By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
Pre-war’s Ethiopia’s educational system began to take shape after the Emperor Haile Sellassie’s coronation in 1930.
At that time a Ministry of Education and Fine Arts was established 
under Blattengetta Sahlu Sedalu, a former graduate of the Menilek 
School. The Ministry’s First Secretary was Ato Kidina Mariam Aberra. The
 Ministry, according to Zervos, was then allotted 2 per cent of the 
Treasury’s revenue, besides the special education tax mentioned in a 
previous article.
Other action was also taken. The Emperor is reported by his Swedish 
advisor Eric Virgin to have given orders that soldiers should learn to 
read and write, and that priests should instruct the youth.
A University Plan
A plan for a University was later drafted by the Ethiopian 
Government’s American educational adviser, Ernest Work, formerly of 
Muskingum College, in the United States. The plan envisaged a system of 
six years 
primary education, six years high school, and four years 
University education. Special attention was to be paid to 
teacher-training and agriculture. The basic problem, Work explained, 
was, however, that there were no trained Ethiopian teachers available to
 implement the plan.
Notwithstanding the immensity of the problems facing the country, significant advances were made in the next few years.
In 1930 the Lycee Haile Sellassie I was founded. It was decided that 
it should give technical and linguistic training to some 100 students. 
Instruction was in French, and the subjects studied included 
mathematics, physics and chemistry, civil engineering, veterinary 
science and modern languages.
Girls’ Education
The modern education of Ethiopian girls may be said to have begun in 
the following year, 1931, when Empress Menen founded the girls’ school 
which bore her name. Students followed their courses in French, and had a
 succession of French head-mistresses: Mme. Garricoix, Mme. Havard, and 
Mme. Garrigue, the last of whom commenced her duties in August, 1935, 
little over a month before the Italian fascist invasion.
Subjects studied at the Menen School included science and 
mathematics, as well as household management, dressmaking, and physical 
training. Students sat annually at the French Legation for an 
examination qualifying them for the French Certificate of Primary 
Studies – and if any reader has such a certificate they should give it, 
for the sake of history, to the Institute of Ethiopian Studies!.
Report on the school is provided by Mrs Sandford. Writing of the 
period immediately before the war, she says that some 80 girls were at 
the school. The Hungarian journalist Farago describes the institution’s 
installations as the “most modern” in the
capital, and adds: “the dormitories impressed me most of all. They 
were hygienic and tidy, and a Swiss pensionat could not have been more 
comfortable.”
How to Educate a Daughter
The importance of the Menen School for Girls may be seen from the 
fact that it was established in the face of strong opposition to women’s
 education. Dr Merab, always a good observer of the Addis Ababa scene, 
noted in 1928 that very few even among rich families, were willing to 
employ a priest to educate their daughters. Popular opinion, he says, 
believed that an educated woman would not took after the house, while 
prejudice held that the husband of a literate wife would not live long 
as his spouse would resort to curses and other wicked practices to kill 
him. Merab, on asking one of his Ethiopian friends why he did not 
educate his only daughter, received the following reply, “Where have I 
the money to pay a priest or dabtara [i.e. lay cleric] to educate my 
daughter, and to buy a eunuch to supervise the priest or dabtara.
St George’s School
Several other schools were also established in the years immediately 
before the Italian war. St. George’s school, situated near the cathedral
 of that name was opened in September 1929. It under the direction of a 
Swiss, M. Bloch, who was later succeeded by an Ethiopian, Ato Akale: it 
had five teachers and about 200 pupils. Instruction was in French, and 
provided entirely free of charge.
School of the Redeemer
The School of the Redeemer for Orphans was founded by the Emperor in 
1932. Situated at Gulale, on the north-western outskirts of the capital,
 it was run by an Ethiopian headmaster, Ato Haile Mariam Gezmu, and 
seven other teachers, including a Lebanese, Frederick Kamal, and later 
by an Ethiopian assisted by a Greek. About a hundred exclusively male 
students were lodged and taught free of charge. Instruction was in 
French and Amharic. Subjects of study included science, mathematics, 
shoemaking, blacksmiths’ work, and other trades.
Teacher Training and Boy Scouting
A Teachers’ Training School was established in 1934, with a view to providing teachers for provincial schools.
A Boy Scouts’ School was also founded in the same year, and was 
directed at first by the above- mentioned Frederick Kamal, and later by 
all Ethiopian assisted by a locally born Greek. Instruction was given in
 French, and included all primary subjects, as well as typical Boy Scout
 activities.
Fine Arts
The Imperial School of Art was established under the direction of Ato
 Agagnew Ingida, who had studied in Paris at the Academie des Beaux 
Arts. Interviewed by Farago, on the eve of the war, he declared: “I owe 
everything to His Majesty. He enabled me to study, and now he is my only
 patron”.
Falasha Students
Another interesting school in the capital was the School for 
Falashas, or Beta Esra’el students, founded in 1924 by the French Jewish
 scholar, Jacques Faitlovitch and his sister. Sponsored by the American 
Pro-Falasha Committee, its director was Professor Tamrat Emanuel. The 
school had three successive sites in Addis Ababa, First established near
 Ras Makonnen bridge, it was later moved to Felwaha, and finally to 
Gulale, on land provided by the Emperor. The school, according to a 
traveller of this time, Hermann Norden, catered mainly for the children 
of Falasha families employed in the city.
From the above outline we may fairly say that modern education, by 1935, had advanced considerably since Emperor Menilek’s day.
Provincial Education
The foundations of primary education were also laid at this time in a
 number of provincial towns, where fourteen primary schools were 
established between 1928 and 1935. It was of course impossible to set up
 secondary schools until students had first passed through primary 
school!
Dessie
Two schools were established in 1928: a French language school at 
Dessie, founded by Princess Sahine, mother of Empress Menen, and an 
English language school at Gore, called after Tafari Makonnen. The 
British mining engineer Bartleet, who visited this latter school, says 
it had cost 40,000 Maria Theresa dollars to build, and that this had 
been collected by a 2 per cent. ad valorem export tax. The institution 
had two Syrian and two Ethiopian teachers, and fifty pupils, who studied
 Amharic, French, English, mathematics, and geography.
Three schools were set up in the following year: the Tafari Makonnen 
school at Jijiga, and the Haile Sellassie school at Lekempt, both of 
which gave instruction in English, and a school at Dire Dawa where both 
French and English were used.
1930, the year of the Emperor’s coronation, witnessed the 
establishment of a second school at Harar, which in 1933 was united with
 Menilek’s old school, under the name Ecole Ras Makonnen.
In 1931 an English language school was founded at Asba Tafari by Dr. Worqneh Martin.
In 1932 a Haile Sellassie school was established at Ambo, and a Medhane Alem school at Jimma. Both gave instruction in French.
Two English speaking schools were set up in 1934: one at Gondar; the other at Debra Markos.
The last three pre-war schools, founded in 1935, the year of the 
fascist invasion, were at Adwa and Makale, both of which were based on 
English, and at Salale, on French.
By this time there were eight English language schools, situated on 
the periphery of the Ethiopian Empire at Maqale, Adwa, Gondar, Debra 
Markos, Lekemti, Gore, Jigjiga and Asba Tafari; five French language 
schools, more in the heart of the country, at Harar, Dessie, Jimma, Ambo
 and Salale, and one at Dire Dawa, where both languages were used.
Foreign Community Education
Several foreign communities also contributed to the furtherance of 
Ethiopian education, in many cases through the medium of missionary 
societies.
The French community ran several schools under the auspices of the 
Alliance Francaise which served the education of youth irrespective of 
nationality. By 1935 the Alliance had 450 students enrolled at its Addis
 Ababa school. In Dire Dawa it had two schools: one for academic 
studies, directed by M. Bonhomme, with 200 students, and another, 
directed by Brother Galmier, which taught handicraft trades to about 30 
students. Another 200 students, supervised by M. Maurel, were enrolled 
at the Ras Makonnen School at Harar.
French Roman Catholic missions were also educationally very active. 
Besides the Brothers of Saint Gabriel, who ran the Alliance Francaise 
schools, there were Capuchin and Lazarist Fathers and the Franciscan 
Sisters. The Capuchins, whose headquarters were at Toulouse, France, ran
 educational projects in various parts of the country. In Addis Ababa 
they had a small school for 20 pupils and an orphanage for 30 boys, 
educated at the mission’s expense. Village schools were also operated at
 Dobba, Sure, Lafto, Bilalu, Midagduu, Lafto-goba, Endeber and Enemor in
 Gurage, Wassera in Kambata, Dubo in Walamo, Mine and Daga-dima in Arsi,
 and Metcha in Shawa, and a small orphanage at Asba Tafari. The 
Lazarists also ran a school and orphanage at Gulale, and a school at 
Mandida, also in Shawa.
The Franciscan Sisters of Calais also played a modest role in girls’ 
education. In the capital they had a school for 30 pupils at the railway
 station, another for 120, mainly day-girls, near the market, and two 
orphanages with 25 and 70 inmates respectively. These missionaries also 
ran an orphanage for 40 girls at Harar, a girls’ school and orphanage at
 Dire Dawa where 70 day-girls and 40 boarders were taught music, design,
 sewing, typing and shorthand, and an orphanage for 40 girls at Dobha.
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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