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‘The money is a token.’ Why Namibia’s peoples feel ignored by reparations.

The first time Laidlaw Peringanda visited the edge of the Namib Desert in Swakopmund, he collapsed at the location of what is today considered the first genocide of the 20th century.

The genocide, carried out by Germans between 1904 and 1908 when they controlled the colony of South West Africa, was directed at the Herero and Nama people of modern-day Namibia.

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An apology for a colonial-era genocide came with an offer of reparations. But descendants of the victims say they were ignored during negotiations, and the lack of respect did more harm by reinforcing their powerlessness.

“Everything I do is to keep the memory of my family alive,” Mr. Peringanda says.

Germany and Namibia announced they’d reached a joint declaration on the genocide in 2021: Germany apologized and offered to pay €1.1 billion over 30 years. One would think that Mr. Peringanda would be among the first to support the deal. Instead, he is one of thousands of Herero and Nama people who have rejected it – and are suing the Namibian government.

The attempts at restitution come when Europeans have faced calls for more accountability for colonial injustice. But for many descendants, the negotiation between the governments of Germany and Namibia failed at reconciliation because it was signed without the approval of the Herero and Nama peoples.

“You cannot say, ‘I apologize,’ without talking to me,” says Sima Luipert, a representative of one of the groups. “And therefore, the money is a token in order for Germany to cleanse itself from its colonial guilt. It is not meant for me, the descendant. It is meant to soothe the ego of Germany.”

Laidlaw Peringanda walks solemnly across the sand, where rocks mark the gravesites of victims killed and left unidentified in what is today considered the first genocide of the 20th century.

It was at this site, on the edge of the Namib Desert in Swakopmund, where Mr. Peringanda collapsed the first time he visited.

The genocide, carried out by Germans between 1904 and 1908 when they controlled the colony of South West Africa, was directed at the Herero and Nama people of modern-day Namibia.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

An apology for a colonial-era genocide came with an offer of reparations. But descendants of the victims say they were ignored during negotiations, and the lack of respect did more harm by reinforcing their powerlessness.

Mr. Peringanda’s great-grandmother had told him stories about her time as a prisoner in a concentration camp in this coastal city. But those accounts – how their people’s traditions were stamped out and how their lands and way of life were stolen – suddenly became real in that moment in 2015. They ignited in him an activist’s drive for justice.

“Everything I do is to keep the memory of my family alive,” Mr. Peringanda says.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Historic photos from the genocide era hang on the wall of Laidlaw Peringanda’s Genocide Museum of Swakopmund, July 20, 2023, in Namibia. During the German colonial era, thousands of Herero and Nama people died in concentration camps and were buried in unmarked graves. Mr. Peringanda’s great-grandmother lived in a concentration camp where she was raped and forced to mutilate the skulls of her relatives.

Ever since, he has been at the forefront of a truth-seeking mission, creating the Swakopmund Genocide Museum, pushing to have the graves investigated with radar-penetrating technology, protesting replicas that glorify Germany’s colonial past, and defacing those that still stand in this town.

So when Germany and Namibia announced they’d reached a joint declaration on the genocide in 2021 – Germany apologized and offered to pay €1.1 billion over 30 years – one would think that Mr. Peringanda would be among the first to support it. Instead, he is one of thousands of Herero and Nama people who have rejected the deal – taking the Namibian government to court over it this year.

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