Return to the Source: Aleqa Asres Yenesew
and the West
Messay Kebede
Opening Remarks
I originally intended to
send this paper to a professional journal. I changed my mind because its
message deserves to be read by a wider public. And since the best way to
reach a wider public is through the Web, I sent the paper to popular
Ethiopian websites without altering its academic form and diluting its
contents, except for some theoretical ramifications.
In
many ways, the ideas that Aleqa Aseres Yenesew develops in the book that I
am analyzing directly deal with the problems that
Ethiopia
and Ethiopian society face today. The book is highly interesting because
it suggests that the mess we are in now has its seed in the adoption of a
wrong educational policy since the end of the Italian war. Asres proposes
solutions in which he discloses the elementary fact that the heritage of a
legacy and the assumption of a common destiny define a nation rather than
its ethnic or linguistic oneness. He shows this in his defense of Ge�ez
language: for him, this Tigrean legacy is the essence of Ethiopian
identity. Consequently, what makes you Ethiopian is less your identity as
Amhara (he himself is an Amhara of Gojjam) than the heritage of Ge�ez
legacy. Unity lies in the acceptance of a common heritage and destiny.
But
what about the southern peoples of
Ethiopia
who do not trace their identity back to Ge�ez? Here Asres advances a
bold assertion by questioning the Western qualification of Ge�ez as a
Semitic language that invaders from
South Arabia
brought with them. He emphatically argues that Ethiopians are black and
that Ge�ez is an African language. For him, the Semitic thesis is a
Western machination intended to create a divide between northern and
southern
Ethiopia
. The direction of history is clear: the torch of Ge�ez��which is
then an idea, a divine mission, and not an ethnic identity��must pass
to southern peoples. And it cannot do so unless Ethiopians present
themselves as the descendants of Ham.
The
objection that Asres�s reasoning lacks scientific credibility because it
is filled with biblical references and argumentations would miss the
important point that what matters in this case is not that facts justify
the discourse, but whether the discourse is empowering, whether it
organizes the world in such a way that it gives us strength, unity, and
historical destiny. Besides, one can take away the biblical content and
only retain the logic of national unity and empowerment. When I wrote my
book, Survival and Modernization,
I was not even remotely aware of Asres�s works. Yet what a delightful
surprise when I discovered that many of my findings reproduce Asres�s
thought! I take this opportunity to thank Aleme Tadesse for introducing me
to Asres�s writings.
Introduction
The opposition of
traditional scholars to the proliferation of modern schools is a fact
known to all those who are familiar with the difficult beginning of
Ethiopia
�s modernization. Besides the opposition of the nobility and the church
hierarchy, traditional scholars known as debtera
had used all their influence to convince the country of the perilous
nature of Western education. Emperor Haile Selassie and those who
supported him often had to battle energetically to neutralize their
opposition. To the youngsters sent to Western schools before and soon
after the Italian invasion of 1935, the opposition of the debtera
appeared as a pathetic attempt to stop what was unstoppable, namely,
the march of the long-awaited modernization of
Ethiopia
. They easily figured out that the debtera�s
ignorance of the modern world and the anger against the loss of their
traditional influence aroused the resistance. To them, the defense of the
traditional schooling betrayed the most stubborn form of traditionalism,
which was nothing else but a wrong-headed endeavor to shield
Ethiopia
from the benefits of modernization in the name of tradition and the status
quo.
In
retrospect, the judgment of the early students appears misplaced and
irresponsible. True, the debtera
had a major weakness, which was that they opposed Western schools without
suggesting any other alternative. They were unable to tell how
Ethiopia
could modernize without adopting Western rationality, science, and
technology, the very virtues that the traditional knowledge had, if not
condemned, at least ignored. More yet, the debtera
did not seem to understand how necessary modernization was for the
maintenance of
Ethiopia
�s independence. Especially after the dreadful episode of the Italian
occupation, which made palpable the dependence of
Ethiopia
�s survival on rapid modernization, the defense of traditionalism could
not be characterized as nothing other than foolish blindness.
Granted
these legitimate criticisms, granted also that traditionalism was
incompatible with survival, the fact remains that the condemnation of the
opposition of the debtera was
singularly one-sided and hardly clever. Notably, it missed the core
message of the opposition, to wit, that the zeal to appropriate Western
knowledge and know-how may result in the loss of the very independence
that it wants to protect.
Such
is the vigorous message that emanates from one of Asres Yenesew�s books
titled Useful Advice.[1]
Asres��a senior cleric and a leading scholar of the
Ethiopian
Church�
�lived at a time when Haile Selassie was forcefully pushing for the
spread of modern education to the detriment of traditional schools.
Undoubtedly, Asres was traditionalist with all the fibers of his soul. For instance, he literally accepted the biblical story of the creation of
man and the Earth and, as we shall see, his arguments are often biblical.
He believed in the magical power of certain plants against devilish
forces.[2]
What cannot be taken away from him, however, was that the need to benefit
and empower
Ethiopia
fully inspired his traditionalism. He was sincerely convinced that the
best weapon against the marginalization of
Ethiopia
by Western powers was the revival of some core traditional beliefs.[3]
The Traditional Intellectual
Written with essentially
children and youngsters in mind, Asres�s Useful
Advice contains, as the title indicates, analyses of some dangerous
developments and recommendations on how to neutralize them, all drawn from
the stock of traditional beliefs. It is a defense of tradition, but less
to shield tradition against external contaminations than to present it as
the best antidote against ominous developments. It is a plea for a return
to the source in the face of dangerous trends. Explaining why he wrote the
book, Asres alludes to his concern about what he saw and observed and his
�obligation to present his reflections to the public.�[4]
His attempt to counter threats leads him not only to defend tradition, but
also to reveal the deep meanings of some of its beliefs, which meanings
appear today quite revolutionary in light of the extensive endeavor to
denounce Eurocentrism and weaken its grip on third-world intellectual
productions.
In
direct connection with his felt obligation to write, Asres underlines the
social function of intellectuals and writers. He compares the writer to an
army intelligence officer: a people without intellectuals are unable to
protect themselves, just as �an army without intelligence is likely to
surrender to the enemy before it undertakes anything.�[5]
To make the parallel clearer, he adds that a people without intellectuals
are like a bee that is unable to find flowers: �just as a bee cannot
make honey unless it absorbs the nectar of flowers, so too a people
without intellectuals cannot achieve knowledge, diligence, and
progress.�[6]
This
definition of the intellectual places
Ethiopia
in an obvious context of threat and war. Intellectuals are the scouts or
the outposts of their society, and as such responsible for scrutinizing
the surrounding world. Interestingly, the allusion to flowers and bees
seem to suggest that the author has no quarrel with the Western world,
provided that Ethiopians are able to extract the nectar by separating the
benefits of the modern world from its detriments. The responsibility of
separating the good from the bad falls on intellectuals whose role is thus
to filter external influences.
This
exploratory role confirms that the great and vital function of
intellectuals is to look after their society. What defines them is their
national function, which compels them to rise above factions and special
interests. While kings rule, warriors fight, peasants produce, priests
pray, intellectuals reflect on what is good and bad; they represent the
small but advanced garrison protecting the society from malefic and
dissolving forces. Notice how Asres�s view widely departs from the
position of many Ethiopian intellectuals today whose ethnicization
deprives them of any national stature by making them the representatives
of particular groups. They are not the outpost of national unity and
survival, but the launch pad of internal divisions and conflicts.
The
characterization of intellectuals as scouts of their society says a lot
about the traditional state of mind. It reveals the mentality of a society
trapped in a hostile environment and compelled to be on a constant guard,
not only against military invasions, but also against foreign ideas. To be
sure, this definition of the intellectual must be related with the mission
that the Ethiopian society assigned to itself. We know the mission to be
the guardianship of the true faith, itself derived from the belief that
Ethiopians are God�s chosen people.[7]
Some such mission requires that intellectuals assume the role of watchdog
by protecting the society against ideological infiltrations damaging to
the mission.
We
see here a function of the traditional intellectual that is quite
different from its modern understanding. Modern intellectuals are expected
to examine critically their own society so as to remove obstacles to
progress through the spread of enlightened ideas. Above all, nothing
should hamper their critical investigation, which therefore constitutes
their primary function. Not so with traditional Ethiopian intellectuals:
their preoccupation is more with external threats, and at times with
internal developments harmful to the religious mission, as when an
Ethiopian king espouses a different religion. So defined, the task of
intellectuals is never to question the mission, which exists only through
the acceptance of the tradition that bequeaths it, but to defend the
mission against external and internal enemies.
I
hasten to add that traditional intellectuals are not devoid of critical
mind but that their criticisms are directed against alien doctrines and
dissident views. What is encouraged is self-defense, less so
self-examination. Such an orientation does not mean that changes and
improvements do not occur, since self-defense does not entirely exclude
self-examination. You cannot efficiently defend yourself unless you agree
to some corrections and refinements, even at times to some
reinterpretations. Still, the movement is not dialectical in the Hegelian
sense of the word where thesis and antithesis fight and move toward a
synthesis. The defensive goal never ventures into an antithetical
position; it simply focuses on improving the original belief without ever
integrating opposition. It is more about improving, polishing the original
belief than transforming or altering it.
A
good example of refinements of belief is found in the various conflictual
encounters of Christian churches with scientific discoveries. Every time
science counters biblical statements, interpretations and refinements are
provided that tone down the conflict. Thus, the story of God�s creation
of the world in seven days is made consonant with the theory of evolution
through the suggestion that days should be taken as a symbolic expression,
that actually they mean longer periods of time, perhaps millions of years.
The belief is not challenged; it undergoes some improvements whereby it is
made acceptable to a modern person.
In
the same line, Asres�s definition refers to the tradition of Ethiopian
intellectuals entrusted with the mission of defending transmitted beliefs.
They are not critics of the tradition; they are its guardians. As such,
they enjoy great prestige and some autonomy, which is necessary for the
defensive purpose. They are literally the lighthouses of society: the
Ethiopian state is appropriately ready to defend itself and accomplish its
mission only when the warnings of intellectuals guide the military
mobilization of kings and their warriors against external and internal
threats.
The Renegade Intellectual
After underlining the
traditional role of intellectuals, Asres deals with what he considers as
the greatest betrayal in
Ethiopia
�s long history, that is, the transformation of the Westernized
Ethiopian intellectual into an ally of the colonization of
Ethiopia
. In a statement that is most revolutionary, he bluntly declares:
�although
Italy
�s army was driven out, its politics was not.�[8]
In other words, the military defeat of the colonizer has not put an end to
the colonial project. It has simply compelled Westerners to proceed
cautiously and to use other more subtle means. Chief among such means of
preserving their original design is modern schooling. That is why they
were so eager to open schools and send teachers. What better means was
there for realizing their colonial project than the propagation of their
books and the creation of a Westernized Ethiopian elite?
So
firmly convinced is Asres that the so-called modern intellectuals are but
the instrument of
Ethiopia
�s colonization in default of military means that he asks: what else is
their role but �to appropriate and expand what originates from the enemy
and pass it on to youngsters?�[9]
As a result,
Ethiopia
faces the greatest danger of all time since those whose task was to
provide protection now side with the enemy. When the patrols of the
society turn into deserters, its defensive capacity is utterly shattered.
This
ominous transformation occurred when the guardians of tradition turned
into its critics under the instigation of Western teachers and books. Let
us reflect for a moment on the magnitude of this transformation. To change
intellectuals into turncoats, Western education had first to
�denationalize their mind� by encouraging individualism and social
ambition.[10]
In thus isolating them from the rest of the community and inducing
frustration over their place in the social hierarchy, Western teachers
changed them into rebels. Whereas the traditional intellectual completely
endorsed the social hierarchy, mainly because he knew what justifies it,
Westernized Ethiopians are essentially unhappy with it because they have
been talked into thinking that the exposure to Western education alone
should determine status and authority.
The
first target of this rebellious mind is the traditional knowledge,
especially the education of the Ge�ez language, which is now
derogatorily labeled as �priestly education.�[11]
No better way could be found to instill contempt for the
traditional system of education than to reduce Ge�ez to an education
reserved for priests. To say so is to imply that Ge�ez is totally alien
to the pursuit of real and useful knowledge so that it has no place in a
modern world. Note that the exclusion of Ge�ez serves the social
ambition of the Western educated elite, since the rejection of Ge�ez
means that only those who can read Western books �find a place in
governmental institutions.�[12]
The primacy given to the learning of foreign languages is evidence of
denationalization. Speaking directly to youngsters, Asres says: though
�to learn is first to master the
mother tongue, you youngsters ally with expatriate teachers and refuse to
learn your national language because you primarily seek social
promotion.�[13]
There is no denying that young Ethiopians were persuaded to prefer foreign
languages because of the prospect of better jobs in the modern sectors of
the country.
Asres
struggles to show that the contempt for Ge�ez and for traditional
education does no more than deprive Ethiopians of the treasure of
knowledge accumulated through centuries. To reject Ge�ez is �no less
than to burry in the ground all of
Ethiopia
�s history and wealth.�[14]
For him, Ethiopian knowledge is like a hidden treasure; it is found in the
monasteries and in Ge�ez. Unfortunately, because of the refusal to learn
Ge�ez, this vital knowledge will remain hidden forever. Asres is such a
fervent defender of Ge�ez that he criticizes those who say that we
should �abolish Ge�ez and maintain only Amharic.�[15]
The thinking is that the preservation of Amharic provides
Ethiopia
with a modern language that is also native while getting rid of the
obsolete language of the church. Such reasoning overlooks the vast
treasure of knowledge contained in books written in Ge�ez; it misses a
fundamental truth, which is that �the source of wisdom is Ge�ez.�[16]
For
Asres, Westernized Ethiopians may know many things about the West, but
they are pretty ignorant when it comes to
Ethiopia
. In rejecting Ge�ez, they make themselves unable to understand
Ethiopia
and to use the treasure of accumulated knowledge to further its interests.
All they can do is read
Ethiopia
through the lens of alien and borrowed concepts with the consequence that
they come up with distorted notions. Far from being the scouts of the
society, renegade intellectuals carry the viewpoint of the colonizer, and
so replace real knowledge with critical declarations. Their so-called
knowledge does not emanate from their society�s history and defining
features; it is made of normative pronouncements deploring the extent to
which their society failed to develop the features of the model society,
i.e., the Western society.
Messianic Destiny
The defense of Ge�ez
through the suggestion that it contains priceless knowledge reveals
Asres�s approach, which is to counter the colonial project by providing
Ethiopians with means drawn from the traditional knowledge. Only the
return to tradition can protect Ethiopians from the dissolving ideology of
Westerners. To orient young Ethiopians toward the quest of their abandoned
legacy, Asres first defines what is meant by learning.
According
to Asres, �the purpose of learning is knowledge; the purpose of
knowledge is understanding. Understanding, in turn, reveals the marvels
that the sovereignty of God prepares and accomplishes.�[17]
Such an understanding procures wisdom: it makes us understand that God is
the ultimate cause of everything and invites us to consider everything
with �patience.�[18]
The understanding that God is the cause of everything is essential to
approach Ethiopian history and social organization. Nothing of
Ethiopia
�s long history and survival is intelligible if we leave out its
messianic destiny. The amazing survival of Ethiopia requires the following
explanation: �Ethiopia survived from the kingdom of Ham to today, that
is, for 4800 years, without its flag being defeated and its script changed
because it has been blessed by the prophesies of the holy prophets and has
benefited of God�s protection as the country where God�s name is
revered.�[19]
The long survival of
Ethiopia
in a hostile environment is nothing but a miracle. As such, it is not
intelligible unless one understands that God has reserved a special
meaning or destiny to
Ethiopia
.
This
knowledge about
Ethiopia
is not taught in modern schools. In addition to being completely alien to
the messianic fate of
Ethiopia
, the very idea of God granting
Ethiopia
with a special treatment is intolerable to Western teachers. The special
destiny of
Ethiopia
belongs to the knowledge hidden in Ge�ez books, especially in the Bible
written in Ge�ez. The latter is the only authentic Bible: unlike other
versions, it alone reveals �the true mystery,� and so must be
preserved and carefully studied.[20]
Supportive
of the messianic destiny is the meaning of
Ethiopia
�s social stratification. Asres notes that in
Ethiopia
all individuals harbor the desire to become �king or at least lord.�[21]
Nevertheless, among all these individuals, �only the one chosen by God
occupies the exclusive place of king while the rest follows what their
fate (idil) reserve for them.�[22]
What is meant by learning stands out here: learning leads to knowledge and
knowledge gives us the understanding of God�s works. The social
application of knowledge is that social stratification and the unequal
status of individuals express God�s choice. To know this is wisdom in
that one cognizes and accepts the place allotted to him/her by God. To be
unhappy with one�s fate is both ignorance and a vain protest, since
nothing can go against the will of God. No exceptional intelligence is
necessary to understand the meaning of God�s promotion of individuals.
Since God directly looks after
Ethiopia
, he makes kings and lords those individuals who have what is required to
ensure the survival of
Ethiopia
. Those whom He has endowed with the best qualities occupy the various
positions of leadership. Leadership, especially political leadership, is
thus a divine assignment.
Since
those who run the state are chosen by God, and not by the people, Asres is
far away from the modern idea of the accountability of the state to the
people. For him, there cannot be a distinction between the state and the
people; in his own words, �the state is the people. And the people are
the state.�[23]
All the same, the intervention of divine election does not mean that kings
and lords are above the people for the simple reason that, as we just saw,
Asres identifies the state and the people. In so doing, he rules out the
idea that the political elite has interests different from those of the
people. �Unless the people prosper, banks cannot be established,� says
Asres.[24]
Since leadership is a divine assignment, what we have in
Ethiopia
is the notion of leader as the shepherd who looks after the welfare of a
people so dear to God. What must be added here is that leaders who
mistreat the chosen people of God will arouse His wrath and very soon will
feel His punishment.
The Blackness of Ethiopians
With a remarkable sense
of consistency, Asres understands that his defense of Ge�ez depends on
the certification that Ethiopians are both originally and authentically
black. He vigorously disputes the idea that �Ham came to
Africa
after the fall of the walls of
Babylon
and the separation of languages,� for the idea intimates that �humans
did not inhabit
Africa
� before the occurrence of said events.[25]
What is more, it originates Ge�ez from the separation of languages,
thereby suggesting that it came from elsewhere and was not the original
language of Ham in
Africa
. For Asres, Ge�ez is native of
Africa
; the origination took place �when Noah divided the world between his
three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth.�[26]
He ascribes the wrong birth of Ge�ez to the malicious writings of
Europeans and to all those who like to echo what Europeans say. In turning
Ge�ez into a derivative language, these writings deny that it is a
primary and authentic source of knowledge. Hence Asres�s categorical
assertion: �
Ethiopia
has no rival in terms of ancientness of state independence, script, and
literature.�[27]
The
importance of Asres�s statement emerges when we see how his position
directly clashes with the prevailing idea about
Ethiopia
. Most historians, archeologists, and linguists attribute Aksumite
civilization to Semitic immigrants from
South Arabia
, and so assert that the present inhabitants of the northern part of
Ethiopia
, namely, Tigreans and Amhara, are Semitic rather than black Africans.
Accordingly, all what
Aksum
has accomplished and the greatness of its civilization, included the
written language of Ge�ez, are duplications of South Arabian
civilization. The racist underpinning of the assertion is not hard to
establish: since
Ethiopia
had an ancient and advanced civilization, its originators, so argue
Europeans, must be Semitic invaders from
Arabia
, obvious as it is that blacks are not capable of such a realization.
Concretely speaking, this means that
Ethiopia
moved to an advanced stage of civilization when Semitic invaders from
South Arabia
subdued the original black inhabitants known as the Agaw people.[28]
To quote an Ethiopian historian,
it
is most likely that at the time of their earliest contact with the south
Arabians the native people were in a primitive stage of material culture,
and lived in small isolated clans or groups of clans with no state or
political organizations. This must have given the immigrants an excellent
opportunity to assert themselves and easily reduce the local population to
a position of political vassalage.[29]
Strongly
defending the originality of Aksumite civilization, Asres writes: history
attests that �
Ethiopia
reached where it is today, not thanks to borrowed things, but thanks to
the wisdom and script inherited from the
kingdom
of
Ham
.�[30]
Granted that Asres�s arguments are biblical rather than scientific, the
truth remains that he is dissatisfied because he considers the Semitic
thesis as the product of European machination aimed at denying the
paternity of a great civilization to Ethiopians. He sees no other way to
defend the originality of Ge�ez and the knowledge it carries than to go
against the prevailing thesis by rejecting the Semitization
of Ethiopians. Only the defense of the original blackness of Ethiopians
can protect them against the contamination of Semitic borrowings and hence
salvage the authenticity of the messianic vocation of
Ethiopia
. If Ge�ez is not native of
Africa
, then it is a borrowed language with the consequence that it is not the
primary source of what it reveals. When we note that most modern educated
Tigrean and Amhara scholars and the members of the Ethiopian ruling elites
endorse the Semitic thesis, Asres�s position appears as a remarkable
dissenting voice, all the more so as his deep traditionalism should have
pushed him toward the Semitic thesis.
Asres
is so determined to defend the blackness of Ethiopians that he reproaches
young Ethiopians who go to
America
for studies of distancing themselves from people because they are black.
He asks: �Why do you push back your brothers? Why do you think that your
lighter skin is superior to their blackness? In your eyes, you are the
second-ranking whites. In so thinking, don�t you see that you are but
ranking Ethiopians below the whites?[31]
If it is slavery that is bothering Ethiopians, Asres reminds them that
�slavery did not start with black people.�[32]
White people too became slaves in the past every time they lost military
battles. Slavery has nothing to do with being black or white; worse yet,
to look down on black people is �to deride and anger God,� since
blacks are His creatures.[33]
Convinced
of the need to hammer on the idea of the blackness of Ethiopians, Asres
asks Ethiopians to remember that their famous Queen Makada (otherwise
known as
Sheba
) was black. She proudly described herself to King Solomon as �a fine
black person.� and as �more beautiful than all the sons of
Israel
.�[34]
Here an objection comes to mind: how does Makada�s story help confirm
the blackness of Ethiopians when its main purpose is to justify the claim
of Solomonic descent of Ethiopian kings? The objection overlooks the
complexity of the story, notably that Makada�s pregnancy was unwanted
and that it was decided by God, who thus wanted to shift His preference
from the Israelites to Ethiopians.[35]
According to the Ethiopian story, Makada turned down King Solomon twice;
the latter had to use the stratagem of spicy foods to compel her to sleep
with him. Makada was, therefore, attracted by Solomon�s wisdom, not his
person, and had it not been for God�s design, she would have
persistently rejected his advances. The purity of Ethiopian blackness was
tarnished less by the desire of Semitic mixture on the part of Makada than
by divine assignment.
Asres
brings out the contagious divisiveness of European racism. Not only to
demean black people is to ally with white people, but once the soul is
infected with the influence of white racism, �first you look down on
your friends, then on your country, and lastly on your father and
mother.�[36]
Unmistakably, Asres warns here against the harmful influence that European
racism had on northern Ethiopians and its negative effects on national
unity and cohesion. By claiming a Semitic descent under the influence of
European racism, northern Ethiopians cannot but feel above
Ethiopia
�s southern peoples, who do not claim such a descent. Equally divisive
is the feeling of superiority on the basis of wealth, which is a
replication of European type of class distinction. For Asres, such
feelings originate from the �divisive propaganda of the enemy,� they
make Ethiopians forget that �without unity there is no force, and
without force there is no unity and pride.�[37]
The
mimicking of Western superiority is injurious to Ethiopian national unity
because it presents what is but a recovery as a colonial conquest. Indeed,
faithful to the pre-European writing of Ethiopian history, Asres sees
Menilik�s southern expansion as a recovery of �lost provinces
subsequent to Gran�s invasion.�[38]
Cut off from the political and cultural center, these lands underwent a
characteristic deterioration, in particular in the use of technical
devises, such the ox-ploughing technique. Asres is further inclined to
speak of the southern expansion as a return to the motherland rather than
as a new conquest since he believes that for many centuries all African
peoples �were under one king and one flag.�[39]
Both on the basis of skin color and the legacy of common ancestry and
history, Asres pleads for worldwide black solidarity in the defense of the
black person.
This
solidarity is all the more necessary as Asres sees a vast and protracted
conspiracy to humiliate and subdue the black person. Incidentally, he
makes the Arabs accomplices of the white conspiracy against black peoples.
He backs the allegation by the role Arab merchants played in the selling
of Africans to whites.[40]
This conspiracy against the black person has historical roots, as it is
but revenge on the part of whites and Arabs. Indeed, citing the Bible,
Asres maintains that in the past the �sons of
Africa
had conquered and despised northern white races,� so that the present
racism against blacks is a payback for past mistreatments.[41]
Both the historical grudge and the racist mistreatments of the modern time
clearly show that �the main purpose� of whites is �to divide,
impoverish, and obfuscate
Africa
so as to rule over it.�[42]
At
first look, such plain accusations recall the position of the African
scholar, Cheikh Anta Diop, who also alludes to a conspiracy stemming from
the fact that the black person is �the very initiator of the
�Western� civilization flaunted before our eyes today.�[43]
However, noticeable differences quickly emerge. Diop establishes the
pioneering role of blacks through the thesis that black people were
directly responsible for the remarkable and original contributions of
ancient
Egypt
while categorically rejecting the inputs of
Aksum
. In his eyes, �except for one obelisk and two pedestals of
statues, nothing is found. The civilization of
Axum
, former capital of
Ethiopia
, is more a word than a reality attested by historical monuments.�[44]
Moreover, unlike Asres, Diop is of the opinion that Africans were so
peaceful that they never showed the desire to conquer other peoples, as
demonstrated by the historical proof that �invasions often take place
from north to south.�[45]
Implanting
Economic Dependency
The
goal of impoverishing African countries is essentially manifested through
the generation of a dependent economic system under the guise of
modernization. Here transpires one of the major goals of the introduction
and spread of Western education. By creating an elite enamored with
Western taste and pattern of consumption, Western education, Asres
maintains, undermines national production and economic self-sufficiency in
favor of imported goods and techniques of production, the outcome of which
is economic dependency. In a word, the objective of replacing traditional
schools with modern schools is to change
Ethiopia
into a periphery of the West.
Unlike
the traditional teaching, which provides the knowledge of Ethiopian
resources, the external orientation of modern education has no concern for
national wealth and resources.[46]
It simply teaches how to import techniques and goods at the expense of
national means and resources. The so-called modernization has been nothing
but the marginalization and neglect of all the techniques that
Ethiopia
had used so far to exploit its resources. Asres justifies his assertion by
providing examples of neglected techniques and resources. For instance,
consider the technique of making colors: �
Ethiopia
�s painters and writers did not work by importing colors from
Europe
.�[47]
They were using traditional techniques, which are now totally forgotten so
that
Ethiopia
today imports colors from outside. Another example is perfumes: the Bible
highly praises perfumes made in
Ethiopia
and exported to the rest of the world.[48]
Today
Ethiopia
imports European perfumes and the know-how is completely lost. Yet the
ancient knowledge could be easily recuperated by reading old books written
in Ge�ez. Hence Asres�s repeated advices to youngsters: �if you go
back to Ge�ez, you will find similar wealth in great number.�[49]
Asres
multiplies examples by indicating how
Ethiopia
had advanced techniques for the use of wood and animal skins, which
techniques are now entirely lost. The same with the crucial technique of
blacksmith, which leads him to say: �Ethiopians
fought against powerful enemies and defeated them by manufacturing
themselves the spear, knife, sword . . . they needed. Unlike today, they
did not import arms from outside.�[50]
At times Westerners have directly intervened and blocked the use of native
resources in order to introduce their own products. For instance, �when
the Italians occupied
Ethiopia
, they eliminated the plant known as gesho.
They did so, not because they knew the hidden virtues of the plant, but
because they wanted to introduce their own ingredients for alcoholic
beverages.�[51]
Asres
mocks the naivety of Ethiopians when they think that Europeans will teach
them the secrets of science. Because of this belief, many Ethiopians were
sent to
Europe
for study and many
foreign teachers hired at great expenses. However, all this effort has not
produced �even 10 young Ethiopians capable of understanding the secrets
of scientific work.�[52]
Asres reiterates his deep conviction by saying to young Ethiopians: �I
want you to understand that European scientists will never reveal the
wisdom of science to you.�[53]
Let
there be no misunderstanding: the warning against the European
unwillingness to share scientific knowledge does not mean that Asres is
against the attempt to import European know-how or that he is opposed to
modernization. Rather, he asks Ethiopians to proceed in a smart way in
view of the European unwillingness to share knowledge. Instead of abruptly
abandoning traditional techniques and resources, which only results in the
loss of self-sufficiency in favor of dependency, Ethiopians should devise
a smart policy of transition from the traditional to the modern.
Accordingly, until modern industries are well established, Ethiopians
should use traditional means and refrain from merely importing goods from
outside.[54]
Likewise, instead of simply shutting down traditional schools, the best
way is to educate a small amount of Ethiopians by hiring few foreign
instructors. Once these Ethiopians graduate, they should be sent to the
various provinces to educate other Ethiopians while foreign instructors
are sent back to their country.[55]
Some Critical Remarks
One thing is sure: Asres�s book reveals
far-reaching revolutionary ideas. Specifically, his analyses of the
harmful impacts of Western education and economic penetration are both
radical and highly insightful. So my criticism is not attempting to show
the invalidity of his analyses, notwithstanding the fact that they appear
excessive at times. Equally excessive is his high regard for tradition and
the traditional system of education, not to mention the fact that some of
his proposals are, if not irrelevant, at least unrealistic. These
shortcomings, however, do not reduce the value of his analyses.
Much
more serious seems to me Asres�s inconsistencies, which strongly
transpire in the complete lack of critical remarks vis-�-vis Emperor
Haile Selassie and his regime. I know that a critical stand would have put
his life in danger, but the fact remains that the book loses much of its
revolutionary impact by not including a criticism of the imperial regime.
After all, Haile Selassie has been the main instrument of the introduction
of Western education and of the economic penetration of the West whose
detrimental effects are analyzed with such a sharp insight. Surprising as
it may sound, the book does not make the slightest allusion to the eminent
role that Haile Selassie played in designing and applying a harmful policy
of modernization.
Asres
could not have missed that his acerbic criticisms of the modernizing
process of
Ethiopia
extends to the initiator and patron of the process, to wit, Haile
Selassie. Though the latter is the real culprit for the bad policy, Asres
inconsistently put the blame on young Western educated Ethiopians. He
repeatedly accuses them of being alienated and the prime instrument of the
colonization of
Ethiopia
when they are but the products of Haile Selassie�s modernizing scheme.
His book attacks the outcome of a policy and exonerates the real agent of
Ethiopia
�s derailment.
Another
related inconsistency is that Asres�s defense of tradition loses its
fervor every time that he has to deal with the imperial regime. Take what
is said about the role of idil, that is, of God�s choice in the stratification of Ethiopian
society. Asres asserts that each individual occupies the place assigned to
him by God and that God�s choice gives the highest positions to those He
created with adequate abilities. This justification of social
stratification implies that the present rulers of
Ethiopia
, including the emperor himself, are not living up to expectations, since
Ethiopia
is divested of its personality and reduces to the status of a periphery of
the West. Clearly, Asres backs down from being a staunch defender of
tradition to avoid a clash with the regime. Some such reversal is
unfortunate, given that he could have condemned the regime in the name of
tradition, which would have provided the best defense of tradition. In
showing that the present rulers of
Ethiopia
are traitors to the tradition of
Ethiopia
�s independence and divine mission, he would have mobilized nationalist
feelings in his defense of tradition.
In
light of Asres�s belief that the wisdom of God chooses the best leaders
for Ethiopia, a basic condition for the implementation of God�s choices
is undoubtedly the absence of social barriers to the promotion of the most
able. But if mediocre people and sellouts continue to rule because they
are protected by privileges, Asres should denounce the obstruction, all
the more vehemently that it is bound to bring disaster, which is God�s
punishment for going against His choices. Such a position could have been
premonitory in view of the occurrence of the 1974 Revolution and the
subsequent rise of the Derg, which brought about the decapitation of the
traditional elite and plunged
Ethiopia
into untold sufferings and further deteriorations of its social cohesion
and power.
That
Asres�s deep and first hand knowledge of tradition could miss that the
notion of idil presupposes an
open society is hardly believable. Idil
posits a society allowing social mobility; it does not make sense in a
society blocked by human-made privileges, such as the Ethiopian society
under the imperial regime with its hereditary monarchy and nobility
together with individual nobles possessing private property and using
tenants in their land. These privileges constituted formidable social
barriers and artificial impediments standing in the way of God�s
choices. Because of his reluctance to criticize the imperial regime, Asres
thus misses the opportunity of demonstrating the value of tradition by
showing how well the notion of idil
fits into the modernizing goal. The demonstration of a connivance with
modernity would have, in turn, advocated the return and consolidation of
the traditional social mobility rather than its elimination.
Lastly,
it is obvious that despite his rage against the West, Asres is not quite
successful in combating its influence. In many ways, he agrees with the
norms of the West. The agreement transpires frequently, as when he
intimates that
Ethiopia
regressed because of Gran�s invasion. The destructions caused by the
invasion were so extensive that Ethiopians lost many of the technological
advances that they had to the benefit of Europeans. In thus assigning
similar technological goals to Ethiopians and Westerners, Asres gives up
the opportunity of describing the Ethiopian civilization in terms of
alternative civilization rather than in terms of a similar civilization
that had regressed. Contrary to the notion of different or alternative
civilization, the notion of regress confirms the idea of European
superiority instead of challenging it.
Likewise,
Asres�s attempt to explain Western racism as a behavior induced by
revenge leads him to say that blacks had dominated and mistreated white
people in the past. The statement presents world history as a field of
fierce competition between races impelled by similar goals. In so
thinking, Asres is not analyzing different civilizations in terms of
divergent aspirations and means, as did, for instance, the African
revivalist school known as Negritude. Arguing that each culture has its
own way of thinking as well as its own goals, the thinkers of Negritude
reject Europeans� claim that they �were the only ones who had thought
out a Civilization to the level and the dimension of University.�[56]
The failure to particularize shows that Asres did not manage to think
Western civilization and its achievements as a particular civilization
among other equally valid civilizations. Instead, he endorses the
normativeness of Western civilization by perceiving its aspirations,
especially its technological goals, as universal aspirations, that is,
aspirations shared by all people regardless of their culture and race.[57]
Willy-nilly, this way of posing the problem puts the West in the driver
seat of history, and so fails to question its colonizing goal.
Notes
[1]
I translate the Amharic title �Tekami Mikre� as �Useful
Advice.� I add that all the direct quotations from the book are my
own translations, which are loose but accurate.
[2]
See Useful Advice (Addis
Ababa: Berhanena Selam Printing Press, 1958), p. 22.
[3]
It would be undoubtedly very revealing to compare Asres with the early
Westernized intellectuals of
Ethiopia
, such as Afework Gebre Yesus and Gebrehiwot Baykedagn. As a
representative of the traditional scholar, Asres shares none of their
views, which derive from the conviction that Ethiopia cannot modernize
unless it throws away its
traditional beliefs and values and unreservedly opens up to the West.
Ethiopia
�s failure to modernize may be due to the failure to reconcile these
two divergent mental directions. For further reading, see Messay
Kebede, �Gebrehiwot Baykedagn, Eurocentrism, and the Decentering of
Ethiopia,� Journal of Black
Studies, 36: 6 (July 2006), pp. 815-832.
[4]
Asres, Useful Advice, p. 5.
[7]
See Messay Kebede, Survival and
Modernization--
Ethiopia
�s Enigmatic Present: A Philosophical Discourse (Lawrenceville,
.N.J.: The Red Sea Press Inc., 1999).
[8]
Asres, Useful Advice Ibid.,
p. 6.
[28]
For more discussion on this issue, see Messay Kebede, �Eurocentrism
and Ethiopian Historiography: Deconstructing Semitization,� International Journal of Ethiopian Studies, 1: 1 (Fall 2003), pp.
1-19.
[29]
Taddesse Tamrat, Church and State in
Ethiopia
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1972), p. 8.
[30]Asres,
Useful Advice, p. 20.
[35]
To read more on this issue, refer to Messay Kebede, Survival
and Modernization--
Ethiopia
�s Enigmatic Present: A Philosophical Discourse.
[36]
Asres, Useful Advice, p.
63-58.
[43]
Cheikh Anta Diop, The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality
(Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books, 1974), p. xiv.
[45]
Diop, �African Cultural Unity,� Pr�sence
Africaine, 24�25 (1959), p. 71.
[46]
See Asres, Useful Advice.,
p. 18.
[56]
L�opold S. Senghor, Prose and
Poetry, trans. John Reed and Clive Wake (London: Heinemann, 1976),
p. 73.
[57]
For further discussion on the idea of alternative civilizations, see
Messay Kebede, Africa�s Quest
for a Philosophy of Decolonization (
New York
: Rodopi, 2004).
|