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San tsî Khoen Digital Archive ǂoaba ǂans
History-South Africa-Khoikhoi (African people)

  • Healing the past for the future: A survivor's view of the Damara/Herero/Nama genocide of 1904-1905

    A seminar in honour of Women’s Day presented by Dr Yvette Abrahams. Chaired by Dr June Bam Hutchison Director of the San and Khoi Centre. Opened by the Dean of the Humanities Faculty Associate Professor Shose Kessi and closed by Paramount Chief Marthinus Fredericks, of the !Aman Traditional Authority/ Chair of the Khoi and San Kingdom Council of southern Africa and member of the A/Xarra Restorative Justice Forum. Yvette Abrahams is of Damara/Herero descendant and a third-generation survivor of the1904/1905 genocide in Namibia.

  • A forgotten first people: The Southern Cape Hessequa

    The present book continues the series on South Africa's 'invisible' earliest people with the Hessequa, who pastured their cattle along the south-east Cape coast -- all the way from the present town of Swellendam to Albertinia, and even beyond -- long before the European colonists arrived. They may be better described as a "Khoekhoe community", rather than what the early history books pejoratively called "Hottentots". In the current dynamic debate in South Africa about the rights of cultural and linguistic minorities, however, the voices of their descendants are not being heard, nor are they appropriately acknowledged by the powers that be. By writing about them and taking up their cause, Mike de Jongh opens a window on their history, their current lives, and their rightful place in the present-day Republic of South Africa.

    Book