Thanks for all the engagement on this video. I want to take a moment to address some of the common arguments I’ve seen in the comments: 1)”The land wasn’t stolen-it was bought.” Let’s be clear: the land was bought by colonizers, from colonizers, after it was stolen from Indigenous people through violence and genocide. Calling that legitimate is ignoring the injustice at the root of these transactions! 2)“The land is tough to farm, and Indigenous people didn’t have the knowledge.” This is simply false. Indigenous communities lived off the land sustainably for centuries. The lands with abundant water resources, like Waterberg, were seized through genocide and force. The dispossession of Indigenous people destroyed their ability to continue these practices! 3)”Colonialism is the past; why blame descendants?” While colonialism may be considered “the past,” its legacies persist in systemic inequalities and unresolved grievances. Plus, as long as statues, flags and other symbols which glorify the German colonial period persist, and their meanings are not explicitly revoked, the past remains the present! And until Germany includes the genocides they committed in Namibia and other African countries in their national history, and until the land is redistributed, WE WILL NOT BE SILENT!!! Finally, I encourage everyone to explore the work of Forensic Architecture, a research agency that investigates human rights violations through architectural and media analysis. Their project on the Namibian genocide carefully reconstructs historical events to support demands for land restitution and reparations. Learn more here: forensic-architecture.org/investigation/restituting-evidence-genocide-and-reparations-in-german-colonial-namibia-phase-1 Let’s continue this dialogue with respect and a commitment to understanding the complexities of history and its enduring impact.
@thebossman487517 күн бұрын
@planB-BacktoAfrica Do these people seriously believe that Africans don't know how to farm? Africans are farming all over Africa. I just got back from Kenya and most families farm in some ways outside of Nairobi. This racist assertion has been used against Zimbabweans and South Africans as justification to steal land from them.
@arvidsfar158017 күн бұрын
@@qrankmw. Mbote na biso. Olabaka Lingala papa? Kitoko makasi !
@XY-rh3if17 күн бұрын
This is one of the most shocking and most captivating colonial stories that I've ever listened to. As African, I can't help but harbor some fear for the White Man considering the hurrible experiences that people of African descent endure all across the western world, particularly in the United States where I lived for 25 years until the year 2020.
@balafama212017 күн бұрын
Firstly i must state that this violent colonialism was horrible and my heart went out to the Herero people when i first heard this story about a year ago. However ,What did land redistribution do in Zimbabwe? Plunged a thriving country that was the bread basket of Southern Africa into a failed starving state, because the rural Zimbabweans didn't know how to run modern mechanized large scale farming. What did it achieve in all the communist countries were such things were implemented? All plunged into poverty/famine.China,USSR,North Korea,Cuba etc Such vast Lands should be given to farmers and agricultural corporations that have expertise in mechanized modern large scale farming. People also have to have a passion for farming not just acquiring land ,that's why successful farms stay in families for generations and people without a passion for farming usually fail.The farmers can be made to pay a bit more in taxes, reparations should be given to the indigenes and some land can be redistributed for housing or Govt/communal use, but agriculture and cattle rearing should be left in the hands of experts or else you will have USSR or North korean style famine with mass deaths or hyperinflation. You can sit in a classroom and teach all day about racism and colonialism and make "academic" recommendations but the practical implications do not always pan out for the best,in reality. You were shocked at certain things because you expected indigenous Namibians to be more hateful and pro active about driving every last German off their land,but the reality is that colonist/indigene relationships are a bit more complex, just like most human interactions.The same colonists who killed their ancestors later built hospitals which saved their kids and educated them.They now share similar religions, they trade together, some earn their living by working in German companies, etc.I do support the ongoing efforts to rename streets and teach proper history. Lastly, when we get so riled up hearing the atrocities of colonialism, we must also not lose sight of the abuse and genocide of Africans by their own Govts and fellow Africans.The poverty/underdevelopment that so many in Africa endure is because of corruption by Africans themselves.If you ask me ,those abuses are what ails the continent today ,more than colonialism. Unfortunately, Colonialism was a symptom of a deeper issue. 400yrs after European colonialism ,which was made possible because Africans didn't have guns, no African country still manufactures weapons......see my drift. Africans are at the mercy of the prevailing Western led human rights ideology. There isn't a single subsaharan African country that can take on any Western country or East Asian Nation like China in the event of an invasion today.America/China will not invade North korea because they developed nukes after the Korean war.
@thebossman487517 күн бұрын
@balafama2120 The illegal European sanctions destroyed Zimbabwe. Get yr facts right. Mugabe was right to take back the land
@Tuminkie18 күн бұрын
I don't understand why no one has made a movie about about Namibia genocide? Their story needs to be told
@illwitness18 күн бұрын
Because if you were to do so it would take away what little respect the world already has for the west. Germany was involved in massive injustice in the 20th century, not just against the Jewish people but the people of Africa.
@Tadao-Lao-q6t18 күн бұрын
Namibia was the first genocide done by Germany.
@brooksshantal20018 күн бұрын
Lol movies 🎬 are fake ...no movies tell the truth ok
@seva441118 күн бұрын
@Tadao-Lao-q6t How about African genocides against other Africans? Why are they ignored?
@antp190018 күн бұрын
We need a documentary about this.
@Margerita87318 күн бұрын
My grandfather had to run to south africa because of genocide. He was 5 years old. Got lost from his family, and an old lady look after him. He never reconnect with his fam. Thank you for this video. It made me want to go there and reconnect with them. We are from nama and damara.
@GodfreyFortuin-ib3ml18 күн бұрын
My other family fled to Botswana and settled in the town of molepolole 70 klm from Gaborone.In this town the chief made my refugee ancestors part of his tribe thus we were under protection of the British government..My ancestors ran away to escape the genocide in Namibia
@redazema850218 күн бұрын
If you can, you must go now and do something about it.
@jonmaclin834417 күн бұрын
Damn. I'm sorry.
@bonolobosaletse587817 күн бұрын
it was bought with the GENOCIDE BLOOD MONEY BE EXPLICIT, im related to the HERERO Nation
@judywilson21017 күн бұрын
@@Margerita873 you must. DNA can help you accomplish this
@kaiwayytv17 күн бұрын
I'm 🇳🇦 Namibian of the OtjiHerero tribe. Thank you for sharing the truth.
@Imran-p6l18 күн бұрын
The most sad part of one person owning such huge land in Namibia is that, No person from Namibia can own the same size of land in Germany 😢😢
@jakosalem18 күн бұрын
farms are not that profitable. we have land reform in the philippines where the lands were distributed to the poor. those lands go to waste, not much agriculture, and the farmers remain poor or even poorer than before.
@brightlight721718 күн бұрын
@@jakosalemYou don't get it. It's not about farming. It's about disturbing the land to the rightful owners.
@ogumkainnocent36518 күн бұрын
@@jakosalemPhilippines are naturally poor both in land and human resources
@EightyFour-s3z18 күн бұрын
The Germans have dignity and self respect. That’s why.
@charleslobe-manga948318 күн бұрын
@EightyFour-s3z Yeah, that's why there are still US troops in Germany up to this day to keep an eye on them. You are always weaker than someone else.
@kaybeekaybee287418 күн бұрын
As a Namibian, in particular a Herero you told our story with so much passion, thank you!
@fennimegamenoangukku613818 күн бұрын
❤
@planB-BacktoAfrica18 күн бұрын
Thank you so much. I stand with you 🫶🏾
@samuelchukwuebuka493418 күн бұрын
What are you Namibians doing against this inhumanity?
@infoinfos-rq9tr18 күн бұрын
@@samuelchukwuebuka4934 yes, what will do about it?
@youcanhodl202418 күн бұрын
Yo, put pressure on your leaders to even things out
@NgombeKouho14 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this video, I'm from Namibia and am writing a memoir growing up in Namibia and not learning about this history, I appreciate that you are spreading the word. We ultimately want our land back.
@misondoze643413 күн бұрын
I have been to Namibia and loved the country so muchi wanted to relocate. I never knew this history. I hope Namibia joins all the African countries that are rising up and regaining their power against these colonial bruts
@asialee810213 күн бұрын
We want our land back to in turtle island aka USA but we won't get it begging and asking politely
@Missforexcharts13 күн бұрын
I’m from Namibia too, we were never told the brutality apart from we were colonised that’s all, I am learning a lot about African history which many never knew 😢😢😢😢
@ritaaraya343913 күн бұрын
Thank you so much. You are Hero of the Africans. ❤😂😢
@odellowe734018 күн бұрын
Its very simple, they can change the law and take back the land, uganda and zimbabwe did it, the namibia government are a joke, it take 15 minutes to change the law and give them 90 days to vacate
@JohnThomas-li2vi18 күн бұрын
That's it. And if they refuse, we'll study the history of Vietnam, North Korea and Algeria, you'll get the message.
@ggmb103218 күн бұрын
Uganda is going to do it again because Museveni and his Rwandese have been taking Uganda’s property since Museveni came. But Namibian needs a leader like Idi Amin
@MarkChavez-d7z18 күн бұрын
What they did in this country will soon come back to them by the generation of today in Namibia, they w drive them out and it won't be long. They will do them like the Haitians did to the French
@vicetsebeth218718 күн бұрын
That is a good idea. Take back everything. THEY will come to rebuild the country in 50 years. Just like in Zimbabwe. Namibia is one of the least populated countries. The problem is you want to take whatever others have built up. There is plenty of land, you just can't do anything with it....
@bapalorininya812818 күн бұрын
Doesn't matter,whether in usage or not it has to revert to the original people or state.
@kudrah18 күн бұрын
The Namibians need to take their land back that was taken unjustly.
@kaulumapaulus923418 күн бұрын
we are trying but the laws are in their favour from the first days, plus the western countries are against it. but we still trying.
@evelynemugeni236918 күн бұрын
An too make children bcz is less peoples there I don’t what Germany did to them in the past 😢big country but only 3millions and 1millions are Germany descendants 😢
@africaine488918 күн бұрын
@@kaulumapaulus9234that's when u don't care about what the west think and take it by force. Like if a family have 100 acres take 95 and leave them with 5 acres
@osricjohnson323518 күн бұрын
Well, @@evelynemugeni2369, there was mass genocide of the indigenous people.
@ellishaindobo179418 күн бұрын
@giantgrow In our lifetime
@neverlookback124417 күн бұрын
In Somalia 🇸🇴 the Italians wanted to do the same they were kicked out in 3 days, I rather be poor in my country than to be colonized by Europeans
@AfricanMaverick16 күн бұрын
Then why plenty migrate to Europe?
@Incognitooooooooooooooo16 күн бұрын
I better go to Namibia rather than Somalia Somalia is much worser
@neverlookback124416 күн бұрын
@@AfricanMaverick there are 35 million Somalis living in Somalia we we doing well
@arr857716 күн бұрын
@@AfricanMavericksome migrate but majority live in africa. Africans in europe ~8 mlns, in Africa ~1 bln
@AbdifatahAden-qj9tb15 күн бұрын
This is the mentality Namibia is weak they are not a Fighters they need to wake up and start a revolution. In Somalia we never adopted the colonists language. We have our own language and we write.
@guybraeken968018 күн бұрын
Dear Weyni, as a son of a Belgian Colonial father in Congo, I admire your courage to speak out like this! Please continue!!
@donnaprice643417 күн бұрын
Yes, important historical awareness. Well said, Belgian-colonizer's-Congo-son. Land is to be shared. Share; operative word. So much more to cultural identity than just outright land ownership. Ask Eddie Mabo. RIP.
@yonasghebre794017 күн бұрын
She didn't talk about her country which owns the land 100% by local and the country poor than namibia
@gagoomt407616 күн бұрын
@@yonasghebre7940that’s changing soon - it will be finfinee. You can’t say Tigrayans benefited from tplf most did not.
@frankyyaggabot622215 күн бұрын
@@yonasghebre7940 Yes, I want to hear her talk about her own country which only gave up slavery in 1943 (one of the last African countries to do so). It is estimated at the time that almost 1 in 3 Ethiopians was a slave.
@Martin-jc3un18 күн бұрын
The Namibians need to deal with the land issue themselves because Germany is never going to help. The longer they wait the harder it'll be.
@April1999-CAN18 күн бұрын
Germary owns Namibia.
@emmanueltugume24918 күн бұрын
There are no indigenous people, they were massacred. The one left are weak to defend themselves apart from working as slaves in Germany Farms.
@annemikestuurland108218 күн бұрын
@@April1999-CAN Not for long.
@synaestesia-bg3ew18 күн бұрын
Without the Germen, Namibia would still be a shit hole like Nigeria today. You have a peaceful country, leave it that way. If the economy work and people can live, why attacking whites to commit the same mistake that south Africa and Zimbabwe did.
@synaestesia-bg3ew18 күн бұрын
@@April1999-CANNamibia is independent
@sethbardu8 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing this info. You are much appreciated. Keep up the good work
@heathermtetwa157918 күн бұрын
The biggest problem we have on the continent is the old leaders who are still afraid of their slave owners and colonisers. We need young leaders like President Ibrahim Traore in Burkina Faso. We need leaders who fully understand the same tactics they use and how to overcome them. Unity is key, doing what Zimbabwe and Haiti alone makes you a target and you are used as an example. But if the whole continent acts in union we will know who has power and who's fake. Zimbabwe was threatened by the west, they wanted to use military force like they did in Lybia. They chose devaluation of their currency, and to date they don't have a stable currency. It's by design by the west.
@jment3417 күн бұрын
Exactly.
@Higin-cf9pr17 күн бұрын
Now there an alternative to western monetary system, Zimbabwe will saved by the BRICS system, at least they've got back their land.
@willkrummeck17 күн бұрын
Yeah wee need both the world can have 3 major trade nexus. We need to keep the roads and houses infrastructures
@trivagravia483717 күн бұрын
Zimbabwean leadership will say to you "HOLD MY BEER" Loool
@TickleThatFancy17 күн бұрын
Yes❤
@judywilson21018 күн бұрын
I travelled there in 2022. As my plain entered the Namibian airspace I saw the farms. I instantly knew the color of the owners. Vast stretches of land few houses. When i Landed i asked my driver to take me to where native Africans lived. He asked if i had no interest in the wildlife . I responded: I came to see the people not the animals. He took me to Soweto. A place where plants cannot grow, cows cannot graze, no indoor plumbing; it was appalling. I wondered why the government did not remove these intruders from their land. We have much to do to free ourselves. The men without knees embodied evil and to this day continue to perpetrate their evil. I was shocked. Thank you for this video. I concur with your presentation. Thank you
@M_KK18 күн бұрын
Are you sure you came to Namibia? The only Soweto I know in Namibia is in Katutura, Windhoek. And it is mainly a middle to upper middle class neighborhood. Even ministers live there. Or perhaps you are referring to DRC in Swakopmund. Majority of those inhabitants have land back at the village. Families here own minimum of 5 hectares of land. Don't confuse their urban situation with lack of land. That is simply due to rapid urban migration
@muhammadnawaz503918 күн бұрын
Talking of animals the neo-colonial SWAPO misgovernment treats those animals better than human beings! That is how thorough the neo-colonial slaves in government service Massa so-called 'White' man!
@sbanda190918 күн бұрын
@@M_KKMy brother don't waste your time with these fake pan africanists, we tell them the same thing about the informal settlements in the periphery of south african cities that the inhabitants of those structures have huge tracts of land in their villages and also have livestock, they are in the cities to make more money that they invest back into their villages. People that grew up in the west will unfortunately never understand the mindset of africans.
@brightlight721718 күн бұрын
@@M_KKHow many hectares are owned by whites?
@HesterVictor-sv6ol18 күн бұрын
Soweto is in South Africa.
@WORLD_NATURE_FAN13 күн бұрын
Hello from USA, these are great, informative videos. Thank you for sharing them.
@kanguham36018 күн бұрын
The land of the brave, my motherland, Namibia 🇳🇦 My people went through colonialism, massacre, genocide, concentration camps, We have suffered beyond measure and repair. One day my son will own land in his country.
@afrikanheritage9918 күн бұрын
😭😭😭😭
@planB-BacktoAfrica18 күн бұрын
💔🙏🏾
@phillwainaina725218 күн бұрын
You are just stupid and silent. Why. Don't. Take it. Back
@phillwainaina725218 күн бұрын
It's painful to see why. Namibian. New. President. Is. Still fearful. Like achild.
@bapalorininya812818 күн бұрын
But why. It's seems for the Namibian people it's not a first priority. They are too slow for me
@ReggaePNW18 күн бұрын
When it comes to Africa's land issues, I just can't fathom it out. My heart aches, and my blood pressure starts boiling when I think about injustices against the indigenous people 😢
@MarkChavez-d7z18 күн бұрын
@@ReggaePNW just like me bro
@davidroux798718 күн бұрын
You probably know nothing about Africa
@JamesMutua-e9t18 күн бұрын
only southern africans did not chase the colonial invaders in their land
@brightlight721718 күн бұрын
Not indigenous, locals.
@synaestesia-bg3ew18 күн бұрын
@JamesMutua-e9t Then what are you gonna do after chasing all the whites? Now, you have to replace them with their skills, which are often invaluable. Also, the whites play a role as middlemen between the multitude of tribes, clans and languages. Tell me how is the situation in Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Nigeria?
@afrocentricafrica13 күн бұрын
Powerful lessons and message from this video. The attempt to gag and disown what generations of colonial children have clearly benefited from and continue to, is shocking, in fact INSULTING to Africa collectively! Absolutely, "DON'T BE SILENT!" Thank you very much being very eloquent about this Weyni. You've earned a new subscribe too from Nairobi🔔
@DavidLewis-uh1hj18 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing. A few years ago, I worked with a German who grew up in Namibia. I didn't know the history and saw this man as my colleague and friend. One day he said something which showed his dislike for me as a Black man. There was a hatred which I didn't understand and where it came from. He looked down on the whole continent of Africa. We must work together to unite Africa to regain its dignity lost over the last 500 years. We can do it. We can do it !!!
@dpeasehead18 күн бұрын
@DavidLewis-uh1hj: That man's attitude is common among a lot of white settlers and Indians and Arabs in Africa. Vietnamese and Indonesians did it the right way. Africans thought they could cut deals with hate crazed racist psychopaths backed the self described western human rights champions.
@flowyscreations18 күн бұрын
What are the Namibians - both home and abroad doing to recapture their past? Are the schools and Government doing enough to educate and uplift their people?
@megamind328518 күн бұрын
Nothing, I see many comments of indigenous Namibian saying their country free from racism and they welcome white South African. Go to any video about white South Africa they are there inviting white farmers 😢
@vanessaabisai430017 күн бұрын
Nothing at all it's quite sad
@brianalexander21617 күн бұрын
They are voting for the new colonialists
@Jazz-fg2dm17 күн бұрын
@ Guys, please stop being nasty! We're all Africans and we all face similar problems in our home country, inclusive of diaspora (because American Africans and Caribbean Africans are not better off). I don't know any black nation that is not oppressed by the colonizers. So let's not insult our Namibian brothers and sisters. Instead let's support them if we have the courage to do so. If we ourselves don't have the courage to help the Namibians, then let's not insult the Namibians. Instead, let's spread "LOVE" among us Africans and pave the way to our unification. I invite you all to close this year on a positive note. My best wishes to all my African brothers and sisters world-wide! Happy New Year 2025!
@jackratjinduakambatuku170917 күн бұрын
The disposed, genoicided and the most affected Namibians do not have political power (a consequence of the genocide that deimated their numbers to make them minorities) and can only protest and make noise while the one with power (who were never dispossed) are happy to line their pockets with German development aid and maingtain the status quo.
@BlackySwartbooi16 күн бұрын
It's so touching, as a Nama speaking Namibian, these atrocities cause serious damage to Nama speaking Namibias culturally as well economically. We the decentance of the colonial passed urge the Namibian Government to play the role. Thank you for telling this as it is. Happiest 2025. God blessed
@arvidsfar158015 күн бұрын
I hear you and your sorrow. A very happy and blessed 2025 to you, too. However, back in the days of early German colonialism, one of the reasons for the Ovaherero 'kapteins' to sign treaties were mostly about protection aganist the then ravaging 'Afrikaaners', which, by that time, meant partly Afrikaans and Khoekhoe-speaking, marauding bandits, mostly coming from the southern Griqua Lands, and recruiting some similarly Khoekhoe-speaking Namaqua sub-tribes in what is now Namibia. Those increasing Afrikaaners/Namaqua raids, mostly directed against Ovaherero, forced the then Ovaherero leadership into signing protection contracts, including Samuel Maherero and his father. Except for the Bondelswaarts, Namaqua sub-tribes did not engage in the 1904-08 warfare. One can still read those documents by Samuel Maherero (always being wary about him being partial, however!), because he happened to be one of the first students of Augustineum in Otjimbingwe. Kaptein Maherero was a proliferous writer. May he, as much as the Swaartbooi kapteins, rest in peace.
@robwin886418 күн бұрын
Namibia change all the names to all cities, towns, and streets to African names.its 2025, this is unacceptable!
@zaktaof412118 күн бұрын
NEED TO DO THIS ASAP!
@thamizama590418 күн бұрын
but we also need to build new towns and cities. Changing names of cities and towns build by white people is not enough.
@KaiVaughn0217 күн бұрын
Why? Not your country not your call
@borisleonel828517 күн бұрын
@@KaiVaughn02 is it your country?
@KaiVaughn0217 күн бұрын
@@borisleonel8285 yeah
@deeipinge17818 күн бұрын
Greetings from Namibia, Windhoek. As a San woman, it is heartbreaking to hear about land issues!! Yes, we are constantly in dispute about land here in Namibia, because our land was taken away by Europeans back in Colonial days. Our ancestral land was taken away back on 1954, which is today called ETOSHA NATIONAL PARK!! Till this day, Hai//om San people are fighting to get their ancestral land back. The real owners of land, the San people do not own land in Namibia, that is the most heartbreaking part 😢 Of course, we are fighting and will keep fighting until the government hear our cry!!'unfortunately not only San people faces this land issue, but the rest of the Namibians want ther land back!!
@ricaard695918 күн бұрын
The government is corrupt and weak, but it's our fault we have such a government. We Namibians are far too complacent and tolerate too much. The government knows it can tax those rich farmers and get bribes from the in the form of donations, so they allow them to keep land. We have the power, but we are too reluctant to do anything. Our ancestors proved one man doesn't need so much land, it's a disgrace.
@muhammadnawaz503918 күн бұрын
We are ready to help grab back the land by any means necessary!
@planB-BacktoAfrica18 күн бұрын
It breaks my heart to hear and see all this 💔 I wonder what can be done? I would love to see more Namibian people on the world stage telling and reclaiming their own story🙏🏾
@Tadao-Lao-q6t18 күн бұрын
I understand why Zimbabwe did what it did now.
@TitusTheJudean18 күн бұрын
That's true the land 1st belongs to the San people We Bantu & Nama people like the Owambo Herero and Kavango found the Sam people here
@jimmyfisher794117 күн бұрын
No land stolen can be called legally sold to another. No matter how many hands it is passed to, stolen is stolen.
@nubitgharaphaelbanti496518 күн бұрын
After watching this master piece I went straight and hit the subscribe button… i mean German colonial atrocities is everywhere on the continent and stretches right up to my backyard. I’m watching this masterpiece at time when I’m thinking of conducting a PhD research on this subject matter on colonialism and its legacy today on the entire African continent. Thank you for this!
@albertok543118 күн бұрын
Me too. That is exactle what i did.
@petermacharia717118 күн бұрын
Can we join hands? Mine will be a masters thesis in kenya
@nubitgharaphaelbanti496518 күн бұрын
@@petermacharia7171 sure, I mean why not!
@petermacharia717118 күн бұрын
@nubitgharaphaelbanti4965 yes. 💯
@kayleelouw80113 күн бұрын
People always exclude the Basters people.
@our10picks1818 күн бұрын
This is the country that’s consistently ranked as having the best road network in Africa! It’s truly heartbreaking what the indigenous population went through in the hands of the colonizers! Watching from kenya 🇰🇪
@RESAHUTEHUT-SOKHOI73.18 күн бұрын
Those are not indigenous peoples,the real once were massacre,genocided hunted for over 500years by British empire Belgium France Portuguese combined but people don't want to talk about it.
@RESAHUTEHUT-SOKHOI73.18 күн бұрын
@giantgrow It is not the same Khoisan people suffered at the hands of blacks and Europeans,Namibia was never colonize by Germans but it was under protection of Germany against blacks and European nations,Khoisan Emperor made the deal with Germany royal house to protect the land and his people this groups that are in the country today allied with Europeans to destroy the country and they took over the land,Emperors descendents have to hide until Osiris comes back.
@synaestesia-bg3ew18 күн бұрын
@@our10picks18 please fix the rest of Africa first before criticising Namibia
@kawiche491117 күн бұрын
@@synaestesia-bg3ewNamibia is not German, the land must be returned to indigenous, we will state with fixing you Namibia, The puppet of West must go
@synaestesia-bg3ew17 күн бұрын
@kawiche4911 There are no indigenous, we are all transient people passing through. White people did a good Job modernizing the country, let them continue. We could cohabitate and transform Namibia into an example of Africa's .
@rpinter67715 күн бұрын
You appropriately raise awareness of the German colonial atrocities but you should clarify that Namibia was taken from Germany after WW1. The League of Nations gave it to South Africa. Germany had nothing to say in Namibia after that point. Germans were kept busy by their own destruction and occupation by foreigners.
@taharka389718 күн бұрын
As an African American ,this is the reason I love Nigeria so much. They own 99% of their land and business.
@Tatenda7118 күн бұрын
Zimbabweans now own most of their land and that's why they hate Mugabe. Mugabe was not perfect just like any other president but he tried.
@masjm727818 күн бұрын
They OWN the LAND But BROKE Impoverished just like Zimbabwe just BIG ignorant Mouths Reign Supreme While their PEOPLE Starve and are Homeless , AND Black Americans likes to JUDGE and insert themselves in OTHER CountY'S Affairs Disguised as PAN Africans, Meantime their NEIGHBOURHOODS are Controlled by Local GANGS and Mass Shootings?GO Figure, Try to Humble yourself and Observe and Learn.Especially an Ethiopian Who's People are Desperate to leave their Country to START SPAZZA Shops selling Epired Food For Quick Money. You PEOPLE are the ENEMY of AFRICA, You Should be Ashamed youselves HYPOCRITES.
@taharka389718 күн бұрын
@masjm7278 You watch too much cnn and bbc. No gang controls our community. AA are the richest black people in the world. If we were a country, we would be the tents richest country in the world. We invented almost everything of value in America. Google black inventors and scientists of America and learn our true history. America would not be powerful and rich without AA. We are the best Americans in history. Do your research fool!!!!
@taharka389718 күн бұрын
@masjm7278 you must be from SA. An African country that is completely controlled economically by white people. Absolutely pathetic. So is namibia. You need to travel to Nigeria to see how they really live. They have poor. Middle class and rich people just like any other country. The difference is that unlike SA and namibia, they actually own their land.
@taharka389718 күн бұрын
@masjm7278 you are lucky you tube removed my comment
@PleasantGreetings2u17 күн бұрын
The fact that 44% of the land in Namibia is owned by Europeans is unacceptable! I'm African American from the US. For the Namibia government to allow that to happen long after they received their independence from Germany is evil. To learn that some of the land is now owned by Europeans that are not descended from former Namibia colonizers is terrible. I agree that the people of Namibia need to get all of their land back.
@Simphiweful16 күн бұрын
In the entire America land is owned by Europeans and everyone speaks European languages 😢
@pietiegrobbelaar398916 күн бұрын
What about all the Communial Land?
@PleasantGreetings2u15 күн бұрын
@@Simphiweful I'm African American and my family still owns the lands that our great grandparents and our grandparents bought after slavey ended in these here Divided States of America. However, we do pay the annual taxes on the land to our local county government. In most states, it is called property tax. In South Carolina, the land that was passed down from our ancestors is called heirs property. The property tax laws vary from state to state in the US. In South Carolina, if you don't pay your land tax, your land will be auctioned off to buyers. If someone pays your land tax before an auction when they see that it's unpaid, they become owner of the land if the land tax is not paid by you within one year. You do have one year to pay the land tax and you can regain your land back. The county them repays the money back to the buyer or the person who paid your land tax. if you pay your land tax off within one year of the due date, you won't lose your land.
@PleasantGreetings2u15 күн бұрын
@@pietiegrobbelaar3989 The closest thing to communal land in South Carolina is Heirs property which is land that's been passed down to family members who are heirs/descendants of the landowner. Heirs property is when the original land deed is still in the name of the deceased last landowner. in Africa, communal land is owned outright by the family descendants and no taxes are paid on the communal land. However, here in the US, property taxes are paid on heirs property and on residential property and commercial property. Europeans brought the land taxes system to the US from Europe. Property taxes in the US are used by the counties to fund county services like schools and education, law enforcement and fire services, libraries, roads and infrastructure and parks & recreation.
@АртурДжумашев-н3д15 күн бұрын
Независимость Намибия получила от юар , а не от Германии
@SHaile-xu9ub18 күн бұрын
Dear Weini Tesfai, Well done! It is great to see you travelling with your children, giving them the best education on the African continent, and on the way confronting and exposing the hypocrisy on the injustice Africans are facing in such a massive manner.
@GodfreyFortuin-ib3ml18 күн бұрын
I am a descendant of the Khoisan people of the griqua tribe.When diamonds were discovered on our in the Kimberley area.The British government annexed our land and our people were sent on a trial of tears.That is how the big companies took over and grew rich on the dispossession of our land.
@HesterVictor-sv6ol18 күн бұрын
Aweh Godfrey, actually the diamond fields were discovered on Boer land and the British stole it from the Orange Free State... you guys got into bed with them. I was born in Kimberley.
@sunnya431017 күн бұрын
@@HesterVictor-sv6ol Boer land is The Netherlands
@AntoniodaGraca-j2b17 күн бұрын
@@HesterVictor-sv6olyou meen diamond in Zeeland the Netherlands!😂😂😂
@HesterVictor-sv6ol17 күн бұрын
@sunnya4310 wrong. Boer land is Eurasia, southern & northern africa, new zealand, australia, north and south america, greenland, antarctica, the moon and wherever the fuck we feel like going next. Hurry up with the bags. That last part was a joke. I think weve learned our lesson and we'll go it alone this time. Youre welcome to stay behind and starve in any of the places we leave over. 🤙
@ebenezerakhideno848715 күн бұрын
What are your people doing about asking the mining companies for compensation, infrastructure and social welfare services for the displaced people?
@sekelanidaka169316 күн бұрын
Thanks so much my sister. I am a member of African Youth Humanitarian Association. Please keep up with the good work
@1muslim86918 күн бұрын
as ethiopian i cant watch this more than half of it and am ashamed that AU is in my city
@ricardozane745518 күн бұрын
Then they call us savages
@Chang-y8x16 күн бұрын
Wow. Thank you so much for the interesting information on Namibia. Another got wrenching history indeed.
@shareefs18 күн бұрын
Absolutely some of the best journalism out there. You probably do not consider yourself a journalist but this is journalism. Thank you for all what you do
@fennimegamenoangukku613818 күн бұрын
❤
@firstsecrets18 күн бұрын
😎 💜 👉✅ 🚀 💎🔥 I can"t agree more
@shareefs18 күн бұрын
@@firstsecrets ❤️
@shareefs18 күн бұрын
@@firstsecrets ❤️
@zmm548918 күн бұрын
German genocide in Namibia is well documented. Not sure why a Mugabe has not corrected this wrong in Namibia.
@M_KK18 күн бұрын
What has Mugabe got to do with Namibia?
@p.millard55718 күн бұрын
Mugabe is dead and was not Namibian.
@timotheusn.h.nakashona100118 күн бұрын
@zmm5489 and Zimbabwe is so prosperous because of Mugabe. I'm moving there next year.
@clivewatson803818 күн бұрын
@@M_KK I believe he ment why no Namibian have the balls to take the land back
@clivewatson803818 күн бұрын
@@timotheusn.h.nakashona1001 If you accept prosperity with whites then Namibia or SA is your country. Then you must accept the inferior of the African
@dr.mukukihante767317 күн бұрын
0.03% people owning 44% of the country's land? It is extremely unjustifiable
@ngana875518 күн бұрын
3:01 min 43,000 hectares = 106,000 acres or 429 sq kilometers. If it were a country, it would be about the size of Barbados (430 sq km).
@Numbers-lq2zo18 күн бұрын
I’m in America…thanks for the clarity!!
@muhammadnawaz503918 күн бұрын
Just imagine
@arvidsfar158018 күн бұрын
43,000 hectares are exactly 430 square kilometres (it's metric).
@thebossman487518 күн бұрын
That's not including the 'plots' of land that are 100,000 hectares
@arvidsfar158017 күн бұрын
@@thebossman4875 Namibia is a vast country. Even now, we're only about 3 millions in a territory that is as large as several other countries, taken together. Area as a metric doesn't equal into anything commercially relevant, unless some are speculating about mining, petroleum or other industry settlement. Namibians are commonly obsessed with the idea that land ownership translates into anything rewarding. I'd suspect most people commenting on this video have never even experienced life on a Namibian farm and would probably not be willing to have their manicured fingernails dirty with such ugly peasant's work.
@SizzlesDiaries17 күн бұрын
As a Namibian it is our sad reality.
@dadao856415 күн бұрын
You guys are weak
@Boer165214 күн бұрын
Ja 😂 woher kommt du
@arescellius464814 күн бұрын
What are you waiting for? REVOLT (USE SOCIAL MEDIA TO ORGANISE)
@SeventySevenTimesSeventySeven14 күн бұрын
They're not weak. The Boers stole their land and divided it between themselves, the Germans and other European settlers. Same thing in South Africa, Zimbabwe & Kenya. Are they weak too?!
@dadao856413 күн бұрын
@SeventySevenTimesSeventySeven the others have been fighting..Zimbabwe took their land back... Namibians are too passive🤷🏾🤷🏾..21st cenntury. The time has come!!
@lojomonbiwott59407 күн бұрын
I visit Namibia as well as Zimbabwe, not so many years after they had attained Independence. As an African who grew up during the fight for Independence in Kenya, I got this feeling that the citizens of these countries had been so brutalised that they became numb. Thank you for 'feeling and seeing' the inhumane treatment they are still being subjected to in their own countries.
@janicejohnson-i8l18 күн бұрын
Thank you! I am from South Africa. I am part of the "coloured" race in South Africa. I am the direct result of may years of colonization. I am now in my later stage of my life I am learning about the true history of South Africa which was omitted from our history which is taught in school. So most people in SA have no clue of their past. We were taught complete lies in school and as stated MOST South Africans have no clue of their past. I am learning the truth of my past through people like yourself who bring the facts through real experiences of what has happened in African and what is still happenng in South Africa and Africa. Thank you...
@FinancialConsultdotcodotza18 күн бұрын
Truth is nobody owns anything by just being born on a piece of land. It's nobody's land and value is created by working the land
@Jazz-fg2dm18 күн бұрын
>>I am part of the "coloured" race in South Africa There's no race called "coloured". This is a pure and malefic invention of the colonizers and you're still believing in this lie until today. This says a lot about yourself.
@NkosikhonaMdluli18 күн бұрын
Colored are not natives or indigenous in africa they are the extention of White settlers
@thatpak17 күн бұрын
I agree. You are a black african woman my sister. Apartheid invented this “colored” thing to divide and conquer our people✊🏾
@OneTinyPlanet_JumpOffIf2Big16 күн бұрын
Colonialism continues and remains truly barbaric. They even "coloured" some? Without ever accepting they must by that logic be "colourless" - when true white has all the colours of the rainbow inside. People institutionalising blind folly, and feeling superior for it. Hope humanity dismantles this nonsense in our lifetime for the sake of a beautiful world forgone.
@johannaashimbanga160017 күн бұрын
Instead of learning about the Namibian genocide, we were taught more about Hitler, the Berlin Conference, and the stories of the Big Three in school. I even have a friend in Namibia named Hitler. I also saw a Lothar von Trotha's grave in the Fish River Canyon.
@eswaribalan16414 күн бұрын
😢😢😢😮😮😢
@nepiahemopo170213 күн бұрын
How old are you?
@johannaashimbanga160013 күн бұрын
Am 42 years old.
@nepiahemopo170213 күн бұрын
@johannaashimbanga1600 I struggle to believe anyone would name a son Hitler. You're having a laugh.
@johannaashimbanga160013 күн бұрын
@nepiahemopo1702 Is that name still existing here in Germany?
@providetriggersforevolutio37483 күн бұрын
That was amazingly presented! Thanks for broadening my scope on Namibia’s history!
@planB-BacktoAfrica3 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@nnekaruizmontalvo657318 күн бұрын
How can we heal from this type of extreme trauma? Any advice you can give would be greatly appreciated.
@octoroogoonerguy208118 күн бұрын
OLD TESTIMONY RETRIBUTION.
@de-sh10918 күн бұрын
It starts with correcting the injustice that was done, reconciliation is not effective without correcting (reclaiming) our land, it's the only way we can also accomodate those in the diaspora. Land is everything, that's why even those who took it know it
@victorlionelnazaire68518 күн бұрын
How to recover from such a trauma ? 1 Putting the light on the perpetrators ( German and Afrikaner) actions through videos and films worldwide ( in Pekin, in Moscow, in New Delhi, in Vietnam, in Algeria) 2 in educating the new elected representatives ( Legislators) in Namibia to pass laws to correct this injustice 3 in legislating a program to make it mandatory for all senior high school graduates in Namibia to visit museum section on genocide and colonization and submit a related one-page paper retroaction.
@hurrekoje214618 күн бұрын
Confidently embody the strength and resilience of Horn of African people. Dive into their history, research their strategies, and share your thoughts on their resistance against colonizers!
@africaine488918 күн бұрын
It starts by giving the land back
@razackndeze-pv5bm18 күн бұрын
Only Namibian new generations going to change everything one day, things can't continue this way.
@kingmaafa12018 күн бұрын
That’s why some nefarious ppl are trying to push a certain agenda 😮
@razackndeze-pv5bm18 күн бұрын
@giantgrow wht history...absolutely nonsense, tell me where in this world any coloniser own over 50acre of land, no where only in Namibia!!! History shows that everything is possible, near example is Mugabe in Zimbabwe, he shows that can be done ✔️.
@lorainethompson652716 күн бұрын
Very interesting information about Namibia, I am Jamaican and my daughter went to Namibia in 2023 and said it is one of the most beautiful country on the African continent. She has visited several other African countries.
@KTjnr201118 күн бұрын
What a well done yet heart wrenching piece! An eye opener to the evil and unacceptable state of affairs. Perhaps the best podcast i have listened from you. Keep on Weyni!
@richardndatabaye961517 күн бұрын
I secretly believe that same thing apply to Kenya. British owns a huge portion of Kenyan land
@frankyyaggabot622216 күн бұрын
@@richardndatabaye9615 You secretly believe? In other words you don't know!
@markmendez101415 күн бұрын
@@richardndatabaye9615 It's tiny. I believe +98% of land in Kenya belongs to Kenya.
@jessicahijarunguru411718 күн бұрын
As a Namibian, thanks for shedding light on the farm issues, as we speak many Namibians dont even own land, in their own country. The story is just too painful, but that's the reality.
@deeipinge17818 күн бұрын
As a Namibian too, yes so true. True land owners don't own land, that's sad!!" We want our land back..
@lenniefei671018 күн бұрын
I BLAME ALL OF U AS A PEOPLE !!!! NO ONE WILL LOOK AFTER YOUR GRIEVANCES BUT YOUR OWN SELVES !!!!!
@jessicahijarunguru411718 күн бұрын
@deeipinge178 absolutely,
@chrisalmighty18 күн бұрын
Start mobilising and change the law to take your land back. We did it in Uganda. When we got our independence, all took back all land owned by the British in our country. It was called “Crown land”. We made it government land and Ugandans started owning it. Zimbabwe did it too. The Western world put sanctions on them to cripple their economy but now they are slowly recovering with their land fully in their hands. They then started spreading propaganda that Zimbabwean economy was collapsing due to failure to manage the farms but really it was the sanctions crippling them. They slowly learnt how to live with them painfully but resiliently
@jessicahijarunguru411718 күн бұрын
@chrisalmighty that's the spirit, thnks for sharing
@likiusefraim79514 күн бұрын
First and foremost, I want to acknowledge your remarkable research and hard work. I truly appreciate your efforts to educate and raise awareness about our history as Namibians, particularly the suffering we endured during the German colonial genocide. It is unfortunate and shameful that many people, both in Germany and across Africa, were never taught about this dark chapter of history. Thank you for addressing the important issue of our stolen land. This land rightfully belongs to the native indigenous people, and there must be a fair way to return it or ensure it is shared equally. Thank you once again for your dedication and concern.
@dochere-bolelwang18 күн бұрын
The horrors our Namibian brothers and sisters went through are harrowing even today and the landlessness and poverty they have spawned are still with us.. Minus the horrific genocide besides the settlers' superiority of armaments against blacks, South Africa is no different. All these injustices have been swept under the proverbial carpet by the Anglo-Saxon-imposed Constitutions here in South Africa, and most probably in Namibia and Zimbabwe as well. The liberation movements which entered into negotiations with colonial powers and their Western sponsors did so in good faith, but were naive not see the colonists evil hand that was behind the writing of hollow Constitutions which preserved/overlooked past injustices while condemning the original inhabitants to perpetual servitude, landlessness and forever injustice .. I must say now we are talking sister.. The African people of today, and the people of the world need to hear this badly.. Thanks for another very awesome content..
@chrisalmighty18 күн бұрын
The current African governments can take back the land but they are cowards. Zimbabwe did it. Uganda did it. Zambia, Namibia, South Africa, Mozambique, Kenya are still sleeping.
@AsSeenOnTV089318 күн бұрын
I knew a bit about the horrors indigenous Namibians faced under German colonialism and torture - but I did not know it was this awful. I shouldn't be surprised though. So much of Africa's vast and varied history is obscured and tucked away to justify the continuous violence and exploitation of the multitudes of people there to this day. There's no rush to iron this in because they don't see certain people as equally human. Very happy you're online sharing this historical information!
@AbdulJabbar-hc2wd18 күн бұрын
You would think this precious research uncoveres a troubling period in the timeline of history, you would be wrong. This is the fabric of eternity. The white man does like Gandalf! They have been to Africa many , many , many , times prior to this. They saw their opportunity and decided to entertain themselves, it certainly wasn't for the sake of developing markets or expanding empire. They will return if you don't ecknowledge their ways , it is their purpose.
@chrisking-m7y18 күн бұрын
You became an expert on Namibia after being here for 3 days. Absolutely clueless 😂😂😂. Just because you are black you assume you have something in common with Namibians
@chrisking-m7y18 күн бұрын
You became an expert on Namibia after being here for 3 days. Absolutely clueless 😂😂😂. Just because you are black you assume you have something in common with Namibians
@almightyswizz17 күн бұрын
80k-15 peoples during occupation, let those numbers seep
@CapeCodXploreКүн бұрын
This is an incredible story that needs to be told over and over again. Thanks young lady!
@Spear_8018 күн бұрын
Thank you madam for properly interrogating the brutal history of Namibia. Sadly, this is the reality of many African countries that were under colonial rule, including my beloved Kenya. When one visits Namibia, at first you get fooled by great infrastructures until you meet the locals (indigenous namibians)and feel a sense of hopelessness and desperation among the locals. Lot's of poor black people living on handouts. Huge tracts of land are still owned by the whites. There needs to be land reforms Otherwise we will see what happened in Zimbabwe and South Africa replicating in Namibia. Good piece sister.
@muhammadnawaz503918 күн бұрын
In Zimbabwe not South Afrika please
@Spear_8018 күн бұрын
@@muhammadnawaz5039 yes Zim. But also in SA the cases of xenophobia is because the locals are tired of foreigners coming to take their "opportunities" after years of apartheid.
@afroscorpian974818 күн бұрын
In Zimbabwe we took back our land the same way it was taken from us and we have known no peace since then. Our country and our leaders are consistently demonised in global western media. All this to make us an example to Namibia and south africa in particular on what can happen when black people dare to take back what is theirs. We have been forced to agree to pay back billions to the white farm owners as compensation for 'improvements' that they had made on the seized land. However you cannot keep a people down. I challenge anyone to read about tobacco farming in Zimbabwe. We are the biggest producer in africa and in the top 6 globally competing with giants like China USA Brazil India. Production initially dropped after the land reform but has now recovered and transformed. the structure of the industry has been completely overturned. 1,500 mostly white large-scale tobacco farmers grew 97% of the crop in 2000, but 110,000 small-scale tobacco farmers grew 65% of the crop in 2013. From the seized peri urban farms, many new suburbs have been developed to provide decent homes for black Zimbabweans. Weyni you are welcome to visit Zimbabwe and see for yourself.
@afroscorpian974818 күн бұрын
For those who are asking what the Namibia Swapo government is going to do about their land question, the simple answer is nothing. The example of Zimbabwe had a chilling effect on Namibias black leaders. They are not going to do anything about their land issues. Please Google the talk to al jazeera with the late Namibia president hage geingob im 2023 or 2024 where he openly said that they do not want to end up like Zimbabwe, so they are only going to use constitutional means to redress the land issue. Evidently Mr Geingob did not understand that his country's Lancaster house constitution was designed (just like the south africa constitution and before that the Zimbabwe Lancaster house constitution) to keep land in the hands of the sellers
@ellishaindobo179416 күн бұрын
@@afroscorpian9748I’m Namibian, spot on.
@kenneth851018 күн бұрын
You are so beautiful and intelligent. Thank you for opening the eyes of a lot of us about our African history which many of us didn't know and that was deliberately hidden from the world. Its a pity that all over Africa, including my country Botswana, the colonizers' still up to this day control big chunks of prime, fertile land when the natives, who are in the millions, have nothing or were pushed to barren, unproductive land. God bless you my African sister and continue the good work.
@XY-rh3if17 күн бұрын
This Women is a goddess. I've never listened to similar story about Namibia narrated so amazingly, you get a perfect idea what's going on in Namibia with regards to neocolonialism. This story reminds me of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe and South Africa. In my opinion, Mugabe was one of the best things that ever happened to the Zims during his reign. People of African descent shall prevail against neocolonialism. ❤ all the way from Nigeria.
@vh2q14 күн бұрын
Mugabe was the the best thing ... what are you smoking my friend. He totally destroyed the country and brought misery to millions of Namibians. Oh, and speaking of genocide, Mugabe was up there with Stalin.
@Peterelikem_Moore17 күн бұрын
You’ve nailed the topic perfectly. Well done.
@afrikanheritage9918 күн бұрын
I am speeches and in tears 😭 Thanks for your work and educating us, my beautiful sister ❤
@newvillagekitchens15 күн бұрын
A note of appreciation from someone helping a Herero family cope with and rise from the total inequitable conditions in Namibia for over 20 years. The principle grip is experienced in access to and quality of education, insanely low wages, and living conditions that are rough and unsuitable.
@Muchapa-ny7xj13 күн бұрын
War is looming in SA and Namibia over the Land issue
@davidsouthwick68028 күн бұрын
I paid for the property I own & have the documentation to prove it. So to anyone prepared to risk their life trying to steal it from me, bring it on..
@free185518 күн бұрын
Dear Weyni, just stumbled upon your channel and was hooked within a minute. Thank you from a fellow Habesh who got sick & tired of Europe and moved out back to the motherland temporarily. Your channel is truly needed. Best wishes for the new year🎉
@yonasghebre794017 күн бұрын
Namibia is better than her indigenous country
@EAGLE-r1s18 күн бұрын
4:15 Namibia exports beef products to the EU same case to Botswana( the only two african countries that got approved to export) So, it literally means the beneficiaries are Europeans themselves whilst using illegaly acquired African people's land fir commercial activities, i wonder if namibia is just the same case
@M_KK18 күн бұрын
That is true. Although most of the cattle is actually owned by black farmers up north. That is where majority of black people live and fully own their land there. The northern areas receive more rain than the arid areas where the white farmers live. But due to lack of disease control because there is no fence between the northern areas and the neighboring countries, the farmers in the northern areas can't access Europe markets. But with the new trade agreements, they'll be able to access the UAE and other Middle Eastern countries
@muhammadnawaz503918 күн бұрын
It is the 'white' farmers that export meat to the EU. There is a colonial veterinary cordon line they call the 'RED LINE'. This RED LINE stops 'black' people from taking meat products from the 'north' to 'south' of the cordon line. The corrupted and debauched SWAPO promised to remove the so-called "RED LINE" upon taking over the government that they will remove the bloody line but alas it is over 3 decades since they promised in 1989 the bloody, colonial and criminal 'white' privilege cordon line is still there
@vanhuvanhuvese273818 күн бұрын
and cheap underpaid no pension african labour
@M_KK18 күн бұрын
@vanhuvanhuvese2738 exploitation of labour is not a racial thing in Namibia. Black business people are even worse. We have black billionaires here that don't pay their low skilled employees salaries for months. Basically low skilled workers are exploited by all. At least with the newly introduced minimum wage law, all of them will have to comply.
@dpeasehead18 күн бұрын
@@M_KK So black business people oppress landless whites in Namibia and in the rest of southern Africa exactly the same way that whites have done to black people? Sure...
@NetumboAukongo15 күн бұрын
I am Namibian, born in exile during apartheid rule. My parents died within 3 years after independence, they did not manage to own land for me to inherit. Instead i bought a plot of 600 square for half a million in the city suburbs. What will my children and grandchildren pay? Let's share the land in an amicable way, you didn't buy that land, it's that simple. Thank you for spreading the message my sister from another African country.
@arvidsfar158015 күн бұрын
600 square what? And half a million what by which time?
@R1M1r1m118 күн бұрын
Those flags remind me of the confederate flags here in the US and how certain people feel about them and the history behind it. All of those people whose families committed those evil acts across the whole globe say the same thing, that they didn't do it it was their ancestors, yet they are benefitting off of what their ancestors did.
@TezraNL18 күн бұрын
They will pay for their ancestors horrors, God hasn't forgotten.😢
@grazion45018 күн бұрын
So true. The Lost Cause and all white supremacist garbage that goes with it.
@MirageTader18 күн бұрын
Swapo government and Germany government are the problem here.If swapo government can’t fix this problem no one can.
@razackndeze-pv5bm18 күн бұрын
This gonna change no matter what, but only new generations of leadership in Namibia gonna change every thing the Mugabe way.
@EightyFour-s3z18 күн бұрын
The people can.
@Homoerectus-zd7vc17 күн бұрын
Get rid of Swapo Government.
@ndamonahashali298314 күн бұрын
I agree. Also, there are mind game playing in the land issues and it might not be resolved. Politicians, their friends and family grab the land given back to the Namibian via the Ministry of Land and Agricultural for themselves in obession of wealth, power and status. This has further deepen land issues and divided the country.
@dieubrandicarreira632218 күн бұрын
Such courageous and potent broadcasting. Thank you
@planB-BacktoAfrica18 күн бұрын
Thanks for listening.🙏🏾
@GettingItDone5918 күн бұрын
Thank you for the great work you"re doing. This was an outstanding piece. Hopefully this will bear much fruit.
@kadyarajs14 күн бұрын
Thank you!! As a Malian/Burkina, I assure you that the People standing behind Assimi Koita (Mali) and Ibrahima Traoré (Burkina) and Tiani in Niger makes all the difference. Also consider the sheer will to go through hardships (no electricity) to be free at last. Today the renegotiation of mine exploitation contracts, ensuring the exploitation of natural resources benefits the countries, the end of tax breaks to up to 60 billions (per firms!) ... All these makes an impact. We already feel it, although the road ahead is long and our leaders are under constant assassination attempts. Next battle, ending the Franc CFA and the compulsory deposit of 50% of a country currency reserve in the French Central bank to "insure our currencies" when France actually invests our reserves and make a minimum of 114Billion a year by investing OUR reserves on the financial markets! Even a day of freedom is worth tasting. I wish you the same in Namibia and wherever you are. Salam.
@naimaabdullahi627212 күн бұрын
Omgggg you’re Mali/Burkina the legends!!!!! Wallahi you don’t understand how much you guys inspire hope in me! When you took back what was yours from those neocolonialists I was so proud even though I’m not from your country - I’m Somali. Allahu Akbar. I wish the best for you and your future, I know you can do it. I feel like after you guys resolve the issues many Africans will look towards you guys as what a country can look like when it restores its dignity and security from neocolonizers! I’m such a fan and I’m so excited for your future. I pray the best for you guys, I pray that Namibians find that courage also to fight these evil settlers that are still lingering in their lands
@naimaabdullahi627212 күн бұрын
Salam!!! People of Mali and Burkina Faso are true legends. Wallahi you don’t know how much you inspire us!
@yohannesaradom865618 күн бұрын
Dear Weyni Tesfai, What a courageous young lady you are to present such a noble history of Namibia. I had some basic history of Namibia got colonized by Germany. Knowing the history of Germany and the world war during the Fascist Hitler where genocide was committed. I can imagine what those Germany during that period did to the people of Namibia. Namibia gained Independence March 21, 1990 so late people might have forgotten about it. We know the European Colnizers met in Berlin known The Conference of Berlin November 15, 1884 - 1885 to colonize Africa. The rest is history we Africans know what happened. Most of African Nations got Independence starting 1960s all the way 1970s. Here and there there are late liberated nations. Dear Weyni, I am surprised by your report and the courage to show to the world the hidden history what the Germans did to the Namibia people. It was late that paid compensation of $1.3 billion for the colonial and genocide paid in 2021 still that is nothing in value what they committed during the Colonial Rule. I am so surprised the story not clear and written very well for history. I believe when Independence was declared the first native leaders purposely with agreement with the Colonial leaders hide the facts and documents. You are inspiring young lady to do this report and documentation with your 2 young children driving saw with your own eyes facts and stories. I am here in USA and I will fellow to get books and movies in documented form. I found you today accidentally and will fellow on KZbin if you have on Horn of Africa. Salute you for doing such a story. Keep up and congratulations!
@rml422417 күн бұрын
Very good post thanks for the information.
@clb824210 күн бұрын
Namibia and South Africa are not ready to be free. Im Zimbabwean and i can but any land i want from anyone i want in Zimbabwe.
@wisdomcalls-u3f18 күн бұрын
Well done. And thank you for the enlightening history lesson. I am 75 years old and at the age of 15, we were taught in school, about the Jewish holocaust. We children were not taught about any history of Africa except that the Africans were backwards and needed god. Keep up the good work. There are many people from every group who has never heard about the holocaust and genocide perpetrated upon the Namibian people.
@Jakawere118 күн бұрын
Happy new year my sister. This is amazing in-depth analysis of Namibia that many have glossed over. I ❤ to the historical perspective you did. Keep it up
@mamamarius18 күн бұрын
An extremely narrow and shallow 'analysis', I'm afraid....
@GRTVO17 күн бұрын
You have done an amazing job of highlighting colonial settler violence by the Germans in Namibia.
@timotheusn.h.nakashona100118 күн бұрын
Very informative piece of video, but Namibian politics is laden with a lot of corruption and kickbacks. To really understand the workings of this country, you really have to live in it to fully understand it.
@AbdulJabbar-hc2wd18 күн бұрын
#rightly SAID, brother! Perfectly said! The heart of darkness. If doesn't make money then it doesn't make sense. But who truly owns the money?!
@M_KK18 күн бұрын
Trust a Namibian to bring in corruption in every topic. What has that got to do with the issue at hand? You make it sound like corruption in Namibia is worse than other countries. Compared to other African countries, ours is at kindergarten level.
@timotheusn.h.nakashona100118 күн бұрын
@M_KK kindergarten garden level, how old are you. Corruption is corruption, no matter how big or small it is.
@PrincessSunrise18 күн бұрын
It's the whole Africa is corrupt and is done on purpose
@DonYahki18 күн бұрын
Thank you very much. Your video is really touching. As a Namibian I appreciate you for this. Bless you and hope this video reaches hearts of both people within the country and abroad. Continue spreading your awareness of all that needs to be addressed. May your platform continue to be epicenter of truth and also may the light be with you always.
@odavonmarees581215 күн бұрын
Jip BUT the onus should ALWAYS BE ON THE TRUTH RIGHT!!!??
@livedovemedia17 күн бұрын
A Much needed refreshing perspective!! As an African diaspora from Ethiopia who loves all of Africa as ONE … An educational healing connecting awakening journalism reporting at this level from someone who’s from the Mother Land is someone we should support! Especially for the younger Generation to find this content. Journalism from us by us. How it should’ve been! Thank you for this detailed and thoughtful peace.
@andrebryan33518 күн бұрын
Now i understand your passion . You put time and sweat into studies and it shows in your approaches to educating your subscribers.
@kynotes18 күн бұрын
@Weyni Tesfai, I am a Kenyan. Sadly, white settlers still own such big chunks of land in Kenya. Some in the name of wildlife reserves. Most of Laikipia and parts of Meru are owned by white settlers some familiy with over 60k acres of land.
@petermacharia717118 күн бұрын
I guess the world if Africa needs to change the narrative. I know the farms in laikipia and Meru
@chardoncrepu18 күн бұрын
HOw is it possible ???
@muhammadnawaz503918 күн бұрын
It is the same with Namibia. We have to grab back our land by any means necessary
@ksoss118 күн бұрын
How os this possible?
@mpendakiswahili305318 күн бұрын
yes those white farmers own over 100k acres each, its crazy...and the indigenous people are forbidden to graze their cattle on those lands...
@shaunmarkowitz992711 күн бұрын
The Namibian government is turning a blind eye to this. For us born Namibians it is a struggle to get land while these absent Europeans own nearly half of the land. If I was these people I will start getting very worried as this boiling pot is going to spill over very soon.
@dr3w97918 күн бұрын
they didn't earn it, they stole it . sad but true
@MJBM-h4u16 күн бұрын
Some will say Africans want the readymade proceeds of European progress in Africa. What they forget is that some Africans were forced off land that was fertile or resource rich. Colonisers simply appropriating the ready made proceeds of African wealth. In South Africa, the Griquas were settled on a piece of land, upon the discovery of diamonds, they were dispossessed of that land, and displaced on threat of death. Triomph/Sophia town, and many other places where black communities were dismantled to make way for settlers. We are not interested in doing a tit for tat, but this history needs to be surfaced and considered when charting a path forward, otherwise the past will always be with us.
@edmund639218 күн бұрын
Thank you for bringing this part of history to light. They would like to have it buried...but we will never let that happen as long as we continue to tell our story. Thank you sister!
@AbdulJabbar-hc2wd18 күн бұрын
The Africans for the most part play it as if Buffalloes completely pretend not recognize the Lions privilege, perhaps upon acquaintance we were unaware. But now we have studied the white man characteristics enough. He is neither a total enemy nor a complete friend, owner of great technology, he attains certain privileges. Rights he often RELISHES to exercise. They really did treat Namibian lives for sport , as long as "Money" was the matter. It is important to know in this said reality, whites will systematicaly always try to show the boundaries of the perception of reality. Like a computer intelligence model would struggle to understand. Like they redefining the boundaries of form and matter in their own nations. They really will never stop because it is their nature. In this function they attain natural purpose. The ignorance is to ignore that.
@JoelKavezepa16 күн бұрын
Thank you very much. I never knew that there are people in this world who spend so much time and money to study and who engage with so many people to educate the young generation about the state of German disrespect brutality toward other nations.
@VitaHamisi-re7cs18 күн бұрын
Your few videos i have watched on you tube are very interesting. It shows you always do extensive research before publishing them. Keep it up, shout out from Tanzania 🇹🇿.
@planB-BacktoAfrica18 күн бұрын
Glad you like them!
@vijandambingeneeko870918 күн бұрын
Firstly, you're not a Namibian. You dont get to come with radical ideas but won't stay for the shit show. Secondly, as a nation, we reconciling trying to put the different races in Namibia at odds with one another destabilise our country , Thirdly, white descendants of German, are Namibians now, so you dont get to say the land is "foreign owned, FYI im a Herero
@concernedc781818 күн бұрын
Stop insulting Wenyi for stating what is a reality on the ground. You may be Herero, but if it was not for other African countries, Namibia would still be under Germany or White South Africa rule. Germany or white South Africa did not help to free the Namibian people from colonialism. Have respect for the people who were there for you, when you needed help the most.
@MrTooEarnestOnline16 күн бұрын
What is wrong with you?
@henry511816 күн бұрын
You have spoken like a true slave defending his master.
@Joycee-y3r12 күн бұрын
Stupid
@michaelmabuku644410 күн бұрын
U sound like a herero married to a german farm owner
@kleoemuno496115 күн бұрын
The fact of the matter is, whatever problems the german government and the affected community have, the government of the day is to blame 50% in so many ways. Thanks for your presentation.
@mvelompanza380318 күн бұрын
It's the same thing in South Africa. Southern Countries in Africa have recently gained independence.
@jeaneloi462418 күн бұрын
Weyni! I've been following you for a while now. I'm learning a lot from you. Sending you ❤ from Haiti 🇭🇹.
@temapokaino32105 күн бұрын
very informative. thanks for the video
@sulaak18 күн бұрын
Namibia has to walk a fine line; if they take back their land, the Western world will impose international sanctions as they have done in Zimbabwe. Libration will take time , starting with a good political government and then gradually taking back farmland from Germany one by one, replacing European tourists and investment by imposing strict visa controls.
@Tatenda7118 күн бұрын
How are they going to gradually take back the land. Zimbabwe initially tried it and it didn't work. If you try to do it at the pace of the muzungu it will take a thousand years.
@@Tatenda71 Zimbabwe used blunt force.African need to use the same tools that the use to take the land in the first place. Start with legal challenges that’s the land was stolen and the introduce legislation that the disputed land cannot be sold. That will reduce the value of the land and place the white owner on immense legal financial burden.
@dpeasehead18 күн бұрын
@sulaak: Western propaganda is powerful. The same westerners who have spent generations undermining land reform in Africa accuse China of colonization...
@Tatenda7117 күн бұрын
@@conceretejungle1150 We are in agreement. I am saying they have to take it by ginya otherwise it will take a long time.
@normg850318 күн бұрын
Wow! That's shocking! This is crazy. Thank you so much for you working making these things known. I had no idea!!!
@TezraNL18 күн бұрын
It's not shocking, they hide this ugly history on purpose but we need to open people's eyes to see the horror these people have exerted on Africa and yet they refuse our people to come to Europe😢 how ironic....thanks for teaching people about the history of Africa.
@africaine488918 күн бұрын
What is shocking for me is the whites in southern africa lying about bantus coming after them in southern africa. Noooo, colonizers found us and the Sans here. We were always here
@maryamleeuw581118 күн бұрын
It looks like their renowned sense of superiority is blinding them from what they did and are still doing.. To this day.. 😢
@Matiomundu18 күн бұрын
Well done Weyni. What you don't know perhaps, is the fact that the Namibian government is in cahoots with German government. Namibian government decided to burry half of Namibian history as long as that piece of the history does not involved the current ruling ethnic group. Sound crazy, but Germans in Namibia knows they lost the Waterberg battle against the Herero. But the Herero out of naive and for the fact that they had their women, children and livestock decided to leave the battle just as the did after the battle of of Oviuombo, of the Germans (under Theodor Lutwein) lost as well.
@sdesta132716 күн бұрын
Well-educated women and brave enough to go this far-putting it in an interesting way. I’ve never heard of a country considered free but still colonized. Keep up the good work , you’re a great history teacher!
@mzerk932418 күн бұрын
Am Namibian and have to correct you. In Namibia there is communal and commercial land. Commercial agricultural land are by law required to be fenced off to prevent animals from leaving one farm to another. That's why u can't find a commercial farm without a fence In Namibia. That's why it is also safe to drive at night. 1. Claim that Whites own 44% of land is misleading. White farmers only stay in Central Namibia and South East and western part before the state desert land. However, 65% of Namibia's population stay or originally from north and northeast Namibia. + 2million of Namibia's population is from north & north east and have land there. No commercial farms in those areas from Angola border in West up to Namibia - Zambia border. Moreso, anyone having money can buy farmland in Namibia 3. There is communal land in South, West, North, East of Namibia including South of namibia from SA border. No fence in Communal areas. Most black people live on communal areas. Communal areas are everywhere in all parts of namibia be it South, North, East and West. They beyond those fences u see next to the road. Another factor for the large game farm u stayed at in namib naukluft national Park is coz it's a desert. There is no agriculture which can be done there apart from tourism establishments and game lodges. It's costly for any operator. Moreso, 98% of whites dnt own farms. Government has been buying farms to resettle those who lost land so they can engage in commercial farming. Namibia is mostly a cattle farming country coz of harsh climate. However most of the cattle is in northern & northeast communal land. I always ask myself why the rest of Africa is poor and hungry but they have land?
@michaelbejiga460417 күн бұрын
I think your ancestors are from Germany....what this lady is talking about facts....
@soundofakamba821116 күн бұрын
You sound wrong and white.
@John-q7z7hКүн бұрын
Do you mean to say there were no people living in those desert areas when the Germans arrived?
@omarabeid10618 күн бұрын
Honestly, through out the entire video, i have been a student. Attending a lecture about a painful past on our African brother's history. In Uganda, we are lucky we dint have any such scars in our history, though our brothers next door, Kenya, had such a horrible experience. What happened to the people of Namibia, hearing it for the first time from you, made me emotional at some point. Your narrative gave me a vivid image of the brutality and felt the misery and suffering our brothers were subjected to. My heart n thought go to our lost brother's lives. Thank you sister Weyni, am a new subscriber, given the content you present is full of researched facts. I have benefited a lot !
@daniebuys913818 күн бұрын
You need to do your research deeper into the the land situation in Namibia. The Namibian government handles the problem the best in Southern Africa. They buy farms when it's on the market and let it to the indigenous people. If the new farmers are capable to farm, they will receive ownership of the farm. Landgrabbers are now in dire straits, and must be helped by other countries to survive. Zimbabwe is an example. Look at Angola, they grabbed the land and now the population is dying of hunger. As a very dry country, Namibia needs big farms to make a living. Will the indigenous people go and stay on land with very little water, very low rainfall, land which is not suitable for agriculture? No, they are living in the best agricultural part of the country, which is the northern part of Namibia. We all agree that colonial rule was bad, but we must not be fools to make more bad decisions by grabbing land and destroy the economy. Will the people be better of by doing that? Please ask the people in Angola, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and many other countries how their situation changed and we may come to a more logical conclusion.
@agimhange394317 күн бұрын
The best ways being refererred to above is tthat the land is being to the friends, cronies of the polititians
@agimhange394317 күн бұрын
The best ways being refererred to above is tthat the land is being to the friends, cronies of the polititians
@pissofmind17 күн бұрын
@@daniebuys9138 thats true keep lands in the hands of those who can get the best out of it , especially those dry and semi dry areas..as a kenyan, our land issues were not resolved even after britain gave money to buy back lands from settlers.. black colonialists took some of it.
@saffakoroma927615 күн бұрын
I am shocked beyond imagination by this revelation of the barbaric atrocities caused by German Colonial rulers in Namibia. But is even worse to learn that German families and other foreigners own the better part of agriculturally productive land. The civilized world especially in the West should help to reverse this continuous German occupation of Namibia. Thanks for sharing.
@AnnoyedMicroscope-ud5tl18 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing your experiences👍we are learning a lot