July 28, 2013
by Selam Beyene, PhD
The
history of Ethiopia is replete with contradictions and paradoxes. There
are accounts galore of heroism and meekness, patriotism and treachery,
devotion and apathy, and, above all, fear of God and acts of
By
anti-Ethiopianism we purport the systematic and government-sanctioned
weakening of the national fabric by pitting one ethnic group against
another, as was witnessed recently in such areas as Benishangul-Gumuz
and Gura Ferda zones. Anti-Ethiopianism is the appalling government
policy of dislocating natives from their ancestral lands and
transferring national wealth to foreigners at dirt cheap prices. It is
anti-Ethiopianism to frame a constitution whose central object is to
promote the disintegration and land-lockedness of the country. Most
importantly, anti-Ethiopianism implies the deviant system of government
under which all major economic, political and military institutions are
controlled by the minority Woyane group, and through which fundamental
human rights are suppressed and the people are denied their basic rights
to participate in free and fair elections.
Confucius sagaciously
advised: “Study the past if you would define the future.” Accordingly,
when we consider the current predicaments of the country, which are
characterized by ethnocentrism, totalitarianism, corruption, nepotism
and absence of a feeling of Ethiopian patriotism amongst the rulers;
and, most importantly, when we search for a viable solution to them, we
should go no further for clues and explanations than the recent past
events, beginning with the invasion of Italy in 1935-1940.
Much
has been documented about the infamous Fascist aggression by notable
Ethiopian and Western historians, journalists and novelists, as well as
other writers who had taken active parts in the actual war. While
well-researched history books and journal articles may serve as the
ultimate sources for academic exercise, there is considerable
information that may be gleaned from anecdotal accounts narrated by
individuals based on their personal experiences. In this regard, we are
fortunate to have at our disposal now the writings of three foreigners
who had the opportunity to witness firsthand the savagery of the Fascist
aggression, the heroism of the Ethiopian fighters, and the betrayal by
local collaborators.
The three foreigners, whose paths had crossed
several times in the battles of Tembien, Maichew and other fronts, had
fought on the side of Ethiopia under the leaderships of such eminent
Ethiopians as Ras Kassa Hailu Darge, Ras Seyoum Mengesha and Ras
Mulugeta Yiggezu, the War Minister. In so doing, they were able to
record considerable historical data and to leave behind intriguing
accounts of bravery and treachery that could inform present and future
researchers seeking answers to some of the most complex questions about
present-day Ethiopia. Most importantly, they provide critical insights
into the underlying reasons for the anti-Ethiopian agenda Zenawi and his
Woyane entourage successfully exploited to catapult themselves to
power; the continued damage to the long-term viability of the country
that is caused by the misguided fiscal, economic, educational and
military policies implemented by the TPLF-led regime; and the
institutionalization of ethnic-based governance that is portentously
promoted to nurture inter-ethnic animosity among brothers and sisters
who have lived in relative harmony for many centuries.
Recently,
the works of two of the foreigners were made accessible to Amharic
readers. The first, ቀይ አንበሳ (Alpha, 2003) was translated by Tesfaye M.
Bayileyegn from the original narration of Colonel Alejandro del Valle1.
The second book, የሃበሻ ጀብዱ (AAU Press, 2010), is a translation by Techane
J. Mekonnen based on Adolf Parlesack’s memoir in Czech entitled
Habesska Odyssea (Praha : Panorama, 1989). The third, and most
controversial, memoir was written by Colonel Feodor Konovalov, a Russian
military adviser to Ras Seyoum Mengesha and other leaders. While there
is no accessible Amharic translation of Konovalov’s writings, relevant
excerpts are available in various sources (see, e.g., Clarke III, 2008
2).
Excepting a few and infrequent inconsistencies among the
renditions of the three foreigners about shared events that they had
jointly witnessed, there is a remarkable degree of consistency in their
accounts of the breathtaking gallantry of Ethiopian fighters, as well as
the distressingly heartrending treachery of domestic collaborators,
especially from Tigray, Rayya, and Azebo regions, in the early days of
the war.
Although Konovalov was generally silent on the
contribution of the traitors to the defeat of Ethiopia, he was in
remarkable concord with the other two in expressing awe and admiration
at the inimitable valor and fearlessness of the Ethiopian army in the
face of an infinitely better armed enemy. Quoting a Western diplomat,
Konovalov was unhesitant to affirm: “… the Ethiopian soldier,
well-taught and well-led, had no equal anywhere in the world.” The
memoirs of all three abound with their eyewitness accounts of how,
defying all odds against them, waves of primitively armed Ethiopian
fighters, composed of men and women from every ethnic group, religious
persuasion and social ladder, stormed, time and again, well fortified
Italian positions, sending terror and confusion among the enemy. As one
reads about the surreal exploits of those brave fighters, the knowledge
of belonging to a people of such valiance and heroism fills one’s heart
with a sense of immense pride. In one instance, for example, del Valle
tells of a story in which the Ethiopians ferociously and unstoppably
climbed up a hill to engage the enemy that was assailing them from above
with automatic weapons and mustard gas. In summarizing his amazement at
the extraordinary scene he was witnessing, he wrote: “The efforts of
the invaders to try to stop those brave Ethiopians, who were charging
uphill over the bodies of their fallen compatriots, was like firing
bullets from machine guns to futilely slow down the gushing of water
downhill.”
The foreigners also documented heroic accomplishments
of ordinary citizens, whose names never made it to the history books,
but who had demonstrated unimaginable bravery on the battlefields. Among
such stories eloquently told by Parlesack, none is probably as
fascinating as that of a young Oromo boy from the Sellale region by the
name of Abichou. Parlesack describes with a Homeric touch the valiance
of the boy as he terrorized the Fascist aggressors, chased to their
deaths many of the traitors, coordinated a multi-ethnic army from
Hamassen, Tigray, Gojjam and Sellale, and scored countless victories
against the invading army.
Parlesack and del Valle were also
unreserved in their expression of disgust at the degree of betrayal and
treachery perpetrated by some members of the Tigray, Rayya and Azebo
regions that made the campaigns of the great armies of Ras Seyoum, Ras
Kassa and Ras Mulugetta immeasurably arduous. Parlesack even hinted that
the balance of power at the battle of Maichew was tipped in favor of
the invaders, thanks in great part to the sabotage of the traitors from
Rayya and Azebo, who inflicted considerable damage on the advancing
Ethiopian army coming from behind at critical moments.
Among the
most notorious traitors of the era was Dejazmach Haile Sellasie Gugsa, a
great grandson of Emperor Yohannis IV, who gave his allegiance to
Benito Mussolini in the early days of the war. This traitor facilitated
the invasion of Mekelle in November of 1935, and later joined the
invading army that marched on Addis Ababa in April of 1936. Throughout
the occupation, he provided invaluable service as a trusted adviser to
both Rodolfo Graziani and the Duke of Aosta. Remarkably, his first
demonstration of treachery was to raise the Italian flag in Mekelle,
desecrating the Ethiopian tri-colors. Over six decades later, another
traitor, the late Meles Zenawi, would defile that same flag.
Indeed,
in the face of the well-known anti-Ethiopian sentiment unabashedly
exhibited by Zenawi, and now aggressively implemented by his successors,
it is not beyond the realm of rational proclivity to wonder whether the
turncoats of the Italo-Ethiopian war did not influence the imprudent
minds of the current traitors.
Much has been disclosed about the
dubious family tree of the late dictator and the backgrounds of some of
those in the Woyane leadership. Regarding the notorious heritage of
Zenawi, Gebremedhin Araya, a one-time TPLF fighter and an accomplished
authority on the late dictator’s family history, has given gripping
testimonials, in a series of ESAT interviews, how the dictator’s mind
might have been poisoned while growing up in a family that had always
betrayed the land they lived in. There are also troubling accounts of
the backgrounds of most of the Woyane leaders, including the notorious
Bereket Simon, Sibhat Negga and several others.
At a time when
there is a lot of confusion among some sectors of the Ethiopian
community about the true nature of the Woyane regime and its hidden
agenda, it is absolutely critical to see the treachery of the rulers
through the prism of their treasonous forefathers. This is especially
indispensable in any effort to raise the awareness of the people of
Tigray in whose name these traitors are causing immeasurable damage.
Although there were several traitors who, like Haile Sellasie Gugsa,
sided with the enemy and fought against the Ethiopian army, there were
also exemplary patriots from the same region who valiantly fought and
died in defense of their motherland against Fascist invasion. Similarly,
despite the common perception that many Tigreans today are backers of
the evil dictatorship, it should be incontrovertibly affirmed that there
is a large proportion of Tigreans who abhor the destructive and
anti-Ethiopian path followed by the Woyane regime.
The late
dictator and his party have always projected themselves as saviors of
the people from the tyrannical rule of the Derg. Unfortunately, many
genuine Ethiopians have overlooked the fact that the Woyane regime is
not only a most vicious authoritarian system, as the Derg was, but also
an atrocious organization whose ultimate objective is the destruction of
Ethiopia as a nation. In actual fact, no rational government in history
has unilaterally advocated the dismemberment of the country it rules,
made attempts to justify its isolation through land-lockedness, parceled
out precious lands to foreigners at dirt cheap prices, or
systematically used ethnicity, famine, illiteracy and disease as
instruments to enslave the people it governs, to the extent the Woyane
rulers have done so. It is therefore vitally important to effectively
establish the anti-Ethiopian identity of the regime, and to reignite the
patriotism of those members of the society who have been hoodwinked by
the pervasive propaganda campaign that the regime has successfully, but
spitefully, launched to portray itself as a better alternative to the
brutal Derg dictatorship.
A major weakness of the pro-democracy
movement thus far has been its hopeless ineptitude to articulate
precisely why the Woyane philosophy is anti-Ethiopian, and how dangerous
that philosophy is to the long-term viability of the country. The
suppression of basic human rights, the codification of ethnocentrism in
the constitution, the irresponsible policy of land grabs, the pitting of
one ethnic group against another, and the unfettered corruption among
the leaders of the regime have not been effectively communicated to the
people as manifestations of this general scheme of anti-Ethiopianism
that the Woyane leadership has perfected over the past several decades.
Indubitably,
the only realistic strategy that would guarantee the certain
destruction of the Woyane regime is one that successfully establishes
and communicates to the people of Ethiopia this abhorrent nature of the
regime. Without a thorough understanding of the TPLF as a perfidious
organization by the people of Ethiopia in general, and those of Tigray
in particular, there cannot be a unified front that is a prerequisite
for a successful outcome of the struggle to save the country, liberate
the oppressed, and establish a democratic system where individual
freedoms would flourish and the long-term survival of Ethiopia would be
guaranteed. As they have heroically demonstrated to the world before,
during and after the Italo-Ethiopian war, there is nothing that unifies
and arouses the fighting spirit of the people of Ethiopia more than a
sense of direct threat to their heritage and independence either by
foreign aggressors or domestic connivers. Pro-democracy forces,
Websites, and other groups and individuals, therefore, have the moral
imperative to reignite the ardor of the people to defend their country
by raising their awareness as to the true nature of the treasonous
organization that is Woyane.
1In “Un hombre blanco en el infierno
negro por el Coronel Alejandro del Valle” as told to Arturo Alfonso
Roselló (Havana: Impreso en los Talleres Tipograficos, 1937)).
2 Clarke III, JV, “Feodor Konovalov and the Italo-Ethiopian War (Part I), World War II Quarterly, 2008; 5:4-37
Warfare is a fascinating subject. Despite the dubious morality of using violence to achieve personal or political aims. It remains that conflict has been used to do just that throughout recorded history.
ReplyDeleteYour article is very well done, a good read.
Warfare is a fascinating subject. Despite the dubious morality of using violence to achieve personal or political aims. It remains that conflict has been used to do just that throughout recorded history.
ReplyDeleteYour article is very well done, a good read.