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HEROES DAY: 05.12.2004: THE REMEMBRANCE OF !NORESEB GAMAB=S (MANASSE) DEATH IN THE BATTLE AT GUBUOMS (AMINUIS) ON 01.12.1905 AGAINST THE GERMAN SCHUTZTRUPPE(3884 total words in this text) (370 Reads) 

Copyright of Photo: Dr. Klaus Dierks
HEROES DAY: 05.12.2004: THE REMEMBRANCE OF !NORESEB GAMAB =S
(MANASSE) DEATH IN THE BATTLE AT GUBUOMS (AMINUIS) ON 01.12.1905 AGAINST THE
GERMAN SCHUTZTRUPPE
SPEECH BY GUEST OF HONOUR: DR. KLAUS DIERKS ON 05.12.2004
As a German speaking Namibian I am very honoured and deeply
touched to be invited to participate in todays 99<sup>th</sup> Heroes Day in
Hoachanas (!Hoaxa!nâs). At this historical place I wish to pay my respect and
tribute to one of the most outstanding Namibian freedom fighters, the great
Kai||khaun or Red Nation Captain Manasse !Noreseb Gamab who died in action
against the German colonial power - on horse back - on 01.12.1905 in the Battle
of Gubuoms in present-day Aminuis. I also pay tribute to all those brave
Namibian women and men and even children, who fought and suffered for the
liberation and independence of Namibia.
This year we remember the greatest tragedy in the history of
Namibia, the German - Namibian War of 1903 to 1913. We remember the genocide
against the Ovaherero and the Nama and against other Namibian communities in the
year 1904 and thereafter. In this year of remembrance - 2004 - everybody in the
international world is talking about the genocide against the Ovaherero. But,
other Namibian communities suffered as well and fought much longer against the
German colonial authority, especially the Nama groups of Namibia and especially
the Kai||khaun community of Hoachanas. Some of the Nama leaders, like Manasse !Noreseb
Gamab, Hendrik Witbooi and Jakob Marengo fell in battle against the Germans
while most of the Ovaherero leaders fled to neighbouring countries. Today we
have overcome this tragic history and have entered a
APolicy of
National Reconciliation@
which include all Namibian communities. If this reconciliation programme we are
talking about, is not broadened to include all Namibian population groups who
have suffered under and fought against the German colonial rule, then I see a
big problem coming.
Therefore it is so important that we remember Captain Manasse
!Noreseb Gamab and the Nama Community of the Red Nation of Hoachanas which
represent a kingpin of Namibian History - a history of resistance wars against
the various colonial powers which oppressed the Namibian people for so long.
The Namibian history did not begin when the first European
adventurers, hunters traders and missionaries and later the settlers arrived in
Namibia as uninvited guests. Namibian societies had been living, changing and
developing in this part of Africa for many centuries before the first Europeans
arrived. The history of the Namibian community of the Red Nation is a symbol for
Namibia =s
pre-colonial history and recounts the complex history of Namibia=s
stuggle for nationhood.
Manasse !Noreseb was one of the most powerful African leaders
in Namibia at the time the Germans began to colonise this country. His insight
that the African conflicts between Namibian communities were secondary to a
threat of an entirely new dimension of immense proportions, namely conquest and
colonisation by Germany which could only be resolved by African unity, makes
Manasse one of the major resistance fighters against colonial rule in Namibia.
He fought the war against the Germans for more than year - side on side with
leaders like Hendrik Witbooi, Jakob Marengo and Simon Koper.
What was the historical environment of the Hoachanas
Community of the Kai||khaun? The Kai||khaun can be regarded as the oldest Nama
speaking group in Namibia and represents somehow the original source of all Nama
communities in Namibia. Their historical roots can be followed back until the
year 1695. In the context of the Kai||khaun history - we can differ between four
basic periods:
1. The Defensive Period before 1820 against foreign
influences from outside Namibia
2. The Missionary Period around 1820 to 1860
3. The Active Period : From 1904 to 1913
4. The Actual Period from 1922 to 1990 against the
South African colonial rule.
Before I come and pay tribute to the great Namibian Hero
Manasse !Noreseb Gamab, allow me, to give some historical background on the
history of the Red Nation.
In 1695, the Nama Captain of the Kai ºkhaun,
the main group of all Nama groups in Namibia, #Hâb,
was probably the first Chief of this community. He was involved in several
conflicts with San and Dama groups. #Hâb unified
the different Namibian Nama groups: The Bondelswarts (!Gami-#nun);
the Topnaar (#Aonin); the Fransman Nama (!Khara-khoen);
the Veldschoendrager (||Hawoben); the Groot
Doden (||Ô-gain); the Swartboois (||Khau-|gõan)
and the Kharo-!oan from present-day Keetmanshoop, whereby the Kai||khaun
played a leading role. Later the ||Khau-|gõan
and the Kharo-!oan were the first groups to separate from the Red Nation.
In 1710 the Nama Chief of the Kai||khaun,
#Hâb, died. His successor was
||Khomab #Hâmab.
In 1725 ||Khomab #Hâmab
died and was succeeded by ||Khaub gaib||Khomab.
During his reign, a split occurred between the Kai||khaun
and the Swartboois after which they left Hoachanas and settled at
|Anhes (Otjiherero: Otjomevamomutumba: Place of
water between dunes) (the Rhenish Missionary Carl Hugo Hahn proposed on
13.05.1843 to name |Anhes
ARehoboth@).
In 1740 the Chief of the Kai||khaun,
||Khaub gaib||Khomab,
died. His successor was #Ô-||nâib
ºKhaumab. He died
in 1755, and his successor was |Hanab
#Ô||nâimab. He
was followed in 1770 by !Gaob |Hanamab.
In 1778/79 the South African Hendrik Jacob Wikar explored the
areas around the Oranje River (formerly called the !Garib River). Wikar
mentioned in his diaries the leader of the Red Nation, !Gaob
|Hanamab. Under his rule the Nama controlled an
area stretching from the upper Fish River to the Oranje. In 1800 !Gaob
|Hanamab died at Hoachanas or at the Koaeib
River (present-day Olifant =s
River (#Khoa-aib River)). His successor was
Gaméb !Gaomab who ruled until 1814. He was followed by Tsawúb Gamab. In 1820
James Kitchingman of the London Missionary Society, together with missionaries
Shaw and Schmelen, visited Tsawúb Gamab. But in 1822 Schmelen left Bethany due
to the dissatisfaction of the Bethany Nama with missionary work among the Red
Nation (after he Aalmost
begged them upon my knees that they should come to church but they would
not@).
This somehow represented the beginning of the Resistance Period against the
European missionaries. In 1824 Tsawúb died and was followed by !Na-khom Gamab.
In the 1830s the powerful Nama leader Jonker Afrikaner
established his sovereignty in the southern and central regions of the
territory. An alliance between the Afrikaners and Kai ºkhaun
was established. These two important Namibian communities represented some years
later the Anti-European and Anti-Missionary alliance. This represented the first
root against foreign dominance and colonialism in Namibia, and the Red Nation of
Hoachanas played a leading role in this. But historical justice has also to
report that in this time first conflicts between Namibian groups arose. Oral
history has it that during the drought 1829/1830 some Ovaherero groups moved
south where they came into conflict with some local Nama communities like the
Red Nation in alliance with Jonker Afrikaner)(Goman torob: the Cattle
War). These conflicts resulted in the establishment of some Ovaherero
communities in the south which started to speak the Khoekhoegowab language (Nama/Dama),
the so-called Ovaherero-Orlams.
In 1840, the leader of the Kai||khaun,
!Na-khom Gamab, died. His successor was Chief ||Oaseb
!Na-khomab, one of the greatest sons of the Red Nation.
||Oaseb and his Nama community settled in an area in the vicinity of
their Orlam allies, Jonker Afrikaner, in the valley of the Skaap River (Kubakop
River), Rehoboth (|Anhes) and Tsebris. The Orlam-Afrikaner
- Red Nation alliance was cemented in 1841 when the Nama Captain of the
Kai|khauan, Amraal Lambert, initiated a formal peace treaty between
||Oaseb and Jonker
Afrikaner. It is reported that on 14.04.1843
||Oaseb visited for the
first time Jonker Afrikaner=s
Windhoek. In 1844 ||Oaseb
attacked the Ovaherero leader Oove ua Muhoko Kahitjene without Jonker Afrikaner
lifting a finger to help Kahitjene. Kahitjene=s
defeat can be directly attributed to his attempts to win independent access to
guns, horses and information with assistance of a European missionary, Carl Hugo
Hahn. These events triggered off a development where the Ovaherero were
supported by the European missionaries, especially Carl Hugo Hahn, the European
traders and hunters while the Nama-Alliance between the Red Nation of Hoachanas
and the Orlam Afrikaners of Windhoek represented the Anti-European Union by
Namibians who tried to establish something like a rudimentary Namibian State. At
the end the European missionary-Ovaherero alliance defeated the Nama and opened
the way for the formal German colonialism in the 1880s. On 12.12.1846 Carl
Hugo Hahn reported that the Orlam Afrikaners under Jonker Afrikaner and the Kai||khaun
under Chief ||Oaseb
were the centres of the resistance against the German missionaries. Only the
Nama group of the Swartboois - under the influence of the German Rhenish
Missionary Franz Heinrich Kleinschmidt - did not take part in the Anti-European
Alliance of the Nama. In February 1850 the Nama group leader Tseib split from
the Red Nation and later formed the group of the Kharo-!oan in Keetmanshoop.
However, in 1854 ||Oaseb
attacked Jonker Afrikaner, who again had earlier attacked the Topnaar-Nama (#Aonin)
who were under the protection of ||Oaseb.
The arrival of European miners intensified further various conflicts between
Jonker Afrikaner and other Namaland chiefs, such as
||Oaseb and Willem
Swartbooi (!Huiseb #Haobemab) from Rehoboth.
In 1856 ||Oaseb
attacked with Hendrik Henricks of the Veldskoendragers, the Ovaherero leader Ua
Tjirue Tjamuaha, without any success. On 09.01.1858 the peace agreement of
Hoachanas was initiated by the Rhenish Missionary Vollmer, and Jonker and
||Oaseb formed again an
alliance. ||Oaseb
confirmed the terms of the original alliance of the 1820s. He recognised Jonker
as equal to him in status and as the overlord of Hereroland. The Red Nation=s
area stretched from the Kalahari to the Auas Mountains, with the Kuiseb River as
border line. The treaty of the 12 clauses did not contain a clause for
co-operation against exploitation by the traders which later was proved to be a
grand omission. The important Hoachanas Treaty of 1858 was ratified by 13 Nama
group leaders and Jan and Piet Kopervoet, sons of Ua Tjirue Tjamuaha. On
22.04.1858 the Hoachanas Treaty was followed by the signing a treaty outlawing
mining concessions and land sales to colonists, except by common agreement.
Unfortunately for Namibia this treaty was, under influence of the Rhenish
missionaries, never strictly enforced.
At the end of the 1850s the new political constellation could
be described as follows: The captains
||Oaseb of the Kai||khaun,
Amraal Lambert of the Kai³khauan,
Piet Koper !Gamab of the Fransman Nama, Hendrik Henricks or !Nanib gaib
#Arisemab of the Veldskoendragers and Jacobus
Boois from Bethany supported Jonker Afrikaner, while Willem Swartbooi or !Huiseb
#Haobemab from Rehoboth, the chiefs from Bethany
and Berseba and later Kido Witbooi from Gibeon, assisted by Chief Tseib from
Keetmanshoop, represented the anti-Jonker coalition. The Rhenish missionaries
and European traders greatly added to these polarisations of different Namibian
groups. The intent was to destroy Jonker=s
and ||Oaseb=s
nascent state structures in order to weaken any local political power that might
resist the missionaries=
objectives and later colonial annexation. Jonker=s
slogan: AAfrica
to Africans, but Namaland and Hereroland to us@
was a challenge which was not acceptable to the German missionaries.
Increasingly the economic power slipped out of the hands of the territory=s
leaders and their councils and passed into the hands of European traders and
missionaries. A new form of European colonial domination was unofficially
introduced by the missionary-trader alliance long before the official colonial
annexation took place in 1884. This development paved the way for the overthrow
of Jonker Afrikaner=s
and his ally ||Oaseb=s
sovereignty in the 1860s.
On 19.12.1867 Kido Witbooi, David Christian Frederiks and
Paul Goliath concluded a peace treaty at Gibeon ( AOrlam
Peace of 1867@).
The treaty was aimed against the Chief of the Red Nation from Hoachanas,
#Goraxab |Oasmab
(Barnabas), the successor to ||Oaseb.
On 21.05.1871 Barnabas died. His successor was Gôbeb #Goraxab
(Petrus).
And now we are coming to the records of the great Kai||khaun
leader, Manasse !Noreseb Gamab. On the 12.12.1880 Wilhelm Maharero defeated Jan
Jonker Afrikaner but was wounded in the battle of Otjikango. The three sons of
Chief Kukuri of Otjosazu were killed. On the Nama side David Christian Frederiks
of Bethany was killed and the Chief of Hoachanas, Petrus, was probably murdered
during the battle. Oral evidence has it that his successor, Manasse, who ruled
from 1881 until the 01.12.1905, gave the order to murder
³Gôbeb. In the next
years some rivalries took place between chiefs of the Red Nation. But in 1888,
when the German colonial authority already had taken over the country, Manasse !Noreseb
made peace with the rival chief, !Hoëb ||Oasmab
(Fritz Lazarus ||Oaseb). But in March 1889,
Fritz Lazarus ||Oaseb joined Hendrik Witbooi.
Manasse !Noreseb of Hoachanas sought the protection of the Ovaherero Chief
Maharero and settled at Seeis and returned to Hoachanas only in 1895, after the
defeat of Hendrik Witbooi in the Naukluft campaign a year earlier. These
Namibian inter-community fights, especially between Manasse !Noreseb Gamab and
Hendrik Witbooi, weakened considerably the Namibian position against the
Germans. Only 10 years later, after the colonial oppression and dispossession of
Namibians became unbearable for most of the Namibian groups, Manasse !Noreseb
joined Hendrik Witbooi in his struggle against colonialism.
In 1902 the Germans created a
Anative
reserve@
(50 000 ha) for the Red Nation at Hoachanas.
The Third Period - The Active Period - in Namibia =s
history of struggle for freedom reached its first culmination point in the
German-Namibian War of 1903 to 1913.The patterns of all social-political
structures in Namibia were fundamentally altered by this war. The "Leutwein
System" based on a combination of diplomacy and military force broke down.
Leutwein was unseated in 1904 and General Lothar von Trotha was called in. The
genocide against the Nama and Ovaherero communities and the extreme
sufferingthis war has caused can be demonstrated by the fact that from ±20,000
Nama in 1901only 9,810 survived in 1911.Thus more than 50% of the Nama died -
Victims to Germany=s
colonial rule. Many Namibians, all-in-all more than 50%, had died in the German
concentration camps, among them members of the Red Nation of Hoachanas.
In October 1903 the German Namibian War was triggered of by
the Bondelswarts of Warmbad. In January 1904 the Ovaherero took up the arms
against the German colonial rule. On 27.01.1904 Leutwein made peace with the
Bondelswarts in the Peace of Kalkfontein in order to avoid a war on two fronts.
The Bondelswarts had to hand over all their arms. From Warmbad the German
commander Von Heydebreck moved north in order to join the war against the
Ovaherero. On the way back he disarmed the Kai||khaun
under Manasse !Noreseb from Hoachanas who showed interest in joining the
Ovaherero in their resistance war against the Germans. The German colonial
forces established a strong military station at Hoachanas. After the outbreak of
the Nama-German War in October 1904 the Kai||khaun
joined Hendrik Witbooi. The Bondelswarts under Jakob Marengo and Johannes
Christian (300-400 armed men), the Veldskoendragers under Jan Hendrik (150-200
armed men), the Fransman Nama under Simon Koper (600-700 armed men), the Bethany
Nama under Cornelius Frederiks (300-400 armed men) and the Red Nation under
Manasse !Noreseb from Hoachanas (90-100 armed men) united behind Hendrik Witbooi
in their resistance struggle against the Germans.
As was said before, in October 1904 Manasse !Noreseb Gamab
followed Samuel Maharero =s
call: LET US DIE FIGHTING. Manasse was always committed to Namibian
self-determination and human peace: He was further influenced by Jakob Marengo
who from Namibia=s
fortified settlement ||Khauxa!nas
in the Great Karas mountains launched the first attack against the Germans in
Namaland in August 1904. In October 1904 the whole of Namaland, except some
sections of the Bethany, Berseba and Keetmanshoop areas, was at war with
Germany. At the height of the war 2,000 poorly equipped 2, 000 Namibian freedom
fighters fought against approximately 15,000 German soldiers, equipped with the
most advanced weaponry of this time. There were more than 200 different
encounters in that war in Namibia=s
south.
I am aware that many people are still disputing these facts
and have still not come to terms with the bitter facts of Namibia's colonial
history. But they should study a German colonial source: Deimling: AUS DER
ALTEN IN DIE NEUE ZEIT: 1930: P.111 & 116. We must come to terms with
history, and without the knowledge of the Namibian history there can be no
National Reconciliation.
On 01.12.1905 Manasse !Noreseb Gamab of the Red Nation of
Hoachanas died in action against the German Schutztruppe in the Battle of
Gubuoms in present-day Aminuis.
After the defeat of the Red Nation and after the death of
their Captain Manasse !Noreseb Gamab on 01.12.1905, the traditional ethnic Red
Nation structures were disbanded and all communal land confiscated by the German
administration as punishment for the so-called
ARebellion by
the Red Nation of Hoachanas@.
On 08.08.1906 a German law was enacted providing for the expropriation of the
land and cattle of so-called
Adissident tribes@
(Ovaherero, Swartbooi, Topnaar, Witbooi Nama, Red Nation of Hoachanas, Bethany
Nama, Fransman Nama, Veldschoendragers and Bondelswarts). This means that south
of the Red Line only the Rehoboth Baster and the Berseba (|Hai-|khauan)
community kept their land, while the Dama - whom the Germans consider as having
no land rights - were given some land as a grant, but not as their property.
This ordinance of August 1906 was further enacted on 08.05.1907.
Hoachanas ceased to exist as an important Nama community
centre. But, the story of the Red Nation of Hoachanas didn =t
end here. This was not the end of the German Namibian War and colonial
oppression in Namibia. Jakob Marengo, Johannes Christian and Abraham Morris of
Warmbad; Cornelius Frederiks of Bethany and Simon Koper of Gochas continued the
struggle. In actual fact the struggle continued until 1990, and the Red Nation
of Hoachanas was always involved. At the end of the German era in 1915, the
Hoachanas community was completely impoverished and dispossessed of all their
land, cattle, sheep and goat.
The Kai||khaun from Hoachanas
obtained a new leader only in 1922, !Hoëb ||Oasmab
(Fritz Lazarus ||Oaseb) who died on 18.07.1936.
His successor was Noach Tsai-Tsaib who ruled the Kai||khaun
traditional authority until 1948. He was followed by Matheus Kooper until 1986.
On 03.12.1988 the new Kai||khaun Captain from
Hoachanas, Petrus Simon Moses Kooper, was sworn in. He is still the leader of
the Hoachanas community.
In the 1930s and 1940s Hoachanas served as place of refuge for leaders from
other Nama groups who were sent into exile by the South African administration.
One example is the *Hai-*khauan
Captain Diederik Ruben Goliath from Berseba. In August 1938 the SWA
Administration conducted three investigations against Diederik Ruben Goliath,
due to his opposition to the South African native reserve policy. Chief Goliath
was ordered out of the Berseba reserve and sent into exile at Hoachanas. On
12.11.1947 Captain Goliath of Berseba died in Hoachanas, after having spent
roughly nine years there in exile. His corpse was brought back to Berseba on
02.06.1995, after the Independence of the Republic of Namibia.
After the Second World War, one of the leaders of the
Hoachanas community, Reverend Markus Kooper, was, together with Hosea Kutako and
Samuel Hendrik Witbooi, one of the first Namibian leaders to petition the United
Nations to grant independence to Namibia. In 1959 the Reverend Markus Kooper
rejected South African Apartheid plans to evict the Red Nation from Hoachanas
and to resettle them at Aminuis and Tses. Consequently the South African
Administration forced him to move to Itsawisis in the Tses Reserve. The
Hoachanas people even threw stones when deeply flying South African war planes
threatened the people in order to force them to leave their homes in Hoachanas.
Under the leadership of Markus Kooper the Red Nation of Hoachanas successfully
resisted the South African Apartheid ideology to evict the people from Hoachanas
and to resettle them somewhere in Namaland.
Only with the date of Independence the wheel of Namibia =s
200 years of resistance history has taken a full circle. The legacy of Manasse !Noreseb
Gamab for a free, united and peaceful Namibia was continued by the successor
captains of the Red Nation of Hoachanas with SWAPO's victory in 1989. The
community of the Red Nation of Hoachanas which has been dispersed and
impoverished firstly by the Germans and later by the South Africans has to be
restored to their former glory. This remembrance day of the death of Manasse !Noreseb
Gamab 99 years ago should serve as a stepping stone to achieve this goal.
Namibia should take note of the Red Nation=s
contribution to the independence of the country. I can only bow in honour of the
heroes of the Kai||khaun and I salute the people
of Hoachanas.
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