"(CNN) -- Skulls taken by German scientists over a century ago have
been returned to Namibia amid jubilant scenes and celebrations.
Thousands
flocked to Namibia's Hosea Kutako International Airport Tuesday,
praying, singing, and chanting as the 20 skulls were returned to their
homeland.
The skulls, which were transported in caskets draped with the Namibian flag, were removed from the plane with military honors.
Among
those welcoming the skulls was the country's Prime Minister Nahas
Angula who said, "These mortal remains are testimony to the horrors of
colonialism and German cruelty against our people. May the mortal
remains of our ancestors proceed into their homeland," Namibian media
reported.
According to historians, the skulls were taken during the
bloody 1904 -1908 colonial conflict in former German West-South Africa,
when the Herero tribe rebelled against German colonial forces. It's
estimated that thousands were killed in the uprising. Once in Berlin,
the skulls were used in research in an attempt to prove the supposed
racial supremacy of European whites.
The skulls were rediscovered
at Berlin's Charite University Hospital in 2005 and are believed to
belong to Namibia's Nama and Herero ethnic peoples. They consist of 15
males, including a three-year-old boy and four females, said Charite
spokeswoman Claudia Peter.
A delegation of over 50 Namibians
traveled last week to Berlin for a handover ceremony before the skulls
were repatriated to Namibia. Members of the delegation read a prayer
outside the hospital before the ceremony.
The skulls have reignited old political tensions between the two countries.
The
Namibian government has, for a number of years, demanded Germany
acknowledge the war as genocide, calling for an apology as well as
reparations.
The German government, which gives development aid
to Namibia has refused to pay reparations. It has, however, expressed
regret for the incident. A statement issued by German Deputy Foreign
Minister, Cornelia Pieper last month read, "We Germans acknowledge and
accept this heavy legacy and the ensuing moral and historical
responsibility to Namibia.
"The German Government is fulfilling
this duty through particularly close bilateral cooperation - and
development cooperation - with Namibia," it continued.
Pieper
added, "I would also like to express my own personal deep regret and
shame for what was done to the ancestors of the tribal representatives
now in Berlin."
STOLEN AFRICAN SKULLS RETURNED BACK TO NAMIBIA
For his part, the CEO of Charite University
Hospital, Professor Karl Max Einhaupl, apologized to the Namibian
delegation present at the ceremony in Berlin for the role played by
German scientists.
"With this step we face up to an inglorious
chapter of German history," he said. "As a medical doctor and scientist
myself, it is especially painful for me to realize that even physicians
worked in the service of this early form of racism."
Peter said
historians now agree that much of the research undertaken by these early
scientists was a precursor to Nazi ideology and is now universally
acknowledged as a "perverse" science.
Despite years of research little is known about how the 20 people died, said Peter.
"Their
cause of death could not be determined. Three skulls showed signs of
lack of nutrition, but there was no sign of a violent death," she said.
But,
she stated, this did not rule out the possibility the skulls belonged
to victims of the conflict, with many thousands of people dying of
starvation and exhaustion in camps set up by German colonial forces."
Friday, April 11, 2014
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)


0 comments:
Post a Comment