In 1938 or 1939, an uninitiated and unwed girl named Nangombe living in
the Uukwaluudhi district of Ovamboland, northern Namibia, became
pregnant. If mission and colonial accounts are to be believed, it was not an
unusual occurrence at this time, but it had profound consequences for
Nangombe and those close to her. By the 1930s, the belief that pre-initiation
pregnancies boded ill fortune for clan, chief and community was highly
contested, but it was far from extinct. When the chief discovered the
pregnancy, he expelled Nangombe. She took refuge in a neighboring society
and bore a daughter. While such infants were often killed at birth,
Nangombe's was not. Mother and daughter returned home within the year.
The chief, enraged by their reappearance, then expelled the entire family.
The problems created by Nangombe's child caused tension in her
household and the family was driven to begging for food. Nangombe's
mother, seeing the catastrophes already caused by the presence of her
illegitimate granddaughter and fearing that worse would come, urged her
daughter to kill the child. Nangombe refused, while her mother continued to
offer dire predictions that their lineage would be destroyed if the child were
left alive. Finally, in July 1941, Nangombe gave into her mother's pressure
and strangled her daughter. Her father and the local chief reported her act
to colonial officials. The colonial government of South West Africa investigated
and sent her to trial with her mother, who was charged as an accessory
to murder.
The nature of the case changed abruptly in the colonial capital of
Windhoek. Instead of trying Nangombe for murder, the Supreme Court
convened to decide whether she was insane, despite testimony from her
village asserting that she was sane and that the murder had been a rational
act. Her mother was transformed from a co-defendant to a witness to her
daughter's physical and mental health. Nangombe was diagnosed as epileptic
and, on this basis, committed to a native asylum in Fort Beaufort, South
Africa. She remained there until 1946, when she was released and returned
home. She lived out the rest of her life in relative anonymity, little noticed
in the communities where she lived and invisible to the colonial administration
– a far cry from the scrutiny and public interventions which attended
her young adulthood.