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Emperor Haile Selassie I
BIRTH & ANCESTRY
Emperor Haile Selassie I was born on July 23,1894,as Lij
Taffari Makonnen at Enjersa Goro, just outside the city of
Harrar. His parents were Ras Makonnen Wolde Michael, the
governor of Harrar, and his wife, Woizero Yeshimebet Ali
AbaJiffar. Ras Makonnen was the son of Dejazmatch Wolde Michael
Wolde Melekot, a noble of Doba in northern Shewa. Ras Makonnen's
paternal grandfather was Ato Wolde Melekot Yemane Kristos a
Tigrean noble from Tembien who had moved to Shewa. Ras
Makonnen's mother however was Woizero Tenagnework Sahle Selassie,
daughter of King Sahle Selassie of Shewa, sister of King Haile
Melekot of Shewa, and aunt to Emperor Menelik II of Ethiopia.
Ras Makonnen was thus the first cousin of Emperor Menelik II and
a member of the Solomonic Dynasty.
Woizero Yeshimebet his wife was the daughter of Dejazmatch
Ali AbaJiffar, an Oromo chieftan of Wollo, and his wife Woizero
Welete Giorgis Yimeru, a Gurage and Amhara woman once married to
Ras Darge Sahle Selassie (Menelik II's uncle). Woizero
Yeshimebet died before her son was 2 years old. Ras Makonnen had
an elder son Yilma whom he did not aknowledge until later in
life (some say after Yilma saved his fathers life during the
battle of Adowa). Dejazmatch Yilma Makonnen was Emperor Haile
Selassie's only sibling, and was the father of four children,
sons Kegnazmatch Sehalu Yilma, Kegnazmatch Asfaw Yilma and
Dejazmatch Mengesha Yilma, and a daughter Her Imperial Highness
Princess Yeshashework Yilma. Ras Makonnen himself had several
siblings however.
His elder sister Ihite Mariam had a daughter Mazlekia, who
was married to Fitawrari Haile Selassie, and was the mother of
Ras Imiru Haile Selassie, who was to be the Emperor Haile
Selassie's life long companion and close confidant. As Ras
Makonnen spent a great deal of time traveling on diplomatic
business for Emperor Menelik, so he entrusted the care of his
son Taffari to Fitawrari Haile Selassie. Therefore, Taffari grew
up with Imiru more as brothers rather than cousins. Lij Taffari
also was cared for by his maternal grandmother Woizero (later
Emahoi after taking vows and becoming a nun) Welete Giorgis, and
his maternal aunt Woizero Mammit. The boys were given the
traditional education given to the children of Ethiopia's
aristocracy. They were taught by Orthodox priests, and could
recite the psalms in Ge-ez by age six. They were ordained
deacons and served as such at Harrar's St. Michael's Church.
Later, Ras Makonnen approached a French Catholic Capuchin monk
residing in Harrar, Father Jaresseau to teach the boys along
western lines.
The Catholic priest taught them French, geography, world
history, philosophy and some Latin as well. Over the next years,
Taffari also picked up English, and German, as well as the
Ethiopian languages of Amharic, Tigrigna and Oromigna(called
Galligna in those days) and became a scholar in Ge-ez. After the
death of his wife Woizero Yeshimebet, Ras Makonnen was prevailed
upon by Empress Taitu to marry into her family.
She arranged for him to marry her niece, Woizero Mentewab, a
girl closer to the age of Lij Taffari and Lij Imiru than Ras
Makonnen. Brought to Harrar, Woizero Mentewab briefly presided
as lady of the household and step-mother to Lij Taffari, however
less than a year later, Ras Makonnen sent the girl back to her
aunt, the marriage having never been consumated. He believed it
was unfair to the girl to marry her to a man of his
comparatively advanced years. Empress Taitu took deep offense
and never forgave the Ras. Lij Taffari however would hold the
woman who was briefly his step-mother in high regard for the
rest of her life.
PATH TO THE THRONE
At the age of thirteen, Lij Taffari Makonnen was created a
Dejazmatch by his father, and given the district of Garra Muleta
as his fief. Ras Makonnen also summoned all his officers and
informed them that it was his wish that his son Dejazmatch
Taffari succeede him as governor of Harrar, and asked them all
to swear their loyalty to Taffari. Although Ras Makonnen may
have tried to establish his wishes in such a manner, ultimate
decisions as to the succession of the Harrar governorate
belonged to his cousin Emperor Menelik II.
When Ras Makonnen died suddenly in 1908, the situation in
Ethiopia was not what most had anticipated. The Ras died at
Kulibi on his way to Addis Ababa from Harrar possibly of typhus.
He was taken back to Harrar and buried at St. Michael's church
there. Emperor Menelik was beside himself with grief upon
hearing that Ras Makonnen had dead. He had the huge funeral tent
set up on the grounds of the Imperial Palace in the capital, and
proclaimed that he himself would be the chief mourner for Ras
Makonnen in place of the two sons of his cousin.
He summoned Dejazmatch Taffari, and Ras Makonnen's entourage
from Harrar to Addis Ababa where Dejazmatch Yilma was already
residing. Dejazmatch Taffari and the officers of Ras Makonnen
arrived in Addis Ababa, and they walked into the Emperor's
presence weeping and carrying a large portrait of the dead
prince. Traditionaly, royalty in Ethiopia did not show emotion
in public, so it stunned and moved the assembled courtiers when
suddenly, Emperor Menelik rose up from his throne and embraced
the portrait of his dead cousin, weeping and sobbing repeadedly,
"Makonnen my son, Makonnen my brother! I have lost my right
hand!" Menelik did not expect the younger Ras Makonnen to
pre-decease him. Indeed it was often speculated that because
Menelik had no sons of his own, he might name Makonnen his heir.
This was not to be however.
Although Ras Makonnen had made clear that he had wanted
Dejazmatch Taffari to succeede him as governor of Harrar,
Menelik was not disposed to following through on that. Empress
Taitu was especially opposed to Taffari inheriting Harrar,
arguing that he was far too young. Instead, she argued for the
apointment of the elder son of Ras Makonnen, Dejazmatch Yilma,
who had been at the Imperial Court for several years, and was
now appointed to succeed his father as governor.
The Empress also arranged for Yilma to marry her neice
Woizero Aselefech. Dejazmatch Taffari was instead given the
honorific governorship of Selale, and told to remain at court
where he became a member of the Emperor's personal retinue.
Empress Taitu may have also advised this course of action
because she suspected that the young prince may have been unduly
influenced by the Roman Catholic priests that had been teaching
him in Harrar.
She may have suspected that he might have accepted the
Catholic faith because he held so many of the progressive views
of his father associated with westerners and Catholics. She
would soon be reassured that he was firmly Orthodox however as
far as religion went. He was placed in the new school built in
the capital for young nobles, the Menelik II School. This
situation continued until in 1910 when Dejazmatch Yilma also
died. Dejazmatch Balcha Saffo (known as Abba Nega) was briefly
appointed to the Harrar governorate, but proved to be extremely
unpopular with the local officials who had long identified with
Ras Makonnen and his sons. They appealed to Addis Ababa to have
Dejazmatch Balcha removed. Empress Taitu, acting on Menelik's
behalf due to the Emperor's stroke, appointed Taffari to the
governorship of Harrar.
It was to be her last official act, as the very next
day, the nobility led by Fitawrari Hapte Giorgis and Dejazmatch
Gebre Selassie Baria Gabr, deposed her, and put power in the
hands of the Lord Regent Ras Tessema Nadew. They limited the
Empress to caring for the stricken Emperor. In 1913, Emperor
Menelik II died, and Lij Eyasu assended the throne, with Ras
Tessema Nadew as his Regent. That same year, Ras Tessema also
died under mysterious circumstances, and Lij Eyasu took the
reigns of government himself, although he refused to be crowned
as of yet.
In 1916, Dejazmatch Taffari Makonnen was removed from Harar
by Lij Eyasu, and appointed governor of Kaffa. Dejazmatch
Taffari was very resentful of the loss of what he considered his
birthright. In addition Lij Eyasu, after taking Harrar for
himself, had moved into the governors palace there, and ordered
that his niece, and Taffari's wife, Menen, be evicted
immediately. Lij Eyasu was informed that Woizero Menen was in
the midst of giving birth, and could not possibly be moved (she
was giving birth to Prince Asfaw Wossen, later Emperor Amha
Selassie).
He resentfully agreed to allow his niece to give birth, but
ordered her to leave immediately afterwards. This embittered
already poor relations between Taffari and Eyasu. Not long after
this, the nobles and ministers of the Empire began to openly
express concern about the erratic behavior of the heir, and his
apparent sympathy for Islam. The diplomatic missions of the
Entente Powers, concerned about Lij Eyasu's pro-German leanings
encouraged this dissension. Finally, the Nobility, led by
Fitawrari Hapte Giorgis, became convinced that Lij Eyasu had
secretly converted to Islam, and following a two day meeting at
Jan Meda in Addis Ababa (the Imperial Parade Ground), the
nobility convinced the reluctant Coptic Archbishop, Abune
Mattiwos, to declare Lij Eyasu an apostate, and release them
from their oaths of loyalty to him.
The nobles decided to swear fealty to the daughter of the
late Emperor Menelik, and so Empress Zewditu was proclaimed
Elect of God, Conquering Lion of Judah, and Queen of Kings, at
the feast of Maskal (Feast of the Holy Cross' discovery by St.
Helena)which fell on September 27,1916. Dejazmatch Taffari
Makonnen was proclaimed Heir to the Throne, and Crown Prince
with the title of Ras as a compromise to progressives who were
feeling relegated from the action which was being led by the
conservative forces. Ras Taffari soon afterwards assumed the
title of Regent, and became the true ruler of the Empire.
Ras Taffari Makonnen began to institute wide spread reforms
in order to bring Ethiopia into the modern age. In order to
qualify for membership in the League of Nations, the Regent
proclaimed the end of slavery in 1923, and all slaves were
declared free. A school was established in Addis Ababa for
former slaves as well. The first newspapers were established to
disseminate the progressive views of the Crown Prince and his
supporters to the people in order to win support He also went on
a tour of the Holy Land and the European capitals, being the
highest ranking member of the Imperial family to ever travel
abroad.
He visited Rome and was greeted by the new Prime Minister,
Benito Mussolini, as well as by King Vittorio Emanuelle. The
King of Italy invested the Crown Prince of Ethiopia with the
Order of the Annunziata, which entitled him to be called a
"cousin" of the King of Italy (Something that would be regarded
with such irony only a few years later). He went on to Paris,
Luxembourg (Where the reigning Grand Duchess Charlotte gave
birth to her heir Grand Duke Jean during his visit),Belgium, the
Netherlands and Britain in an official capacity and paid private
visits to Sweden and Germany.
He met the Pope as well, and received an honorary degree from
Cambridge University. In an effort to convince the nobility of
the Empire that the path of modernization and progress was the
best way to guarantee Ethiopia's continued independence and
future prosperity (as well as to keep a close eye on them), the
Prince-Regent had brought with him to Europe the leading nobles
and aristocrats of his country. This exposure to the west with
it's wealth, it's technology and it's military might as well as
to it's many material advantages was instrumental in getting the
nobility to relax their long time conservative opposition to the
progressive trends of the Prince and his predecessors, Emperors
Menelik II and Tewodros II. The visit was very successful in
that respect.
However, he failed to convince France, Italy and Britain to
cede Ethiopia a sea port in one of their colonies. The Ethiopian
delegation caused quite a stir in Europe and aroused the
interest of many who were not aware of the only ancient
independent state in Africa. Much comment was made on the
impeccable aristocratic manners and traditions of the
delegation, and on the enlightened attitude of the Crown Prince.
His desire to bring progress and education to his people was
applauded in the European press. Among several anecdotes from
this trip, is one involving Ras Hailu Tekle Haimanot of Gojjam.
This Prince was one of the wealthiest men in the Ethiopian
Empire.
He was the son of a king, and a man who carried himself as
such. When the Crown Prince and his entourage were received by
King George V and Queen Mary at Buckingham Palace, Ras Hailu
along with the other princes and nobles was introduced to the
British King. King George in meeting Ras Hailu asked if His
Highness could speak English. The interpreter said no. He asked
if he could speak French or German, again the answer was no.
King George, rather irritated told the interpreter to tell His
Highness that he was an ignorant man. Ras Hailu listened quietly
and asked the interpreter if His Majesty could speak Amharic.
When told no, he asked him if His Majesty could speak Tigrigna
or Guragigna, again he was told no. The prince then haughtily
told the interpretter to tell the King that His Majesty was
equally ignorant. King George burst out laughing and took a
great liking to Ras Hailu, Prince of Gojjam. Ethiopia was said
to be opening up to the world.
Upon his return, the Crown Prince was able to please the
Empress with the news that the British government would be
returning one of the crowns of Emperor Tewodros II that the
Napier expedition had siezed and carried off from Magdala in
1867. He did have to face however the deepening hostility to his
modernizing zeal on the part of the conservative camp led by
Fitarwrari Hapte Giorgis (who had not accompanied him abroad)
and the Archbishop Abune Mattiwos who was displeased with the
delegations call on the Pope in Rome.
They rigorously opposed his every move towards modernizing
the administration of the Empire, raising objections, saying
that the things the Prince wanted to do were "un-Ethiopian".
Particularly, when told that slaves were to be freed, Fitawrari
Hapte Giorgis is said to have sputtered with outrage "...so is
my wife to carry water on her back from the springs herself????"
With the deaths of these two powerful but elderly men, Ras
Taffari was able to consolidate his power by co-opting much of
the Fitawrarris personal forces and staff into his own, and by
postponing the appointment of a new Archbishop by entering into
negotiations with the Coptic Patriarchate of Alexandria over the
posibility of having an Ethiopian appointed to the post for the
first time.
The reluctance of the Patriarch to agree to this
resulted in the Ethiopian born Echege (Abbot of Debre Libanos
Monastery) being the highest ranking cleric in Ethiopia, and he
being much more in sympathy with the regent than the Archbishop
had been, it was in the interests of the Prince to let things
remain as they were and let the negotiations with the Holy See
of St. Mark drag on. The power of the conservatives was thus
greatly reduced. The Empress, although a staunch traditionalist
was increasingly devoting her time and energies towards prayer,
fasting, and church building.
She was therefore never an effective leader for the forces of
conservatism. Part of the reason for this behavior may have been
a deep sense of guilt that she bore for having defied her
father's will and replaced his designated heir on the throne,
and also because of her deep sorrow at being forcefully
separated from her husband. These events may have put her in a
position of helplessness, and at the mercy of her nobles. After
a series of plots and counter plots, an attempt was made to
arrest the Prince-Regent at the Imperial Palace by conservative
elements in the cabinet, possibly with the Empresses knowledge
and agreement.
However, the Crown Prince's wife got wind of the plot, and
was able to alert him as well as send a force of his guards to
the palace to liberate him. The Empress claimed ignorance of the
plot, although it had been carried out in her name. Progressives
and modernizers in the nobility and the army held an
unprecedented demonstation in support of Ras Taffari on the
grounds of the palace. In order to appease the angry
progressives who rallied to the Crown Prince, the Empress agreed
to crown him king.
In November of 1928, Empress Zewditu of Ethiopia
crowned Taffari Makonnen as King and Heir to the Throne of
Ethiopia. It was an unusual arangment as the King would remain
in the capital with the Empress, and that no territory such as
Wollo or Gondar was given him with the title. It was assumed
that he was king of all Ethiopia, an unprecedented situation.
His coronation as Nigus was regarded as a dress rehersal of
sorts for his eventual coronation as Niguse Negest (Emperor). He
would later see to it that no one else would ever be crowned
king once he became Emperor.
With the eventuallity of his becoming emperor all the more
likely now, the new king began to accelerate the process of
getting an Archbishop from Alexandria. Although the Copts
remained staunch in refusing to name an Ethiopian to the post,
the Ethiopians were able to get the Patriarch to appoint 4
Ethiopian born suffrugan bishops to serve under the Egyptian
Archbishop.
The new Egyptian born Archbishop Kyrilos, and the Ethiopian
born Bishops Petros, Abraham, Markos and Lukas were all
consicrated in Alexandria and arrived in Ethiopia soon
afterwards. The Ethiopian Church was jubilant to have so many
bishops at once, as well as 4 native born bishops. A year later,
upon the occasion of the visit of the Coptic Patriarch of
Alexandria to Ethiopia, he consicrated the Echege of Debre
Libanos, as the fifth Ethiopian born Bishop with the name
Sauiros.
Soon after becoming king in 1928, Nigus Taffari recieved yet
another challenge from the forces of conservatism. Dejazmatch
Balcha Saffo, known popularly by his horse name of "Abba Nefso",
an Oromo unich who had been raised by Emperor Menelik and placed
in several powerful posts by that Emperor. He had briefly
succeeded Dejazmatch Yilma Makonnen as governor of Harrar, but
upon his replacement by the then Dejazmatch Taffari in 1910, he
had been appointed Governor of the wealthy gold, ivory and
coffee producing province of Sidamo.
Now he arrived in Addis Ababa from Sidamo with a very large
number of well armed men. He had repeatedly refused the summons
of the new King to come to the Capital, and only obeyed now
because he had recieced a summons from the Empress. Dejazmatch
Balcha and his army encamped at Nifas Silk, just outside the
city, and the presence of Balcha's large Army was regarded as
being a direct challenge to the king, in support of the Empress
and the conservatives she supported. On the second evening after
his arrival, Dejazmatch Balcha and his leading officers were
invited by King Taffari to come to the Imperial Palace for
dinner.
They arrived to find a fine feast prepared for them, and much
to drink. As the evening wore on, and Balcha's officers grew
more and more intoxicated, they also grew more and more
insulting to the king and his supporters as they sang songs as
was customary. When the Dejazmatch and his followers finally
returned to Nifas Silk, they were stunned to find that his
entire army had vanished. While they had been eating and
drinking at the palace, Ras Kassa Hailu and several other
officials had arrived at Nifas Silk with a bag of Silver Maria
Theresa Thallers, and another bag of whips. They announced to
Balcha's army that a new governor, Ras Birru, had been appointed
for Sidamo and that they were to report to him at once.
They were instructed to immediately accept payment in the
silver coins, surrender their weapons and go home. The bag of
whips was left in clear view to show what would happen to anyone
who did not obey. Within a short time, the soldiers had
surrendered their weapons, recieved their payment and were
headed back to their farms and families in the south. When
Dejazmatch Balcha realized what had happened he fled to the
Raguel Church on Mt. Entoto and rang the bell, a traditional
plea for royal mercy in Ethiopia that monarchs were required to
honor. The King confined Balcha to a monastery, but did not
punish him further.
The country was abuzz with the many changes that were taking
place. Bale was set up as a model province and was ruled along
western lines with direct rule from the Central government, as
an example to the nation. The armies of the various nobles and
princes were being increasingly consolidated into a central
military force with loyalty to the central government and not to
regional leaders. Taxation was being uniformized accross the
land and it's collection handed over to officials appointed by
Addis Ababa rather than by the regional rulers.
This cut into the income of the regional aristocracy and
caused great resentment. The most resentful was clearly Ras
Gugsa Wele who had much to be angry about. Although he had been
made governor of Beghemidir, he fealt greatly slighted by the
Shewans, and by King Taffari in particular. The Shewans and
Tigreans had been responsible for the removal from state
responsibility of his aunt Empress Taitu. They had later
conspired to remove Lij Eyasu and place his own wife on the
throne on the condition that he her husband separate from her,
and sent him to far off Gondar to make sure his influence on the
Empress would be minimal.
His resentment against Addis Ababa and the King increased as
time went by, and he recieved encouragement from the Italians in
Eritrea. In 1929 he gathered together a huge army of Beghemidir,
Simien, and Yeju loyalists of his family, and marched on Shewa.
The Empress pleaded with her husband repeatedly to no avail. Her
final letters to him showed that she had become quite embittered
by his refusal to listen to her pleas. The government ordered an
Army north to meet him and do battle, and the two forces met at
Anchiem plain. Before the battle began, the government engaged
in a first for Ethiopia, the use of airoplanes in battle. Two
flights took place.
The first flight was used to drop leaflets on Ras Gugsa's
army which bore messages from the Archbishop Kyrilos
excommunicating anyone who was found to have fought against the
government, and another that bore letters from the Empress
(reluctantly written) and the King-Regent that declaired Ras
Gugsa a rebel. This psychological warfare worked on some of Ras
Gugsa's forces who then began to desert in significant numbers.
The second flight then took place in which a bomb was dropped on
Ras Gugsas army and caused panic, and the bitter battle of
Anchiem began.
By the end of the day, Ras Gugsa was dead and his army
crushed. Quiet celebration of this victory had barely begun in
Addis Ababa the next day when suddenly the capital was plunged
into deep mourning with the death of Empress Zewditu herself.
Zewditu's death was a shock to her subjects. The population was
deeply saddened as Zewditu was hugely popular, arousing much
sympathy with her piety and her devotion to her late father. It
is unclear if Empress Zewditu was actually told that her husband
was dead, and if this played a role in her demise.
There are those who maintain that the Empress was
poisoned as soon as news of her husbands defeat was certain, by
radical modernist elements in the Palace. It had however been a
palace secret that the Empress had long suffered from diabeties,
and that in addition to western medicine, she also took
traditional folk treatments, and visited shrines to bathe in
holy water and holy springs in hopes of a cure. Members of the
diplomatic corps reported to their home governments that the
Empress had been taken early that morning to be emmersed in a
container of frigid holy water for a cure, and that she had
promptly gone into shock and died. They reported that she had
not been told of her husbands death.
Other more romantic rumors reported that the Empress had
fainted in sorrow upon hearing of the death of her husband, and
had then died of a broken heart. Her Swiss doctor would report
years later that her cause of death was diabeties, and it is
this that is stated in Emperor Haile Selassie's autobiography,
and in a book by General Virgin, a Swedish military advisor.
Nevertheless, this event marked the end of the conservative
feudal era in Ethiopia, and the beginging of the new centralized
beaurocratic Empire. The day after the death of Empress Zewditu,
Nigus Taffari Makonnen was proclaimed Emperor Haile Selassie I,
Elect of God, Conquering Lion of Judah+ , King of Kings of
Ethiopia. His wife became Empress Menen of Ethiopia, and his
children all assumed the titles of Prince and Princess.
On November 1st, 1930, the new Emperor of Ethiopia paid his
respects to his illustrous predicesor, by erecting a equistrian
statue of Emperor Menelik II infront of the Cathedral of St.
George. Addis Ababa's streets had been newly repaved, electrical
lights put up and unsightly slums cleaned up for the pagentry
that would follow the next day. On November 2nd, 1930, Haile
Sellasie I was crowned Emperor of Ethiopia by the Coptic
Archbishop, Abune Kyrillos at the Cathedral of St. George. His
wife was also crowned as Empress, and Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen
anointed as Heir to the Throne.
The coronation was the most splendid yet in Ethiopia. On the
evening of November 1st, the Emperor and Empress were driven to
the Cathedral in an open car as footmen riding behind them held
red velvet umbrellas, heavily embroidered in gold, over their
heads. After an all night vigil at the Cathedral, the foreign
guests arrived to witness the anointing and crowning of the
Imperial couple and the anointing of the crown prince. Around
the outdoor dias were four large live lions, chained to the
platform on which the Emperor sat with gold chains.
The Emperor and Empress were crowned outdoors infront of the
Cathedral and enthroned there, as canons boomed a 100 gun
salute, church bells rang, women ulultated and men cheered. The
Imperial family, under a large portable gold encrusted canopy of
red velvet, the upper nobility and clergy along with the foreign
delegations then entered the cathedral to hear mass.
The coronation was witnessed by royalty and important
dignitaries from around the world. Representing the British
Empire was H.R.H. Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, son of King
George V, brother the future Kings Edward VIII and George VI,
and uncle to Queen Elizabeth II. Representing Italy was H.R.H.
Prince Eugenio Di Savoia, Duke of Udine, cousin of the King of
Italy. France was represented by Marshal Franchet D'Esperry. The
King of Belgium was represented by Monseiur Gerard, the King of
Sweden by Baron Dabells, the Queen of the Netherlands by Mr.
Unhar Hersmadd, the Emperor of Japan by Baron Ezbur, the King of
Egypt by Tewfik Nessim Pasha, the Greek government by Count
Metaxis, the government of Turkey by Muhitin Pasha, the
government of Poland by Count David Bazaki, the President of
Germany by Baron Balthaussen, and the President of the United
States by Mr. Jacobi.
The international press was also present, a first for
Ethiopian coronations. Following the church ceremonies, the
Emperor and Empress boarded the former Imperial Coach of
Germany, which had been purchased from the German government
earlier. Thousands of Ethiopian subjects and nobles lined the
streets to the palace and witnessed the procession, the last
coronation the country would see.
National Geographic took photographs of the Emperor in his
coronation robes and covered the events in their next issue. The
pagents did not go off without a glitch however. During
welcoming ceremonies for the foreign delegations there was one
significant event that caused minor disruption. As Crown Prince
in 1923, the Emperor had visited Jerusalem. While there, the
Armenian Patriarch and Catholicos of Jerusalem had met him, and
told him of the plight of the large number of Armenian orphans
being raised by the Patriarchate, and the financial dificulty
this had placed on the patriarchate.
These children were among the survivors of the huge massacres
of Armenians by the Turks a few years earlier. The then Crown
Prince had decided to help the Armenian Patriarch by taking some
of these orphans to Ethiopia to raise them in a country that
shared the Oriental Orthodox heritage of their dead parents.
These Armenian youths had formed a marching band in Ethiopia
that played at many public events, and at the Palace as well for
Imperial occasions of state. During the welcoming ceremonies
before the coronation, they would play the national anthem of
which ever delegation was arriving at the train station.
When the Turkish delegation arrived, the Armenian youths
staunchly refused to play the Turkish anthem causing the Emperor
to be very embarrassed and quite angry. The Emperor decided to
put the matter before the senior princes and nobles in council
to decide how to punish the Armenians for disobeying the
monarch. When the council demanded an explanation from the band,
the Armenians tearfully replied that it was against their
conscience to honor those who had butchered their fathers and
mothers. Much moved, the council agreed that it was too much to
expect the Armenians to honor the representative of Turkey, so
they recomended that they not be punished. The Emperor agreed
and the Armenians were allowed to disobey the Emperor and refuse
to play the Turkish National Anthem as it was in violation of
the commandment "Honor your Father and Mother". Among the guests
at the coronation was the novelist Evlyn Waugh who would one day
be a major defender and apologist for the fascists and
Mussolini's invasion and occupation of Ethiopia.
Emperor Haile Selassie began an agressive programme of
modernization and centralization of the structure of the state.
He ordered the drafting of the first written constitution for
the Empire, which was completed and promulgated in 1931. The
First Imperial Constitution, which borrowed heavily from the
Meiji Constitution of Japan, provided for a Parliament for the
first time in Ethiopian History. The Parliament was composed of
two houses, a House of Deputies (lower house) and an Imperial
Senate (upper house).
The Senate was comprised of High Nobles, and important
personages who were appointed to their seats by the Emperor. The
lower house was made up of land owners, and was also filled by
appointment of the Emperor. Although the structure of this new
constitution maintained the absolute power of the monarhcy, it
did set down the rights of the people. As was traditional, the
Supreme Court of Ethiopia remained the Emperor's Chilot, where
the Emperor heard the cases himself and passed down the final
verdict. Every subject had the right to appeal to this court and
to be heard.
The ministries were staffed with men who shared the Emperors
progressive views, and advisors were employed from abroad to
help them in their work. The cabinet of ministers, established
by Menelik II was expanded, and under the constitution it had an
advisory role to the monarch, as well as running the day to day
affairs of state. Emperor Haile Selassie being the type of
person he was, however, was not one to let others do the work of
state. He was very active early in his reign with the most
minute details of government.
However, as he grew older, and the government grew in size
and in function, he began to have less and less of a role, and
simply excersized his final approval/veto of policies formulated
and excecuted by the increasing number of technocrats. The
Emperor had no Prime Minister, but the Tsehafi Te-ezaz, a
traditional title that had been converted into the Minister of
the Pen in the modern cabinet, was the most senior of the
ministers. After 1961, however, the Emperor decided to appoint a
Prime Minister to take on more of the Policy formulation role in
government. Early in his reign though, there were not enough
educated Ethiopians to take on the responsibilities this would
entail. The Emperor also used the restructuring of the
government to severly curtail the powers of the aristocracy and
the regional princely and noble families.
The 1931 constitution limited the succession to the Imperial
Throne not only to the House of Solomon, but within the House,
to direct decendants of Emperor Haile Selassie. This limit on
the Imperial succession caused considerable unhappiness among
the Princes of the Imperial blood who were expected to sign away
their potential claims to the throne by endorsing the
constitution, particularly Ras Hailu of Gojjam and the princes
of Tigrai, Ras Gugsa and Ras Seyoum. Ras Kassa Hailu himself, a
firm ally of the Emperor in most matters, and a man who had
refused to be considered for the throne himself, was not the
least bit pleased that his decendents should be excluded in this
manner.
He pled illness and was not present for the signing of the
constitution, and did not sign it. The Emperor encouraged the
spread of modern education, and sponsored many young Ethiopians
to go to Europe to study. He built the Haile Selassie I Hospital
(known today as the Yekatit 22), and several schools. A modern
military was being developed with the aid of European advisors.
The Swedes trained his Imperial Guard, and the Belgians his
Imperial Army. He built the Amsale Guenet Palace, and housed the
visiting Duke of Abruzzi there, and then recieved the Crown
Prince of Sweden Gustav Adolph and his wife for a state visit
and housed them in the newly built Guenete Leul Palace, both
built on the site of his fathers old Addis Ababa house. After
the visits, the Emperor and Empress moved in to the new Guenete
Leul palace themselves, and it together with the Amsale Guenet
became known as the Little Guibi (the Menelik or Imperial Palace
being the Great Guibi). Ethiopia sought to emulate Japan in it's
development strategies, something that the colonial powers in
the region were not very pleased about.
It was during this time, late 1931, that Lij Eyasu escaped
from his detention at Selale. He was hunted down and captured,
and re-imprisoned, this time in much less comfortable
circumstances at Gara Muleta in Harar. Eyasuism would continue
to be a thorn in the side of the government. Lij Eyasu himself
would remain a prisoner, but among the people of Wollo and among
various elements in the nobility, there were strong feelings
that he was the true and legitimate heir to Menelik II, and this
belief would persist for a long time.
Upon the recapture of Lij Eyasu, it was found that he had
been aided by his former father-in-law, the Prince of Gojjam,
Leul Ras Hailu Tekle Haimanot, in concert with the Italian
colonial authorities in Eritrea. The Gojjami prince, who
previously had been convicted of conspiracy to murder someone,
was now sentenced to life imprisonment. Behind his plot to
restore his ex-son-in-law was Hailu's deep resentment at not
having been made King of Gojjam in succession to his late
father, Tekle Haimanot. Ras Hailu was a fabulously wealthy man,
he may have well been the richest man in the Empire. He taxed
Gojjam brutally, and he owned lavish homes both at his seat in
Gojjam at Debre Markos, and in the capital.
His relations with his his brothers, Ras Bezabeh, and
Dejazmatch Bellew were not warm, and all three brothers at
various times had quarelled with their father and sought the
protection of Menelik. Menelik II always partial to the King of
Gojjam, never tried to undermine him by using his sons against
him, but rather counseled the sons to honor their father.
Tekle Haimanot was aware of this, and appreciated it.
Upon Tekle Haimanot's death, his widow Laquech Gebre Medhin,
sister of Emperor Tekle Giorgis III, wanted to rule Gojjam as
successor to her husband as did both Bezabih and Bellew who were
at court with Menelik. Her argument was that her stepsons had
behaved badly toward their father and so she should be
considered his heir. Bezabih had married Lij Eyasu's sister
Zenebework, but it was Seyoum ( who changed his name to Hailu)
who ended up with the bulk of Gojjam. Now though, Emperor Haile
Selassie was determined not to create anymore vassal kings
within the Empire following Menelik's example. Menelik had
chosen to recognize Tekle Haimanot as king of Gojjam because
that title had been granted by Yohannis IV, but he didn't create
any Kings elsewhere as he could have. Lij Eyasu had created his
father King of Wollo, and Zewditu had made her cousin Wolde
Giorgis King of Gondar, but the new Emperor was having none of
that.
The Tigrean and Gojjami royals were created "Leul" or Prince,
their wives granted the title of "Lielt" or Princess. Thus Rases
Seyoum Mengesha and Gugsa Araya (succeeded by Dejazmatch Haile
Selassie Gugsa) in Tigrai, Hailu, Bezabih, and Bellew (succeeded
by Hailu Bellew) in Gojjam, and Kassa Hailu, and Imiru Haile
Selassie in Shewa, made up a tier of "Princes of the Blood".
They were royals with Solomonic blood who surrounded the throne
of Haile Selassie, but knew that they could never hope to be
made kings in his reign. Ras Hailu was resentful, and his aid to
Lij Eyasu was probably in reaction to this. With his
imprisonment though, The Emperor replaced him with Ras Imiru,
his own cousin, and sent representatives of the central
government to take over Hailu's property and the entire province
of Gojjam bringing under the direct rule of the central
government and ending the reign of the Gojjam branch of the
dynasty in the province. Ras Hailu's nephew, Ras Hailu Bellew
would briefly govern Gojjam in the 1950's, and would be the last
member of the Gojjam branch of the dynasty to govern it.
The Emperor continued with his modernizing zeal. Foriegn
advisors were appointed to assist in advising and helping to set
up a modern administration and beurocracy in the various
ministries. The cadre of young educated people known as the
"Young Ethiopians" made up a new domestic intelegencia which was
rooted in progressive and modernist philosopy, and were relied
on by the Emperor to carry out his plans for the Empire.
They were eager and willing to work hard towards this
goal. The Emperor continued to promote men of humble background
to positions of the highest responsibility at the expence of the
traditional nobility. The commoners, he believed, would be more
directly loyal to him because they would owe him their education
and high station completely, and be more likely to act in his
interests. The old nobility was too conservative, and too
ambitious with their own family interests and personal ambitions
to promote. The aristocracy was increasingly resentful of the
commoners that the Emperor seemed to favor, and they campaigned
for him to return to appointing people from the noble classes to
powerful posts.
The Emperor decided to balance one group against the other by
creating the Crown Council. The Cabinet of Ministers would
eventually be dominated by commoners with a few nobles here and
there, while the Crown Council would be dominated by the
Aristocracy with a few commoners included. He hoped this would
create a balance of interests. It was into this situation that
the country would spiral into the Ethio-Italian conflict of
1936, and the prelude to World War.
Her Imperial Majesty Empress Menen was born in Wollo in 1889.
She was the daughter of Jantirar Asfaw of Ambassel, and his
wife, Woizero Sehin Michael. Woizero Sehin was the daughter of
King Michael of Wollo and half sister of Lij Eyasu. Through King
Michael, Empress Menen could trace her ancestry back to Emperor
Fasiledes and also to the Prophet Mohammed. Empress Menen had
been married three times prior to her marriage to Emperor Haile
Selassie.
Her husband immediately before the Emperor had been Ras
Leulseged Atnafseged. From her first husband Empress Menen had
two children, Woizero Belainesh Ali, and Jantirar Asfaw Ali.
From her second marriage, she had two more children, Jantirar
Gebre Igziabiher Amede and Woizero Desta Amede. She had no
children from her brief marriage to Ras Leulseged. The Empress
thus had ten children altogether and the Emperor therefore had 4
step-children. Empress Menen married Emperor Haile Selassie on
July 30th 1910, while he was still Dejazmatch Taffari Makonnen
of Harrar. Unlike her previous marriages, this one was a church
wedding with a communion service, thus the only one of her
marriages recognized by the Orthodox Church. Lij Eyasu ordered
his niece to marry his maternal cousin, and involved Taffari's
cousin Dejazmatch Imiru in escorting Woizero Menen to Harrar
after he ordered her separation from Ras Leulseged.
He may have promoted the match after the couple first met at
his home in Addis Ababa and were smitten, and he realized the
political advantages to him. Whatever one believes, what is
certain is that their marriage proved very successful and long
lasting. Theirs would prove to be a remarkable personal and
political partnership. No one could claim to having been more
influential with the Emperor than Empress Menen. The Emperor and
Empress celebrated their golden wedding aniversary in 1960. Her
Imperial Majesty died in 1961 after 51 years of marriage, at the
age of 71. She had been Empress of Ethiopia for 32 years at the
time of her death. She was buried at Holy Trinity Cathedral in
Addis Ababa.
The Italian Invasion of 1935
Ever since the crushing defeat of the Italian Army at Adowa
in 1896, Italian officials, especially colonial officials had
chaffed at the lack of revenge, or restoration of their honor.
Revenge for Adowa was considered essential for Italian prestige
in Europe. Italian colonies in Libya, Italian (southern)
Somaliland and Eritrea were unprofitable, and in the case of
Libya, unstable. The Italians increasingly saw Ethiopia as their
natural hinterland for their Somaliland and Eritrean colonies. A
vast territory of industrious people, fertile soil, untapped
mineral wealth and the prestige of ancient empire were a prize
that they were simply unwilling to pass up for good.
The fact that relations between Ethiopia and Italy had been
outwardly warm since the war of 1896 was no deterrent. As Crown
Prince and Regent, the Emperor had visited Rome in 1923 and met
with King Victor Emmanuelle and Queen Helena, as well as Italy's
brand new Premier, a vulgar braggart and demagogue named Benito
Mussolini. During the visit of Prince Regent Tafari, the leader
of the Socialists in the Italian Parliament, and a vocal
opponent to Mussolini's fascism, mysteriously disappeared. A
racist cartoon in a Rome Daily depicted the Ethiopian Prince
asking el Duce if he had eaten his opponent, as if that was
typical behavior for Ethiopian leaders to eat their enemies.
The Italian and Ethiopian governments renewed the treaty of
Friendship and Commerce, and the King of Italy decorated the
Prince with the Order of the Annunziata, entitling him to be
called a "cousin" of the King of Italy. The Prince of Udine
(later made king of the fascist puppet state in Croatia), an
actual cousin of the King of Italy had even attended the
Emperor's coronation in 1930. At the same time, the new fascist
government was laying down plans for the eventual conquest of
the Ethiopian Empire. The excuse that Italy needed was provided
by the infamous Wal Wal incident and the un-demarcated border
between Ethiopia and Italian Somaliland.
Wal Wal was a outpost in the Ogaden desert that had wells
used by the Somali nomads that freely crossed between British,
French and Italian Somalilands, and the Ethiopian Ogaden. The
treaty that set down the border between Italian Somaliland and
Ethiopia stated that the border ran parallel to the Benadir
coast of Somalia at a distance of 21 leagues. What was unstated
was if this meant 21 standard leagues or 21 nautical leagues.
The Italians insisted on the nautical leagues, as this would
push the border further inland, while the Ethiopians maintained
it was absurd to claim that the treaty used nautical leagues to
measure a distance on dry land.
Nevertheless, a contingent of Italian soldiers occupied the
wells at Wal Wal and built a small fort on what Ethiopia claimed
was clearly Ethiopian territory, and had been administered by
the Ethiopians. Ethiopian territorial troops under the command
of Fitawrarri Shiferaw (posthumously created a
Dejazmatch)confronted the Italians, and after repeated requests
for the Italians to leave the site, gunfire was exchanged. The
fighting grew fierce and Italian airplanes bombed Ethiopian
positions. Ethiopia complained to the League of Nations, calling
on the collective security agreements embodied in the charter to
be invoked and applied. The Italians railed that it was Ethiopia
that had attacked an Italian fortification.
The Emperor assumed that the League would protect all members
from aggression once the victim party was ascertained. In order
to leave no doubt as to who was the aggressor, and in a move
that showed exactly how much faith he had put in the League, the
Emperor ordered all Ethiopian forces to withdraw from large
areas along the borders with Italian Somaliland and Eritrea. In
the meantime, Italy charged that its honor had been impinged.
Ethiopia was depicted at the League as a savage and barbarous
land where slavery and brutality were the common way of life, a
land that did not deserve to be treated equally with "civilized
countries". Ethiopia was urged to find a way to accommodate the
"civilizing influence" of Italy territorially in the Ogaden and
even in Tigrai in the north.
The Ethiopian government refused all such urgings as
impinging on it's sovreignity. In November 1935, thousands of
Italian troops accompanied by even more native colonial "Askari"
troops crossed into Tigrai from Eritrea in the north under the
command of Field Marshal De Bono, an elderly and cautious
officer who planned to progress slowly into the Empire. They
were quickly followed by similar forces from Italian Somaliland
in the south and east commanded by Marshal Graziani.
The fact that Italy had crossed deep into Ethiopian territory
left little doubt as to who the aggressor was, but there was
still little will to stop the aggression. The Emperor had put
complete faith in the League, and had resisted the calls of his
nobles to declare war because he believed that the League would
live up to the charter and rush in to protect his country. The
Emperor's logic was that the doctrine of "Collective Security"
would obligate the League to protect Ethiopia.
An attack on one member of the League was supposed to be
regarded as an attack on all the members. It was this protection
that had inspired him to join the League in the first place back
when he was still Prince-Regent and faced with a hostile
nobility which wanted no part of the "foreigners" League.
However, at the time, Hitler was preparing to annex Austria, and
the leading voice against this was Mussolini. Britain and France
hoped to use Mussolini as a bulwark against German designs on
Austria, and thus did not want alienate Mussolini over what they
considered an unimportant African remnant.
Not only were they not going to help Ethiopia, but France
went so far as to forbid the import of weapons into Ethiopia on
the Addis Ababa - Djibouti railway. Instead they encouraged mild
sanctions on Italy that did not include the all important
petroleum used for military trucks and tanks. The sanctions were
essentially useless. The Foriegn Ministers of France and Britain
(Laval and Hoare) were secretly negotiating a solution that
would involve Ethiopia handing over the Ogaden and most of
Tigrai to the Italians, grant English hegemony over the basin of
the Blue Nile, and the French control of the area adjacent to
the railroad to Djibouti. The Emperor would be left with a
truncated Empire composed of Shewa and Wollo, with bits and
pieces of the Tigrean and Oromo territories.
He would be firmly placed under an Italian protectorate. The
Hoare/Laval plan was denounced by supporters of the Ethiopian
cause in Europe when it was leaked, and the Ethiopians were
generally scandalized. The Emperor had no choice left to him but
to try and fight an enemy that had massive material resources
prepared to defeat him. The great negarit (war drum) of Menelik
was beaten at the Palace in Addis Ababa, and war was formally
declared. Thousands of irregulars, mostly armed with old guns
from the last century and swords, spears and shields, marched
north to confront the huge Italian force which was equipped with
modern tanks, machine guns, artillery and airplanes armed with
bombs and poison gas.
Even the modern regular army created by the Emperor was ill
equiped to face this technological onslaught. The soldiers even
marched barefoot. Emperor Haile Selassie at this point knew that
a military solution was futile, but he was determined to fight
on militarily and diplomatically until such time as he hoped the
League acted. Empress mobilized the women of Addis Ababa in
making bandages and provisions for the soldiers. She presided
over the Ethiopian Red Cross and became it's patron. The Emperor
established his norther front headquarters at Dessie, and
commanded the troops against the Italians. The Italians in the
north were led by Marshal De Bono, a senior officer of the Royal
Italian army with weak ties to the Fascist hierarchy. His
cautious and slow approach to the invasion of northern Ethiopia
was regarded with deep impatience by Mussolini who believed that
De Bono was dragging his feet. In the mean time, Ethiopian
Imperial family was horrified when they learned that the
Emperor's son-in-law, Dejazmatch Haile Selassie Gugsa had
crossed over to the Italians.
Dejazmatch Haile Selassie was the husband of the late
Princess Zenebework, and the great-grandson of Emperor Yohannis
IV. His action is said to have been caused by his resentment at
not having been made king of Tigrai, or at least Ras. This act
of betrayal caused him to still be remembered in Ethiopia as the
ultimate traitor against his country. The Tigrean locals looted
his home in Mekele in anger. Photographs were taken of him
sitting at a table looking over maps with Marshal De Bono and
his staff and publicized by the Italians, to show Ethiopian
nobles that they could expect good treatment if they
collaborated with the Fascists. In the meantime, Ethiopian
troops were being pounded by tanks, heavy artillery, airplanes
and finally poison gas and liquids.
Use of poison gas had been strictly prohibited by the Geneva
conventions, yet the world did nothing to stop Italy. Special
spraying mechanisms were installed on the aircraft so that
poisonous substances could be sprayed directly onto the land,
poisoning not just soldiers, but peasants, cattle, fields and
bodies of water. Italy even bombed Red Cross ambulances and
clearly marked treatment camps that were run by the British and
French Red Cross. Rases Imiru, Kassa, Seyum, Getachew and
Mulugueta led armies in the north that fought valiantly, but
were beaten back by the slow advance of De Bono and his well
armed troops. Impatient with the slow pace of the war,
Mussollini removed De Bono and replaced him with Marshal
Badoglio.
As the Italians battled through Tigrai and northern
Beghemidir with the forces of Rases Seyoum, Imiru, and Kassa,
the Emperor assembled his forces and prepared to meet the
fascist invader at Mai Chew in southern Tigrai. Shortly before
the battle, the Emperor is said to have given a great
traditional Giber Feast in a cave near Mai Chew. Some believe
that constant delays in attacking the Italians cost the
Ethiopian side the element of surprise at Mai Chew. Although
they fought valiantly, it was in vain, and the Ethiopian forces
were smashed by the Italians and began to retreat in haste.
Taking this opportunity, Raya and Azebo tribesmen attacked the
retreating forces of the Emperor in revenge for a recent raid to
stop them from raiding and rustling cattle, and in anger over
the just announced death of Lij Eyasu who many of them still
regarded as their rightful monarch.
Oddly, while the army retreated in disarray, the Emperor
seemed to retreat in leisure. He did not retreat with the army,
but behind it, a dangerous situation that upset some of his
advisers as dangerous opening him up for possible capture. The
monarch had perhaps given up on earthly powers and was turning
to higher authorities. Emperor Haile Selassie paid a secret
visit to the churches at Lalibella to pray, taking the time to
visit the distant church of Our Lady at the summit of Mt.
Asheten as well.
This trip was a huge detour that extended his retreat
considerably and dangerously. Finally, the Emperor finished his
prayers and then proceeded out of Wello and on to Addis Ababa.
Upon his arrival an emergency meeting of war leaders and nobles
was held at the palace to decide what the next action should be.
It was agreed that Addis Ababa would be impossible to defend,
and that in the interests of preserving the Imperial house, the
Empress and the Imperial family should immediately leave for
Djibouti, and board an English ship for Palestine. A debate was
held as to what the Emperor himself and the government should
do. Some believed that it would be best to relocate the
government to Gore, in the remote south. The Emperor agreed with
this and ordered that it be done immediately.
It was then discussed whether it would be wise for the
Emperor to move with the government to Gore, and fight on, or
leave with his family and present the plea of the Ethiopian
people in person before the League of Nations in Geneva. One of
his long time supporters and fellow modernist, Blatta Takkele
angrily stated that an Ethiopian Emperor had never fled a
battle, and that Emperor Haile Selassie should die in the glory
of battle rather than go into exile and beg for the help of
European colonialists. Ironically, it was the chief voice of
conservatism, Ras Kassa Hailu, who just as forcefully argued
against this traditionalist position championed by a modernist.
The premier prince of the blood argued that if the Emperor
stayed and was killed or captured, the cause of Ethiopia would
be finished as the forces of opposition to the Italians
fragmented. By staying alive and safe abroad, he could appeal
for assistance from a position of legitimacy and return some day
to fight again, keeping hope alive for the resistance. The
Empress also pulled the Emperor aside and stressed her agreement
with this position. She added that he should come with her to
Jerusalem and pray for the deliverance of their country with
her.
Blatta Takelle is said to have horrified the assembled
courtiers by threatening to draw his gun and saying that he
would rather shoot the Emperor himself rather than have his
country abandoned by her king. The Emperor made his decision. On
the morning of May 3rd, 1936,The Emperor with Empress Menen,
Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen with Crown Princess Wollete Israel and
Princess Ijigayehu their daughter; Princess Tenagnework and her
children, Princesses Aida, Seble, Sophia,Hirut,Princes Amha and
Iskinder Desta; Princess Tsehai; Prince Makonnen Duke of Harrar;
and Prince Sahle Selassie; along with numerous nobles and
officials boarded the train to Djibouti. Crowds assembled to see
them off, and as the trian pulled out, the crowds began to wail.
When news that the Emperor had fled began to spread, panic began
to set in. The government had packed up and departed hurriedly
for Gore.
The Emperor had appointed his cousin Ras Imiru as
Prince-Regent and Commander-in-Chief. Ras Desta Damtew, the
Emperor's son-in-law and husband of Princess Tenagnework was to
continue in command of the Imperial forces in the south. The
remnants of the northern Armies were directed to join him or Ras
Imiru immediately. Dejazmatch Beyene Merid, husband of the
Emperor's eldest daughter, Princess Romanework (from his first
marriage) remained in command of troops in Bale, under the
general command of Ras Desta. Princess Romanework and her two
little sons remained behind with the Dejazmatch rather than go
into exile.
The chief of the Addis Ababa police, Balambaras (later
Ras)Abebe Aregai began to organize a guerrilla army, set fire to
key structures that he didn't want the Italians to seize and
marched out of the city. With the departure of the Imperial
family, the exit of the government and of the army and police
forces, disorder began to take root as the residents realized
that the city had no authorities and was on the verge of falling
to the hated Italians. Many began to loot and burn stores and
warehouses, and foriegn nationals fled to the safety of the
compounds of the various diplomatic missions.
On May 5th, 1936, the armies of fascist Italy, led by Marshal
Pietro Badoglio marched into Addis Ababa and occupied the city.
Promptly, that very day, Benito Musollini went out onto the
balcony of the Venezia Palace in Rome and declared that
"Ethiopia is Italian" before huge throngs of cheering Romans.
The King of Italy emerged on the balcony as the dictator
proclaimed him Vittorio Emannuelle, King of Italy and Emperor of
Ethiopia before the wildly cheering masses.
The new "King-Emperor" of the new "Italian Empire" in
gratitude bestowed the title of "Duke of Addis Ababa" as a
hereditary title upon Marshal Badoglio, and Marchese of Neghelli
on Marshal Graziani, the commander of the Ialian troops that
seized Harrar. Mussolini appointed Badoglio as the Vice-Roy
(Vice-re) in what would henceforth be referred to as "Africa
Orientale Italiana" or Italian East Africa, and would combine
Ethiopia with the old Italian colonies of Somaliland and
Eritrea. The title of Niguse Negest (King of Kings) which had
been used by the Emperors of Ethiopia was forbidden to be used
for the King of Italy. His new Imperial title over Ethiopia
would be Keasare Ityopia (Caesar of Ethiopia) in an echo of
Italian pretensions to ancient empire. The Italian flag was
raised over the palace of Menelik, and the Italians began to set
up colonial administration as they continued the military
campaign to stamp out the resistance in the south.
In the mean time, Emperor Haile Selassie and his family were
entering Djibouti. As the Emperor had left, he had ordered two
prominent prisoners be brought to him and be put on the train.
The Imperial train had stopped at Dire Dawa, where the Emperor
had these prisoners brought before him. They were Ras Hailu
Tekle Haimanot, the disgraced Prince of Gojjam, and Dejazmatch
Balcha Saffo, the great general of Adowa and servant of Menelik
who had tried to rebel against the then King Taffari on behalf
of Empress Zewditu and the conservatives.
He addressed these prisoners by telling them that although he
recognized that they did not favor him, he hoped that their love
of their country would guide them in their actions, and he
released them. Ras Hailu promptly boarded a train for Addis
Ababa and submitted to the Italian forces. He would serve them
loyaly for the duration of the occupation, and in return he was
recognized as the senior "native noble". Dejazmatch Balcha
however was a man of a different caliber.
Although aged and very bitter towards the Emperor (whom he
continued to contemptuously refer to as Taffari), he retained a
strong love of his country, an unshakable loyalty to Emperor
Menelik, and a deep hatred of Italy going back to the Adowa
campaign. He and a band of followers became guerrilla fighters
who harassed and made life difficult for the Italian occupiers
for months on end. Finally, when his troops were almost all
dead, and he himself was exhausted and had little hope of
success, Dejazmatch Balcha sent a message to the local Italian
commander near Harrar and announced that he was prepared to
surrender to him and to meet at a specific locale. The officer,
accompanied by an appropriate guard in dress uniform went to
receive the surrender. The found the old Oromo nobleman, wrapped
in a traditional white shawl, sitting under a large tree. As
they approached him, he cried out to "Menelik my master" and
pulled out a machine gun, killing all the senior officers before
being gunned down himself. He is upheld as a great hero of the
resistance to this day.
Film exists of the arrival of the Imperial family of Ethiopia
and their retinue at Djibouti. They received a state welcome by
the French Governor of the colony. The Empress is shown wearing
a large hat covered by a heavy veil, but eye witness accounts
state that she wept through the whole proceedings. Two trains
had arrived in Djibouti carrying many people into exile with the
family. Ethiopians resident in the French colony lined the roads
in Djibouti to see for themselves if indeed the Imperial family
had gone into exile for the first time in history. When they saw
that it was indeed a somber Haile Selassie, and a weeping
Empress, being driven past them, they too were seen to weep
according to the Illustrated Times of London. An English ship
had been directed to pick up the Emperor of Ethiopia and convey
him to Palestine.
When the ship arrived, it was determined that not all of the
people that had gone into exile with the Emperor would be
allowed to board the ship for Palestine, and when the Imperial
family and a small group of followers (about half of those who
had arrived on the two trians) boarded the ship and set sail,
those anguished people left behind stood on the docks and wailed
and wept as the monarch departed. The Emperor relates in his
autobiography how some Ethiopian men and women resident in Egypt
rented a boat as his ship passed through Port Said, and sailed
next to it waving an Ethiopian flag. When he came out on deck to
acknowledge them, he saw them break down and weep, the incident
moved him deeply. The Illustrated Times of London printed
photographs of the Imperial couple arriving at Haifa, the
Emperor and Empress looking dejected. They proceeded to
Jerusalem to pray, and to settle in while the Emperor prepared
to present Ethiopia's case to the League of Nations at Geneva.
The Emperor and his entourage were determined to make a stand
against Italy at the League of Nations. Although France and the
United Kingdom had continued to press Ethiopia to accept
partition, and now that the Italians had marched into the
capital, both these powers were leaning heavily towards
recognizing Italian rule over Ethiopia, the Emperor had a strong
case to be heard, and they could do little to prevent Ethiopia
from presenting her case.
Although the French had received him in Djibouti with all the
pomp of a visiting monarch, his arrival in Palestine and later
in Britain had been treated as the arrival of a private person,
and no official notice was taken of the event. Hundreds of
anti-fascists however chose to make their presence felt by
thronging the docks upon the Emperor's arrival in England, and
by crowding around various places he visited to pay their
respects. Many roadblocks were set up though to make it
difficult.
The Italians spread rumors that the Imperial family had
fled with tons of gold and silver, that the Emperor had ordered
the torching of Addis Ababa and the butchering of the people. In
reality, the Emperor had left to prevent a bloodbath in the
city, and he had left with little money, although he did take
with him his crown and the old war tent of Emperor Menelik to
prevent it from falling into the hands of the fascists. The
Emperor arrived in Geneva to address the League of Nations in
person. He was the first head of state to appear before the
assembly, and the only one who would ever address it. The
assembly of the League of Nations was being presided over by the
Romanian delegate.
The galleries above the floor of the assembly were packed
with journalists, many of whom were Italians. When "His Majesty
the Emperor of Ethiopia" was announced, the Italian journalists
in the gallery began to whistle, stomp their feet and jeer
loudly. The Emperor quietly walked up to the podium and stood
quietly, a small man in a black cape looking up at the loudly
protesting Italians silently. The angry president of the
session, the delegate from Romania (who was chairing the
session) lost his temper and demanded that the security
personnel "Remove the savages!", and the Italians were removed
from the galleries. The Emperor then began his historic speech.
The Emperor, although fluent in French, spoke in Amharic. He
traced the history of the conflict and the atrocities committed
by the Italians. He told of the horrors of poison gas attacks
and the death rained on his people. He appealed to the League to
follow through on it's guarantees of collective security, and
the promise that small and weak countries would not be allowed
to be the victims of the large and strong.
In spite of his victory in the battle for public opinion, the
League of Nations did little however to help the Emperor, beyond
weak symbolic sanctions that had little effect on Italy.
Although the League did recognize the government at Gore, and
did not accept the Italian argument that the Ethiopian Empire
ceased to exist due to their conquest, Great Britain, France and
the United States all gave recognition to the Italian conquest
of Ethiopia by acknowledging King Vittorio Emanuele III of Italy
as Emperor of Ethiopia. The League accepted the Emperor's
argument that the Ethiopian government continued to exist at
Gore, and permitted the Ethiopian delegation to continue to sit
in the League and represent that government.
The Emperor departed for Britain to begin his new life in
exile. He was assisted in his work by Lorenzo Taezaz, and
Eritrean born loyalist who acted as his primary representative
to the league and a frequent go between with exiles and
resistance fighters. Azaj Workineh Eshete (Dr. Charles Martin),
the Ethiopian minister to Great Britain was also an active
participant in raising funds and publicity for the cause of
Ethiopia. Blatangueta Hirui, the elderly foreign minister of
Ethiopia worked also towards liberation from exile, until his
death in London in 1937.
Back in Ethiopia the Italians were settling in. The Italians
took possession of the capital and set about building the
foundations for their new administration. The former colonies of
Eritrea and Italian Somaliland were merged with Ethiopia to form
what they called "Africa Orientale Italiana" or "AOI", a single
colony ruled from Addis Ababa by the Vice-Roy as the
representative of the King-Emperor(Kesare) and the Duce
Mussollini. As administative units, the Empire was restructured
into new regions that replaced the old Imperial provinces.
The Ogaden was joined to Italian Somaliland and made the new
governorate of "Somali" based in Mogadishu in the east, the
southern kingdoms, provinces and principalities became the
governorate of "Galla-Sidamo" and was ruled from Jimma. In the
north, Tigrai and Eritrea were merged into the governorate of
"Eritrea" based in Asmara, Gojjam, Beghemidir and Simien, Wello
and parts of northern Shewa were merged into the governorate of
"Amhara" based in Gondar. The region surrounding Addis Ababa was
first named after the capital, but later was re-named the
governortate of "Shewa" and was ruled directly by the Vice-Roy.
Harrar and Dire Dawa, and their environs became the "Harrar
governortate". The Vice-Roy took up residence in the Emperor's
Guenete Leul Palace. Addis Ababa was divided between the
"Native" and "Colonial" districts.
The city market, once next to the Cathedral of St. George was
moved further out north of St. Tekle Haimanot church and named "Merkato
Indigino" and is still refered to as "Merkato" today. This was
the "native" district of the city. Italian names were given
different parts of the City. The city center of the time was
named Piazza (which it is still refered to as even today), the
Casa Populare and Casa I.N.C.E.S. are even today refered to as
Populare and Casanchis districts of the capital. The Italians
would build new buildings and roads, further modernizing the
city of Addis Ababa, and the ancient towns of Gondar and Jimma
were to be similarly developed by the Italians. Although the
Facists ordered strict racial segregation and
non-fraternization, this policy was not agressively enforced.
The Italian soldiers and officers, and later settlers, formed
friendships and romantic liasons, and had children with
Ethiopians, relationships that would survive the occupation. For
this reason, many would remain in Ethiopia after the occupation
was over. However, the Fascist doctrine of conquest was based on
an ideology of revenge for the humiliation of Adowa, and the
erasing of Ethiopian national identity. The Italians looted what
they could of Ethiopia's heritage. Several crowns of previous
monarchs were taken to Italy on Mussolini's orders. Badoglio
showed one crown to the English writer Evlyn Waugh (a fascist
sympathizer) to confirm that this was in fact the crown of
Emperor Haile Sellassie, whose coronation Waugh had attended
five years earlier.
Waugh confirmed that the silver gilt crown was indeed the
crown of Emperor Haile Sellassie, but he was mistaken. The crown
used at the coronation in 1930 was solid gold, not silver gilt,
and had accompanied the Imperial family into exile. The Italians
carried off the taller of the two standing obelisks at Axum, and
erected it in Rome in front of the Ministry of the Colonies (the
headquarters for the United Nations Food and Agricultural
Organization today) where it stood for decades until it was
returned in 2006. During the visit to Addis Ababa by the
Minister for the Colonies, Lessona, he ordered several other
monuments removed also. Taken to Rome was the Lion of Judah
monument from in front of the Addis Ababa train station. The
lion was re-erected in Rome next to the Vittorio Emanuelle
monument.
The Italians also removed the statue of Emperor Menelik from
the square in front of St. George's Cathedral and also the crown
from the top of the dome of the St. Marys Ba'eta monastery where
Menelik II was buried. These two large monuments of the
Ethiopian monarchy were removed in the dead of night, and taken
out of the city and hidden. The next morning, people came out
into the streets of the city and saw the empty pedestal of the
statue of Emperor Menelik, and many are said to have beaten
their chests and wept as if at a funeral of a relative. The
Italians took a host of valuable works of art, manuscripts, and
the entire Imperial archives and took them to Italy. They also
took the Emperor's Ethiopian assembled airplane, the "Princess
Tsehai" named for his daughter. After a few months as the
Vice-Roy of the "King-Emperor Vittorio Emanuelle III", Marshal
Badoglio, "Duke of Addis Ababa" resigned and returned to Rome,
where he could better bask in the glory of being the conqueror
of Italy's new Empire. More of a monarchist than a staunch
fascist, he found himself in constant battles with the Minister
for the Colonies, Lessona, over ideological and jurisdictional
issues.
He was replaced as Vice-Roy by Marshal Graziani, a staunch
fascist, and a man with a long and bloody reputation from his
ruthless supression of rebles in Italian ruled Libya. Although
the Italians had proclaimed a new "Fascist Empire", Ethiopia was
hardly conquered and pacified. Wide stretches of the countryside
remained outside Italian control, and would remain so for the
duration of the occupation. Although all the major urban areas
were firmly occupied, rural areas remained restive and alive
with anti-Fascist activity. The armys of Ras Imiru and Ras Desta
remained in the south, very actively opposing the Italians.
Guerillas were banding together in the central and northern
highlands as well. In particular, Abebe Arregai in Shewa, Belai
Zelleke in Gojjam, and "Amoraw (The Hawk)" Wubineh in Beghemidir
led well organized guerilla forces that harrassed and bloodied
the Italians again and again, making it impossible for them to
ever fully extend Fascist rule.
Remnants of the Imperial army however were determined to oust
the Italians from Addis Ababa. The scattered brigades needed
someone to lead them, and coordinate with the guerillas. Soon,
the rumors swept through Addis Ababa, that the Imperial red
umbrella's had been seen in Menz to the north. The House of
Solomon was far from finished. In Menz, the sons of the premier
prince of the blood, Ras Kassa Hailu, were rallying the
peasantry to the banner of the dynasty. Dejazmatch Wondwossen
Kassa, Dejazmatch Abera Kassa, and Dejazmatch Asfaw Wossen Kassa
began to gather the remnants of the Imperial forces and many
more peasants urban intelegencia who had fled the occupation of
the cities into a new army. With them was the Bishop of Wollo,
Abune Petros himself, who rallied the population and exhorted
them to refuse the rule of this godless enemy. The three royal
Dejazmatches captured the imagination of the Shewan loyalists of
the dynasty, and plans were set up to expell the Italians from
Addis Ababa.
The post-war period in Ethiopian history was one of
unprecidented development and change. The Emperor returned to a
country that had recieved some benefits in infrastructure
development fromt the colonial administration of Italy, but much
had been distroyed in the war, and the British had instituted a
parallel administration to his own. It would take years to
dislodge them.
The Family
Emperor Haile Selassie had a large family. His first marriage
was to Woizero Altayech, by whom he had a daughter, Her Imperial
Highness Princess Romanework Haile Selassie. Princess Romanework
was married to Dejazmatch Beyene Merid, and had four sons, two
of which survived to adulthood. They were Dejazmatch Samson
Beyene, and Dejazmatch Merid Beyene. Dejazmatch Beyene Merid
died fighting the fascist Italian invasion in 1936. Princess
Romanework and her sons were captured by the Italians, and
imprisoned in Italy, where the Princess died on Asinara island
in 1940, and her body was returned to the Imperial Family after
the restoration of 1941. Her sons returned to Ethiopia and were
raised by their grandfather the Emperor. Dejazmatch Samson died
in Ethiopia before the revolution.
He had been married to Woizero Koremtit Andargatchew,
daughter of Ras Andargatche Messai and step-dauther of Princess
Tenagnework his aunt. The have one son, Lij Sibistianos Samson.
Dejazmatch Merid died in exile in London without issue in 1990.
Emperor Haile Selassie was next married to Empress Menen Asfaw,
who had previously been the wife of Ras Leulseged Atnaf Seged,
an old Shewan noble. Woizero Menen was the daughter of Jantirar
Asfaw of Anbassel (Jantirar is a hereditary title reserved for
the ruler of Anbassel and is one of the oldest titles in
Ethiopia). Her mother was Woizero Sehin Michael, daughter of
King Michael of Wollo and sister of Lij Eyasu. Her Imperial
Majesty was thus the neice of Lij Eyasu. In 1930, she was
crowned Empress-consort upon the coronation of her husband as
Emperor.
Empress Menen and Emperor Haile Selassie were the parents of
six children. The eldest was Princess Tenagnework, followed by
Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen (later Amha Selassie
I,Emperor-in-Exile),Princess Zenebework,Princess Tsehai,Prince
Makonnen Duke (Mesfin) of Harrar, and Prince Sahle Selassie.
Princess Tenagnework first married Ras Desta Damtew who died
fighting the Italians in 1936. By him she had two sons, Prince
Amha Desta, and Prince Rear-Admiral Iskinder Desta, as well as
four daughters, Princesses Aida, Seble, Sophia, and Hirut.
Prince Amha Desta died young (possibly of tuberculosis) in
Englad during the exile of the Imperial family there. He had no
children and was never married. Princess Aida would marry the
hereditary prince of Tigrai, Ras Mengesha Seyoum, and had four
sons and a daughter. They are Lij Michael Sehul, Lij Yohannis,
Lij Stephanos, Lij Jalliye and Woizero Menen Mengesha. Princess
Seble Desta would marry the heir to the Oromo ruling family of
Leqa-Qellem principality of Wellega Dejazmatch Kassa Jote. They
would have four daughters and a son, Woizero Jote, Woizero Yeshi,
Woizerit Lally, Woizerit Kokeb and Lij Amha Kassa. Princess
Sophia Desta would marry Captain Dereje Haile Mariam , and had a
daughter, Woizero Hanna Dereje. Princess Hirut Desta would marry
Gen. Nega Tegegne.
Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen first married Princess Wollete
Israel Seyoum, daughter of the then hereditary prince of Tigrai
Ras Seyoum Mengesha. They had one daughter, Princess Ijigayehu
Asfaw Wossen. Princes Ijigayehu was married to the heir of the
ruling Oromo family of Leqa-Neqemt in Wellega, Dejazmatch Fikre
Selassie Hapte Mariam. They had six children (see details under
page for Emperor Amha Selassie I on main page). Following his
divorce from from his first wife, the Crown Prince married
Medferiashwork Abebe, daughter of General Abebe Damtew. The new
Crown Princess was thus the neice of Ras Desta Damtew, first
husband of Princess Tenagnework. Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen had
four more children with Crown Princess Medferiash. They are
Princess Mariam Senna (Mary), Princess Sefrash Bizu, Princess
Sehin, and Prince Zera Yacob (See under Emperor Amha Selassie).
Princess Zenebework Haile Selassie married Dejazmatch Haile
Selassie Gugsa, son of the other hereditary prince of Tigrai,
Ras Gugsa Araya. Princess Zenebework died in 1934, and her
husband defected to the fascist Italians on the eve of the 1935
war. He was sent into internal exile after the restoration.
Princess Tsehai Haile Selassie was married to General Abiye
Abebe, but died in childbirth in 1941. General Abiye continued
to be accorded the protocol rank of the Emperor's son-in-law,
even after his remarriage. General Abiye served in a number of
capacities in the Imperial government including Crown
Representative in Eritrea, Senator, and Minister of Defence. Lt.
General Abiye Abebe was executed with the other high government
official by the Derg in November of 1974.
Prince Makonnen Haile Selassie, Duke of Harrar was married to
Princess Sara Gizaw Duches of Harrar. They had five sons,Princes
Wossen Seged, Taffari, Makonnen (David),Michael, and Beide
Mariam. Prince Sahle Selassie Haile Selassie was married to
Princess Mahisente Hapte Mariam, daughter of the heir to the
Oromo principality of Leqa-Neqemt. They had one son, Prince
Ermias Sahle Selassie, who is the current President of the
Ethiopian Crown Council in exile.
Prince Makonnen, Duke of Harrar, was killed in a car crash on
his way to the resort town of Nazareth in 1959. Prince Sahle
Selassie died of illness in 1961. Her Imperial Majesty Empress
Menen also died in 1961 after many years of ill health. The
Empress, the Duke of Harrar, Prince Sahle Selassie, Princess
Zenebework, Princess Romanework, and Ras Desta Damtew (first
husband of Princess Tenagnework were all buried in the crypt of
Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa.
Princess Tsehai was buried at the Ba'eta Le Mariam Monastery
Church, in the Imperial mausoleum with Emperor Menelik II,
Empress Taitu and Empress Zewditu. Emperor Haile Selassie had
built a huge new sarcophagus for himself and a matching one for
his wife in the north trancept of the Nave in Holy Trinity
Cathedral. He planed to move the Empress' remains from the crypt
under the cathedral to this new tomb,and to be buried there
himself. However, the revolution intervened, and the Empress
remained in her original tomb until November 2000. Following the
disinternment of the Emperor's remains from the secret grave he
was placed in by the Derg in 1991, disputes between the
government in Ethiopia and the Imperial family over whether the
Emperor should receve a state funeral or not, erupted.
The Emperor's remains were placed in the mausoleum at the
Ba'eta Le Mariam Monastery until the time that an agreement
could be reached to hold his funeral and final burial at Holy
Trinity Cathedral. No agreement could be reached with the state
authorities, so the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, the Haile
Selassie I Memorial Foundation, and the Veterans Association of
Ethiopia, in agreement with the Imperial family, held a
non-State Imperial Funeral for the late Emperor on November 5th,
2000. Her Imperial Highness, Princess Tenagnework Haile Selassie
is the only child of the Emperor who survives.
The FALL
After months of the military co-ordinating committee (Dergue)
placing members of the Aklilu Haptewold and Endalkatchew
Makonnen governments in prison, along with the senior military
officers, nobility and regional governors and officials, it
became clear that the days of the Emperor on the throne were
numbered.
The press was full of vitriol and scathing attacks on the
fallen governments, on the corruption and incompitence of the
officials, and even on the character and the performance of the
Emperor himself. The attacks on the Emperor ranged from critics
that stated his reign had been too long, that he should have
abdicated in favor of his son or one of his grandsons long ago,
that he was too old and too senile to hold state responsibility,
to outright attacks on his character labeling him a thief and a
despot. The daily attacks eroded the Emperor's once vast
popularity and laid the groundwork for the inevitable.
On September 11th, 1974, Ethiopians celebrated their New
Year, welcoming the year 1967 according to their version of the
Julian Calandar. During the day, truckloads of soldeirs spread
out from the baracks of the 4th division and took up strategic
positions all over the capital. Tanks and armoured personnel
carriers rolled down the streets of Addis Ababa and jeeps with
mounted machine guns took up guard outside banks, ninistries,
palaces and important junctions in the city. Soldiers wore
stickers with the slogan "Ethiopia Tikdem" (Ethiopia before all)
on their helmets. Rumors swept the city that Princess
Tenagnework and several other members of the Emperor's immediate
family had been placed under arrest. Nothing in the press
indicated what exactly was going on.
In fact, the Emperor's daughter Princess Tenagnework, his
daughter-in-law Princess Sara Duchess of Harrar and all their
children were placed under arrest in Addis Ababa. In Tigrai, the
hereditary Prince Ras Mengesha Seyoum had already taken to the
hills with a band of followers, but at Mekele's castle, his wife
Princess Aida Desta (daughter of Princess Tenagnework) along
with her daughter and the children of her sister Princess Seble
were arrested and put on a plane back to Addis Ababa. The
Imperial family was systematically being rounded up. Rumors
swept the city, but nothing official was announced. Late in the
day, as was traditional, the Patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox
Church, Abune Theophilos gave his yearly New Year's Address on
national television and radio.
In his speech, the Patriarch likened Ethiopia to a ship in
stormy seas, charting a new path into the future. At the end of
the speech, for the first time ever, he failed to bless the
Emperor and the Imperial family, and instead wished success to
the mission of the co-ordinating committee. For the Emperor's
loyalists it was a jarring and shocking development. In 1960,
Abune Basilios had condemned any attempt to dethrone the man
annointed by the Church and stood firm against the Imperial
Guard coup attempt. That his successor should make a statement
that seemed to abandon the Emperor to his fate was a shock. Then
came the Coup-de-Grace on the reign of Haile Selassie I.
Ethiopian Television, showed the Ethiopian public the BBC
production of the Hidden Famine by Jonathan Dimbleby.
The film showing the horrifying famine in Wollo with scenes
of death and starvation was damaging enough on it's own, but the
Dergue had re-edited the film to include footage of lavish
palace banquets and ceremonies in honor of the Emperor's 80th
birthday, the marriage of Prince Asrate Kassa's daughter, and
other glittering court events. The Emperor was also shown
feeding his pet leopards and dogs choice cuts of meat from
silver platters held by liveried servants.
People watching the film in public places were seen to weep.
This time no mention was made of the Aklilu cabinet hiding the
famine from the Emperor, or of the ogtagenerian Emperor being
out of touch. The film was made to make him seem heartless and
steeped in luxury while his people suffered untold misery. It
was the final nail in the coffin of Haile Selassie's reign, and
indeed in the coffin of the worlds oldest monarchy.
The following morning, September 12th, 1974 (Meskerem 2, 1967
Ethiopian calander) ten junior officers who were members of the
Dergue arrived at the Jubilee Palace which was surrounded for
the first time by tanks and machinegun mounted jeeps. A small
mostly male crowd had gathered outside the gates suspiciously at
the same time as the ten officers. The officers were led by
Major Debela Dinsa.
Their mission was to inform the King of Kings that his reign
was over and to remove him from his palace. Concerned that he
might not be cooperative, the Dergue had asked Ras Imiru Haile
Selassie, the Emperor's cousin, life long companion, and
socialist sympathizer, to come with them to convince him to step
down peacefully. Ras Imiru was also the father of Lij Michael
Imiru, the recently appointed Prime Minister. The officers were
all armed with Uzzi sub-machineguns and revolvers, and some had
grenades strapped to their belts. The senior prince and junior
officers waited at the gates for a camera crew from Ethiopian
Television to show up. Much to their irritation, the camera crew
did not materialize, and when calls were made, it became
apparent that Ethiopian Television had not been informed of the
event so they scrambled to get a camera man to the palace at
once. The small group then entered the palace and asked to see
the Emperor.
The palace no longer had throngs of courtiers and noblemen
attending the Emperor's person, only the servants walked the
halls. Debela Dinsa's account (refered to in Guenet Ayele's book
"Ye Colonel Mengistu Tizitawoch" as "Dergue member 11" at a
transparent attempt at annonimity) states that the encounter
between the Emperor and the group of officers took place in the
Grand Throne Room, but the film of the event indicates it took
place either in the Palace library or the Emperor's study. The
film is quite compelling. The armed soldiers stood in a line
facing the Emperor, with Debela Dinsa standing at the center of
the line. He stepped forward and saluted before producing from
his pocket a speech which he read out loud to the Emperor.
The letter was a decree of the Dergue removing Haile Selassie
I from the Imperial throne and charging him with abuse of power,
lack of compitence to continue to reign due to his advanced age,
and the additional charge of embezzeling the money of the
people. The Emperor listened to the speech in silence. Debela
Dinsa's hands were visibly shaking throughout his reading of the
speech, and his fellow soldiers, although armed to the teeth,
seemed awed and nervous while the Emperor sat, regal in his
bearing and completely silent. Once the speech was finished, the
Emperor continued to sit completely silent looking at the
soldiers.
Debela Dinsa freely admits in his account of the event that
he was awed and frightened in the Emperor's presence, and he
completely understood the stories that even though the Emperor
was such a small frail old man, there was something about him
that compelled you to bow low before him. As the nervous tension
increased in the room, Ras Imiru approached the Emperor and they
spoke in low tones for an extended time. The Emperor then spoke.
His statement was simple and moving. He stated that all through
his life, he had tired endlessly for the benefit of his country
and his people, and that ones individual desires could not come
ahead of the needs of the nation.
The Emperor's role was to lead in good times and bad, he
said, and to serve his people always and without fail. If it was
determined that this was for the greater good of Ethiopia, then
he would accept the decision and do what was required of him.
After another nervous extended silence, still refering to the
Emperor as "Your Majesty", Debela Dinsa asked that the Emperor
accompany him and his fellow officers to a place where he "would
be safe and comfortable". The Emperor asked "Where are you
taking me". Debela Dinsa replied that a place had been prepared
for "your majesty" that would offer comfort and protection of
his safety.
The Emperor asked if he could bring some retainers. Debela
Dinsa said that he would be allowed some retainers, but for the
time being, the Emperor was to bring just one servant with him.
The Emperor called out to his servant Merid who came quickly.
The Emperor rose and started to walk out with the officers. Ras
Imiru, visibly moved asked if he could come with the Emperor.
The soldiers informed "His Higness" that he could not come with
them, but that he could come see the Emperor later in the day.
As the Emperor walked past Debela Dinsa, he asked him "Why are
you holding your gun like that?" refering to the Uzzi in Debela
Dinsa's hands.
Debela Dinsa nervously replied that it was so he could carry
the gun more comfortably. The Emperor smirked and said "I think
not, I think it's so you can shoot it more easily." and swept by
him. As the Emperor walked through the palace with his armed
escort, liveried servants began to gather and follow. They all
looked shocked and bewildered. When they arrived at the front
portico, footmen, maids, Imperial guards, gardeners, and other
staff both male and female had gathered on the steps and at the
windows of the palace. Debela Dinsa said most of the men looked
stunned and many were staring at their shoes or the ground. It
was obvious to them all what was happening. Most were openly
weeping.
A small caravan of vehicles pulled up. The Emperor caught
sight of the car which was to take him away from the Jubilee
Palace for the last time. It was a small baby blue volkswagen
beetle, a far cry from the Rolls Royce and Benz limosines that
he was accustomed to. Members of the Dergue have since claimed
that this car was chosen in order to take the Emperor away with
maximum annonimity to protect him fromt he anger of the people,
and not to humiliate him in anyway. This is belied by the fact
that the small car was escorted in front and back by two jeeps
with mounted machine guns, making it just about the most
conspicuous car in the city.
For years afterwards, the Dergue would often display this car
in public as the final humiliating end of Haile Selassie's
reign, so this statement is obvious in it's absurdity. As the
Emperor was driven away, his servants began to wail and weep
loudly, many beating their chests as if at a traditional
funeral. Of all his former subjects, the staff of his palaces,
people with little power and relatively small personal gain from
his reign, have remained the most consistantly loyal to the
Emperor's memory. Once outside the gates however the scene
changed dramatically. The small crowd of men which had gathered
opposite the palace gates began to scream "Thief! Thief! Thief!"
at the Emperor as he passed.
They followed the little group of cars as they drove slowly
through the city, running after them screaming abuse at the man
who had reigned over them till that very morning. Members of the
Dergue have claimed that this was a spontaneous demonstration by
people who were enraged at the Emperor following the previous
night's broadcast of "The Hidden Famine". The Dergue leader and
subsequent dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam in an interview with a
biographer Genet Ayele told her that he found the denunciations
of the Emperor distasteful and hated the fickleness of these
people who only weeks earlier would have bowed to the ground
before him.
This statement ofcourse should be taken with a grain of salt,
as Mengistu spent his entire rule of Ethiopia trying to demolish
the memory of Haile Selassie and his reign. However, others have
stated that the group of young men, who suspiciously gathered at
the gates just as the group of officers arrived to enter the
palace that morning, was actually a group of soldiers ordered by
the Dergue to appear in civilian dress in order to give the
dethronement a look of civilian approval and perhaps also to
humiliate Haile Selassie I. If this was the case, it was an
unnecissary and cruel measure, for within minuites of Radio
Ethiopia announcing that Haile Selassie I had been removed from
the Imperial throne, students from the University that still
bore his name ran through the streets with burning and torn
portraits of the Emperor.
The always radically leftist and ardently anti-monarchist
students were jubilant and they quickly took up cries of "Taffari
Thief" and sang songs sarcastically depicting the wailing of the
aristocracy at the end of their days eating fine lamb and
chicken. They tossed flowers at the soldiers guarding the city
and sang the praises of the Dergue and the Ethiopian revolution.
Around the world leaders and governments hailed the peaceful
transfer of power in Ethiopia, commending the military for
carrying out the coup in a civilized and bloodless manner. Cries
of "Etyopia Tikdem" (Ethiopia before all) and the even more
ambitious "Yaleminim Dem Etyopia Tikdem" (Without any bloodshed,
Ethiopia before all) which was quickly incorporated into a
popular song, were heard on the streets and on television and
radio. Ethiopia was supposedly embarking on a bright and happy
future, emerging from centuries of darkness and backwardness.
It would be only a very short time later that the hollowness
and falseness of these dreams would be dreadfully apparent. In
the immediate aftermath of the dethronement, the Dergue issued a
decree establishing itself as the Provisional Military
Admimistrative Council (PMAC) and declared martial law. The
constitution was suspended, the Imperial court disbanded and the
Emperor's Chilot which was the Supreme Court of the land
abolished, as was the Crown Council. Parliament was immediately
disolved. The Dergue did not however formally abolish the
monarchy at tht time. Instead, it was announced that Crown
Prince Asfaw Wossen would be annointed "King" of Ethiopia (as
opposed to Emperor) upon his return from medical care in
Switzerland. In the following days, it was announced that the
title of Conquering Lion of Judah was henceforth to be changed
to Conquering Lion of Ethiopia, and that Prince Asfaw Wossen was
to be a strictly titular monarch with no political power
whatsoever.
The brief period of freedom of the press was ended as part of
the emergency measures of martial law and would never see the
light of day again for 17 years. The Dergue, in an effort to
gain support with more liberal elements announced that Lt.
General Aman Michael Andom, would serve as it's new Chairman and
acting Head-of-State and Head-of-Government. General Aman was an
Eritrean born veteran in his youth of the war against Italy and
a renowned Ethiopian patriot. Unlike most of the Ethiopian
heirarchy he was not an Orthodox Christian, but born and raised
a Protestant (Lutheran).
He had attended Sandhurst on an Imperial scholarship and was
generally regarded as one of the finest officers in the
Ethiopian Army, and widely popular with the rank and file of the
military as well as the general civilian population. General
Aman had an impecable military record, and was refered to as the
"Lion of the Ogaden" due to his heroic role in turning back the
Somali invasion of the Ogaden in the early 1960's. However, his
outspoken support for reform had alienated him from the Imperial
government, and he had been retired from active military
service.
The Emperor, in an act he often carried out on public figures
who were outspoken in their critisism of his regime, had
appointed General Aman to the Imperial Senate. (It was the type
of punishment that would soon be looked back with fondness by
political dissidents in Ethiopia. It was noted the Emperor used
to punish people with appointments to prestegious yet powerless
positions or foriegn ambassadorships.) General Aman was popular,
and the Dergue was confident that he would lend them added
legitimacy. One of his first public acts was to announce that
Ras Mengesha Seyoum was to henceforth be regarded as a traitor
and an outlaw, and that he was not only stripped of his
governorship of Tigrai, but that he was also stripped of his
princely title. He also issued an immediate recall to Prince
Makonnen (David) Makonnen, second son of the late Duke of Harrar,
to immediately leave his military studies in the United States
and return to Ethiopia at once. David Makonnen promptly went
into hiding.
Following his dethronement, the Emperor was taken from his
palace to the baracks of the 4th Division on Debre Zeit Road,
near the rail line into the city, where most of the members of
his government and his court were imprissoned. According to his
doctor, noted surgeon Professor Asrat Woldeyes (later founder of
the All Amhara Peoples Organization in the post Dergue era) who
was brought to see him, he spent his first night there in large
tent, with a machine gun set up facing the entrance from the
outside.
The next morning however he was moved into the vacant house
of one of the senior officers on the grounds of the baracks. He
was visited here by Ras Imiru and Dejazmatch Kebede Tessema, the
only two Crown Councilors to escape arrest, as well as his
doctor. He was waited on by members of the palace staff, and his
meals were cooked at the palaces and brought to the 4th Division
daily.
The new government sent deligation after deligation to the
Emperor to demand that he return the "Billions" that they
charged he had stolen from the people of Ethiopia. Over the
months the Emperor steadfastly denied that he had secreted money
abroad for his own benefit or for his decendents or for the
nation. Some sources say that he admitted that a modest sum had
been sent to Switzerland to cover the medical costs of the Crown
Prince and the living expenses of the Crown Princess and her
daughters, but denied that any other money had been sent abroad,
but even this claimed admission is not clearly documented. The
Dergue even convinced Ras Imiru to plead with the Emperor to
return any money he might have taken. What the Emperor must have
felt at his own cousin and the one person who could claim to be
a brother to him being co-opted into this effort can only be
imagined as he has left no record of this. Ras Imiru who had
long enjoyed a good reputation in all quarters of Ethiopian
society would now earn a serious blemish on his record for his
role in this matter.
When a sarcastic Dergue officer (some say it was Mengistu
himself) is said to have asked the Emperor "Surely Your Majesty
must have had some savings put away for hard times, for your
retirement." The Emperor is said to have haughtily replied
"Retirement? The Emperor of Ethiopia has no retirement. His
retirement is death. Therefore there was never any need to save
for retirement." On another occasion, he was accused of having
stolen the equivalent of U.S. $20 Billion. It is said he wearily
stated, "How poorly we have failed in educating you in math."
For a country that in the 1970's when it's economy was at it's
most productive since the begining of his reign in the 1930's,
had a Gross Domestic Product of U.S. $2billion, it was a truely
ridiculous sum. The Dergue decided it would take on more of the
formal trappings of government and assume the mantle of state by
leaving it's erstwhile headquarters at the 4th Division Baracks
and move into the Imperial Palace (Great Guibi) built by Emperor
Menelik II as it's seat of power.
All the prisoners were removed from the baracks and placed in
the wine cellars of the palace. The Emperor himself was moved
into Inqulal Bet (Egg House) on the grounds of the Imperial
Palace. This house, built by Emperor Menelik was thus named for
it's egg shaped dome on it's roof, and had previously been used
by Empress Zewditu while she was still a Princess and helping to
nurse her ill father Emperor Menelik II, and later as a guest
house during her reign. The house had a small flower garden
where the confined Emperor would take daily walks. However, when
palace staff, and even the administrative staff of the Dergue as
well as soldiers posted to guard him continued to bow and pay
him customary homage, the Dergue ordered a tall fence of
corrugated tin to be built around the garden to block him from
view. His place of detention was right next to the Se'el Bet
Kidane Meheret Church (Our Lady Covenant of Mercy) which is
located on the grounds of the palace. Denied permission to
attend services at the Church, he would instead stand at an open
window overlooking the church and listen to the liturgy over the
public address system of the church, making the responses as
required.
He continued to be attended by loyal servants, but he was
repeatedly subject to visits by officials and "intermediaries"
demanding bank account numbers and admissions of embezzelment
which he steadfastly denied to the very end. The Emperor's
signet ring, which bore the emblem of St. George slaying the
Dragon, was taken from him and found to contain a spring
mechanism that bore a key. The Dergue triumphantly proclaimed
that it had found the key to a safty deposit box someowhere in
Switzerland and demanded to know the location of the box. The
Emperor's servants protested that the key was only used to open
an attache case that the Emperor had, but the Dergue was only
interested in furthering their search for money and distroying
the Emperor's reputation. They ordered a comitteee of University
Professors to study the ring and find any hidden codes or bank
account numbers in the ring, going so far as removing the stones
that surrounded the signet. Nothing was found, and the existence
of a fortune stashed abroad for the Emperor and his family was
never proven. (The author's father, as personal jeweler to the
Emperor confirms that the key in the ring was indeed simply for
an attache case that the Emperor used to keep personal
documents.)
In the meantime, the Revolution had started to heat up. The
Ethiopian Orthodox Church was disestablised as the state
religion and Equality of Faith declaired. Even as students,
intellectuals, and former politcal dissidents debated the future
of the Ethiopian state and what form it should take, things were
changing at the top. General Aman Andom was a forcefull leader
and a man used to firm military dicipline. The antics of the
Dergue with it's collection of low level officers acting in
defiance of their supperior officers was not really to his
tastes.
The Dergue had wanted a figure-head in General Aman, but
instead it got a dynamic leader with ideas of his own, and a
suspicion of their motives, as well as a driving ambition to be
the new power in the land. Soon, the Dergue and it's leaders
Colonel (formerly Major) Mengistu Haile Mariam and Colonel
Atnafu Abate were in a direct collision course with General Aman
Michael Andom. The Dergue wanted to authorise a new major
deployment of troops in Eritrea to put down the seccesionist
rebellion there. General Aman argued that a chance should be
given to negotiations with the rebles now that a new government
had come to power in Ethiopia. Dergue members looked at his
argument with suspicion since General Aman was of Eritrean
background.
They began to whisper that the General wanted to resurect the
old Federation, and that his loyalty to a united Ethiopia was
questionable. There was also the issue of the imprissoned
ex-officials of the Imperial Government under arrest in the wine
cellars of the Great Guibi. Although General Aman was the leader
of the government that had put them there, these people were his
former fellow officers, fellow senators, colleagues, and many he
counted as personal friends. Their alleged misdeeds were being
investigated by the Investigating Committee.
Weary of their long winded investigations, the Dergue
demanded results which didn't seem to be rapidly forthcoming.
There was lobbying to simply summarily execute the major figures
of the Imperial regime immediately. General Aman was said to
have balked at this and refused to ever sign any extra-judicial
decision to sentence anyone to imprisonment or execution.
Matters quickly came to a head. The Dergue demanded that General
Aman sign their collective decission to send new troops to
Eritrea to crush the rebles militarily.
General Aman refused, and in the heated exchange, Generla
Aman announced his resignation as Chairman of the Dergue and
left the meeting hall for his home next to the Princess Tsehai
Hospital (known today as the Armed Forces General Hospital) in
the Old Airport (Lideta) district of the capital along with
several of his supporters. After he refused several personal and
telephoned summonses to return to the Palace and meet with the
Dergue, a meeting was called, chaired by Mengistu Haile Mariam,
to decide what to do about this situation.
In addition to the Dergue, Mengistu claims he also summoned
the Neus Dergue, a rag tag crowd of soldiers and low ranking
officers several hundred strong to attend the meeting as well
along with the Dergue to participate in this particular decision
and that this group subsequently forced his hand by going to
extremes. Others say that Mengistu simply used this group to
provide him and the smaller Dergue with political cover from
future backlash to their fatefull decissions they were about to
make. After a case was presented to the meeting for General
Aman's percieved treasonous behavior, it was agreed that an
armed unit should immediately be dispached to the General's home
and he was to be escorted back to the palace at once. If he
resisted then force would be used.
The subject then turned to the issue of the prisoners in the
wine cellars under the palace floors on which they were
conducting their meeting. According to Mengistu it was the Neus
Dergue who demanded that the matter of the prisoners be decided
at once, and that he was a reluctant participant in what
followed. However, it is more likely that the subsequent events
were exactly what Mengistu wanted, and that all the events were
carefully engineered to bring about the results he desired. One
by one the names of prisoners were read out and cries of "Kill
him" and "Let him live" decided the fates of the men who had
governed the country for decades.
Following this meeting, on the night of November 23rd,1974,
soldiers surrounded the home of General Aman Michael Andom and
demanded his surrender. When he refused they opened fire, and
the General and a group of supporters fired back. After a fierce
but brief firefight, a large explosion demolished the General's
house and it's occupants were all killed. Some claim it was
blown up by the General and his followers themselves in an act
of Theodorean suicide. With this act completed, the armed unit
returned to the palace in the heart of the night and awoke the
prisoners. One by one, 58 prisoners of the prisoners were
summoned by name and led out of the cellars.
When they asked where they were being taken they were either
not given answers or told they were being taken to the central
prison. Some of them may have been pleased at being taken to the
prison as that would allow their families to start visiting them
again as they had done when they were imprissoned at the 4th
Division. Others such as Ras Mesfin Sileshi are said to have
almost immediatly commented "We are being taken to our deaths".
The former governor to the Imperial Household, Blata Admassu
Retta was removed from what his doctors were certain was his
death bed at the Haile Selassie I Hospital in order that he be
executed. The Eritrean born veteran of the war with Italy, the
elderly General Isayas was also taken on a stretcher from the
hospital to his execution.
Prince Asrate Kassa is said to have been loaded into the back
of an army truck in a wheelchair. The selected prisoners were
driven in trucks and buses to the Akaki Prison (also known as
Kerchele) to it's Alem Bekagn (which translates with Finished
with the World) section. Under bright spot lights, they were
machine-gunned to death and their bodies tossed into a freshly
dug trench nearby, their remains promptly covered by buldozers.
On the night of Friday November 23rd, 1974, the so-called
"Bloodless Revolution" of the Dergue showed it's true face. The
next day, the city awoke to the spreading rumor that General
Aman had been toppled, and possibly killed, and that there had
been a change of leadership overnight, but the population had no
idea of the scale of the previous nights events.
The author remembers peering at the remains of General Aman's
house from the grounds of the Princess Tsehai hospital where his
parents had gone to visit a doctor friend who lived there. Then
as the people of the counry sat down to lunch on Saturday
November 24th, Radio Ethiopia announced the names of the 58
ex-officials of the Imperial Government, complete with military,
official and noble titles along with the names of Lt. General
Aman Michael Andom and the two Dergue members who had died with
him. As people waited to hear news of either additional charges,
trial date or pardon, they instead heard the announcement that
all of the mentioned had been executed for abuse of power and
crimes against the people.
Their "ceremony of burial" had been conducted and it would
not be permitted for their family members to ask for their
bodies. They had never had a chance to defend themselves in open
court, as so many of them had been sure they would be allowed to
do when they surrendered peacefully. Immediately a dark mood
decended on the city as the horror of the day sank in. In a
courageous act of defiance the widows and close relatives of the
deceased opened their homes to mourners and their houses were
thronged with weeping people.
The wife of one of the Generals walked up and down the street
in front of her house waving his ceremonial sword crying out to
all who passed that her brave lion had been killed by "these
girls..these cowards" who had to tie his hands because they were
afraid to fight him. The women and children of the Imperial
family are said to have learned of the execution of the
ex-officials at the Duchess of Harrar's palace where they had
been all confined on an upper floor together. One of Prince
Asrate Kassa's younger sons had leaned out the window to listen
to a radio being played by the soldier guards below when he
heard the name of his father and other former officials, and
then heard the news of their deaths. His hysterical screams
brought the entire family running to hear him screaming "They
killed them all! They killed them all!" As the women and
children panicked and chaotic hysteria began to set in, the
soldiers rushed in and ordered them to be quiet and told them
the boy had misheard and that all that had been anounced was the
trial of the prisoners, nothing esle.
The next day however, a Dergue member arrived and informed
them of the deaths of six people who the Dergue had determined
were Imperial relatives. In fact, the Imperial family had lost
11 relatives of various degrees that day. Prince Asrate Kassa,
the Emperor's cousin, and Prince Rear-Admiral Iskinder Desta,
the Emperor's grandson, being the most prominent family members.
When the women tearfully asked to be allowed to visit their
graves with a priest, they were scolded and ordered never to ask
such a question again. Their is no public record provided as of
yet on what the Emperor's reaction was to the deaths, but it
must have been profound.
Source: IMPERIAL ETHIOPIA |