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Herero people

The Herero (Otjiherero: Ovaherero) are a Bantu ethnic group inhabiting parts of Southern Africa. There were an estimated 250,000 Herero people in Namibia in 2013. They speak Otjiherero, a Bantu language. Though the Herero primarily reside in Namibia, there are also significant populations in Botswana and Angola, and a small number in South Africa. The Hereros in Botswana and South Africa are there because of displacement during the 1904 - 1908 genocide committed by the German Empire.

Herero
Herero women
Total population
317,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Namibia273,000
 Angola25,000
 Botswana19,000
Languages
Herero (Otjiherero), Namibian Black German (rare)
Religion
Christianity, Traditional faith
Related ethnic groups
Ovambo, Ovimbundu and other Bantu peoples
Herero
PersonOmuHerero
PeopleOvaHerero
LanguageOtjiHerero
CountryHereroland

Overview edit

 
Herero woman in traditional dress.

Unlike most Bantu, who are primarily subsistence farmers,[2] the Herero are traditionally pastoralists. They make a living tending livestock.[3] Cattle terminology in use among many Bantu pastoralist groups testifies that Bantu herders originally acquired cattle from Cushitic pastoralists inhabiting Eastern Africa. After the Bantu settled in Eastern Africa, some Bantu nations spread south. Linguistic evidence also suggests that the Bantu borrowed the custom of milking cattle from Cushitic peoples; either through direct contact with them or indirectly via Khoisan intermediaries who had acquired both domesticated animals and pastoral techniques from Cushitic migrants.[4][5]

Though the Herero primarily reside in Namibia, there are also significant populations in Botswana and Angola.[6] In Botswana, the Hereros or Ovaherero are mostly found in Maun and some villages surrounding Maun. These villages among others are Sepopa, Toromuja, Karee and Etsha.[citation needed] Some of them are at Mahalapye. In the South eastern part of Botswana they are at Pilane. There are also a few of them in the Kgalagadi South, that is Tsabong, Omawaneni, Draaihoek and Makopong Villages.

Organization edit

The Herero claim to comprise several sub-divisions, including the Himba, Tjimba (Cimba), Mbanderu, and Kwandu. Groups in Angola include the Mucubal OvaKuvale, Zemba, OvaHakawona, OvaTjavikwa, OvaTjimba and OvaHimba, who regularly cross the Namibia/Angola border when migrating with their herds. However, the OvaTjimba, though they speak Herero, are physically distinct indigenous hunter-gatherers. It may be in the Hereros' interest to portray indigenous peoples as impoverished Herero who do not own livestock.[7]

The leadership of the Ovaherero is distributed over several heads of clans of which some are more prominent and referred as royal houses, among them:[8][9]

  • Ovaherero Traditional Authority, of the Ovaherero central governance system established in 1863, chief Mutjinde Katjiua[10]
  • Maharero Royal Traditional Authority, chief Tjinaani Maharero
  • Zeraeua Royal Traditional Authority at Omarurur
  • Ovambanderu Royal Traditional Authority, chief Eben Nguvauva
  • Onguatjindu Royal Traditional Authority at Okakarara, chief Sam Kambazembi

Since conflicts with the Nama people in the 1860s necessitated Ovaherero unity, they also have a paramount chief ruling over all clans of Ovaherero,[9] although there is currently an interpretation that such paramount chieftaincy violates the Traditional Authorities Act, Act 25 of 2000.[8]

Paramount Chiefs edit

The highest office is that of the Paramount Chief, the leader of all Herero people. The position is vacant and in dispute, and so far, no formal gazetting has been done by the Ministry of Urban and Rural Development. Potential candidates are Prof Mutjinde Katjiua (elected in March 2021 by the Ovaherero Traditional Authority, OTA)[11] and Dr Hoze Riruako (elected by "a splinter group within the OTA" on 5 February 2023).[12] Meanwhile, Chief Vipuira Kapuuo from Ovitoto is acting in the position since Rukoro's death.[13]

The genealogy of the Paramount Chiefs of the Herero is:

  • Vekuii Rukoro (2014-2021) In June 2014, when Riruako died, the chairman of the Chiefs Council, Tumbee Tjombe, who was deputized by Vipuira Kapuuo, became the acting Paramount Chief. In July of the same year, Tjombe also died, and a senior traditional councilor, Tjipene Keja, was elected in August 2014 by the Chief's Council to serve as the acting Paramount Chief. Acting Paramount Chief Keja convened a senate meeting in September 2014 at Ehungiro, to elect the substantive Paramount Chief, and Advocate Vekuii Rukoro emerged as the sole candidate.
  • Kuaima Riruako (1978–2014) In March 1978, after the assassination of Kapuuo, the chairperson of the Chiefs' Council, Senior Headman Gerson Hoveka became the acting Paramount Chief. A senate meeting was convened in the same year where Kuaima Riruako was elected, as the substantive Paramount Chief.
  • Clemens Kapuuo (1970–1978) Due to the advanced age of Kutako, in 1960 Clemence Kapuuo, who was the secretary of the Chiefs Council, was elected as deputy Paramount Chief to take the mantle in the eventuality that Kutako passes on. In 1970, two days following Kutako's death, Kapuuo assumed the position of a substantive Paramount Chief.
  • Hosea Kutako (1917–1970) Following the Herero Wars from 1904 to 1908, Paramount Chief Samuel Maharero fled to Bechuanaland (now Botswana). This created a leadership vacuum amongst the Ovaherero, more so when the Ovaherero were incarcerated into the concentration camps. When the Ovaherero were released from the concentration camps in 1915, an election was held in 1916/17 among the clan leaders and their councillors to choose between two candidates, Hosea Kutako and Kaevaka Kamaheke, for the position of Acting Paramount Chief. Hosea Kutako emerged victorious, and was later confirmed as Paramount Chief in 1920.
  • Samuel Maharero (1890–1917) When Paramount Chief Maharero died in 1890, his son Samuel Maharero assumed the position in 1892 with the aid of the German Administrative Governor Theodor Leutwein.
  • Maharero ka Tjamuaha (1861–1890) With Tjamuaha's death in 1861, hostilities started between the Nama people and the Herero.[14] This made it necessary for the clans to unite as a group. That is how, on 15 June 1863 at Otjizingue (now Otjimbingwe), Maharero was elected as the commander-in-chief of all Herero clans. Later Maharero was elected the first Paramount Chief of the Herero people.[15]

History edit

Pre-colonial edit

 
Herero, at the end of the 19th century

In the 15th century, the Herero migrated to what is now Namibia from the east and established themselves as herdsmen. In the beginning of the 19th century, the Nama from South Africa, who already possessed some firearms, entered the land and were followed, in turn, by white merchants and German missionaries. At first, the Nama began displacing the Herero, leading to bitter warfare between the two groups, which lasted the greater part of the 19th century. Later the two peoples entered into a period of cultural exchange.[citation needed]

German South West Africa edit

During the late 18th century, the first Europeans began entering to permanently settle the land. Primarily in Damaraland, German settlers acquired land from the Herero in order to establish farms. In 1883, the merchant Franz Adolf Eduard Lüderitz entered into a contract with the native elders. The exchange later became the basis of German colonial rule. The territory became a German colony under the name of German South West Africa.

Soon after, conflicts between the German colonists and the Herero herdsmen began. Controversies frequently arose because of disputes about access to land and water, but also the legal discrimination against the native population by the white immigrants.[citation needed]

In the late 19th and early 20th century, imperialism and colonialism in Africa peaked, affecting especially the Hereros and the Namas. European powers were seeking trade routes and railways, as well as more colonies. Germany officially claimed their stake in a South African colony in 1884, calling it German South West Africa until it was taken over in 1915. The first German colonists arrived in 1892, and conflict with the indigenous Herero and Nama people began. As in many cases of colonization, the indigenous people were not treated fairly.[16]: 31 [17]

Between 1893 and 1903, the Herero and Nama peoples' land and cattle were progressively being taken by German colonial settlers. The Herero and Nama resisted expropriation[18] over the years. In 1903, the Herero people learnt that they were to be placed in reservations,[19] leaving more room for colonialists to own land and prosper. The Herero, 1904, and Nama, 1905, began a great rebellion that lasted until 1907, ending with the near destruction of the Herero people. "The war against the Herero and Nama was the first in which German imperialism resorted to methods of genocide...."[20] Roughly 80,000 Herero lived in German South West Africa at the beginning of Germany's colonial rule over the area, while after their revolt was defeated, they numbered approximately 15,000. In a period of four years, approximately 65,000 Herero people were killed.[21]

 
Omuti-ngau-zepo (The tree must be removed) in Otjinene from which many Herero people were hanged to death.

Samuel Maharero, the Paramount Chief of the Herero, led his people in a large-scale uprising on January 12, 1904, against the Germans.[22] The Herero, surprising the Germans with their uprising, had initial success.

 
Herero chained during the Herero and Namaqua genocide, perpetrated by the German Empire

German General Lothar von Trotha took over as leader in May 1904.[23] In August 1904, he devised a plan to annihilate the Herero nation.[24] The plan was to surround the area where the Herero were, leaving but one route for them to escape, into the desert. The Herero battled the Germans, and the losses were minor.[clarification needed] It was when the majority had escaped through the only passage made available by the Germans, and had been systematically prevented from approaching watering holes, that starvation began to take its toll.[citation needed] It was then that the Herero uprising changed from war, to genocide.[25] Lothar von Trotha called the conflict a “race war.” He declared in the German press that “no war may be conducted humanely against non-humans” and issued an “annihilation order”: "... The Herero are no longer German subjects. They have murdered and stolen, they have cut off the ears, noses, and other body parts of wounded soldiers, now out of cowardice they no longer want to fight. I tell the people: Anyone who delivers one captain will receive 1,000 marks, whoever delivers Samuel Maharero will receive 5,000 marks. The Herero people must, however, leave the land. If the populace does not do this, I will force them with the Groot Rohr [cannon]. Within the German borders every Herero, with or without a gun, with or without cattle, will be shot. I will no longer accept women and children, I will drive them back to their people or I will have them shot at."[26][27]

On the 100th anniversary of the genocide, German Minister for Economic Development and Cooperation Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul commemorated the dead on site and apologised for the crimes on behalf of all Germans. Hereros and Namas demanded financial reparations; however, in 2004 there was only minor media attention in Germany on this matter.[28]

Culture edit

 
Herero woman in Okahandja, Namibia

The Herero are traditionally cattle-herding pastoralists, thus cattle is the mainstay of their economy. Historically cattle raids occurred between Herero clans, but Hereroland (Ehi rOvaherero) belongs to all the Ovaherero and has no fixed boundaries.[citation needed]

The Herero have a double descent system. A person traces their heritage through their mother's lineage, or eanda (plural: omaanda), and one gains clan leadership from their father's lineage, or oruzo (plural: otuzo).[29] In the 1920s, Kurt Falk recorded in the Archiv für Menschenkunde that the Ovahimba retained a "medicine-man" or "wizard". He wrote, "When I asked him if he was married, he winked at me slyly and the other natives laughed heartily and declared to me subsequently that he does not love women, but only men. He nonetheless enjoyed no low status in his tribe."[30] The Holy Fire okuruuo[clarification needed] (OtjikaTjamuaha) of the Herero is located at Okahandja. During immigration, the fire was doused and quickly relit. From 1923 to 2011, it was situated at the Red Flag Commando. On Herero Day 2011, a group around Paramount Chief Kuaima Riruako claimed that this fire was facing eastwards for the past 88 years, while it should be facing towards the sunset. They removed it and placed it at an undisclosed location, a move that has stirred controversy among the Ovaherero community.[31]

Dress edit

 
Traditionally the otjikaiva matches the dress

Despite sharing a language and pastoral traditions, the Herero are not a homogeneous people. Traditional leather garments are worn by northwestern groups, such as the Himba, Kuvale, and Tjimba, who also conserve pre-colonial traditions in other aspects: for example, they do not buy bedding, but rather sleep in bedding made of cow skin. The Kaokoland Herero and those in Angola have remained isolated and are still pastoral nomads, practicing limited horticulture.[32]

However, the main Herero group in central Namibia (sometimes called Herero proper) was heavily influenced by Western culture during the colonial period, creating a whole new identity. The missionaries considered the shape of the traditional headdress Ekori, which symbolized the horns of cows (the main source of wealth of the people), as a symbol of the devil and rejected it.[33] The dress of the Herero proper, and their southern counterparts the Mbanderu, incorporates and appropriates the styles of clothing worn by their German colonizers. Though the attire was initially forced upon the Herero, it now operates as a new tradition and a point of pride.

During the 1904-07 war, Herero warriors would steal and wear the uniforms of German soldiers they had killed, believing that this transferred the dead soldiers' power to them. Today, on ceremonial occasions, Herero men wear military-style garb, including peaked caps, berets, epaulettes, aiguillettes and gaiters, "to honour the fallen ancestors and to keep the memories alive."[34]

Herero women adopted the floor-length gowns worn by German missionaries in the late 19th century, but now make them in vivid colors and prints. Married and older Herero women wear the dresses, locally known as ohorokova, every day, while younger and unmarried women wear them mainly for special occasions.[35] Ohorokova dresses are high-necked and have voluminous skirts lavishly gathered from a high waist or below the bust, incorporating multiple petticoats and up to ten metres of fabric. The long sleeves display sculptural volume: puffed from the shoulders or frilled at the wrists. Coordinating neckerchiefs are knotted around the neck. For everyday wear, dresses are ingeniously patchworked together from smaller pieces of fabric, which may be salvaged from older garments. Dresses made from a single material are reserved for special occasions.

The most distinctive feature of Herero women's dress is their horizontal horned headdress, the otjikaiva, which is a symbol of respect, worn to pay homage to the cows that have historically sustained the Herero. The headdresses can be formed from rolled-up newspaper covered in fabric. They are made to match or coordinate with dresses, and decorative brooches and pins attached to the centre front.

This dress style continues to evolve. In urban Windhoek, fashion designers and models are updating Herero dress for modern, younger wearers, including glamorous sheer and embellished fabrics. "Change is difficult, I understand, but people need to get used to the change," says designer McBright Kavari. "I'm happy to be a part of the change, to be winning souls of people and making people happy when they are wearing the Herero dress."[36] Kavari has won the Best Herero Dress competition three times in a row, but has been criticised for raising the hem of the garment to the knee.[37]

Language edit

A Herero speaker, recorded in Namibia.

The Herero language (Otjiherero) is the main unifying link among the Herero peoples.[citation needed] It is a Bantu language, part of the Niger–Congo family.[38] Within the Otjiherero umbrella, there are many dialects, including Oluthimba or Otjizemba—which is the most common dialect in Angola—Otjihimba, and Otjikuvale. These differ mainly in phonology, and are largely mutually intelligible, though Kuvale, Zemba, and Hakaona have been classified as separate languages. Standard Herero is used in the Namibian media and is taught in schools throughout the country.[citation needed]

Religion edit

Herero people believe in Okuruuo (holy fire), which is a link to their ancestors to speak to Ndjambi on their behalf. Modern-day Herero are mostly Christians, primarily Catholic, Lutheran, and Born-again Christian.[citation needed]

Domestic animals edit

The Herero make a living out of rearing domestic animals.

Cattle edit

 
Nguni cattle

Cattle are the most valued domestic animals in the Herero culture, therefore cattle herding is the most significant and substantial activity for the Herero people. In the Herero culture the cattle herding and cattle trading activities are only conducted by males while females are responsible for milking cows, household chores, harvesting small field crops and taking care of the young children. As women are responsible for milking cows, there are also responsible for preparing the delicious sour milk called "Omaere".[39] Although males are responsible for the cattle trading activities the females do most of the trading such as bartering for other goods.[citation needed]

Cultural impact edit

The Herero people take pride in their cattle, hence the culture of Herero requires women to wear their iconic fabric hats shaped like cow horns.[39] They believe that the more cattle one has, the richer one is, making cattle a symbol of wealth. In celebrations such as marriages, cattle is normally eaten, whereas religious or ancestral veneration ceremonies involve the sacrifice of cows or other animals.

Goats and sheep edit

Goats and sheep are kept for their meat and milk. Goatskin is manufactured into child carriers and to create household ornaments. Goat dung, meanwhile, is considered medicinal;[40] it is normally used to treat chickenpox.[citation needed]

Horses and donkeys edit

Horse and donkeys are common means of transport for the Herero. In cases of herding or searching for lost domestic animals, the Herero engage horses to carry out these activities.[citation needed]

Some Herero people are believed to consume donkey meat.[citation needed]

Dogs and chickens edit

In the Herero culture, dogs are used by men for both hunting and herding. The Herero people tend to hunt to acquire meat, hide, and horns that are bartered for goods such as sugar, tea, and tobacco.

Chicken are kept for their meat and eggs.

Herero in fiction edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Herero | Joshua Project".
  2. ^ Immaculate N. Kizza, The Oral Tradition of the Baganda of Uganda: A Study and Anthology of Legends, Myths, Epigrams and Folktales, [1], p. 21: "The Bantu were, and still are, primarily subsistence farmers who would settle in areas, clear land, organize themselves in larger units basically for protective purposes, and start permanent settlements."
  3. ^ Mark Cocker, Rivers of Blood, Rivers of Gold: Europe's Conquest of Indigenous Peoples, Grove Press, 2001, p. 276
  4. ^ J. D. Fage, A History of Africa, Routledge, 2002, p. 29: "In the north-east, the Bantu entered 'Azanian' lands inhabited by peoples speaking southern Cushitic languages. Indeed, this was of some importance because there is firm archaeological evidence that modern Kenya and northern Tanzania were the home of a succession of societies, once known as the 'Stone Bowl' cultures, which from about the middle of the third millennium B.C. onwards had cattle and were developing food-producing techniques well suited to the environment. It is unlikely that the Bantu would have brought large cattle with them through the forest, and their cattle terminology suggests that they acquired cattle from eastern African speakers of Cushitic languages, possibly through the mediation of Khoisan-speaking peoples. There is also linguistic evidence to suggest that at a later stage the Bantu may have borrowed the practice of milking directly from Cushitic-speaking peoples in East Africa."
  5. ^ Blench, Roger (8 August 2008). "Was there an interchange between Cushitic pastoralists and Khoisan speakers in the prehistory of Southern Africa and how can this be detected?" (PDF). Presented at Königswinter, March 28-30, 2007 and to be published in a special volume of Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika. Retrieved 1 November 2019. pastoralists speaking Cushitic languages once spread as far as south-central Africa, where they were in contact with the ancestors of present-day Khoe-speakers. This led to a transfer of both species of domestic animals and also some rather specific techniques of pastoral lifestyle including dairy-processing etc. Khoe pastoral culture is known mainly from records and their original sheep and cattle breeds have now become heavily crossbred. The explanation for related traits among adjacent Bantu peoples is likely to be a similar, subsequent transfer from the Khoe to the Bantu, although it is possible that there was also direct Cushitic contact with the Bantu in the same region.
  6. ^ Vivelo, F. (1976). The Entry of the Herero into Botswana. Botswana Notes and Records, 8, 39. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  7. ^ Roger Blench, Are the African Pygmies an Ethnographic Fiction?
  8. ^ a b Immanuel, Shinovene (24 October 2014). "Rukoro chieftaincy rejected". The Namibian. p. 1.
  9. ^ a b Kandetu, Bob (23 October 2014). . Informanté. Archived from the original on 11 March 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  10. ^ "Katjiua installed as Ovaherero chief" The Namibian, 2022-07-09
  11. ^ "OTA shows self as democratic trailblazer". Windhoek Observer. 7 February 2023.
  12. ^ Tendane, Sophie (9 July 2022). "Katjiua installed as Ovaherero chief". The Namibian.
  13. ^ "Kapuuo cautions Uutoni against Katjiua recognition". New Era. 29 June 2022.
  14. ^ Vedder 1997, p. 319.
  15. ^ Dierks, Klaus. "Biographies of Namibian Personalities, M. Entry for Maharero". klausdierks.com. Retrieved 6 May 2023.
  16. ^ Jan-Bart Gewald (1998) Herero heroes: a socio-political history of the Herero of Namibia, 1890-1923, James Currey, Oxford ISBN 978-0-82141-256-5
  17. ^ Peace and freedom, Volume 40, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, page 57, The Section, 1980
  18. ^ "A bloody history: Namibia’s colonisation", BBC News, 29 August 2001
  19. ^ Samuel Totten, Paul Robert Bartrop, Steven L. Jacobs (2007) Dictionary of Genocide: A-L, p.184, Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn. ISBN 978-0-31334-642-2
  20. ^ Chalk, Frank, and Jonassohn, Kurt. The History and Sociology of Genocide: Analyses and Case Studies. Published in cooperation with the Montreal Institute for Genocide Studies. (Yale University Press: New Haven & London, 1990)
  21. ^ UN Whitaker Report on Genocide, 1985, paragraphs 14 to 24, pages 5 to 10 Prevent Genocide International
  22. ^ The New York Times. 18 August 1904
  23. ^ The Times (London). 7 May 1904
  24. ^ Mahmood Mamdani (2001) When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda, Princeton University Press, Princeton ISBN 978-0-69105-821-4
  25. ^ "Germany moves to atone for 'forgotten genocide' in Namibia". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  26. ^ Haas, François (2008). "German science and black racism—roots of the Nazi Holocaust". The FASEB Journal. 22 (2): 332–337. doi:10.1096/fj.08-0202ufm. PMID 18239065. S2CID 19786064. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  27. ^ Haas, François. "General Lothar Von Trotha Extermination Order against the Herero". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  28. ^ Krabbe, Alexander. . OhmyNews International. Archived from the original on 2004-09-05. Retrieved 2004-08-06.
  29. ^ 1 How Societies Are Born by Jan Vansina: "Of Water, Cattle, and Kings"
  30. ^ Boy-Wives and Female Husbands edited by Stephen Murray & Will Roscoe. Published by Saint Martin's Press in 1998. p. 190
  31. ^ Nunuhe, Margreth (31 August 2011). . New Era. Archived from the original on 15 May 2012.
  32. ^ Carvalho, Ruy Duarte (2000). Vou lá visitar pastores. Rio Mouro, Portugal: Círculo de Leitores, Printer Portuguesa Casais de Mem Martins. ISBN 972-42-2092-3.
  33. ^ The Ekori: The Story of a German-Namibian Interrelationship SPK, 2019-06-20. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  34. ^ Stinson, Liz (24 June 2013). "Photos: The Amazing Costume Culture of Africa's Herero Tribe". Wired. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  35. ^ Young, Lisa (July 2004). "Herero Dresses – The Bigger The Better". Travel News Namibia. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  36. ^ "Namibia: The Trauma & Triumph Of Herero Dresses". Refinery29. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  37. ^ Kaakunga, Rukee (7 December 2012). "The Iconic Herero Dress Deconstructed". The Namibian. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  38. ^ Herero at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)  
  39. ^ a b . University of San Francisco. Archived from the original on 2014-07-14.
  40. ^ "Domestic Animal Farming in the Fransfontein Area".
  41. ^ Serebrov, Mari. Mama Namibia. Windhoek, Namibia: Wordweaver Publishing House, 2013.

Literature edit

  • Vedder, Heinrich (1997). Das alte Südwestafrika. Südwestafrikas Geschichte bis zum Tode Mahareros 1890 [The old South-West Africa. South-West Africa's history until Maharero's death 1890] (in German) (7th ed.). Windhoek: Namibia Scientific Society. ISBN 0-949995-33-9.

Further reading edit

  • , , 93 California Law Review 1155 (2005).
  • S. Passarge, Südafrika, (Oldenburg and Leipzig, 1908)
  • Hans Schinz, Deutsch Südwest-Afrika, (Oldenburg and Leipzig, 1891)
  • Herero people 2017-06-14 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • —Photographs and information.

herero, people, herero, otjiherero, ovaherero, bantu, ethnic, group, inhabiting, parts, southern, africa, there, were, estimated, namibia, 2013, they, speak, otjiherero, bantu, language, though, herero, primarily, reside, namibia, there, also, significant, pop. The Herero Otjiherero Ovaherero are a Bantu ethnic group inhabiting parts of Southern Africa There were an estimated 250 000 Herero people in Namibia in 2013 They speak Otjiherero a Bantu language Though the Herero primarily reside in Namibia there are also significant populations in Botswana and Angola and a small number in South Africa The Hereros in Botswana and South Africa are there because of displacement during the 1904 1908 genocide committed by the German Empire HereroHerero womenTotal population317 000 1 Regions with significant populations Namibia273 000 Angola25 000 Botswana19 000LanguagesHerero Otjiherero Namibian Black German rare ReligionChristianity Traditional faithRelated ethnic groupsOvambo Ovimbundu and other Bantu peoplesHereroPersonOmuHereroPeopleOvaHereroLanguageOtjiHereroCountryHereroland Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Organization 1 2 Paramount Chiefs 2 History 2 1 Pre colonial 2 2 German South West Africa 3 Culture 3 1 Dress 3 2 Language 4 Religion 5 Domestic animals 5 1 Cattle 5 1 1 Cultural impact 5 2 Goats and sheep 5 3 Horses and donkeys 5 4 Dogs and chickens 6 Herero in fiction 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Literature 8 3 Further reading 9 External linksOverview edit nbsp Herero woman in traditional dress Unlike most Bantu who are primarily subsistence farmers 2 the Herero are traditionally pastoralists They make a living tending livestock 3 Cattle terminology in use among many Bantu pastoralist groups testifies that Bantu herders originally acquired cattle from Cushitic pastoralists inhabiting Eastern Africa After the Bantu settled in Eastern Africa some Bantu nations spread south Linguistic evidence also suggests that the Bantu borrowed the custom of milking cattle from Cushitic peoples either through direct contact with them or indirectly via Khoisan intermediaries who had acquired both domesticated animals and pastoral techniques from Cushitic migrants 4 5 Though the Herero primarily reside in Namibia there are also significant populations in Botswana and Angola 6 In Botswana the Hereros or Ovaherero are mostly found in Maun and some villages surrounding Maun These villages among others are Sepopa Toromuja Karee and Etsha citation needed Some of them are at Mahalapye In the South eastern part of Botswana they are at Pilane There are also a few of them in the Kgalagadi South that is Tsabong Omawaneni Draaihoek and Makopong Villages Organization edit The Herero claim to comprise several sub divisions including the Himba Tjimba Cimba Mbanderu and Kwandu Groups in Angola include the Mucubal OvaKuvale Zemba OvaHakawona OvaTjavikwa OvaTjimba and OvaHimba who regularly cross the Namibia Angola border when migrating with their herds However the OvaTjimba though they speak Herero are physically distinct indigenous hunter gatherers It may be in the Hereros interest to portray indigenous peoples as impoverished Herero who do not own livestock 7 The leadership of the Ovaherero is distributed over several heads of clans of which some are more prominent and referred as royal houses among them 8 9 Ovaherero Traditional Authority of the Ovaherero central governance system established in 1863 chief Mutjinde Katjiua 10 Maharero Royal Traditional Authority chief Tjinaani Maharero Zeraeua Royal Traditional Authority at Omarurur Ovambanderu Royal Traditional Authority chief Eben Nguvauva Onguatjindu Royal Traditional Authority at Okakarara chief Sam KambazembiSince conflicts with the Nama people in the 1860s necessitated Ovaherero unity they also have a paramount chief ruling over all clans of Ovaherero 9 although there is currently an interpretation that such paramount chieftaincy violates the Traditional Authorities Act Act 25 of 2000 8 Paramount Chiefs edit The highest office is that of the Paramount Chief the leader of all Herero people The position is vacant update and in dispute and so far no formal gazetting has been done by the Ministry of Urban and Rural Development Potential candidates are Prof Mutjinde Katjiua elected in March 2021 by the Ovaherero Traditional Authority OTA 11 and Dr Hoze Riruako elected by a splinter group within the OTA on 5 February 2023 12 Meanwhile Chief Vipuira Kapuuo from Ovitoto is acting in the position since Rukoro s death 13 The genealogy of the Paramount Chiefs of the Herero is Vekuii Rukoro 2014 2021 In June 2014 when Riruako died the chairman of the Chiefs Council Tumbee Tjombe who was deputized by Vipuira Kapuuo became the acting Paramount Chief In July of the same year Tjombe also died and a senior traditional councilor Tjipene Keja was elected in August 2014 by the Chief s Council to serve as the acting Paramount Chief Acting Paramount Chief Keja convened a senate meeting in September 2014 at Ehungiro to elect the substantive Paramount Chief and Advocate Vekuii Rukoro emerged as the sole candidate Kuaima Riruako 1978 2014 In March 1978 after the assassination of Kapuuo the chairperson of the Chiefs Council Senior Headman Gerson Hoveka became the acting Paramount Chief A senate meeting was convened in the same year where Kuaima Riruako was elected as the substantive Paramount Chief Clemens Kapuuo 1970 1978 Due to the advanced age of Kutako in 1960 Clemence Kapuuo who was the secretary of the Chiefs Council was elected as deputy Paramount Chief to take the mantle in the eventuality that Kutako passes on In 1970 two days following Kutako s death Kapuuo assumed the position of a substantive Paramount Chief Hosea Kutako 1917 1970 Following the Herero Wars from 1904 to 1908 Paramount Chief Samuel Maharero fled to Bechuanaland now Botswana This created a leadership vacuum amongst the Ovaherero more so when the Ovaherero were incarcerated into the concentration camps When the Ovaherero were released from the concentration camps in 1915 an election was held in 1916 17 among the clan leaders and their councillors to choose between two candidates Hosea Kutako and Kaevaka Kamaheke for the position of Acting Paramount Chief Hosea Kutako emerged victorious and was later confirmed as Paramount Chief in 1920 Samuel Maharero 1890 1917 When Paramount Chief Maharero died in 1890 his son Samuel Maharero assumed the position in 1892 with the aid of the German Administrative Governor Theodor Leutwein Maharero ka Tjamuaha 1861 1890 With Tjamuaha s death in 1861 hostilities started between the Nama people and the Herero 14 This made it necessary for the clans to unite as a group That is how on 15 June 1863 at Otjizingue now Otjimbingwe Maharero was elected as the commander in chief of all Herero clans Later Maharero was elected the first Paramount Chief of the Herero people 15 History editPre colonial edit nbsp Herero at the end of the 19th centuryIn the 15th century the Herero migrated to what is now Namibia from the east and established themselves as herdsmen In the beginning of the 19th century the Nama from South Africa who already possessed some firearms entered the land and were followed in turn by white merchants and German missionaries At first the Nama began displacing the Herero leading to bitter warfare between the two groups which lasted the greater part of the 19th century Later the two peoples entered into a period of cultural exchange citation needed German South West Africa edit See also Herero Wars and Herero and Namaqua genocide During the late 18th century the first Europeans began entering to permanently settle the land Primarily in Damaraland German settlers acquired land from the Herero in order to establish farms In 1883 the merchant Franz Adolf Eduard Luderitz entered into a contract with the native elders The exchange later became the basis of German colonial rule The territory became a German colony under the name of German South West Africa Soon after conflicts between the German colonists and the Herero herdsmen began Controversies frequently arose because of disputes about access to land and water but also the legal discrimination against the native population by the white immigrants citation needed In the late 19th and early 20th century imperialism and colonialism in Africa peaked affecting especially the Hereros and the Namas European powers were seeking trade routes and railways as well as more colonies Germany officially claimed their stake in a South African colony in 1884 calling it German South West Africa until it was taken over in 1915 The first German colonists arrived in 1892 and conflict with the indigenous Herero and Nama people began As in many cases of colonization the indigenous people were not treated fairly 16 31 17 Between 1893 and 1903 the Herero and Nama peoples land and cattle were progressively being taken by German colonial settlers The Herero and Nama resisted expropriation 18 over the years In 1903 the Herero people learnt that they were to be placed in reservations 19 leaving more room for colonialists to own land and prosper The Herero 1904 and Nama 1905 began a great rebellion that lasted until 1907 ending with the near destruction of the Herero people The war against the Herero and Nama was the first in which German imperialism resorted to methods of genocide 20 Roughly 80 000 Herero lived in German South West Africa at the beginning of Germany s colonial rule over the area while after their revolt was defeated they numbered approximately 15 000 In a period of four years approximately 65 000 Herero people were killed 21 nbsp Omuti ngau zepo The tree must be removed in Otjinene from which many Herero people were hanged to death Samuel Maharero the Paramount Chief of the Herero led his people in a large scale uprising on January 12 1904 against the Germans 22 The Herero surprising the Germans with their uprising had initial success nbsp Herero chained during the Herero and Namaqua genocide perpetrated by the German EmpireGerman General Lothar von Trotha took over as leader in May 1904 23 In August 1904 he devised a plan to annihilate the Herero nation 24 The plan was to surround the area where the Herero were leaving but one route for them to escape into the desert The Herero battled the Germans and the losses were minor clarification needed It was when the majority had escaped through the only passage made available by the Germans and had been systematically prevented from approaching watering holes that starvation began to take its toll citation needed It was then that the Herero uprising changed from war to genocide 25 Lothar von Trotha called the conflict a race war He declared in the German press that no war may be conducted humanely against non humans and issued an annihilation order The Herero are no longer German subjects They have murdered and stolen they have cut off the ears noses and other body parts of wounded soldiers now out of cowardice they no longer want to fight I tell the people Anyone who delivers one captain will receive 1 000 marks whoever delivers Samuel Maharero will receive 5 000 marks The Herero people must however leave the land If the populace does not do this I will force them with the Groot Rohr cannon Within the German borders every Herero with or without a gun with or without cattle will be shot I will no longer accept women and children I will drive them back to their people or I will have them shot at 26 27 On the 100th anniversary of the genocide German Minister for Economic Development and Cooperation Heidemarie Wieczorek Zeul commemorated the dead on site and apologised for the crimes on behalf of all Germans Hereros and Namas demanded financial reparations however in 2004 there was only minor media attention in Germany on this matter 28 Culture edit nbsp Herero woman in Okahandja NamibiaThe Herero are traditionally cattle herding pastoralists thus cattle is the mainstay of their economy Historically cattle raids occurred between Herero clans but Hereroland Ehi rOvaherero belongs to all the Ovaherero and has no fixed boundaries citation needed The Herero have a double descent system A person traces their heritage through their mother s lineage or eanda plural omaanda and one gains clan leadership from their father s lineage or oruzo plural otuzo 29 In the 1920s Kurt Falk recorded in the Archiv fur Menschenkunde that the Ovahimba retained a medicine man or wizard He wrote When I asked him if he was married he winked at me slyly and the other natives laughed heartily and declared to me subsequently that he does not love women but only men He nonetheless enjoyed no low status in his tribe 30 The Holy Fire okuruuo clarification needed OtjikaTjamuaha of the Herero is located at Okahandja During immigration the fire was doused and quickly relit From 1923 to 2011 it was situated at the Red Flag Commando On Herero Day 2011 a group around Paramount Chief Kuaima Riruako claimed that this fire was facing eastwards for the past 88 years while it should be facing towards the sunset They removed it and placed it at an undisclosed location a move that has stirred controversy among the Ovaherero community 31 Dress edit nbsp Traditionally the otjikaiva matches the dressDespite sharing a language and pastoral traditions the Herero are not a homogeneous people Traditional leather garments are worn by northwestern groups such as the Himba Kuvale and Tjimba who also conserve pre colonial traditions in other aspects for example they do not buy bedding but rather sleep in bedding made of cow skin The Kaokoland Herero and those in Angola have remained isolated and are still pastoral nomads practicing limited horticulture 32 However the main Herero group in central Namibia sometimes called Herero proper was heavily influenced by Western culture during the colonial period creating a whole new identity The missionaries considered the shape of the traditional headdress Ekori which symbolized the horns of cows the main source of wealth of the people as a symbol of the devil and rejected it 33 The dress of the Herero proper and their southern counterparts the Mbanderu incorporates and appropriates the styles of clothing worn by their German colonizers Though the attire was initially forced upon the Herero it now operates as a new tradition and a point of pride During the 1904 07 war Herero warriors would steal and wear the uniforms of German soldiers they had killed believing that this transferred the dead soldiers power to them Today on ceremonial occasions Herero men wear military style garb including peaked caps berets epaulettes aiguillettes and gaiters to honour the fallen ancestors and to keep the memories alive 34 Herero women adopted the floor length gowns worn by German missionaries in the late 19th century but now make them in vivid colors and prints Married and older Herero women wear the dresses locally known as ohorokova every day while younger and unmarried women wear them mainly for special occasions 35 Ohorokova dresses are high necked and have voluminous skirts lavishly gathered from a high waist or below the bust incorporating multiple petticoats and up to ten metres of fabric The long sleeves display sculptural volume puffed from the shoulders or frilled at the wrists Coordinating neckerchiefs are knotted around the neck For everyday wear dresses are ingeniously patchworked together from smaller pieces of fabric which may be salvaged from older garments Dresses made from a single material are reserved for special occasions The most distinctive feature of Herero women s dress is their horizontal horned headdress the otjikaiva which is a symbol of respect worn to pay homage to the cows that have historically sustained the Herero The headdresses can be formed from rolled up newspaper covered in fabric They are made to match or coordinate with dresses and decorative brooches and pins attached to the centre front This dress style continues to evolve In urban Windhoek fashion designers and models are updating Herero dress for modern younger wearers including glamorous sheer and embellished fabrics Change is difficult I understand but people need to get used to the change says designer McBright Kavari I m happy to be a part of the change to be winning souls of people and making people happy when they are wearing the Herero dress 36 Kavari has won the Best Herero Dress competition three times in a row but has been criticised for raising the hem of the garment to the knee 37 Language edit Further information Otjiherero source source source source source source A Herero speaker recorded in Namibia The Herero language Otjiherero is the main unifying link among the Herero peoples citation needed It is a Bantu language part of the Niger Congo family 38 Within the Otjiherero umbrella there are many dialects including Oluthimba or Otjizemba which is the most common dialect in Angola Otjihimba and Otjikuvale These differ mainly in phonology and are largely mutually intelligible though Kuvale Zemba and Hakaona have been classified as separate languages Standard Herero is used in the Namibian media and is taught in schools throughout the country citation needed Religion editHerero people believe in Okuruuo holy fire which is a link to their ancestors to speak to Ndjambi on their behalf Modern day Herero are mostly Christians primarily Catholic Lutheran and Born again Christian citation needed Domestic animals editThe Herero make a living out of rearing domestic animals Cattle edit nbsp Nguni cattleCattle are the most valued domestic animals in the Herero culture therefore cattle herding is the most significant and substantial activity for the Herero people In the Herero culture the cattle herding and cattle trading activities are only conducted by males while females are responsible for milking cows household chores harvesting small field crops and taking care of the young children As women are responsible for milking cows there are also responsible for preparing the delicious sour milk called Omaere 39 Although males are responsible for the cattle trading activities the females do most of the trading such as bartering for other goods citation needed Cultural impact edit The Herero people take pride in their cattle hence the culture of Herero requires women to wear their iconic fabric hats shaped like cow horns 39 They believe that the more cattle one has the richer one is making cattle a symbol of wealth In celebrations such as marriages cattle is normally eaten whereas religious or ancestral veneration ceremonies involve the sacrifice of cows or other animals Goats and sheep edit Goats and sheep are kept for their meat and milk Goatskin is manufactured into child carriers and to create household ornaments Goat dung meanwhile is considered medicinal 40 it is normally used to treat chickenpox citation needed Horses and donkeys edit Horse and donkeys are common means of transport for the Herero In cases of herding or searching for lost domestic animals the Herero engage horses to carry out these activities citation needed Some Herero people are believed to consume donkey meat citation needed Dogs and chickens edit In the Herero culture dogs are used by men for both hunting and herding The Herero people tend to hunt to acquire meat hide and horns that are bartered for goods such as sugar tea and tobacco Chicken are kept for their meat and eggs Herero in fiction editA group of Herero living in Germany who were inducted into the German military during the Second World War play a major part in Thomas Pynchon s novel Gravity s Rainbow The genocide under von Trotha plays a major role in another novel by the same author V German author Uwe Timm s novel Morenga set in German southwest Africa includes several Herero characters A Portuguese Herero mestico protagonist is featured in Guy Saville s novel The Afrika Reich The fictional story takes place in a 1952 Africa largely conquered by the Nazis who came away from World War II politically and economically empowered and relatively unopposed In the historical novel Mama Namibia by Mari Serebrov two perspectives of the 1904 genocide in German Southwest Africa are shown The first is that of Jahohora a 12 year old Herero girl who survives alone in the veld for two years after her family is killed by German soldiers The second is that of Kov a Jewish doctor who volunteered to serve in the German military to prove his patriotism As he witnesses the atrocities of the genocide he rethinks his loyalty to the Fatherland 41 The Treatment of the Herero by German colonists is the subject of the 2012 play We Are Proud to Present a Presentation About the Herero of Namibia Formerly Known as Southwest Africa From the German Sudwestafrika Between the Years 1884 1915 by Jackie Sibblies Drury See also editHistory of Namibia Herero DayReferences editNotes edit Herero Joshua Project Immaculate N Kizza The Oral Tradition of the Baganda of Uganda A Study and Anthology of Legends Myths Epigrams and Folktales 1 p 21 The Bantu were and still are primarily subsistence farmers who would settle in areas clear land organize themselves in larger units basically for protective purposes and start permanent settlements Mark Cocker Rivers of Blood Rivers of Gold Europe s Conquest of Indigenous Peoples Grove Press 2001 p 276 J D Fage A History of Africa Routledge 2002 p 29 In the north east the Bantu entered Azanian lands inhabited by peoples speaking southern Cushitic languages Indeed this was of some importance because there is firm archaeological evidence that modern Kenya and northern Tanzania were the home of a succession of societies once known as the Stone Bowl cultures which from about the middle of the third millennium B C onwards had cattle and were developing food producing techniques well suited to the environment It is unlikely that the Bantu would have brought large cattle with them through the forest and their cattle terminology suggests that they acquired cattle from eastern African speakers of Cushitic languages possibly through the mediation of Khoisan speaking peoples There is also linguistic evidence to suggest that at a later stage the Bantu may have borrowed the practice of milking directly from Cushitic speaking peoples in East Africa Blench Roger 8 August 2008 Was there an interchange between Cushitic pastoralists and Khoisan speakers in the prehistory of Southern Africa and how can this be detected PDF Presented at Konigswinter March 28 30 2007 and to be published in a special volume of Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika Retrieved 1 November 2019 pastoralists speaking Cushitic languages once spread as far as south central Africa where they were in contact with the ancestors of present day Khoe speakers This led to a transfer of both species of domestic animals and also some rather specific techniques of pastoral lifestyle including dairy processing etc Khoe pastoral culture is known mainly from records and their original sheep and cattle breeds have now become heavily crossbred The explanation for related traits among adjacent Bantu peoples is likely to be a similar subsequent transfer from the Khoe to the Bantu although it is possible that there was also direct Cushitic contact with the Bantu in the same region Vivelo F 1976 The Entry of the Herero into Botswana Botswana Notes and Records 8 39 Retrieved May 21 2021 Roger Blench Are the African Pygmies an Ethnographic Fiction a b Immanuel Shinovene 24 October 2014 Rukoro chieftaincy rejected The Namibian p 1 a b Kandetu Bob 23 October 2014 Kambazembi and Rukoro Await their Reigns Informante Archived from the original on 11 March 2016 Retrieved 26 October 2014 Katjiua installed as Ovaherero chief The Namibian 2022 07 09 OTA shows self as democratic trailblazer Windhoek Observer 7 February 2023 Tendane Sophie 9 July 2022 Katjiua installed as Ovaherero chief The Namibian Kapuuo cautions Uutoni against Katjiua recognition New Era 29 June 2022 Vedder 1997 p 319 Dierks Klaus Biographies of Namibian Personalities M Entry for Maharero klausdierks com Retrieved 6 May 2023 Jan Bart Gewald 1998 Herero heroes a socio political history of the Herero of Namibia 1890 1923 James Currey Oxford ISBN 978 0 82141 256 5 Peace and freedom Volume 40 Women s International League for Peace and Freedom page 57 The Section 1980 A bloody history Namibia s colonisation BBC News 29 August 2001 Samuel Totten Paul Robert Bartrop Steven L Jacobs 2007 Dictionary of Genocide A L p 184 Greenwood Press Westport Conn ISBN 978 0 31334 642 2 Chalk Frank and Jonassohn Kurt The History and Sociology of Genocide Analyses and Case Studies Published in cooperation with the Montreal Institute for Genocide Studies Yale University Press New Haven amp London 1990 UN Whitaker Report on Genocide 1985 paragraphs 14 to 24 pages 5 to 10 Prevent Genocide International The New York Times 18 August 1904 The Times London 7 May 1904 Mahmood Mamdani 2001 When Victims Become Killers Colonialism Nativism and the Genocide in Rwanda Princeton University Press Princeton ISBN 978 0 69105 821 4 Germany moves to atone for forgotten genocide in Namibia The Guardian Retrieved 25 December 2016 Haas Francois 2008 German science and black racism roots of the Nazi Holocaust The FASEB Journal 22 2 332 337 doi 10 1096 fj 08 0202ufm PMID 18239065 S2CID 19786064 Retrieved 5 July 2016 Haas Francois General Lothar Von Trotha Extermination Order against the Herero encyclopedia com Retrieved 9 April 2019 Krabbe Alexander Remembering Germany s African Genocide OhmyNews International Archived from the original on 2004 09 05 Retrieved 2004 08 06 1 How Societies Are Born by Jan Vansina Of Water Cattle and Kings Boy Wives and Female Husbands edited by Stephen Murray amp Will Roscoe Published by Saint Martin s Press in 1998 p 190 Nunuhe Margreth 31 August 2011 Holy fire relocation triggers storm New Era Archived from the original on 15 May 2012 Carvalho Ruy Duarte 2000 Vou la visitar pastores Rio Mouro Portugal Circulo de Leitores Printer Portuguesa Casais de Mem Martins ISBN 972 42 2092 3 The Ekori The Story of a German Namibian Interrelationship SPK 2019 06 20 Retrieved 25 September 2021 Stinson Liz 24 June 2013 Photos The Amazing Costume Culture of Africa s Herero Tribe Wired Retrieved 30 May 2018 Young Lisa July 2004 Herero Dresses The Bigger The Better Travel News Namibia Retrieved 30 May 2018 Namibia The Trauma amp Triumph Of Herero Dresses Refinery29 Retrieved 30 May 2018 Kaakunga Rukee 7 December 2012 The Iconic Herero Dress Deconstructed The Namibian Retrieved 30 May 2018 Herero at Ethnologue 25th ed 2022 nbsp a b Herero People Hats amp History University of San Francisco Archived from the original on 2014 07 14 Domestic Animal Farming in the Fransfontein Area Serebrov Mari Mama Namibia Windhoek Namibia Wordweaver Publishing House 2013 Literature edit Vedder Heinrich 1997 Das alte Sudwestafrika Sudwestafrikas Geschichte bis zum Tode Mahareros 1890 The old South West Africa South West Africa s history until Maharero s death 1890 in German 7th ed Windhoek Namibia Scientific Society ISBN 0 949995 33 9 Further reading edit Rachel Anderson Redressing Colonial Genocide Under International Law The Hereros Cause of Action Against Germany 93 California Law Review 1155 2005 S Passarge Sudafrika Oldenburg and Leipzig 1908 Hans Schinz Deutsch Sudwest Afrika Oldenburg and Leipzig 1891 Herero people Archived 2017 06 14 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Herero nbsp Scholia has a profile for Herero people Q170088 Africa on the Matrix Herero People of Namibia Photographs and information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herero people amp oldid 1201076814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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