect that if the Germans wished to take that route, it would only be
possible for them to do so after having defeated the Uukuambis in battle. The
German commander thereupon decided to make a wide d tour.
In strong contrast with the hatred and suspicion of the Ovambos towards the
Germans may be mentioned the spontaneous outbursts of friendship and confi-
dence with which they greeted the arrival of the British troops in their country.
A few months after the conquest of South-West Africa in July 1915, Major
Pritchard, a Native Affairs Officer, and a party of British officers visited all the
reigning Chiefs, and were everywhere received with demonstrations of
friendship and cordial welcome.
In his report193 on the results of his mission, Major Pritchard mentions the
following conversation with the Paramount Chief, Martin, of Ondonga:–
He frankly stated that the Ovandonga had no love for the Germans, whose wars
with the natives they had heard of, that he and his people had always wished that
the English would come into their country … He added, with emphasis, that no
German officer had ever entered his house, that I and these officers accom-
panying me were the first who had ever entered or camped near it.
Before Major Pritchard left Ondonga on his return journey. Martin, who is now
the most powerful ruler in Ovamboland, sent the following message through
him to the British Government:–
I send my greetings to the great men who rule your country. I had always been
afraid of the Germans, and have never had the opportunity, as I had wished, to
invite the English to my country. I was pleased when I heard that the English were
masters of the country; the words that have been spoken to me by you have given
me such confidence that I feel as strong as a rock.
193
South Africa, Union of Report by the Officer in Charge of Native Affairs on his Tour of
Ovamboland, Cape Town, Government Printer, 1915: pp. 21-22.
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At the commencement of this chapter the writer gave the divisions of tribes,
population, and Chiefs as estimated by the Germans at the time of annexation
in 1890. It will be of interest to state the present allocation and position of the
various tribes. The changes in numbers and name are due to the obtaining of
clearer and more definite information, while inter-tribal wars have, during the
past twenty-seven years, brought about changes in the position of the various
Chiefs. The details which follow are taken from Annexure 13 to Major
Pritchard’s report.
Locality: Cuanyanma.
Area: Approximately 3.600 North to South, 30: East to West, 120. (In
Protectorate
194
(Page 142 in original) Since deceased. The Blue Book footnotes the fact that the Kwanyama
leader Mandume ya Ndemufayo was ‘since deceased’. It does not mention that he had died during
an attack by a South African expeditionary force on 10th February, 1917. The ‘warm welcome’
allegedly provided to representatives of the Union of South Africa in 1915 had therefore,
apparently, been of short duration. The Blue Book is certainly being ‘economical with the truth’
here. Silvester, My heart tells me I have done nothing wrong: The Fall of Mandume, National
Archives of Namibia, Windhoek p. 32
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Locality: Ukuambi.
Area: Approximately 300 square miles North to South, l7: East to West. I7
Locality: Ongandjera.
Area: Approximately 100 square milles North to South, 10; East to West,
10.
Chief Shanika, a heathen, age about 70 years.
Population: Estimated by Rev. Rautanen to be about 15,000; other missionaries
place it at not more than 10,000.
Locality: Okualudsi.
For the first time in the history of the Ovambos of South-West Africa, a Euro-
pean official, a British officer, was in 1915 stationed at the head village of
Ondonga, where he now carries out the duties of Resident British Commis-
sioner and adviser to the various Chiefs.
This appointment has been fruitful of very good results, and the Chief
Martin has, throughout, proved himself to possess the fullest confidence and
friendliness towards the new regime. The supply of Ovambo labour is steadily
on the increase, and before many years are over the Ovambos will begin to
show the beneficial results of contact with a humane and just system of
government.
A return of this country to the Germans spells for the Ovambos only one
thing, and it is that the fate of the Hereros will, sooner or later, inevitably
overtake them, and they themselves know it only too well.
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CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
It. is generally accepted that the primitive Bushmen were the aborigines of
South and South-East Africa. It is also quite probable that they have for long
centuries inhabited South-West Africa.
These yellow and dark-brown-skinned pigmies are still to be found in
considerable numbers all along the eastern border of the Protectorate in the
Kalihari sandveld and in the Grootfontein and Kaokoveld areas. Scattered
bands also roam along the Namib desert belt on the western side near the
Naauwkloof and Tiras Mountains, and in the south-western corner where the
Huib Hochebene Mountains and the rugged gorges of the Konkip and Great
Fish rivers give that insolation and shelter which they need.
They live solely on the proceeds of the chase and the wild roots, berries and
fruits of the veld.
Armed with very well-made bows and arrows, and possessing a knowledge
of veldcraft and of the haunts and habits of antelopes and other game, in which
they are unsurpassed, the nomad Bushmen are constantly on the move,
following their quarry from one grazing ground to the other.
Probably the smallest people in the world, they are nevertheless wiry and
firmly built. The hands and feet of the Bushmen are very small and delicately
made, and in general appearance he is not unlike the Hottentot, though much
shorter of stature. Very few pure bred Bushmen reach a height of 5 feet, the
average being about 4 feet 10 inches, while the women are even smaller, but as
delicately formed. Unlike the Hottentot women, they do not show with
increasing years any signs of that very extraordinary and abnormal posterior
development which is a characteristic, graceless and enigmatic feature in the
Hottentot female.
195
In the course of the twentieth century a small battle has been raging within academic circles
regarding the correct terms to be used and applied to people. In southern Africa this debate has
raged particularly stridently around the issue of what to call the earliest inhabitants of southern
Africa. For an introduction to the terms used see, Emil Boonzaier et al., The Cape Herders: A
History of the Khoikhoi of Southern Africa, (Cape Town 1996) pp. 1 - 3. A recent report identified
sixteen different dialect groups amongst those classified today as San within Namibia and these
names are generally used for self-identification. Robert Gordon has argued for the retention of the
term in academic discourse within a historical context and that the term ‘San’ is itself derived from
a word for ‘bandit’. He argues that “To feel compelled to change the label is to submit to the
effectiveness of colonial socialiszation. In order to confront this restrictive socialization we need
to confront the same terms and infuse them with new meaning.” Suzman, James An Assessment of
the Status of the San in Namibia, Legal Assistance Centre, Windhoek, 2001: 3. Robert Gordon, The
Bushman Myth: The making of a Namibian underclass, Westview, Boulder CO, 1992: pp. 5-8.
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The very nature of their mode of life has always militated against a communal
or tribal manner of living. They live scattered here and there in single families
or in groups of one, two, or more families, but rarely in excess of thirty to forty
souls in each group. Such “banding together” (which was in German times a
crime and was punished by long periods of imprisonment in chains) would also
be purely of a temporary nature, induced by the presence in their locality of
plenty of water and sufficiency of game, and as water got scarce and game
began to scatter, so also would the Bushmen separate in order thereby to be able
the better to feed themselves.
The manner of life of the wild Bushmen may be described as being hardly
on a higher plane than that of the lion and the leopard – his rivals in the chase.
He is occupied from birth until death in one long war with nature and in the one
unending task the preservation of himself and his family from death by hunger
and thirst.
It will therefore be understood that among this primitive people, who build
no huts and possess no domesticated animals except a dog or two, whose
territory is to them bounded only by the horizon, who know few laws and few
restraints, and have but the most vague ideas of property or ownership, a settled
government under hereditary or nominated Chiefs has never existed, nor has
there ever been any tribal organisation.
A knowledge of the same language conveying the idea of community of
origin is all that binds the families together, and that promotes the rare and very
occasional assembling of groups of families for feasts and festivities.
The control is therefore purely patriarchal. An ancient grandfather may live
in a family group of two or three sons and a few daughters with their wives.
husbands, and offspring, numbering perhaps fifteen or twenty persons. On
being visited by a curious European and being asked to indicate the head or
Chief, they naturally point to the old man. In other cases, where the elders have
grown too feeble for the hunt, a younger man, generally the most daring and
skilful hunter, may by common consent be acknowledged as the leader of the
party; but this gives no ground for the erroneous ideas often published that
Bushmen have tribal chiefs. They have no chiefs in the tribal or government
sense at all.
In his Report on the Rietfontein Area of the Kalihari, published in 1908 (Cd.
4323), Major J. F. Herbst gave some most interesting and valuable details
concerning the Bushmen and an extract from his account will indicate what
manner of people they were.
He writes (page 10):–
The lares et penates 196 of a Bushman consist of a few lean and hungry dogs, a
short but heavy knobkerrie, a long bone tsamma 197 knife, a bow and arrows, the
196
‘the valued possessions of a household’
197
The Tsamma or ‘Wild Watermelon’ (Citrillus lanatus) and provided an important source of
water and subsistence in arid areas. Van Wyk, Ben-Erik & Nigel Gericke, People’s Plants: A Guide
to Useful Plants of Southern Africa, Briza, Pretoria,2000: 38.
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dried body of the gnubo snake as an antidote against snake bite, a skin bag or two
as a receptacle for these articles, and a tin for use as a kettle. Every werf has a
large number of dogs which accompany their masters on the hunt, and it is really
wonderful with what courage these lean mongrels will tackle a leopard a courage
no doubt begotten of hunger and an absolute confidence in their masters who,
with their knobkerries, are never far behind so soon as the dog has gripped his
prey. The chief offensive weapon of the Bushman is the bow and poisoned arrow.
The poison is obtained from snakes, insects, and the euphorbia, and mixed with
the juice of the melkbosch (not that of the Colony) which grows in the Karasberg
mountains in German South-West Africa. The milky juice is boiled, and when
cool is quite black and sticky. It is applied to the barbed arrow-head made from
old hoops, knives, &c., and fixed in a bone tied to a reed obtained from the distant
river beds.198 The gnubo snake is very rarely found, spending most of its the
underground. It is small, of a brown colour, and said to be very poisonous. There
are two kinds, one with two small, short fore feet. The dried body is carried by all
natives and most of the Europeans in this country and German South-West Africa,
and the dried flesh, ground to a powder and rubbed into the incised wound, is said
by all to be an absolutely safe antidote to the most virulent snake poison. It is said
to draw the poison “out in a stream.” If I remember rightly, some gnubo was
analysed in Cape Town some years ago. but no properties were found that could
account for this action.
The Bushmen are the keenest hunters and the finest trackers in the world.
Being dependent for their sustenance upon the products of the desert and in daily
contact with its fauna, it is not surprising that their powers of vision and their
perceptive faculties should be developed beyond those of ordinary man; and to
one unversed in the ways of the desert their capabilities in these respects are little
short of marvellous. As we look to our morning paper for a record of the events
of the previous day, so the Bushmen will interpret the doings of the animal world
during the previous night (when alone history is made by them) by the imprints
left on the sand. Every footprint is familiar to him and he will announce to you
what visitors his area has had, their number, time of visit during the night, and
whether they were at ease or startled. In the loose sand, game spoors, old and new,
in many hundreds, go in every direction; it would appear hopeless for us to follow
a particular spoor; to them the problem presents no difficulty. Shoot at a buck in
a herd that flees, he will follow their spoor for a short distance and return to tell
you whether you have wounded your buck or not. The merest clot of blood on the
spoor will give him his clue, and he could lead you on that spoor for miles and
miles and never lose it. Fleet of foot, their powers of endurance are wonderful,
and if one could only induce a specimen to compete at the Olympic games in
Europe, methinks a world s record in long-distance running could be secured. The
fleetest steenbok or duiker are run down by them during the hottest part of the
day. The procedure is simple. By day these animals lie in the shade. Then the
Bushman, club in hand, sallies forth, clad only in his veldschoens199, and, with
much shouting, drives up whatever game comes in his way. Then the stern chase
commences. The buck will outstrip his pursuer and lie down again, but the
Bushman on the spoor at a fast trot soon drives him up, and so the relentless
pursuit goes on for about three or four hours in the hot burning sun. By that time
the hot sand will have burnt the hoofs of the unfortunate animal to such an extent
198
For a more detailed discussion of poisons see Shaw, E.M. ‘Bushman Arrow Poisons’,
Cimbebasia, Vol. 7 (1963); also Watt, J.M. and Breyer-Brandwyk, Medical and Poisonous Plants
of Southern and Eastern Africa, E.S. Livingstone, Edinburgh, 1962
199
‘Veld shoes’ made from animal skin.
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that he falls an easy prey to the club of the Bushman. A duiker and steenbok
cannot run far in wet sand, and after rain they are chased by Bushmen, who soon
catch up to them; the wet sand gets between the cloven hoofs of the animals and
chafes them so severely that they cannot run far. Where bush is scarce steenbok
frequently spend the day in the numerous antbear holes. Finding a morning spoor
leading to these holes, the Bushman, silently as a cat, creeps up to the hole and
plants himself before it, leaving a small open space under the left arm for which
the buck charges, when he is pinned and dealt a stunning blow over the head with
the Kerrie in the right hand. In these ways numbers of these animals are killed,
and one can see with what difficulties they must rear their young.
The strength of a Bushman is remarkable. I have seen an insignificant-looking
fellow carry, one on each shoulder, the two complete legs of a full-grown male
ostrich up a steep sand dune.
It is the most interesting experience imaginable to watch the ingenuity
displayed by this savage when on the spoor of game. Possessed of a perfect
knowledge of the habits of all game he is able to forestall them at every point.
Employed as a guide, they will always precede the horsemen by a few yards, first
throwing a handful of sand in the air to test the direction of the wind, which, of
course, determines the route for the day. Not a word is spoken, for one s vision is
limited by the sand dunes, and sound travels far. As he walks along he will
indicate to you, by figures made on his fingers denoting the horns of the animal,
what spoors he is meeting with and whether fresh or old, &c. Before mounting a
dune he will creep on his stomach, and with eyes and ears on the alert, peer
cautiously over the crest from behind the friendly cover of a tuft of grass, lying
motionless the while, till he has examined every nook and corner of the area
exposed to view. If there is game, his keen eye will take in the topographical
features of the whole scene, and he will take you, after much creeping and
climbing on all fours, to the nearest point affording cover, and there is no prouder
moment in his life than when the crack of your rifle lays at his feet the much-
prized meat. A particularly good shot is greeted with shouts of laughter and a
salute of Gai koms (lit., big stomach) which in the native is synonymous with “big
man.”
The greatest ambition of a young Bushman is to catch his first steenbok, for
no girl will have him to wed until he has shown his competency to provide the
family with food. The capture of a buck is indicative of manhood. No ceremony
takes place when a Bushman weds. It is a “taking” pure and simple. Their only
method of giving expression to any exuberance of feeling is by dancing, which is
indulged in by the men alone, the women circling round and wailing a weird
chant in praise of either the gemsbok, ostrich, lion, &c. While these are sung, with
clapping of hands, the men with horns on their heads and strings of hairworm
shells fastened round their legs, making a peculiar noise, imitate the antics of the
respective animals in their sportive moods.
Notwithstanding the fact that the Bushmen were regarded as outlaws and wild
animals by the Germans, and despite the wholesale killing off which has taken
place, there are today perhaps ten to fifteen thousand of these people left in
South-West Africa. The majority live in the Grootfontein area, and in the
Kaokoveld and the sandveld north of Gobabis, along the edges of the Kalahari
desert.
In a most illuminating report made in January 1912 to the German Gover-
nor, the District Chief of Grootfontein (Herr von Zastrow), says:–
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I do not think I am making a false estimate when I fix the number of Bushmen in
the Grootfontein District alone at from 7 to 8,000.
He goes on to add that the estimate of Professor Dr. Passarge (Die Buschleute)
of a total population of the Bushmen in the northern areas at not more than
10,000 is much too low.
The Bushman language is merely a succession of clicks and gutturals, and
there are reported to be several dialects, due in some measure to Hottentot
influence.
Although there are subdivisions based mainly on differences of dialect and
locality, there are two main groups or families into which the main body of
Bushmen of South-West Africa may be divided, namely, the Kung and the
Heikom.
The Kung are pure bred yellow-skinned pigmies, and are in every respect
typical wild bushmen of the most primitive type known. They are easily
distinguishable from the Heikom, who are taller and darker. These people live
in parts of the Grootfontein District, in the northern and eastern sandveld, and
along the Omuramba Omatako. They are timid and shy of the white man and
keep out of his way. Should he happen to come on a party unexpectedly and
they find flight inconvenient or undesirable, a dangerous situation is likely to
result, as they never hesitate to use the deadly bow and arrows. For this state of
affairs the entire blame must not be placed on the Kung Bushman.
The Heikom Bushman evidences in his physical appearance and in his
language further proof of the ancient migration through this area of the
Hottentot tribes. He is as tall as the average Hottentot and dark yellow of skin,
while his language is Nama, like that of the Hottentot and the Berg-Damara.
This race is undoubtedly the result of intermixture between the Hottentots
and some now extinct Bushman tribe. Some members of the race are dark and
also bear unmistakable evidence of intermixture with the Berg-Damaras.
Their habitat is the Grootfontein District proper, the Etosha pan area, and
the North-western part of the sandveld of the Kalahari border.
The Heikom Bushman is, as may be expected, less wild than his Kung
neighbour and more amenable to control and civilisation. At one the, a year or
two before the war, there were no fewer than 1,500 Bushmen farm workers in
the Grootfontein area, the majority of them being Heikom Bushmen; but for
reasons which will be referred to presently the majority of these people
eventually decided that their free natural barbarism was more preferable than
service with the Germans.
The extermination of the bulk of the natives in the south has now made it
necessary to look to the northern areas for supplements to the insufficient
sources of labour supply to carry on mining work and agricultural and other
undertakings. There is no doubt about it that should South-West Africa receive
an influx of white settlers after the War, the problem of native labour will
become acute. The gradual taming and utilisation of the Bushman for farm
work and herding of stock is therefore a subject which cannot be waived aside
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without serious consideration. It is unfair to urge that these wild people are
irredeemable and that they are incorrigible thieves and dangerous neighbours.
The Bushman will never steal cattle except as a revenge, or unless he is driven
to do so by the desperation of an empty stomach, and in nearly every case it is
the action of the white people, in shooting off all the wild game. or in
proclaiming game reserves and stringent game protection laws, which has
driven the Bushman to resort to theft as a means of existence.
Major Herbst in the already quoted report, says (page 13):–
The strict enforcement of the game laws has made the country unsafe for them.
They profess to be unable to understand by what right Government protects the
game, and invariably ask to be shown the Government brand on the animals.
At other times it has been a means of revenge on the German settlers, whose
ideas of the property of the Bushman in his wife were about as nebulous as the
Bushman’s idea of the rights of the settler to the land and his cattle, the majority
of the German settlers had acquired their cattle by the doubtful means already
outlined; they decided, very many of them, to appropriate the wives of their
Bushmen in like manner, namely, by forcible acquisition.200 The Bushmen
retaliated by driving off the stock and sometimes by shooting the German.
This does not indicate or prove, however, that the Bushman is useless and
that he constitutes a problem. the solution of which is only possible with a rifle
and unlimited cartridges.
Herr von Zastrow says that extermination is out of the question. Referring
to the estimated population of 7 to 8,000 Bushmen in his district, he writes:–
Taking this number in conjunction with the fact that so many men are already
working on the farms. and bearing in mind also the small number of natives now
in the whole Protectorate, one cannot afford to pass over these people without
consideration. More than half of the farmers would not be able to carry on their
business were the available Bushman labour to vanish.
The opinion so generally expressed that the Bushman cannot be utilised as a
labourer, because he will not remain on a farm and is too weak, is not actually
correct. Surely it must be clear that such people who have during their whole
lifetime wandered about the veld and have never done any hard manual labour,
cannot in a moment lose their habits and become efficient and energetic
labourers… The present generation cannot entirely change its nature.
It is remarkable to observe how the Bushmen serve the purpose of farm
labourers. They learn to plough, to cultivate tobacco, to control oxen transport,
and whatever else a farm labourer must do. Many remain for long years on the
farms and become so serviceable as assistants that they are indispensable to the
farmer.
200
Robert Gordon quotes from one of the earliest reports of the South African Military
Magistrate, Lt. Hull, who took control of Grootfontein District after the German surrender in 1915
and complained that “… their [Bushman] women were being constantly interfered with by both
farmers and police” Gordon, Bushman Myth, p83
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Dealing with stock thefts, the District Chief goes on to state very definitely that
as a rule the wild Bushmen do not appear to be the thieves; but that the thefts
are committed by fugitive Bushmen who have previously been farm labourers.
He gives the following example, which is extremely significant:–
In the case of the stock thefts on the Omuramba Ovambo, the perpetrators
had suffered under the false and bad treatment of a farmer and were therefore
driven to commit these crimes out of motives of revenge. Probably, though I
cannot prove this, the same is the case in regard to the stock thefts at Jumkaub and
Begus …
In regard to remedial measures of control, von Zastrow considers that large
areas should be left free as reserves for the wild Bushmen, and that by fair
treatment it may be possible in the gradually to entice them to give up their wild
nomadic life and to settle down as useful people. He is definite on the point that
the putting of the terror of death into them will not influence them to abandon
their old habits:–
Other suggestions, such as extermination or the deportation of whole tribes, are
so absurd as to merit no consideration.
201
A concentrated German campaign took place in the years 1911-1912 with over 400 patrols
sent out to police and capture Bushmen. Robert Gordon has described Swakopmund as ‘a major
Bushman holding center’ with high mortality rates. For example, he quotes German files showing
that amongst one group of 32 brought to Swakopmund as prisoners, 15 had died within a year and
reproduces a disturbing photograph of a group of sixteen prisoners in Swakopmund in 1911.
Gordon, Bushman Myth, pp. 69-71.
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It was the grossly inconsiderate and immoral attitude of the German farmers in
the north towards the wives of their Bushmen labourers that precipitated all the
troubles between them and resulted eventually in reprisals by the Bushmen and
their shooting by the farmers.
In Major Herbst’s report, the capture of his first steenbok by the young
Bushman is given as proof of his competency to provide the family with food
and encouraged him to take unto himself a wife. The Bushman was no believer
in polygamy; he found that it took him all his time to provide for one wife and
her offspring. That wife was, however, his cherished companion, and with her
and her children the husband shared every morsel of their rough and oft-times
scanty diet. The killing of his first steenbok did not, however, imply that he
would at once get married. It entitled him to a kind of provisional first claim on
his lady-love; but her father saw to it that the prospective son-in-law, during
months and often years of servitude (calling to mind the Biblical story of Jacob,
Laban and Rachel) worked and hunted for the whole family, and proved
beyond any doubt his efficiency as a hunter and a provider of food.
A prize so dearly won was not uncherished, and the one person he could
look upon as a mate and a life s companion was not readily to be parted with.
Yet what do we find. The writer has it on the verbal evidence of missionaries
and German officials, and on the statements of the natives themselves, that the
chief cause of all the trouble between Germans and Bushmen was that the
Germans would persist in taking the Bushwomen from their husbands and
using them as concubines. The result was that the Bushmen revenged them-
selves by driving off cattle and, in some cases, by shooting their brutal masters.
Johannes Kruger, an intelligent Cape Bastard, who in 1895 was appointed
by Governor Leutwein as “Chief” of the natives of Grootfontein, states under
oath:–
The first German I met was Von François, who passed through Grootfontein with
troops towards N’gami. Some years later Major Leutwein came to Ghaub with
Dr. Hartmann, the manager of the S.W.A. Company. He stayed there only a day
and drew up an agreement for me to sign, wherein I was appointed Captain of the
natives and had to recognise German sovereignty and control. Leutwein said I
was Captain of the Bushmen and Damaras and of all people who lived at Ghaub.
The agreement was signed on 31.8.1895. I identify the original agreement and my
signature now shown to me. (Original agreement read over to deponent.) I signed
the agreement most unwillingly. I at first refused to sign it, but they (Leutwein
and Hartmann) insisted, so I eventually agreed.
I knew the Bushmen had no real Chiefs, and that every head of a family was
practically his own Chief and master. I told Leutwein that Bushmen would not
readily submit to a Chief, especially as I was not a Bushman. The reply was that
as I know the language and the people I might have influence over them. The
Berg-Damaras, I felt, I could control, and also the Hottentots, though the
Hottentots in particular strongly objected to the agreement being made. They said
they did not want to be German subjects and preferred the English. The Berg-
Damaras said nothing, and the few Bushmen were also silent, as they understood
nothing of the matter. After the agreement was signed, Hartmann gave me 51. a
month. I had to provide labourers for the Company. I then tried to collect people
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to live in Ghaub which, under the agreement, was given to us. I collected in time
212 Heikom Bushmen (men, women, and children) also 110 Berg-Damaras, and
these, with the 35 Hottentots all lived on my werft at Ghaub. They all agreed very
well, but the Bushmen only remained a short time, as there was not enough veld
kost (wild fruits, roots, herbs, &c.) for them to live on. They had no stock. So they
scattered and returned to the bush. Later on the Bushmen began to offer their
services as labourers on the farms of the German settlers. The majority of the
Heikom (several hundred families) left the bush and came in to the farm. Then the
trouble started. The German farmers refused to pay them their wages, they said
food and tobacco were enough for them. They did not want money. The food was
poor and the Bushmen complained to me. I spoke to Lieut. Volkmann, the
German Magistrate, and said the Bushmen were a wild people, but if they were
properly treated and fed and got a little money, just a little they would get tame
and become useful. He made promises, but nothing came of them. We got no
redress. As a rule a Bushman only has one wife. If she is barren he may take
another, but never has more than two. The majority of the Bushmen have only one
wife. They are extremely fond of their women, whom they treat well. The
Germans started to take their wives away from the Bushmen and made
concubines of them The whole district is full of these German-Bushwomen cross-
breeds. This conduct of the Germans annoyed and irritated the Bushmen more
than anything else. They deeply resented it; I received numerous complaints from
them. I made representations to the German Magistrate, Volkmann, but the
trouble continued. This resulted in the Bushmen refusing to work on farms unless
compelled by hunger to do so. Then they began, for the first time, to steal the
cattle of the Germans and rush them away to the bush. One Bushman whose wife
had been taken in this way, murdered the German farmer who had despoiled him.
Bushmen were shot on sight by police and German farmers, and no mercy was
shown to them. Those who were shot were men who, too afraid to stand, ran away
on being seen by a German patrol or a farmer. They were in a state of terror. Often
the Germans surprised and captured families of Bushmen in the veld. These
people were then transported, with women and children, to Swakopmund or
Luderitzbucht to work. Many died down there. I only saw two who had escaped
and returned to the bush there. They said all their people perished there of cold
and exposure. The Bushmen are human beings after all, and resent their wives
being taken away, and object to ill-treatment. They are too terrified now and don
t trust white men; but in time I think the Heikom will settle down and become
useful labourers if well treated. The Kung or Kalahari Bushmen are more fierce
than the Heikom, and will not readily settle down. I have always got on well with
them though, and never was molested by any of them. The white men, especially
the Germans, treated them as if they were wild animals, and therefore they
retaliated and are naturally wild and timid. The Germans treated all natives with
harsh brutality and gave them no justice. They all hate the Germans. The majority
of the natives here have from time to time been badly flogged and thrashed for all
sorts of small offences, such as petty thefts or vagrancy or laziness or
impertinence. They were spoiled and driven to desperation by suppression, and
many offences they committed and impertinence and lack of respect arose out of
the Germans’ intimate and immoral relations with their wives and daughters. If a
native objected and was cheeky he got flogged for insubordination and
impertinence. This was in peace time. In war time a German showed no mercy to
man, woman, or child.
We were very unhappy under German rule, and I often deeply regretted their
having come here. But what could we do – we were too weak.
I know the natives of Grootfontein. They are all much happier now than they
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were under German rule. They talk all day long about the new Government, and
say they hope and pray that England will keep this country and govern us. They
are in terror at the very idea of a German Government. coming back. They say
they will all be killed, and will flee away to another country rather than stay. I say
the same. The Germans hate me because I tried to protect my Bushmen and
Damaras. I reported their cruelty, and they blamed me when the natives deserted
their service. I won’t stay here if the land is given back to Germany. I don t believe
any of us will remain.
PART TWO
CHAPTER ONE
In the remaining chapters of this report it is proposed to deal with some aspects
of the criminal law of the Protectorate applied as against natives before the
Occupation, some illuminating features of the administration of the law as
against Europeans during the same period when the aggrieved parties were
natives, and, finally, with the position between Europeans and natives in these
respects as it has been forced on our notice since the Occupation from the point
of view purely of the criminal law.
On the first subject what follows in this chapter will be sufficiently instruc-
tive. On the second it is felt that the surface merely has been touched, and that
deeper investigations would lead to even more serious conclusions than are to
be deduced from such cases as that of Ludwig Cramer, referred to in the next
chapter. On the third, the bare facts are left to speak for themselves; but cases
like those of Venuleth on the one hand, and Becker and Schmidt on the other,
throw an unmerciful light on the estimation in which native life has been held
within the borders of the Protectorate under German rule.
From the whole only one conclusion is to be drawn, viz., that if a native was
killed or seriously injured as a result of a collision with a German it was a
matter of small moment, to be disregarded if the authorities were not forced to
take notice of it, and if otherwise even then to be minimised to the greatest
possible extent. On the other hand, had a German the slightest of grievances
against a native, the latter was made to suffer severely under the lash.
The Imperial German Criminal Code constitutes a comprehensive system of
criminal law. It carefully defines all offences and provides the punishment for
each, even going so far in the latter respect as to lay down maximum penalties
for those misdemeanours which must of necessity under modern methods of
Government be established by local or police regulation. In outstanding contra-
distinction to the codes with which we are familiar, it provides precise limits of
penalization which leave to the Court, once the exact offence has been deter-
mined, but little discretion as regards the sentence to be imposed. It further
endeavours to provide for those conditions of mind and circumstance which are
usually regarded as reducing in gravity or nullifying entirely an act which is,
on the face of it, a breach of the law. Its rigidity cannot be regarded with favour
by any one who is familiar with the admirable elasticity of the Roman, Dutch
or English systems of criminal jurisprudence, but none the less it affords a body
of legal prohibition almost wholly complete in extent and of a nature which
doubtless is thoroughly suitable to the meticulous German mind.
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202
Carl Joseph Anton Mittermaier (1787-1867) wrote an extensive (686 page) account of
standard criminal procedure, as applied in Germany after unification in 1870. Die Gesetzgebung
und Rechtsübung über Strafverfahren: nach ihrer neuesten Fortbildung, Erlangen, F. Enke, 1856.
203
A translation of this law is contained in a ‘Memorandum on the status of natives in German
South West Africa’, Consul Müller, Luderitizbucht to Sir Edward Grey, 12th April, 1911: 13-14.
Pretoria Archives, GG 276.
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I. COMPETENCE
(1) Criminal Jurisdiction and Procedure in the case of the coloured population
are exercised by the Governor. In the various Districts the Bezirksamtmann or
independent Chief of the District (both these officials are included in the term
“District Officer” used later) takes the place of the Governor. The Bezirksamt-
mann or independent Chief of the District is entitled to delegate his powers, on
his own responsibility, to his subordinate officials for their areas, but is bound to
inform the Governor to what extent he has made use of his powers of delegation.
The right to inflict punishment shall not be given to a non-commissioned officer,
even if in charge of a station. The officer in charge at Cape Cross, who retains his
former powers, is exempted from the operation of this provision.
II. PUNISHMENTS
(2) The following punishments may be inflicted: Corporal punishment (flogging
and caning), fine, imprisonment with hard labour, imprisonment in irons, death.
(3) Corporal punishment cannot be employed for the punishment of natives of
better standing.
(4) No female of any age whatsoever shall be liable to be flogged or caned.
(5) The only punishment in the case of males under 16 years shall be caning.
(6) Flogging shall be carried out with an instrument specified by the Governor,
caning with a light cane or rod. A sentence of flogging or caning may be carried
out in one or two instalments. Where flogging is inflicted the number of strokes
shall not at any one time exceed twenty-five, and where caning is inflicted the
number of strokes shall not at any one time exceed twenty. The second instalment
cannot be inflicted before the expiry of a fortnight from the first.
(7) The execution of a sentence of flogging or caning must always take place in
the presence of a European appointed for this purpose by the official empowered
to exercise criminal jurisdiction (paragraph 1), a medical man, for instance,
where one is available.
(8) Before the infliction of punishment is begun the person convicted shall be
examined in order to ascertain his physical condition.
(9) The medical man called in, or in his absence the European present at the
flogging, has the right to stop or suspend the infliction of the flogging or caning
if the state of health of the person convicted appears to make such a proceeding
necessary.
(10) Sentences of imprisonment for more than six months require the sanction of
the Governor, to whom the passing of the sentence must be immediately reported.
The execution of the sentence shall be postponed until such sanction is received,
unless the delay involved is likely to make the execution of the punishment
impossible.
(11) The final decision in the case of a death sentence is the sole prerogative of
the Governor. In cases where a District Officer has imposed such a penalty the
fact shall be reported forthwith to the Governor, to whom the records in the case
should be forwarded.
(12) A record of all criminal cases is to be kept in a book on the following lines
No. Name. Crime. Sentence. Date of Sentence. Remarks.
Theft 20 strokes with cane 26th June 1896
Murder Death 1st August 1896
Confirmed by the Governor. 12th November 1896.
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(13) The Captain (Headman or Chief) or his substitute shall be present during the
criminal proceedings. In the case of serious crimes the District Officer shall call
in several reputable natives to assist him, though the sole responsibility shall rest
with the District Officer. Minutes of the proceedings must be taken, and the
verdict must be given in writing.
(14) In the case of outlying stations and official expeditions into the interior of
the country the provisions contained in sections 1 to 13 of this Ordinance apply
save that with regard to the exercise of criminal jurisdiction the officer in charge
of the station or the chief of the expedition is substituted for the District Officer.
(15) In case the procedure laid down in Section II. cannot be adhered to in the
case of outlying stations or expeditions into the interior (Section 14) in case of
mutiny, hostile attack, or any pressing emergency owing to urgent reasons, but on
the contrary the immediate execution of the death sentence upon a native seems
required by the circumstances, then the officer in charge of the station or
expedition shall institute summary proceedings against the accused after, if
possible, calling upon at least two assessors to assist him, and shall thereafter
forward the minutes of the proceedings with the sentence passed and reasons
therefor together with a report of the circumstances to the Imperial Governor. If
it should have proved impossible to call upon assessors as prescribed, the reason
which made this impossible should be entered in the minutes.
(16) If Martial Law is declared in any portion or locality of the Protectorate by
the Imperial Governor, his substitute or, in the event of urgent danger, by an
independent Government official or Military Commander, then the summary
proceedings laid down in Section 15 of this Ordinance immediately come into
force as against natives who render themselves liable to punishment.
III. DISCIPLINARY POWERS OF DISTRICT OFFICERS AND OFFICERS
IN CHARGE OF OUTLYING STATIONS
(17) Natives who are employed as servants or under a contract to work may, on
the application of their masters or employers, be sentenced as a disciplinary
measure by any officer entrusted with the exercise of criminal jurisdiction
(Sections 1, 14) to the following punishments, viz., corporal punishment, together
with imprisonment in irons or imprisonment in irons alone, for a period not to
exceed 14 days, for the following offences Continued neglect of duty and
idleness, insubordination or unwarranted desertion from their places of service or
employment, as well as any other serious breach of the condition of service or
employment. The provisions of Sections 2 to 9 and 12 with regard to judicial
punishments are applicable to disciplinary punishments.
IV. CONCLUDING PROVISIONS
(18) District Officers and officers in charge of stations or, as the case may be,
leaders of expeditions or their substitutes in case of their absence, are required to
furnish a quarterly return of all punishments carried into effect to the Governor.
These reports are to be submitted to the Imperial Colonial Office.
(19) This Ordinance comes into force on the day of its publication in the various
Districts and Stations. Contrary regulations are simultaneously repealed.
(20) This Ordinance, as far as the administration of the judicial proceedings is
concerned, is only applicable to disputes among the natives belonging to the same
Captain, as far as is compatible with the terms of the Protectorate Treaties.
This law is deserving of study. In the first place and properly so, the supreme
administration of justice is in the hands of the Governor. If magistrates, juries,
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judges all have erred, with the Crown remains the power to put matters right,
and with it also rests the divine prerogative of mercy. Subject to this authority,
the Ordinance is exercised, not by the ordinary Courts, but by the Bezirksamt-
mann or Distrikt Chef. These officers were Chiefs of Police of their Districts,
and the undesirability of vesting the power of punishing crime in the same
official who is responsible for its detection and investigation needs no
emphasis.
Punishments are laid down under Section 2, but there is nothing whatever
to indicate how they are to be applied. This was left entirely to the whim of the
individual official, and there was in law nothing to prevent him except in regard
to the offences against an employer set out in Section 17. from inflicting any
punishment from a fine of 1s. to death for any offence. Examples of how this
was carried out in practice appear later.
There is no reference whatever to the very material subject of evidence, but
it is laid down that minutes (protocol) must be kept and the decision recorded
in writing. In the case of Venuleth (see Chapter 3, Part II.) it was urged that the
trial held by him was conducted under the authority contained in Sections 15
and 16 of this Ordinance. The entire record of the case charge, evidence,
verdict and judgment is contained in the following document204:–
PROTOCOL
Okonjati,
9th June 1915
Proceedings of Court Martial, held at Okonjati on 9th June 1915, upon two Bush
-
men, names unknown.
Corporal Schulze.
Corporal Rapecki.
Statement of Facts:
The two Bushmen were discovered by Lieutenant Venuleth in the middle of
October on the farm Schonbrunn busy slaughtering two wethers near a small
cattle post. When the stock were counted it appeared that 367 had been stolen.
Moreover, all over the neighbourhood a considerable quantity of stock had been
stolen (Okaturua). On the 9th June, Lieutenant Venuleth searched the bush and
found about twelve natives in it, but only succeeded in capturing the two in
question.
The unanimous decision was that the crime of stock theft had been proved, and
that they should be shot.
This sentence was carried out on the 9th June by Corporal Rapecki and Lance-
Corporal Hitter, under the orders of Lieutenant Venuleth.
(Signed) Venuleth, Oberleutnant.
Okonjati,
204
For further discussion of the case involving Lt. Venuleth see Gordon, Bushman Myth, p79-81
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This is the entire record of a case in which the supreme penalty was imposed,
and immediately carried out, upon evidence every word of which would have
been rejected by a British Court. One of the victims was a woman.
The Ordinance also contains no reference to the equally material subject of
defence. In fact, the whole question of procedure is left in the air, and
apparently the presiding officer could do as he liked. Although these omissions
are apparent in the law, they would not perhaps obtrude themselves on the
notice of any one familiar with all the safeguards established in Union and
British law in favour of the accused were they not forced upon it by the
examples of complete disregard of those safeguards displayed by persons
exercising its provisions in this territory.
According to official records, on the 18th September 1914, a Court similar
to that constituted by Venuleth, sitting at Waterberg, tried a native named
Alfred for the offence of stock theft. The only evidence given was that of a
farmer, Schneider205, who stated that he had lost some 50 head of small stock,
and that a Herero, by name Simon, had also lost one head; that this native had
gone to look for his animal and had come across the accused in possession of
some blankets which Simon claimed as his own. Schneider stated further that
Simon had also found the head of his missing goat, and that lying about Alfred
s camping-ground were the bones of a number of other small stock. This
evidence was read over to the accused, who made the following statement “I
have been loafing about the bush, have lived on veld food and caught guinea
fowl, but I have not stolen cattle, but my two associates have stolen stock. I
have always made them give me some their meat.” Apparently a Herero named
Sepp gave evidence similar to that of but only this bare fact appears on record.
Upon these statements the accused Alfred was sentenced to death by hanging
for repeated stock thefts, the Court giving the following reasons for its decision
“Though the accused denies all guilt, yet the Court has come to the
conclusion that the accused himself assisted in the stealing of stock and that he
has even been the leader of the gang. As a lot of small stock has disappeared in
this locality lately, and according to the investigation of the police and troops
the offences had been committed by natives, the court is of opinion that they
must impose the death penalty in order to deter the natives and to protect the
neighbouring farmers and small settlers against. further serious losses.”
The judgement was promulgated forthwith and executed immediately.
Upon this case being brought to his notice, Governor Seitz telegraphed at
once to the President of the Court, Lieutenant von Weiher, forbidding him to
execute any more such sentences without His Excellency’s consent. He also
drew the attention of the Officer Commanding Troops to the case, pointing out
205
Today the Schneider-Waterberg family has a farm at Klein Waterberg with a small private
museum that mainly contains memorabilia from the decisive battle between the German and
Herero forces which took place nearby at Ohamakari on 11th August, 1904. Tötemeyer, Andree-
Jeanne, The state of museums in Namibia and the need for training for museum services, University
of Namibia, Windhoek, 1999. p. 142
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that as the native was not in the service of the Army a field court martial had
no jurisdiction in the matter; that it is not proper to summarily punish stock
theft with the death penalty; that it was doubtful whether the members of the
Court had not rendered themselves liable to prosecution on account of unlawful
proceedings, and that there could be no doubt that the case would have serious
consequences upon the cessation of hostilities. The Bezirksamtmann at Oma-
ruru, on his own initiative, also brought this case to the notice of Governor
Seitz; but no one apparently took any notice of the point that, beyond the
accused s admission of having had some of the meat, there was practically no
evidence whatever as we regard it that he had committed any offence at all.
The forms of punishment provided by this Ordinance differ materially from
those prescribed in the criminal code.
The place of honour is occupied by corporal punishment; then follows fine,
which was rarely imposed, and rightly so since the natives as a rule were not in
a position to pay; the next variety is imprisonment with forced labour, which is
more severe than any of the forms of imprisonment mentioned in the criminal
code. Kettenhaft, or imprisonment in chains, does not necessarily imply
anything very serious. Its full value can only be appreciated when the chains
themselves are examined (see Appendix 1).206 It should be noted, moreover, that
this punishment was applicable to women. While the death sentence was
carried out on Europeans by decapitation, in the case of natives hanging was
employed. No proper gallows appears ever to have been used, and in many
instances the arrangements were of such a primitive character that slow
strangulation was the result. (See frontispiece.)
Section 3 is a reasonable provision, but leaves a loophole through which
abuse might creep in, since it remains to the official to decide the meaning of
the words of better standing. Previous chapters show that this loophole was
made use of in the cases of Chiefs of high standing, who were compelled to
suffer lashes.
Sections 4 and 5 are in accordance with humane ideas of penal correction.
In regard to Section 6 it is clear from the German official records that the
number of strokes imposed frequently exceeded 23. (Statistics on this point
appear later in this chapter.) Further, the infliction of corporal punishment in
two instalments has rightly or wrongly long ago been rejected by us as
abhorrent.
Exception cannot be taken to Sections 7 to 13, nor is the principle of
Sections 14 to 16 objectionable, though obviously it requires strict care in its
application. In practice Section 13 was completely ignored.
206
It had been reported in 1916 that the German prisons were “most primitive and, in some
cases, totally unfit for human occupation. Prisoners wre prevented from escaping by neck chains,
handcuffs, chains fastened to rings in the cell floors, and other barbarous methods of a byegone
age”. It is interesting to note that ‘all chains’ were removed and some were sent to ‘the
Departmental Museum in the Union’. Administrator ‘Report of the Administrator of SWA, 9 July
1915-31 March 1916, p. 20. A 272. Bk. 1.
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returns made under Section 18 confirm this view. The following particulars are
given from a return from the small district of Bethany, taken at random from a
large number of such.
This return covers the period 1.1.13 – 31.3.14, and shows 103 punishments
recorded. 38 of these were awarded by the District Court after trial; the other
65 were summarily administered, i.e., by the police, without trial. The district
in question is very sparsely populated, its native population – men, women
andchildren – in 1913 being officially stated as about 1,400.
Of the total of 103 cases, 30 convictions were for desertion, 20 for negligence,
9 for vagrancy, 7 for insolence, and 18 for disobedience.
A similar return from the Gibeon District, also a very sparsely populated
area, affords the following information.
During the period under review, 148 convictions are recorded. Of these, 37
are for negligence, 17 for desertion, 12 for laziness, 13 for vagrancy, and 21 for
disobedience.
(1) Tstuchub. a Bushman, for the crime of serious theft in four cases,
being a band leader and threatening, was sentenced to death and duly
executed. A similar penalty was imposed on the Bushman Kunchab
for “attempted murder, sedition and. banding.”
(2) For the crime of congregating or “banding,” the Bushman Lamzib
received six years in chains, while his compatriots Eirub, Olip and
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At Gobabis
(1) The Hottentot Lucas for “repeated serious housebreaking” was sen-
tenced to death, but the Governor commuted this sentence to 10 years
us in chains.
(2) The Herero Lucas received 15 lashes for “creating a nuisance,” and
Matthias the same sentence for making a wrong accusation.
From these returns it appears that, during the 15 months ending 31st March
1914, 4,356 natives of both sexes were convicted, 4,039 males and 317
females. Out of the 4,039 males, 3,044 suffered corporal punishment, 2,787
being flogged and 257 caned, and of those caned some were boys under 16, and
practically the whole of the remainder were labourers of mixed race from the
Cape. No doubt they owed to their white blood the adoption of the milder form
of punishment. The maximum number of strokes with the cane imposed was
40, and this was administered in four cases; in one, in two instalments of 20
each, while three persons underwent 20 strokes and the same number 30 in two
instalments. For flogging a sjambok was used, generally made of rhinoceros-
hide. This was a severe instrument one metre long and one centimetre thick at
the thin end. The following table shows the number of persons on whom more
than nine lashes were inflicted during the period:–
10 609
12 13
15 1,141
20 77
25 435
30 9
15 twice 22
40 37
20 twice 16
50 59
25 twice 68
2,486
The average number of lashes imposed was nearly 17 per individual. The total
number of strokes. cane and sjambok, was 50,127. These figures indicate that
the lash as an instrument of justice was indulged in to an appalling extent.
In the Union of South Africa the following whippings were inflicted on
adult natives in the year 1913:–
7 – 12 1.110
13 – 24 488
Over 24 – 16 16
1,959
The total number of male adult natives punished in that year was 296,965 that
is to say, that in only one out of 150 cases was the rod called upon as against
three out of four in this territory. Moreover, corporal punishment is rarely
imposed in the Union save for sexual offences or repeated serious offences.
Here it could be, and constantly was, imposed on a servant merely because he
did not do his work. It must, moreover, be borne in mind in making these
comparisons that, from the point of view of severity, there could be no question
of equality between a rhinoceros sjambok of the official dimensions already
mentioned and the rod employed in Union prisons.
On the 26th February 1907 the head of the Colonial Section of the German
Foreign Office wrote to the Governor at Windhuk stating that objections had
been raised in Togo and the Cameroons to the sjambok on account of the
injuries it caused, and asking for his views on the subject in the light of the
longer experience obtained in the Protectorate. The District Officers were
consulted and, with one exception, were in favour of its retention. The Chief
Government Medical Officer reported that in his opinion the sjambok ought to
be condemned. The Governor’s reply to Germany was that all District Officers
save one were in favour of the instrument, and he proposed to retain it in use.
He omitted to give the Medical Officer’s view.
In. the year 1900 the Berlin Government pointed out that the number of
natives punishment in this country was out of all proportion to the population,
and that corporal punishment was awarded in an exceedingly large number of
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cases, and that it was feared that public opinion in Germany would draw very
unfavourable conclusions as to the success of Germany methods of civilisation.
It was accordingly directed that such punishment should only be, inflicted in
very serious cases and where experience has proved other means for the moral
improvement of natives to be ineffectual. The ability of officials was to be
judged in future by their success in their chief duty, the education of natives,
without too frequent recourse to punishment. Governor Leutwein called for
reports from the District Officers, missionaries and others.207 All, with one
accord, deprecated any change in the matter, and the officers said that they
knew of no case in which the sjambok had done harm. Captain Fourie, of the
South African Medical Corps, who has in the course of his duties as officer in
charge of the Native Hospital at Windhuk examined large numbers of male
natives, has reported that a large proportion bear permanent injuries due to the
sjambok.
It is probably due to this official reproof from Berlin that the exercise of the
so-called fatherly right of correction (Väterliche Zuchtigungsrecht) became so
frequent. By this means natives were punished by their masters without the
necessity for any official record being kept or, in fact, any official receiving
notice of it. In consequence, even the summary procedure laid down by Section
17 of the above-quoted Ordinance was constantly disregarded, and the admin-
istration of corporal punishment freely took place without being forced on the
official notice of the authorities to their embarrassment.
The death sentence would appear in our eyes to have been abused, though
not to the same extent as the lash. The returns referred to above disclose its
imposition and execution, for attempted murder coupled with assault and theft,
and for serious theft. Such a sentence was also passed in one instance for
house-breaking, but was commuted by the Governor to ten years imprisonment
in chains.
It is convenient here to remark on a further important point in which
discrimination in the method of punishment as between European and native
took place. Under the theory known as real-concurrence, if any one person
committed several offences the penalty was assessed separately for each, the
total amount was then usually reduced to a certain extent and this reduced total
was the actual sentence put in force. The authority for this is Section 74 of the
German Criminal Code. Cramer, whose case is dealt with in the next chapter,
got the benefit of it. In the lower Court the sentences imposed on him totalled
27 months and they were reduced in this way to 21. On appeal the original
sentences were altered to a total of five months, which was similarly converted
into an actual sentence of four months. Compare this with the case referred to
above of the native sentenced to death for repeated housebreaking, the maxi-
mum punishment for a single instance of which under the Code is 10 years’
hard labour.
207
English translations of Leutwein’s order and twenty-eight responses form District Magis-
trates, District Advisory Councils and missionaries can be found in NAN A 41 ‘re. Infliction of
corporal Punishment on Natives’.
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The foregoing shows how severely the law was administered when it was
observed. Yet it is the firm conviction of British officials now in the country,
forced on them by numerous instances which have come to their notice during
their 21/2 years of occupation, that the law was mainly honoured in the breach
and that it was the general practice to disregard it on account of the rules whose
observation it required. The ordinary police-post was in charge of a sergeant,
who could not exercise the law of April 1896; yet evidence is constantly
cropping up that these sergeants as a matter of practice assumed that. they had
the necessary power and regularly thrashed natives for trifling offences.
Beyond this it is abundantly clear that masters rarely went to the extent of
troubling the sergeants until they had themselves gone to a grave limit in the
direction of corporal punishment of their servants.
Attention must also be drawn to the fact that these police sergeants were ex-
soldiers. with no training worthy of the name as policemen, and whose only
qualification was that they had served in the von Trotha campaign and under-
gone its brutalising and degrading influences.
The pernicious theory of the parental right of correction already referred to
which was allowed to grow up and encouraged by officials, was doubtless in
the main responsible for the state of affairs that existed. Every German employ-
er of native labour, except – to their credit be it stated – a few with feelings of
humanity, claimed that he stood in loco parentis to his native servants, whether
they were 15 or 50 years old, married or single, male or female, and as such
asserted his right to administer “parental correction” to them. It appears that
German law gives a master the right to administer such correction to his
apprentices and, in some German States; to domestic servants. This defence
was raised in practically every case (the number was not large) in which master
or mistress was charged here with ill-treatment of a servant, and the local
Courts appear to have laid it down that, although not expressly provided by
law, nevertheless such right did exist, but that the correction must not exceed
the limits of ordinary restraint not be such as to do serious injury. It must, in
fact, be such reasonable punishment as a father would give to his unruly child.
This view is perhaps not without its logical support; but a perusal of the case of
Cramer dealt with later on, in which this defence was the only serious answer
to the main facts, will show how far such a theory may carry an individual
beyond the limits of self-restraint to the utmost excesses.
A question which has led to many of the disasters which have attended Ger-
man administration of the criminal law in its application to natives is that of the
oath. This is a matter of considerable difficulty, and some sympathy may be felt
with the German side of it, however opposed to our ideas it may be. To a
German Court – but not, unhappily, to every German individual – the oath was
sacred. Its administration was a solemn function attended by divers ceremonies
and, once taken, the witness’s words received credence almost without reserva-
tion as against other evidence not on oath, no matter how powerful. The Ger-
mans have not progressed to the stage which we have reached of examining
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even sworn statements solely in relation to all the other proved circumstances
of a case and testing their reliability accordingly, but gave a fictitious value to
such statements. With them the sanctity of the oath is based on the theory of
Divine punishment, and consequently natives who are usually heathen – and,
even if Christian, mere babies in Christianity – cannot be permitted to take it
since it has no such binding force on them as on a European, who may be de-
scribed from this point of view as having reached his majority in Christianity.
Yet anyone who has read the statements in Part I. of this Report regarding
the customs of the local natives will have gathered that they were thoroughly
familiar with the oath, of which they had their own forms, and breach of which
was a grave dishonour visited with heavy punishment. For centuries the most
sacred oaths had a prominent part in their tribal life. and were universally
respected. No doubt upon this is founded the experience of British officials
that, in most instances, the statements of a native in a Court of law may, after
making due allowance for his lower grade of intelligence, ignorance of the, and
so on, be accepted quite as readily as those of his European fellow-inhabitants.
Where a native has departed from the truth it has generally been found that he
has done so through fear of his German master. Generally speaking, local
natives in Court show a remarkably high regard for the truth. comparing very
favourably in this respect with Europeans and remarkably so with the natives
of the Union.
The writer of this part of this Report has had many years’ experience in the
Union of the behaviour under oath of Europeans, natives, coloured people,
Indians, Malays and other races, and is probably better qualified than any other
British official in the Protectorate to form an opinion in regard to local natives
when in the same situation. It is sufficient to say here, without going into
the grounds upon which the foregoing conclusion is based, that it is his
deliberately-formed opinion in the light of such experience.
Only as proof, therefore, either of utter blindness or of deliberately fostered
misconception as to the high standard of the natives in this respect can the
following be regarded. In 1909 Herr Dernburg put forward proposals for
certain reforms in judicial procedure in the German Colonies directed among
other things towards improving the standing of natives. Among them was the
following:–
It is intended to introduce the administration of the oath to natives as a measure
for their moral improvement.
In giving evidence, therefore, natives could not take the oath and, owing to the
fictitious value placed upon it, were consequently not so readily believed as
Europeans who did. This, originally a possibly well-intentioned attitude of the
Courts, led in the outcome to the dreadful situation that not even the most
incontrovertible evidence, and oceans of it, was permitted to weigh against the
bare statement of a single European witness. That this is no wild statement is
proved by the following extracts from the deliberate judgement in Cramer’s
case:–
In the determination of these facts the Court, contrary to custom, accepted the
statements of the natives Heiweib and Grunas inasmuch as they adhered to their
former statements which agreed with the former evidence of the accused and
certain white witnesses. while the accused and the said witnesses today depart
entirely from their former evidence…The Court could not accept this as
established by the “evidence of the natives alone in view of the denial of the
accused.”…
That is to say, reduced to its logical conclusion, that if accused and his wit-
nesses had lied consistently throughout there would have been no question of
giving credence to the statements of the natives.
The following extracts (for original text see Appendix 3) from the German
records at Windhuk (W. III., r. 2) also go far in support of this view:–
1
Imperial Magistrate
Luderitzbucht,
J. No. 295
31st January 1908
The Imperial Government,
Windhuk
ILL-TREATMENT OF NATIVES in re.
No cases have become known to me in which German farmers have ill-treated
their natives or not provided them with sufficient food.
However, a whole number of cases have been reported in which employees of
the railway have ill-treated Herero prisoners of war who have been working under
their supervision.
In most of these cases I have laid a charge against the offenders with the
Imperial District Court. However, these charges have very rarely resulted in a
conviction, as in most cases only natives could be called as witnesses. whose
statements were not considered sufficient and satisfactory by the Court.
(Signed) Boehmer
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2
Imperial Magistrate
Luderitzbucht,
J. No. 5150
14th June 1911
The Imperial Government,
Windhuk
In consequence of the opinions prevalent in this country, every official whose
duty it is to oppose the ill-treatment of natives on the diamond-fields and who has
to prosecute such offences by laying corresponding charges in the Courts is only
too readily suspected of negrophilism.
The opinion is very frequently held in this country that the Ovambo is “no
human being” at all, and that the native does not possess the right of self-defence
even in case of the most severe ill-treatment by Europeans, but that he has only
the right to lodge a complaint with the Magistrate.
(Signed) Heilingbrunner,
Acting Magistrate
3
Imperial Magistrate
Luderitzbucht,
The Imperial Government,
21st April 1913
Windhuk
ILL-TREATMENT OF NATIVES in re.
Complaints regarding the ill-treatment of natives are once more on the increase,
although for a short time an agreeable improvement had taken place in that
respect.
How much times have changed is best proved by the remark passed by one of
the heads of the largest diamond companies, who could find no other answer to
the complaint of the Native Commissioner to the effect that one of his diamond
sorters was continually striking the natives than: “I have complaints about the
natives also.” The change in opinion is apparently the result of the companies
now having sufficient native labourers and consequently thinking that it is no
longer necessary to look after them so well as formerly.
The Law Courts are utterly useless (Die Gerichte versagen vollkommen). One
may occasionally obtain a conviction and a monetary fine in the first instance. An
appeal is promptly lodged. The case is heard by a Chief Judge, who does not
know the conditions on the diamond fields, nay, has perhaps never seen one. The
native witnesses have left for home during the long period elapsing between the
first and second hearings, and the reading of the scanty record of their statements
made at the first hearing of the case makes no impression. The accused has learnt
sufficiently from the first case how to conduct his defence; the natives are not
believed, while the most doubtful statements of Europeans are given full cre-
dence as long as they are made under oath. Naturally the matter is settled by a
brilliant judgement of “Not Guilty.” There is no more thankless task than to act
as prosecutor in such cases.
It is useless to deal with the Chamber of Mines. This institution hardly does
anything else than dispute the actual facts, and very seldom gets beyond banali-
ties.
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Furthermore, the Chamber has not by any means the influence over its members
which would be expected by the outsider.
(Signed) Boehmer
These are the opinions of a highly-placed official, not once expressed but at
intervals over a number of years.
In German South-West Africa, therefore, the native was oppressed by a
criminal law of mediaeval severity administered, not in the calm judicial
atmosphere of a Court, but in the heat and turmoil of everyday administration
by executive officials; and, if he came before a judicial tribunal, laboured under
most serious disabilities.
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CHAPTER TWO
Coming here full of British ideas of the administration of justice, with echoes
of German vaunts of superior civilisation in our ears despite hints from
Belgium and not suspecting that that civilisation carried with it views of the
exercise of the law in regard to natives utterly different from those with which
it was carried out in regard to Europeans, for some the it did not occur to
anyone to make serious investigation into the manner in which the German
Government had fulfilled its obligations in this respect towards its coloured
subjects.
From the to the, however, references to ugly occurrences cropped up, and
recently a definite attempt to ascertain the truth was made. In the course of the
inquiries the case of Ludwig Cramer, of which the full judgement follows later,
came to notice. A glance showed its importance, and the papers were then fully
examined.208 The scantiness of the documents gives much room for conjecture,
but the facts are sufficiently fully stated in the judgement to enable an unbiased
person to form a conclusion as to the way justice was meted out to the
unfortunate natives (all but one women) concerned in the matter, and the
inhuman brute into whose hands it was their misfortune to fall.
Cramer was first of all tried by the District Judge at Windhuk. The charge
brought against him was “dangerous assault,” and there were 10 separate
counts. On two of these, in which it was alleged that he had on separate
occasions kept natives chained up in his “farm-prison” for many hours in such
a position that they were unable to move, he was acquitted, the Court not being
satisfied that they were fastened up immovably. The mere chaining up of a
native for 24 hours was not worth taking notice of. On the remaining eight
counts he was sentenced as follows:–
For the assaults on Grunas, Auma, and Maria. five months’ imprisonment
in each case.
For the assaults on Konturu and July, three months’ imprisonment in each
case.
208
The German response to the Blue Book criticised the emphasis that it gives to the Cramer
case, but condemned his actions, rather than the leniency of the judicial response – “The German
Administration … can only express the most intense regret that such persons should make their
way to the colonies and injure the German name through their actions.” German Colonial Office,
The Treatment of Native and other Populations in the Colonial Possessions of Germany and
England …, Hans Robert Engelmann, Berlin, 1919: 135-141.
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imprisonment each.
Or 27 months in all.
In the cases of July and Magdalena a fine of 401. was imposed, and the same
in the case of Konturu, although in addition to the beatings accused s conduct
in regard to her was grossly indecent in one particular respect.
For thrashing Amalia and Alwine he escaped with 101. and 51. respectively.
It appeared front the proceedings in tile lower Court that the sjambok used
by the accused was a heavy rhinoceros-hide instrument, such as has already
been referred to in the preceding chapter.
In order to fully understand what follows, it is necessary to reproduce here
certain provisions of the German Criminal Code209:–
209
Waters was already extremely familiar with these laws. See Gage, R.H and A.J. Water
Imperial German Criminal Code Translated into English, W.E. Hortor & Co, Johannesburg, 1917
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For the difference between Sections 211 and 212, a matter which is not of much
importance here, the reader is referred to the next chapter.
A translation of the judgement of the Appeal Court now follows. It has been
carefully made and revised, and may be taken as entirely correct.
xvii
(Page 164 in original) Offences under the German Code are divided into three classes
according to their gravity. The words: Crime, Misdeed and Delinquency are used in the translation
by Messrs. Gage and Waters, from which these sections are taken, to represent the three classes.
Somewhat similarly, Penal Internment, Confinement, Military Detention and Detention represent
different forms of incarceration known to the German Criminal Code.
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In the criminal case against the Farmer Ludwig Paul Cramer, born on the 16th
December 1866 at Warburg, married, Protestant, previously convicted, residing
on the farm Otjisororindi:
Charged with dangerous assault.
The Imperial Supreme Court sat at Windhuk from the 28th March to 4th April
1913 to hear the appeals by the accused and the Crown Prosecutor against the
judgement of the Imperial District Judge at Windhuk of the 9th and 10th August
1912.
The Court consisted of:–
(1) District Judge Werner, in place of the Chief Justice, as President:
(2) Farmer Gathemann,
(3) Farmer and Merchant Kotting,
(4) Brewery Director Mahler,
(5) Post Director Thomas, as Assessors:
(6) Government Councillor Dr. Kohler, as deputy of the Crown Prosecutor;
Police-Sergeant Kudell, as Registrar;
and declared the following to be true justice in the case:–
The appeal of the Crown Prosecutor against the judgement of the Imperial
District Judge at Windhuk of the 9th – l0th August 1912, is dismissed with costs
against the Treasury.
On the appeal of the accused the said judgement is altered, and accused is
sentenced for misdeeds in contravention of Sections 223 and 223 (a) of the
German Criminal Code on eight counts (in seven in conjunction with Section 240
of the German Criminal Code) as follows, the order as to costs being confirmed:–
In the case of Auma to three months’ imprisonment.
In each of the cases of Grunas and Maria to one month’s imprisonment.
In each of the cases of July, Konturu, and Magdalena to a fine of M800.
In the case of Amalia to a fine of M200.
In the case of Alwina to a fine of M100.
The sentences of imprisonment are converted into a combined punishment of four
months’ imprisonment. Should the fine, amounting in all to M2,700, not be paid,
one day s imprisonment shall be substituted for each M15.
The costs of accused s appeal shall be borne half by the Treasury and half by
the accused.
REASONS FOR JUDGEMENT
The accused was, by the judgement of the Imperial District Judge at Windhuk, on
the 9th and 10th August 1912, acquitted on two counts and sentenced on eight
counts of dangerous assault combined with Section 240 of the German Criminal
Code to one year and nine months’ imprisonment and to pay the costs of the
proceedings.
Against this judgement he, in writing dated the 16th August 1912 received the
same day, lodged a timely appeal in due form for the reversal of the proceedings
of first instance and an acquittal. The Crown also, in writing dated the 19th
August 1912, received the same day, lodged a timely appeal in due form against
the amount of the punishment awarded in these cases.xviii
* Translation
xviii
(Page 165 in original) Here follows argument on a question of jurisdiction, which is of little
interest and is omitted.
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Hieweib, a Kaffir, who had been an excellent servant of Europeans in Gobabis for
12 years, was stationed with his wife, the Bushman woman Grunas, in charge of
a small-stock post of the accused. At the end of September 1912 (?) he reported
to accused the death of a valuable sheep. Accused went with the witness Kisker
to Hieweib’s post. Having satisfied himself that there was suffusion of blood
under the skin of the neck of the dead sheep, and having in consequence come to
the conclusion that the animal had been violently killed either by Grunas or
Hieweib, he ordered the witness Kisker to beat Grunas, who was far advanced in
pregnancy and naked, with a riding sjambok. Kisker refused out of consideration
for the condition of the woman. Accused thereupon thrashed Grunas with the
riding sjambok so heavily that she collapsed and could take no nourishment that
evening.
Next morning, two more small-stock having died, accused removed Hieweib
and Grunas from their post and took them in his cart with him to his farm. Here
Grunas underwent another severe thrashing with the sjambok, and was then sent
to gather grass.
On this or the next day Grunas gave birth to a dead child. The medical experts
were unable to say with certainty that the abortion was a result of the beating.
In the determination of these facts the Court, contrary to custom, accepted the
statements of the natives Hieweib and Grunas, inasmuch as they adhered to their
former statements, which agreed with the former evidence of the accused and
certain white witnesses, while the accused and the said witnesses today depart
entirely from their former evidence.
The ascertained facts contain all the essentials of Section 223 (a) of the
German Criminal Code. Severely beating a woman, a short time before child-
birth, with a riding sjambok is treatment dangerous to life, especially when the
woman has been beaten on two consecutive days and on the first occasion so
severely that she collapsed. Further, a light riding sjambok is a dangerous instru-
ment, since it is liable, if mechanically handed, to deviation which might bring
about a by no means unimportant bodily injury.
Accused relies on his paternal right of correction. As to this the Court,
although such a right is not established by law, agrees with the reasons of the
judgement of first instance. The extent of this “paternal right of correction” for
the purpose of parental control is, however, determined by the strict meaning of
the words. No father, in his senses, would severely beat with a riding sjambok his
daughter when in a condition of advanced pregnancy. Such treatment is not in
accordance with educational requirements, but is rather sheer brutality. On this
exception the accused cannot rely. He is therefore punishable under Sections 223
and 223 (a.) of the German Criminal Code.
The Court cannot declare an ideal-concurring misdeed against Section 240 of
the German Criminal Code, since no one deposed that any declaration whatever
was intended to be forced from Grunas by the beating.
On the 12th January 1912 the wife of the accused asked him to take her and
the children out for a drive. He put her off because he had so much to do in his
mealie lands. When, however, the horses had been brought for the drive, he, in a
state of excitement which he could not understand or account for, had them
inspanned in the spider210 and set out with his wife and children for the drive. The
family went to the Otjikango Pan, seven kilos. distant. A short way from the Pan
the accused got out and went on ahead alone with his gun, as he hoped he might
come across a head or two of game grazing on the Pan. On the Pan he noticed two
210
A spider phaeton was a light horse-drawn carriage that was high off the ground with tall thin
wheels
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natives who bent down at intervals and touched the surface of the Pan with their
hands. At first he believed he recognised them as two of his people; then he
thought they were Jan and Kewas, two natives who had previously absconded and
whom he regarded as dangerous stock-thieves. When the natives saw him they
bolted. He fired two shots (Schreckschusse) after them to frighten them.
Accused declared he thought he recognised Jan and Kewas. At the Appeal
proceedings it was credibly deposed on oath by the farmer von Michaelis that
about that time (after the Ohlsen case) be had sent two natives on the spoor of the
small stock of the farmer Spiro Theologo in the direction of accused s farm. These
natives had returned unsuccessful with the excuse that they had run away because
accused had shot at them twice. The remarkable behaviour of the two natives
observed on the Pan having thus been simply explained by the fact that they were
spoor-trackers, accused then made a new statement that Jan at least he had
recognised definitely. In view of his original statement the Court did not accept
this one, especially as he had made his observations at a distance of 400 metres.
One of the medical experts accepted the definite declaration of the accused
regarding his recognition of the native Jan at a distance of 400 metres, in
conjunction with the preceding impulsive ordering of the drive after first refusing
as basis for inquiry into accused’s state of mind.
Next morning accused went with his daughter Hildegard to the small-stock
post of the Herero woman Alwine, under whom the child Doris was placed as
assistant. Just as on the previous day, so on this day, the accused asserts he
established the loss of certain head of small stock from the flock of Alwine. He
then took Alwine by the hand, his daughter took Doris, and both brought the
shepherdesses to the farm. According to the evidence of accused, Doris freely
admitted that Alwine had at their request given some small stock to the Hereros
Jan and Kewas, lurking in the bush, whom the accused believed he had seen on
the Pan Otjikango the day before. Alwine declared that Doris was forced to this
admission by beating. Even without a beating a native child is easily influenced.
After Doris had made this admission, the accused examined Alwine and ordered
her to declare the names of the stock-thieves. Alwine said she did not know.
Accused then said to her:
“Tell me the names of the stock-thieves or I will sjambok you till you die.” As
Alwine insisted that she did not know, accused began to beat her over her bare
shoulders with a heavy leather sjambok. After some 13 strokes Alwine cried out
“Enough,” and indicated Jan and Kewas as the stock-thieves. Today, as at the first
trial, she declared she had, under pressure of the pain, said all that accused wished
simply in order that he should cease thrashing her. She had never at any time seen
Jan and Kewas, and did not even know where they were. Two weeks later Alwine
still had 13 broad weals across her shoulders.
Next day accused counted over his other flock of small stock which was in
charge of the Herero girl Sosina (Josephine), and found a loss of animals. He took
the girl to the farm and declared to her that hamels211 had been stolen and she must
tell the names of the thieves. If she told the truth he would only give her a little
sjambokking; but if she lied, a great deal. She then named to him Jan, Kewas, and
other natives as the thieves. Questioned regarding earlier losses of animals, which
had not been cleared up, she indicated other natives of the neighbouring Farmer
Faber as the stock-thieves, and even gave information as to the supposed where-
abouts of three oxen.
Sosina has also declared today, as at the first trial, that through apprehension
of a thrashing from accused she had “spoken with his mouth,” that is, lied and
211
Male sheep, rams.
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falsely stated whatever he wished. This appears to the Court to be credible, since
we know how simple it is to extract from a native any desired statement, and how
difficult to procure from them the truth. During the appeal proceedings the Court
witnessed a minor instance of how natives were examined at Otjisororindi. The
wife of the accused was at his request confronted with a native witness. Frau
Cramer placed her hand on the shoulder of this witness, looked at her with
extraordinarily wide-opened eyes, and began to speak to her imploringly. This
example so enlightened the Court that it straightway put an end to the con-
frontation. Moreover the native witness throughout this attempt to influence her
stuck to her answer, because she is now in the service of another and has nothing
more to fear from accused’s sjambok. According to the consistent testimony of
the native witnesses, the sjambok and serious threats throughout played a great
part in accused s inquiries. Sosina and Amalia, from whom he obtained the most
important statements, both declared he said to them “If you do not say just what
I tell you, I will beat you till you kick the bucket.”
After the above-mentioned pleasure drive, the accused spent a sleepless night
wondering what the two natives he saw on the pan could have been doing. It then
struck him that his neighbour Linde, exactly a year before, had lost 18 head of big
stock and 50 to 60 head of small stock. The accused, with Linde himself and other
farmers, had come to the conclusion at the time that poisonous plants were the
cause of death. Linde is still today of the opinion that the beasts died of plant-
poisoning, since it was the time when the poison plants grow, the grass was not
yet green, and the animals through lack of green grass readily took other green
stuff. In the night suspicion came to the accused that the Veld-Hereros might have
poisoned Linde’s watering-place at that time for hunting purposes, and now had
also strewn poison on the Otjikango Pan. He therefore forbade grazing in the
direction of the Otjikango Pan.
Accused next sent for Police-Sergeant Phillips from Steinhausen, near by.
Before him Alwine and Sosina repeated their statements, but, as they constantly
and consistently declared in the Court proceedings against the accused, only
under the constraint of accused s presence.
After the departure of the Sergeant, the accused renewed his investigations
according to his own method. He wanted to know something of the supposed
poisoning of the Otjikango Pan; that it was poisoning he had definitely decided
in his meditations during the sleepless night. In the belief, as he himself declared,
that the Hereros only admitted what they believed the Europeans already knew,
he behaved as if he knew the Otjikango Pan was poisoned, and so obtained from
Sosina the desired information, namely, that the Pan was poisoned by the Veld-
Hereros in order to poison his stock. She further indicated Kadwakonda,
accused’s foreman, a former Under-Captain and distant relative of Maharero, as
the instigator, and several others of accused s natives as accomplices. This
aroused in accused s mind the strongest suspicion against Kadwakonda, and he
asked Sosina if Kadwakonda had not perhaps also ordered the poisoning of him
himself. She answered that both he and his wife had already on one occasion
through the Herero girl Lupertine received poison through their tea, and that this
took place shortly before Christmas and at the instigation of Kadwakonda. This
she learned from Alwine. Alwine was called and corroborated Sosina’s statement.
At the trial both witnesses, being removed from the intimidating influence of
accused, withdrew their statements and declared they had, through fear of
accused, said just what he wanted them to. Accused had put the statements to
them in question form, and they had simply said “Yes” out of fright. As a matter
of fact, shortly before Christmas, accused and his wife had suffered from some
intestinal and other troubles, which they themselves at the time put down to
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drinking thick milk. At the time when the suspicion of poison was first aroused,
they agreed that the tea was poisoned the evening before and that they two alone
had drunk it, while the remaining whites on the farm had not drunk the tea and
remained well. Subsequently, however, accused himself stated that only he and
not his wife had drunk the tea. He is now of the firm opinion that the senna tea212
which his wife drank was also poisoned. In support of this, however, there was at
no time any native evidence, and the medical experts declared that senna tea not
administered in the right quantity or not prepared with sufficient care might
produce severe disorder such as the wife of the accused had experienced. All
these circumstances point to the view that the aroused distrust of the accused led
him to connect his past symptoms of illness with poisoning, and that he sought to
force corroborative evidence from the natives with the sjambok and threats.
Upon the declaration of Sosina and Alwine, accused had Kadwakonda seized
and took from him a piece of carved wood which he carried. Then he questioned
Lupertine. She declared she knew nothing. He began to beat her with the sjambok
until she admitted that it was just as she stated. She had poisoned the tea with
Kadwakonda’s piece of wood which was exhibited to her, because a woman must
carry out a man’s orders.
The piece of wood in question is not poisonous. It is a wooden crook, a kind
of amulet, which descends from father to son and which Kadwakonda had
received from his dying father. It was impossible to poison tea with it.
Accused then continued his violent methods of inquiry in the manner and way
already described. He wished to clear up the death of two calves which he had not
been able to fathom. He obtained from the milking woman Amalia’a statement,
which she has since retracted as having been forced from her. that they were
poisoned and that it was done by Maria, the wife of Fritz. at Kadwakonda’s
instigation. Amalia even produced in support two roots said to be poisonous.
Accused himself today no longer finds poison in them. The expert declares that
they have a poisonous effect in large doses, but thinks that they are a native
medicine.
Accused next examined the Herero Jacob. He stated he knew nothing of the
stock poisoning, but he spoke of another instance of poisoning.
Accused in 1909, in the hot season. after superintending the clearing of trees
until after midday, collapsed on his way back to the farm, and only returned to his
senses a considerable while after he had been carried into the farmhouse.
Jacob now asserted that accused was the victim of poisoning by the Kaffir
July; this man had put fire-poison in the camp fire, just when accused was to
leeward of it; the smoke arising therefrom had reached and poisoned him.
Jacob has likewise retracted this assertion; he had only said so because
accused had overborne him with questions. The medical experts, including the
Government doctor and the bacteriologist Dr. Sieber, who is the Protectorate
expert on chemistry. were in agreement that poisoning by poison strewn in an
open fire, in the open, according to the method described and within the
subsequent symptoms described by accused was impossible. Excepting perhaps
cyanic acid compounds, no chemical was known to them which could produce
such acute poisonous results as were described by such a method. It could not be
imagined that natives were in possession of more efficacious substances. The
medical experts held that it was undoubtedly a sunstroke or a fainting fit brought
about by excessive exercise and the heat or a heart failure. The accused and his
wife had also so described it previously.
212
A tea made from dried leaves of the yellow-flowered Cassia Angustifolia or Cassia
Alexandrian. Senna tea was believed to act as a laxative and to help ‘clean’ the body of impurities.
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213
A word originally derived from Malay, but widely used during the colonial period in Africa
to describe a locally made hut
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was done in the open, while before the talk was always of a kitchen fire in the
kitchen. The experts in this instance also are of opinion that there can be no
question of poisoning by poisoned smoke in the open with a half-year’s illness as
the result. They agree that it was chronic malaria lasting for some the.
Before the District Chief, Sosina, Alwine and Lupertine withdrew their accu-
sations of poisoning when they were confronted with Kadwakonda. Graf Schwe-
rin was already by no means satisfied as to the accuracy of the evidence of the
natives regarding the alleged poisoning. At the request of the accused he, how-
ever, sent a mounted messenger to Otjisororindi to warn Frau Cramer against the
Kaffir, July. Graf Schwerin had arranged a large police campaign against the
Hereros squatting in the bush in the neighbourhood of Otjisororindi, and arrived
there on the evening of 26th January 1912. Accused, who had traveled fast with
his ox cart, reached there on the morning of 27th, January 1912.
The District Chief Graf Schwerin, at Otjisororindi, examined the natives of the
Farmer Linde. who were accused of poisoning cattle; also the Kaffir July, accused
of attempted murder by poisoning and Sosina as a Crown witness. Sosina made
a deposition that Lupertine had wanted to poison the tea of accused s family, but
had never carried her intention into execution. Graf Schwerin would not allow her
to sign the record as he did not believe her. After the accused arrived, the inquiry
was repeated, and Sosina made the same statement regarding the poisoning of
Linde s cattle as before.
After examining July and Sosina, and imprisoning July in the prisoners’ cell
on the farm. Graf Schwerin believed he had done all he could for the safety of
accused s family. He accordingly rode off, after directing that July and Sosina
should be transferred to Gobabis later, on his campaign against the Veld-Hereros.
Before he rode away he consented to permit the accused once more to examine
July and question him as to the whereabouts of the poison.
About three o’clock Graf Schwerin had ridden off. Accused then fetched July
out of the cell and questioned him about the alleged attempt to poison Frau
Cramer. As July declared he knew nothing of it, accused began to thrash him over
the naked back with a sjambok. Between the blows he continued his questions
about the matter. As July’s only answers were taken by accused to be lies, accused
continued beating him further till he felt himself becoming faint and begged for
water. Accused gave him brandy. and continued the thrashing. According to the
witness, the mason Röder, accused asked him to fetch a firebrand and place it near
July, who had fallen to the ground, to frighten him. July declared that the
firebrand was laid against him as he cowered down under the blows. He had, in
consequence, called out “My master may beat me to death, but I won’t let myself
be burnt,” and rolled on the other side.
No statement of importance could accused extract from July. This scene of
beating lasted a long time. According to July he was thrashed the whole after-
noon; the accused sweated a lot over it, and often rested. If the Court does not give
this statement implicit belief, still accused’s own statement and the deposition of
Röder show that the beating lasted a long while, because during the beating Röder
went into the room two or three times and each the found accused at his investi-
gation by means of the sjambok. Accused himself admitted July was cruelly ill-
treated. The Court deduces from the fact that he called Röder repeatedly as
interpreter that accused, in this inquiry by means of such severe violence,
behaved without scruple, he could not even properly understand the tortured July.
His frightful scars prove today, after 11/4 years, how cruelly July was treated on
this afternoon. At the medical examination two weeks after the ill-treatment. he
was still feverish. According to medical opinion his whole back was thrashed to
bits, as follows:– On the back there was an absence of skin from 13 to 10
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centimetres big on both sides of the spine in the neighbourhood of the lowest
chest-vertebra. The edges of this ulcerated area were sharply defined. On the day
of the examination it was covered with matter and numerous fly-maggots. On the
right shoulder-blade an irregular bow-shaped wound, similar to the above, 10.2
centimetres big. On the right shoulder a deeply-ulcerated wound of the same
character of the size of a hand. Left of the edge of the “Kappen” muscle to two
fingers breadth below the collarbone a similar wound 5 centimetres wide.
“The deposition of the injured party that these injuries were due to a sjam-
bokking was supported by the conditions found.”
After accused had had July locked up again, when the fruitless inquiry was
ended, he summoned July s wife Maria. She has given evidence that she had crept
up round the house that afternoon and had heard the blows of the sjambok and the
groans of her husband. In consequence she was in great fear, and had therefore
agreed to all the accused had said to her. Indeed, accused had told her that July
had already confessed, and that if she did not say the same she would be beaten
like the others. Since the Court has been able to gather by different proofs the
manner and way in which accused conducted his investigations into the objective
facts, it has no cause to doubt the new depositions of Maria. She, in her enforced
statements at the time, declared:–
(1) That July, Jacob, and Piet had poisoned Frau Cramer with fire-poison. In
regard to this matter reference is made to what has been said above.
(2) That in 1908 the Kaffir Piet had shot accused in the wrist on the road to
Windhuk with a poisoned arrow. In this the accused found the explanation
of a serious sickness in Windhuk, which extended over a long time and
ended in inflammation of the testicles. Previously accused attributed this
illness to infection from Lung sickness-vaccine. According to medical
experts, an affection of the testicles may result from chronic malaria.
Accused did not consult a doctor while lying sick in Windhuk.
(3) That July, Piet, and Acherab in 1908 had poisoned accused’s mason,
Steffenfausweh, with poison which they had put into caf –au-lait. The said
mason was undoubtedly seriously ill in 1908. The statements of the
natives regarding his poisoning have been retracted. There stands now
only the evidence of the witness Piet that he had told July, who was looked
upon as a sort of native doctor, that he should give Steffenfausweh, who
had been very good to them, some of his medicine to cure him. Maria has
also made some statements regarding earlier cases of poisoning by July.
A principal witness of the accused s was Ernestine July’s daughter, who was
called after Maria. She also has withdrawn her previous statements. When
accused saw the impression which the appearance of this child, who was to give
evidence on events far past, produced on the Court he abandoned her evidence.
The same thing happened with his witness Haika. On the very evening before her
examination by the presiding Judge, she was beaten in Windhuk by the accused,
and immediately after questioned as to the evidence she would give next
morning. In consequence she also, under the influence of the beating and
accused’s presence, gave her evidence next morning as he wished it; later she
retracted her statements.
Before the examination of Maria the accused had caused July’s pondok to be
searched. Ruder and Hieweib brought to light several suspicious roots, a box of
ointment, and a small quiver filled with the little magic arrows of the Bushmen.
According to the opinion of the expert Dr. Siebert, these must be regarded as
native medicine. The arrows are used by the Bushmen in witchcraft. and are not
poisoned. as examination proved. Some of the miniature arrows are wrapped up
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like the big Bushmen arrows intended for the reception of poison. No single case
in which they have been poisoned was established. It is possible that the wrapping
up was merely in imitation of the big arrows. Police-Wachtmeister Ramm, who
has long lived among Bushmen, and has made inquiries, has in his possession
over 5,000 of the small arrows, none of which were poisoned. In his opinion. they
are only used for witchcraft. If they are shot in the direction of an enemy, be he
100 kilos, or more away, witchcraft will bring about his death. Farmer Rudiger
has seen, among the Bushmen of Ovamboland, highly artistic healing processes
carried out by the witch-doctors with the arrows. They also serve as toys.
The discovery, of these arrows before the questioning of Maria, her statement
that in 1908 accused was shot by such an arrow which was poisoned and thereby
became ill, and her declaration that she only said this because accused had put it
in her mouth, supported the conviction reached by the Court through the whole
course of the Supreme Court proceedings, that once the accused had become
suspicious of poisoning he thought to connect all past cases of sickness in his
house with poisoning, to make everything fit in with this, and in consequence to
bring out by questions the desired evidence from the natives by the application of
the sharpest means of compulsion. That this last is possible no one who knows
natives doubts. For this purpose the numerous and severe “cudgel-cures” which
he himself acknowledges may not even have been necessary.
Accused had now the little arrows and the evidence of Maria that they had
already been employed for poisoning. He wished, therefore, to get into his
possession the poison which, according to his view, appertained to the arrows.
Maria, July s wife, had also asserted that Jacob and Langmann had bought small
Bushman arrows and poison from July. He accordingly had brought before him
Amalia and Sosina, the wives of these two men, who themselves had been taken
to Gobabis. showed them the quiver with the little arrows, said he knew their
husband had such arrows, and asked the women what their men wanted to do with
them. They said their husbands intended to shoot accused with them if he became
angry.
This reply also was forced out of the witnesses, and later withdrawn after the
influence of accused was removed from them.
To his question as to the whereabouts of the arrows they declared Konturu and
Maria, Jacob’s wife, had received them with an order from Kadwakonda to work
with poison on the farm in his absence against the people and stock, just as
opportunity came. Several head of cattle had already been stabbed.
Accused with his daughter Hildegard now fetched Konturu, bound her hands
together with an ox riem, tore the clothes from her body, and took away three
purses with money and pins and a little bag of sand which was secreted under her
modesty-apron. Then he began, while continually questioning her about the
poison, to lay it on to her naked back with a heavy sjambok, so that she fell to the
ground. As she lay on the ground he kicked her on the buttocks, back and head,
then pulled her up and further thrashed her. He himself says that he gave Konturu
an “energetic sjambokking.” His wife begged him not to beat her anymore, but
nevertheless he did not stop. His daughter looked on. Throughout the night
Konturu was locked up naked in the farm prison with only one blanket to cover
her.
Next day Konturu was brought back into the same room and sjambokked in
the same energetic fashion, while continually questioned about the poison,
although she said: “I have no poison.” “I am not lying.” “You can beat me until I
go to my grave, I will not lie.”
On the third day Konturu was once more brought out. On this day, however,
she was only subjected to a thorough examination of her person. Accused even
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sought for the poison in her private parts with his finger.
Konturu was terribly mauled by the “ cudgel-cure.” Her body showed, even
fourteen days afterwards, the following marks, according to the medical report:–
“The woman shows the following injuries or signs of such: On the nape of the
neck an already dried-up abrasion of the skin the size of a 10 mark piece.
Under the left shoulder-blade an absence of the skin as big as the palm of a
hand, covered with dry scab. Above that six weals, making good progress.
Similar weals over the left shoulder-blade. Below the shoulder-blades 8-10
older weals running obliquely. In front, on the breast, numerous absences of
skin, the size of a 10 pfennig piece, drying well; also three length wise 1
centimetre broad and from 4 to 7 centimetres long. On both arms older weals.”
Even today the back shows deep and severe scars.
Konturu was in the first months of pregnancy, and on the journey to Gobabis
soon after her ill-treatment had a miscarriage. The medical experts could not
declare with certainty that the miscarriage was a result of the ill-treatment. Had it
been positive, as she asserted, that during the ill-treatment her body was trodden
on, the experts would have attributed the miscarriage to it. The Court could not
accept this as established by the evidence of the natives alone in view of the
denial of accused, although treading on the body would very probably cause a
miscarriage.
In precisely similar fashion to Konturu, accused summoned Maria, Jacob’s
wife. She also was caught by her hands by accused and his daughter Hildegard
and brought into the “Court House,” as she aptly designated the farm house. They
bound her hands to her back, cut her clothes from her body, and then she was
energetically sjambokked with the same sjambok till she, as she credibly
declares, fell unconscious to the earth. She deposed that she was beaten the whole
evening, and even by lamplight. She suffered a further “cudgel-cure” the follow-
ing day. Until removed to Gobabis she was kept in the accused’s prison-cell. She
gave no information regarding the concealment of poison.
Maria was marked by the accused in unheard-of (unerhör-ter Weise) fashion.
On her reception into hospital a week later she, a big woman, could scarcely stand
on her feet and had fever badly. According to the medical report her body showed
as follows:–
From the lower edge of the shoulder-blades right to the loins an absence of
skin 20 by 18 centimetres in size covered with putrefying skin except at the
edges, which had granulated for a distance of one centimetre, Under the morti-
fied skin exuded stinking matter, and some fly maggots were also visible. The
edges were sharply defined.
On the right shoulder-blade were four to five deep length wise furrows, to
the extent of a palm’s breadth. On the right shoulder an absence of skin in
extent 12 by 8 centimetres, also covered with putrefying skin, malodorous
matter exuding under it. On the left shoulder an injury the size of a 5 mark
piece in the same condition. On the upper lip, forehead, in front diagonally
across the breast, were older weals as if from blows from a stick.
The statement of the injured person that she received the wounds through
a sjambokking agrees with the conditions found.
The woman is not yet out of danger.
Maria never recovered. The doctor could not bring about the closing of the
surface wounds, because the tissues underlying the skin were so broken to pieces.
An operation failed on this account. Maria hovered for a long the between life and
death, and had to be released from the hospital uncured. She would never again
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recover her full physical capacity. After about six months she died. No doctor saw
her body. It has therefore not been determined whether Maria died as the result of
her ill-treatment by accused.
As accused could obtain no information regarding poison by his barbarous ill-
treatment of Maria and Konturu. he “belaboured with the Sjambok” (bearbeitet
mit der Schambock) Amalia as well, to force it out of her. The witness Röder held
her fast by the arms for the purpose, and the Kaffir Hieweib by the legs. She was
thrashed for a long while, and at intervals questioned about the concealment of
the poison. Her back looked as if some one had burnt it with fire. Even today, l1/4
years later, she bears frightful scars (furchtbare Narben). At last she fetched
certain bones and roots, which are believed to be employed as native medicines.
Next day she was taken about to show the place of concealment of the poison. As
she could only give unsatisfactory information “she allowed herself to be beaten
a long time,” as accused put it then she indicated a fresh hole in the ground in
which the poison was supposed to have been formerly hidden, and finally she
accused Aumaxix of having the poison. The accused believed this. In this case the
Court was convinced that the accused started his investigations in a scarcely
comprehensible state of delusion, and that in the same violent fashion he obtained
false conclusions regarding the circumstances of the poisonings. It did not occur
to him to regard the statements of thrashed women as worthless. It did not strike
him that a woman would ever put the guilty possession of poison on another
woman in order to free herself from his blows with the sjambok, till at last the
guilt remained fixed on Auma and Magdalena, who had only been on the farm
some three days.
Auma was a feeble old woman of from 55 to 60 years of age, whom the
accused had received with Magdalena and other natives from the District Chief
as substitutes when he left his first prisoners in Gobabis. After three days
residence on the farm, though Kadwakonda and his associates were in Gobabis
and July in prison, they had to share in the alleged poisoning conspiracy. This
view is incredible to the Court.
This decrepit woman was terribly cut about (furchterlich verhauen) by
accused with the sjambok, because he asked her for the poison and she could only
produce harmless things as alleged poison. The blows were inflicted on her bare
back. The accused himself described the procedure as “a powerful cudgel-cure.”
Old Auma was so injured by it that her lacerated back could not be cured except
by skin-transference, which was out of the question in an old and feeble woman.
When she was fetched away from Otjisororindi, she could only walk with an
effort. Farmer Grabow, on his neighbouring farm, saw her collapse three times in
a short distance. A police-boy had to pick her up. Grabow saw the frightful
wounds, and out of pity gave her milk and offered her his cart to carry her.
xix
(Page 174 in original) i.e. Ouma equals Old Mother
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Plate 4: Photograph of the back of Maria taken in Gobabis hospital on the 15th
february 1912.
Note: The original of this photograph was cracked across the top left-hand corner. This crack
shows in the reproduction as a straight line.
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Plate 5: Photograph of the back of Auma taken in Gobabis hospital on the 15th
february 1912.
Note: The original of this photograph was cracked across the top left-hand corner. This crack
shows in the reproduction as a straight line.
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xx
= 103°F
xxi
102°2 to 103°3 F
214
A bodkin was a small dagger
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treatment and set on foot a judicial inquiry. Accused said to him on this occasion
that he had gone too far, and would put up with the consequences.
Exhaustive inquiry has resulted in establishing these as the material facts; for the
most part they are supported by the assertions, or at any rate the earlier evidence,
of the accused.
There can be no doubt that in the thrashings of Alwine, July, Maria, Konturu,
Amalia, Auma and Magdalena, all the elements of the offence of contravening
Sections 223 and 223 (a) of the Criminal Code were present. Even if it is doubtful
whether the sjambok is a dangerous instrument, at any rate the grievous bodily
harm which was inflicted within it is established. In the cases of July, Maria,
Auma and Amalia, the Court agrees with the medical experts as to the presence
of treatment dangerous to life.
As for the plea of paternal right of correction, it carries no weight in the said
seven cases, since the accused in these cases did not punish but extorted
statements about stock theft, poisoning and the place of concealment of poison.
Moreover, these “cudgel-cures” are entirely beyond the limits of the paternal
right of correction. All the said natives must be regarded as severely, even
dangerously, injured. It is plainly not impossible that the wounds of the injured
may have been aggravated by the journey of several days without treatment;
nevertheless, upon the evidence and the corroborative opinions of the experts, the
Court finds it proved that they were caused, in their depth and danger, by the
sjambokkings inflicted by the accused.
The skin in its whole thickness and the underlying tissues were so beaten and
crushed that the whole of the skin affected was bound to putrefy and mortify.
There is no support for the argument that the natives intentionally aggravated
their wounds to any extent worth mentioning. The fly maggots in the wounds are
only an external condition of no importance as to the manner in which the wounds
were caused; they were found in the mortifying parts and even without them the
wounds would have been there.
The elements of the offence of contravening Section 240 of the Criminal Code
are similarly present in the seven cases. He unlawfully compelled the natives by
violence to acts, namely, answers about alleged stock theft and poisoning.
With the exception of the ideal-concurrence of Section 240 of the Criminal
Code in the case of Grunas, the facts accepted as proved agree with those of the
Court of first instance. In the six last-named cases accused claims exclusion of
punishment on the grounds laid down in Sections 51, 53 and 54xxii of the Criminal
Code. The Court disallows this plea.
The Court agrees within the medical experts that the accused carried out ill-
treatment extending over several days in a normal state of mind and the exercise
of his free will. Indeed, in his conduct of his inquires he acted throughout with a
definite and logical consistency.
xxii
Sections 51, 53 and 54 of the Code are as follows:-
51. If the offender at the time of the committal of an offence was in a state of unconsciousness
or derangement of the intellect, due to illness, by which the free exercise of his will was prevented,
the act is not punishable.
53. An act committed in self-defence is not punishable.
Self-defence is such a defence as is required to avert aim imminent illegal assault on oneself
or another.
Exceeding the limits of self-defence is not punishable if the perpetrator has so acted through
confusion, fear or panic.
54. An act committed in order to rescue the perpetrator or a relative from present danger to life
or limb in an emergency other than self-defence, not caused through the fault of the former and not
otherwise to be averted, is not punishable.
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kept so fully occupied by him, that in his opinion their tenfold increase was
necessary if there was as much for them to do on all farms, he still held it proper
to pursue his inquiries on his own account and lines, and occasionally to punish
extremely severely. He had never made himself familiar on any other farm when
he first came into the country with the handling of natives and how difficult it is,
as is generally done, but he started farming and handling natives at ounce by
himself. He quite forgot that he knew nothing of the treatment of natives. On this
point the Court is fully satisfied. Full many a native came from the District Office,
after a little complained of hard treatment and ran away. A marked case of wrong
treatment is that of the Herero Christian. Farmer Linde had lent this man, his best
servant, to accused. Being by accident present on Linde’s farm, Christian had to
help his master put out a grass fire, and in consequence his return to accused was
delayed half a day. Accused did not attempt to prove the justice of Christian s
excuse, but punished him with 25 strokes with a sjambok. When the affair was
later on cleared up in Christian s favour by Linde the accused says he asked the
native s pardon. In this instance not only the unwarranted punishment of Christian
has weight, but also the circumstance that he beat another s servant. That was
flagrantly improper according to the custom of the country.
When pursuing absconded natives, according to the statement of Farmer
Grabow, accused fastened his two native spoor-trackers together at night with
chains with a dog in between, and also during the day made them walk in chains.
Even a native cannot endure such treatment for any length of time.
It is also a sign of self-conceit, almost amounting to infatuation, that accused
regarded his daughter Hildegard, then just outgrowing childhood, who came to
this country first in 1908, as a sufficient interpreter in Herero during his extensive
inquiries into complicated matters. Everyone in the Protectorate knows the
endless difficulties of interpretation of Herero. In the Supreme Court proceedings
three of the best interpreters in the land were engaged together, and yet often
could scarcely master the difficulty of a question or answer. And the accused
today still points to this young girl, who has interpreted from the age of 14 to 18,
as a satisfactory interpreter. Moreover, it has been actually proved that at
Otjisororindi a native was beaten because Hildegard Cramer translated an expres-
sion wrongly. Herero Jacob is of opinion that she was quite unable to interpret.
According to the statement of accused, she has since forgotten much of her
knowledge of Herero, so that a test of her ability was useless.
As proof of the self-conceit of accused, the Court regards also the fact that he
found fault with, and to some extent dealt roughly with, all witnesses the moment
they said anything unfavourable to him: for instance, Graf Schwerin, whose
sworn evidence the Court regarded as credible throughout on points material to
the issue and provable thereby.
It was by reason of this self-conceit that accused believed himself justified in
his unlawful conduct. This may have been increased by a certain distrust of every-
one, especially officials, and a certain fear of the natives. The latter is frequently
a symptom of improper treatment, and to white people living on a lonely farm this
distrust is often all but a symptom of illness.
In this way, in the opinion of the Court, the accused reached his criminal
methods of inquiry, which otherwise would appear incomprehensible in a man of
good education and normal mental capacity.
Although the condition of limitless self-deception which he worked himself
up to in a criminal manner does not, in the opinion of the doctors, fall within the
terms of Section 51 of the Criminal Code, the Court still has to consider this
condition in the fullest degree when dealing with the questions of mitigating
circumstances and the amount of punishment. This the Court believes all the
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more must be done, since it is under the impression that accused has not found in
his wife the usual pacifier, but even encouragement of his criminal conduct.
Although the behaviour of the accused in all eight cases is incomprehensible in a
decent man, and is worse than the conduct of a slave owner of earlier days (Sclim-
mer als das Gebaren eines Sklaven halters früherer Zeit), the Court is never-
theless of the opinion, upon consideration, of all the facts, that in seven cases it
must allow mitigating circumstances. Only the case of the deceased old woman
Auma is found so serious that mitigating circumstances cannot be admitted. The
cases of Maria and Grunas the Court finds further so bad that, while accepting
mitigating circumstances, it considers imprisonment appropriate. In the remain-
ing cases fines are considered sufficient.
The punishments of imprisonment in the three cases are moderately measured,
although they approximate to the elements of the offences of Sections 224, 226
of the Criminal Code, which carry heavy penal internment, because the Court in
this respect has again taken into account his self-deception as well as his
blameless record and the circumstance that owing to his social standing accused
will feel imprisonment sufficiently without it being of long duration. We have
also given consideration to the fact that the accused ceased to defend himself in
the arrogant and unregulated manner he adopted before the Court of first instance.
On the same grounds, and in view of the inordinate amount of the costs of the
cases, the fines are reduced to mild limits in spite of the seriousness of the matter.
Section 74 of the Criminal Code has been taken into consideration. It is on that
account that sentences have been pronounced as they have been.
Sections 497 and 505 of the Criminal Procedure Ordinance govern the costs.
The first charge dealt with in this judgement is the assault upon Grunas, and the
manner in which it is handled shows clearly how anxious everybody concerned
in the matter was to favour the accused. It is plain that Kisker, accused, and
natives all testified to the fact that this unhappy woman, far gone in pregnancy
and naked, was thrashed till she collapsed and could not eat that night. The
avowed object of this monstrous treatment was to extort from her a statement
that either she or her husband had killed a sheep. Two more sheep died after the
first thrashing. It is highly unlikely that Heiweib caused their death and
impossible for Grunas to have done so. Probably, therefore, the first sheep died
in some natural way. Heiweib is expressly given a good character. In spite of
all this, he and Grunas are taken off to the farmhouse and there both are
severely beaten, after which Grunas is sent to gather grass. This is the story told
at the first trial by all parties, and at the second repeated by the natives but
denied by accused and his witnesses. Yet the Court evidently accepted it with
the greatest reluctance, and only because no other course was possible if it was
to retain any reputation for justice at all.
At latest the day after the second assault Grunas gave birth to a dead child.
It is safe to say that if she had been white the medical expert would have had
no difficulty in ascribing this directly to the two thrashings she had received.
Accused was not even prosecuted for thrashing Heiweib. Apparently it was
quite justifiable to administer to a native who had given Europeans in Gobabis
good service for 12 years a severe beating on the flimsiest of pretexts. For the
atrocious treatment of Grunas accused was awarded one month imprisonment.
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The next charge relates to the woman Alwine. Without the slightest excuse, as
the judgement plainly shows, he assumed that certain natives – Jan and Kewas
had stolen some of his stock. By beating a child, Doris, he extorted from her a
false statement that Alwine had given stock to these men. He then threatened
to beat Alwine to death if she did not disclose their names, and when she said
she did not know struck her 15 times over the naked shoulders within a heavy
leather sjambok. A fortnight later she still bore 15 broad weals. For this line was
fined 5l. Nothing was done regarding the beating of Doris.
The accused apparently would believe anything, and not merely believe it
but go to the utmost lengths on the strength of it without further inquiry.
After beating Alwine he passed a sleepless night, not, as one might have
hoped, over the fates of Grunas and Alwine, but because he was still puzzling
over the perfectly innocent Jan and Kewas. This time he came to the
conclusion, again on the absurdest evidence, that they had been using poison.
By violence and threats he had obtained statements from Alwine as the result
of which he thrashed a woman named Lupertine till she implicated a man,
Kadwakonda. Lupertine, it should be noted, received two more thrashings, one
in the presence of a police-sergeant and another before the investigating magis-
trate. No steps were taken in regard to the assaults on her, although false state-
ments were extorted from her by them. After the second beating of Lupertine,
she, Alwine, a woman Maria, Kadwakonda, a man Langmann and Harutonge,
a woman captured in the bush, were all chained together to the back of an ox-
cart and carried off to Gobabis prison, apparently on a charge of poisoning
Cramer, unsupported by a scrap of real evidence. The distance from Otjiso-
rorindi to Gobabis is 72 miles as the crow flies.
On the way there he invented another flimsy charge of poisoning, this time
against the native, Jacob. As a result he gave Jacob 50 strokes with a sjambok.
in the hotel at Gobabis. This must have been very severe, as he was fined 30l.
for it, yet no one at the hotel intervened.
On his return to his farm, after the officials had left, accused began again.
By this time another native had been in the same way implicated in the
supposed poisoning. He accordingly thrashed Juli till he became so faint he had
to be revived with brandy in order that the thrashing might be continued. The
medical statement shows how severe were the injuries. Yet he was let off with
a fine of 40l.
Getting nothing out of Juli, he turned his attention to his wife Maria and
bullied her into false accusations, which he put into her mouth, against Konturu
and another Maria, wife of Jacob already mentioned.
With the aid of his daughter, a girl of 16 or 17, he shockingly ill-treated
Konturu. All her clothes were torn off. she was severely beaten, and then
locked up for the night naked in the farm prison (the very existence of which is
highly significant) with one blanket only as covering. Next day this treatment
was repeated, and she got another “energetic sjambokking,” in accused s own
words. Next day her person was closely and even indecently examined. The
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Court described Konturu as “terribly mauled” (bos zugerichtet). and the med-
ical certificate indicates serious injuries. She was in the first months of
pregnancy, and shortly afterwards had a miscarriage. Apparently the natives
asserted that accused trod on her body; if so, the miscarriage was at once
accounted for, yet the Court refused to accept it as proved to be due to accused
s conduct simply because he denied this. His statements were evidently
obviously unreliable throughout, and it would seem that the Court would have
been fully justified in rejecting this denial on that ground alone in view of the
definite statements of the natives. Accused’s punishment in this case was a fine
of 40l.
His next victim was Maria. She was even worse treated, if it were possible,
and her photograph shows the result. The worthy doctor, however, allowed her
to leave hospital uncured; and when she died some six months later no medical
man saw her body, and it was therefore impossible to connect the death with
the assault. One thing is certain, and that is that she was permanently injured;
but this point was lightly avoided by the Court. and the punishment imposed
was one month s imprisonment.
Cramer now turned his attention to Amalia. When the Appeal Court heard
the case 11/4 years later her back still looked as if it had been burned with fire.
Each of these last three women got two severe thrashings on consecutive days
(even the harsh German criminal law for natives demands an interval of 14
days between whippings), and each as a result passed on the blame for the
mythical poisoning to someone whom she knew to be innocent, and who was
in consequence severely handled in similar fashion. Amalia’s case was
considered so trifling that a fine of 10l. was enough. When examined by the
doctor at Gobabis on the 10th February 1912, she showed numerous abrasions
and one ulcerated sore 20 by 12 cm., i.e., about 8 in. by 4.8 in. in extent. She
was a girl of 20, and recovered. Consider the position of the unfortunate girl
Amalia. All the other natives on the farm had been dealt with except the two
old women Auma and Magdalena, and in order to save them she heroically held
out as long as she could, but at length even her fortitude gave way and to escape
further punishment she reluctantly accused Auma. Probably she chose this old
woman in the hope that her age and the impossibility of her having had
anything to do with the poisoning would save her; but it was not to be.
This brings us to the worst case of all. When the accused took his first
prisoners to Gobabis, the magistrate gave him other natives to take their place
on the farm. Auma and Magdalena were two of them, and had only been on the
farm three days when they were beaten. It was therefore, humanly speaking,
impossible that they could have anything to do with the poisoning, but this
consideration was of no moment to the accused. On the accusation – extorted
from Amalia by two days’ thrashing, so severe as to leave her marked by fearful
scars for life – he meted out the same treatment to Auma.
This decrepit old woman of from 55 to 60 was terribly cut about in the
course of what accused described as a “powerful cudgel-cure.” She was
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practically in a state of collapse when taken away from the farm. Her injuries
are described in the medical report and exhibited in the photograph, and there
can be no reasonable doubt that her death (14 days after admission to hospital)
was directly brought about by accused. Yet all German officialdom combined
to procure his freedom from any such accusation. The doctor would not say
accused caused her death, the State-prosecutor would not bring such a charge,
and the Court refused to entertain it.
The ridiculous sentence of three months’ imprisonment was passed.
Nothing was obtainable from Auma, so Cramer turned his attention to the
sole remaining person, Magdalena, aged 40, who had also only been on the
farm three days. She was also gravely injured, but a fine of 40l. was considered
enough to meet the case.
It is when the Court comes to consider the question of mitigating circum-
stances that it reaches its most incomprehensible limit. It is pointed out that the
allegations of poisoning were entirely without support; that accused was a man
of good intelligence, but unable to draw the proper conclusions from obvious
facts; that he constantly ill-treated his natives without cause; that his daughter,
whom he used as an interpreter, was so poor a success that on one occasion a
wrong translation by her procured a beating for an unfortunate native; that he
abused the witnesses in Court; that he had his full mental powers but was given
to self-deception; that his wife did not exercise the proper wifely pacifying
influence over him; that his behaviour was worse than that of a slave-driver,
and chiefly that he suffered from boundless self-conceit. It is doubtful whether
anyone outside the five persons who sat on this case could be persuaded to
discover in any of these arguments anything whatever in mitigation of accused
s barbarism. On the contrary, most of them would be regarded by anyone of
common sense as aggravations of his conduct.
Just before the appeal judgement, was delivered, Cramer’s wife published
in Germany a book, “Weiss oder Schwartz?” (White or Black?) which is one
long protest against the injustice he had received at his first trial, and a plea for
tightening up the administration of native affairs in the Protectorate.215
Cramer is no longer alive. A few months ago, while engaged with two
natives preparing holes for planting trees in his orchard, for which purpose he
was using dynamite, he was blown to pieces. The natives declared that this was
due to accident, and in all probability were correct but if his death had been the
result of design most people would admit that he merely received his just
deserts.
That this was no isolated case is plainly shown by other records of the
German Courts. As an instance, the case of Walter Boehmer may be referred to.
This man was tried at Windhuk on the 1st May 1914. He was charged with a
series of assaults committed on natives in his employ. The most serious case
was that of Andreas. This man was suspected of theft, and accused had him
215
Cramer, Ada, Weiss oder Schwarz: Lehr und Leidensjahre eines Farmers in Südwest im Licht
des Rasenhasses, Deutscher Kolonial-Verlag, 1913.
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stripped and tied up hand and foot with wire to some shelves in a storeroom.
Accused then thrashed him with a makoss. described as a thong, 1 metre long
and 2 cm.(4/5 in.) thick, with a wooden handle. After accused had beaten him,
he ordered four of his natives to continue the thrashing, and one after another
they did so. Andreas was then untied and sent into the veld with instructions to
bring in the stolen articles. Upon his return without them he was again beaten
with a donkey-whip and the makoss. Six natives gave evidence to this effect.
Eight natives and a police-boy said that Andreas’s body was as a result badly
swollen, covered with blood and open wounds, and that he was exhausted. Two
European witnesses who saw Andreas immediately after the beating testified to
the swelling of his genitals and a large number of weals all over his back, some
swollen to the thickness of a thumb and some burst. Andreas died some days
after the assault. No medical man examined him either before or after death.
The Court found Boehmer guilty of assault dangerous to life.
Another charge was that he had given a boy Wilhelm 30 strokes on his
buttocks with a stick about 2 cm. thick. The boy s statement was corroborated
by a police-sergeant who examined him the next day and found 22 distinct
weals and eight open cuts. Wilhelm had deserted from his service, and accused
claimed it was his right to beat him for so doing. The Court admitted this right,
but decided that as actual injury had been caused it had been exceeded.
In giving judgement, the Court described Boehmer’s conduct as absolutely
inhuman and brutal, and pointed out that he was a well-educated man fully able
to understand that such behaviour was contrary to the dictates of humanity.
Mitigating circumstances were found in the facts that the accused had not been
previously convicted, that he was excited on account of the theft and possibly
also because his wife was in child-bed, and that Andreas was a very cunning
native who had deserted about 14 times before. Accordingly accused was
permitted to pay a fine of 50l. for the assault on Andreas and 7l. l0s. for beating
Thomas.
Boehmer was further charged with having tied up a native, Hans, with wire
hand-to-foot to an anvil and kept him so for a whole morning. The Court
decided that on the evidence of several natives there was a strong suspicion that
this was done as a punishment. Accused denied this, and said he had merely
tied up Hans with a thong in order to take him to the police to be punished
because he suspected him of having released one August, whom Boehmer had
tied up for causing a grass fire. In view of his claim, admitted by the Court, that
he had the right to punish his natives himself, this would appear to be a
somewhat dubious theory, and it was uncorroborated, but the Court accepted it
and acquitted him.
A further charge against Boehmer was that he had struck Hans twice with a
drill and four thes with a hammer handle across the back. This was found to be
proved, and the drill in Court was admitted to be a dangerous instrument; but
on the ground that no actual physical injury had been caused, and Hans had
merely suffered pain, it was found by the Court that the accused had acted with
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the limits of his right of correction and he was found not guilty. The same
decision was arrived at in the case of Acherob, who had received 15 strokes
with an ox-hide thong on the clothed buttocks, although accused could not give
any reason for this beating.
A native, Automab, had also brought two charges against accused, and in
the first his evidence had proved unsatisfactory. In considering the second
charge the Court properly remarked that, in view of this, his testimony must be
received with great caution. On the other hand, as appears above, the
statements of accused were more than once disbelieved. yet his other evidence
was fully accepted almost always when contradicted solely by natives.
These two cases show how anxious the Courts were to shield Europeans
when accused of ill-treatment of natives. Every excuse was taken for rejecting
native evidence, while that of a white witness was accepted without reserve. It
was only when accused completely contradicted himself, or was faced with
other white witnesses who disproved his statements, that the story of the
natives was admitted, but even then it was discounted as much as possible.
It is now proposed to give details of what appears to be an instance in which
two natives were thrashed to death by a white man or on his orders. and the
whole thing was hushed up by the authorities. The Khan Copper Mine is a
fairly prosperous concern situated in the desert some 60 kilos. from
Swakopmund, and employed numbers of natives and others on its works. In
1911 it was under the management of a Dr. Sichtermann. The following extract
is taken from a sworn affidavit recently made by one Dixon, who was
employed in the mine as overseer in 1911 and 1912.
David Esma Dixon states:–
As an example of how murders and brutal treatment were hushed up by the
German authorities, I will mention the case of Dr. Sichtermann, who was at one
time the Manager of the Khan Copper Mine near Swakopmund. This was after
the Herero rebellion about 1912. I was working there at the time. One of the
Ovambo mine labourers on the mine died suddenly. Two compatriots of the dead
native had been reported to Dr. Sichtermann as suspects. It was alleged that they
had poisoned the man. Dr. Sichtermann reported the matter to the police at
Swakopmund, but before they arrived he decided to investigate the matter
himself. He sent for the two Ovambos. I was the overseer who brought them to
him. He then ordered thick ropes to be tied round their necks, and they were asked
by him to say what they knew of the death of the other boy. They denied all
knowledge and said they were innocent. Sichtermann then ordered them to be
flogged. A German named Ahlefelder then beat them. The instrument used was a
piece of 11/2 in. India-rubber hosepipe. After a severe flogging they still pleaded
that they were innocent, and after a while they were flogged and flogged again.
Ahlefelder alternated the flogging by striking them with his fists. When they fell
he kicked them with his booted feet until they rose again. They were both quite
naked, and were held fast by the ropes round their necks. I had to hold one rope,
and a native named David held the other. I protested, but Sichtermann said I had
to obey his orders like everyone else. He said the boys were not going to get the
better of him, and he would flog them until they admitted their guilt, of which he
appeared to be convinced, though there was no evidence at all against the natives.
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This treatment went on at intervals nearly the whole forenoon, until the boys’
bodies were swollen terribly and cut and bruised all over. They cried out for
water, but Sichtermann ordered that they were to receive neither food nor drink.
They kept on protesting their innocence. Sichtermann then ordered their ankles to
be bound together. They were then made to sit down with their knees drawn up to
their chins, and their hands were then drawn round their knees and fastened
together, while a stick was placed through under the knees and over the bent arms
near the elbows. This meant that they could not stir and had to remain in this
trussed position. It would be painful to do this even when one is well, but after the
thrashings they had received it was barbarism to do that. However, Sichtermann
would listen to no interference. I told him he was killing them, but he took no
notice. He ordered them to be carried away and locked up in separate rooms. One
boy we placed in the room where the oils were stored. I secretly gave him some
water to drink, but I could see he was terribly hurt and I was anxious. After dinner
I went and looked again and found he was quite dead. I rushed off and told Dr.
Sichtermann, and he at once ordered the other boy to be unbound and washed, and
told us to wash the dead boy and stretch him out carefully. Sichtermann had just
heard that a doctor and police-detective were arriving from Swakopmund.
Shortly afterwards the German District Surgeon, Dr. Brenner, arrived; he was
accompanied by the detective named Friederich. We all went into the room where
the body was. Brenner looked at it, and although it was terribly cut and swollen
he asked no questions. He then performed a post-mortem. When he had finished,
he said “The organs appear to be quite normal; I trace no disease.” This caused
me to glance at Dr. Sichtermann, as I thought the statement would frighten him.
At that moment I saw him wink very significantly at Dr. Brenner: the latter
hesitated a moment and then opened up the boy s heart, which he carefully
examined. He then said: “Ah, here it is – heart disease: I am prepared to certify.”
The body was then taken away and buried.
The other Ovambo was taken by the detective to Swakopmund by rail, but he
died on the train. I remained on the mine with Dr. Sichtermann for a year after
that incident, and I can swear that no steps were ever taken against him by the
German authorities although the incident was fairly well known and talked about.
Dixon is not certain of the date, but from official German records it appears that
on the 26th October 1911 an Ovambo, Karuwappa, died suddenly at the mine
and that the Ovambos, David and Chicongo, were suspected of poisoning him.
Police-Sergeant-Major Springhorn held an enquiry at the mine, and took
statements to the effect that Karuwappa had been ill for a week and complained
of severe pains in his chest and stomach, and shortly before his death had
accused Chicongo of having given him meat poisoned by David on the instruc-
tions of the latter. Certain Ovambo witnesses stated that David had poisoned
other people in Ovamboland, and that they were quite certain that he and
Chicongo were guilty of poisoning Karuwappa. It was also stated that after
arrest both accused at first asserted their innocence, but subsequently admitted
their guilt. Dr. Brenner held a post-mortem on Karuwappa, and found alcoholic
kidney and liver, haemorrhage and swelling of the mucous membranes of the
intestines and stomach “which probably caused death by poisoning.” There
was nothing else to support the theory of poisoning. It is stated on the papers
that Chicongo “escaped on the morning of the 26th December, and died soon
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after his capture.” He was not examined by Springhorn. Dr. Brenner dissected
the body and certified:–
On the 26th October this year at the Khan Mine I dissected Ovambo Chicongo,
who died about an hour before and whom the assistant suspected of having been
poisoned. The dissection disclosed heart failure as the cause of death. There were
no external or internal injuries.
but he was a well-known man, the manager of an influential company, and that
was the end of it.
With such occurrences taking place, is it to be wondered at that the Governor
found it necessary to issue his secret circular of the 31st May 1912 (see Chapter
22, Part I) to his District Officers?
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CHAPTER THREE
Shortly after the surrender of the Protectorate to the Union Military Forces
Military Courts were erected for the trial of criminal offences committed by the
inhabitants in place of the German Courts, which it was not deemed politic to
revive. Minor misdemeanours are dealt with by Courts of Military Magistrates
stationed at various places in the country; serious crime comes before what is
known as the Special Criminal Court, which sits twice a year at such points as
may be convenient and has jurisdiction to try any offence whatever.216 All these
Courts are compelled by the dictates of International Law as accepted by us to
follow the provisions of the German law when Germans are before them.
Numerous cases have come before this last-mentioned Court which throw a
violent light upon the relations between German inhabitants and the aborigines.
In this chapter it is proposed to give some account of these, taken direct
from the original records of the trials.
The principal deduction to be drawn from the series of cases of which
details will be given is that the relationship between Germans and natives has
always been on an unhappy footing. Mutual confidence has been absent and
mutual fear has taken its place.
The manner in which natives were dealt with under the previous régime,
when suspected of criminal charges, has been discussed in a previous chapter.
We have endeavoured to follow the wellfounded traditions of the Union, and
have done our best in all such matters to follow the basic principle of law
obtaining in all British countries that Justice is blind to any distinction of race
or colour.
One grave source of trouble between the white and black inhabitants of this
country has been theft of stock. In the case of Bushmen in particular a German
farmer apparently believed himself justified, if he had the merest suspicion that
they had stolen his stock, in shooting them out of hand. We have made it clear
that we do not accept this view, and that such thieves may only be punished
through the intervention of the Courts.
216
In the period from its establishment 28th September 1915 up to January, 1918 (when the Blue
Book was submitted) the Special Criminal Court that was established by the Union of South Africa
following the surrender of German forces in Namibia on 9th July, 1915, heard 158 cases. Of these
61 cases are referred to directly in Part 2 of the Blue Book and a eighty-five of those directly
accused in these cases are referred to. Details of the relevant cases can be found in Storage Units
SCC1-10. National Archives of Namibia, Finding Aid, ‘Special Criminal Court’. ‘Report of the
Administrator of South West Africa’, 9th July, 1915 – 31st March, 1916’, Windhoek, 1st April, 1916.
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For the very reason that it is regarded as essential for the good government of
the country to press home this attitude, the Courts have always taken a serious
view of such thefts, as the following cases tried by the Special Criminal Court
show
Rex versus Katai and seven others – Tried 6th April 1916. The accused, all
Bushmen, were charged with the theft of four head of cattle, the property of one
Baumgarten, a German farmer of the District of Grootfontein. They all pleaded
guilty, and were sentenced to four years’ imprisonment with hard labour.
Rex versus Sarrup – Tried 6th April 1916. Sarrup, a Bushman, pleaded
guilty to stealing five head of cattle belonging to a farmer of Gobabis, named
Hans von Hatten. On the outbreak of hostilities complainant was called upon
to join the German forces, and it was whilst he was on active service that the
Bushman helped himself to the stock. The skins were identified at accused’s
hut, and two accomplices, also Bushmen, turned King’s evidence. Sentence of
two years’ hard labour and six lashes was imposed.
Rex versus Jacob Casob – Tried l0th April 1916. Accused was sentenced to
three years’ hard labour andl ten lashes for theft of a cow from a farmer named
Duval of the Outjo District.
Rex versus Isaac Thithis – Tried 20th April 1916. Accused stole 37 head of
small stock from a German named Bleichmer, and was awarded two years’
hard labour and six lashes.
Rex versus Simon Ncaib – Tried 27th April 1916. Ncaib received two years’
hard labour and ten lashes for stealing 43 sheep from a farmer named Jasper-
son.
Rex versus (1) Jacob; (2) Titup – Tried 9th October 1916. These men,
formerly farm servants, had taken to the veld and committed a series of depre-
dations, some small, some of more consequence, including thefts of goats,
produce, &c. They were each sentenced to three years’ hard labour and ten
lashes.
Rex versus (1) Ouxason; (2) David – Tried on 18th November 1916. For the
theft of five head of cattle from a farmer named Schweikhardt accused were
each sentenced to three years’ hard labour and twelve lashes.
Rex versus (1) Aramib; (2) Hendrik – Tried on 18th November 1916. These
men received a similar sentence for the theft of two head of cattle from Joseph
Stroka, a farmer.
Rex versus William Christian – Tried 8th May 1917. Accused stole 30 head
of small stock from two farmers of Aroab District, and had to undergo 18
months’ imprisonment in consequence.
Rex versus (1) August; (2) Kukub – Tried 29th May 1917. The accused were
vagrant Bushmen who had caught in the veld, killed and eaten five cows
belonging to a farmer named Voswinckel of Otjamibambo. Grootfontein
District. in October 1916. They admitted their guilt and were each sentenced to
18 months’ hard labour and seven lashes.
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Rex versus (1) Massinab; (2) August; (3) Andries; (4) Kukub – Tried 29th May
1917. The two accused in the preceding case with two other members of their
party had pleaded guilty to a similar theft of five sheep from a farmer named
Wujack of the same neighbourhood. They each received sentence of 12
months’ hard labour.
Rex versus (1) Katjirora; (2) Kaitanagora; (3) Kapapie – Tried 10th
December, 1917. For stealing two cows from Farmer Schlettwein at Cauas
Okawa, Outjo District, accused were sentenced to three years’ hard labour
each, with, in the case of Nos. 1 and 3, seven lashes as well.
Rex versus (1) Kateminikwa; (2) Kambenjene; (3) Kanako – Tried 10th
December 1917. for stealing two bulls from the same owner at Otjitambi, Outjo
District, these men received three years hard labour each, with seven lashes in
addition in the cases of Nos. 1 and 2.
Rex versus Nampira – Tried 10th December 1917. Accused, a shepherd, ate
five sheep belonging to his employer at Canas, Outjo District. He was
sentenced to 18 months’ hard labour and seven lashes.
In none of the foregoing cases was profit the object of the theft. They were all
due to the overpowering desire for a good meal of meat which now and again
attacks a native.
Although these sentences differ somewhat for various reasons which need
not be gone into here, none of them can be regarded as lenient, and Germans
who have sought personally to avenge similar acts cannot assert as an excuse
that they are not sufficiently punished by the Courts. Corporal punishment,
which is regarded by the local inhabitants as the only proper penalty for a
native, was imposed in practically all cases where the physical condition of the
offender did not preclude it.
In order to assist the reader to a more clear understanding of the cases now
to be dealt with, a few words on the law of homicide, as laid down in the
German Criminal Code, are necessary.
The capital offence, known as Mord, consists in the killing of a fellow-
creature with intention and deliberation. What is meant by intention need not
be enlarged upon now, but deliberation requires some explanation. since it is
regarded by German jurists as an entirely distinct issue. Roughly, it may be
defined as any sort of calm exercise of the intellect directed towards the choice
of the means of execution, the rejection of unsuitable means, the prevention of
the victim’s escape, the procurement of immunity from prosecution or
punishment or any other factor vital to the whole affair. In the most recent case
on the point (Rex versus Sokolicz), in which there was very little evidence of a
preconceived plan, but it was proved that accused had so arranged his victim’s
body as to give it all the appearances of that of a suicide, it was held that this
fact was proof of deliberation.
The next variety of homicide is that known as Totschlag. This consists in the
killing of another with intention but without deliberation. This in our law is,
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generally speaking, also murder and punishable with the capital sentence; but
under the German Code the penalty is imprisonment with hard labour for a
period of from five to fifteen years, unless there has been provocation in the
shape of violence or gross insult, in which case a less rigorous form of deten-
tion for not less than six months may be imposed. To this distinction between
Mord and Totschlag is attributable the fact, remarkable to British people, that
in several of the cases referred to later on the death sentence was not inflicted.
Various special forms of Totschlag, such as killing a relation or killing while
engaged in another offence, are specially punishable. but need not be consid-
ered here.
An assault which results in death but is not an intentional killing is
punishable with imprisonment for from three to fifteen years.
Causing death by negligence, a form of what is known to us as culpable
homicide, is punishable with three years hard labour at most.
If a bodily injury is caused by negligence, the maximum penalty is a fine of
900 marks or two years’ imprisonment.
If there are mitigating circumstances in any case except that of Mord a more
lenient punishment is applicable.
The following trials are concerned with instances in which grave violence
was used by Germans towards natives, followed usually either directly or
indirectly by the death of the victim.
Rex versus Heinrich Pieter Kreft – Tried 30th September 1915. It was alleged
that accused in July 1915, and at Otjibonde, Omaruru District, murdered Gond-
jore, a native labourer in his employ. Accused reprimanded deceased for
laziness, and while doing so endeavoured to take from him a light kerriexxiii
which he was holding in his left hand behind his back. Native witnesses denied
that beyond changing the kerrie to his right hand Gondjore did anything of a
threatening nature, and said that thereupon accused struck him two blows with
a heavy piece of wood. The first brought him to his knees and the second,
delivered while the boy was still in that position, fractured his skull. For the
defence accused called a number of witnesses to show that deceased was of a
truculent disposition, one of them basing this statement on the fact that
Gondjore had once resisted an assault upon him by the witness. Accused said
further that Gondjore actually hit him on the arm with his stick before he
himself struck one blow. He admitted that Gondjore was brought to his knees
by the first blow and used no further violence, and he admitted killing him with
the second blow.
He was sentenced to one year s imprisonment with hard labour for assault
resulting in death in mitigating circumstances.
xxiii
(Page 186 in original) A knobbed stick used for hunting or protection. A heavy one is a
dangerous weapon, a light one is not.
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Rex versus Walter Barth. Tried 4th October 1915. On the 4th July 1915, at
Guchab, near Otavi, accused, a mine manager, was alleged to have murdered
Wilfred, a male adult native labourer on the mine. On the 3rd July 1915 our
troops arrived at Guchab. Accused said it was reported to him that at this the
deceased and others had attempted to break open the mine provision store, and
that he found him near it and ordered him away. Wilfred denied knowledge of
the matter, explaining his presence there by saying he had been holding the
horses of the troops. The next day Barth came to the huts and again accused
Wilfred of trying to break open the store. Wilfred denied this, and after a few
words accused struck him with a sjambok. Thereupon, according to accused,
deceased picked up a kerrie and threatened him. This was denied by native
witnesses, who said that on the contrary Wilfred started to run away. However
that may be, accused next fired four shots from a Browning pistol at Wilfred
and killed him.
Accused s reason for using the sjambok in the first instance is instructive.
He said: “I hit him because of the expression of his face. He looked imperti-
nent. I also hit him because he lied to me, I thought I was justified in hitting
him, because in German South-West Africa the High Court gave a decision that
a manager had the so-called Zuchtigungsrecht, the right to apply a light punish-
ment.
This Zuchtigungsrecht (right of correction) is dealt with elsewhere in this
volume.
Accused was found guilty of Totschlag and sent to prison for three years.
Rex versus Hermann Albert Rudolph Eisentraut – Tried on the 6th October
1915. The charge was that on the 2nd August 1915, and at Niederungsfeld,
Omaruru, accused murdered Joseph, a native in his employ. Accused lived in
concubinage with a native girl. When our troops came into the neighbourhood
all his servants, including the girl, ran away. He followed them, taking a
Browning pistol with him, came upon them in the bush and immediately
opened fire, killing Joseph with his first shot. He stated that he acted in self-
defence as his life was in danger, giving as his reasons that the natives were all
armed with bows and arrows or kerries. He did not say that any attack upon him
was actually made or attempted. After killing Joseph he fired several more
shots without effect and then drove the woman back to the farm, telling the men
to follow, which some of them did.
He was found guilty of intentional homicide (Totschlag) and sentenced to
three years’ imprisonment with hard labour.
Rex versus Heinrich Petrus Witbooi – Tried on the 7th October 1915. It was
alleged that accused, a native, shot a Bushman, Gaidip, near Hebron, Otavi,
during July 1915. Accused had made a statement to the effect that, being out in
the veld with his master, Kremer, they came upon three Bushmen; that Kremer
at once opened fire, wounding deceased and killing another man, and that
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accused, on Kremer’s instructions, fired at the wounded man with fatal results.
This statement was not admitted by the Court. The only other evidence was
that of the third Bushman, who did not see his assailants and consequently was
not of much value. Accused was acquitted.
Rex versus Henrich Christian Kremer – Tried on 8th October 1915. This was
the man mentioned in the previous case, and he was charged with the murder of
the two Bushmen therein mentioned. The principal witness against him was
Witbooi, and in the absence of satisfactory corroboration he was acquitted.
Rex versus Frederick – Tried 8th October 1915. It was alleged that the accused
on the 26th August 1915, at Gamrarab, Outjo, shot dead a Bushman named
Gaidap. The principal evidence against him was his own statement that cattle
of his master, Buntebardt, having been stolen, he and Buntebardt had followed
the spoor and came to a Bushman werft, where fresh meat was hanging up.
They concealed themselves outside the hut until dawn broke. Just before
this, Buntebardt handed accused a shot gun and cartridges, and ordered him to
shoot any Bushmen he saw. He approached the hut, saw deceased in the door-
way and immediately fired, killing him. He went on to say that thereupon a
woman ran out of the hut and he fired at her and purposely missed her, where-
upon his master told him that if he did so again he would shoot him and himself
fired and killed the woman. Accused concluded his statement by saying that he
shot Gaidap because he was ordered to do so, and that even if it had been his
wife he was ordered to kill he would have obeyed, because it was his master
who gave the order.
There was no other evidence of any value, and accused was acquitted.
Rex versus Fritz Buntebardt – Tried l 9th October 1915. Accused was charged
with the murder of Tanesis. the woman referred to above. The only witness
against him was Frederick, and in the absence of corroboration he was acquit-
ted.
Rex versus Walter Böhmer – Tried 11th October 1915. Böhmer is a farmer in
the Protectorate. During hostilities he held some military position at Seeis, but
on the approach of our forces, according to his own statement, he was told to
lay aside his uniform and return to his own farm. His only other instruction
being that he was to protect the neighbouring farmers against natives.He did
not retain his rifle. On the 21st May 1915 four native servants of a neighbour
of accused deserted from their service, after some form of dispute with their
master, and set out for Windhuk. Accused was told of this by telephone. These
natives had to pass accused’s farm, and when they approached his homestead
he got ready his weapons, a combination gun and a double-barrelled shot-gun,
and summoned his own natives to his assistance. He then called to the four men
to approach, and they did so. The accused says that when they were ten paces
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away he ordered them to stop and sit down, that they refused and continued to
approach slowly, that one at least had a kerrie in his hand and that he fired
because he was afraid that this would be thrown at him. He did not go so far as
to say definitelv that this man made any actual motion as if to throw the kerrie.
He fired in all four or five shots, and the first two from the shotgun each killed
one of the natives. The other two natives ran away, both being wounded in their
flight. The medical evidence to the effect that one of the deceased was shot in
the right breast and the other in the right side, both at from ten to fifteen paces
distance, does not corroborate accused s story that the natives were advancing
upon him when he fired.
During all this accused s own natives were standing by. The evidence given
by them and the two who escaped is to the effect that the four natives halted in
a line when accused told them to but refused to sit down when he ordered,
saying they were going to Windhuk, and that accused shot them on account of
this refusal.
The Court declined to accept accused s version of the affair and found him
guilty of intentional killing without deliberation, and sentenced him to five
years’ imprisonment.
In 1912 accused was convicted by a German Protectorate Court of beating
to death with a makossxxiv a native who was in a weak condition and consump-
tive. He tied his victim hand and foot and beat him until he himself was tired
and then called on his native servants to continue the thrashing. For this offence
he was fined 501. or 100 days’ imprisonment, and the Court commented
severely on the inhumanity of his conduct, but found mitigating circumstances
in the facts that his wife was at the the lying in child-bed and the native was of
bad character. Full particulars of this case have been given in the previous
chapter.
Rex versus Karl Wilhelm Becker – Tried 25th October 1915. It was alleged that
on the 24th August 1915, and at Tsumanas. Outjo District, accused attempted
to murder a native, Kasinda, by shooting at him and wounding him.
Kasinda and another native went on to accused s farm to look for lost goats
They were met by accused, who was armed with a rifle, which he said he never
was without when he was away from the house; and he took them to his house.
The parties were unable to understand one another. The boys said that after a
time they became frightened and ran away, and that accused fired at them,
slightly wounding Kasinda. Accused said that, seeing strange natives on his
farm and having recently lost a lot of cattle, he took them to his house and
questioned them, and understood that they were not in employment. He
accordingly determined to take them to the police, and when they heard him
say this they ran away. He shouted to them three times to stop and as they did
not do so he fired two shots, that he did not aim at them, that when he fired the
xxiv
(Page 188 in original) A short, very heavy sjambok, used to control the wheeler oxen of a
wagon.
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second shot they were out of sight in a hollow, that he did not know either shot
had taken effect until two days later when a neighbour told him, and that the
wound must have been due to a ricochet. The evidence of the medical man who
attended Kasinda was not available.
Accused was convicted of causing bodily injury through negligence and
hued 45l. or one year’s imprisonment.
Rex versus Siegfried Alexander Wilhelm von Seydlitz – Tried 26th October
1915. It was alleged that on the 22nd September 1915, and at Schonfeld Oma-
ruru, accused had attempted to murder a native named Simon in his service, by
shooting at and wounding him.
Simon was late for his work, and accused remonstrated with him and then
struck him, and there was a struggle between them. After it was over. Simon
went to his hut. Another German then went up to him and struck him because
he had hit accused. There was a further struggle between Simon on the one
hand and accused and the second German on the other. After this Simon was
ordered off the farm by accused, and his goats remained behind. Accused and
his companion followed him to see him off, accused taking a rifle with him.
When they got near Simon sprang towards them, and accused shot and
wounded him. Accused said he fired because he thought he was being attacked.
Simon said he was afraid accused was going to shoot him and sprang forward
to get the gun away.
The Court accepted the view that accused acted in self-defence and found
him guilty of attempted homicide in mitigating circumstances, and fined him
10l. or three months’ imprisonment.
Rex versus Emil Kurz – Tried 16th November 1915. The charge was that in
May 1915, at Omajette. Omaruru, accused shot dead a native woman named
Kauchave.
An ox had been stolen from accused, who followed on the spoor with two
native servants. They came to a spot where meat was hanging and, seeing
figures moving through the bush, accused fired. He admitted that he wounded
the woman but denied causing her death.
The evidence of native companions of deceased was that she was killed
outright. No medical testimony was available.
Accused was found guilty of dangerous assault and sentenced to twelve
months’ imprisonment with hard labour.
Rex versus Julius Folkmann – Tried 18th November 1915. The charge was that
on the 7th October 1915, and at Otjihua, Windhuk District, accused murdered
a native named August, in his employ, by shooting him with a Browning pistol.
Some of accused s calves had been lost, and there was a quarrel at night
between him and deceased over this, which ended in a struggle in which
accused’s wife also took part. She sent a small native to bring the pistol, and
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accused shot deceased with it. He maintained that deceased tried to take it from
him, and that it went off in the struggle.
The case resulted in a verdict of intentional homicide in mitigating
circumstances, and accused was fined 45l. or one year’s imprisonment.
Rex versus Hermann Holtz – Tried 7th April 1916. Holtz, a German farmer of
Sturmfeld, Gobabis, killed Fritz, a native whom he charged with deserting from
his service. Accused was on trek when he came upon a German named Voss,
for whom Fritz was acting as servant. Voss gave the native up through fear of
Holtz, who was in an excited state, and accused and deceased left in company
for the former s farm. On arrival at the farm two other native servants saw Holtz
strike the servant Fritz on the head with a very heavy knife, and afterwards saw
deceased going along a road in front of accused, who at this stage was carrying
a gun. Accused came back some time afterwards without deceased, inspanned
a wagon, took the same road, and on his return shortly afterwards brought back
the body of Fritz. Native servants witnessed all this, and on examining the dead
body found bullet wounds in the back and stomach. Accused had gone to
another man on the farm, Frederick Sauer, and asked him to drive out to the
veld where a native, Fritz, was lying. The accused told this man that he had
wounded Fritz. Saner found Fritz in a dying condition. Holtz then told Saner
that the boy had threatened to strike him in the morning and that he (Holtz)
tried to get a piece of wood to defend himself, but that he could only reach a
knife, with which he struck Fritz on the head. Holtz said that in the afternoon,
on the veld, Fritz attacked him with a stick, whereupon accused shot him.
Accused told another farmer that he was attacked by the boy in the veld whilst
he (accused) was relieving himself, and that he shot the native in self-defence.
The defence was that Fritz had lost one of accused s cows through neglect and
that Holtz scolded him, to which he replied with insolence. Holtz was going to
give deceased a blow with his hand, whereupon deceased picked up a stick.
Accused stated that he tried to get a piece of wood but, failing in this, picked
up a knife and used it on deceased, striking, however, with the broad side of the
blade. Later accused and deceased started out in search of the missing cow, and
it was then that accused shot Fritz, who was making an attack on him.
According to Holtz the deceased, after being shot, admitted he was himself to
blame for his injuries. Holtz left his water-bottle with deceased and went for
assistance. Accused was found guilty of intentional homicide under mitigating
circumstances and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment.
Rex versus Carl Georg Schroeder – Tried 8th to 10th April 1916. Accused, a
German farmer, residing at Kampe, in the District of Maltahohe, On Christmas
Day, 1915, killed Johannes Xatjindu, a native servant employed by him. On the
afternoon of that day Schroeder went to the huts of the servants and instructed
deceased to attend to the lambs, which was deceased s usual duty. Deceased
refused to carry out the order, and some words passed between him and
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accused. At the place where the altercation took place there were a number of
other native servants. Accused had complained to deceased about the loss of
small stock and charged him with negligence. Schroeder approached deceased
with a sjambok and a revolver. He first struck him with the sjambok and
afterwards fired three shots from the revolver, as the result of which deceased
died in hospital about six weeks later. Schroeder declared that as he approached
deceased the latter picked up a stone with the intention of attacking him, and
that he (Schroeder) acted in self-defence. None of the native witnesses saw
deceased threaten accused. Schroeder was found guilty of intentional homicide
under mitigating circumstances and sentenced to two years imprisonment.
Rex versus Hendrik Stoetzer – Tried l4th-l5th April 1916. Stoetzer, a German
farmer of Gobabis, was charged with the murder of Hans, a native herd in his
employ, in August 1915. Accused pleaded not guilty. The Crown witnesses
were natives, fellow-servants of deceased, and deposed that Stoetzer had words
with Hans regarding his work, during which time, holding deceased by the arm,
he led him away from the house. After the two had gone a few yards shots were
heard, and Hans was seen to fall. The native witnesses stated that Hans went
along without struggling, and that he never in any way threatened accused. It
was established that when Stoetzer caught hold of deceased s arm the latter had
a jackal-trap in his hand. Stoetzer said that he acted in self-defence, as deceased
threatened him with this trap. Asked to account for the possession of the
revolver at that particular time, he stated that he was carrying it for his
protection. Stoetzer, however, fired not one but three shots, all of which took
effect and any one of which was sufficient to disable the deceased according to
medical testimony. Accused pleaded that as a result of ill-health and accidents
which had befallen him he had become exceedingly nervous, so much so that
when the native threatened him he drew the revolver and remembered very
little of what followed. Stoetzer buried the body of the deceased immediately,
but made no effort to bring the death to the notice of the police. It was only after
several weeks had elapsed that the matter came to the ears of the authorities,
and then through the instrumentality of a native servant from accused’s farm.
The Court found accused guilty of intentional homicide and passed sentence of
five years imprisonment with hard labour.
Rex versus Carry Venuleth – Tried l7th-20th April 1916. This was a case of
extreme interest from many different points of view.xxv
Rex versus Antonius Setecki – Tried 25th April 1916. Accused, a German
farmer of Omaruru District … (see p. 48 of [Cd.8371]) … Accused refrained
from giving evidence himself, and was fined 100l. or nine months hard labour.
xxv
(Page 190 in original) The judgement, which is printed in full at pp. 42 44 of [Cd. 8371], is
not reprinted here.
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Rex versus Marie von Weiher – Tried 25th - 27th April 1916. Accused, a
German woman residing in the Omaruru District, was on the outbreak of war
left on the farm of her husbandxxvi … (see p. 48 of [Cd. 8371]) … The Court
found accused guilty of intentional homicide under mitigating circumstances,
and sentenced her to pay a fine of 300l. or, in default of payment, to undergo
eighteen months’ imprisonment.
Rex versus Johann Binkowski – Tried 2nd - 5th May 1916. Binkowski, a
Police-Sergeant during the German regime … (see p. 50 of [Cd. 8371])
The magistrate took no action against accused, but in Court admitted that he
might have done so had he seen fit. When British troops occupied this part of
the country, Petrus’s body was discovered lying unburied, and the British
police received reports which led to accused s arrest. It was established that
Petrus was not one of the murderers of Luther, though evidence was forth-
coming that Binkowski had been told that he was. The German magistrate
sought to impress the Court with his power in the matter, but the fact that
proceedings were not taken by him against the police-sergeant did not absolve
the latter from the consequence of his action. The Court found accused guilty
of intentional homicide and sentenced him to eighteen months’ imprisonment
with hard labour.
Rex versus Frank Juzek – Tried 6th May 1916. Accused, who like Binkowski
was a German police officer, was charged with the murder of a native, named
Fritz, at Okambahe, in January 1915....(see p. 51 of [Cd. 8371]) and accused
was found guilty, in the absence of proof of the cause of death, of dangerous
assault and sentenced to two years hard labour.
Rex versus Georg Frederick Nauhas and Theodor Jakubowski – Tried 18th
May 1916. Nauhaus and Jakubowski, German farmers of Gobabis, were
charged with the murder of Thabagab, an adult Bushman, on the farm Nabat-
zaub, in the District of Gobabis. the previous January … (see p. 51 of [Cd.
8371])
The flogging was systematic with a view to induce confession or betrayal,
but failed to secure its object. No medical evidence of the cause of death could
be procured, and accused were convicted of dangerous assault and sentenced,
No. 1 to eighteen months’ and No. 2 to twelve months’ imprisonment with hard
labour.
xxvi
(Page 191 in original) The Lt. v. Weiher referred to in Chap. I, of this part.
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Rex versus Max Willy Frenzel – Tried 10th and 11th October 1916. Accused is
a young German farmer, residing in the Maltahohe District., and it was alleged
that he had committed rape upon a young Hottentot girl of about seven on the
2nd April 1916.
On that date in the morning the girl left the farm Grootfontein for
Nieuwerust, where her mother worked, with a message. The same morning the
accused, who had spent the night at Nieuwerust, left on horseback for
Grootfontein. The girl’s story, clearly told for so young a witness, was that they
met on the road at a lonely spot, and accused got off his horse and committed
the act charged.
On her arrival at Nieuwerust it was at once noticed that she was bleeding,
and on examination it was seen that her injuries were such as to indicate
penetration and were severe. In consequence of what she said, a European,
named van der Merwe living at Nieuwerust, followed up accused’s spoor.
There had been a certain amount of rain, and the accused s and the girl s were
the only tracks visible. He came to a spot where the accused had dismounted
and tied up his horse, and here the girl s spoor diverged slightly from the road
to a point a yard or so from it, where blood was seen. Accused had walked to
this spot from the horse. This satisfied him that the girl’s story was true, and he
did not follow the spoors further. No one else had passed Nieuwerust in the
direction of Grootfontein that morning, and accused was the first person to
reach Grootfontein that morning. So far as could be ascertained he was the only
person who had passed the girl on the road. Before going into the house at
Grootfontein accused rode on a short distance to a water hole near by, but out
of sight, remained there half an hour or so and then returned and entered the
house.
Medical evidence that penetration had been effected was conclusive.
Immediately after his arrest accused shaved off most of his moustache and
made other changes in his appearance. When asked to point him out soon after
this the girl was unable to do so, but at the trial she was confident of his identity.
Accused denied that he had washed his clothes at the waterhole, and said he
went there to get letters he had accidentally left there the previous day. He
admitted meeting the girl on the road and seeing no one else on it. He stated
that when he met her she was already injured.
On the ground that as van der Merwe had not followed the girl s tracks the
whole way to Grootfontein there was nothing to disprove this, accused was
acquitted.
The remark made by one witness in this case, that a small matter of this sort
was not worth troubling about, is significant of the attitude of local farmers to
cases of this character.
Rex versus Otto Rapmund – Tried 30th and 31st October 1916. The accused is
a German farmer residing in the Okahandja District. He had been in the habit
of forcing the wives of his native labourers to work for him under threat of
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turning them all off the farm if they refused. This system had been in vogue for
about five years, and was commonly adopted on the farms of the Protectorate.
On the 26th April 1916 one of his men, Lucas Karoreke, refused to allow
his wife to work any longer. The other natives took up the same attitude, and
were all told by accused they must leave the farm.
On the following day they were ordered out by the foreman to work as
usual. Lucas refused to go, stating that he was under notice to leave and that he
wished to see his master, Rapmund, to obtain a pass from him. He was taken to
his master, who assaulted him, first with his fists and then by firing three revol-
ver shots at him, one of which entered the groin. He made a good recovery.
Native evidence was to the effect that Lucas did nothing to provoke this.
Accused stated that when he went up to Lucas the latter looked at him
impertinently and, in consequence, had his ears boxed; that, he then expected
Lucas to return to work, but instead he sprang at him; and that, after his
foreman had broken a stick over Lucas s head, he (accused) fired in self-
defence. He also said that the pistol had gone off by accident.
He was convicted of dangerous assault and sentenced to a fine of 100l. or
twelve months’ imprisonment with hard labour.
Rex versus Walter Lichterfeld – Tried 17th October 1916. The accused, who is
the manager of the farm Otjisongati in the Okahandja District, was charged
with having assaulted a native labourer in such a manner as to cause death. The
native, Jacob, had been employed as a herd by accused and, having lost a sheep,
returned late with the cattle one evening. Lichterfeld informed him he must pay
for the sheep and smacked his face several thes and, as he turned to run, kicked
him. The kick caused a rupture of the urethra, and eventually resulted in death.
Lichterfeld’s plea was guilty of assault resulting in death. The plea was
accepted, and he was sentenced to a fine of 25l. or three months’ imprisonment
with hard labour.
Rex versus Ernst Fahrig – Tried 7th and 8th November 1916. Accused; a
German police-sergeant, was charged with the murder at Okazongura, Oma-
ruru District, in June 1915, of a native named Kamohombo. In May or June
1915, when our forces were approaching that part of the country, a farmer
named Luther was killed by a native, who was subsequently convicted of
intentional homicide by the Special Criminal Court. A German police patrol
went out (unsuccessfully) in search of Luther’s assailants. They found several
natives and grossly ill-treated them with a view to extracting information.
Among other acts they seriously thrashed a native woman, and wished to
mete out the same treatment to another who was enceinte, but their own natives
interfered in her favour. One member of the patrol, Johann Binkowski,217 is
already undergoing sentence for causing the death of one of the natives whom
they caught (see above).
217
‘Pregnant’.
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The Crown case was that Kamohombo was severely beaten on three occasions
and eventually, when he became exhausted and was unable to proceed further,
was shot by accused. One witness gave evidence to this effect, and a second,
named Johannes Hausib, was called, who said that he had, under orders,
administered the thrashings, and also testified to the shooting by the accused.
This man, it transpired, had a very bad record, having several times been con-
victed of admitted offences under the German regime. The medical evidence
was negative.
The defence was that the deceased was shot while trying to escape, which
was permitted under German law.
The Court by a majority found the accused not guilty.
Rex versus Max Ahrens – Tried 8th November 1916. It was alleged that on the
9th June 1916 accused had attempted to murder his native servant, Appollis, at
Aris, Outjo District, by shooting him with a rifle. Accused pleaded guilty of
shooting without any intention of seriously injuring the boy. The evidence
showed that, after a quarrel with Appollis, accused sent another boy to bring
him the rifle and shot him through the thigh. Appollis had made a complete
recovery from his injuries.
The Court found the accused guilty of dangerous assault and sentenced him
to 18 months’ hard labour.
Rex versus Karl Schilg and Wilhelm Lehmpuhl – The charge was murder of one
Matthys, a Bushman male adult, at Obarura in Otjiwarongo District, on the 1st
October 1916. The forefathers of Matthys had resided on this farm for many
years. Their descendants were eventually dispossessed of it by the German
authorities, and it came into the hands of Schilg. Lehmpuhl assisted him as a
foreman on the farm.
For a time Matthys worked for Schilg, and about Christmas 1915 was sent
away. At the end of September 1916 he returned, and when again ordered off
by Schilg refused to go, saying that the Germans no longer owned the country
and that the farm was his. Schilg went away and returned with Lehmpuhl with
the intention (denied by them) of putting him off the place. Some sort of
struggle took place between the two white men and Matthys and a native, Elias,
which ended in Schilg drawing a Browning pistol and shooting Matthys
through the right breast, lung, and spine, causing his immediate death. Both the
natives were unarmed. Accused stated that he fired in self-defence, but the
Court did not accept that view and found him guilty of assault resulting in death
and fined him 100l. or 18 months’ hard labour.
At the preliminary enquiry evidence was led that Lehmpuhl held Matthys
while Schilg shot him. This was not substantiated at the trial, and he was
acquitted.
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Rex versus Georg Hounschild – Tried 16th, 17th and 18th November, 1916-
There were three charges of murder against accused, alleged to have been
committed at Okahabara, Outjo District, in April 1916
Rex versus Franz Ernst Becker – Tried 9th and 10th November, 1916. Accused
is a farmer, and in 1915 was engaged in this occupation at Gransab. in the
Tsumeb District.
A few days before Christmas 1915, Hendrik, a “wild” Bushman, drove off
two of his oxen to a water hole 81/2 miles from his farm. There he was joined by
the rest of his family, and the animals were killed and eaten. The party consist-
ed of two grown men, Hendrik and Kangob, two adult women, Ibis and Kaai-
goos; two youths, Fritz and Tedrip, and two girl children, Ongaris and Arowas,
aged about 12 and 6 respectively.
Accused, accompanied by a Bushman servant, Max, next morning followed
on the track of the oxen and came upon the party still torpid from their meal.
He at once opened fire with his sporting Mauser magazine rifle at close range.
The second shot killed Hendrik and the third Kangob. Meanwhile the rest of
the party scattered. Fritz and Tedrip got into a thickly-foliaged tree, and the
women and children hid under a dense bush. Fortunately for them, the two
youths escaped notice; but the track of the others was followed, they were
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detected, and both women and children were shot dead by Becker. In his
defence Becker stated that he was attacked with arrows. This was entirely
contrary to the evidence of his servant Max, Fritz and Tedrip. who were all
agreed. that the party of Bushmen was completely taken by surprise, and in any
case did not justify the shooting of the women and children after the men were
killed.
Becker was sentenced to death. The sentence was commuted to imprison-
ment for life.
Rex versus Hans von Hatten – Tried 11th to 18th May 1917. Hans von Hatten,
a German farmer, 32 years of age, residing at Oas in the District of Gobabis,
was charged with attempting to murder Michael, an aged Klip Kaffir who had
been in his employ, on the 21st December last, at Oas.
It appeared that von Hatten was for some reason dissatisfied with Michael,
and about the 18th December took him to the police at Gobabis. According to
Michael, he was made to perform the journey on foot, tied to accused s horse
by a thong fastened round his neck. The distance was some thirty odd miles.
Accused admitted this treatment, but only over a portion of the journey some
four miles in extent. On arrival at Gobabis the police refused to charge
Michael, and told him to return to Oas and remove his family and goods and
thereafter seek another employer. On the evening of the 21st December
Michael reached his huts and told his wives to prepare to leave. Later in the
night accused rode up to the huts, accompanied by a Bushman named Sab.
There was some conflict of evidence as to what happened thereafter. Accused
s story was that having lost cattle he wished to search the huts for meat and
ordered the natives to come out, that upon their refusal he threatened to set fire
to the huts, and that thereupon Michael seized hold of him and tried to throw
him down, and Michael s son, Hodebeb, also assumed a threatening attitude,
and that he fired the Browning pistol he was carrying first at Hodebeb and them
at Michael.
There was no evidence that Hodebeb bore any injury. Michael had received
wounds from three bullets, one on the left side of the head, the entrance being
behind the ear and the exit in the neck, another through the left side of the neck
from back to front, and a third inwards and downwards through the covering of
the right side of the stomach. All the wounds were slight and no serious injury
was caused.
The Court was apparently not satisfied that accused intended to kill
Michael, but found him guilty of dangerous assault. The punishment awarded
was a fine of 50l. or six months hard labour.
Rex versus A. F. J. Bohme – Tried 28th May 1917. Accused, a German and a
painter (out of work), aged 63, was charged with an offence upon a young
native girl at Usakos on the 21st March 1917. It appeared that the police had
some reason to suspect him of improper conduct with native children. On the
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day in question he was seen going in the direction of thick bush with two young
girls and was followed by Constable v.d. Post, who found him lying down with
one of them inside a bush which was so thick that he could not see plainly what
was taking place. The girl ran away when she saw the constable, as did the
other girl who was in the vicinity. Accused stood up, and van der Post saw that
his clothing was disarranged. The girl was an unwilling witness, but admitted
that accused had taken her to the bush for the purpose of having connection
with her and failed in his purpose. He had given her 1s, and she was a
consenting party. Medical examination showed that she had been tampered
with, and accused admitted a certain degree of improper conduct.
There was some difficulty about the age of the girl. In appearance she was
under 14, and the medical witness estimated that she was between 12 and 13.
She had not yet menstruated. Accused produced a certificate that she was
baptised in 1909, which stated that she was born in 1903. Her mother was
unable to give the Court any satisfactory assistance on the point, as is usual
with natives of this territory, who are as a rule extremely vague on the question
of age.
The Court found the accused guilty of indecent conduct with a girl under 14
and sentenced him to six months hard labour.
Rex versus Carl Alfred Feuerstein – Tried 23rd May, 28th May-2nd June 1917.
Feuerstein is a German ex-Postmaster, aged 33, who had taken up his residence
on the farm Sus in the Grootfontein District. He was charged with the murder
on the farm, on the 27th October 1916, of a Bushman named Hans.
At the time of his death Hans was the leader of a gang of Bushmen vagrants,
and Hans himself was a renowned stock thief. He was also suspected of more
than one murder. The facts of these as known to us indicated that he may have
had considerable provocation; but it is undoubtedly the case that they were
officially regarded, after some investigation by authority, in the light of murder.
It may therefore be accepted that among the German population he was looked
upon as a dangerous man.
For some few days before the 27th October Hans s presence in the vicinity
of Sus was known to the residents. On the 26th they received information that
he was in the immediate neighbourhood, and determined to try to effect his
capture. Possibly they intended to kill him, but there was no direct evidence on
this point.
There were on the farm accused and two other white men, who possessed
between them two rifles and a Browning pistol, and a number of natives all said
to be ill-disposed towards Hans.
On the 27th October, accused, accompanied by a Bushman, Guntsas, and
followed at a short interval by another named Qabub, set out on horseback after
Hans. He carried his rifle, as was his custom, and, in addition and contrary to
his ordinary habit, took with him the Browning pistol, which was not his
property.
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Rex versus Jacobus Markus – Tried 15th May and 2nd 3rd July 1917.
Rex versus John Annis – Tried 15th May and 2nd 3rd July 1917.
Rex versus Albert Schmidt – Tried 15th May and 4th 5th July 1917.
Although the accused in these cases were indicted and tried separately, it will
be convenient to report on them together. Schmidt is a German farmer at
Chamis South, Bethany District. Annis is the son of a Portuguese and a Bastard
woman. He occupies a neighbouring farm and lives in a house on Schmidt s
property. Markus is a coloured inhabitant of this country who was in the
employ of Schmidt as a shepherd.
Annis had in his service a Hottentot named Lindip. Schmidt had in his
possession a rifle and ammunition, and was anxious to conceal this fact from
our officials, presumably to prevent them being taken away. Lindip became
aware of this, and to prevent him disclosing his information to the authorities
Schmidt determined to make away with him. He accordingly, on the 6th
October 1916. arranged with Annis and Markus that Lindip should be sent out
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into the veld and the three of them would follow and shoot him. On the morning
of the 7th October, Lindip was sent out by Annis. He took with him two dogs.
Soon after his departure Markus received the rifle and two cartridges from
Schmidt, concealed in sacking, and with Annis went after Lindip. As arranged.
they waited at the foot of the mountain for Schmidt, but as he did not come
went on to the top. There they found Lindip. and all three sat down. After
Lindip and Markus had smoked a pipe, Markus, at the instigation of Annis, and
after having expressed some hesitation. shot Lindip dead in cold blood. He
fired two shots, the first through the body and the second through the head.
Having disposed of the body by placing it in a hole under a ledge of rock
and walling it in with stones. they returned to Schmidt s house and told what
they had done. They took the two dogs back with them. A report was made to
the police that Lindip had absconded.
Some time after this Markus was given a bottle of paraffin by Schmidt and
sent out by him to burn the corpse. He took the paraffin to the spot and left it
there, and has explained that he was afraid to do anything further.
About the 12th January 1917 Schmidt and Annis proceeded to the spot and
made a fire with bushes and the paraffin and destroyed the body, nothing being
left but some calcined bones and certain metal articles. which Lindip was
proved to have had in his possession on the 7th October.
Other natives on the farm had become uneasy and suspicious at Lindip’s
absence. One, Hans Lucas, received orders to go into the veld the day after
Schmidt and Annis had gone out. He seized the opportunity to follow their
spoors, and eventually found the fire and recognised the metal articles. He took
another native to the spot and showed him what he had found, but they
disturbed nothing.
On their return to the farm Lucas went to Chamis Police Station, which was
not far away, and reported the matter.
Constable Enslin went to Chamis South and verified the facts. The next day
Markus, who had apparently learned of his visit, arrived at the Police Station
and said his conscience was troubling him and he wished to make a full
disclosure of what had occurred. He then made a short statement to the above
effect. Enslin, who was alone, sent him into Bethany, which he reached the
next day but one. There he made a full confession to Sergt. Coetzee, which was
reduced to writing. Subsequently he confirmed this confession before the
magistrate. Annis also made a statement to the police on arrest which exon-
erated himself but implicated Schmidt and Markus.
The three accused were indicted and tried separately. The trial of Markus
took place first. He now told a different story, obviously false, to the effect that
Lindip had been shot by accident. He was convicted and sentenced to death.
Annis was next dealt with, and Markus was called as a witness against him.
He reverted to his original story of the affair, explaining that on the way to
Windhuk the other two accused had persuaded him to give a false account. The
Court did not accept Annis s version, and he was also convicted.
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Thereafter Schmidt was placed on his trial, and both Markus and Annis were
called against him. Markus repeated his first story, and Annis, under
examination by a member of the Court, seriously implicated Schmidt, who in
his turn was sentenced to death.
The sentences were commuted to imprisonment for life.
Rex versus Paul Arno Becker – Tried 11th December 1917. This man a German
farmer at Chairos, Outjo District, had a Bushman boy, Hongrib. aged 15, in his
service. He gave him a beating for an alleged theft, and the boy ran away. He
was recovered, was again charged with stealing, and again absconded. Hon-
grib’s mother, Dikpens, also lived on the farm. She had two other children, one
about 5 years old and the other still at the breast. In order to get Hongrib back,
Becker sent her out to look for him, first locking up the children in a room at
the farmhouse. He told her not to return without Hongrib. She was away three
days and three nights, and returned without him. Meanwhile the children had
been kept locked up in the room with no covering, and had only received as
food a little milk. On Dikpens s return Becker sent her out again at once to look
for Hongrib. She went to the nearest police-station, and a patrol was sent out
and the children were released and restored to their mother.
For his ill-treatment of the little children he was fined 50l. or three months
hard labour.
Upon Hongrib s return subsequently Becker thrashed him, for which he was
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fined 5l. or 14 days hard labour. Thereafter Hongrib was taken out into the veld
by another German and very severely beaten and left tied up in the hot sun all
day. He became unconscious, and was found a day or so later by a native
constable in the last stages of exhaustion. This matter is still sub judice.
At the present moment the following cases are pending:–
Rex versus Georg Vosswinckel – There are two charges of murdering natives
and concealing their bodies in ant-bear holes pending against this man.
Rex versus Rudolph Tommaschewski – There are two charges against this man
of murdering a native man and woman and, in the case of the woman,
destroying the body by fire.
Rex versus H. Ehmke – After a dispute with a farm servant over his duties
accused is alleged to have picked up a large stone and struck the boy two or
three blows over the head, giving him dangerous injuries which necessitated
his detention in hospital for 14 days.
We now turn to the converse case of violence offered by natives to Ger-
mans. Only two have come before the Special Criminal Court, and particulars
are as follows
Rex versus (1) Fritz; (2) Massinab; (3) Langman – Tried 27th April 1916.
Accused were Bushmen, living in the Grootfontein District. Fritz was for a
period in the employ of Europeans, but for some years had apparently lived as
one of a predatory band of Bushmen who at that time infested the bush in this
as in other parts of the Protectorate. He was charged with the murder of two
German farmers, Olhroggen and Korting, on the 15th September 1915, On the
farm Goroab West, in the District of Tsumeb, by shooting then with a rifle.
Some Bushmen, servants of a farmer named Eckstein. the owner of Goroab
West, had run away. He with other natives, Ovambos, went to a water-hole and
found one of them, whom he took back to the farm. He also took five or six
Bushmen women, his object being, as he stated, to induce their husbands to
follow them, when he hoped to obtain their services as labourers. The chief of
the party living at this water-hole was one Max, who was away at the time but
returned later in the day. All the accused were said to be members of his band.
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The party possessed two rifles and a few cartridges. Max ordered accused
(Fritz) to take some of the other men, armed with the guns and bows and
arrows, and go next day to recover the women.
When they reached the farm, Fritz carrying a Mauser rifle, Eckstein was
away in the lands and a German named Angebauer was near the house. The
latter was shot at and wounded, but no evidence was forthcoming as to who
fired the shot except Fritz s admission that he did it. Eckstein them fled to the
next farm and returned with two other men, Ohlroggen and Korting. They were
unarmed. In the meantime the Bushmen had disappeared into the bush near the
road. Eckstein left his companions and went to his natives in the lands to find
out what had happened during his absence. Ohlroggen and Korting continued
on the road. A shot was fired from the bush where the Bushmen had hidden,
and Ohlroggen fell. Korting ran away, but was killed at once by another shot
from the same spot.
There was no direct evidence as to who fired the fatal shot, but it was proved
that Fritz was in the party and carried a Mauser. There was some evidence that
Massinab and Langman were also with the party, but armed only with bows and
arrows. No one could see any of the Bushmen when the shots were fired,
although they were last seen shortly before in the immediate vicinity of the spot
from which the shots came.
Fritz on three separate occasions admitted his guilt. He gave as his reasons:–
I am a Bushman. About two years ago I was employed by a Mr. Bucherin in the
Grootfontein District. I was not treated well by Mr. Bucherin, so I left his service
and. lived in the bush. One day a Bushman named Max, who is headman of a
Bushman family, came to me and told me that he had shot a white man named
Ludwig on the farm Guntsas; he then gave me a rifle (Martini pattern) and told
me to come with him, as I was a good shot and the Germans would soon be
chasing him, and that I could help him shoot the Germans.
From that time I followed Max, and he was my captain and I had to do every-
thing that Max ordered me to do. About the rains came last year Max instructed
me to accompany him, together with five other Bushmen, named Noib, Acherob,
a son of Noib, and Jakob, to the farm of a German named Fribohn, where he
intended killing the Europeans because he (Max) had no tobacco left; so he said
we must kill the white man and take his tobacco. When we reached the farmhouse
the white man was not there, so we helped ourselves to his tobacco and clothing
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and also money. As we were standing outside the house Max went over to the
dwelling of the farm servants and was captured by three natives (a Bushman,
Herero, and a Kaffir). When I perceived that Max had been caught, I immediately
went to his assistance and shot all three of the natives, who died. I know the
names of two of these natives: the Kaffir’s name was Koisib, the name of the
Bushman was Kaikabas, and I do not know the name of the Herero. This occurred
in the Grootfontein District. After that we were chased by the German police, so
came and lived at the water-hole named Herab, in the Tsumeb District. On the
14th September 1915, Mr. Eckstein, of Goroab, came to Herab and took some of
Max’s Bushwomen away from his farm. Max then instructed me to proceed to
Eckstein’s farm. accompanied by Noib, Massinab, David and Acherob, and told
me to kill Eckstein and bring his (Max’s) people back. We arrived at Eckstein’s
farm in the morning, and waited in the bushes at the back of the house. I saw Mr.
Angebauer and shot at him; I cannot say whether I hit him. I then saw Andries in
the mealie lands and went down to him and told him he must not accompany
white men when they went into the bush and stole Bushwomen who were doing
no harm. I then intended to go to Goroab East in pursuit of Eckstein, who had
gone away, and it was then I perceived three white men and two Ovambos
conning from the direction along the road. I then went into the bush near the road
and waited for them. Before they reached me Eckstein left the other two white
men and went towards Andries in the mealie field, and the other two white men
came past me. I shot the big man (Ohlroggen) first, and the small man (Korting)
turned round and ran back, and I shot him also. I then fired at Eckstein once, and
Eckstein fired three times at me. When I shot these two white men I was
accompanied by Acherob; the others were some distance away in the bushes. I did
not follow Eckstein after this, but took my people whom Eckstein had stolen and
returned to Herab. Max did not accompany us, as he was suffering from sore eyes.
All the crimes I have committed were done on the instructions of Max; he is my
captain, and I cannot refuse to do anything he tells me to do. The Bushmen who
accompanied me did not fire at the white men; I did all the shooting. Noib fired
once at the house, just after I had shot at Angebauer, but did not shoot anyone.
Acherob murdered a Kaffir named Fritz by striking him on the head with a log of
wood at New Desenberg, in the Grootfontein District, about the time the rains
came last year. Max has a Martini-Henri pattern rifle, but has no ammunition for
it. The others have bows and arrows.
Johannes Fritz, his x mark
Rex versus Langmann and Jonas – Tried 2nd May 1916. The first accused was
a Herero, the second accused a Berg-Damara. They were charged with the
murder of Paul Luther, a German farmer in his lifetime residing at Omaroho,
District of Omaruru, where the crime was committed. Deceased, accompanied
by native servants, went in search of small stock which he had lost. This party
reached the werft of accused, where they found some girls, who took alarm and
ran to the men. Deceased, with the object of frightening these girls, fired a shot
in the air. He and his native servants followed the girls and came upon accused.
Deceased approached these men holding his rifle at the hip. Langmann jumped
underneath the rifle and caught hold of it. Luther called to his servants for help,
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but before they could release him Jonas, the second accused, came up and
struck deceased with a bar of iron on the base of the skull. He fell dead, and his
body was further mutilated after death. The second accused admitted that he
killed Luther, was convicted of intentional homicide, and sentenced to two
years imprisonment with hard labour. The first accused was acquitted.
In both these cases it will be seen that there was something to be said on
behalf of the natives. In the first, several women had been carried off and
detained by the Germans; and, whatever the motive of this, it was not to be
wondered at that their husbands endeavoured to rescue them. In the second,
deceased had already fired one shot and approached with his rifle in a position
to fire another, so that the accused had some reason for supposing that he
meditated an attack on them.
On the other hand, in most of the cases of violent conduct towards natives
on the part of Germans, which are quoted above, there was no evidence of any
adequate motive.
It will be observed, and perhaps wondered at in view of what has been stated
in Part I of this work, that sexual offences against native women are only
represented in this chapter by one case, in which conviction followed. There is,
however, good reason to think that the true facts as to the position in this respect
have not been disclosed through the medium of the Courts. The native races
have been so subjugated by their white overlords that their women have for
years been defenceless and at the mercy of any European male who cared to
make use of them. Complaint to the police in German time would have been
worse than useless. They have, in consequence, become accustomed to submit
more or less tamely to the advances of white men and to offer but little
resistance, however distasteful such overtures may be to them, and least of all
to make complaint to authority. This was but one more misery added to all the
other miseries of life. After years of docile submission it is obvious that time
must elapse before they can realise that matters have changed. that they can
look to us for protection, and that attacks upon their virtue may now be resisted,
and resisted with impunity.
It has not been the purpose of the writer to offer extensive comment on the
foregoing. His object has been to give concisely the bare facts of each case as
found proved by the highest tribunal in the land – whose members are a
barrister of high standing in the Union with large experience of criminal
matters, and two stipendiary magistrates of similar experience – and leave the
reader to form his own conclusions. He should meet with no difficulty.
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APPENDICES
APPENDICES
A. – Chains
B. – Corporal punishment
C. – Hanging
APPENDIX I
Fig. No. 1 shows a chain, 8 feet long, connecting two iron neck-collars. The
collars are made of flat iron bands, 11/4 inches wide and [three-sixteenths] inch
thick, have a hinge and lock attachment, and do not have a leather or other
Plate A
326 APPENDICES
Plate A1
Plate A2
APPENDICES 327
covering for the protection of the skin. The combination weighs 7 lbs. 3 oz.,
viz., chain 3lbs. 7 oz., and each collar 1 lb. 14 oz. The defect in the open collar
close to the link from which it is suspended was caused by the passage of a
bullet, showing that in all probability a prisoner was shot through the neck,
while actually in chains. (See also Plate A2.)
Figs. 2 and 3 show gang chains for four and three prisoners respectively,
similar in construction to No. 1 but of lighter material. The collars are covered
with leather and the chains are 61/2 feet long. No. 2. weighs 14 lbs. 10 oz., and
No. 3, 10 lbs. 3 oz., while the weight of each collar is 1 lb. 5 oz., and of the
connecting chain 3 lbs. 2 oz.
Gang chains were applied as shown in Plate A1. Working gangs were sent
out and had to perform their work in these chains, and instances are recorded
where prisoners were marched long distances, e.g., from Warmbad to Keet-
manshoop, a distance of 140 miles, chained together in large groups. When the
weights of these appliances are teaken into consideration, it will be found that
each prisoner, with the exception of those at the extremities of the gang, had to
support from 41/2 to 51/4 lbs. from the neck. Their continued use is bound to lead
to local injury, and the constant and inevitable interference with the circulation
and respiration to serious impediment of the health of the prisoner.
Fig. 4 represents a rough neck-collar, made from round iron, half an inch
thick. It is not provided with a lock, but the ends are furnished with eyes,
through which a chain can be run to connect up the prisoners. Its weight is 13/4
lbs. It has not been possible to determine whether this type was actually made
use of.
Fig. 5 is a rough collar made out of a horse-shoe and furnished with a chain
for locking a prisoner to the saddle. It weighs 21/2 lbs., and demonstrates one of
the ways in which prisoners were led from one station to another by mounted
escorts. In addition to the neck chain, the prisoner was invariably handcuffed.
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328 APPENDICES
Plate B
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APPENDICES 329
Plate C1
330 APPENDICES
Plate C2
APPENDICES 331
HANDCUFFS:
Fig. 1 shows a bar handcuff, 2 feet long, made of flat iron, 2 inches wide and
3
/8 of an inch thick. It weighs 12 lbs.
In the upright position it produces painful pressure in whatever attitude the
arms are placed. The same also applies to the sitting and recumbent postures,
when every change of position causes pain and torture. Its use cannot be
justified under any circumstances, not even as a temporary measure for
restraint. If worn for any length of time very serious injury will result to the
arms and also to the general health of the prisoner. (See also Plate C2).
Figs 2 and 3 – This type of handcuff varies in weight from 11/2 lbs. to 2 lbs.
No objection could be raised against them as a temporary means of restraint,
provided that the correct size is fitted. Their use for long periods or in
conjunction with leg-irons (Figs. 9 and 10, Plate C) especially in the cae of
women, cannot be too strongly condemned.
Figs. 4 and 5 represent the ordinary types of handcuffs, and require no
description or comment.
Figs. 6 and 7. – These handcuffs are used for transferring prisoners by
mounted escort from one station to another, sometimes over long distances.
The prisoner, attached to the saddle by the chain, had to regulate his pace
according to that of his escort. The hands were, more often than not,
handcuffed behind the back. This method of conveying prisoners may be
perfectly humane, but lends itself to gross abuse by an inconsiderate escort.
Plate C
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332 APPENDICES
The hands are in too close opposition to be comfortable, and when the distance
is great considerable suffering will result.
Figs. 8, 9 and 10 are leg-irons, which were generally used in conjunction
with Nos. 2 and 3, as described above. They vary in weight from 21/2 to 31/2 lbs.
The cell floors were provided with ring bolts to which prisoners were
frequently secured by means of these chains. While the actual use of them as a
temporary means of restraint, in the case of dangerous criminals, cannot be
considered inhumane, there is, unfortunately, abundant evidence to show that
they were designed and actually used as means of punishment, and their use for
the chaining of women for such offences as laziness, impertinence or vagrancy
could not possibly be justified. During progression they are a constant source
of discomfort, and when worn for any lengthy period, destruction of the skin
and underlying parts takes place, with very painful and even serious conse-
quences to the prisoner. (See also Plates C1 and C2).
No more cruel system of slow and deliberate torture could be devised than
this chain system. In addition to the torture inflicted by these chains, prisoners
were made to do as much work as if they were unfettered. Further, being clad
in sacks only, their sufferings were aggravated in winter by the cold in the dark
and badly ventilated cells. (The original chains and fetters appearing in these
plates are all in my possession.)
B
(1) OBSERVATIONS ON CORPORAL PUNISHMENT
AS PRACTISED IN THE UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA
APPENDICES 333
Plate D
object of justice. The cane is soaked and disinfected as far as possible before
use, and the strokes are horizontal and not vertical. Great care is exercised to
protect adjacent vulnerable parts by means of pads, and to confine the strokes
to the buttocks, by immobilizing the prisoner on a tripod. By these precautions
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334 APPENDICES
APPENDICES 335
injury to such organs as the genitals, and cutting of the skin over bony promi-
nences, are prevented. Before the administration of the strokes the prisoner is
examined by a medical officer, who advises as to his fitness, or otherwise, to
undergo punishment.
The sjambok was the prescribed instrument for inflicting lashes in S.W. Africa
during the German régime. It may be described as a short handwhip, varying
in length from 3 to 4 feet, and composed entirely of the raw hide of such
animals as the giraffe, rhinoceros, or hippopotamus. The handle is rigid, and
the lash gradually tapers towards the point, which is very supple and
consequently not under control (vide Plate D). It is generally used for driving
cattle, and will, if sufficient force is applied cut clean through the skin of even
these animals. The lashes were administered by a native policeman, who was
selected on account of his strength. The prisoner, after being stripped, was
placed prone over a barrel, box, log of wood, or other convenient object, and
held securely by the hands and feet by two or more assistants. This position
allows of the delivery of downward and more focible strokes with the sjambok,
and greater laceration of the tissues necessarily results. Further, as the prisoner
was able to wriggle about while being flogged, it was impossible to place the
lashes accureately, and very often the point of the sjambok reached round the
abdomen or other parts. Of the antives who have passed through the Native
Hospital at Windhuk since our occupation, a very large percentage bore
unmistakeable evidence of having been brutally flogged. For instance: A boy
who received nearly 10 years ago, 60 lashes, in instalments of 15 at fortnightly
intervals, was laid up in the prone position in hospital for two months after the
flogging. The buttocks show extensive scarring, due to the complete destruc-
tion of the skin and a distribution of scars over the upper and outer part of thigh
and abdomen, caused by clean cuts of the sjambok. Another native, who
received, about 10 years ago, 37 lashes for desertion from service of a brutal
master, in two instalments of 24 and 13 respectively, shows similar scarring,
which extends beyond the buttocks. This boy required a month’s hospital
treatment after the flogging. Similar instances could be multiplied indefinitely.
C
OBSERVATIONS ON CAPITAL PUNISHMENT AS PRACTISED
BY THE GERMANS IN SOUTH AFRICA
Executions were carried out in a very crude and cruel manner. The condemned
prisoner was conducted to te nearest tre and placed on an ammunition, biscuit,
soap, or other box or convenient object, and the rope, after being run round his
neck and through a fork of the tree, was fixed to the trunk. The box was then
removed and death resulted from asphyxiation. There was no privacy about the
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336 APPENDICES
proceedings, nor, except in towns or in their immediate vicinity, was the body
taken down and buried.
The majority of the victims shown in the photographs of executions bear
evidence to the cruelty and torture of the chain system. Note the rags covering
the wounds produced by the chains above the ankles.
Where a number of executions had to take place, a rough gallows was put up
and the hanging carried out in the manner described above. (See frontispiece).
In other instances the condemned prisoner was strangled by merely hoisting
him off his feet by utilizing the fork or branch of a tree.
When rope was not available, telegraph or telephone wire or other
convenient material was used.
Very rarely could death have resulted instantaneously.
APPENDIX 2
APPENDIX 3
Kaiserlichen bezirksamt,
J. No. 295 Lüderitzbucht, den 31. Januar 1903
An das Kaiserliche Gouvernement, Windhuk.
Betr.: misshandlungen gegen eingeborene.
Auf die Verfügung vom 2. d. Mts. J. Nr. 153: – Fälle, in denen Ansiedler sich
Mishandlungen gegen ihre Eingeborenen haben zu schulden kommen lassen oder
ihnen keine ausreichende Verpflegung verabfolgt haben, sind hier nicht bekannt
geworden. Jedoch ist eine ganze Reihe von Fällen, in denen Behnangestellte die
ihnen unterstellten oder zur Beaufsichtigung zugewiesenen Herero-Kriefsgefan-
genen misshandelt haben, zur Anzeige gelangt.
Ich habe in den moisten Fällen gegen die Betreffenden Straffantrag be idem
Kaiserlichen Bezirksgericht hier gestellt, das jedoch nur selten zu einer Bestra-
fung gelangt ist, da in den weitaus moisten Fällen nur eingeborene als Zeugen in
Betracht kamen, deren Aussagen von Seiten des Gerichtes nicht für genügend
gehalten wurden …
Die Kaiserliche Bezirksamtmann,
(gez.) Boehmer
Kaiserliches bezirksamt,
J. Nr. 5150. Lüderitzbucht, 14. Juni 1911
Dem Kaiserlichen Gouvernement, Windhuk.
In den Verdacht der Negrophilität great derjenige Beamte, der berufsmässig den
auf den Diamant-Feldern grassierenden Eingeborenenmisshandlungen entgegen
zu treten und sie durch Anzeige beim Bezirksgericht zu verfolgen hat, bei den hier
teilweise herrschenden anschauungen nur allzuleicht. Die Anschauung, das der
Ovambo “kein Mensch” sei und dass dem Eingeborenen selbst bei schweren
Misshandlungen durch Weisse kein Recht der Notwehr, sondern nur das Recht
der Beschwerde an das Bezirksamt zustehe, wird häufig genug vertreten …
(gez.) Heilingbrunner
Kaiserliches bezirksamt,
J. Nr. 3269. Lüderitzbucht, den 21. April 1913
An das Kaiserlich Gouvernement, Windhuk
Betrifft: eingeborenen-misshandlungen.
Im Anschluss an den Bericht von 15. Mai 1912, J.Nr. 4304, und den Erlass vom
13 Juni 1912, J.Nr. 13126: – (1) In neuester Zeit mehren sich wieder die Klagen
über Eingeborenenmisshandlungen, nachdem eine Zeitlang eine erfreuliche Bes-
serung eingetreten war.
Wie sich die Zeiten geändert haben, zeigt am besten die Bemerkung eines der
Leiter einer der grössten Diamantgesellschaften, der auf die Beschwerden des
Herrn Eingeborenenkommissärs, dass ein Sortierer die Eingeborenen dauernd
prügele, keine andere ANtword fand, als: “Ich habe hier auch Beschwerden über
die Eingeborenen.”
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340 APPENDICES
Derselbe Herr hatte im Mai 1912 noch eine lange Verfügung an sämtliche
Betriebe erlassen, worin er “jede Züchtigung von Eingeborenen” bei Strafe sofor-
tiger Entlassung verbot. Anscheinend kommt der Umschwung der Meinungen
daher, dass man jetzt, wo genügend Arbeiter da sind, ihnen nicht mehr soviel
Aufmerksamkeit schenken zu müssen glaubt.
Die Gerichte versagen vollkommen. Wenn das Beweismaterial geradezu
erdrückend ist, gelingt es vielleicht in dem einen oder anderen Falle in der I.
Instanz eine Verurteilung zu einer Geldstrafe herbeizuführen. Dann wird
Berufung eingelegt. Ein Oberrichter, der mit den Zuständen auf den Feldern nicht
vertraut ist, ja zuweilen noch nie ein Diamantfeld gesehen hat, verhandelt. Die
eingeborenen Zeugen sind in der langen Zeit zwischen der 1. und der 2. Verhand-
lung in die Heimat abgereist, die Verlesung der mangelhaften Protokolle der
ersten Verhandlung über ihre Aussagen macht keinen Eindruck. Der Angeklagte
hat aus dem ersten Urteil gelernt, wohin er seine Verteidigung zu lenken hat, den
Eingeborenen wird nicht geglaubt, noch so zweifelhafte unter Eid geleistete
Aussagen Weisser finden Glauben. So endet die Sachem it einem glänzenden
Freispruch. Es gibt nichts undankbareres, als in solchen Sachen die Staats-
anwalschaft zu vertreten.
Mit der Minenkammer zu verhandeln, ist wertlos. Sie kommt über ein
Bestreiten der Tatsachen, günstigenfalls über allgemeine Redensarten nicht
hinaus. Zudem hat sie auf ihre Mitglieder nicht entfernt den Einfluss, den ein
Fernstehender anzunehmen geneigt ist …
(gez.) Boehmer
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ADDITIONAL APPENDIX
In the course of interviews on Friday with various men who have returned from
German South-West Africa where they have been engaged in assisting in the
operations against the rebels, various statements were made by them that
confirmed the allegations made in these columns as to the employment of
British subjects as combatants.
In some cases our informants desired that their names should not be
published, in others they had no objection, and in all cases it was made by us a
condition of publication that we should be free to disclose their names and
addresses to the Colonial Government and that if the German authorities
approached the Colonial Government on the subject the latter should be free to
disclose these particulars to them.
It will be seen that the information supplied by these men does more than
confirm the allegations as the employment of British subjects as combatants.
They told of shocking treatment of native women and children.
Our informants, some six or seven in number, are all men of a distinctly
respectable type.
They all complained that, apart from the fact that while engaged as non-
combatants they were compelled to fight, their contracts were not properly
carried out by the German authorities.
342 APPENDICES
Horrible Allegations
“At Okanjiso about February 12, I saw a number of women and children
executed. There were eight women and six children. They were all strung up to
trees by the neck and then shot.”
“But why were they killed?”
“The Germans said they were spies, but they ere captured with the natives
with whom we had been fighting and some of the children could not have been
older than five. A lieutenant gave the orders. Five soldiers would take each
woman or child in turn, put a rope round their neck, string them up over a
branch and then shoot them. No, the women did not shriek for mercy. They
never said a word. They were glad to be released from their suffering, for they
had been very cruelly treated. The children were quiet, too, as a rule. Like the
women they had had an inch of bayonet into them time after time, a s well as
being badly treated in other ways.
“All the women and children we captured while I was on the march were
treated in the same way. I have seen at least twenty-five of them with my own
eyes hanged and shot.”
It may be remarked here that some of the most striking statements came out
in the course of conversation, being casually elicited.
Another man who was present then referred to the treatment of the women cap-
tives, who are made to work at Angra Pequena. The statements that followed
were given or corroborated by practically all the party.
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APPENDICES 343
The women who are captured and not executed are set to work for the military
as prisoners. They saw umbers of them at Angra Pequena put to the hardest
work, and so starved that they were nothing but skin and bones.
“You will see them,” said one, “carrying very heavy loads on their heads along
the shore in connection with the harbour works, and they are made to work
until they fall down. While I was there, there were five or six deaths every day.
The other women have to bury them. They are made to work till they die. All
they have on is a blanket. If one falls down of sheer exhaustion as they
constantly do, they are sjambokked.”
Another man said he had seen the same sort of thing in Windhoek.
Another, confirming the state of things at Angra Pequena, remarked that he
had often seen those women dropping down of exhaustion, under a heavy load
and trying in vein to raise herself under a shower of blows and failing.
As a rule they seem to suffer with the dumbness of anguish that marks the beast
of burden.
“They are given hardly anything to eat, and I have very often seen them pick
up bits of refuse food thrown away by the transport riders. If they are caught
doing so, they are sjambokked.
“Yes” added Mr C. Vos, a very intelligent young Dutchman of 2, Pineroad,
Woodstock, who has recently returned. “I have often seen all this. And I
remember that on one occasion when I gave a two pfennig piece to one of them
she knelt down and kissed my feet”.
Mr Vos had a fine record of service during the late Boer war in the Imperial
Yeomanry Scouts with Colonel Pilcher’s column as head conductor, also as
scout with General Rundle’s [?] eighth division. He had previously been for
some years in the Bechuanaland Border Police and served in the Matabele
campaign of 1899 and he strikes one as an admirable type of the quiet self-
reliant Afrikander that border life had bred in this land.
He was engaged for transport conducting in German South West Africa on
November 26, with some fifty other men. He was next in command under the
chief conductor and was engaged at $20 per month. He states that the rank and
file who were paid between $3 and $7 10s were obliged to spend most of their
pay on food, owing to the poor quality of the rations served out.
When he arrived at Angra Pequena with some twenty-five of this lot, they
had to enter into another contract, which provided again for transport riding.
There was no sign of transport riding, and they were all served out with a
rifle apiece and fifty rounds of ammunition and a few days rations. They
left for Kubub where the party was split up into two portions. Mr Vos’s
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344 APPENDICES
going on to Bethany. On arrival there they were made to relieve the garrison
there by taking over their duties. Two months had now elapsed “and still”,
as Mr. Vos put it, “we had not even seen transport”.
“On Christmas Day, Lieut Von Trotha, a nephew of the General, arrived at
Bethany with the rest of our party. We left there an hour later, at ten o’clock in
the morning, on a 20 day patrol. Lieut. Von Trotha sent us word that as there
was no doctor and no arrangements for dealing with the wounded, any man
who was badly wounded would be shot so as to save him from falling into the
hands of the natives. Still no signs of transport. Some days later we got into
action and six or seven natives were killed. Two natives, a man and a woman
were found wounded after the fight.
The officer gave orders for them to be shot. The men whom he ordered were
named Van Dyk, of the Transvaal, Caldwell, who used to be a tram-guard in
Cape Town, and Botha, who comes from the Transvaal – did the shooting. The
woman was only some ten or twelve yards away from me, on the other side of
some rocks. I heard her implore him in Dutch, ‘Please, baas, don’t shoot me!’
And I heard the two shots. When she implored him, he replied ‘I must do it,
these are my orders’.
“A little later Cornelius found the two corpses and he sent a message to say
he would deal with us later on for murdering those two.”
“You say that Lieutenant Von Trotha said that any badly wounded of his
men would be shot to prevent them falling into the hands of the enemy. Was it
because he had no medical assistance to give those two natives that he shot
them?”
“How could it be? Their own people would come to them and look after
them as soon as we left. After this Von Trotha wanted us to go on to Gibeon,
but most of the men refused, as they had had no food for two or three days..
“Then we were told to go back and we would be put on transport. We
complained all along that we had been engaged to do transport riding and not
fighting. This was about the end of January. On our way back to Bethany we
escorted some German families to safety.”
Some of the statements above are, of course, of a very serious nature, and
were it not for the fact that we have no reason whatever for doubting the bona
fides of our informants, who are prepared, if called upon, to make affidavits in
support of all their allegations, and who must, f they are not adhering to the
truth be engaged in a conspiracy with no particular object, we would prefer not
to publish them.
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APPENDICES 345
One man, whose name and address are at he disposal of the Colonial Govern-
ment, as are those in the case f all those whose statements are published in these
columns, stated: “I have seen women and children with my own eyes at Angra
Pequena, dying of starvation and overwork, nothing but skin and bone, getting
flogged every time they fell under their heavy loads. I have seen them picking
up bits of bread and refuse food thrown away outside our tents. And I have seen
them flogged for it when they were caught doing so”.
Most of our informants referred to the bad feeling existing between the
Germans and the Dutch. The former thought at first that they would be
personae gratae with the Germans, but before long the same ill-feeling sprang
up between the two as exists between the German soldiers and the British who
engage for service there.
Assaults by overwhelming numbers of German soldiers on both British and
Dutch are said to be very common. There may be plenty of faults on both sides
in this matter an there is no need to go into full details of some of the
occurrences.
D. McLeod, an Australian, confirmed the statements as to the employment
of British subjects as combatants. Engaged for transport riding he left Angra
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346 APPENDICES
There they were armed and provided with ammunition. Then they went to a
plae which he spells phonetically “Hau-ais”. There they were told to be pre-
pared for action at any moment, as the Hottentots were all around, and Corne-
lias was expected to attack. “They returned alone from that place without any
escort of German soldiers. When at Spitzkop two or three of them were out
shooting when they saw three Hottentots. The conductor went to the helio
station and reported it, with the result that four German soldiers came down
form the camp with another fifteen rounds of ammunition for each man and told
our informant and other transport riders to go out and look for the Hottentots.
They did so, but failed to find them. Later, while at a place named Chanas,
the Hottentots shot a German soldier dead outside the place, and Mr. McLeod
with others of the transport were asked to go out and help to bring in the body,
bringing their rifles with them. But they refused, as they had not been engaged
to fight or to run such risks.
Our informant gave details of the manner in which he and some of his
companions had been assaulted by German soldiers at Angra Pequena at night
time, being knocked senseless with yoke-skeis, one of his companions being
stabbed in the thigh with a bayonet. They heard the day they arrived that this
party had been saying in the daytime: “Some more Englishmen have landed”
and threatening what they would do. They came in the night with a lantern,
while the Britishers were asleep.
The next one interviewed was Mr.Percival Griffith, a young man, an account-
ant of profession, who owing to hard times, took on transport work at Swakop-
mund for some two months, and then worked at Angra Pequena for seven
months discharging cargo. He said that most of the prisoners, who compose the
working gangs at Angra Pequena, are sent up form Swakopmund. There are
hundreds of them, mostly women and children and a few old men. There are
many small children among them and not a few babies. Children as young as
five or so years of age are made to work and are ill treated like their unfortunate
elders. The work in which [unclear] whom he had the best opportunity of
observing, were engaged, was in connection with the improvements to the
jetty. Heavy loads of sand and cement have to be carried by the women and
children, who are nothing but skin and bone.
“The loads”, he said, “are out of all proportion to their strength. I have often
seen women and children dropping down, especially when engaged on this
work, and also when carrying very heavy bags of grain, weighing from 100 to
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APPENDICES 347
160lbs. For the stores to the wagons, a distance sometimes of some 300 or 400
yards, through very heavy sand.
“When they fall they are sjamboked by the soldier in charge of the gang,
with his full force, until they get up. Across the face was the favourite place for
the sjamboking and I have often seen the blood flowing down the faces of the
women and children and from their bodies, from the cuts of the weapon. I have
never seen one actually die under this treatment but I have seen one woman
who in spite of all the soldier’s sjamboking could not get to her feet, being at
last carried away, and I feel sure, although I cannot say so positively that she
must have been dying. Their funerals took place daily. They averaged while I
was there from 9 to a dozen daily, with many children and babies among them.
The women had to carry the corpses and dig the hole into which they were
placed. They had no burial ceremony of any kind. If they wanted to, they would
not dare to ask. The corpse would be wrapped in a blanket and carried on a
rough stretcher. They seemed bereft of all power of emotion of or showing it,
and I have never heard one cry, even when their flesh was being cut to pieces
with the sjambok. All feeling seemed to have gone out of them. They never
cried out, they never complained.
“And what about the babies?”
“There were a good number of them. The mothers have to work like the
others, carrying them on their backs, and get treated and beaten in exactly the
same way. The babies, like the others, all look like skeletons. The babies and
small children are dying off at a terribly fast rate because they can not stand the
ill-treatment and starvation as well as their elders. The youngest children I have
seen working, boys and girls, would be about four or a little over.
“Where a woman or child falls, the rest of the gang goes on, while the
soldier remains behind to shower blows with the sjambok on her or it. If the
others halt for a moment to look he beats them also. Each gang consists o from
30 to 40, and there is one soldier in charge of each. I cannot say how many
gangs there are as they work in different parts of the town. A lot of them work
on the island, where we were not allowed to go.”
“On one occasion I saw a woman carrying a child of under a year old slung at
her back, and with a heavy sack of grain on her had. The sand was very steep
and the sun was baking. She fell down forward on her face, and the heavy sack
fell partly across her and partly o the baby. The corporal sjamboked her for
certainly more than four minutes and sjamboked the baby as well.”
“Are you ready to swear that you saw a white man sjamboking a baby, as
well as its mother?”
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348 APPENDICES
“All this”, went on Mr. Griffiths, “is of daily occurrence. It was in full swing
when I arrived in Angra Pequena some eight months ago, and it was going on
when I left about a month ago. I have seen other forms of torture inflicted.
There was a petty chief whose name I do not know who ad been captured. He
was originally a British subject, but had settled down in this territory some con-
siderable time, I understand, before the war broke out. He had been captured
and was made to work in one of the gangs, and had fallen exhausted while
carrying heavy stores for building purposes. The soldier in charge did the usual
sjamboking, and at last the man got up and lifted his hand as if to strike the
soldier. He was put under arrest and tried. I did not actually see what occurred
before he trial, but the whole thing was common talk, and I spoke about it after
the trial with several soldiers who spoke a little English, and what they told me
is what I have told you.
“What happened after the trial I myself saw. The man was a smallish man
with no particular strength, and apparently his action of lifting his hand was the
instinctive one that would come to most men who are being cruelly beaten
under such circumstances.”
APPENDICES 349
“There was only one German soldier – an under-officer at this station, and we
formed the garrison, numbering twenty-one or so, all of whom had been
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350 APPENDICES
engaged for transport-riding, and objected to fighting. We were there for fifteen
days, and during that time the natives attacked for about four or five hours,
getting within two or three hundred yard of the station. None of us were
wounded. Next morning the under officer told us to go out after the natives. We
caught two and killed one. This was about the end of May or the beginning of
June. The usual practice so far as I saw, when a native is captured is to tie him
up and give him fifty lashes. I have not seen any shot or hanged, but it is
common knowledge that of lot of this is done. It depends I suppose, on the sort
of man the officer in charge is. After that we went out on patrol, night and day,
on many occasions. This went on till my time was up on the first of this month.
We protested at Windhoek at the start that we did not want to fight but we were
compelled to, being threatened as to the consequences if we disobeyed orders.
We never got a quid of the extra money they promised us. It was the head
conductor who promised it to us. He admitted that we had only signed on for
transport.
Extract from letter – “ … it is only quite recently that clothing has been issued
in Cape Town – and such clothes, a shoddy corduroy that barely survived the
first trek. Prior to the issue in Cape Town, the clothes given out to the transport
riders for over a year were the soldiers cast-off garments, ragged, and
indifferently washed, or soused in cold water by the prisoners. The boots were
in the last stages of decrepitude, and let in the sane which blistered the feed and
crippled the wearers. The shirts and underpants, one of each expected to last six
months without change were ragged and infested with vermin. The food is so
‘good’, especially upon trek, that the men of necessity have to mortgage their
pay in advance to obtain edible nourishment, and they have to expend a
considerable portion of the remainder of their ‘good’ pay monthly for clothing
… In conclusion, we [transport riders from GSWA] may state that we have seen
the same cruelties perpetrated, and some unmentionably worse then any
published in the article that ‘Vindex’ weakly attempts to belies. We append our
signatures and you have our addresses to give to the Colonial Government if
desired. We are, etc. C. Hughes, T. Petzer, A.J. Hammond, F.H. Windle, M.J.
Pretorius, Percival Griffith, F.H. Smith, F.S. Cooke, O. McLeod.
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APPENDICES 351
3. ‘German S.W. Africa: Alleged Atrocities, the other side’, Cape Argus,
30th September, 1905
352 APPENDICES
quarter. There he would have been told, in accordance with the strict truth, that
arms have been given to the transport riders and men attached in that service
for the sole purpose of self-defence and protection of the trains in case any of
the loitering bands should venture to attack them or their valuables. In this
sense only the wording ‘arming’ may be used, not as The Argus is in the habit
of putting the term ‘recruiting’.
I would strongly advise the editor of The Argus to leave the Germans to
themselves in adjusting their affairs, which they are quite capable of doing, and
rather concentrate his unlimited abilities upon the concerns of the country of
which he shines as a prominent representative. I am, etc. A German with 43
years of cape colonial experience.
Sir, – I have read with surprise and indignation the statements made by men
returned from service in German South West Africa, and I though it at first
better not to take any notice of the accusations made because most of your
readers will sum them up pretty quickly, but especially because I cannot
absolutely contradict them, I can, however, relate my personal experience in
the country itself.
I have not been in Damaraland, but I have been lately off and on for a con-
siderable time in German Great Namaqualand, and particularly on the Dach
Country stations. I have talked to a great many officers, men and South African
transport-riders, and I have never heard of any cruelties committed towards
natives. I have seen one batch of native women prisoners arrive with a convoy;
they all sat on wagons, wrapped up in blankets, and after they arrived at the
station, they were sent out into the veld to fetch fire wood on two ox wagons;
they simply collected the wood, put it on the wagons and brought it into camp.
They received their daily rations (the same as the loyal natives), that is a
panniking of meal, some rice and twice a week they received meat. Of course,
this was at a station where the military had enough food. When soldiers had to
starve, I can barely imagine that the prisoners fared better. If anybody suffered
it was the officers and men in the Karas Mountains, when it rained for days, the
officers and soldiers clothes were torn, their boots were worn through and the
only food they had was trek-ox and nothing else. A native might even stand
this, but for a white man, such living is a great hardship. It is astounding how
the troops stood the cold and privations, but these particular transport-riders,
who were with that column shared their lot bravely with the soldiers.
I have made inquiries and find that some 3,000 men were engaged by the
German Government for transport services in the Cape Colony and Natal and
naturally there were strictly drawn from the unfortunate unemployed. Many of
the men were very glad indeed to be able to earn a living, but some, I am afraid,
are men who want work when they have just not any, but as soon as they obtain
something to do, they consider themselves entitled to wages, etc, without any
work.
As regard the rations supplied to transport riders I can only say, that they get
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APPENDICES 353
exactly the sae as the German soldiers and he does not fare badly, except on
extraordinary occasions. Most men, who are engaged as transport riders,
manage to save a good deal of their wages and I myself have forwarded
remittances for transport riders to their respective wives.
Lieutenant Von Trotha who was so severely attacked, fell some time ago to
the Fish River Mountains, so he is unable to defend himself.
It is true that I am myself one of the barbarous race, the Germans, but I have
always been and am still a good friend of many a Britisher. Of course, my name
is at the disposal of the local authorities. I am, etc. Barbarian.
Sir, – I have noticed with great regret the articles you have published in your
issue of the 28th inst. Concerning the alleged cruelties to natives in German
South West Africa and the forcing of British subjects to fight the natives. It is
all the more regrettable that you start this campaign of calamny again, as it is a
positive fact that former statements concerning the same subject in your and
other Cape papers have been repudiated by responsible persons, who have a
good insight in affairs in GSW Africa. I very much regret that I cannot
repudiate the statements made by your correspondents, as I have not been in
Swakopmund and Angra Pequena, but trust this will be done by persons who
have been up in these parts. However, if such a state of affairs exists in that part
of GSW Africa it would only be right to argue that similar things would happen
in other parts of that country. For the last five [?] months I have resided in
Warmbad and R’drift and have had every opportunity to watch the treatment of
natives and transport-riders in that [six words unclear]. I have come to the
conclusion that the former have been altogether too well treated – in fact
spoiled – by the Germans, while the latter were perfectly happy with their lot,
being well paid, well fed and treated with all the respect due to white men,
irrespective of nationality. The transport riders were certainly never armed by
the Germans in that part. I remember the time – some three months ago – when
Warmbad and R’drift, which were only garrisoned by a handful of soldiers,
were both in continual danger of being attacked by the Hottentots who were in
the neighbourhood in considerable numbers. At that time some ten transport
riders were at R’drift, and although they applied to the Commandant for arms
of their own free will, he refused to give them, and they were told to camp at
the bank of the Orange River, where a boat was in readiness to take them over
to British territory should the place be attacked. I have spoke to many of these
men, and they expressed themselves as being perfectly content, but I must at
the same time state that they were men of a superior stamp, and sensible
enough to understand that in wartime things will sometimes go wrong and that
they had not been engaged for soft jobs. I am afraid, Mr Editor, that in many
cases, you are being imposed upon by men whose characters will by no means
allow a close investigation, and before publishing such very serious allega-
tions, it would be wise to have a close scrutiny into the matter. Our German
soldier has his faults, just as your Tommy Atkins, but downright cruelty, such
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354 APPENDICES
Sir, – You have published lately long accounts of transport-riders and others
reporting the most horrible atrocities having been committed by German
soldiers. I am not in a position actually to deny that such occurrences have
taken place, not having been present for instance, when you informant was
content to watch women and children being flogged without interference, cost
what it may. I have travelled in the German colony for the last two months to
every place approachable by rail, and during that time I have never seen or
heard of prisoners being ill-treated. In Angra Pequena, I have only seen a few
women at work, most of the prisoners being kept on an island in the bay,
connected with the shore by a bridge. This island is reserved for the prisoners
and as no constrution works are carried on there, nor are there any sheds or
stacks of goods, the poor blacks can hardly be made to work too hard – if they
work at all. In Swakopmund a goodly number of women can be seen working
near the landing stage, and in the goods yards. They have to load and unload
trucks and push them along for little distances, but although this may look as if
they were working hard, this is not the case. Each bag or case requires a whole
swarm to lift it up, and their movements are slow to a degree. Further, up-
country I have seen women working on the railway carrying baskets of coal to
the engines and children oiling the wheels or turning [?] the brakes, and doing
such light work. I have also seen them employed to bring in materials for
building houses. But never once have I had reason to believe that they were
made to work more than they are capable of. As to their treatment they are
ordered about as the German ‘Unter O[unclear]’ order their soldiers, and no
doubt [unclear] way of speaking to ladies was not agreeable to the cultivated
senses of your informants. Their daily food consists of one cup of Boer meal –
nearly the size of of [sic] 2lbs tin of jam – and half a cup of rice with
occasionally a handful of yellow sugar thrown in. Meat they get a couple of
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APPENDICES 355
times a week. I am not sure how often. They are also supplied with coffee, but
as they do not drink this as a rule, the merchants buy the coffee beans and
supply them with other goods in exchange – at least this is the case in the more
northern districts. The appearance of men and women is perfectly healthy; and
in Swakopmund I was particularly struck that the Herero women had such tall
and strong figures, the flesh on their limbs showing that they had no lack of
nourishment. In this port they are also all provided with clothing, as the climate
is rather cold owing to frequent fogs. The death rate is large owing to this fact,
but this is not any fault of the Government, as they cannot keep all prisoners
up-country, when they are even now unable to send up sufficient supplies. In
Windhoek and other places I have sometimes seen men and women terribly
thin and with legs like sticks, but on inquiry I have always found that they were
prisoners only just taken, or people who had come to subject themselves forced
to do so by hunger.
Another point raised by your correspondents is that women captured with
rebellious Herero have been shot. I believe that this had actually happened, but
if it was known that it is the custom of the Herero women to cut from the
wounded but still living soldiers and particularly officers pieces of their flesh
– without going into details – and to give them roasted to their husbands,
thinking to instil them with the courage of the fallen, then one will hardly
wonder that the soldiers can sometimes not be constrained from killing such
bestial creatures.
The third allegation made, which you consider the most serious, viz. the
arming of British subjects to take par in actual fighting, is so unfounded that
even a man who has never seen the country there could find enough reasons to
contradict such an indictment. Surely nobody engaged here by the German
authorities expected to go to a peaceful country where his life was watched
over always by a policeman. They were no bound to do any actual fighting but
on the other side is it unreasonable to expect that each wagon or convoy should
have such a strong escort, that it was impossible for any enemy to attack it. This
would naturally happen now and then, and Boers I have met up there have told
me that they were only too glad to obtain in the form of a rifle the means to help
the soldiers to defend their own lives; in fat, I have heard numerous complaints
that the military did not supply them with enough ammunition.
There is, however, another class of Boer or Englishman – as the case may
be – the sweepings of South Africa, those who had planned to organised
themselves as a band of robbers to attack Windhoek and then escape over the
border with all they could lay hands on. Form these all arms have been taken
away and they are shunted again as quickly as possible out of the German
colony. They are the men who do not want to go back again. As to the story that
clothing and boots etc. were not supplied as agreed, to which you rightly attrib-
ute only minor importance all the men engaged here, or at least their foremen,
have their written contracts, and if these were not carried out the proper place
to lodge their complaint would be the Imperial German Consulate here, where
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356 APPENDICES
I am told some such claims have been willingly met. Of course, it could not be
helped that in the field transport-riders should have to put up with the same
privitations as the soldiers.
In conclusion, I repeat that I cannot actually deny the statements made by
your correspondents, but I leave everyone to judge from the relation of my
experiences whether or not all these terrible stories have been painted in their
true colours. Anyway [unclear – twelve words] … have happened at all, can
only be allegations.
By the bye, how is it possible to tie up a man on a wagon wheel so that he
hangs by his wrists and only the tips of his toes just touch the ground? This
particular man must have been something of a dwarf.
From inquiries made by telegram in Paaarl I find that the height of the
largest wheel of transport wagons is 51 [half] inches, I am, etc. Karl Brehmer.
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JAJ 009 boek Words cannot be … 28-04-2003 13:26 Pagina 361
INDEX
All spellings – as given in Blue Book! Where relevant spellings of leaders that are used in Namibia
today have been given in brackets. Where insufficient information was provided in the text to
identify individuals they have been omitted from the index.
362 INDEX
De Waal, Lt.-Col. D. 213, 222 Gobabis 50, 51, 54, 65, 77, 78, 80, 83, 105,
Deutsche Südwestafrikanische Zeitung 262 106, 107, 120, 128, 141, 142, 144, 145,
Diamond Mining 11 146, 185, 238, 258, 268, 272, 276, 277,
Diehl. G. Missionary 54 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 288, 289,
Diergaard, Petrus 119, 172 290, 298, 305, 306, 307, 312
Diergard, Johannes 212 Gochas 128, 146
Dikasip, Jacob 190 Goering, Dr. jnr. Heinrich Ernst 28, 29, 30,
Dixon, Daniel, Esma 119, 156, 201, 293, 31, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 53, 54, 55,
294, 295 56, 70, 139, 141
Dohling, Ludwig 307 Goldammer 28
Dove, Prof. Dr. Karl 77, 87, 93 Goliath, Christian 124, 131, 165
Duval 298 Gorambuka, Elias 86
Eanda 67, 68, 69, 72, 85, 186 Goresib, Chief Judas 182, 185, 189, 190
Eckstein 317, 318, 319 Goresib, Gottlieb 185, 187, 201
Ehmke, H. 317 Goroab West 317
Eisentraut, Hermann, Albert, Rudolph – Grabow 281, 287
Farmer (?) at ‘Niederungsfeld’ in Gransab 311
Omaruru District 301 Graves xxxv, 70, 92, 160, 174, 175
Enslin 315 Green, Frederick 23, 24, 75, 127, 190
Etosha 65, 223, 224, 239 Griqua 17, 117
Extermination order (Vernichtungs Befehl) Grootberg 153, 154, 155
106, 108, 109, 121, 165, 166, 175, 185 Grootfontein 12, 14, 29, 65, 117, 124, 152,
Faber 273 154, 163, 167, 185, 190, 207, 235, 238,
Fahrig, Ernst 309 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 298,
Feuerstein, Carl, Alfred 313, 314 308, 313, 316, 317, 318, 319
Fledermuis, Jonathan 144 Grootfontein South 209, 210, 212
Flogging xi, xvii, xviii, xxv, xxvii, xxxiii, Gross Barmen 119
84, 93, 94, 134, 135, 159, 160, 161, 174, Grossmann 190
189, 190, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, Grundoorns 160
204, 241, 242, 251, 258, 293, 307, 335, Guchab 301
342 Guntsas 313, 318
Folkmann, Julius 304 Habicht 119
Fourie, Louis Capt. xix, 67, 260, 336 Hahn, Dr. Theophilus 131, 134, 135, 137
Francke, Ober-Lt. 215, 216, 219 Hahn, Rev. Hugo 24, 33, 70, 124, 181, 182
Franken 284 Halberstadt, Wilhelm 316
Franzfontein 128, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156 Halbich 23, 138
Fraser, Hendrik 120, 174 Hamakari xiii, xxi, 115, 116, 117
Fredericks, Cornelius 27, 169, 172 Hanging xi, xvii, 12, 118, 120, 254, 255,
Fredericks, Edward 172 302, 304, 323, 336, 348
Fredericks, Joseph 27, 53, 172 Hartmann, Dr. 152, 228, 230, 243
Fredericks, Paul 27, 139 Hausib, Johannes 310
Friederich 294 Haybittel 23
Gabis 209 Hebron 301
Gamrarab 302 Heibib, Piet 53, 128, 136, 139
Garies 214, 221, 222 Heidmann, M. 212
Gathemann 271 Heikom 239, 242, 244
Gautheta, Leonard 86 Heilingbrunner 264, 339
German Colonial Company 28, 41 Heldt 91
German law xvi, 32, 56, 191, 242, 256, 261, Hendrick 40
297, 310 Hendricks, Jan 54, 128
Gertze, Mathaeus 216, 217, 218, 219 Herbst, J.F. Major xvii, 147, 236, 240, 243
Ghaub 117, 190, 243, 244 Heuras 219, 220, 221
Ghoudab, Jacobus 144, 146 Himarua 230, 231
Gibeon 27, 36, 43, 48, 71, 128, 137, 146, Hite, Thomas, Alfred 173
149, 163, 164, 165, 166, 171, 172, 257, Hoachanas 50, 53, 77, 128, 167
344 Hollander 268
Gilers 91 Holtz, Hermann 305
Holy cattle 66, 71, 77, 85, 86, 91
Holy fire 64, 66, 68
JAJ 009 boek Words cannot be … 26-04-2003 16:28 Pagina 363
INDEX 363
364 INDEX
INDEX 365
Railway xxvi, xxxv, 73, 171, 173, 177, 178, Swakopmund xx, xxi, xxiv, xxxv, 14, 65, 78,
179, 180, 196, 217, 220, 230, 263, 354 102, 119, 171, 172, 174, 175, 177, 180,
Rapmund, Otto 308, 309 187, 214, 215, 216, 221, 241, 244, 262,
Red Nation 53, 128, 139, 152 293, 294, 295, 345, 346, 349, 353, 354,
Rehoboth 3, 25, 39, 40, 43, 45, 49, 53, 56, 355
71, 116, 117, 123, 127, 139, 163, 172,
Swart, Carolus 216
191, 192, 194, 207, 209, 210, 211, 212,
Swart, Martinus 216
213, 214, 215, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221,
Swartbooi, Abraham 128, 154, 207
222, 231
Swartbooi, David 117, 148, 152, 153, 154,
Reichmann 152, 153, 154, 156 155
Reichstag xiv, 105, 262 Swartbooi, Lazarus 152, 153, 154, 156
Reiter, Cornelius 144 Swartbooi, Samuel 153, 154
Rhenish Mission Society 21, 23, 24, 43, 91 Swartbooi, Sem 154
Rhodes, Cecil 30 Swartbooi, Willem 155
Riarua, Asa (Assa) 77, 79 Swartboois (//Khau /gôan) 127, 128, 152,
Richardt, Hauptmann 116 153, 156, 207, 209
Richter, Sarah 156 Tamm 23, 138
Richter, Timotheus 156 Theologo, Spiro 273
Rietfontein 147, 168, 209, 236 Thithis, Isaac 298
Rietkuil 171 Thomas 271, 292
Röder, Mason 277, 281 Thomas, Jan 257
Rohrbach, Dr. Paul 8, 23, 28, 29, 31, 34, 62, Timbu, Manuel 115
78, 83, 90, 91, 99, 107, 108, 121, 145, Titus, Councillor 189
169, 193 Tjaherani, Heinrich 103, 198
Sauer, Frederick 305 Tjaherani, Michael 96
Saul, Chief 106, 107, 117 Tjaherani, Willem 103
Schayer, Joseph 159, 170 Tjetjoo (of Okandjose) 51, 72, 75, 78, 86,
Schilg, Karl 310 99, 114
Schinz, Dr. Hans 65, 182 Tjetjoo, Hugo 86
Schlettwein xxix, 299 Tjienda, Traugott 178
Schmerenbeck (of Ommandjereke) 90 Togo 152, 166, 250, 259
Schmerenbeck (of Otjipaue) 91 Tommaschewski, Rudolph 317
Schmidt, Albert 314 Topnaar (≠Aunin) 27, 28, 128, 129, 139
Schonfeld 304 Traugott, Under-Chief 107, 114
Schroeder, Carl, Georg 305, 306 Tseib 54, 128, 141
Schultze, Dr. Leonard 13, 14, 34, 124 Tses 152, 167
Schwabe, Kurt xx, 46, 47, 61, 81, 84, 143, Tsobasib, Simon 183, 189
150 Tsumanas 303
Schwerin, Graf 276, 277, 287 Tsumeb 12, 29, 178, 190, 200, 201, 230,
Seeis River 80 311, 317, 319
Setecki, Antonius 306 Uejulu 51, 114, 224, 229, 230
Shark Island xxi, xxvi, xxxv, 171, 172, 173, Ugab River 128, 187
180 Ukamas 160, 168, 169, 170
Sichtermann, Dr. 293, 294, 295 Usakos 201, 312
Sieber (or Siebert), Dr. 275, 276, 278 Uukuambis (Kwambi) 224, 232
Solomon, Councillor 187 Uukuanjamas (Kwanyama) 223, 224
Sosina, Josephine 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, van der Merwe 308
279, 284 van der Post 313
Springhorn 294, 295 van Renen, Willem 72
Steffenfausweh 278 van Wijk, Cornelius 213, 215, 216, 222
Stoetzer, Hendrik 306 van Wijk, Frederick 214, 221
Stopke 90 van Wijk, Gert 214
Stow 125 van Wijk, Stoffel 214, 221, 222
Stroka, Joseph 298 van Wyk, Dierk 212
Sturmfeld 305 van Wyk, Hendrik 117
Surmon, Capt. 147 van Wyk, Hermanus 209, 210, 212
Sus 313 van Wyk, Willem 212
Väterliche Zuchtigungsrecht (‘fatherly
correction’) 260
JAJ 009 boek Words cannot be … 26-04-2003 16:28 Pagina 366
366 INDEX
Vernichtungs Befehl – see extermination Witbooi, Hendrik xiv, xxvi, xxvii, 24, 35,
order 108 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46,
Vilander Bastards 209 47, 48, 50, 53, 56, 81, 89, 102, 127, 128,
Voigts 52, 70, 91 129, 132, 133, 137, 138, 139, 141, 146,
Volkman, Ober-Lt. 119, 231, 244 147, 148, 150, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167,
von Caprivi, Count 42 168, 171, 172, 173, 180, 213, 228, 229
von Estorff, Capt. xxi, 81, 145, 153, 155 Witbooi, Hendrik (Young) – deported to the
von Falkenhausen 91 Cameroons 47, 48, 173
von François 31, 32, 35, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, Witboois (Khowesin) 43, 45, 46, 47, 48, 128,
45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 59, 70, 72, 75, 77, 141, 139, 141, 143, 150, 164, 166, 170, 171,
143, 148, 149, 243 173, 186, 351
von Hatten, Hans 298, 312 Wolff, Under-Officer 119, 120
von Hiller, Bezirksamtmann 213, 215, 216, Women, abuse of 177
218, 219 Wosillo 91
von Kleist, Dr 213, 215 Wujack 299
von Lindequist xxix, 13, 89, 107, 138, 152, Xatjindu, Johannes 305
170, 175, 177, 178, 179 Zacharias 51, 75, 78, 94, 95, 96, 103
von Michaelis 273 Zandfontein (Sandfontein) 213
von Rudno 311 Zelow, Ober-Lt. 119
von Schmelen, Missionary 21 Zerua, Bermenias 86, 95, 103
von Seydlitz, Siegfried, Alexander,Wilhelm Zwartmodder 218
304 Zweinicke, Ober-Lt. 172
von Trotha, Gen. Lothar xxi, 8, 70, 103, 105,
106, 107, 108, 109, 111, 113, 114, 115,
116, 117, 119, 121, 122, 152, 164, 165,
166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173,
174, 175, 177, 179, 185, 197, 261, 344,
353
von Weiher, Marie 254, 307
von Ziethen, Lt 81
von Zulow, Capt. 177
Vosswinckel, Georg 317
Walfish Bay (Walvis Bay) 14, 24, 25, 27, 28,
30, 47, 139, 141, 155
Wandres, Missionary 165, 166
Warmbad 54, 97, 128, 137, 141, 157, 159,
160, 161, 163, 164, 166, 167, 201, 209,
327, 353, 354
Waterberg xxxv, 51, 70, 72, 105, 114, 115,
116, 117, 119, 120, 166, 179, 183, 185,
200, 254, 307
Waters, A.J. xvi, xvii, xix, 18, 269, 270
Werner, District Judge 271
Westphal 90
White Nosob River 78, 90, 146
Widmann 216, 217
Wilhelmsruhe 316
Windhuk (Windhoek) 13, 21, 42, 44, 46, 47,
48, 50, 65, 77, 78, 79, 80, 85, 87, 89, 90,
91, 96, 99, 102, 106, 114, 129, 134, 142,
143, 144, 146, 148, 149, 150, 152, 153,
154, 155, 156, 165, 166, 177, 181, 183,
187, 188, 189, 196, 202, 203, 205, 213,
215, 217, 219, 222, 231, 241, 259, 260,
263, 264, 267, 271, 278, 291, 302, 303,
304, 315, 323, 335, 336, 337, 339
Wint, Jan 117
Witbooi, Heinrich, Petrus 301