Africans were also victims of a German Holocaust, Thousands Died in Namibia
When people think of the Holocaust,
they immediately think of how many lives were lost and how much
destruction was caused because of Hitler’s policies. However, no one
knows much about what happened in Africa’s Forbidden Zone in the 1900’s,
in Namibia, during an earlier German genocide. A reporter, Sean Thomas,
is brave enough to write about this Forbidden Zone (Sperrgebiet ); he
gives his personal accounts and feelings.
Thomas
starts by describing the area as a desolate, dusty road. He explains
that there is a certain heaviness in the air. Just as he is about to
cross the unidentified border where the Forbidden Zone starts, he thinks
to himself that he would have been arrested, beaten, or shot nearly 100
years ago for stepping foot in that area. Sperrgebiet warning sign from the 1940s.Source
The
Forbidden Zone was known for its secrets the Germans held, as well as
the terrible beginning of the blood diamond phenomena. This area is
about 20,000 square kilometers in southwest Namibia. It has been closed
to travelers since the 1900’s in order to protect the diamond industry
from smugglers. Another name of this area is Diamond Zone 1, along with
its Afrikaans name Sperrgebiet.
Thomas noticed that some of the
tactics the Namibians used relate back to those of some of the Germans,
who colonized the country. In a strange way, the city exists because of
the Germans’ interest in diamonds. During the early 1900’s German
geologists began searching in this area for jewels.
Thomas
describes the government’s paranoia as understandable since the
diamonds mined in that area provide almost 80% of the nation’s tax
income. Travelers who try to attempt to cross the border have actually
been shot and killed by the guards.
Just recently, the area
officially became the newest National Park. It will be years before any
infrastructure is built, but it will always be remote, with few visitors
since it has such a terrible past.
Namib Desert in the Sperrgebiet.SourceThis
area has two things that people want: ecology and history. The ecology
is that it has a forbidden status and is one of the last unspoiled area
on Earth. This area has many animals that have been left untouched and
are a wonder to see. Some of the animals include the world’s biggest
jellyfish known and Namibian sea-nettles, strange insects, plants, and
reptiles. The area has such an odd fog that there are cacti that feed
off of the sea’s mist, as well as trees that are so poisonous that the
smoke from the burning wood can kill a person.
There are also
hundreds of wild horses known as Namib. No one is really sure how all of
the horse got there. Many believe that the German Baron, Heinrich von
Wolf, released them there in 1907. It is said that he had stables in a
Baroque castle nearby. Another rumor is that the horses escaped from
British Army shipwrecks on the Skeleton Coast. That last, and most
likely, idea is that the horses were the last remnants of the
Schultztruppe, a colonial army that ruled southwest Africa. The Germans
were defeated by the South African forces of the British Empire in 1915.
These horses are now considered the only wild desert horse in the
world, slowly adapting the especially dry climate.
Thomas then
went to one of the most secret parts of the Forbidden Area called
Oranjemund. It is one of the most restricted cities in the free world
due to the fact that only diamond traders are allowed in. This means
that about 99% of the population in the area are male.
Thomas was
not allowed directly inside due to those strict rules, however, he was
allowed to gaze at the city from afar. While the rest of the Forbidden
Area is starting to be opened to the public, Oranjemund remains
restricted. That is because there are 1.3 million carats of diamonds
there to protect. Close-up aerial photo of Bogenfels, a major landmark in the Sperrgebiet south of Lüderitz (Namibia).SourceEverything
that goes in and out of that city is thoroughly examined, and nothing
ever leaves as far as equipment. If a person decides to quit their job,
their orifices are examined for hidden gems as well as X-rayed. All of
the men there have to carry their X-rays with them so they are not
overdosed with radiation.Pigeons are banned from the area since they
were once used to smuggle the gems.
Before
the diamonds were found, the area was only considered suitable for
cattle farmers and guano merchants, since it is so dry.
The German
rulers in the area did not quite care about the area unless it
concerned gemstones. Before World War I, German Lieutenant General
Lothar von Trotha was in charge of putting down a rebellion by local
tribes. The Kaiser ended up sending out his best colonial forces, which
dealt with the rebellion by using extreme violence.
Lothar von Trotha.SourceThomas
also traveled to Shark Island. In 1905, the island was known as the
world’s first extermination camp when the German forces, enraged by all
the tribal rebellions, turned on the local Witbooi people. Many of this
tribe were killed in the colonial war, and those who survived were put
on the island.
The Germans had sent those people there to die,
resulting in the Witbooi being wiped from the face of the Earth.
Although this is considered terrible, it was just the beginning of the
German-Namibian holocaust.
In
the mid-1900’s, the Herero people massacred dozens of German settlers.
The Germans saw this as a serious threat which would eventually spill
over into the diamond regions. The Germans then sent for the ruthless
Prussian imperialist Lothar von Trotha to deal with the Herero people.
He
dealt with the rebels by using violence, terrorism, and cruelty. After
several battles between the two groups, many Herero were killed. Von
Trotha then decided to kill off the entire tribe. In 1907, he issued his
extermination order. He sent everyone in the tribe – men, women, and
children – west to the Kalahari Desert, where they eventually perished
from the terrible conditions.
As if this wasn’t enough, von Trotha
decided to have guards at each waterhole so the people couldn’t drink.
If there weren’t guards, then the waterholes were poisoned. Those who
couldn’t take the repression any longer and tried returning were
immediately shot to death.
Witnesses said it was the worst thing
they have ever seen. The desert was strewn with people slowly dying of
thirst. The flies surrounding the bodies were deafening, and those who
couldn’t go any further were eaten alive by leopards and jackals.
Historians believe that 60,000 people died during the expulsion, up to
about 70 to 80% of the population.
No amount of payment can
restore the lost tribes or the destruction the Germans caused. However,
the German state is one of the biggest aid donors to Namibia. Von
Trotha’s family still apologizes to the Namibian people and asks for
forgiveness.
A majority of people who travel to the area are German tourists. The German language is actually widely spoken in the cities.
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