I was awed once again by the modest, humble and thought provoking letter of Eskinder Nega, an award winning Ethiopian journalists who has been separated from his wife and son and being incarcerated at the notorious Kality prison for doing the job he loves most. What is even more surprising about Eskinder's letter is that his endurance and composure to write such master piece from the worst unlikely places in the world where chaos, trauma, demeaning and degrading treatment of the inmates are a norm. Here is what he penned in his own word.
A Hero in Son's Eye
The
mistakes of my life. Ah! I could go on and on and on about them.
(Warning, I am aiming for your sympathy.) There are the missed
opportunities. (God is generous, I squandered them all, literally.)
There are the wrong choices (Hey there is at least the adrenaline
rush that comes with every wrong move.) There is the conceited
self-absorption (Obviously more and more as I rush through middle
age.) There is the lack of direction (Bitter to admit, but true.)
There is the incapacitating self-doubt. (Question: are you teary-eyed
or disgusted?)
Unlike virtually all the women of her
generation, education had emancipated mother not only financially,
but crucially, emotionally. Reversal of either was unsavory, to be
fended off at any cost. She was in a sense a feminist, absent the
creed. There was little of the past she cared for. To exemplify her
feelings, she started smoking, though discretely. Had he known, her
devoutly religious father would have simply died of grief. Neither,
as far as I could discern, did father. He would have certainly balked
at the prospect of a smoking wife. Even if he had wanted to oblige
her, society, his friends and kin would have censured him. But every
puff was an exhilarating expression of freedom for her. Freedom not
from want, but the strictures imposed by tradition. When she finally
stopped, after her divorce, it was for my sake. I was trying to
emulate the only parent I knew. And by this time she also had a more
serious diversion to engage her energy; the quest, unprecedented in
Ethiopia, to prove that there can be a better life for a single woman
after a divorce. Her vindication came, in little over five years, by
way of the most successful clinic in the country, which she owned and
managed. Father, awed and embarrassed, could only watch from the
sidelines. A rebellious wife customarily returned to her husband
chastened and humbled.
To
all appearances, father was the quintessential modern man. He was
moderately liberal, he lived in the right neighborhood, he dressed
fashionably, his English was faultless, and until the rise of
communism drove the latest cars. And he had money. But this was only
the façade. His acquiescence to modernity extended only slightly
beyond these parameters. The nucleus of the values he internalized
from society, which were in need of metamorphosis to complement his
public image, remained intact.
In this sense his profiles outlines the
paradox that is the modern Ethiopian intellectual. There is the
fixation with the façade of modernity—the technology, the
infrastructure, the economy, the lifestyle. But there is also the
corresponding resistance to its essential modus operandi—a
radically transformed worldview. This means redefined relationships
between husband and wife; parents and children; individual and
society; the state and its citizens.
Anachronistic Mom?
To
mother, on the other hand, most established values were
anachronistic. She had no compunction discarding them. In their
place, a singular fixation with independence took hold. Society was,
of course, less than ready to accommodate her. Though unexpressed,
her husband had expected blunting of the fiery spirit, a gradual but
inevitable acceptance of a place in life as a stay-at-home-mom. She
thought otherwise. Forsaking a secure and well-paying job, when
females with jobs were a rarity, for a precarious entrepreneurial
venture was inexplicable. Both departures from convention were
broadly misread as expressions of aggressive disposition. Few were
able to see an indomitable spirit of individualism that make a
modern society possible. This discord between a cumbersome past and
a future grappling to unfold is also at the core of our national
dispute over democracy.
A coarse
encounter between the novel and the archaic is as old as history
itself. The anecdotal evidence is rarely for the new to relinquish
to the old. After all, women no[w] live in a far more liberate
milieu than the yesteryears when few brave souls like mother were
challenging convention.
Our modern
politics has its genesis in a coup attempt in 1960. Though
overwhelmed with relative ease, it left a lasting imprint on history
by precipitating the rise of a fiery student movement, a precursor
to the nation’s major political parties. Inspired by Egypt’s
much romanticized coup, in 1952, which propelled young left-leaning
revolutionary officers to power, Ethiopia’s was the first shot by
soldiers to seize state power in black Africa. But while Egypt’s
was conscientiously planned and executed to eschew violence,
Ethiopia’s was marred by wanton carnage. Thus the debut of modern
Ethiopian politics shadowed by unbridled violence. Fifty years
later, the menace of brute force still lies at the heart of
politics.
Ethiopian Students' Movement of the 60s
By the
reckoning of the imperial government, father, like many of the
intelligentsia, harbored suspect reformist sentiments. Though
rewarded with high positions at an early age, there was tension in
his relationship with the government. But it was tension devoid of
danger for both sides. For the government, father and many of the
young Turks, as they were propitiously called by some, posed no
danger of subversion. They were impatient for hasty reform from
inside, not calamitous revolution from outside. Even if the young
Turks had their way, the result would be far less than catastrophic,
with some measure of discomfort, they were tolerated. And indeed no
sedition was ever intended by the young Turks. All they wanted was
to upgrade, not change, the software. This somewhat cozy but uneasy
bond between government and intelligentsia was upstaged the day
university students flooded the streets in support of the coup
attempt.
In 1960,
the year of the coup attempt, Ethiopia’s elite center of learning
was cloistered in a lone university college. A full-fledged
university had yet to be realized. This was almost a generation
after liberation from the Italians. In about the same interval,
war-ravaged Germany and Japan had not only reconstructed but were on
the verge of crossing new economic frontiers. Ethiopia’s
shortcoming was manifestly evident. And finally a new generation
scandalized by the inertia, indolence, stoicism and cynicism had
risen. It was palpably time for change.
The 1960s
could be credibly dubbed as the decade of student movements. But at
its dawn, students nurtured no greater ambition than to be part of
the global post-war economic boom. The revered genre of the silent,
strong male, which dominated the 1950s, was still paramount. By the
mid-1960s, Vietnam radicalized American youth, primarily on its
colleges and universities. In France it was another war, Algeria,
that was the impetus for campus militancy. In Iran and Europe [think
he meant Ethiopia] it was a coup, successful in the case of the
former, [a] debacle in the latter. The quartet gave the world the
most animated students in history. By the mid-1970s, however, the
Americans and French had fizzled out. The Ethiopians and Iranians
peaked in the late 1970s, and quietly faded into oblivion in the
early 1980s.
But their
fleeting existence notwithstanding they left behind powerful
legacies. The backlash against the counter-culture (contempt for
authority and tradition) the students triggered in the US made the
seminal presidencies of Nixon and Reagan possible. It took the
coalition forged by Obama to win a second term to alter the dynamics
of American politics. At their peak, Iranian students mesmerized the
world by storming the US embassy in Tehran and humiliating a proud
superpower. In less than a decade and a half, Ethiopian students
inspired a nation to uproot a monarchy that had preserved for a
millennium.
Marxism and its Disastrous Impacts on Ethiopian Politics
Though they
were from four far-flung continents, had distinct histories, and
promoted radically different visions, the students shared a common
denominator: disdain for the status-quo. To the Americans no one
older than 30 was trustworthy. As a way to unshackle tradition, they
attacked its prudish sexual mores. The French were unduly agitated
against their government, and vented their anger on the streets of
Paris with passion unseen since the storming of the Bastille. After
rejecting the modernizing pretensions of their foreign-tainted
monarch, Iranian students yearned for the purity of a lost age. To
the Ethiopian students, groomed by rote learning rather than
critical thinking, Marxism became the Holy Grail, the panacea to all
the nation’s ills.
But a
pivotal divide also separated them. The Americans and the French
lived in free societies. There were adept political parties, vibrant
free press, useful civic organizations, multitude of professional
and trade unions to channel grievances and represent interests. None
of these were about to be supplanted by students. The Ethiopians and
Iranians lived in tired monarchies. There were no conduits for
dissent. Here was an opening for transformative impact.
Unlike the
Japanese and the Chinese after the madness of the Cultural
Revolution, Ethiopian students never really made the crucial
connection between the indigenization of science and development.
They saw national redemption primarily in the social sciences, and
many of the best students flocked to them in droves despite steady
underperformance on standardized reading and comprehension tests. To
father and his generation, the monarchy was sacrosanct. Very few of
them flirted with republicanism. Their ideal was a British monarchy.
To the students who were embittered and abruptly radicalized by the
events of 1960, the monarchy, and the US, which was implicated in
the reversal of the coup attempt, became loathed icons. Embracing
socialism seemed only logical and inevitable. And here is where an
academic culture chronically short on critical thinking was to have
detrimental effect. Whereas in the U.S. and France deep scholarly
foundations mitigated against the swamping of the student majority
by extremism, in Ethiopia and Iran intellectual buffers against
infantile radicalization were ominously absent. But while Iranian
students rallied around grassroot sentiments for religious chastity
and nationalism, only Ethiopian students militated against all
things aboriniginal. Nothing was sacred to them. The emperor was
lampooned. Religion was rejected. Culture was mocked. Tradition was
attacked. History was disputed. Ethnicity was politicized. It was a
tsunami at full thrust against all things established. A good
measure of excitement was the intriguing possibility of engineering
society from scratch.
But rejection is virtually a carefree venture.
There is little strenuous intellectual effort involved. The demanding
undertaking lies in the pursuit and nourishment of an alternative
consensus. Ultimately, this is where the students failed
calamitously. Singularly transfixed with rebellion, and only
perfunctorily with its aftermath, they were governed by no moral
codes, were disciplined by no hierarchy, and were direly lacking
sense of proportion to temper emotions. In this sense, they had no
analogue in the Americans or the French. Nor indeed in the Iranians.
The Americans and the French were ultimately anchored by nationalism
and ingrained identity. The Iranians of course had religion. Having
rejected both nationalism and religion, Ethiopian students had
nothing durably satiating to replace them with. This was the pristine
environment in which militancy thrived. Extremism thus became not a
mere idiosyncrasy, but rather the structural building block of the
movement. Tragically, what the Ethiopians radicalized was really
nothing more than nihilism. The mania was to tear down an existing
order. In the end, after the collapse of the imperial order, only a
small minority, by now metamorphasized into armed insurgents, had the
energy to tread o. The majority was too exhausted to continue, opting
for exile and a well-earned rest in the West.
Of
[A] multitude of vague memories from my distant childhood, the sense
of dread that permanently enveloped my grandmother’s home, where
my mother and I lived intermittently after the divorce, still
lingers with me. Years later, in the 1990s, I was to learn, rather
to my shock, ours was only one of a handful of families in the
neighborhood that mourned the fall of Haile Selassie, the diminutive
king who had held sway over the nation for over half a century.
Initially I thought it was loss of privilege that explained our
anomalous. But I know now there was more.
If
one word was to render the spirit of the revolution, it would
certainly be equality. An inordinate passion for equality suddenly
bewitched the public—what in theory could only have meant equality
of opportunity was in practice subverted to imply equality of merit.
Not even the elderly, the repository of wisdom in traditional
thinking, were to be deferred to anymore. The nation’s best and
brightest, whose income, lifestyle and manners marked them from the
majority, became more subjects of derision than role models. They
were no more in vogue. It was time to celebrate mediocrity, to
artificially elevate it to a higher podium. This atmosphere endured,
with disastrous consequences for the entire reign of the military
dictatorship, the guardian of the revolution and still influences
the present. It is this pauperization of value that lies at the
provenance o fthe national malaise that has numbed the intellectual
elite.
To be fair, many nations, including the
meritocratic U.S., where guilt-ridden 2008 (2012?) presidential
candidate Mitt Romney was bullied for his wealth, occasionally toy
with debased populism, but rarely has it persisted with the kind of
intensity evident in Ethiopia. It was this slide to debauched
populism that distressed grandmother’s household. It was a
prescient reserve that anticipated an impending moral morass.
The
ultimate failure of the military dictatorship, including its gross
human rights violations, is the failure of Communism. But even
within the narrow constraints of communism, more was possible. The
Soviets failed broadly but compensated with a world-class
military-industrial complex. Nothing works in Cuba except health
services, one of the best in Latin America. Mao’s China at least
liberated a billion plus mass of humanity from worry about its
quotidian meals. Ditto for many Communist countries, where a lone
bright spot attested to the restrained potential of an oppressed
people. But because the principal consensus in post-revolutionary
Ethiopia had been an unremitting joy derived from the leveling of
society, a culture against exceptionalism gained traction. Blending
became the default modus operandi both at the individual and group
levels. No distinction was made between superiority stemming from
privilege and superiority attained by merit. For a government
fighting multiple insurgencies, this was a fatal shortcoming. Unable
to build a professional army based on merit, it eventually succumbed
not to superior force but to weaker adversaries who had assembled
meritocratic fighting machines. It took seventeen years, but there
was no avoiding it: grandmother was vindicated. And she lived to see
it all. God bless her soul.
Post 1991 and TPLF's Hegemony
Sadly, the
implosion of the military dictatorship did not necessarily entail
reorientation of national disposition. On the contrary, unlike their
less fortunate, American, French and Iranian brethren, Ethiopian
students, untempered by outside influence, ascended to power in 1991
and had their nation at their complete mercy. And they did what was
unthinkable to everyone but the puritan nihilist: facilitated—nay,
promoted—the secession of Eritrea, the heartland of historical
Ethiopia. Whether the nation will survive the shock that ensued is
still an open question.
But while
this is where we are, our future is not predestined. The future is
malleable, at least in its mid to long-term facets. This is God’s
way of internalizing hope into our existence. And best of all, the
age of the students is fading. Consider recent events.
Even in
sane democracies, the death of a nation’s leader can be the slow
motion drama that it customarily is in autocracies. In contentedly
democratic Ghana, where the specter of succession no more bodes the
possibility of bloodletting, the president’s ill-health was the
state’s most guarded secret. When John Atta Mills finally spoke of
his illness, it was to insist of a successful cure. In the spirit of
the famous adage, he wanted a return to normalcy. What he lacked,
though, was an obliging public. This is Ghana, after all. Cynicism,
one could argue plausibly, is a national brand. But in the end, even
his deputy and successor, John Mahama, could not help but be caught
unawares by his boss’s abrupt transition.
Why is the Death of Statesman is a Secret in Ethiopia?
In
increasingly Orwellian Ethiopia, the mere mention of the leader’s
ailment required a radical departure from an entrenched—and
prized—ethos of opacity. The enduringly hapless Ethiopian public
does not expect to be told the truth by its government. The absence,
not the histrionics itself, would have surprised Ethiopians. Thus
only the hopelessly guileless were surprised by the delayed news of
the leader’s death.
The
paranoia is hardly misplaced. The death of despots has altered the
course of national histories scores of times, and sometimes even
world history.
One of the
greatest empires in world history, that of Alexander the Great,
simply collapsed with news of his early death; clearing the path for
the rise of the Romans. The inopportune death of Odedai Khan saved
Europe from an unstoppable Mongolian invading army in 1241. Had the
Mongolians overrun Europe as they did China, world history would
have changed beyond recognition. Along with the body of Oliver
Cromwell was buried the political prospect of republicanism in 17th
century England. Ominously, cautionary tales from local history are
hardly in want. The legacies of Ethiopia’s last four kings,
stretching from mid-19th century to mid-20th century, have all been
marred by lack of continuity. And now there is the instinctive
inkling by Ethiopia’s ruling party that history is about to repeat
itself. But this time, absence of an enduring legacy awaits not
merely a leader or party but an entire generation, the spirited
students of the 1960s. Theirs will mostly be a legacy of infamy. To
paraphrase Reagan, a legacy meant for the trash bin of history.
Middle-Age Crisis?
Life is
tragically short. But only when challenged by a mid-life crisis, or
when shock is triggered by illness or accident, does existence’s
fleeting status dominate consciousness. How people react to the
challenge is a measure of character. The broad motions people go
through, however, are well established. There is the initial dazed
realization of how disloyally momentary life is, then a reaction
abounds, and finally, either stoically or grudgingly, acceptance of
the inevitable assumes primacy. Prison has been the triggering
element for me. And however exalted, the cause of justice is that
has landed me here. I miss you and your mother terribly. The pain is
almost physical. But in this plight of our family is embedded hope
of a long suffering people. There is no greater honor. We must bear
any pain, travel any distance, climb any mountain, cross any ocean
to complete this journey to freedom. Anything less is impoverishment
of our soul. God bless you, my son. You will always be in my
prayers.
Eskinder
Nega
Kaliti Prison
Kaliti Prison
Source: ECADF
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