Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Books, Books, Books

I have been alerted to a relevant new memoir by Tadelech Hailemikael, the wife and partner of the late Berhane Meskel Redda, a founder of the EPRP murdered by the Derg during the so-called Red Terror. She was imprisoned by the Derg in her own right, and in the post-Derg regime served as Minister of Women's Affairs. It seems to be published only in Amharic right now, which frustrates an illiterate like me to no end, but it looks fascinating and informative. See news about this book at Tadelech’s website, which is maintained by her daughter. I wish the book well!

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coming soon from Palgrave
The second edition of the Palgrave Encyclopedia of Imperialism and Anti-Imperialism, edited by Immanuel Ness and Zak Cope, is currently available for pre-order. While it’s a pricey volume from Palgrave/Macmillan for the academic market, it contains a wealth of information on anti-imperialist struggles around the world. It will be available in both digital and physical media formats.

I am excited to announce that this second edition contains an essay commissioned by Palgrave from me on imperialism in Ethiopia, entitled “Ethiopia, Revolution, and Soviet Social Imperialism.” It extends the discussion of Soviet involvement in Ethiopia beyond the way the topic is introduced in my own new book; as is my style it presents a bunch of period documents and sources to make its case.



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Finally just another pitch for my own new book Like Ho Chi Minh! Like Che Guevara! The Revolutionary Left in Ethiopia, 1969-1979, by Ian Scott Horst, soon to be published by Foreign Languages Press in Paris. It’s shown here with another book being released the same day, part of FLP’s ground-breaking New Roads series: Critiquing Brahmanism is an important new study by Comrade Ajith, a leader of the Indian Maoist movement. These two books will be available for order soon!





Monday, April 4, 2016

Women in Revolution

EPRP women at an International Women's Day rally, 1975 or 1976

“Women,” as Mao Zedong is supposed to have said, “hold up half the sky.” But the story of the world's revolutions has often been one of inadequately addressing the concerns of women, and failing to understand how crucially intertwined is the struggle for women’s liberation with the overall political struggle for a better world. It seems that there was some consciousness of the importance of organizing women among Ethiopian leftists, but that it took a bit of a back seat. In his books on the EPRP, Kiflu Tadesse refers a few times to the EPRP wanting to organize a women's organization, but suggests such an effort was only embryonic. Carried over from the days of student activism, the leadership of the movement seems to have been mostly male.

Bahru Zewde convened a retreat in 2005 for veterans of the Ethiopian Student movement to discuss the politicization of that movement in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and recorded this retreat in the extraordinary book Documenting the Ethiopian Student Movement: An Exercise in Oral History (FFS, 2010). Veterans of the student movement and revolutionary period testified to their experiences. Importantly, several women were asked to contribute. Here, Original Wolde Giorgis shares her experiences:

“It was most assuredly true that even those male members of EPRP reputed to be well-read never accepted female leadership; this was openly expressed in meetings...[yet] women contributed immensely in (EPRP) squads and other activities. I remember an incident at the Darg [sic] Interrogation Center where an interrogator wondered aloud what sort of discipline could have been instilled in women members that enabled them to withstand such tortures as having their breasts set ablaze by torched newspapers. Those heroic young women endured it without divulging any information. Women, contrary to popular belief, are singularly tenacious....Women...have proved themselves equal to the task, this is undeniable....” (Bahru, p. 125)

Hiwot Teffera's Tower in the Sky is a must-read on this subject. A young female militant of the EPRP, Hiwot becomes involved personally with one of the EPRP's controversial leaders, Getachew Maru, but carries on the work of the party faithfully until she is eventually imprisoned by the Derg. It's really an inspiring and tragic story, though she raises many questions about the factionalism with EPRP.

Pro-Derg official International Women's Day rally, 1978
A young French tourist Hubert Tabutiaux attended the Derg's Addis Ababa celebration of International Women's Day in 1978. Describing the event as impressive but clearly unspontaneous, he documented the day in a series of photographs, and reports on the photo above, “Under a placard showing a picture of the Great Helmsman, the rows are formed. The rather inscrutable faces bear witness to the pretty artificial atmosphere of this forced celebration, but can also be due to the presence of the camera.” There are more really interesting photos of the day on his website.

(Top photo from Goh Magazine, 1976; lower photo from Hubert Tabutiaux, 1978)

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Women's History Month: Martha Mebrahtu


Martha Mebrahtu was an Ethiopian/Eritrean student revolutionary who was killed during a failed hijacking attempt in 1972. This was when airplane hijackings were propaganda actions not designed to take innocent life. On the eve of the attempt, she wrote a manifesto of the beliefs behind her action:

‘We, women of Ethiopia and Eritrea, have made our life ready to participate in a struggle and we would like to explain the nature of our struggle to our sisters and brothers all over the world.
‘Our struggle demands a bitter sacrifice in order to liberate our oppressed and exploited people from the yokes of feudalism and imperialism. In this struggle we have to be bold and merciless. Our enemies can only understand such a language.

‘We, women of Ethiopia and Eritrea, are not only exploited as members of the working classes and peasants, we are also victims of gender inequality, treated as second class citizens. Therefore, our participation in this struggle must double the efforts of other oppressed groups; we must fight harder, we must be at the forefront.

‘We must equally participate in the struggle for economic and social justice that our brothers have waged. We have a responsibility to become a formidable force in the revolutionary army.

‘The rights for freedom and equality are not manna from heaven. We, women, have to be organised and have to make ourselves ready for any armed struggle. This fight will need financial, material and moral support of progressive international women's associations. We reach out to our sisters in other parts of the world so you can help us achieve this goal; we hope your support will reach us as we need it.

‘We affirm our full support for the oppressed people of the world who are struggling to free themselves from imperialism, colonialism, neocolonialism and racism! We stand by the freedom fighters in Vietnam, Palestine, Guinea-Bissau and in other African and Latin American countries; we also support the civil rights leaders in North America.

‘Victory to the popular struggle of the people! May the people's movement for freedom in both Ethiopia and Eritrea live forever! My sisters and my brothers, let's keep on fighting!’



This manifesto, and some biographical notes on Martha Mebrahtu, appeared in Pambazuka News in 2011.