The Herero People of Namibia….

The Herero people are one of Namibia’s proudest tribes. They pride in their culture and fiercely safeguard it from outside influence. In fashion, they’re an inspiration.

Image ref: Namibia Gallery

The Herero tribe is said to have migrated southwards to Namibia from East and Central Africa, settling in northeast Namibia in the 1500s. Over the years, they moved further south and today, they have homesteads in various parts of Namibia, mostly the eastern, central and northeastern areas of the country. Some Hereros can be found in Southern Angola. Consisting of various sub-tribes such as the Himba, Tjimba (Cimba), Mbanderu, and Kwandu, the Herero speak Otjiherero, with the various sub-tribes having their own dialects.

Image ref: Namibia Gallery

While many of the cultural practices of the Herero are similar to those of other Bantu tribes in Namibia, the Herero follow some rituals that many other tribes have long stopped practising – the practice of otjiramue, for instance – where cousins get married to each other. Herero boys are required to be circumcised, while girls are groomed from an early age to become good wives to the men who’ll marry them when they come of age. Men are traditionally the head of the house and are afforded a lot of respect within the household and in the community. The Herero celebrate their culture through many festivals.

Image ref: Namibia Gallery

The Herero are traditionally cattle-herding pastoralists who place great importance on the number of cattle owned by one person or household. Cattle are so important in this community that traditional dress is worn with a head scarf that is tied to resemble the horns of a cow. Even in dance, the Herero honour their precious cows. The outjina traditional dance (interpreted ‘dance of the cow head’) which is performed at weddings sees women, and in some cases men, sing about and make observational notes on the dowry that is delivered as a bride price.

The Herero are a pastoral cattle-breeding people and with great resiliency, they are today, ranked among Namibia’s best cattle farmers and businessmen.

Why the Herero people’s special dress is worn with pride in Namibia?

Image ref: Namibia Gallery

Namibia was a German colony for just over a century and in the early 1900s the Herero and the Nama people rose up against the Germans with tragic consequences. This brutal history saw about 80 per cent of the Herero people (up to 100,000) exterminated in a genocide carried out by the German colonial government between 1904 and 1908. While modern-day German governments have refused to call the killings a genocide, the Herero, alongside the Nama people of Namibia, have since taken up a case for reparations to be paid to them by the German government, a case that’s ongoing and where Germany is facing increased pressure to officially apologise for the atrocities and re-evaluate their current stance on reparations.

Image ref: Namibia Gallery

So, every year the Herero people commemorate those that died in battle with a special ceremony. And the women wear a special dress which is specific to Herero culture. One thing that the Herero people kept from the German colonialists is the dress code which they cherish to this day. The now iconic Herero dress which is worn with a head scarf is an adaptation of the Victorian-styled dress of the German settlers. The men wear military styled suits decorated with badges in colours that denote which sub-tribe they belong to.

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