By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
The 1920s, as we saw last week, were a time when increasing numbers
of young Ethiopians were despatched for study abroad. This policy was
actively promoted by the then ruler, the Regent and Heir to the Throne,
Ras Tafari Makonnen. His attitude to this educational enterprise is
apparent from a speech which he made, on 17 December 1926, when
receiving a batch of twenty-one students prior to their departure.
In this address, which was characteristic of his approach to youth,
he spoke to the youngsters almost as a father to his sons, and declared:
Insufficient Schools
“In our country, of which it can be said there are several million
inhabitants, we have not, as you know, sufficient schools teaching
languages and arts to cater for many children. Nevertheless, in the
schools that have been established, there are now more than a thousand
students; and if this number is small, it is no matter for surprise, but
we hope that, by God’s goodness, the numbers will grow.
“It is some five or six years since we started to send students to
Europe, as you are now going thither. We have heard no bad reports
against any of the boys who had gone hitherto. You must not forget the
saying ‘Unity is strength; disunity is injury’. With the aim of bringing
honour and praise upon the name of Ethiopia, pursue your studies with
suitable humility and diligence. If, on the contrary, you behave badly,
it will certainly not only be yourselves who will be condemned, but you
will also bring discredit to your country.
“To Help Your Country”
“We have chosen and despatched you so that you may help your country
with the fruits of your education. If you learn well, and your character
is good, you will be an honour both to yourselves and to your country;
and you will further encourage our hopes.
“You should so behave in the presence of foreigners as to make them
express the wish: ‘Since these few boys we have seen are of such high
intelligence and good character, we should like many others to come for
us to teach them.’ At the same time, however, I must tell you not to
forget, while you are in the foreign country whither you are bound, the
reading and writing of your own country’s language. To help you in this I
am giving you some of the various books which I have had printed, and I
recommend you to pay them diligent attention, and profit thereby.
“I further suggest that, since a person’s faults are not known to
himself, you should choose three from among you, outstanding in
knowledge and personality, who will observe your shortcomings, and
advise you about them – this will be a safeguard for you!
“I pray God, on your behalf, that you will return safely to our undying Ethiopia, and that you may help her!
“Good-bye!”
How and Where They Went
Most Ethiopian Government students going abroad in this period went
first to Egypt and Lebanon, before transferring to Europe or America.
Egypt, Sudan, Lebanon, and Palestine
The group in Egypt at one time numbered about forty students. The
largest number were at Lycee Francais at Alexandria, and included many
who subsequently went on to France. Among them was a future Ethiopian
Prime Minister, Aklilu Haptewold, as well as such well-known figures as
Kifle Irgetu, Asheber Gabre Heywot, and Tadesse Zeweldo. Several other
students went to Victoria College.
The group in the Sudan was smaller, perhaps around fifteen. They
included Aman Andom, a future general, who became Ethiopian Head of
State, for a short time after the Ethiopian Revolution of 1974.
The group in Lebanon, some thirty strong, were almost all in the
American University of Beirut. They included Gabre Mariam Amante and
Getahun Tessema, as well as Ingida Yohannes, Makonnen Haile and Makonnen
Desta, who later went to the United States.
There were also about half a dozen students in Palestine, several of whom later proceeded to Europe.
France
The largest number of Ethiopian students abroad, over fifty in
number, went to France. This was not surprising in view of the fact that
French was then Ethiopia’s principal foreign language. A score of
students studied political science, law or economics. They included
Aklilu Haptewold, subsequently Ethiopian Prime Minister, Andargachew
Masai, and Lorenzo Taezaz. Other students, whom we have been able to
identify, studied such subjects as mathematics, civil engineering, radio
telegraphy, architecture, and art.
Most of these students were in Paris, but there were others, too, in
such places as Mulhouse and Montpellier. Though the majority took
academic subjects, over a dozen attended the French military academy of
St. Cyr, and at least three specialised in aviation. One of the latter,
Tesfaye Mikael, became a fully qualified pilot at Le Bourget.
The students in France founded a society, the “Association Mutuelle de la Jeunesse Ethiopienne,” in 1929.
England and the United States
Ethiopian students in England were less numerous, a little over a
dozen. They included two sons of the then Foreign Minister, Blattengeta
Heruy, and several children of Haqim Warqnah, a sometime Minister in
England; Yilma Deressa, who attended the London School of Economics, and
later became an important Minister; Ayanna Berru, who went to the
Camborne School of Mines; and two other future Ethiopian Ministers,
Amanuel Abraham and Abebbe Retta.
Almost a dozen Ethiopian students likewise went to the United States.
They included Makonnen Desta, who took anthropology at Harvard, and
later became acting Ethiopian Minister of Education; Makonnen Haile, who
studied finance at Cornell, and Ingida Yohannes, veterinary medicine at
New York. Three other students, Melaku Beyen, Besha Worrid Hapte Wold
and Worku Gobena, went to Muskingum, a missionary college in Ohio, two
of them later transferring to Ohio State University.
Melaku Bayen subsequently founded a newspaper, the “Voice of
Ethiopia”, in defence of his country’s independence, at the time of the
Italian occupation. His slogan was “Better to die a free man than live
in slavery!”
Switzerland, Germany, Italy and Belgium
Ethiopian Government students were also found in Switzerland, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Spain, and elsewhere.
The Vatican
Almost forty Ethiopian students, despatched under Roman Catholic
auspices, meanwhile attended the Pontificio Collegio Etiopico, in the
Vatican, which was established by Pope Benedict XV in 1919. It replaced
the old Hospice for Ethiopians, which dated back several centuries. Most
of these students had come in six groups, between 1919 and 1932.
Falsahas
A group of 22 Falashas, or Ethiopian Beta Esra’el, students were also
sent abroad, in the 1920s and 1930s. They went, under Jewish auspices,
to study a wide variety of subjects, in various countries, including
Palestine, Egypt, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France, and England.
Women’s Education Abroad
Women’s education advanced much slower than that of men.
Nevertheless, the Emperor’s daughter, Princess Tsehai, was sent to
Switzerland. She was tutored by Lola Flad, the granddaughter of the
Swiss missionary of that name. During the Italian occupation Tsehai was
well known as a nurse in England, and after the liberation set about
establishing medical facilities in Ethiopia, but died prematurely. A
hospital in her name was later founded in Addis Ababa.
During her Swiss days she was accompanied by Yemiseratch Imru, the
daughter of Ras Imru, and Amsale Heruy, daughter of the Blattengeta
Heruy. All three women were taught French by Lola Flad, and returned
home with her, in 1928.
Shortly after this Kantiba Gabru’s two daughters, Yubdar and Sededu,
were sent to St. Chrischona, near Basle. Senedu subsequently went to
Lausanne. Imprisoned in Italy during the Italian occupation, she
subsequently wrote a play on that event, and later became Director of
the Manan School for Girls, and was Ethiopia’s first woman Member of
Parliament.
Eritreans
Students sent abroad by the Ethiopian Government in this period
included a significant number of youths from Eritrea. The Italian colony
was then very poorly supplied with educational facilities, most of
which, in view of the Fascist racial laws, were in any case not
available to “natives”. Tafari and his Government, following established
tradition, on the other hand made no distinction between Eritreans and
other Ethiopians.
Eritreans educated abroad at Ethiopian Government expense included
Lorenzo Taezaz, of Adi Caieh, Dawit Ogbazgy, of Daro Pawlos in Hamasen,
and Saraqa Berhan Gabra Egzi, of Akala Guzay. Another Eritrean, Ato
Ambay, who served as Ethiopian Political Director in Harar at the time
of the Italian invasion, told the British journalist George Steer that
he had left Eritrea “like all who had reached a certain level of
education and could not bear a racial tyranny”.
The Returnees
Ethiopia’s student returnees were, for the most part, deeply
patriotic. Their attitude may be seen in the words of a student, who, on
returning from the United States, wrote in an Amharic poem:
If the Lord helps me and give me strength,
I wish to learn for the good of my country.
We will study diligently and learn much,
So that the foreigners will not come to rule us!
If we think and study with attention,
We will learn to do what others do.
We must study as much as we can
Because, if we do not study, our country will be finished: we will lose it.
A similar point of view was expressed by the LSE graduate Lej Yilma
Deressa, who observed to the Hungarian journalist Ladislas Farago,
immediately prior to the Italian war:
“We young Ethiopians are in duty bound to our country. We are the
bridge that the Emperor has thrown across to European culture. It goes
almost without saying that we are sent to finish our education in Europe
or North Africa. Ethiopian students are to be found in all the
important universities of the world. The Foreign Minister’s sons studied
in Oxford and Cambridge . . . This growing generation will complete the
civilisation of our country.”
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
No comments:
Post a Comment