By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
We saw last week that Ethiopian imports, in the 1920s and 1930s, were both growing and becoming more diversified.
Railway Statistics
This development may be further illustrated by a comparison between 
the statistics compiled by the Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway company for 
1916, the year of Lej Iyasu’s overthrow, and 1930, the year of Ras 
Tafari Makonnen’s coronation as Emperor Haile Sellassie. The import of 
textiles, a traditional item of consumption, rose substantially from 
3,573 tons to 5,901, while that of articles associated with the modern 
sector of the economy rocketed: petrol rose from 142 tons to 453, 
ironware from 41 to 221, glassware from 11 to 247, soap from 67 to 421, 
rice from 64 to 297 and sugar from 51 to 595.
The gradual introduction of more and more imported goods, as well as 
the adoption of mechanical techniques, inevitably resulted in the 
beginnings of a great transformation, which is of course still in 
progress today.
The social impact of such changes on the daily life of the peasant, 
and above all of his wife and daughter may be deduced from the following
 poems, collected by Ato Alemayehu Mogus outside Dabra Marqos after 
World War II. Several voice bantering male comment on the easier life 
opened up for their womenfol, and are by implication critical of 
feminine laziness. They remind us of Emperor Tewodro’s comment on a 
flour mill cited in a pervious article.
The advent of imported abujedid, or calico, and of flour ground by mechanical mill, causes a husband to exclaim to his wife:
My trousers are of abujedid, and my shamma is of (manufactured) warp.
 My ox does the ploughing; I have the flour mill to grind the grain, 
What right have you (feminine) to ask where I spend my days or nights?
A similar theme is apparent in the words of the man, who, commenting 
on the various innovations of the time observes, in sexist vein:
She does not grind pepper: we now have pepper mills,
She does not wash our feet: we now have large shoes,
She does not gather wood: we now have eucalyptus trees.
A broken piece of tin is of no practical use. Take your daughter, my 
lady, for a mother cannot abandon her offspring (however useless).
The same idea may be seen in the following excerpt from a poem in which the husband exclaims:
Welkffa trees (a tree the bark of which is used in making rope) grow in the valleys; Unable to make her grind the tef,
I had it ground (at the mill), and brought it for her to make the dough,
She put the pot on the fire like a cultivated woman,
But she went wandering about instead of preparing the dough,
And my children were hurt when the pot wasoverturned.
The existence of the mechanical flour mill provokes the husband, who still relies on his wife’s labour, to say to her:
Wake up and do the grinding, Shall I also buy flour like the sleepy one?
A conservative, linking together the idea of women’s emancipation and the use of imported calico, or abujedid, says
She who has come as an advocate of women
Is clad in abujedid from head to feet.
What the women themselves thought is not recorded!
Changing Way of Life
Not withstanding the elements of change outlined above the static 
forces in Ethiopian economic and social life continued to be powerful. 
Charles Rey, writing in the mid-1920′s, reported that though imported 
cloth was by then much cheaper than the locally produced article, it did
 not penetrate far from the main trading centers. This latter statement 
was corroborated by his compatriot Rosita Forbes. She recalls that at 
the old town of Ankobar people still did their own spinning and weaving,
 and adds: “In front of every hut we saw one or two hand looms where men
 plied wooden shuttles on a primitive frame, the white shammas growing 
under the gaze of their womenfolk, who with a basket of cotton fluff 
beside them, wound the froth on to a bobbin and spun it into thread.”
Conclusions
The review of the history of innovation in Ethiopia covered in over 
twenty articles of this series reveals the inflexibility of the 
country’s economic and social life, the strength of tradition, and the 
immensity of the task of modernisation which confronted the rulers of 
the past. Isolation, which tended to be broken mainly by undesired 
events, such as invasions and wars, not to mention the intrigues of the 
Great Powers, rather than by useful contacts with foreign lands, 
produced a situation in which the population was essentially 
conservative. Many people disliked the idea of change, and still more 
were profoundly unaware of its possibility. The prevailing attitude was 
therefore one of extreme conservatism: may I indeed say of misoneism?
On the other hand the rulers of the country, to whom all classes 
looked for leadership, in many cases displayed great interest in 
newinstitutions. Though often unconscious of the exact nature of the 
gulf which separated them from the countries of Europe many rulers were 
anxiousto bridge it, usually for reasons of military strategy. The 
desire for technical progress, until recent times, was in fact largely 
restricted to three sectors. It was primarily apparent in the military 
field, especially in relation to fire-arms, but may also be discerned in
 the medical field, and to some extent in that of the building of 
palaces and royal churches.
The royal insistence on innovation in these three areas moreover had a
 great influence on the public at large, so that the society’s attitude 
to change presented a dichotomy. European rifles and medicine won the 
greatest possible admiration, from a people who spurned any attempt to 
introduce the wheel, or to adopt a new kind of currency.
One may hazard the view that change was acceptable if it promoted one
 or more of the following aims: the acquisition or maintenance of power,
 as in the case of the gun, the preservation of health and the conquest 
of disease, as in the case of modern medicine, or the glorification of 
the ruler, as in the case of the constructing of palaces and certain 
churches in their vicinity. Innovation which failed to promote any of 
these aims tended to be regarded at best with indifference, and at worst
 with suspicion, often being dismissed indeed as a threat to the 
Christian way of life.
The almost wistful longing for foreign technicians, manifested by the
 Ethiopian rulers of the Middle Ages gave way in in the course of time 
to the construction of the great castle-like palaces which symbolised 
the Gondar period. The renewed attempts by Dajazmach Wube and King Sahla
 Sellase to import craftsmen from abroad in the first part of the 
nineteenth century was followed by the remarkable modernising efforts of
 the innovating Emperor Tewodros II, whose ideas in a sense foreshadowed
 the modern era. His progressive ideas were followed by Emperor Yohannes
 IV, but,more especially, by Emperors Menelik II, and later by Haile 
Sellassie, whose reigns both witnessed notable attempts at innovation. 
These steadily expanded, from the military field to almost all others.
This later period, discussed in the last few articles, witnessed such
 developments as the construction of modern roads and bridges, the 
advent of the railway, the motor car and the aeroplane, the coming of 
the telephone, the telegraph and the radio, the establishment of central
 administration, schools and hospitals. In the capital, where innovation
 was most pronounced,there was greater division of labour than ever 
before, more external influence and increased utilisation of foreign 
goods. The cumulative effect of these developments began at that time to
 be felt by increasingly large sections of the community.
The conservative tendencies still inherent in the society, however, 
continued to make themselves felt, and as a result innovations which 
were often experimental in character, failed to gather the momentum 
necessary for self-sustained or spontaneous development until after 
World War II. These, however, have no place in the present series of 
articles, which come to a close today,
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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