Namibian President Returns Home to Fordham
By Tom Stoelker on September 23, 2015 Rose Hill, University News
"Hage G. Geingob, PhD, FCRH '70, president of the Republic of Namibia, returned home to Fordham to receive an honorary doctorate of humane letters at the Rose Hill campus on Sept. 22."We welcome you back as a son of Fordham, but at the same time we hail you as the Father of Namibia," said Joseph M. McShane, SJ, president of Fordham.
President Geingob arrived at Keating Hall with an entourage that included his wife, Monica Kalondo. Father McShane showed the president the granite step engraved with his name commemorating the occasion.
Namiba President Hage Geingob. (Photos by Bruce Gilbert)
"Namibia also went though apartheid and fought the liberation struggle," he said. "Their independence was an inspiration to the struggle that we [in South Africa] were going through."
It was his nation's discriminatory policies in education under apartheid that spurred Geingob to seek schooling in the United States in the mid-1960s.
At the time Fordham had a burgeoning African and African-American studies program, born out of the United States' own civil rights struggle. Geingob began studies at two colleges before a position at the U.N. brought him to New York, and finally to Fordham, where he finished his bachelor's.
Please click here for more photos and the President's full speech....and on the historic photo above for a current video interview with the President.
Read more...H.E. Dr Hage Geingob makes his first Heroes Day Speech as President of the Republic of Namibia:
HEROES ACRE NATIONAL MONUMENT, WINDHOEK, AUGUST 26, 2015
Director of Ceremonies;
Your Excellency, Edgar Chagwa Lungu, President of the Republic of Zambia and our Guest of Honour;
Comrade Sam Shafiishuna Nujoma, Founding President and Father of the Nation; (...)
I am honoured and humbled to be standing here today, to deliver my first Heroes Day Speech as President of the Republic of Namibia.
We mark this solemn occasion by remembering and paying tribute to the valiant sons and daughters of our soil, whose blood waters our freedom.
There is an African proverb which says, "Tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today."
Several decades ago, brave Namibians made the choice to take a leap of faith and join the struggle for the liberation of our beloved country.
These are the heroes and heroines who prepared us for the peace and tranquility we enjoy today. There is a time in human suffering, when one is forced to make a choice whether to submit or to fight, even if it means paying the ultimate price.
In 1966, when the International Court of Justice failed to assist our cause for self-determination in farcical circumstances, a turning point came to SWAPO. This prompted one of our stalwarts and heroes Peter Ndilimani Nanyemba to say, "We will cross many rivers of blood before we can achieve our freedom."
Following this clarion call, the SWAPO Central Committee, under the leadership of Comrade Sam Nujoma, resolved that we must fight in order to become our own liberators. To this end, the first bullets which marked the beginning of the armed struggle were fired at Ongulumbashe on 26 August 1966.
Today, the three heroes we are honouring as well as all our other heroes and heroines, are a testament to that statement made by Comrade Nanyemba and the resolve of Comrade Nujoma, for indeed they crossed many rivers of blood so that we can be a free and independent people rather than an oppressed people.
I am honoured to join this august gathering in Gaborone, where my delegation and I have received excellent hospitality since our arrival. I thank my brother, Lt. Gen. Seretse Khama Ian Khama, President of the Republic of Botswana, for making us feel at home.
Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,