Staff Reporter
Windhoek-The Association of the Ovaherero Genocide In the USA in conjunction with the Ovaherero Chief Adv Vekuii Rukoro and Chief David Frederick, chairman of the Nama Traditional Authorities Association, said in a statement issued yesterday that the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) is in possession of Namibian human remains.
Some of the remains appear to be related to the German genocide of the Ovaherero and Nama peoples during the period of German occupation of what was then South West Africa from approximately 1885 to 1915.
Prof Felix von Luschan, a German anthropologist and ethnologist at the Museum for Ethnology in Berlin from 1885-1910, originally collected the Namibian body parts. He was a member of the German Society for Racial Hygiene. Over the span of many years, Von Luschan built up two large collections containing thousands of specimens:
one for the Berlin Museum and one in his own private possession. Both collections contained skulls and skeletons of Namibian people that had been shipped from Namibia to Berlin during the German colonial period in Namibia.
According to Dr Holger Stoecker, a historian at Humboldt University in Berlin familiar with the collection, after von Luschan’s death in 1924, his widow sold his private collection to the AMNH in New York. It is believed that Felix Warburg, a German-born New York banker, donated the money for the transfer of the collection from Berlin to New York.
Barnabas Veraa Katuuo, a co-founder of the association and a plaintiff in the federal class action lawsuit pending against Germany in New York relating to the genocide of the Ovaherero and Nama peoples by German colonial forces, said he reviewed the human remains at the American Museum of Natural History on September 12.
He said of the skeletal remains from Namibia found there, at least two were likely genocide victims, including one from Shark Island, the notorious German concentration camp located at Lüderitz Bay, and one from Windhoek, where the German colonial authorities also maintained a concentration camp for Ovaherero and Nama prisoners.
According to Katuuo, “The discovery of Namibian and Ovaherero remains at the museum is a highly significant event, in that it shows that the genocide of the Ovaherero and Nama peoples in Namibia in the early part of the 20th century involved not only the mass killing of Ovaherero and Nama men, women and children, and the confiscation of their lands and livestock, but also the desecration of their remains when literally hundreds of skulls and skeletons were shipped off to Berlin by German scientists and researchers.
“It is likely that these remains were then used extensively in pseudo-scientific experiments to support racist theories regarding the inferiority of the African races and the superiority of the German peoples.”
Kenneth McCallion, the attorney for the association and the Namibian leadership of the Ovaherero and Nama peoples in their federal class action signed the statement released yesterday, saying: “The discovery of Namibian human remains at the American Museum of Natural History highlights the fact that the genocide of the Ovaherero and Nama peoples continues to have repercussions not only in Namibia, but also in places such as New York and the rest of the U.S., where many of the descendants of survivors of the genocide have settled and still maintain their vibrant cultural and ethnic identities, despite the effort by the German imperial forces to wipe them out.”
In addition to seeking compensation from Germany, the federal complaint alleges that the leadership of the Ovaherero and Nama peoples has been unfairly excluded from ongoing negotiations between Germany and Namibia regarding the settlement of claims related to the genocide.
The complaint states that both Germany and Namibia are parties to the September 13, 2007 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which provides that indigenous peoples have the right to participate in decision-making in matters which would affect their rights, through representatives chosen by themselves …”
As set forth in the complaint, the Ovaherero and Nama indigenous people were robbed during the German colonial occupation period of virtually all the grazing lands that provided the economic basis for their communities and cultural heritage.
As a result, the surviving members of the Ovaherero and Nama indigenous communities have been condemned for generations to perpetual and institutionalised poverty, requiring as a matter of fundamental justice that their lawful representatives be included in the negotiations with Germany.
Rukoro, Frederick and other Ovaherero and Nama leaders and representatives from Namibia and around the globe will view the remains at the museum on October 13, the date of the next scheduled court appearance before Judge Laura Taylor Swain in a federal court in downtown Manhattan.