Address of the Patron of the
TMF, Thabo Mbeki,
Commemoration of the 121st Anniversary of the
Battle of Adwa:
Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia – 4 March,
2017.
I would like to thank the
organisers of the important Commemoration of the 121st Anniversary
of the historic Battle of Adwa for inviting me to join you here today, as I did
at the memorable celebration at Adwa two days ago, where the important
announcement was made that the Pan-African University will be established in
Adwa. Our presence here today once more serves as confirmation of the truth our
Continent has known for over a century that the great victory of Ethiopia in
1896 at the Battle of Adwa was indeed both an Ethiopian and an African victory.
Accordingly our presence
here today gives us a renewed opportunity to pay tribute to the heroic African
army led by Emperor Menelik II, Empress Taitu, Ras Alula, Ras Makonnen and
other eminent Ethiopians, which, by defeating the invading Italian forces, gave
all Africa the powerful message that our Continent’s struggles for liberation
from imperialism and colonialism would emerge victorious. That victory also
confirmed the high esteem in which Africans across our Continent and in the
African Diaspora held Ethiopia, as well as the inspiration they drew from the
existence of this sovereign African State which had existed for millennia. It
was for this reason that for many Africans the two names Africa and Ethiopia
were seen as synonymous.
In this regard I am
certain that many of us present here today are very familiar with “The
Ethiopian Manifesto: Issued in Defence of the Black Man's Rights in the Scale
of Universal Freedom”,
written by one Robert
Alexander Young, described as a slave preacher, and published in New York in
1829. This moving Manifesto was a passionate appeal for the liberation of the
African slaves in the United States as well as all Africans everywhere.
Robert Young named it “The Ethiopian Manifesto” for two
reasons.
One of these was that it
described all Africans, including those in the Diaspora, as Ethiopians. The
other was that he associated the African aspirations for freedom and justice
with Ethiopia. Accordingly, Robert Young began “The Ethiopian Manifesto”, which was addressed first of all to the
African slaves in the United States, with these words:
“Ethiopians!
the power of Divinity having within us, as man, implanted a sense of the due
and prerogatives belonging to you, a people…”
He continued:
“We do, therefore, to the accomplishment of
our purpose, issue this…grand manifesto, herefrom requiring the attention towards us of every native, or those
proceeding in descent from the Ethiopian or African people; a regard to your
welfare being the great and inspiring motive which leads us to this our
undertaking.”
And further he wrote:
“Ethiopians! open your
minds to reason…Know, then, in your present state or standing, in your sphere
of government in any nation within which you reside, we hold and contend you
enjoy but few of your rights of government within them. We here speak of the
whole of the Ethiopian people… “Fallen, sadly, sadly low indeed, hath become
our race, when we behold it reduced but to an enslaved state, to raise it from
its degenerate sphere, and instil into it the rights of men, are the ends
intended of these our words…
“These words, which carry
to the view of others the dictates of my mind, I borrow not from the sense of
white men or of black: learn, my brother and fellow-Ethiopian, it is but the
invigorating power of Deity instils them to my discernment. Of him do I know I
derive my right; of him was I on the conception of a mother's womb created
free; who then in the shape of man shall dare to rob me of my birthright as
bestowed to me in my existence from God?...
“No, I am in myself a man,
and as a man will live, or as a man will die; for as I was born free (with) the
will allotted me, of the freedom of God, so do I claim and purport to establish
an alike universal freedom to every son and daughter descending from the black…
“Man, white man, black man
or, more properly, ye monsters incarnate, in human shape, who claim the horrid
right to hold nature's untutored son, the Ethiopian, in bondage, to you I do
herefrom speak.
“Mark me, and regard well
these my words; be assured, they convey the voice of reason, dictated to you
through a prophetic sense of truth. The time is at hand when many signs shall
appear to you, to denote that Almighty God regards the affairs of afflicted
men: for know, the cries of bitter servitude, from those unhappy sons of men,
whom ye have so long unjustly oppressed with the goading shafts of an accursed
slavery, hath ascended to Deity.”
It was exactly this same
sentiment expressed by a slave preacher in New York in “The Ethiopian Manifesto” 188 years ago which informed the
pan-Africanism and the African nationalism which later guided the struggles of
all Africans, including those in the Diaspora, as they fought for our
emancipation during the 19th and 20th centuries.
And indeed this African
nationalism itself was first of all known as Ethiopianism!
For instance as late as
1906, the Governor of the British colonial Province of Natal in South Africa
described John Dube, who became the first President of the African National
Congress (ANC), as “a pronounced Ethiopian who ought to be watched.”
Indeed during the same
year, a predecessor organisation of the ANC, the South African Native Congress,
had resolved as follows: “Congress believes that Ethiopianism is a symptom of
progress, brought about by the contact of the natives of Africa with European
civilisation, making itself felt in all departments of the social, religious
and economic structure.”
This use of the
characterisation Ethiopianism was
first introduced into South Africa by African Christians who broke away from
the Missionary Churches established in our country by European missionaries,
thus to assert their independence from domination by these missionaries by
establishing their own churches.
In this context an early
leader of the religious Ethiopian Movement in South Africa, Rev J.G. Xaba, said
in 1897, a year after the Battle of Adwa: “The aim of the Ethiopian Church is
to promote Christianity and unity in the whole continent of Africa.”
In this regard the South
African Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana has said:
“The
Ethiopian Movement was a nationalist religious movement that declared that
there was no need to seek to reach out to God via the path of European
colonialism – citing the verse in the Psalms that ‘Ethiopia shall extend her
hand to God’. The history of Ethiopian Christianity which had no reference to
European colonialism was, I believe, the foundation upon which the Ethiopian
repulsion of colonial invasion (at Adwa) was to be based.
“In
the same spirit, as the first effort at forging a united national movement in
South Africa, the Ethiopian Movement became the bridge between the era where
Africans in South Africa fought colonial forces as disparate regional and
ethnic formations, and the
modern era of national unity. Thus Ethiopia gave us the nationalist commitment
to propagate and defend the values of the dignity and welfare of all and the
value of national unity behind these human rights.”
It is therefore obvious
that with the Africans at home and abroad having already identified themselves
with Ethiopia, including in the context of their quest for liberation, the
victory at Adwa would have confirmed the impending triumph of Ethiopianism throughout the African
world.
This conviction was
strengthened by the fact that this victory in Adwa was achieved a mere 11 years
after the signing by the imperialist powers of the infamous Treaty of Berlin on
February 26, 1885, at the Berlin Conference, with its arrogant entrenchment of
the system of colonialism in Africa. The victory at Adwa therefore confirmed to
all Africans that their continuing resistance and liberation struggles, despite
their defeat during the colonial wars, would sooner or later bring the purposes
of the Treaty of Berlin to naught.
Through the victory at
Adwa Ethiopia taught all Africans the critical importance of national unity in
the struggle to defeat the common colonial enemy, given the example that had
been set as the Ethiopians throughout the Empire united as one people to defend
their independence, thus to shed their blood to assert their right to determine
their destiny. That victory also underlined the absolute imperative for the
Africans to repudiate the demeaning image of themselves propagated by the
imperialist powers that they were inferior and barbaric, and therefore the need
to assert their human dignity and their equality with all nations.
Here I would like to speak
of the need to mobilise the people to be ready to make the necessary sacrifices
such as were made by the Ethiopian peasantry as it contributed the necessary
logistics to support the war effort, as well as those made by the infantry, the
foot soldiers who confronted the modern Italian weapons inspired by the view –
victory or death! The victory at Adwa also underlined the vital importance of a
skilled and patriotic leadership capable of outsmarting the enemy not only on
the deadly military field of battle, but also in the challenging areas of
politics and diplomacy. In the end the victory at Adwa told all Africans that
they were indeed right to call themselves Ethiopians because as such they had
demonstrated practically that the claimed invincibility of the European powers
was false, and that united Africa and Africans would win!
It also made an important
statement about the emancipation of women and gender equality, illustrated both
by the role played by Empress Taytu before and during the Battle of Adwa and
the contribution of the women battalions during the Battle. The victory at Adwa
was also important for the Africans because it helped to undermine or weaken
the arrogant feeling of superiority of the colonial powers and nations and
therefore strengthened the resolve and confidence of the African oppressed. In
its edition of March 5, 1896, a few days after the victory at Adwa, the
Johannesburg newspaper, The Star, wrote that:
“The utter and crushing
defeat…represents the most disastrous check which any European power has
received at the hands of the natives for years past…It cannot but be deplored
by white men in all parts of Africa…It is far from impossible that this great defeat
may have even larger consequences than a temporary check to civilisation in
Africa.”
On the same day, the South
African Cape Argus newspaper editorial said: “Italy is bound to carry out to the bitter end her policy in
Abyssinia…Menelik must be crushed at any cost…Meanwhile Italy will have the
keenest sympathy in her latest trouble.”
Both these newspapers
represented the opinions of the white settler population and the colonial
administration in South Africa. Obviously as the black oppressed read the comments
I have quoted, they would have celebrated the fact that the victory at Adwa
would indeed “have even larger consequences than a temporary check to (the
colonisation of) Africa” and that ‘Menelik would never be crushed’. Reflecting
the same sentiments as the white South African press, a correspondent of The Times of London reported from Paris:
“No one here…wishes for the success of the
Abyssinians at the price of the discomfiture of a civilised nation, from which
it is quite possible to differ in aims and opinions without being supposed to
cherish any ill-will when that nation is face to face with a brave but
barbarous foe.”
However the editor of the
same newspaper, The Times, conveyed a
more rational view and wrote:
“The
defeat of the Italians by Menelik would be remembered in history forever. This victory will arouse the spirit of the
Africans who until today have been treated with contempt as pagans…(Menelik’s)
victory is the victory of all Africa. This kind of commentary is going to be
strongly evident in the future. Since it travels fast with the wing of air
across the desert, the news is known now from end to end in those (African)
countries. In the future too, since it is known that Africa defeated Europe, it
will create a sense of defence and raise the level of consciousness of millions
of Africans…It is not comfortable to be happy with the defeat of the Italians.
This defeat is ours and that of others…It is a defeat of colonial Europe, and
tomorrow’s Europe too.”
During his lecture
delivered on March 4, 1896, a ‘distinguished’ French historian said:
“The defeat of the
Italians by the King Menelik is an event which you should keep in your
memories. It is the waking up of Africa to meet what has been hitherto the
disdainful seizure by Europeans of these countries which we call barbarous. It
must not be forgotten that in many of these countries now reverted to
barbarism, there formerly existed an extremely advanced civilisation and that
Ethiopia in particular enjoyed throughout Africa great renown for its
refinement and wealth.”
As these various opinions
were reproduced in the European press, there was also an important development
in Italy in the aftermath of its defeat at Adwa – the development of a popular movement
against the imperialist invasion of Africa. Some of this was reported in a book
published in 1910. This is Vol II of the "Memoirs
of (Baroness) Bertha Von Suttner: The Records of an Eventful Life.”
Among others she reported:
“In
Italy the protest of the people against the continuation of the war continues
to grow louder. But since it is Republicans and Socialists who vote for the
discontinuance of the campaign, their demonstrations are suppressed by the
government. On February 29 a great…banquet (in opposition to the war against
Africa) was planned in Milan, but forbidden by the prefecture. And on the next
day comes the terrible news of the defeat in Adowa - eight thousand men fallen
- the rest put to flight - two generals killed - in short, a catastrophe; wild
agony in Italy and sympathy throughout Europe…
“The…movement
(in opposition to the war against Africa) is assuming great dimensions. In
Rome, Turin, Milan, Bologna, and Padua, committees of ladies are active in
getting signatures for a peace petition to Parliament. This has been signed by
many thousand persons. “So acted the ladies; the women of the people were still
more energetic. They threw themselves down on the rails before the cars that
were about to carry away their husbands and sons to the place of embarkation,
and thus actually prevented the departure of the trains. “Likewise in the
barracks, a protest is made against sending more men to the African shambles, and
large numbers of deserters are escaping over the border. “What is beginning to
take place in the whole country is a battle between the idea of war and that of
peace…
“(The
King) would be glad to retain Crispi (as Prime Minister), but a storm is arising
against him throughout the land and - Crispi falls.
“A
new ministry is formed. Rudini…becomes Prime Minister…
“The
Crispi journals and the papers representing the war party are fierce against
any idea of peace: "Revenge for Adowa!", “Guerra a fondo”! ("War
to the bitter end!") And had it been a [little] earlier, this cry alone
would have come to the surface.
“Yet
louder and more impetuously now arise the voices in protestation against the
continuance of the unrighteous war. The movement of protest was organized;
hence it was effective. Through Teodoro Moneta I learned all that was going on
in this direction. It was a victory; for the new minister, Rudini, did not
demand the continuance of the war…
“The
defeat of the Italians in Africa pains me; but it is a wholesome lesson. If I
were Crispin’s successor, I should have no scruple in openly declaring, ‘Italy
has been deservedly punished for a great offense; let us not make the offense
worse; we have something better to do’, and Italy would give jubilant
ratification to [peace].”
Thus
did the victory at Adwa communicate the strategic message to the Africans that
it was possible for them to enter into an alliance of solidarity with the
ordinary people of the imperialist and colonial countries, against the policies
and programmes of the ruling elites of these powers.
It
was exactly because of the understanding of this possibility, to which the
historic African victory at Adwa made an important contribution, that it became
possible, many decades after 1896, to give birth to the very powerful
International Anti-Apartheid Movement and the International Movement of
Solidarity with Vietnam, both of which enjoyed mass support in the Western
countries, as did the Ethiopian people with regard to the Italians, when
Ethiopia sought to defend and preserve the historic results of the victory at
Adwa.
Because
of its historical position among all Africans, including and especially the
victory at Adwa, Ethiopia was accepted as a participant at the very first and
momentous 1900 Pan African Conference at which the outstanding Pan-Africanist,
W.E.B. du Bois, made the indelible and prescient statement – the problem of the
20th century is the problem of the colour line!
Significantly,
as all of us know, Menelik authorised a fellow African, but from the African
Diaspora, Benito Sylvain, originally from Haiti, to represent Ethiopia at the
Conference.
The
respect which Emperor Menelik bestowed on Benito Sylvain derived in good
measure from his celebration of the importance for all Africans of the
establishment of the First Black Republic in the world in 1804 in Haiti, put in
place as a result of the victory of the risen African slaves of Haiti over the
Spanish, British and French imperial forces after a protracted military
struggle.
It
was also in the context of the universal African recognition of the place of
Ethiopia in the African liberation consciousness and the vital importance of
the victory during the Battle at Adwa that Menelik II was admitted among the
ranks of the African fighters for liberation as an Honorary President of the
Pan-African Association.
Following
the celebrations at Adwa two days ago, we have gathered here today to
commemorate the victory secured by disciplined Ethiopian and therefore African
forces against a predatory and arrogant European power. Many of our esteemed
and historic African leaders have spoken very highly of the place of the
Ethiopians who fought at Adwa in terms of their African revolutionary consciousness,
and therefore their actions as African liberators. In this regard, the
outstanding African patriot, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, then resident in London,
England, said that in the context of the context of the invasion of Ethiopia by
fascist Italy in 1936:
“At that moment it was almost as if the whole
of London had declared war on me personally. For the next few minutes I could
do nothing but glare at each impassive face, wondering if these people could
realize the wickedness of colonialism, and praying that the day might come when
I could play my part in bringing about the downfall of such a system. My
nationalism surged to the fore; I was ready to go to hell itself, if need be,
in order to achieve my object.”
Much later, Nelson Mandela said:
“I was seventeen when
Mussolini attacked Ethiopia, an invasion that spurred not only my hatred of
that despot but of fascism in general…Ethiopia has always held a special place
in my own imagination and the prospect of visiting Ethiopia attracted me more strongly
than a trip to France, England, and America combined. I felt I would be
visiting my own genesis, unearthing the roots of what made me an African.
Meeting the Emperor (Haile Selassie) himself would be like shaking hands with
history.”
Thus do we arrive at the
moment of our shared and common point as Africans when we must ask ourselves
the vitally important question – over what issues will we now shake hands as
Africans, signifying our solemn agreement about what we will do together
further to build on the historic Victory at Adwa 121 years ago? In this context
I would like to believe that all of us are agreed that through the African
Union we have agreed that as Africans we continue to face the two strategic
tasks of achieving African unity and realising Africa’s renaissance. I think
that it is in this context that we should reflect on the matter of the
important lessons we should draw from the historic victory at Adwa.
In as much as the victory
in Adwa was achieved through the united action of the Ethiopian people, one of
these lessons is the critical importance of national unity behind a progressive
vision as a fundamental condition for the realisation of our strategic goals.
Given the fact that these strategic goals also relate to our Continent as a
whole, this surely means that we must mobilise all our countries to act
together in unity to achieve these strategic goals. All this means that we
should together act to honour the injunction coming out of Adwa, that – let
each of our countries as well as our Continent as a whole act in unity to
achieve our strategic goals!
The second lesson we must
draw from the victory at Adwa is the absolute imperative we face properly to
carry out the necessary preparations to enable us to achieve the strategic victories
we seek. I am certain that in this regard we are familiar with the diplomatic,
political, logistic and military preparations which were essential to secure
the victory at Adwa.
I think the third lesson
we must draw from Adwa is that since it is only through struggle that we will
achieve our strategic goals, we must therefore be ready to make the necessary
sacrifices as we strive to overcome the resistance of those who will oppose us.
In this context, once
again, I would like to mention the enormous sacrifices which were made by the
Ethiopian peasantry as it supplied the needs of a 100 000-strong national army,
over a period of many months! This goes together with the sacrifices the
Ethiopian soldiers were ready to make as they went to battle, knowing that they
were confronting a European army, supported by African levies, and armed with
the most modern weapons!
I am certain that the
fourth lesson we must draw from the victory at Adwa is the need for us to
develop the necessary principled, courageous and determined leadership which
must stand at the helm of the African masses as they engage in sustained
struggle to achieve the strategic victories our countries and Continent need. In
this regard I have no doubt that it is not difficult for any of us here to
imagine the courage and determination which drove the leaders of the Ethiopian
national army, led by Emperor Menelik II, Empress Taitu and others, as they led
the successful struggle to defeat the encroachment of Italian colonialism and
therefore defend the independence of Ethiopia.
During the last half-hour
I have had the privilege to address the distinguished participants at this
gathering, I have been fully aware of the fact that I am essentially talking to
Ethiopian sisters and brothers to salute them for the enormous contribution
Ethiopia has made, over many centuries, as she has served as an exemplar of
what Africa must do to realise her aspirations. During those centuries Ethiopia
has stood out as a sovereign and authentically African State which, among
others, could and did enter into formal relations with other States, such as
those of Italy, Great Britain, France, Russia and the United States of America.
She inscribed on the
global historical record an indelible account of heroic resistance to defend
her independence as an independent African State, as exemplified by the
successive wars of resistance before Adwa, fought under the leadership of
Emperors Tewodoros II and Yohannes IV for instance against Britain, Egypt and
Italy.
As I have said, because
Ethiopia came to represent exactly what all Africans dreamed of in terms of
their future, including those in the African Diaspora, these Africans were
proud to describe themselves as Ethiopians, given the sentiment of common
struggle and the aspiration they shared, characterised as Ethiopianism.
As all of us know, the
creed shared by the independent anti-colonial African churches, which emerged
during the 19th century and described themselves as Ethiopian,
though separated by many centuries from the ancient Ethiopian Orthodox Church,
was based on the well-known text in the 68th Biblical Psalm which
reads, in part:
29 Because of thy temple at Jerusalem shall kings bring presents unto thee.
30 Rebuke the company of spearmen, the multitude of the bulls, with the
calves of the people, till every one submit himself with pieces of silver:
scatter thou the people that delight in war.
31 Princes shall come out of Egypt; Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her
hands unto God.
I would like to suggest that everything I
have said relating to Ethiopia, including this Biblical text, has imposed on
today’s Ethiopians a particular obligation. This is that you, my fellow
Ethiopian and therefore African sisters and brothers, have an especial and
noble obligation to conduct yourselves in a manner which confirms your eminent
role, acclaimed through all known history, as true representatives of the
aspirations of all Africans both on our Continent and in the African Diaspora.
To conclude, I would like
to assert that it is indeed important that both Ethiopia and the whole of our
Continent should continuously celebrate the historic victory at Adwa as this
serves to give inspiration to all of us to pursue our progressive strategic
goals, confident of success. At the same time I would like to suggest that the
victorious pursuit of those progressive strategic goals requires that first we
break them down into specific and concrete tasks, and second, that we use the vitally
important lessons handed down to us by the victory at Adwa successfully to
accomplish those tasks.
Thus will the historic
victory at Adwa, 121 years ago, continue practically to serve as the source of
inspiration it was from the very beginning, for the all-round emancipation of
the peoples of Africa, and therefore the Renaissance of Africa!
Thank you.
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