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************
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* THE
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* CYBERSENIOR
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* REVIEW
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************
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===================================================
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VOLUME 3 NUMBER 3 JULY 1996
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====================================================
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The CyberSenior Review is a project of the Internet
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Elders List, an active world-wide Internet Mailing
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List for seniors. The Review is written, edited and
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published by members of the Elders for interested
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netizens worldwide. Contributions from non-Elders
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are welcome. Please query one of the editors first.
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Contents copyrighted 1996 by the Internet Elders
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List and by the authors. All rights reserved by the
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authors. Quoting is permitted with attribution.
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The editorial board of The CyberSenior Review:
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Elaine Dabbs edabbs@ucc.su.oz.au
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Pat Davidson patd@chatback.demon.co.uk
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James Hursey jwhursey@cd.columbus.oh.us
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======================================================
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CONTENTS, Volume 3, Number 3, July 1996
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EDITORIAL by Pat Davidson
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THE VALLEY OF THE CROW by Jim Olson
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Indians, rebellions and carefree summers. Jim reminisces
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about the Minnesota valley where he spent his childhood.
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ETHIOPIA by Quentin F. Schenk
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Quentin, who lived there for some years, gives us an
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interesting and enlightening analysis of the recent
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history of this troubled African nation.
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HISTORY THROUGH MAORI PLACE NAMES by Horace Basham
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Omanawanui, Kaingamaturi, Puke-aruha Pa. Horace tells us
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the romantic stories of Maori place names.
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GRAND CHILD a poem by James Hursey
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Jim ponders the different emotional experience of a
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grandchild and the birth of one's own children.
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==============================================================
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EDITORIAL
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by Pat Davidson
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It is summer here in the UK, with flowers everywhere, striped
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green lawns and Pimms on the terrace! As I write, Wimbledon
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tennis fortnight is taking place, and we still have a Brit
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playing in the fourth round of the Men's Singles. Mind you, by
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the time you receive this, he could have been knocked out! At
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least we'll have had one moment of glory.
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The longest day has passed, and we're now beginning the long slow
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march towards winter, while our southern cousins look forward to
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their summer.
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In this issue, we look at the lands and people of the past; the
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Sioux and Ojibwe of the Valley of the Crow, the Amhara, Gallena
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and Nilotic of Ethiopia, and the Maori of New Zealand. It is
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right that we should look back, and realise that though these
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peoples lived far different lives from those we lead today, they
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too were human beings with their hardships and problems, yet
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survived them, not as individuals, but as a race. They found
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their strength in their lands. When, however, they had their
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lands taken from them by superior forces, sometimes by people of
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their own race, they were left weak and destitute.
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We too need our "land", the place of our childhood, even though
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it might not be in a country house but in a town apartment; we
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need the "roots" from which we can grow in experience and wisdom,
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to become the mature adults that we are.
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Nowadays, we have a better appreciation of the territorial rights
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of the indigenous peoples of the Americas and Australasia. As
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Quentin shows us in his article on Ethiopia, however, it is not
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enough to provide aid for those who are weak and destitute. We
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need to encourage them to use their lands and resources wisely,
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and to ensure the population does not grow, by limiting the
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number of births.
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How can we do this? Better heads than mine have not yet found a
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solution to the problem. We ALL look to the future of the family
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through our children and grandchildren. Jim Hursey in his poem
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"Grand Child," epitomises our delight in them.
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I look back to my own "land" for understanding, to Scotland. In
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Victorian times, there were large families, with no birth
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control; many infants, and indeed their mothers, died in
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childbirth. Today, most families are small, with one or two
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children, infant and maternal mortality almost non-existent.
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Perhaps education for the women and a better standard of living
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is the way forward in Ethiopia. All we can do is wait and hope;
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as Quentin says, the alternative is too horrible to contemplate.
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===============================================================
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THE VALLEY OF THE CROW
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by Jim Olson
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There is, I believe, a connection between the essence of our
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lives and the places we have lived, a kind of bond with a
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location and its history. Most of us have roamed about somewhat
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during our lifetime, but there is for each of us some key
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territory, perhaps a land of our beginnings, a place where we
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achieved or lost some part of ourselves. It returns to memory
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most strongly as we survey the past in an effort not just to
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remember but to seek answers to questions about our identity,
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questions about our source, what drives us, our destiny.
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For me that land is the Crow River Valley in west central
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Minnesota where I was born and spent my childhood and early
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adolescence and where I felt connected not just to my immigrant
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ancestors who lived in and around the town but to the races of
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people and the elements of nature that had touched the land
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before me and left their traces for me to ponder.
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The Mdewakanton Dakota (Sioux) people, who lived there briefly
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and contested the land with the Ojibwe driven south and east by
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still other tribes, called it the Valley of the Crow. But I
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recall most vividly the Red Tail Hawks that soared over the
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area, the fall flocks of migrating Blackbirds stretching
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almost from horizon to horizon, the skitting salamanders that
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raced along and through the puddles near the prairie pot holes,
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and the slithering inhabitants of a cemetery just north of us
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that we christened "Snake Heaven."
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As a boy my main connection with the earlier tribal occupants
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of the valley was through retracing their steps on the Indian
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trail along the river bluff, one of the few elevated spots in
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this generally flat and fertile valley. A short stretch of the
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trail had escaped temporarily the development of homes along the
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the pond formed by an early dam and feed mill. It passed a
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very small cave in the bluff that had traces of having been
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used as a shelter, but in our imaginations was as large and
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mysterious as the cave where Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher
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played out their adventure with mystery, fear, and discovery.
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The trail ended upstream by a burial mound left by an early race
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of mound builders in the area. The cave and the mound have long
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since been destroyed by a housing development and the only
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physical acknowledgment of the earlier inhabitants of the valley
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is a bronze statue in a town park by the dam, and I think there
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is some talk now of removing it.
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It is a statue of Chief Little Crow, who was ironically the
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leader of the so-called Sioux Uprising that threatened the town
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in 1863 and resulted in the massacre of many nearby immigrant
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farmers and non-combatant Indians. The statue was part of a WPA
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artists project in 1936, the product of the adolescent
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imagination of a young artist I knew who was several years my
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senior and with whom I shared an art teacher, but not an
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artistic talent. He won a contest to design a statue appropriate
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to the river site of the new park.
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A restored water wheel at the site of a glorious mill fire that
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lit up the sky all of the way up to our farm represented the
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pioneer days and his statue the tribal peoples of the area. The
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town treasured its youth and extolled those who appeared
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precocious. To the town we were all like the mythic youth of
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Garrison Keilor's nearby Lake Woebegone, all "above average."
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But not necessarily to our parents. The artist's father once
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told my uncle, "That damn kid aint going to amount to anything.
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He's late getting up to catch the bus and comes home from school
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too late to do the chores. All he does is day dream and
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scribble."
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Later he was quite proud of his son. I don't know what my uncle
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said. I daydreamed, too, but did make it back for chores
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although my uncle milked four cows in the time it took me to do
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one. I can remember the sounds, the slow erratic sounds of milk
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jets hitting my tin pail vs. the steady quick rhythm of the
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streams of milk filling his. Mine would stop sometimes and I
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would talk to the cat, "Here kitty, you want some. Open your
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mouth." A white moustache appeared on the cat's face and a
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long tongue came out to lick it off.
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The artist later went on to become a prominent wildlife painter
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in Minnesota and abandoned sculpture. One can perhaps sense
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why by noting the lack of proportion and awkward pose of Little
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Crow as he peers up the valley in a wooden, cigar-store-Indian
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stance. At the time I shared the artist's enthusiasms and
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heroic concept of Little Crow and greatly admired the statue. He
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did do one more statue as he replaced Little Crow with a new
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much improved version many years later and donated it to the
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city.
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I hardly ever passed it as I walked from town to our small farm
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just north of town without stopping to refresh myself at the
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nearby drinking fountain and peer up the river as he did,
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wishing, as the plaque read, for "Peace for all peoples of the
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Valley of the Crow," a quote from one of his many speeches made
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as he negotiated treaties with the Great White Father whom he
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also told, "I come to speak like a man and not a child."
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The message of peace was a relevant message in 1937. My father
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had not many years before fought in the Great War, and many of
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the town's young men were, by 1940, when we moved from the town,
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volunteering for service in preparation for an impending war
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that was eventually to involve me.
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Little Crow's war started when a band of young, undisciplined
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braves, incensed by failure of the government to honor a treaty
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and assist the tribe through a difficult winter, attacked a
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nearby farm family and killed most of them. Little Crow spoke
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for peace and reconciliation in a speech that lasted most of the
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night, and failing in that, became one of the principal and most
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persistent leaders of the war.
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The war was ineptly fought on both sides and dragged on to the
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inevitable end with the defeat of the insurgents. The Sioux
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were removed from the state, those who fought on the side of the
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militia as well as those who fought against; and a mass hanging
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of war prisoners, again some friends along with the foes, at New
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Ulm, Minnesota, brought an end to the episode.
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Little Crow who had fled into Canada returned in a vain attempt
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to get support and renew the war. He was shot in the back by a
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local farmer who discovered Little Crow and his son picking
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berries just north of town. It was early in July and the body
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was taken to town and paraded down the main street on the 4th,
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decapitated, and the torso sent to the state historical society
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where I viewed the bones in 1938 in a dark basement exhibit
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while on a field trip for honor students. Being an honor
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student was a distinction I seldom held, my penchant for
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questioning authority often stronger than my ambition for
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academic honor. But on this occasion I had achieved it partly
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with an essay about Little Crow's diplomatic skills and desire
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for peace.
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If the statue by the river had been turned left slightly it
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would have faced up the Main street toward the town square where
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a plaque on a large boulder marked the spot of one of Little
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Crow's main frustrations as a warrior. It was here that the
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settlers, along with some tribal members who had sided with them,
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built a stockade and thwarted a brief attack from a band led by
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Little Crow early in the war. I recall the tea in the library on
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the square where the honor students were recognized. I also
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recall the time when I met a girl there, the Becky of my
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imagination, and our walking hand in hand by the stockade site,
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past the ghosts of settlers and Indians who fought and died
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there.
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But mostly I remember one last day of school in the spring when
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Little Crow looked out at a group of us boys who celebrated our
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freedom with a quick swim to the diving raft on the mill pond.
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We slipped off our shorts, mounted the raft and ran naked across
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to the other side, waved at the statue and dove into the cold
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water, swam back to retrieve our wet underwear, swam ashore, put
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on our school trousers and shirts, and walked dripping,
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shivering, homeward.
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It seemed to me at the time that his upraised arm was not to
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shade his eyes as he searched for peace in the Valley of the
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Crow as my essay had indicated, but a return of my salute, a
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gesture from one independent spirit to another. My gesture of
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independence resulted in a nasty head cold that I soon recovered
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from, that hot, barefoot summer of 1938.
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=============================================================
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ETHIOPIA
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by Quentin F. Schenk
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In all my travels throughout the South Pacific, Europe,
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South America, and Africa, Ethiopia is the most fascinating
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place I have ever seen. It is about the size of California,
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has a population of about 50,000,000, lies just above the
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equator, has altitudes from below sea level to over 10,000
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feet, with a climate ranging from an average of 70F to over
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100 degrees. Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia, where I
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lived for three years, has a population of over 1 million.
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Our home was at an altitude of 8700 feet. My office at the
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National University was at 9200 feet. The altitude posed a
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problem for many foreign visitors and workers who previously
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lived at lower altitudes. Over half who came to Addis Ababa
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to live had to leave because of their inability to adapt to
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the altitude.
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Ethiopia is composed of three major ethnic groups: the
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Amhara, the Gallena, and the Nilotic. There are 22 major
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language groups in the nation. Over the years this has
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posed a major obstacle toward melding Ethiopia into a single
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society and political entity. Over his protracted reign,
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Haile Selassie made progress in the direction of true
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unification, mainly through education, but he was only
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modestly successful.
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The Amhara are the highland people, and have been the
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historic rulers of Ethiopia, but always tenuously. The
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recent war with Eritrea is rooted in the long-standing
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cultural and ethnic differences among Ethiopia's ethnic
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groupings. The Amhara wanted to unite all of Ethiopia under
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its rule and impose its culture and political system on
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others. Its greatest failure in this regard is the recent
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secession of Eritrea after a bitter civil war that lasted
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from the middle l960's to 1990.
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The Amhara speak a Semitic language and do not consider
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themselves Africans, but identify themselves with Egyptians,
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Israelis, and Arabs. They are Coptic Christians, having
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been converted to Christianity by Egyptian missionaries
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about 400 A.D. Their patron Saint is St. Mark, who brought
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Christianity to Egypt even before St. Paul's missionary
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efforts that are chronicled in the New Testament. They are
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fierce warriors, and this coupled with their highland
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inaccessibility enabled them to escape European colonization
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that was the tragic fate of most of the rest of Africa.
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The Gallena occupy the southeastern quarter of Ethiopia, and
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are similar in culture and language to the rest of East
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Africa. They are primarily Muslim. Haile Selassie was most
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successful in integrating the Gallena into the Ethiopian
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nation mainly by coopting the Gallena elite into prominent
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positions into his political and economic system.
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The Nilotic live in the remote interior of southwestern
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Ethiopia and are the most "primitive" of the Ethiopian
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groupings. They have no written language. They are pagans,
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and have little concept of what we define as modern
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civilization. Haile Selassie shrewdly used European and
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American missionaries to "Ethiopianize" the Nilotic. He
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permitted missionaries in Ethiopia, but only with the
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understanding that they would not work with the Amhara or
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Gallena, but confine their efforts to converting the
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Nilotic. He monitored their efforts carefully to see that
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they did not teach the "pagans" anything antithetical to his
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goal to create a unified Ethiopian nation. He was so shrewd
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in this tactic that I do not think many missionary groups
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realized how he co-opted them to his own nationalistic ends.
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Ethiopia is divided into provinces, each with a governor.
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Up until the time of Emperor Menelik's reign (Haile
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Selassie's predecessor) the governors were princes of quasi
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independent duchies. There were numerous wars over the
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years to establish dominance, and gradually the prince of
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Shoa province, in which Addis Ababa is located, became the
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lead prince and eventually was able to declare himself
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emperor. Emperor Menelik, one of the great rulers of
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Ethiopia, consolidated the various duchies into the
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provinces that today comprise Ethiopia.
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There was no hereditary nor constitutional means of
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succession, so when an emperor died the nation was plunged
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into chaos and often war until a successor could by fair
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means or foul be chosen. After Emperor Menelik died, it
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took Haile Selassie almost twenty years to win the
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succession. He immediately set out to appoint his own
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governors to bring the provinces under his control, and was
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quite successful at this effort.
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It was during Emperor Menelik's reign that European nations
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completed the colonization of Africa. Not to be left
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behind, Italy set out to grab her own piece of Africa, and
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chose Ethiopia. Italy acquired a foothold in Eritrea in
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extreme northern Ethiopia, and planned to conquer the rest
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of Ethiopia from there. However, in 1898, at the battle of
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Adowa, Italy was soundly defeated by the Ethiopian warriors,
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who were outnumbered and outgunned, but well organized by
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Emperor Menelik and fiercely determined not to go the way of
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the rest of Africa. This single victory assured Ethiopia's
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reputation as the "jewel" of Africa, and made Italy the
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laughingstock of the European powers. Years later Mussolini
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attempted to avenge this humiliation by occupying Ethiopia,
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but succeeded mainly in raising the stature of Emperor Haile
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Selassie. His speech at the League of Nations made him
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world famous as a courageous, lonely figure standing against
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the immoral exploitation of his country by a greedy European
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power. Haile Selassie spent his exile in England. He used
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his persuasive powers to convince Britain that Ethiopia must
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be liberated at all costs, so in 1939, very early in World
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War II, Britain invaded Ethiopia and drove the Italians out.
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After World War II Haile Selassie decided that the only
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future for his nation was to open it up to the outside
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world. He gave amnesty and full citizenship to the Italians
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who had settled in Ethiopia during the brief occupation, for
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they were skilled artisans that the nation needed to
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"modernize". He invited foreign investment to develop
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coffee production, mining, and manufacture. He encouraged
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foreign aid, primarily in health care and education. A
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number of nations responded, notably Sweden, Yugoslavia, and
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the United States. Sweden concentrated on primary and
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secondary education, Yugoslavia governmental planning and
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development, the United states on higher education and health
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services. As the cold war intensified, the United States, in
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conjunction with Israel, furnished resources and manpower to
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develop the military and internal security forces of the
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nation. Ethiopia gradually found itself becoming a client
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state of the United States, which the United States felt was
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necessary since at the time Somalia and Egypt were client
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states of the Soviet Union.
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The development of a modern nation state was a formidable
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task. One of the requisites is a shared scientific
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language. At first the Ethiopians attempted to modernize
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Amharic, which Haile Selassie declared to be the official
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language of Ethiopia, but this proved impossible. So they
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chose English as the modern language. Therefore, when
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students entered school they were first taught Amharic upon
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the Emperor's insistence so they could learn the official
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culture. Then about the sixth year they switched to English
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so they could participate in the modern world. English was
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used exclusively at the National University, and students
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had to be proficient in English to matriculate. Given the
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difficulties encountered, language teaching was surprisingly
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successful, much to the credit of the Swedes.
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Tito of Yugoslavia and Haile Selassie became fast friends
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during World War II for they were the "little guys" fighting
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the Axis powers against terrible odds. After the War Tito
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developed a modified communism which included central
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planning spanning five year periods. Haile Selassie
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embraced this approach, and had his government expend much
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effort to develop these plans. They looked wonderful on
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paper, but the task was enormous and the resources scarce.
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The lack of infrastructure precluded the realization of much
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what was projected, even though infrastructure development
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was the primary goal of the planning effort.
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The United States poured major resources into the National
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University through AID and the Ford Foundation. During the
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post war years of the Emperor's reign the Ford Foundation
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was an important arm of American foreign policy in Ethiopia,
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both in terms of resources furnished and determination of
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results. One of the major efforts was to develop a university
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modeled completely on the American pattern, so the National
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University became the only university in Africa to develop
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along these lines. All other institutions of higher
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learning in Africa patterned themselves along either the
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British or the French model. Since Ethiopia was an
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American client state it was important that the educated
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elite accept American ways, and no more effective way
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existed than to make it easy for Ethiopian students to
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make a smooth transition from undergraduate education
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in Ethiopia to graduate education in the United States.
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The United States poured substantial resources into military
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development to counteract the potential threat of Egypt and
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Somalia, then client states of the Soviet Union. Israel, at
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the behest of the United States, strengthened the internal
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||
security forces of Ethiopia. Seeing this, the Soviet Union
|
||
armed Eritrea which was particularly restive under the
|
||
Emperor's control and wanted to become independent. In the
|
||
late l960's hostilities broke out between Ethiopia and
|
||
Eritrea, with Eritrea being supplied with arms by the Soviet
|
||
Union and Ethiopia by the United States.
|
||
|
||
The United States also led the effort to introduce western
|
||
medical practices into Ethiopia, building clinics and
|
||
hospitals, educating medical personnel, and encouraging
|
||
religious groups to send their medical personnel. As in the
|
||
rest of Africa much of the effort was concentrated in
|
||
lowering the infant mortality rate. Because of the
|
||
extremely high rate of infant mortality the birth rate was
|
||
at the physical maximum, approximately twenty children per
|
||
adult female. Since the mortality rate was roughly equal to
|
||
the birth rate the population was close to equilibrium, with
|
||
a slight growth over the years. The upset of this balance
|
||
without careful consideration of the consequences could be
|
||
calamitous. I will deal briefly with the unintended
|
||
consequences of this and other changes later in the article.
|
||
|
||
Because of the inherent difficulties of succession in
|
||
Ethiopia, Haile Selassie could not guarantee a successor.
|
||
He tried several strategies. He tried to retire, but did
|
||
not like what he saw happening so did not retire. One of
|
||
his sons tried a coup which failed. So the aging Emperor
|
||
kept on until an American trained colonel, Haile Mariam,
|
||
overthrew him in a bloody coup. At this time the political
|
||
scene shifted, with Egypt and Somalia pulling away from
|
||
Soviet control. Haile Mariam saw himself as a dictator in
|
||
the Russian mold, so the influence of the United States
|
||
waned. Ethiopia became a client state of the Soviet Union,
|
||
and Egypt and Somalia came under the influence of the United
|
||
States.
|
||
|
||
Haile Mariam was an Amhara, so could not tolerate an upstart
|
||
province such as Eritrea trying to break away. He
|
||
intensified his effort to defeat Eritrea, which eventually
|
||
resulted in Haile Mariam's defeat and overthrow and
|
||
independence for Eritrea. Ethiopia presently is
|
||
experimenting with a decentralized, somewhat democratic
|
||
political system, the outcome of which is too early to
|
||
discern.
|
||
|
||
I am pessimistic of Africa's ability to prosper in the long
|
||
run simply because it is difficult if not impossible to
|
||
predict and control the consequences of change. I will give
|
||
one telling example - the unintended consequences of the
|
||
introduction of western medicine.
|
||
|
||
All change comes encased in the cultural and social
|
||
characteristics of the change agent. The effort of the
|
||
United States and European countries to lessen infant
|
||
mortality without lowering the birth rate resulted in a
|
||
population explosion in Ethiopia which preceded the famines
|
||
that have beleaguered the nation. This is also the case
|
||
with the rest of Africa - an uncontrollable population
|
||
explosion. It is not that life expectancy is greatly
|
||
extended but that more infants live to suffer malnutrition
|
||
and disease, and increase the ratio of young to older
|
||
members of the population.
|
||
|
||
Unless the world finds some way to control explosive
|
||
population growth, the unrest which I witnessed among the
|
||
young in Ethiopia and which is evident in the rest of Africa
|
||
as well as other parts of the globe spells trouble for the
|
||
twenty first century. Continued population growth may
|
||
eventually result in the disappearance of the human species
|
||
altogether from the planet.
|
||
|
||
==========================================================
|
||
|
||
HISTORY THROUGH MAORI PLACE NAMES
|
||
by Horace Basham
|
||
|
||
Since living in the Waitakere City district of the Auckland
|
||
region, I have followed my interest in local history. There
|
||
is much to learn from the plethora of Maori place names that
|
||
abound in this region.
|
||
|
||
Take for instance Opanuku. Opanuku is the name of the road
|
||
on which I live. The Opanuku stream flows down the valley at
|
||
the bottom of this road. The story of Opanuku takes us back
|
||
to pre-European times and tells of an incident of local
|
||
importance. Opanuku means "the place of Panuku."
|
||
|
||
Panuku was a chief of a tribe living in the Waitakere range
|
||
at Te Henga (Bethell's Beach). Legend has it that Nihotupu,
|
||
a Turehu (or those seen by the Maori as the first
|
||
inhabitants of New Zealand) invaded Panuku's plantation at
|
||
Te Henga stealing gourds and Panuku's wife, Parakura.
|
||
|
||
Parakura not being a willing party to this enterprise pulled
|
||
white feathers from her cloak leaving a trail that Panuku
|
||
would follow. When Panuku came upon the encampment of
|
||
Nihotupu an unholy battle took place resulting in the deaths
|
||
of Nihotupu and his followers. It was at that site of battle
|
||
that the nearby stream was named for Panuku, and another
|
||
stream and the hill nearby was named after Panuku's wife,
|
||
Parekura.
|
||
|
||
This area has been inhabited by the Maoris for more than a
|
||
1000 years, as shown in the many archaelogical sites found
|
||
throughout the Waitakeres, in Pa and food storage pits. One
|
||
such site near my place of residence is called Puke-aruha Pa
|
||
(or the hill of the braken fern root) and is to be found on
|
||
a high ridge overlooking the valley. The remains of the Pa
|
||
and the food storage pits are evident today. Much of the
|
||
site was demolished by bulldozing in 1975.
|
||
|
||
Braken roots were a staple of the Maori diet in lean times.
|
||
The tribes did not live permanently at one site, moving
|
||
around to where food was to be found. Areas were burnt off
|
||
and left so the braken would grow. Then they would return
|
||
later to dig up the roots.
|
||
|
||
The Opanuku Valley is now called Henderson Valley, after a
|
||
prominent sawmiller merchant of that district who arrived
|
||
from Dundee Scotland in 1845. The stream is still the
|
||
Opanuku, until it reaches Henderson township and runs into
|
||
the Henderson Creek.
|
||
|
||
The most famous ancestor of the whole of West Auckland was
|
||
the Turehu chief Tiniwa, who gave the ranges and the West
|
||
their name. After the Turehu came Panuku's people, the
|
||
Maruiwi, who arrived in the Kahuitara canoe in Taranaki. The
|
||
legendary explorer Kupe also left many important place names
|
||
on the west coast between the Manukua and Hokianga.
|
||
|
||
Maori Tradition has it the earliest inhabitants of the
|
||
Waitakere Ranges were the fairy folk -- the Turehu, who
|
||
dwelt in the forested hills and only ventured out at night
|
||
or in the fog or mist to fish and search for food. It is in
|
||
these tales that many of the place names of the Waitakeres
|
||
are mentioned and explained.
|
||
|
||
The following story gave Kaingamaturi, or Maramaturu as it
|
||
is called today, its name:
|
||
|
||
A local youth became enamoured of a chieftainess of a
|
||
Waikato tribe who used to come to Huia for the fishing
|
||
season. To while away the evening hours they used to play
|
||
games of skill. These games, which began in a competitive
|
||
spirit, soon developed into mutual feelings of love. But the
|
||
time came when the tribe returned to the Waikato.
|
||
|
||
Next season, when the tribe returned, the feelings of love
|
||
were as strong as ever. But in the meantime the chieftainess
|
||
had been betrothed to an older but influential warrior
|
||
chief. At first sight, the two hearts beat with joy, and
|
||
realising that their love had survived the intervening
|
||
absence, they sought a way to ensure they would not be
|
||
parted again.
|
||
|
||
Behind a high waterfall up the valley was a deep cave. The
|
||
youth, knowing of this, stocked the cave with supplies and
|
||
bedding where they would hide until the hue and cry would
|
||
end. After a long interval the pair, knowing the Waikato
|
||
tribe would have left, emerged from the cave. They found,
|
||
because of the thundering noise of the waterfall, they had
|
||
become deaf and had difficulty conversing with other people.
|
||
From this incident the stream was named Kaingamaturi, the
|
||
home of the deaf lovers. But it is now named Karamatura -- I
|
||
know not why.
|
||
|
||
Omanawanui Peak was named by this incident: Several
|
||
centuries ago two lovers were forbidden by their parents to
|
||
continue their love affair. They decided that, rather than
|
||
be parted, they would die together by jumping from a high
|
||
cliff on the seaward side of the peak of this name near
|
||
Whatipu. The man was killed outright, but the maiden was
|
||
critically injured and lay for two days before she was
|
||
discovered. Her injuries proved fatal, however, and in
|
||
memory of this tragedy, the peak was named Omanawanui,
|
||
the place of long suffering.
|
||
|
||
There are many romantic place names in Maori country and all
|
||
of them tell a story. This has been just a few of them.
|
||
|
||
===========================================================
|
||
|
||
GRAND CHILD
|
||
by James Hursey
|
||
|
||
How I remember my own children's birth.
|
||
So giddy, truly, was I on that day
|
||
That, indeed, my feet hardly touched the earth,
|
||
And I felt that I would simply float away.
|
||
|
||
In those days fathers waited down the hall,
|
||
So I wasn't in the room when they were born,
|
||
But I cannot forget when I first saw
|
||
Them squalling in the nursery that morn.
|
||
|
||
Twins, of course, one so wrinkled, ugly red
|
||
That I thought surely something wasn't right;
|
||
But they were fine, both screaming in their bed,
|
||
Indignant being brought into the light.
|
||
|
||
After visiting their mom I danced away,
|
||
Accosting perfect strangers on the street:
|
||
"Twins," I said, "O two perfect girls. Hooray!"
|
||
The ground, I'm sure, never touched my feet.
|
||
|
||
Truly, it was an intoxicating
|
||
Time, the birth of one's first, in my case two,
|
||
And now, after thirty years of waiting,
|
||
The elder twin has dropped the other shoe.
|
||
|
||
I'd just about lost hope until that day
|
||
(I tried to tell myself I did not care);
|
||
It was a new experience, in a way,
|
||
Seeing my little namesake lying there.
|
||
|
||
It's different, somehow, when a grandchild's born:
|
||
This time it's a quieter elation.
|
||
While our own are conceived in joy, then formed,
|
||
A grandchild is true procreation.
|
||
|
||
Some grand eternal cycle's consummate
|
||
And we, as grandpas, know that we've fulfilled
|
||
Our urgent task as species' advocate,
|
||
Upon which the generations build.
|
||
|
||
Ordinarily, it's said, they're much more fun,
|
||
Since you can hand them back to be attended;
|
||
I think the pleasure is a deeper one:
|
||
It's not a child, but, now, a descendant.
|
||
|
||
Pleasure without responsibility,
|
||
We sometimes say, even as we anoint
|
||
The child into our loving life, but surely
|
||
Responsibility is not the point;
|
||
|
||
Nor is the joy that the little one
|
||
Gives us growing up; the real pleasure
|
||
Is knowing, as we age, he'll carry on:
|
||
Therein, I think, lies grandpa's greatest treasure.
|
||
|
||
Nature provides us with the impetus
|
||
To reproduce, but life's not true complete
|
||
Until our own child has provided us
|
||
A happy grandchild playing at our feet.
|
||
|
||
======================================================
|
||
end cybersenior.3.3
|
||
|