By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
We saw last week that the innovative policies inaugurated by Emperor 
Menilek were continued, to some extent, during the brief reign of his 
grandson, Lej Iyasu. Progress suffered, however, from the many power 
struggles of this period. These were only partially resolved when the 
prince was deposed, in 1916, and replaced by a system of dual 
government, with Menilek’s daughter as Empress, and Ras Makonnen’s son 
Tafari (the future Emperor Haile Sellassie) as Heir to the Throne, and, 
before long, Regent.
Tafari, who was largely concerned with foreign affairs, and in 
contact with most foreign visitors to the country, succeeded in 
convincing them that he was firmly committed to innovation. The Phelps 
Stobes mission, a visiting American educational group, for example 
declared him “among the first elements of hope.”
Though Empress Zawditu and most of the older nobles were reputedly 
opponents of rapid change, this period was characterised by a 
significant amount of innovation.
The League of Nations
On September 28, 1923, Tafari succeeded in gaining Ethiopia’s 
admission to the League of Nations. This was an important event in 
Ethiopia’s long history of foreign contacts. Membership of the 
international body enabled Tafari, in the 1920s, to withstand the 
pressures of the British and Italians, but was to prove almost useless 
at the time of fascist Italy’s inavasion in the following decade.
A State Visit to Palestine, Egypt – and Europe
In the summer of 1924 Tafari, undertook an important foreign tour, 
visiting Palestine, Egypt, France, Belgium, Holland, Sweden, ltaly, 
England, Switzerland and Greece. He was accompanied by the two most 
prominent Ethiopian chiefs of the day, Ras Hailu and Ras Kassa. The 
visit, which may be compared with Peter the Great’s to Western Europe 
some two hundred years earlier, did much to awaken Ethiopian society to 
the need to take the outside world seriously into account, as well as to
 adopt foreign inventions.
The visit, not surprisingly, intensified Tafari’s already 
considerable interest in innovation. Rosita Forbes, a British traveller 
of this time, quotes him as saying to her, very revealingly, “We need 
European progress because we are surrounded by it. That is at once a 
benefit and a misfortune. It will expedite our development, but we are 
afraid of being swamped by it.”
Good and Bad Influneces
Besides the political dangers from abroad, which were to culminate 
within a decade in Mussolini’s invasion, the Regent was faced, like 
earlier rulers, with the need to discriminate between the good and bad 
influence of the outside world. The British journalist George L. Steer, 
discussing this latter point a few years later, claimed that the 
“vulgarities of the west” came to the Regent, as to every African or 
Asian, “jumbled up with its refinements,” but that he was able to 
differentiate between them. “Early in his reign,” Steer goes on,”Europe 
came to him through the worst Europeans . . . but he was quick to sift 
them away.’
Ras Hailu
Ras Hailu, the hereditary ruler of Gojjam, was also much influenced 
by his foreign visit. He also revealed himself something of a wit. The 
story is told that in England he was received by King George V, who 
asked him, “Can you speak English?” Ras Hailu replied, through an 
interpreter, in the negative. “French?”, the King asked. “No!”, the Ras 
replied. “Arabic?” “No!”. ” Well, What do you speak ?”, said the King at
 last. The Ras retorted, “Can you speak Amharic?” “No,” said the King. 
“Galla?” “No. “Guraghe?” “No!”, “Well, sire,” said Ras Hailu, “I am glad
 to see that we are both equally ignorant!” Whereat, it is said, “the 
King laughed so loud and so long that the Queen came over to see what 
the matter could be.
Notwithstanding such language difficulties, Hailu obtained a fair 
understanding of the countries he visited, as may be seen by his 
observations to Rosita Forbes. She quotes him as saying, “Paris is for 
play, London for work . . . women buy clothes and jewels in Paris, but 
guns and boots come from London.” Turning to Egypt, he is said to have 
added, “You have done a great deal for Egypt… but you have not taught 
her to do anything for herself… It is not good for a country to be 
milk-fed by strangers.”
The Ras was particularly interested in introducing into Ethiopia the 
things he had seen on his travels. Tradition has it that, on returning 
to Gojjam, he enthusiastically described the modern inventions of the 
period, including the aeroplane, but that many of his listeners 
disbelieved him, whispering behind his back the word teqededu (“he 
lied”).
A Motor Car in Gojjam
Ras Hailu was determined to have a motor car in Gojjam. The British 
consul R.E. Cheesman relates that the chief ran his own car at Debra 
Markos, but, because of the difficulties of transport, it had been 
necessary for the machine to be brought there in pieces by mule. The 
vehicle moreover could only be used within the confines of the town. 
Baum, another taveller of this time, says that the Ras was full of 
questions about ploughs and tractors, while, according to the British 
merchant Rey, the chief was “contemplating the execution of a number of 
enterprises which we should describe as public works; such as a large 
mill for crushing the grain used in Debra Markos, for which the water 
will have to be brought several miles.” The Ras, he adds, was “a keen 
trader” and had bought a “lot of property” in Addis Ababa, which he let 
as shops, stores and a hotel; he also imported a number of motor-cars, 
which his agents hired to the general public”.
Other Innovations
This period witnessed a number of important innovations in various 
spheres of economic and social life. In the field of transport and 
communications opposition to the extension of the railway beyond Akaki 
was overcome, the line being at last brought to Addis Ababa in 1917. 
Characteristic of the dislike of trains manifested by the traditional 
mind is Rey’s statement that Fitawrari Hapta Giyorgis, Empress Zawditu’s
 Minister of War, boasted of never having seen the railway, far less of 
having used it.
A few years later, however, in 1922, the Regent set up a Public Works
 Department. Rey reported that year that the Regent had “taken in hand’ 
the question of road making in the capital, and that “many miles of good
 macadamised roads” had already come into existence.
Import of Motor Cars
After their visit to Europe the Regent, Ras Hailu, and Ras Kassa all 
three brought back a number of motor cars, the presence of which 
naturally increased the desire for road improvements. Traffic police 
were soon afterwards introduced. In the next few years work was 
initiated on a road from Addis Ababa to Jimma, and another in the 
Gambela area in the far west of the country. The number of cars in this 
period increased considerably. Christine Sandford, a British resident of
 the time, states that scarcely more than one or two cars would be seen 
in the streets in 1925, but that by 1930 several hundreds were in daily 
use. According to the Greek author Zenvos, 746 vehicles of various kinds
 had been imported between 1919 and 1935, by which date the number of 
cars registered in use was 526, including 80 taxis. The public was by 
this time much more accustomed to the sight of the motor car which in 
the early days was sometimes stoned by the unsophisticated, who referred
 to it as meto beila, a corruption of automobile, but literally a thing 
which “ate a hundred” people.
The Aeroplane
The advent of the aeroplane was delayed for a decade or so, 
reportedly because of opposition from Empress Zawditu and Fitawrari 
Hapta Giyorgis to so novel an innovation, apparently because the latter 
feared that its advent would endanger his country’s historic 
independence. Rey writing in 1922, stated that:
“while I was in Addis an effort was made by an enterprising Frenchman
 to bring two aeroplanes into the country; by some mistake of the 
Customs (who couldn’t classify them for duty under any existing tariff 
heading) they got up in truck as far as Addis, but there they remained. 
They were never allowed to be unpacked, and for weeks they lay rotting 
in open trucks under the tropical sun, until at last the diabolical 
instruments were returned ingloriously to the coast.”
Rey sums up the then conservative attitude by saying that Fitawrari 
Hapte Giyorgis, and the other conservatives, regarded `planes “as 
childish toys, or as an affront to the Almighty by endeavouring to 
extend the powers of man beyond those granted him by Providence, or as a
 devilish device of the Frangi [i.e. European] to spy out the land from 
abroad and so facilitate ultimate foreign conquest.”
In the summer of 1929, however, the Regent succeeded in obtaining the
 first `planes from Europe – two each from France and Germany and one 
from ltaly. Bartleet, a British resident of the time, recalls that when 
the first plane arrived, on August 15, members of the public “just gaped
 with amazement, the general feeling amongst them being aptly put into 
words by one whom I heard say, What does God think of that machine up in
 his sky.”
Though at first outside the comprehension of the multitude the `plane
 was destined to be of major importance in Ethiopia, where the 
difficulties of ordinary communication gave it an even greater advantage
 over other forms of transport than in most countries.The military 
significance of aviation was soon also proved. First by the Government’s
 defeat of Ras Gugsa of Gojjam on March 31, 1930, later by the ltalian 
invasion of 1935 when an Ethiopian poet exclaimed:
We would not have failed to defend our country, Had not they entered by the gates of Heaven which we did not know of.
The element of surprise is apparent also in a couplet of Gojjam, 
recalled by Alemayehu Mogos, in which an Ethiopian, on seeing an ltalian
 plane, for the first time,says:
You who fly like angels, Please answer the cry of the poor.
One of the early Ethiopian `planes, called Tsehai, after Emperor 
Haile Sellassie’s daughter, is currently in the Italian Aviation Museum.
 Now that the issue of the return of the Aksum obelisk in Rome is 
resolved, we are waiting to see whether the Italian Government will have
 the dedency to return this `plane to Ethiopia, as should be done in 
accordance with the Italian Peace Treaty of 1947: vediamo!
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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