The 1918 "Blue Book" Report on the Natives of South-West Africa and Their Treatment by Germany, is based on the voluntary statements taken under oath of no less than 50 African witnesses. This testimony was combined with numerous German colonial documents to produce, not only a stinging indictment of German colonial policy in German South West Africa, but also the first detailed eyewitness accounts of the first genocide of the twentieth century. However, within ten years of being printed, orders were issued for the destruction of all copies of the "Blue Book" within the British Empire.
The editors have investigated how the Blue Book came into being, provided background information to the events and people described, and sought to discover the original German documents upon which so much of the Blue Book material is based. The particular usefulness of the book lies in the fact that it gives voice to African testimony regarding the first genocide of the Twentieth Century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
The editors have investigated how the Blue Book came into being, provided background information to the events and people described, and sought to discover the original German documents upon which so much of the Blue Book material is based. The particular usefulness of the book lies in the fact that it gives voice to African testimony regarding the first genocide of the Twentieth Century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
' Silvester and Gewald's annotated reprint of the 1918 British Blue book.. offers a chilling glimpse of colonial violence and monumental injustice. '
J.O. Gump, University of San Diego
Recommended by Choice.
''...an important publication which will stimulate the discussion in Namibia and Germany in the years to come' Joachim Zeller in Allgemeine Zeitung
J.O. Gump, University of San Diego
Recommended by Choice.
''...an important publication which will stimulate the discussion in Namibia and Germany in the years to come' Joachim Zeller in Allgemeine Zeitung