Blatan Gheta Lorenzo Taezaz
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[Print version] |
Remembering Eritrean heroes in contemporary history
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A
Short Biography
Of
Blatan Gheta Lorenzo Taezaz
A
super diplomat of war times |
Compiled and edited
By
Emnetu Tesfay
Stavanger, Norway
April 2013
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Table of contents
Introduction
Brief background
Interview II. Dr. John Spencer
Interview III. Woizerit Lorenzo, his daughter
Lorenzo’s Role Against Italian Fascism
Conclusion
Does history remember Lorenzo Taezaz?
Source review
Bibliography and Endnotes
Introduction
Lorenzo Taezaz was born on the 30th of June 1900 to an Eritrean
parents in Adi KeyiH in the Akele Guzaie province of Eritrea. Little is known
about his early years except that he received his first education in Italian
schools in Asmara and Keren and started his career with the Italian colonial
administration when he was still very young. Because of his intelligence and
hard work, Lorenzo rose to the rank of Secretary to the Governor of Asmara, the
highest position that an Eritrean could reach in the colonial administration*.
Lorenzo Taezaz is an Eritrean of high caliber who displayed his intelligence,
devotion and determination to fight Italian colonialism. After experiencing the
shackles of colonialism in his home land he opted for gaining higher education
in order to fight the mighty Italian colonial power on the political and
diplomatic fronts. It is to be remembered that the colonialist’s main weapon to
realize their dream of occupying and staying in African was to keep its people
uneducated. Due to the ban on native education beyond the 4th grade level,
Lorenzo Taezaz like many other young Eritreans crossed the Mereb river into
Ethiopia to further his education. In an interview with a researcher his
daughter has shed some information on the main reasons for Lorenzo Taezaz to
cross the border and move to Ethiopia. “One day, while he was filing papers, he
read a secret military document which spelt out Italian war plans against
Ethiopia, including the intention to use poison gas.” She claims
Our legendary compatriot Dr. Lorenzo Taezaz managed to get high education at the
University of Montepleir in France. After graduation he was rendered high
political and diplomatic posts in Ethiopia, a country that has become a target
of the Italian colonial expansion in the Horn of Africa.
According to Dr. Daniel Kindie, a reknown historical and political commentator,
Lorenzo Taezaz’s commitment to duty “In
the field of diplomacy, few can rival him. Simply stated he was a genius in all
walks of life”*.
He was Ethiopia’s Permanent Representative to the League of Nations in Geneva
during World War II.
During that time Lorenzo Taezaz's reputation grew steadily. He was widely
accepted as the most significant black diplomat on the world stage.
The following is a quote from Dr. Daniel Kindie’s paper titled “Dr. Lorenzo
Taezaz And The Italo-Ethiopian War (1935-1941)”: Lorenzo, who lacked neither
ideals nor insight, successfully played several roles as a pressman, diplomat,
intelligence officer, agitator, and counselor, and discharged his
responsibilities with great distinction. In the process, he displayed great
fortitude and endurance. For no one can dispute the key role he played in
fighting the Italian war efforts in the Horn of Africa.
A Blogger's Note:
On this day 112 years ago one of Ethiopia's patriot and model civil servant who
served his country by fighting colonialism on the diplomatic front was born in
Eritrea. His name was Lorenzo Taezaz. I have featured his biographical sketch in
my publication last year. Due to space limitations, the biographical sketch I
had to write about him was very short and brief. Dr. Daniel Kinde, one of the
prominent scholars on Ethiopia's political history has written more extensive
article about this patriot and his admirable role for the cause of liberating
Ethiopia from Italian occupation. The article was published in Ethiopian Review.
In the interest of educating present Ethiopian/Eritrean generation about
their proud heritage and to commemorate the 112th birthday of this loyal and
energetic fighter.
Here below you will find a short biographical sketch of Lorenzo Taezaz from his
birth up to his untimely death in Sweden in 1946. This biographical sketch is
written by Dr. Daniel Kindie and posted in Wikipedia. I took the freedom to copy
and post it in my website’s new biography section.
Lorenzo Taezaz’s legendary work and achievement is a source of pride to all
Eritreans and Ethiopians.
Elias | May 18th, 1991
By Dr. Daniel Kendie
Lorenzo Taezaz could be
considered as one of the legendary heroes of the Italo-Ethiopian war of
1935-1941. From the day he left his homeland in 1925, until his untimely death
in Sweden in 1946, he had an unusual life. Few Ethiopians of his generation have
enjoyed a life so intense and so productive over a period of 21 years. He
contributed more than his share to the liberation of Ethiopia from Italian
fascism. Yet, the young generation of Ethiopians, which has grown up after the
war, are almost entirely ignorant about him. The reason of his consignment to
oblivion, for instance, has never been fully known. Similarly, the manner of his
death which invites more questions than answers is passed over in complete
silence.
The purpose of this study
is limited in scope. First, it is to introduce Lorenzo Taezaz to the general
reader, and possibly, to stimulate more discussion about him among scholars who
study Ethiopia. Second, to investigate the actual role he played in the
1935-1941 period of Ethiopia’s struggle against fascism. This requires some
information about the man’s early life, and the circumstances for his departure
from Eritrea. Who was he? And what was his background? I will treat the
essentials of his early life and discuss the reasons why he left his homeland,
how he met Ras Teferi Mekonnen [the future Emperor Haile Selassie I], and how he
started his career with the Ethiopian government.
I have reviewed the
existing literature. As will be noticed, it gives him scant coverage. Most of
the literature refers to him only in passing. Even important events in which he
was involved appear in snippets rather than as a whole, so that their overall
impact is diffused, preventing one from ever knowing his full story. For this
reason, I had to interview a number of people. These include: his daughter, Mrs.
Woizerit Lorenzo, the late Ambassador Ephreim Tewolde Medhin, his lifelong
friend, Dr. John Spencer, a war time colleague who knew him from 1936-1946, and
Mebratu Taezaz, his brother. Three of them were interviewed in Asmara in 1983,
and Dr. Spencer, on 30 August 1987 in New Haven, Connecticut.
There is some controversy
about the circumstances of his departure from Eritrea. The controversy has
something to do with Italian war plans to invade Ethiopia, and Lorenzo’s alleged
understanding of that plan as related to me by his daughter. Before coming to
grips with his actual role in the fascist Italy period, therefore, I have found
it important to evaluate his daughter’s version of Lorenzo’s immigration to
Ethiopia. For this reason, I had also to provide some sketchy information about
the historical background of the Italian occupation of Eritrea and the
subsequent threat to the rest of Ethiopia.
Brief Background
Lorenzo Taezaz was born
on 30 June 1900 in the Akele Guzaie province of Eritrea, then an Italian colony.
He received his first education in Italian schools in Asmara and Keren and
started his career with the Italian colonial administration when he was still
very young. Because of his intelligence and hard work, Lorenzo rose to the rank
of Secretary to the Governor of Asmara, the highest position that an Eritrean
could reach in the colonial administration.
In 1924, while on
vacation in Aden, he met Ras Teferi Mekonnen, the future Haile Selassie, who was
there on an official visit, and who encouraged him to go to Ethiopia. A year
later, Lorenzo went to Addis Ababa. Subsequently, Ras Teferi Mekonnen arranged
for his education, and along with other Ethiopians, he sent him to France on a
government scholarship. Lorenzo spent the next eight years at the University of
Montpelier where he completed his studies in Law and Philosophy. Apart from his
native Tigrigna, he already spoke Amharic, Arabic and Italian, but Montpelier
also provided him with an opportunity to master French and English.
He returned to Ethiopia
in 1933 and began to serve the Ethiopian government in several capacities:
Secretary, Ministry of Justice (1933); member of the Anglo-Ethiopian Boundary
Commission which demarcated Ethiopia’s borders with former British Somaliland
(1933-34); member of the same Commission which was charged with the duty of
surveying the grazing grounds of the Ogaden, and investigating the causes of the
Wal-Wal incident of 1934, which led to the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1935-1941;
appointed private secretary of Haile Selassie, and in addition he served as
liaison officer to
the international press
(1935-1936). He even saw action at the Battle of Maichew (1936) that culminated
in the defeat of the Ethiopians by the Italians.
Lorenzo had presented a
plan to Haile Selassie to transfer the government center to Gore (1) – a remote
and inaccessible town in western Ethiopia from where the counter-offensive could
be prosecuted. However, the costs and risks of fighting the mechanized Italian
army was debated and measured against the risks and costs of not fighting. When
the Council of Ministers agreed by twenty one to three vote(2), that the risks
were too grave and the costs too high, it was decided that Haile Selassie should
go and personally present Ethiopia’s case to the League of Nations. In May 1936,
therefore, Lorenzo left Ethiopia and accompanied Emperor Haile Selassie in his
exile to Europe. There, he was appointed Ethiopia’s Permanent Delegate to the
League of Nations and subsequently took an active role in the struggle against
Italian fascism. During the occupation, Lorenzo secretly entered Ethiopia on
several occasions. After Ethiopia’s liberation in 1941, he was appointed
Minister for Foreign Affairs (1941-1943), Minister for Posts, Telephones and
Telegrams (1943), President of the Chamber of Deputies (1943-1944), Minister to
Moscow, USSR (1944-1946), and Delegate to the Paris Peace Conference (May 1946).
A month later, he died in a hospital in Stockholm, Sweden.(3)
Interview I. Ambassador
Ephreim Tewolde Medhin:
When I visited the late
Ambassador Ephreim Tewolde Medhin at his residence in Asmara, he was ninety
years of age. The following is a summary of what I was able to gather from him:
Lorenzo was my life long
friend. Ever since we left Eritrea, we shared adversity and happiness together.
There was no future for both of us in Eritrea. In 1925 we escaped to Aden. It
should be recalled that Lorenzo had met Ras Teferi Mekonnen in Aden a year
earlier and had thus invited him to go to Addis Ababa. I took the boat and
waited for him in Djibouti. When we met in Djibouti, both of us were in tears.
From there, we took the train and went to Addis Ababa. Ras Teferi Mekonnen asked
us what we wanted to do. Both of us requested him to send us abroad to school,
which he did. I went to Beirut. Lorenzo went to France… What we did for Ethiopia
during the war, is for history to judge. We stayed in Europe to help intensify
the diplomatic struggle, but Lorenzo was exceptional. He even traveled inside
Italian occupied Ethiopia on secret missions. I can assure you that he was a
selfless patriot. At a time when an entire generation of educated Ethiopians was
simply wiped out by fascism, he was Ethiopia’s eyes and ears. The British only
talked to him.(4)
Interview II: John Spencer:
Dr. John Spencer knew
Lorenzo for some ten years. The following provides what he could recall from
memory:
I met Lorenzo on 15
January 1936 in Dessie at the headquarters of His Majesty the Emperor Haile
Selassie. I remember everything very well. Even the place where we met was kept
dark for fear of Italian air raids. In general, he gave me the impression of an
extremely reserved man. Perhaps his inner nature needed privacy and solitude for
reflection. He had a quick mind and a sharp tongue. He impressed me as being an
intellectual. He spoke excellent French and English. We collaborated on the war
bulletins for some months in Addis Ababa. We met again in London in June 1936
where we worked together. He was very meticulous. It was easy to work out a
sentence with him. He helped draft Haile Selassie’s 1936 address to the League
of Nations, translated his speeches and led the Ethiopian delegation to Geneva.
In 1938, Haile Selassie wanted to return to Ethiopia to lead the resistance, and
so, he sent Lorenzo to Ethiopia to assess the situation and to help organize the
Arbegnoch (the patriots). He did a thorough job. As a result, the Emperor
decided to move. However, the British strongly objected to the plan, contending
that it was premature. But the truth is, since they were negotiating with the
Italians over the Mediterranean, they did not want the talks to be prejudiced.
Lorenzo again spent some
months inside Ethiopia in 1939 and re-organized the resistance. He did a
marvelous job. The Italians left Ethiopia in 1941, and I met Lorenzo in Addis
Ababa in 1943. This time, he was the foreign minister. He performed very well.
It was not an easy task to evict the British from Ethiopia. He had a terrible
time as they were toying with the idea of establishing a protectorate over
Ethiopia. But, nevertheless, he came out with flying colors. The last time I met
him was at the Paris Peace Conference in May 1946. A month later, he died in
Sweden.(5)
Interview III: Woizerit
Lorenzo, his daughter
One day, while he was
filing papers, he read a secret military document which spelt out Italian war
plans against Ethiopia, including the intention to use poison gas. Taken by
shock and horror, while he was weeping, his tears dropped on the papers and
spoiled the document. No sooner had this taken place than his Italian boss
discovered what had happened and asked him why he was sprinkling water on vital
government document? Being naive and innocent, he confessed that it was not
water that spoilt the pages, but his tears. “Why did you have to weep”? asked
the Italian. “Because I read the secret document which tells a lot about what
you intend to do against Ethiopia,” he replied. “Yes, but that has nothing to do
with you Eritreans. You are worried about a different people and society, which
should not be of concern to you,” retorted the Italian. Three days later,
Lorenzo told Ephreim Tewolde Medhin about what he had read. After that, both
discussed the matter and escaped to Aden and from there they went to Addis Ababa
where they met Haile Selassie.(13)
How much reliance could
be attached to the information, especially that provided by his daughter? Did he
really escape from Eritrea because of what he had read? And did such information
ever exist? The 1925 letter of Mussolini to the Minister of the Colonies may
provide a clue. There is also Badoglio’s handwritten instruction to General
Malladra regarding the use of poison gas. These clues, when
considered along with the
fact that mustard gas that had been shipped into Massawa was utilized to
substitute for the mountain warfare in which Italians lacked training (14), may
lend considerable weight to what Woizerit Lorenzo contends. However, when Italy
launched its unprovoked aggression against Ethiopia in 1935, the country was not
prepared to resist the aggression. In fact, the primary cause of Ethiopia’s
defeat was that it had no arms, and was allowed none. The secondary cause of its
defeat was that it had no aviation.(15) It therefore appears very unlikely that
Lorenzo had access to secret war plans. For, if he did, he would have made it
available to Hale Selassie, and that would have given Ethiopia a span of ten
years with which to strengthen its defenses.
One is inclined to think
that his daughter has read back into the past on the basis of the actual use of
poison gas, the likely Italian preparations to do something against Ethiopia and
Lorenzo’s patriotic role against fascism. In such a set-up, it becomes easy
within the family to make Lorenzo into an even more prescient hero. While one
does not deny the utility of oral sources, perhaps the most one can say in this
particular case is that her information cannot be used to supply adequate
answers to the type of questions we raised earlier.
That Lorenzo served the
Italian authorities from 1920-1925, is not debatable, and that he met Haile
Selassie in Aden in 1924 is not also in dispute. But what cannot be sustained is
the contention that he escaped from Eritrea because of the “secret document” he
had read. Available evidence does in fact support the view that his escape from
his home land was likely motivated by his daily exposure to constant
humiliation, provocation and racial discrimination.
In this regard, let us
consider the views of the London Times correspondent George Steer, who was
expelled from Addis Ababa by the Italians in 1936, and who later participated in
the liberation campaign of Ethiopia in the capacity of a British Intelligence
Officer in charge of Offensive Propaganda. Steer who knew Lorenzo both in Europe
and in Africa has this to say:
He rose to be Secretary
to the Governor in Asmara when he was still very young, for Lorenzo is quick as
lightening. It was the highest position that he could reach: Lorenzo is not a
white man. Embittered by his servile condition, he could bear it no longer after
a scene in a small cinema to which Italian friends had invited him. Other
Italians hissed them for bringing in a colored man. Lorenzo was already
miserable enough. With his savings he fled to Aden and waited there in poverty
until [Haile Selassie] picked him up.(16)
One is inclined to accept
this version of Lorenzo’s escape from Colonial Eritrea. It is also likely that
Steer heard it from the man himself. Since impressions of youth are more lasting
that those of the immediate past, it seems that such an experience had a
chilling effect on his outlook. It made him resent the Italians very deeply. In
expecting him to treat them not as an equal, but with a submissiveness demanded
of a subject, the Italians succeeded in converting him into an envenomed and
resolute enemy for all time.
Thereafter, and as
mentioned earlier, Lorenzo went to school in France, and having returned to
Ethiopia in 1933, he began to serve the government in several capacities until
he was forced into exile again by the Italians, this time to Europe along with
Haile Selassie.
Lorenzo’s Role Against
Italian Fascism
Haile Selassie’s moving
address to the League of Nations that stirred the conscience of the world and
which was drafted by Lorenzo in part reads:
I am here to give Europe
warning of the doom that awaits it, if it bows before force. I ask the fifty-two
nations assembled here to give my country the support they promised her. There
is not on this earth any nation that is higher than any other, apart from the
kingdom of God. God and History will remember your judgment.(17)
It should be noted here
that after delivering this historic address to the League of Nations, the
Emperor Haile Selassie settled in Bath, England. As far as the League was
concerned, therefore, it was Lorenzo, who in his capacity as Permanent Delegate
of Ethiopia accredited to that world body, who continued the diplomatic struggle
in Geneva. To that end, he even carried his credentials signed and sealed in his
pocket. If any motion prejudicial to Ethiopia were to be tabled at the Council,
he had all the intention of walking into the Assembly Hall and occupying the
vacant post.(18) However, he was also impatient with the obstacles that loomed
on all sides. As was to be expected, when Ethiopia was sacrificed by the League
at the altar of political expediency, Lorenzo could not but agree with those few
Ethiopian ministers who saw the virtues of guerrilla warfare.
With regard to the
situation inside Italian occupied Ethiopia, it should be noted that Italian
atrocities that were regarded by many as the apogee of fascist barbarity had
reached a climax. The Ethiopian nationalist movement was gaining ground. There
was continuous rebellion, even if it was uncoordinated, bedeviled as it was by
factions which adhered to personalities rather than programs. Italian censorship
was so strict that little information reached the outside world. It was
therefore assumed that the fascists were making good their occupation of the
country. Hence, in February 1938, Haile Selassie decided to dispatch Lorenzo to
make a secret visit to Ethiopia and to explore the possibilities of his return
to lead the resistance. Lorenzo had to succeed in this mission, if only because
the prospect of failure was too grim to contemplate. Accordingly, he went to
Ethiopia and spent several months inside the country. He delivered Haile
Selassie’s messages to the various leaders of the resistance, assessed their
strength and weakness, mediated their disputes, distributed arms at strategic
points, helped to integrate them into a cohesive fighting force, and left the
country.(19) Three months later, Lorenzo was back in Europe. Haile Selassie was
so impressed by what he had to tell him, that he decided to report the whole
situation to the League of Nations, some of whose members had started
recognizing Italian occupation of Ethiopia. But since the emperor was ill,
Lorenzo had to read the speech for him, which in any case, he had drafted:
Is the League, the
appointed guardian of the principles of international justice, about to sign its
own death warrant by tearing up with its own hands the covenant which is the
sole justification of its being? Is right to triumph over Might, or Might over
Right? [Let me reiterate to you here and now] that an implacable guerrilla
warfare is being waged and will continue to be waged until either the [country]
is evacuated by the Italians, or the Ethiopian people have been exterminated.
… The Italian government
exercises no control over the greater part of Ethiopia… Its troops merely
control the towns (where) garrisons can only be supplied with provisions and
munitions by means of aircraft. (I am annexing to this statement) the petitions
presented by the Ethiopian warrior chiefs setting forth the situation and asking
for the assistance of the League of Nations.(20)
The petitions, no doubt,
were written by warrior chiefs, at Lorenzo’s suggestion. He took the petitions
with him and annexed them to Haile Selassie’s speech. And from the point of view
of those States that were hesitating to recognize Ethiopia’s occupation by
Italy, the speech and the petitions mush have had a restraining influence.
Countries like Sweden, Mexico, the USA, USSR and others never recognized Italian
occupation of Ethiopia.
In 1939, Lorenzo went
back to Ethiopia on a similar mission. According to George Steer, who seems to
have closely following his activities:
Lorenzo, a lively man who
used to worry where to get the next stamp to send a letter to the Secretariat of
the League of Nations, came to Paris by arrangement. His timing was good. The
League of Nations did not meet that year. He went off dressed in a tarboosh,
saying that he was a Sudanese of the Eritrean frontier tribe of the Habab.(21)
The volcano (the Ethiopian resistance movement) permanently simmered, and
Lorenzo’s coming gave it a poke. He poked it all around – north and south, east
and west, skillfully exploiting the resentment that had been simmering. Among
other things, he composed the quarrels of the resistance leaders in Gojjam after
three days of negotiation. Elsewhere, he promised the people that the end is not
far off.(22)
Similarly, Christopher
Sykes, who describes Lorenzo as “an Ethiopian of high character and
distinguished record,” reports that he was known at this time as Wolde Michael,
elsewhere as Thompson and correctly as Lorenzo Taezaz.(23) The French
intelligence officer, Colonel Robert Monnier, who had also made a clandestine
journey in the interior of Ethiopia in July 1938, taught Lorenzo how to use a
compass in his arduous travels. Lorenzo therefore extensively traveled inside
Ethiopia. He constantly disguised himself in order to elude the Italians.
But in areas where he
felt secure, he appeared in an Ethiopian army officer’s uniform with a
considerable escort of Ethiopian soldiers. The fact that Lorenzo was able to
wonder about Ethiopia in uniform and with an escort, it was said, is an
indication of the state of affairs prevalent inside the country.(24) At other
times, he traveled disguised as a priest or as a peasant.(25) After several
months in the country, and after having established an Ethiopian Intelligence
Bureau in Khartoum Lorenzo proceeded to Cairo to give full account of his
discoveries to the skeptical British Middle East Headquarters.(27)
By the winter of 1939, he
was back in England with news to gladden and inspire. Again Haile Selassie
wanted to move, but this time, the British were not convinced that he had a
large following in the country. In 1938, if Britain did not act in support of
Haile Selassie, it must have been certainly acting, when it argued that the
emperor’s wish to move to Ethiopia and to lead the resistance was premature. But
the truth is, as Spencer remarked, since Britain was negotiating with the
Italians over the Mediterranean, it did not want the talks to be prejudiced.
However, British reluctance a year later had some merit worthy of note. At a
meeting of some 900 patriotic commanders which took place in Gondar, the need to
abolish the monarchy and declare Ethiopia a republic was discussed. To that end,
even a document was prepared for the League of Nations touching on the form
which a future government of the country might take.(28) Since Britain was aware
of that, London did not want to end up by backing a man whose leadership was
challenged. To dispel their doubts, however, Lorenzo was sent back to Ethiopia.
This time, he was to provide evidence that important members of the resistance
affirmed their allegiance to the emperor. He collected 10,000 signatures in a
matter of weeks and helped to persuade the British to support Haile Selassie’s
claim to the throne.
On June 10, 1940, Italy
declared war on France and Britain. As a result, Haile Selassie was allowed to
go to Khartoum to organize and lead a liberation army. He immediately asked for
the battalion of trained Eritreans which had deserted from the Italian army in
1937, but which was kept in internment
in Kenya.(29) Who else
but Lorenzo could go to Kenya? He went there and read them Haile Selassie’s
invitation requesting them to join the resistance. They responded with wild
cries of delight,(30) and they did. Back in Khartoum, more work was waiting for
Lorenzo, and more duties that needed his attention. He wrote the decrees and the
military mobilization orders of Haile Selassie, which the British Royal Air
Force effectively utilized in the propaganda warfare against the Italians.
Eritreans in Kassala, for instance, were seen to kiss the seal, press it to
their foreheads and weep.(31) At long last, as the British army moved to evict
the Italians from Ethiopia, it entered the country along the tracks blazed by
Lorenzo Taezaz.(32)
Conclusion
It was pointed out
earlier that because the existing literature gives scant coverage to Lorenzo’s
background in general, and to the actual role he played in the Italo-Ethiopian
war of 1935-1941 in particular, this study would attempt to rectify that
limitation. From the discussion we have already had, we can therefore make the
following conclusions.
Although Lorenzo’s escape
from Eritrea was largely motivated by the reality of an empty future in his
homeland, his uncompromising position against fascism seems to have been largely
inspired by his early experience of constant humiliation and racial
discrimination. Those painful memories have lived with him for very many years.
In those days, Haile Selassie needed educated young Ethiopians to help him in
his modernization program. He sent several of them to Europe to study European
methods of administration, science and technology. As fate would have it, in
sending Lorenzo to France, he did make a wise decision. It paid off.
Lorenzo, who lacked
neither ideals nor insight, successfully played several roles as a pressman,
diplomat, intelligence officer, agitator, and counselor, and discharged his
responsibilities with great distinction. In the process, he displayed great
fortitude and endurance. For no one can dispute the key role he played in
Ethiopia’s liberation. But more than most, Lorenzo’s commitment to duty must
have strengthened Haile Selassie’s faith in education.
By delivering the
Emperor’s messages to the various leaders of the resistance, Lorenzo provided
the movement with a sense of direction and helped co-ordinate the internal and
external struggle against Italian fascism. Whenever disputes arose among the
leaders, by appealing to their sense of patriotism and by mediating their
conflicts, he helped in the emergence of a cohesive and formidable fighting
force that carried out devastating guerrilla operations against a mechanized
army considered invincible at the time.
If thousands of peasants
could turn into soldiers overnight, fight with limitless courage, and turn the
tide of the war, they owe it to Lorenzo’s organizational and agitation ability
and to the arms he distributed to them at critical times and places. If Eritrean
soldiers, who were in the service of fascism, could desert the Italian army and
join the Ethiopian forces of resistance, it was in part because of the knowledge
that Lorenzo was around.
As a lawyer, and fluent
in several European languages, Lorenzo effectively argued Ethiopia’s case in
Geneva, and gained for his country considerable sympathy and support.
When the British
government hesitated in supporting Haile Selassie’s return to Ethiopia,
contending that the emperor had no power base inside the country, Lorenzo was
instrumental in changing London’s mind. He went to Italian occupied Ethiopia,
collected the signatures of 10,000 important members of the resistance who
affirmed their allegiance to the emperor, and convinced the British to go along
with Haile Selassie. Is there any wonder then, if the late Prime Minister
Endalkachew Mekonnen could immortalize Lorenzo’s name in the funeral oration by
paying tribute to his memory in words that are both fitting and deserving?
Does history remember
Lorenzo Taezaz?
All that can be said is
that the coverage of Lorenzo Taezaz in history is scanty. No published scripts
that match his outstanding role and enormous contribution are available neither
in Ethiopia nor in Eritrea. Foreign authors like Dr. John Spencer and Angelo Del
Boca have made some coverage of Lorenzo Taezaz in their history books on the
Ethio-Italian war. On the official level his name is rarely mentioned. And if
done it is only in few lines. I hereby quote from Ghirmay Yeibio’s feature
article dated Monday, 14 January 2013.
“Upon arrival in Ethiopia Lorenzo was
sent by Emperor Haile Selassie to the University of Montpellier in France on a
government Scholarship, where he studied Law and Philosophy.
Upon his return he was appointed as the Minister of Justice (1933), Ethiopia's
Permanent Delegate to the League of Nation (1936), Foreign Minister of Ethiopia
(1941-43), Minister for Posts, Telephones and Telegrams (1943) President of the
Chamber of Deputies (1943–1944), and later as Ambassador of Ethiopia to the
Soviet Union (1944 -1946).
Lorenzo was a diplomat par excellence, a veteran of the second Italo-Abyssinian
war, a true genius, and an exceptional person in many aspects. Blaten Geta
Lorenzo Taezaz died in a hospital in Stockholm, Sweden in 1946 and was buried in
Addis Ababa with full honors at the grounds of Holy Trinity Cathedral reserved
for the royal family of Ethiopia and high ranking officials. A Street in
Addis Ababa another street in Asmara and a Junior Secondary School in his birth
place Adi Keyih were named after Lorenzo Taezaz. I wonder if the street in
Asmara and the School in Adi Keyih are still named after him. The street
in Addis Ababa is still called "Lorenzo Taezaz Menged" (Lorenzo TaezazStreet).”
I close this section by quoting the lyrics of Sammy Hagar’s song.
Remember the heroes
Lyrics by Sammy Hagar
Remember the heroes
Who fight for the right to choose
Remember the heroes
We've all
got a lot to lose
A rebel to the naked eye
An undiscovered legend
Face the
facts and don't ask why
It's something to believe
in
In the dark, day and night
Fight for wrong to prove what's right
Remember the heroes
Who fight for the right to choose
Remember the heroes
Just
another life to use
Remember the heroes
We've all got a lot to lose
(Remember the heroes)
(Remember the heroes)
(Remember
the heroes)
(Remember the heroes)
To take one life without a say
Demanded without reason
To turn our backs and walk
away
A faceless act of treason
A father's son must carry on
The wound is only deepened
Remember the heroes
Who fight for the right to choose
Remember the heroes
It's just
another life to use
Remember the heroes
You know we all got a lot to lose
Remember the heroes
Who's gonna
fill their shoes?
Source Review
There is an enormous
literature on Italian fascism and Ethiopia. But as pointed out earlier, however,
the coverage on Lorenzo is scanty, and where it is not, disconnected details are
not united.
Kebede Tesema, an
important Ethiopian intelligence officer of the time, who was later to occupy
several ministerial posts in Haile Selassie’s government, published Historical
Notes (Addis Ababa, 1955). Among other things, his book contains invaluable
information on how the Ethiopians managed to sustain effective guerrilla warfare
against the mechanized Italian Army. Although he fully recognizes Lorenzo’s
vital contribution to the prosecution of the war, strangely enough, he does not
say much about his role in making that operation effective. Similarly, the
Italian journalist, Del Boca, in his illuminating book, The Ethiopian War
1935-1941, (London, 1965), mentions Lorenzo three times. Even then, this is done
in the context of his exile to Europe along with Haile Selassie, the speech he
made at the League of Nations in 1938, and how he distributed arms to the
insurgents in Western Ethiopia in 1939.
In the same way, Richard
Greenfield, in his Ethiopia, A new Political History, (New York, 1965), provides
some insight into the valuable information Lorenzo brought out of Ethiopia
describing the extent of guerrilla operations and the poor morale of the
Italians.
John Spencer, who served
the Ethiopian government for many years as advisor in foreign affairs, as has
already been pointed out, knew Lorenzo from 1936-1946. In his informative book,
Ethiopia At Bay (Algonac, Michigan 1984), he writes of Lorenzo’s French
education, the information he used to collect from the war fronts (1934-35) for
the publication of war bulletins, his translation of Haile Selassie’s speeches
into French in Geneva, and the detailed information he brought out of Ethiopia
in 1939 regarding the status and operations of the patriotic forces. He also
mentions the invaluable contributions Lorenzo made to the military campaigns
through which the emperor returned to Ethiopia in 1941, and Haile Selassie’s
praise of the significant role played by Lorenzo in the liberation campaign of
Ethiopia.
In his recent book on the
Italo-Ethiopian War, Haile Selassie’s war: The Italian-Ethiopian Campaign,
1934-1941 (New York, 1984), Anthony Mockler provides Lorenzo’s biographical
sketch in just six lines and dismisses his activities with the Ethiopian
refugees in the Sudan and Kenya, in just a couple of paragraphs. Beyond that,
there is nothing. There is also the autobiography of Haile Selassie, My Life and
Ethiopia’s Progress, 1892-1937 (London, 1976). In this book, Haile Selassie
praises Lorenzo’s diplomatic skill and the outstanding services he rendered to
the country.
Let us then begin with a
brief survey of Italy’s involvement in the affairs of the area – an involvement
which probably caused Lorenzo’s departure from his place of birth.
Background to the Italian
Occupation of Eritrea and the Threat Against Ethiopia
The Eritrea of the 1920s
that Lorenzo left, was a sad place. Eritreans were constantly reminded of their
inferiority in their own country by their colonial masters, the Italians. The
Asmara municipality excluded them from all participation. In the central
government hierarchy, they had no part. Eritreans could at best aspire to be
low-paid clerks or orderlies. There was no trace when they could advance
towards participation in
government, or of administration scheme which could lead to it. There was to be,
in perpetuity, only rulers and the passive ruled.(6) The combined effect of the
policy of colonial oppression, social humiliation and material deprivation had
several results in Eritrea. Of immediate concern to us during this particular
period is the immigration of some 200,000 Eritreans to Ethiopia. One such
Eritrean was Lorenzo Taezaz.
Why did he escape from
Colonial Eritrea? Was his immigration to Ethiopia largely inspired by personal
feelings of hopelessness in his future in colonial Eritrea, or by some other
purpose? Was he conscious of a specific threat against Ethiopia at the time? How
was it possible for him to play an outstanding role in the resistance movement
against fascism, and eventually to become Ethiopia’s Foreign Minister? These
questions are pertinent. It is useful to consider them in the context of the
historical background that led to Italy’s involvement in the affairs of the
people of the region.
As far as Italy was
concerned, Asmara was merely a stepping-stone to bigger designs: Eritrea was
acquired with the larger objective of the whole Ethiopia in mind.(7) The fact
that between 1890 and 1896 Italy launched a series of assaults against Ethiopia
from Eritrea is a sufficient testimony to that design. In any event, the series
of intolerable military encroachments on Ethiopia’s sovereignty culminated in
the Battle of Adowa of 1896, in which the Italians were routed.
As The Spectator of March
7, 1896 observed regretfully:
The Italians have
suffered a great disaster – greater than has ever occurred in modern times to
white men in Africa. Adowa was the bloodiest of all colonial battles. (8)
Italy’s pride was
wounded. If ever Rome was to occupy a respectable place in the councils of
Europe, that national humiliation and disgrace had to be avenged. Thereafter,
propelled by Mussolini’s 1922
dictum, that “Italy must
either expand or explode,”(9) fascism came to power. In such a situation, the
first policy declaration el Duce made was to settle once and for all, the great
account which has been left open since 1896.(10) “If only Italy had 6,000 more
soldiers in Adwa, the result would have been different,” he was to say later.
To that end, he gave the
necessary directives for building up Eritrea’s economic infrastructure in order
to facilitate military mobility for the conquest of Ethiopia. Such a direction
can be discerned from a letter Mussolini wrote in 1925 to the Prince of Scala,
the Minister of the Colonies, in which Mussolini called his attention to the
poor defensive conditions of Eritrea, and to correct such deficiencies as might
exist.(11) Since nobody was threatening Eritrea, one can only interpret that
message to mean preparations for committing aggression against Ethiopia.
Similarly, Pietro
Badoglio, the Chief of Staff of the Italian Armed Forces, had instructed General
Malladra in 1926 to carry out a thorough study of Eritrea’s defenses (read
preparations for war), including the possible use of poison gas, either through
aerial bombing or through artillery shelling.(12) Ten years later, Badoglio, who
directed Italy’s invasion of Ethiopia from Colonial Eritrea and Somaliland, did
precisely that.
Lorenzo’s Departure from
Eritrea
I had heard contradictory
accounts about Lorenzo’s departure from Eritrea. Since the evidence provided by
anyone of the people I talked to was insufficient to prove any point, I decided
to interview Woizerit Lorenzo, his daughter. In response to my question why her
father, who was privileged by the standards of many Eritreans, because he was
working at the Civil and Political Affairs Department of the colonial
administration, left Colonial Eritrea and went to Ethiopia, Woizerit Lorenzo
explained her father’s immigration in the following way:
Bibliography and
Endnotes
1. Steer, G. L. Caesar in
Abyssinia, Hodden and Stoughton Ltd., London 1936, p. 356.
2. Ibid, p. 364.
3. The rumor mills in
Ethiopia have been grinding out conflicting stories about his death. It is
strongly alleged by many Ethiopians that Lorenzo was poisoned by Wolde Giorgis
Wolde Yohannes, Haile Selassie’s powerful Minister of the Pen, who deeply
resented Lorenzo’s wide popularity with Haile Selassie. Spencer for one is
convinced that he died a natural death. He claims that Lorenzo suffered from
intestinal adhesions.
4. Interview I, December
10, 1983, Asmara. The Ambassador was very sick, but still he was kind enough to
talk to me for some minutes. While trying to recall the circumstances of their
departure
from Eritrea, tears were
constantly in his eyes.
5. Interview II was
conducted on August 30, 1987, New Haven, Connecticut.
6. Longrigg, H. Stephen:
A Short History of Eritrea, the Claredon Press, 1945, p. 135.
7. Marcus, Harold: Haile
Selassie I, the Formative Years, 1892-1936, University of California Press,
1987, p.84.
8. The Spectator, March
7, 1896.
9. Coffey, M. Thomas: The
Lion by Tail, the Story of the Italo- Ethiopian War, Viking Press, New York.
1970, p.7.
10. Kirkpatrick, Ivor:
Mussolini, A Study in Power, Hawthorn Books, New York, 1964.
11. de Bono, Emilio: The
Conquest of the Empire, London 1937, p.2.
12 Instructions for
General Malladra, Rome, 10 July, 1926, IFM/MAI, 50/24/64, ibid., Marcus, p.76.
13. Interview III, July
15, 1983, Asmara.
14. Barker, A.J.; The
Civilizing Mission: A History of the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1935-1936, the Dial
Press, New York, 1968, p.242.
15. Ibid, Caesar in
Abyssinia, p.8.
16. Ibid, p.73.
17. The Autobiography of
Emperor Haile Selassie I, translated by Edward Ullendorff, Oxford University
Press, 1976, pp.299-312.
18. Sanford, Christine:
Ethiopia Under Haile Selassie, J.M. Dent and Sons Ltd. London, 1946, p.100. His
brother, Mebratu Taezaz whom I interviewed in Asmara on August 15, 1983,
informed me: “Between 1937 and 1941, Lorenzo entered Ethiopia several times. He
had to disguise himself sometimes as a woman, sometimes as a peasant, and
sometimes as a priest. The Italians could not tolerate his activities and had to
issue an award for anyone who could catch him.”
19. An important Italian
source that provides interesting reading about Lorenzo especially from the
Italian point of view is Angelo del Boca’s Gli italiani in Africa Orientale,
Vol. I: Dall’Unita alla marcia su Roma, Bari, Laterza, 1976, pp.97, 189, 246,
691; Vol. II: La conquista dell Impero: (1979); pp. 336-339, Vol. III
(1982), La caduta dell’ impero, pp.27-28.
20. League of Nations,
Provisional Agenda of the 101st Session of the Council, May 9th, 1938, Geneva:
Document C. 193. M. 104. 1938. VII.
* Why Paris? Britain also
was not making much progress in its negotiations with Mussolini. Haile Selassie
was still in England and he could be used against Italy. Since Steer was working
for the British Intelligence Service, he must have been instructed to contact
Lorenzo.
21. Steer, G.L.: Sealed
and Delivered, Hodden and Stoughton Ltd. London, 1942, pp. 8-41.
22. Ibid.
23. Sykes, Christopher:
Orde Wingate, A Biography, The world Publishing Co., 1959, New York, pp.
240-244. Wingate commanded the British army in the liberation campaign of
Ethiopia.
24. Ibid, Sanford, p. 104.
25. Ibid, Baker, p. 309.
26. Gabre Meskel
Habtemariam was from Seraie, Eritrea. He completed his studies in engineering,
University of Paris in 1928. In the 1940s he was editor of the Voice of Eritrea,
which demanded Eritrea’s unification with Ethiopia.
27. Sanford, Christine:
The Lion of Judah Hath Prevailed, J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd., London, 1955, p.86.
28. Greenfield, Richard:
Ethiopia, a New Political History, Frederick A. Praeger Publishers, New York,
1965, pp. 247-48.
29. Ibid, Sykes, p. 244.
30. Ibid, Sealed and
Delivered, p. 103.
31. Ibid, The Lion of
Judah, p. 33.
32. Ibid, p.26.
33. Lorenzo! You are no
more with us. But history will remember you as a great patriot. You stand head
and shoulders above us all. The outstanding services you rendered to the cause
of Ethiopia’s liberation have already occupied a prominent place in the history
of Ethiopia. Your tenacity, bravery and single mindedness of purpose, will,
forever, inspire millions of Ethiopians. For more of the oration,
see Sendick Alamatchin, Amharic Weekly,
June 25, 1946.
----The end -----
A wakeup call
Many countries in the world honor their heroes and commemorate them
eternally by erecting statues, naming streets, parks, schools,
universities and all sorts of institutions in their names. Eritrea
has failed to remember its heroes in all spheres of life and fields
including statesmanship, military, scholarships, arts, literature,
religion, music and sports. It would be too long to list all the
great Eritrean personalities from antiquity to the present. Even the
heroes of the last 50 years who have not been recognized and honored
are very many.
I believe many will agree with me that Eritrea has many amazing
individuals in history who have done something unique to their
country in the field of politics, culture, education, sport etc,
which we need to remember them for what they have done. It is
disheartening though not to see biography books of Eritreans in the
library shelves. Lately I have decided to open a section in my
website that will be dedicated to the biography of individual
Eritreans from all walks of life in history (www.emnetu.com).
To start with I have randomly established a list of possible
candidates. I therefore ask you all to put additional names to the
list and return it to me.
The list has to accommodate only individuals who have passed
away. In other words we will concentrate only on post mortem
biographies. I will update the list when I hear from you. The list
will remain open all the time for additional names.
If you are positive about this idea and you have the time I would
challenge you all to write biographical sketch or find individuals
who can be interested to write a biography on any in the list. If
you come across anyone who has access to information but not ready
to write, you can ask him/her to supply the information to me in any
format (paper, diskette, gramophone dish, cassette, videos,
photographs etc) so that I can send it to the one who is interested
to write.
The size of the file is not important at all. What is important is
remembering them and trying to document their history before it
disappears all together. The size will be determined only by the
amount of information available on these individuals. Of course the
individuals in the list must have done something positive to the
cause of our country or to the well being of our people and our
culture.
Emnetu Tesfay |
Biographical sketch of Dr. Lorenzo Taezaz