I was the first African to receive the Goethe Medal. I just gave it back
I cannot stay silent or keep an official decoration from a government this callous to human suffering in Gaza, explains the award-winning writer.
My name is Zukiswa Wanner. I am a writer, editor, publisher and curator who considers the African continent my home. In 2020, I became the first woman on my continent to receive the Goethe Medal alongside Bolivian artist and museum director Elvira Espejo Ayca and British writer Ian McEwan. While the Goethe Medal is conferred by the Goethe-Institut to “non-Germans who have performed outstanding service for international cultural relations”, it is important to note that the award is an official decoration of the Federal Republic of Germany.
I note and appreciate Goethe-Institut President Carola Lentz’ statement from an article of 14 January 2024 in Der Spiegel where she states: “Longstanding partners in the international cultural world are losing trust in the liberality of Germany’s democracy and poses the question, should the Auswartige Kultur und Bildungspolitik (AKPB) support only persons or groups who accommodate the political/moral agenda of the respective German government?”
She concludes otherwise and notes that organisations like Goethe-Institut must not become the extended arm of the government, particularly in difficult political times. In the same vein, Goethe-Institut Johannesburg, which is the regional headquarters for sub-Saharan Africa stated on 7 February 2024: “As to the current war in Gaza – we are convinced that in view of the catastrophic situation, a new ceasefire is urgently needed. The rising number of civilian victims is unacceptable.”
It’s important to state this so I highlight that this is not a statement surrendering the medal because of the Goethe-Institut and its position even where we may not always agree. I mention the Goethe-Institut’s statement by way of explaining that my actions are not a critique of the cultural institution but rather of the government of the Federal Republic of Germany.
In May 2023, while attending Palestine Festival of Literature and months before 7 October, I was in the Occupied Palestine Territories and travelled to Ramallah, Nabi Saleh, East Jerusalem, Hebron, and Lydd. As a writer coming from a country with a history of apartheid, what I experienced shook me and resulted in my writing a long essay “Vignettes of a People in an Apartheid State”. One did not need to be from a country with a history of apartheid to see the daily injustices visited on Palestinians from separate roads and number plates to having strangers from the US or white South Africans with apartheid nostalgia come with guns and the protection of Israeli Defence Forces to settle into their homes. Indeed, unlike most literature festivals, PalFest takes the writers to multiple cities since Palestinians are unable to travel without permission from Israel, much like the pass laws in South Africa during apartheid, just more cruel.
This is why I am giving up the medal.
I understand Germany’s guilt for the Holocaust.
I do.
That guilt is appropriate and has enabled Germany to face its unconscionable past.
But it is this that makes its position on a current genocide in Palestine all the more shameful.
As an aside, and as an African, I wish the German government exhibited the same regret for their history in Namibia with the Herero-Nama genocide and the genocide in Tanzania during the Maji Maji Rebellion. Equally important, I wish that the German government, in reflection and saying “never again” would acknowledge that never again should be for anybody.
Instead, what I see is Germany being on the wrong side of a genocide again (as per International Court of Justice provisional ruling to the case brought on by South Africa). Additionally, according to the UN High Commission for Refugees, Germany and the US are the biggest arms exporters to Israel. With more than 30,000 killed in Gaza, this should have been a mea culpa moment for Germany; instead, they seem to have doubled their support for a very problematic government.
Culturally, since 7 October 2023, I have seen Germany disengaging from artists for their position on the colonial state that is Israel even in light of Israel’s failures to adhere to the Oslo Accord (which was a super mediocre document for Palestinians). I am reading that of the cultural events cancelled by Germany, 30% are by Jewish artists who are anti-Zionist. It doesn’t make sense to me that Jews can be considered antisemitic (obviously ignoring that Palestinians are a semitic people as those in support of the Israeli government seem intent on forgetting).
More recently, during the Berlin Film Festival, Palestinian filmmaker Basel Adra and Israeli journalist Yuval Abraham won best documentary prize for their film No Other Lands which shows the eradication of Palestinian villages in the West Bank. The German Cultural Minister is reported to have stated that her applause was only for the Israeli half of the filmmaking duo. South African history has a phrase for this. Petty Apartheid.
I thus find myself unable to stay silent or keep an official decoration from a government that is this callous to human suffering.
Brava! Admiration and thanks from a Canadian artist who spent the last few years of South African apartheid in Harare, Zimbabwe. My partner was a journalist who supported the ANC and we were not allowed to visit SA until after Mandela was released. When I finally went and visited Jo’burg and Durban, I experienced the engineered separateness that was the legacy of apartheid. Since then, through my Palestinian friends, artists and filmmakers, I have seen a hyper intense, atomized version of it. The systematic violence and oppression are unbearable, and the passive witnessing of this carnage is appalling. I am ashamed of the complicity of the Canadian and American governments in this; whereas tears of joy ran down my face as I watched the South African legal team present their case at the Hague. So a thousand thank you’s to you and your government, for standing up for what is right.
Wonderful stance to fight for the rights of humanity. Yours is a strong statement and an act of honour Madam.
Thank you for your courage, your compassion and your commitment to justice across the planet!
Almighty bless you for your stance on not accepting this award.
No person of conscience would accept the hypocrisy the west has blatantly shown in the Palestinian issue.
That’s impressive! Your achievements showcase the rich diversity and talent across continents. Congratulations on your well-deserved recognition! Your work and recognition contribute to the cultural landscape, highlighting the importance of programs like SASSA in supporting diverse talent
Dear Zukiswa, I am honoured to be your countryman. The Palestinian life no less than an Israeli life. This is a call for all progressive people to rally behind the call to preserve the remaining lives of the people of Palestine.