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‘I WAS AFRAID OF SAMUEL, THEREFORE I CAME TO SEKGOMA’: HERERO REFUGEES AND PATRONAGE POLITICS IN NGAMILAND, BECHUANALAND PROTECTORATE, 1890–1914

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2002

JAN-BART GEWALD
Affiliation:
University of Cologne

Abstract

Writers dealing with the Herero of Botswana have tended mostly to deal with them as a single homogeneous whole. Concentrating on Ngamiland, this article outlines and discusses the arrival, at different times and for different reasons, of various groups of Herero into the territory. The article indicates that prior to the Herero–German war of 1904, the majority of Herero moved into Ngamiland on account of the activities of German colonizers and the Herero chief, Samuel Maharero. In Ngamiland, the Herero immigrants came to form a substantial source of support for the Batawana usurper, Sekgoma Letsholathebe. With the outbreak of the Herero–German war, Herero who had fled Namibia on earlier occasions now opposed the move of Samuel Maharero into Ngamiland, and found themselves supported by Sekgoma Letsholathebe. Following the deposition of Sekgoma in a coup, the position of Herero who had supported Sekgoma became increasingly tenuous and led to their move out of Ngamiland. Overall, the article presents a case study of the manner in which, in seeking to strengthen their positions within host communities, refugees of necessity come to be bound up in the internal politics of such communities.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This article is based on fieldwork and archival research conducted in Botswana and Namibia between 1991 and 1997. The author gratefully acknowledges the funding of the Netherlands Organization for Tropical Research (WOTRO W 24-521) and the German Research Foundation (SFB 389 C7). I am grateful to the Journal's anonymous readers, as well as to B. Morton, N. Parsons and R. Ross, who read and commented on earlier drafts of this article. K. Sadr kindly drew the map.