Mburumba Kerina#Early life and education

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2021}}

{{Short description|Namibian politician and academic (1932–2021)}}

{{Infobox officeholder

|honorific-prefix =

|name = Mburumba Kerina

|honorific-suffix =

|image =

|imagesize =

|smallimage =

|caption =

|order =

|office = Member of the Constituent Assembly of Namibia

|term_start = 1989

|term_end = 1990

|president =

|predecessor =

|successor =

|birth_date = {{birth date|1932|6|6|df=y}}

|birth_name = William Eric Getzen

|birth_place = Tsumeb, South West Africa

|death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|2021|6|14|1932|6|6}}

|death_place = Windhoek, Namibia

|nationality = Namibian

|party = SWAPO

|spouse = Evelhardine Kapuuo-Kerina
{{marriage|Naomi Kikii Zauana|5 May 2017|5 June 2017|reason=died}}

|relations =

|children =

|residence =

|alma_mater = Lincoln University
New School for Social Research
Padjadjaran University

|occupation = Lecturer

|profession = Politician

|religion =

|signature =

|website =

|footnotes =

}}

Mburumba Kerina (born William Eric Getzen; 6 June 1932 – 14 June 2021) was a Namibian politician and academic. He was a co-founder of SWAPO, NUDO, and FCN, and the founder of a host of smaller political parties. For independent Namibia, he was a member of Namibia's Constituent Assembly, as well as the National Assembly and the National Council. Kerina coined the name "Namib" for the independent state "Namibia" on the territory of South West Africa.

Early life and education

Kerina had Ovambo and Ovaherero ancestry,{{cite book

|last=Norval

|first=Morgan

|title=SWAPO: A Marxist-Leninist Organisation

|chapter=Death in the Desert: The Namibian Tragedy, 6

|url=http://www.namibweb.com/chap6.htm

|year=1989

|publisher=Selous Foundation Press (via namibweb.com)

|location=Washington DC

|isbn=0-944273-03-3

|pages=57–66}} and was also a great-grandson of explorer and trader Frederick Thomas Green, from which he derived his surname (Kerina {{langx|hz|green}}).{{cite web

|url=http://www.klausdierks.com/Biographies/Biographies_K.htm

|title=Biographies of Namibian Personalities, K

|last=Dierks

|first=Klaus

|author-link=Klaus Dierks

|publisher=klausdierks.com

|access-date=2 April 2013}} Mburumba was born William Eric Getzen on 6 June 1932 in Tsumeb.{{cite news|author=Mupetami, Limba|url=https://www.namibian.com.na/127811/archive-read/The-Man-Who-Named-Namibia--Mburumba-Kerina|title=The Man Who Named Namibia – Mburumba Kerina

|work=The Namibian|date=9 September 2014|access-date=15 June 2021}} He grew up in Walvis Bay and went to school in Windhoek{{'s}} Old Location where he attended St Barnabas Anglican Church School. While schooling he came into contact with Reverend Michael Scott, who would later enable him to study in the United States, and to become one of the early petitioners to the United Nations.{{cite news

|url=http://www.newera.com.na/articles/40928/-

|title='I am politics' John the Baptist'

|last=Ndjebela

|first=Toivo

|date=30 September 2011 |newspaper=New Era

|url-status=dead

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150214165616/http://www.newera.com.na/articles/40928/-

|archive-date=14 February 2015 |publisher=via allafrica.com

}}

He went to the United States in 1953 and studied at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1957. Kerina then became a graduate fellow at New School for Social Research, New York, and between 1960 and 1962 did a PhD at Padjadjaran University in Bandung, Indonesia.{{cite web

|url = http://www.nid.org.na/view_book_entry.php?book_id=96

|title = Who's Who, Mburumba Kerina

|last = Hopwood

|first = Graham

|work = Guide to Namibian Politics

|publisher = Namibia Institute for Democracy (NID)

|access-date = 2 April 2013

|url-status = dead

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110611173927/http://www.nid.org.na/view_book_entry.php?book_id=96

|archive-date = 11 June 2011

}} While in Indonesia, Kerina got an audience with then-president Sukarno, who, according to Kerina, agitated him to find a better name for the territory of South West Africa whose independence he was fighting for. Kerina subsequently wrote an opinion piece in an Indonesian publication about a yet-to-be created country Namib and its nationalist movement, Namibianism. The claim for Kerina to have coined the name "Namib" is widely recognised, while Sam Nujoma, Namibia's founding president, is more commonly credited with the name "Namibia".{{cite news

|url=http://www.republikein.com.na/politiek-en-nasionale/prof-kerina-sluit-weer-by-swapo-aan.83647.php

|title=Prof. Kerina sluit weer by Swapo aan

|trans-title=Prof. Kerina joins ranks with SWAPO again

|date=16 April 2009

|work=Die Republikein

|language=Afrikaans

|access-date=25 June 2013

|archive-date=20 August 2021

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210820150403/https://www.republikein.com.na/nuus/prof-kerina-sluit-weer-by-swapo-aan/

|url-status=dead

}}

Political career

=Early years as UN petitioner=

From 1956 onwards, Kerina was among the first petitioners to the United Nations for Namibian independence on behalf of the Herero Chiefs' Council. Other early petitioners besides Kerina and Scott were Hosea Kutako, Hans Beukes, Markus Kooper, Ismael Fortune, advocate Jariretundu Kozonguizi, and Namibia's founding President Sam Nujoma.

The year 1959 saw the establishment of two important Namibian black nationalist parties: the South West Africa National Union (SWANU) and the Ovamboland People's Organization (OPO). SWANU had its base among the Herero population while OPO was founded as an organisation of the Ovambo people.{{cite book

|editor-last=Lugard

|editor-first=John

|title=The South West Africa Namibia Dispute: Documents and Scholarly Writings on the Controversy Between South Africa and the United Nations

|series=Perspectives on Southern Africa Series

|issue=9

|isbn=0520026144

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yx2785DKKvUC&q=%22Mburumba+Kerina%22+OPO&pg=PA218

|year=1973

|publisher=University of California Press

|pages=217–219}} In December the Old Location Uprising in Windhoek gave the liberation struggle a different direction. Following protests and an effective boycott of municipal services by Main Location residents, the police opened fire on the protesters, killing 11 and wounding 44 others. A brother of Kerina was among those killed. The event was one of the factors leading to the foundation of SWAPOPeter N. Stearns and William Leonard Langer. The Encyclopedia of World History: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern, Chronologically Arranged, 2001. Page 1070. by forcing community leaders from OPO into exile, including Sam Nujoma.{{cite web

| title = Chronology of Namibian History, 1959

| author = Klaus Dierks

| url = http://www.klausdierks.com/Chronology/101.htm

| access-date = 5 April 2013}} It is also probably one of the main reasons for SWAPO to have put less effort into petitioning and resistance, and to turn the independence struggle into an armed conflict.{{cite web

|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/402283/Namibia

|title=Namibia

|editor=Reginald Herbold Green

|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica

|access-date=15 February 2012}}

Both OPO and SWANU soon realised that a broader group would serve the nationalist interests better. SWANU founder Fanuel Kozonguizi and OPO leader Sam Nujoma discussed whether a merger of OPO and SWANU would achieve that result but Kerina's suggestion to expand OPO into the South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) was implemented in 1960, mainly because SWANU did not have the full support of the Herero Chiefs' Council. Kerina became one of SWAPO's co-founders, and is the person to have suggested the name.{{sfn|Tonchi|Lindeke|Grotpeter|2012|pp=396–398}}

=Fallout with SWAPO=

The difference in preferred methods to lead the country to independence soon led to different factions within SWAPO. Kerina was on the moderate side and disliked violence. He was expelled in 1962 for publicly discussing the formation of a new party.{{cite web

| title = Chronology of Namibian History, 1962

| author = Klaus Dierks

| url = http://www.klausdierks.com/Chronology/104.htm

| access-date = 5 April 2013}} Morgan Norval writes:{{Cite book|last=Norval|first=Morgan|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/21133289|title=Death in the desert : the Namibian tragedy|date=1989|publisher=Selous Foundation Press|isbn=0-944273-03-3|location=Washington, D.C. |chapter=SWAPO: A Marxist-Leninist Organisation|oclc=21133289|chapter-url=http://www.namibweb.com/chap6.htm}}

However, all was not well [...]. A growing rift was developing between the moderates and the hardliners. The hardliners, led by Nujoma, were insistent upon following the path of a war of liberation. They looked with disdain on those seeking a political solution to the independence question in Namibia.

In 1964 Kerina returned from the US for an unsuccessful attempt to enter Namibia. He stayed in Bechuanaland (today Botswana) for a while but soon was expelled from there and moved to Tanzania. In September 1965 the National Unity Democratic Organisation (NUDO) was founded by Kerina, Clemens Kapuuo, and Hosea Kutako. NUDO at that time was an organisation that had mainly Herero followers. It was created at the suggestion of the Herero Chiefs' Council.

In 1966 Kerina broke with the Herero Chiefs' Council (and by extension, NUDO) again. That same year he established the South West Africa National United Front (SWANUF) in an attempt to unite SWANU and NUDO. The attempt was unsuccessful; the two parties remained partly adversarial. SWANUF ceased its activities at the end of the 1970s.

The Namibian War of Independence, which soon escalated into the South African Border War, started in August 1966.{{cite news

| author = Petronella Sibeene

| publisher = New Era

| title = Swapo Party Turns 49

| url = http://www.newera.com.na/article.php?articleid=26156

| date = 13 September 2011}} Later that year, the UN General Assembly revoked South Africa's mandate to govern South West Africa, and created the position of a United Nations Commissioner for Namibia.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/country_profiles/1469048.stm BBC News - Timeline: Namibia]

=Turnhalle Conference=

{{main|Turnhalle Constitutional Conference}}

In the meantime, the white inhabitants of South West Africa and conservative black members of the population, including Kerina, tried to contain the violence and preserve the status quo. The South African government hoped that by means of small reforms and compromises a broad spectrum of the indigenous population would cease their support for armed resistance. This was the aim of the Turnhalle Constitutional Conference, a controversial conference held in Windhoek between 1975 and 1977 which was tasked with the development of a constitution for a self-governed Namibia under South African control. Sponsored by South African government, the Turnhalle Conference laid the framework for the government of South West Africa from 1977 to independence in 1989.{{cite book

|last=Napierala

|first=Nils

|title=Namibia zu Zeiten des Kolonialismus und der Mandatsherrschaft

|trans-title=Namibia During the Periods of Colonialism and Foreign Administration

|year=2010

|publisher=GRIN

|language=German

|isbn=978-3-640-74284-4

|page=16

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8HShmc_3MUoC&q=%22Turnhallenkonferenz%22&pg=PA16

|access-date = 8 September 2011}}

The Turnhalle conference was widely criticised for providing "pseudo-reforms", entrenching the racial segregation of Namibia's population, and indirectly reinforcing the economic and political power of the white population.{{sfn|Landis|1977|p=21}} Several black delegates, however, welcomed the start of institutionalised communication between the parties.{{sfn|Seiler|1982|pp=693-694}} Kerina did not attend the conference—he only returned from the US in 1976 after the plenary sessions—but supported its outcome. He wrote in 1977:{{sfn|Kerina|1977|p=197}}

The Constitutional Conference [...] has created a tranquil atmosphere in which all the people of Namibia are re-examining [...] institutions of the Territory at a round-table conference of equals dedicated to mutual coexistence and survival. This historic development is in conformity with major resolutions of the United Nations, the Advisory Opinions of the International Court of Justice, and the Lusaka Manifesto.

He also criticised the UN General Assembly's 1972 decision to recognise SWAPO as the 'sole legitimate representative' of Namibia's people:{{sfn|Kerina|1977|p=198}}

It is unfortunate, indeed, that the United Nations has been prematurely hoodwinked into the recognition of one Namibian tribal faction as 'the sole authentic representative' group of all Namibians at the expense of the majority of the people.

After the Turnhalle conference Kerina initiated a number of political movements in South West Africa. He founded the Namibia Patriotic Coalition (NPC) in 1978 which entered into an alliance with the Rehoboth Liberation Front (LF) and the Liberal Party. The NPC soon became defunct and was reestablished in 1982 under the name Namibia National Democratic Coalition (NNDC). In 1988 Kerina co-founded the Federal Convention of Namibia (FCN) with Hans Diergaardt, who became its president.

=Independent Namibia=

In the pre-independence 1989 election the FCN gained one seat in the Constituent Assembly of Namibia which went to Diergaardt. When he resigned on health grounds, Kerina took over the seat from him and was elected Deputy Speaker of the house.{{sfn|Tonchi|Lindeke|Grotpeter|2012|p=85}} After the Independence of Namibia in 1990 he also took FCN's seat in the 1st National Assembly of Namibia but resigned that same year.

Kerina returned to active politics in 1998 as Regional Councillor for the Aminuis Constituency on a Democratic Turnhalle Alliance (DTA) ticket. He was subsequently elected to serve in the National Council. In 2003 he quit the DTA and again joined NUDO. He was expelled in 2005, allegedly for misappropriation of funds, an accusation he denied. In 2009 he again became a member of SWAPO. Asked why he changed his political affiliation so often, Kerina said: "I am a political marathon runner. I started in SWAPO, and now I'm doing the last mile".{{cite news

|url=http://www.az.com.na/politik/wieder-gewechselt.83585.php

|title=Wieder gewechselt. Mburumba Kerina setzt politische Odyssee fort

|trans-title=Changed again. Mburumba Kerina continues political odyssey

|date=16 April 2009

|work=Allgemeine Zeitung

|language=German

|access-date=25 June 2013

|archive-date=19 April 2009

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090419171618/http://www.az.com.na/politik/wieder-gewechselt.83585.php

|url-status=dead

}}

Academia

Between 1953 and Namibian independence in 1990, Kerina stayed in the United States but frequently visited Namibia for sustained periods. In the US he worked as an academic, holding both administrative and academic positions, often in parallel, at various institutions. Kerina held a lecturer position at New York City School of Visual Arts (1966–1968) and an assistant and later associate professor position at the Brooklyn College of the City University of New York (1968–1971). Between 1982 and 1992, he worked as a consultant.

Personal life and death

Kerina was married to Evelhardine Kapuuo-Kerina. On 5 May 2017, he married Naomi Kikii Zauana. She died only one month later on 5 June 2017, at the age of 54.{{cite news | url=http://www.namibian.com.na/55321/read/Kerinas-wife-dies | title=Kerina's wife dies | last=Kangootui | first=Nomhle | work=The Namibian | date=7 June 2017 | page=5}} Kerina lived in Windhoek{{'s}} Katutura suburb.{{cite news | url=http://www.namibian.com.na/index.php?id=28&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=98159&no_cache=1 | title=Kerina celebrates 80th birthday | last=Coetzee | first=Pearl | work=The Namibian | access-date=2 April 2013}}

In 2019, the City of Windhoek named former Bahnhof Street in the central business district after him in recognition of his role in the fight for Namibian independence.{{cite news | url=https://www.namibian.com.na/79159/read/Kerina-to-have-street-named-after-him | title=Kerina to have street named after him | publisher=NAMPA | newspaper=The Namibian | date=2 June 2019}}

Kerina died due to COVID-19 in Windhoek on 14 June 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic in Namibia. He was 89.{{cite news|author1=Mutanga, Marthina|author2=Terblanché, Niël|url=https://informante.web.na/?p=305137|title=Kerina dies from Covid-19|work=Informanté|date=14 June 2021|access-date=15 June 2021}}

References

=Notes=

{{Reflist|30em}}

=Literature=

  • {{cite journal

|last=Landis

|first=Elisabeth

|year=1977

|title=The Turnhalle Constitution: An Analysis

|journal=Africa Today

|volume=24

|issue=3

|pages=12–23

|issn=0001-9887

|jstor=4185704

}}

  • {{cite journal

|last=Kerina

|first=Mburumba

|year=1977

|title=Guest Editorial: Independence in Namibia—An Urgent Reality

|journal=The Journal of Negro Education

|publisher=Howard University

|volume=46

|issue=3

|pages=197–201

|issn=0022-2984

|jstor=2966767

}}

  • {{cite journal

|last=Seiler

|first=John

|date=December 1982

|title=South Africa in Namibia: Persistence, Misperception, and Ultimate Failure

|journal=The Journal of Modern African Studies

|publisher=Cambridge University Press

|volume=20

|issue=4

|pages=689–712

|issn=0022-278X

|jstor=160344

|doi=10.1017/s0022278x00000306|s2cid=154396810

}}

  • {{cite book

|last1=Tonchi

|first1=Victor L

|last2=Lindeke

|first2=William A

|last3=Grotpeter

|first3=John J

|title=Historical Dictionary of Namibia

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mls4H1mnN_0C

|edition=2

|series=Historical Dictionaries of Africa, African historical dictionaries

|year=2012

|publisher=Scarecrow Press

|isbn=9780810879904

}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kerina, Mburumba}}

Category:1932 births

Category:2021 deaths

Category:Brooklyn College faculty

Category:Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Namibia

Category:Herero people

Category:Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) alumni

Category:Members of the National Assembly (Namibia)

Category:Namibian expatriates in the United States

Category:Namibian people of British descent

Category:People from Otjozondjupa Region

Category:SWAPO politicians

Category:The New School alumni

Category:Namibian expatriates in Indonesia

Category:Herero Chiefs' Council affiliate