BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY Germany’s Black Holocaust: 1890–1945: In the 1890s Blacks were tortured in German concentration camps in Southwest Africa (nowcalled Namibia) when Adolph Hitler was only a child. Thousands of Africans were massacred. Regrettably, historians neglected to properly register the slaughter—that is, to lift it from the footnote in history that it had been relegated to—until now.In the 1890s Blacks were tortured in German concentration camps in Southwest Africa (now called Namibia) when Adolph Hitler was only a child. Colonial German doctors conducted unspeakable medical experiments on these emaciated helpless Africans decades before such atrocities were ever visited upon the Jews. Thousands of Africans were massacred. Regrettably, historians neglected to properly register the slaughter-that is, to lift it from the footnote in history that it had been relegated to-until now. In an attempt to give the incidents their rightful recognition in the historical context of the Holocaust, Dr. Firpo W. Carr has authored a new book entitled, Germany?s Black Holocaust: 1890-1945. In it, he reveals the startling hidden history of Black victims of the Holocaust. The mayhem and carnage date back to the turn of the 20th century, many years before there were ever any other unfortunate victims-Jew or Gentile-of the Holocaust.
NAMIBIA
BEFORE THE GENOCIDE
Africa is almost certainly the birthplace of the human species. From it
the earliest people ventured into Asia and then across the
long-vanished land bridge to the Americas, or across the Pacific island chains to
Australasia. They also spread to the lands north of the Mediterranean
Sea. Many thousands of years later their European descendants gained
glory and wealth by rediscovering the southern hemisphere, and plundering
it. They - we - have often treated it, and its inhabitants, with
brutality, indifference and contempt. White Europeans forced black Africans to
become slaves. White Europeans deprived black people of their homes and
communities and cultures. White Europeans sent their missionaries to
change black people's religion to their own. And in the 19th century
white Europeans began moving into Africa to occupy the land as well. The
land was desirable for itself: it provided new territory, new possessions
and new trade, both for individuals and their countries. The land had
other values, too: it provided bases for further take-overs and
further military threats; and, above all, it contained riches.
Along the coastline of Namibia runs the Namib desert, a 1,200 mile long
strip of unwelcoming sand dunes and barren rock. Behind it is the
central mountain plateau, and east of that the Kalahari desert. Namibia's
scarcest commodity is water: this is a country of little rainfall, and
the rivers don't always run. But the very sand of the Skeleton Coast is
the dust of gemstones; uranium, tin and tungsten can be mined in the
central Namib, and copper in the north; and in the south there are
diamonds. Namibia also has gold, silver, lithium, and natural gas. For most of
the region's history, only metal was of interest to the native tribes.
These tribes lived and traded together more or less peacefully, each
with their own particular way of living, wherever the land was fertile
enough. The San were nomads, hunters and gatherers. The Damara hunted and
worked copper. The Ovambo grew crops in the north, where there was more
rain, but also worked in metal. The Nama and the Herero were livestock
farmers, and they were the two main tribes in the 1840s when the
Germans (first missionaries, then settlers, then soldiers) began arriving in
South West Africa.
Before the Germans, only a few Europeans had visited it: explorers,
traders and sailors. They opened up trade outlets for ivory and cattle;
they also brought in firearms, with which they traded for Namib
treasures. Later, big guns and European military systems were introduced. The
tribes now settled their disputes with lethal violence: corruption of a
peaceful culture was under way.
In the 1880s Germany made South West Africa their own colony, and
settlers moved in, followed by a military governor who knew little about
running a colony and nothing at all about Africa. Major Theodor Leutwein
began by playing off the Nama and Herero tribes against each other. More
and more white settlers arrived, pushing tribesmen off their
cattle-grazing lands with bribes and unreliable deals. The Namib's diamonds were
discovered, attracting yet more incomers with a lust for wealth.
Tribal cattle-farmers had other problems, too: a cattle-virus epidemic
in the late 1890s killed much of their livestock. The colonists offered
the Herero aid on credit. As a result the farmers amassed large debts,
and when they couldn't pay them off the colonists simply seized what
cattle were left. In January 1904, the Herero, desperate to regain their
livelihoods, rebelled. Under their leader Samuel Maherero they began to
attack the numerous German outposts. They killed German men, but spared
women, children, missionaries, and the English or Boer farmers whose
support they didn't want to lose.
At the same time, the Nama chief, Hendrik Witbooi, wrote a letter to
Theodor Leutwein, telling him what the native Africans thought of their
invaders, who had taken their land, deprived them of their rights to
pasture their animals on it, used up the scanty water supplies, and
imposed alien laws and taxes. His hope was that Leutwein would recognise the
injustice and do something about it.
THE GENOCIDE
The German Emperor replaced Major Leutwein with another commander, this
time a man notorious for brutality who had already fiercely suppressed
African resistance to German colonisation in East Africa.
Lieutenant-General Lothar von Trotha said, 'I wipe out rebellious tribes with
streams of blood and streams of money. Only following this cleansing can
something new emerge'. Von Trotha brought with him to German South West
Africa 10,000 heavily-armed men and a plan for war.
Under his command, the German troops slowly drove the Herero warriors
to a position where they could be hemmed in by attack on three sides.
The fourth side offered escape; but only into the killing wastes of the
Kalahari desert. The German soldiers were paid well to pursue the Herero
into this treacherous wilderness. They were also ordered to poison the
few water-holes there. Others set up guard posts along a 150-mile
border: any Herero trying to get back was killed.
On October 2, 1904, von Trotha issued his order to exterminate the
Herero from the region. 'All the Herero must leave the land. If they
refuse, then I will force them to do it with the big guns. Any Herero found
within German borders, with or without a gun, will be shot. No prisoners
will be taken. This is my decision for the Herero people'.
After the Herero uprising had been systematically put down, by shooting
or enforced slow death in the desert from starvation, thirst and
disease (the fate of many women and children), those who still lived were
rounded up, banned from owning land or cattle, and sent into labour camps
to be the slaves of German settlers. Many more Herero died in the
camps, of overwork, starvation and disease.
By 1907, in the face of criticism both at home and abroad, von Trotha's
orders had been cancelled and he himself recalled, but it was too late
for the crushed Herero. Before the uprising, the tribe numbered 80,000;
after it, only 15,000 remained.
During the period of colonisation and oppression, many women were used
as sex slaves. (This had not been von Trotha's intention. 'To receive
women and children, most of them ill, is a serious danger to the German
troops. And to feed them is an impossibility. I find it appropriate
that the nation perishes instead of infecting our soldiers.') In the
Herero work camps there were numerous children born to these abused women,
and a man called Eugen Fischer, who was interested in genetics, came to
the camps to study them; he carried out medical experiments on them as
well. He decided that each mixed-race child was physically and mentally
inferior to its German father (a conclusion for which there was and is
no respectable scientific foundation whatever) and wrote a book
promoting his ideas: 'The Principles of Human Heredity and Race Hygiene'.
Adolf Hitler read it while he was in prison in 1923, and cited it in his
own infamous pursuit of 'racial purity'.
The Nama suffered at the hands of the colonists too. After the defeat
of the Herero the Nama also rebelled, but von Trotha and his troops
quickly routed them. On April 22 1905 Lothar von Trotha sent his clear
message to the Nama: they should surrender. 'The Nama who chooses not to
surrender and lets himself be seen in the German area will be shot, until
all are exterminated. Those who, at the start of the rebellion,
committed murder against whites or have commanded that whites be murdered
have, by law, forfeited their lives. As for the few not defeated, it will
fare with them as it fared with the Herero, who in their blindness also
believed that they could make successful war against the powerful
German Emperor and the great German people. I ask you, where are the Herero
today?' During the Nama uprising, half the tribe (over 10,000) were
killed; the 9,000 or so left were confined in concentration camps.
AFTER THE GENOCIDE
After the First World War, South West Africa was placed under the
administration of South Africa. South Africa imposed its own system of
apartheid (now banned in Namibia by law). In the late 1940s a guerrilla
movement called SWAPO (South West African People's Organisation) was
founded to fight for independence. In 1968 the United Nations recognised the
name Namibia, and the country's right to independence, but it was
another 20 years before South Africa agreed to withdraw and full
independence was gained. By then the country was ravaged by war.
Today most of Namibia's 1.7m people are poor, living in crowded tribal
areas while powerful and wealthy ranchers still own millions of acres
seized by their predecessors over 100 years ago.
Some of the descendants of the surviving Herero live in neighbouring
Botswana, but others remained in their homeland and now make up 8% of
Namibia's population. Many of them are in the political opposition party.
Most Herero men work as cattle-handlers on commercial farms. Although
as opposition members they don't get government support, the Herero on
their own initiative recently asked Germany to give them compensation
for the atrocities the tribe suffered, which the president of Germany
recently acknowledged were 'a burden on the conscience of every German'.
In fact Namibia gets more aid from Germany than any other country; but
most of the money goes to non-Herero majority interests: it's the
governing Ovambo (not reached by early colonists, and modern Namibia's main
tribe) who led the struggle for liberation and, in 1990, independence.
The 25,000 or so present-day rich German settlers are among those who
deny that there was a genocide, fearing that reparation might mean
losing their valuable land.
WITNESS
from Nama chief Hendrik Witbooi's letter to Major Leutwein, describing
the typical colonist:
- 'He makes no requests according to truth and justice, and asks no
permission of a chief. He introduces laws into the land, laws which are
entirely impossible, untenable, unbelievable, unbearable, unmerciful and
unfeeling. He punishes our people in Windhoek and has already beaten
people to death for debt. It is not just and right to beat people to
death for that. He stretches people on their backs and flogs them in a
shameful and cruel manner, be they male or female. He thinks we are stupid
and unintelligent people, but we have never yet punished people in the
cruel and improper way that he does. No-one can survive such a
punishment.'
- 'Herero women adapted their high-waisted dresses, and hats that jut
out like cattle-horns, from the wives of Victorian missionaries. On
holidays they wear versions of the dress in red and black, the colours of
Herero nationalism - and of the 19th-century German Empire. The men wear
the German volunteers' uniform. German diplomats are always invited to
Herero celebrations. "We're treated like VIPs and often asked to give
the keynote speech," said one diplomat, who confessed that he is baffled
by the practice. The peculiar attraction between the Herero and Germans
here resembles the one in the Natal region of South Africa between the
Zulus and British, two other peoples who fought a brutal colonial war.
"It's the respect of a soldier for a soldier," explains Kuaima Riruako,
paramount chief of the Herero. "We never gave up our army, even during
the German period." But the links are much closer. Because many Herero
women were forced into sexual slavery, many Herero today have German
ancestors, and German is widely spoken here.'
GENERAL VON TROTHA'S DECLARATION
On 2 October 1904 the German commander, General von Trotha issued the
following proclamation: "I, the great general of the German troops, send
this letter to the Herero people... All Hereros must leave this land...
Any Herero found within the German borders with or without a gun, with
or without cattle, will be shot. I shall no longer receive any women or
children; I will drive them back to their people. I will shoot them.
This is my decision for the Herero people."
The general was true to his word.
The Herero were machine gunned and their wells were poisoned. Finally
they were driven into the desert to die.
This was how colonisation began in what is today Namibia.
BEFORE THE GENOCIDE
Africa is almost certainly the birthplace of the human species. From it
the earliest people ventured into Asia and then across the
long-vanished land bridge to the Americas, or across the Pacific island chains to
Australasia. They also spread to the lands north of the Mediterranean
Sea. Many thousands of years later their European descendants gained
glory and wealth by rediscovering the southern hemisphere, and plundering
it. They - we - have often treated it, and its inhabitants, with
brutality, indifference and contempt. White Europeans forced black Africans to
become slaves. White Europeans deprived black people of their homes and
communities and cultures. White Europeans sent their missionaries to
change black people's religion to their own. And in the 19th century
white Europeans began moving into Africa to occupy the land as well. The
land was desirable for itself: it provided new territory, new possessions
and new trade, both for individuals and their countries. The land had
other values, too: it provided bases for further take-overs and
further military threats; and, above all, it contained riches.
Along the coastline of Namibia runs the Namib desert, a 1,200 mile long
strip of unwelcoming sand dunes and barren rock. Behind it is the
central mountain plateau, and east of that the Kalahari desert. Namibia's
scarcest commodity is water: this is a country of little rainfall, and
the rivers don't always run. But the very sand of the Skeleton Coast is
the dust of gemstones; uranium, tin and tungsten can be mined in the
central Namib, and copper in the north; and in the south there are
diamonds. Namibia also has gold, silver, lithium, and natural gas. For most of
the region's history, only metal was of interest to the native tribes.
These tribes lived and traded together more or less peacefully, each
with their own particular way of living, wherever the land was fertile
enough. The San were nomads, hunters and gatherers. The Damara hunted and
worked copper. The Ovambo grew crops in the north, where there was more
rain, but also worked in metal. The Nama and the Herero were livestock
farmers, and they were the two main tribes in the 1840s when the
Germans (first missionaries, then settlers, then soldiers) began arriving in
South West Africa.
Before the Germans, only a few Europeans had visited it: explorers,
traders and sailors. They opened up trade outlets for ivory and cattle;
they also brought in firearms, with which they traded for Namib
treasures. Later, big guns and European military systems were introduced. The
tribes now settled their disputes with lethal violence: corruption of a
peaceful culture was under way.
In the 1880s Germany made South West Africa their own colony, and
settlers moved in, followed by a military governor who knew little about
running a colony and nothing at all about Africa. Major Theodor Leutwein
began by playing off the Nama and Herero tribes against each other. More
and more white settlers arrived, pushing tribesmen off their
cattle-grazing lands with bribes and unreliable deals. The Namib's diamonds were
discovered, attracting yet more incomers with a lust for wealth.
Tribal cattle-farmers had other problems, too: a cattle-virus epidemic
in the late 1890s killed much of their livestock. The colonists offered
the Herero aid on credit. As a result the farmers amassed large debts,
and when they couldn't pay them off the colonists simply seized what
cattle were left. In January 1904, the Herero, desperate to regain their
livelihoods, rebelled. Under their leader Samuel Maherero they began to
attack the numerous German outposts. They killed German men, but spared
women, children, missionaries, and the English or Boer farmers whose
support they didn't want to lose.
At the same time, the Nama chief, Hendrik Witbooi, wrote a letter to
Theodor Leutwein, telling him what the native Africans thought of their
invaders, who had taken their land, deprived them of their rights to
pasture their animals on it, used up the scanty water supplies, and
imposed alien laws and taxes. His hope was that Leutwein would recognise the
injustice and do something about it.
THE GENOCIDE
The German Emperor replaced Major Leutwein with another commander, this
time a man notorious for brutality who had already fiercely suppressed
African resistance to German colonisation in East Africa.
Lieutenant-General Lothar von Trotha said, 'I wipe out rebellious tribes with
streams of blood and streams of money. Only following this cleansing can
something new emerge'. Von Trotha brought with him to German South West
Africa 10,000 heavily-armed men and a plan for war.
Under his command, the German troops slowly drove the Herero warriors
to a position where they could be hemmed in by attack on three sides.
The fourth side offered escape; but only into the killing wastes of the
Kalahari desert. The German soldiers were paid well to pursue the Herero
into this treacherous wilderness. They were also ordered to poison the
few water-holes there. Others set up guard posts along a 150-mile
border: any Herero trying to get back was killed.
On October 2, 1904, von Trotha issued his order to exterminate the
Herero from the region. 'All the Herero must leave the land. If they
refuse, then I will force them to do it with the big guns. Any Herero found
within German borders, with or without a gun, will be shot. No prisoners
will be taken. This is my decision for the Herero people'.
After the Herero uprising had been systematically put down, by shooting
or enforced slow death in the desert from starvation, thirst and
disease (the fate of many women and children), those who still lived were
rounded up, banned from owning land or cattle, and sent into labour camps
to be the slaves of German settlers. Many more Herero died in the
camps, of overwork, starvation and disease.
By 1907, in the face of criticism both at home and abroad, von Trotha's
orders had been cancelled and he himself recalled, but it was too late
for the crushed Herero. Before the uprising, the tribe numbered 80,000;
after it, only 15,000 remained.
During the period of colonisation and oppression, many women were used
as sex slaves. (This had not been von Trotha's intention. 'To receive
women and children, most of them ill, is a serious danger to the German
troops. And to feed them is an impossibility. I find it appropriate
that the nation perishes instead of infecting our soldiers.') In the
Herero work camps there were numerous children born to these abused women,
and a man called Eugen Fischer, who was interested in genetics, came to
the camps to study them; he carried out medical experiments on them as
well. He decided that each mixed-race child was physically and mentally
inferior to its German father (a conclusion for which there was and is
no respectable scientific foundation whatever) and wrote a book
promoting his ideas: 'The Principles of Human Heredity and Race Hygiene'.
Adolf Hitler read it while he was in prison in 1923, and cited it in his
own infamous pursuit of 'racial purity'.
The Nama suffered at the hands of the colonists too. After the defeat
of the Herero the Nama also rebelled, but von Trotha and his troops
quickly routed them. On April 22 1905 Lothar von Trotha sent his clear
message to the Nama: they should surrender. 'The Nama who chooses not to
surrender and lets himself be seen in the German area will be shot, until
all are exterminated. Those who, at the start of the rebellion,
committed murder against whites or have commanded that whites be murdered
have, by law, forfeited their lives. As for the few not defeated, it will
fare with them as it fared with the Herero, who in their blindness also
believed that they could make successful war against the powerful
German Emperor and the great German people. I ask you, where are the Herero
today?' During the Nama uprising, half the tribe (over 10,000) were
killed; the 9,000 or so left were confined in concentration camps.
AFTER THE GENOCIDE
After the First World War, South West Africa was placed under the
administration of South Africa. South Africa imposed its own system of
apartheid (now banned in Namibia by law). In the late 1940s a guerrilla
movement called SWAPO (South West African People's Organisation) was
founded to fight for independence. In 1968 the United Nations recognised the
name Namibia, and the country's right to independence, but it was
another 20 years before South Africa agreed to withdraw and full
independence was gained. By then the country was ravaged by war.
Today most of Namibia's 1.7m people are poor, living in crowded tribal
areas while powerful and wealthy ranchers still own millions of acres
seized by their predecessors over 100 years ago.
Some of the descendants of the surviving Herero live in neighbouring
Botswana, but others remained in their homeland and now make up 8% of
Namibia's population. Many of them are in the political opposition party.
Most Herero men work as cattle-handlers on commercial farms. Although
as opposition members they don't get government support, the Herero on
their own initiative recently asked Germany to give them compensation
for the atrocities the tribe suffered, which the president of Germany
recently acknowledged were 'a burden on the conscience of every German'.
In fact Namibia gets more aid from Germany than any other country; but
most of the money goes to non-Herero majority interests: it's the
governing Ovambo (not reached by early colonists, and modern Namibia's main
tribe) who led the struggle for liberation and, in 1990, independence.
The 25,000 or so present-day rich German settlers are among those who
deny that there was a genocide, fearing that reparation might mean
losing their valuable land.
WITNESS
from Nama chief Hendrik Witbooi's letter to Major Leutwein, describing
the typical colonist:
- 'He makes no requests according to truth and justice, and asks no
permission of a chief. He introduces laws into the land, laws which are
entirely impossible, untenable, unbelievable, unbearable, unmerciful and
unfeeling. He punishes our people in Windhoek and has already beaten
people to death for debt. It is not just and right to beat people to
death for that. He stretches people on their backs and flogs them in a
shameful and cruel manner, be they male or female. He thinks we are stupid
and unintelligent people, but we have never yet punished people in the
cruel and improper way that he does. No-one can survive such a
punishment.'
- 'Herero women adapted their high-waisted dresses, and hats that jut
out like cattle-horns, from the wives of Victorian missionaries. On
holidays they wear versions of the dress in red and black, the colours of
Herero nationalism - and of the 19th-century German Empire. The men wear
the German volunteers' uniform. German diplomats are always invited to
Herero celebrations. "We're treated like VIPs and often asked to give
the keynote speech," said one diplomat, who confessed that he is baffled
by the practice. The peculiar attraction between the Herero and Germans
here resembles the one in the Natal region of South Africa between the
Zulus and British, two other peoples who fought a brutal colonial war.
"It's the respect of a soldier for a soldier," explains Kuaima Riruako,
paramount chief of the Herero. "We never gave up our army, even during
the German period." But the links are much closer. Because many Herero
women were forced into sexual slavery, many Herero today have German
ancestors, and German is widely spoken here.'
GENERAL VON TROTHA'S DECLARATION
On 2 October 1904 the German commander, General von Trotha issued the
following proclamation: "I, the great general of the German troops, send
this letter to the Herero people... All Hereros must leave this land...
Any Herero found within the German borders with or without a gun, with
or without cattle, will be shot. I shall no longer receive any women or
children; I will drive them back to their people. I will shoot them.
This is my decision for the Herero people."
The general was true to his word.
The Herero were machine gunned and their wells were poisoned. Finally
they were driven into the desert to die.
This was how colonisation began in what is today Namibia.
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