By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
Italian Fascist Ideas on Education for “Natives”
In concluding this extended series of articles on Ethiopian 
education, reference may be made to the Fascist attitude to education 
for “natives”, which had a profound effect on education in Ethiopia in 
the period after 1936.
Fascist policy was, generally speaking, opposed, to the creation of 
an educated “native” elite, and to any kind of training, which would 
enable “natives” to compete with “nationals”, i.e. Italians.
The Philosophy of Benito Mussolini Himself
The philosophy behind this policy was stated, in 1938, by the Fascist
 dictator Benito Mussolini, in the official Italian publication 
“Etiopia”. He declared that racial problems found “a definite relation 
to the conquest of the
 Empire, because it is necessary to realise that 
the Empire is conquered by the sword but is held by prestige. To 
maintain prestige we must have a strict and clear racial consciousness, 
which will stabilise not only the difference of race but also our 
absolute superiority.”
The application of this thesis was expounded by a prominent Fascist 
luminary, Guiseppe Fabbri, the editor of the publication. He argued 
that, in the ancient Roman empire, when Agricola had educated the native
 chiefs of Britain he had “betrayed Rome”. To prevent a similar fate 
befalling Mussolini’s East African empire “the office and the 
administration should”, he declared, “seem mysterious to the native, a 
place where white people stay, as at the altar.” He added:
“To affirm the superiority of our race, and to join it to the idea of
 domination is the basis of life in Fascist Italy . . . our power, 
spiritual, political and military, should, and must, forever rid the 
Empire of other peoples weaker and inferior to us . . .
“We abhor the invasion of the colonial office by officials who employ
 natives, because that constitutes a formidable danger. The mentality of
 the natives is spoilt; they believe themselves equal to us when they 
see themselves invested with functions we are accustomed to fulfill. 
Moreover, the native mass tends always to admire this kind of 
aristocracy of their race; to forment this evil germ is to destroy our 
empire.
“Where White People Stay as at an Altar”
“The office and the administration’, he continued, “should seem 
mysterious to the native, a place where white people stay as at the 
altar; the documents locked in the cupboards should have the odour of 
sacred papers which natives must not touch. It is when natives are put 
in contact with such instruments of civilisation that they cease to be 
sensible of the difference between themselves and us. It initiates, in 
fact, a gradual process of assimilation, which finally develops 
consequences grave, if not fatal, to our supremacy, because, in order to
 retain our natural race superiority and to preserve it from being 
undermined we must maintain our prestige.
“The employment of natives in the administration must not be resorted
 to even though they might be useful to us before we have created staffs
 of Italians who know the local language and the habits and customs of 
the subject people. When we have developed such Fascist experts they 
will be the watchful vanguard of our prestige.
“Our expansion in Africa must have a totalitarian character, and one 
of racial integrity; it must not aim at disseminatory culture, as the 
illustrious magnates of Africanism, who poison the air with their 
literary baggage, perniciously desire.”
So much for such “magnates” and their “literary baggage”!
General Guglielmo Nasi
The above Fascist principles were embodied in an important Government
 directive, of 1938, which deserves quoting at some length. It was 
issued by General Guglielmo Nasi, the Italian Governor of Harar, on 5 
June, 1938, and declared:
“… I notice that Commissioners and Residents have above all an 
ambition to extend elementary education for natives, and to teach our 
language to as many children as possible.
“This is a fundamental political mistake that tends to put 
individuals out of their class who, solely because they possess a veneer
 of education, will refuse to work in the fields, as we know by our own 
colonial experience and by that of other countries. They are attracted 
to the towns, ask for Government employment, compete with the nationals 
in trades that should be reserved to the latter, forming a class of 
discontented, or even worse, rebellious people.
“As I have already said on other occasions, we should reserve 
strictly necessary education to the sons of chiefs and more important 
notabilities only, because these can subsequently succeed to the duties 
of their fathers, serve us as interpreters, and hold modest positions in
 offices.
“However, while for obvious reasons, we cannot altogether close the 
door of public education to the youth of the lower social classes, we 
can, and we ought to, close the door tightly on special courses, e.g. 
for interpreters; and in general we should avoid propaganda, and, still 
worse, pressure on families to send their sons to Italian schools.
“This principle, which can be absolute in the country, ought, of 
course, for obvious reasons be subjected to many exceptions in the 
larger towns (Harar and Dire Dawa).
“Also, with regard to native orphans it is a mistaken policy, for the
 same reasons as mentioned above, to establish orphanages, because 
there, in the end, you will always give them habits that do not belong 
to their race or social class.
“Instead, these derelicts should be cared for by entrusting them to 
relatives, or at any rate to native families, who under our control and 
for a monthly sum, will bring them up in the very surroundings in which 
they afterwards will have to live and work.
“It is superfluous to add that the present directive is of a very 
secret character, and should be applied without divulging its real 
motives”.
Secret though it was, we publish it in “Addis Tribune”, with Nasi’s self-styled “real motives”!
The Duke of Aosta
A further directive on educational was issued, on 16 October 1939, by
 the second Viceroy of Ethiopia, the Duke of Aosta, who has often been 
described, in the present writer’s opinion wrongly, as a great 
“liberal”, for he was, rather a great racist. It read as follows:
“At the last meeting of the Governors full assent was given to the 
principle determining the directions issued several times from this 
Governorate-General, that schools of all kinds established for the 
subject peoples of Italian East Africa ought above all to aim at this 
goal: to train pupils in the cultivation of the soil or to become 
qualified workers (not specialised) in order to create gradually native 
skilled craftsmanship for all fields of labour where, for reasons of 
climate, surroundings, or race prestige, the use of Italian labour is 
not admissible or convenient, and for the purpose of reducing the cost 
of labour and production in general, by making use of native labour.
“Consequently it is important that the respective Governors, taking 
into account the special conditions of their own territories, the native
 attitude to work and the demands of the local industries, should 
organise schools for colonial natives, assigning to each of them the 
specialisation that will most easily lead to the goal indicated above.
“It is also understood that, with the exception of schools for 
agricultural instruction, where the greater the number of pupils is, the
 greater the economic and social advantages derived from these schools 
will be, for all others, vocational schools and ‘cultural schools’ 
reserved for the sons of native notabilities, the number of students 
should be decided, year by year, with regard to employment possibilities
 in the industries and local occupations that can be held out to 
students leaving the school.
“To the training planned . . . should be added gymnastic-military 
exercises, in the form and teaching staff that each Government judges 
most convenient”.
Academic type education for “natives”, in Italian-occupied Ethiopia, 
as in the Italian Fascist empire as a whole, simply did not exist. The 
dispatch of young Ethiopians for study abroad, began by Emperor Menilek,
 had entirely ceased (except for some youngsters sent for religious 
studies in the Vatican under Roman Catholic auspices).
Eritrea
The Fascist approach to education was likewise seen in Eritrea, in 
the mid-1920′s, and 1930′s. It was decided, in 1932, that elementary 
school education for Eritreans should be limited to four years, after 
which students could go either to a school of arts and crafts (where 
there would be great emphasis on the learning of Italian), or to special
 schools where an additional two year course would be given to complete 
primary studies. So-called “medium schools” for “natives”, i.e. 
secondary education, were suppressed.
Professor Andrea Festa, describing these developments, explained that
 the objective of the Italian education in Eritrea was to make the 
student “know Italy, her glories and her ancient history”, and to teach 
him to “become a conscientious soldier in the shadow of our flag.” 
“Superfluous” knowledge, such as the history of the Italian 
“Risorgimento”, or struggle for independence and unity, should, he declared, be cut out of the syllabus.
The principal schools for “natives” in Eritrea in 1932 were:
1. The San Michele school of arts and crafts at Saganeiti, which was 
run by Capuchins and taught carpentry, tailoring, shoemaking and 
saddlery to Catholic children;
2. The St. Giorgio school of arts and crafts at Addi Ugri, which was 
mainly concerned with agriculture and was attended primarily by 
Ethiopian Orthodox children;
3. The Salvago Reggi school of arts and crafts for Muslim children at Keren, which taught printing, woodwork and smithy work.
There was also a Re Vittorio Emanuele III elementary school, founded 
in Asmara in 1926 for the training of interpreters and clerks, and 
smaller schools at Assab, Ghinda, Addi Ugi, Addi Caieh, and Agordat. 
None of them of course offered secondary, let alone academic type 
education.
Education for Italian children was of an entirely different level. 
Despite the colony’s tiny Italian settlement, there were, in 1932-3, 894
 Italian and “half-caste” children in Government schools as against 
1,692 “natives.”
The Fascist impact led to the closing of the Swedish and American 
Protestant Missions in 1932, though the Swedish Mission School in Asmara
 was allowed to continue until 1935, when, as the Rev. Axel Johnson 
records, “all its missionaries were expelled.” The state of education in
 pre-war Eritrea was an important factor causing many youngsters from 
the Italian colony to cross the frontier into Ethiopia in a quest for 
education.
Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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