Showing posts with label EPRA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EPRA. Show all posts
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Quick Review: Makonnen Araya
Negotiating A Lion’s Share of Freedom:
Adventures of an Idealist Caught up in Ethiopian Civil War
A Memoir
By Makonnen Araya
Self-published paperback; 2010; 248pp.
This was a quick, entertaining, though not particularly uplifting read. It's the memoir of the author's time as a member of the Ethiopian Peoples' Revolutionary Army, the guerrilla wing of the EPRP, in rural northern Ethiopia 1977–1979.
It's quite a tale of hardship and determination that really undercuts romantic notions of what it's like to be a guerrilla. As I just read in volume two of Kiflu Tadesse's The Generation, the EPRA was set up to be a long-term project of armed struggle as the EPRP was gradually eliminated by the military government from Ethiopia's cities. Young students, workers, and even lawyers like author Makonnen Araya, targeted for assassination by the military for being “anarchists,” sought refuge in the hardscrabble liberated areas of several northern provinces. Unfortunately, the EPRA found itself in conflict not only with the military government and its peasant militias, but competing guerrilla groups like the TPLF and EDU; while it did provide refuge for militants fleeing the cities, it didn't seem to morph into a serious military threat to the Derg. Although the EPRP leadership had hoped to make a strategic turn to rural guerrilla war, Makonnen here admits that while the EPRA met with some sympathy at first, it was never able to follow up its plans and promises with enough military power to make a viable difference for Ethiopian peasants unhappy with the Derg.
The story recounted is mostly not one of military confrontation but of survival and a somewhat futile attempt to win over the peasant population to leftist ideals which seemed abstract to the bitterly poor peasants among whom the EPRA operated. His main enemies turn out to be lice, hunger, cheap rubber shoes, and unrelenting weather. But Makonnen relates in great detail his attempt to negotiate escape from Addis Ababa through clandestine channels, his dangerous journey to the EPRA's Tigray base, and then his guerrilla training in an EPRA camp. He recounts two years spent with the guerrillas in the bush, largely living off the land and trying to keep away from government forces. Eventually Makonnen resigns his post and joins the flood of Ethiopian refugees in the borderlands, escaping Ethiopia for Khartoum in the Sudan, where he navigates UN relief, vindictive veterans of the rival, anti-communist EDU militia, and local law enforcement before winning relocation to the US.
It's a really interesting, if sobering, read. Although self-published it is readily available on Amazon.
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
Symbolic Confusion 2 - Hammers and Sickles
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From Abyot, 1978. EPRP, EPRA, EPRYL, ELAMA logos. |
The hammer and sickle icon was developed in Russia during its 1917 revolution. The hammer symbolizes the proletariat, and the sickle the peasantry. Like Ethiopia, Russia was a country with vast social forces outside the urban working class, and the Bolsheviks wisely sought ways to symbolically reflect this necessary alliance of power and unity against oppression and exploitation. The hammer and sickle became the symbol of communism, wielded proudly by socialist revolutionaries of every imaginable ideological stripe around the world, and wielded menacingly by anti-communist reaction as proof of communism's authoritarian violence.
While the hammer and sickle was replaced by various socialist movements, especially in developing countries seeking to suggest independence from the Soviet Union, it seems to have become the absolute symbol of the Ethiopian revolution's socialist ambitions.
It was adopted by the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Party, despite the EPRP's general animosity to the modern revisionist Soviet leadership, and used by their mass organizations like the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Army (EPRA), the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Youth League, and the EPRP's revolutionary trade union ELAMA.
But in altered form, the hammer and sickle was also used by the All-Ethiopia Socialist Movement (Meison), EPRP's main leftist competitor, and by EMALEDH, the Union of Ethiopian Marxist-Leninist Organizations that was an abortive attempt to unite Ethiopia's civilian left behind the Derg. And of course the hammer and sickle was adopted by the Derg itself, as a symbol of its eventual governing face the Workers Party of Ethiopia, and of Ethiopia's general allegiance to the socialist camp.
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Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Army logo (EPRA) |
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EPRP logo per Wikipedia |
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Meison journal cover, from Red Terror museum |
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Meison logo per Wikipedia France |
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Meison logo per Wikipedia |
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EMALEDH's Yehibret Demts, Feb 1979 |
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EMALEDH float? Pro-Derg rally. |
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Derg banners and billboards, Addis Ababa |
Thursday, August 28, 2014
The Revolutionary Artwork of Nadir Tharani
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1979 poster for EPRP/EPRA |
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1978 cover for the journal Forward |
More of the work of East African artist Nadir Tharani can be seen at his website. See especially his section of Pamphlets and Magazine Covers and Posters.
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