失踪者还没有死:Efraim Kamati Kapolo和消失无踪的不可能

Q4 Arts and Humanities
V. Shigwedha
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1990年3月21日,纳米比亚在经历了106年的殖民占领后获得独立,首先是德国(1884年至1918年),随后是南非(1920年至1990年)。在殖民时期,纳米比亚人是有组织的种族和政治压迫以及国家策划的恐怖行为的受害者,这些恐怖行为包括出于种族动机的杀害、驱逐和失踪许多人。在这篇文章中,我试图研究在南非在纳米比亚的镇压统治时期,特别是在种族隔离时期,失踪的纳米比亚人的“存在和不存在”的持续模糊和不确定的情况。在我采访的纳米比亚家庭中,失踪人员一直存在,许多家庭成员坚持认为,那些在种族隔离期间失踪的人尽管失踪了几十年,但仍然活着。在此背景下,我从一系列证词中提出一个案例研究,这些证词反映了关于Efraim Kamati Kapolo的困难和未解决的历史,他在1966年9月被南非国防军(SADF)成员逮捕后失踪,至今仍下落不明卡波罗的失踪并不是一个孤立的事件,他的证词与许多在殖民统治期间失踪的纳米比亚人的痛苦经历产生了共鸣。我的目的是提出一种模式,用于探索失去亲人的经历,并承认吞噬许多家庭生活的巨大痛苦和苦难,这些家庭渴望了解失踪亲人命运的真相,却从未得到国家的任何承认或认可。我关注的是那些失踪的人并没有死这种错综复杂的看法。感知是真实的,但却难以探究。虽然我的结论是尝试性的,但伴随这一案例研究的修辞可能会引发一场辩论,在我看来,这场辩论与一个因殖民主义、种族隔离、战争和恐怖经历而遭受长期创伤和痛苦的社会是高度相关的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The missing are not dead yet: Efraim Kamati Kapolo and the Impossibility of Disappearing Without a Trace
On 21 March 1990, Namibia gained its independence after 106 years of colonial occupation, first by Germany (from 1884 to 1918) and subsequently by South Africa (1920 to 1990). During colonial times, Namibians were victims of systematised racial and political oppression, as well as state-orchestrated acts of terror involving the racially motivated killing, deportation and disappearance of many people. In this article, I seek to examine the ongoing condition of ambiguity and inconclusiveness surrounding the ‘presence and absence’ of Namibians who went missing during the years of South Africa’s repressive rule in Namibia, and especially during the apartheid period. Among the Namibian families I interviewed, missing persons are ever present, and many of the family members insist that those who went missing during apartheid are still alive despite decades of absence. Against this backdrop, I present a case study from a collection of testimonies that reflect difficult, unresolved histories regarding Efraim Kamati Kapolo, who went missing following his arrest by members of the South African Defence Force (SADF) in September 1966, and who remains missing.1 Kapolo’s disappearance was not an isolated event, and the testimonies resonate with painful experiences of many other Namibians who also went missing during colonial rule. My aim is to suggest a model for exploring the experience of losing loved ones, and for acknowledging the enormity of the pain and suffering that engulf the lives of many families who desire to know the truth about the fate of their missing loved ones and who have never received any acknowledgement or recognition from the state. I focus on the intricacies surrounding the perception that those who went missing were not dead. Perceptions are real and yet difficult to probe. While my conclusions are tentative, the rhetoric accompanying this case study may open up a debate which, in my understanding, is highly relevant to a society with the long-lasting trauma and suffering arising from the experience of colonialism, apartheid, war and terror.2
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来源期刊
Kronos
Kronos Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
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24 weeks
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