Explanatory note
An English translation of a controversial manifesto in Eritrea's political history is provided following this short note. Its publication is driven by the need to help young Eritreans and researchers understand the political dynamics of Eritrea, not only by making the manifesto available in English, but also by making it more accessible. The manifesto is of some significance to scholarship. The aim of this note is to introduce it, touching on its contentious side, with the hope that further studies will be devoted to it.
Issued in 1971, Our struggle and its goals is commonly known as NHnan Elamanan 1 – its title in Tigrinya, one of the nine languages in Eritrea, in which it was originally written. First-time readers of a piece on Eritrea may not find it easy to understand, though the document contains some introduction to parts of Eritrea's history written from the perspective of its author/s.
In brief, Ethiopia's unilateral annexation of Eritrea took place in the second half of the 1950s in breach of the latter's status as ‘an autonomous unit federated with Ethiopia under the sovereignty of the Ethiopian Crown’ (UNGA Resolution 390A[V]). Most commentators argue that this move was not welcomed by the majority of Eritreans, though Negash (1997) holds a contrary view. The first to rise militarily were Muslims of the western lowlands of Eritrea who, in 1961, launched the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF), referred to as Jebha in the manifesto (Selassie 1989, p. 48; Kibreab 2008, p. 152; Pool 1998, p. 23). By resorting to extreme force and repression, however, the Ethiopians lost the support of the other segment of the Eritrean population – highland-dwelling Coptic peasants, the majority of whom were at one point in favour of unity with Ethiopia – and which motivated many to join the ELF (Erlich 1980, p. 178; Giorgis 1989). There, the newcomers, especially those seeking broader social and political change (Muslims and Christians alike), were not accommodated to their satisfaction (Kibreab 2008, pp. 152–153).
For this reason, a few years later, the ELF ruptured into many factions, one of which was led by the author of the manifesto, and which later became the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) (Kibreab 2008, p. 169). In the 1940s, Eritrea was marked by cries for unity across ethnic and religious lines. The background to the manifesto was Britain's proposal to divide Eritrea, and Ethiopia's moves to claim it. Against this backdrop, those who broke with the ELF to form a new organisation felt compelled to write the manifesto to communicate to the rest of the world essentially why they had walked away, who they were and what their goals were. At the time it was written, the breakaway groups were already in a civil war with ELF. Twenty years later, after a second eruption of civil war in 1980–81, the ELF was driven out of Eritrea by the EPLF and its allies in the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF). Factions of the ELF now make up a considerable part of the opposition organisations in exile. Meanwhile, the EPLF amassed military power and liberated Eritrea in 1991. Since then, the EPLF alone has remained in power in the de facto single party state of Eritrea.
Some level of dubiousness marks the manifesto. For example, although existing views on its authorship are not necessarily contradictory, the author is not clearly known. Zere (2004) argues that Isaias Afwerki, the only and unelected president of Eritrea for the last 20 years and all-time key figure in the EPLF, ‘alone wrote the declaration’, but that the then 24-year-old Isaias was ‘savvy enough to delude the audience (readers) by giving “collective” sense to his message’. Connell (1997, p. 83) wrote that the manifesto was ‘drafted and laboriously typed in early 1971 by Isaias – it was his first experience with a typewriter – before being produced on a primitive duplicating machine smuggled out of Asmara for the purpose’. Pool (1998, p. 24) attributes authorship to Isaias Afwerki in all probability, while Tesfai (2010) holds that the manifesto was authored by ‘a team of young Christian warriors’. It is also unclear whether the manifesto was intended for wide distribution, although it appears at times to be addressed to potential foreign supporters. At one point it indicates that the authors were standing before, and addressing, what was presumably a crowd. This seems to indicate that the document was conceived as a speech to those splinters it could reach in person.
At least on two fronts – Eritrea's entitlement to statehood and accusations against the ELF – the document is interesting. On the first issue, it tries to rebut proposals on the disposal of Eritrea in the 1940s devised by Stephen Longrigg (1945a, 1945b, 1946), the then British military administrator of Eritrea who wanted to partition Eritrea along racial lines which then would join Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and Ethiopia. Viability as a state, a claim by Haile Selassie at the United Nations during the deliberations over the future of Eritrea, is another argument the manifesto tries to rebut. To start with, Eritrea had a strong case in law to be an independent state (Permanent Peoples' Tribunal 1980; Selassie 1988).2 The claim that it could not administer itself was strongly opposed at UN forums on legal grounds by implicated small states such as Haiti; and international lawyers argued that Eritrea's autonomous status under the federal arrangement was unamendable, even by unanimous agreement between Eritreans and Ethiopians (Meron and Pappas 1980, p. 211).3 It is against this backdrop that the manifesto argued for Eritrea's right to self-determination.
When it comes to accusations against the ELF, many Eritreans question whether they were accurate and, even if so, whether they justified a split in the liberation movement. Ammar (2004), a well-placed ELF veteran, casts doubt on the truthfulness of its accusations. Kibreab (2008, p. 162) backs the accusations of the manifesto, though relying on authorities whom ELF veterans call biased towards the EPLF. Nevertheless, he questions the ‘lack of alternative’ the manifesto claims as the rationale for the split from ELF as well as the ‘non-sectarian democratic’ alternative the new front claims to have offered (2008, pp. 189–221). One young and unaffiliated online commentator (Kidane 2009) attributes the manifesto's lasting impact to the fact ‘that there was no one feisty enough to rebut it’.
As Connell (1997, p. 83) observed, the ‘embryo of the EPLF's vision was expressed in Our Struggle and Its Goals’. This document and the 1977 programme and 1994 charter of the EPLF are important to understand the ideological content (at least the ones preached) of the government in power today. Have Eritrean realities matched the vision? The most significant issue is national unity vis-à-vis national diversity. Pool (1997) argues that ‘unity and discipline, core values of the EPLF and of the independent government after liberation, can be linked to two experiences: the loose controls and internal struggles of the ELF, and an internal crisis’. Determined to avoid splits and a replication of the early history of the ELF, the EPLF ‘established strict democratic centralism as its core organising principle’. Tesfai (1999), an EPLF veteran and a former member of the government, states that ‘national unity has been identified as an overriding principle that touches on practically every government policy’ (p. 276). Indeed, says Hedru (2003), the focus on national unity has become an obsession and a tool of repression to the extent that ‘“sub-nationalism”, that is, ethnicity/tribalism, is a political crime in Eritrea’ (p. 436). Thus, even though the end of the Cold War forced the EPLF to superficially embrace some democratic principles, its core values have remained essentially the same, particularly with reference to civil and political liberties, economic policies, social diversity and foreign policy. Were popular expectations of the former EPLF leaders, now top officials of the government of Eritrea, misplaced? Because the manifesto was used to justify the rupturing (disunity) of the ELF, the manifesto is blamed by some commentators for the current state of Eritrea's fractured politics. Zere (2004) holds that it is an ‘evil document’ which ‘had produced an unexpected result with a disastrous consequence’. Salman (2009) calls it an ‘infamous manifesto’ and a hatchet of Christian chauvinists. Ammar (2004) says it contained a ‘venomous message’ which had a ‘negative effect in modern Eritrean politics’ and it ‘must be understood as [a] negative influence’. Musallem (2010) takes the document as a ‘sectarian project’ – the very accusation the document makes against others. A 2010 manifesto, The Eritrean Covenant: Towards Sustainable Justice and Peace condemns Our Struggle and its Goals as ‘aimed to serve as a clarion call for uprising and a blue print for ethnic domination’ that ‘became the rallying cry for all sorts of enmity and prejudice against Eritrean Muslims’ (Mukhtar 2010). The Eritrean Covenant is intended to counter NHnan Elamanan while mimicking the latter's structure. Yet even some of the EPLF's fiercest critics acknowledge the document's power. Omer-Ali (2010), an ELF veteran, grudgingly salutes Isaias Afwerki for his ‘will-power and cleverness’ in using ‘a small ragtag army’ and the NHnan Elamanan to build something akin to an ‘empire’.
Selassie (2010), who once represented the EPLF at the United Nations and headed the post-independence Constitution Commission, asked 25 Eritreans, including both Christians and Muslims, about the role of the manifesto in the politics of Eritrea's armed struggle, and saw a trend:
EPLF supporters consider [it] a historic document that was billed as justification for the split [but for mostly ELF-oriented commentators] was a fraud perpetrated by Isaias Afwerki in order to assure himself the support of Christians. And in doing so, he committed a crime against the Eritrean nation by causing a dangerous religiously-based division.
Some of his interviewees, presumably neutrals, seem to hold that the manifesto itself is not a problem:
In fact, they both contend that it is one of the best political documents ever written in the history of the Eritrean struggle, articulating as it does the mission and vision and core values of the EPLF and the people who made it.
Yet, the lasting influence of the document is contested, too. Zere (2004) holds that it did not, despite its mystical status, play a crucial role and ‘it is more likely that the majority of Eritreans never read it or were never influenced by it’. ‘Aside from its lyrical and aesthetic format’, he argues, ‘the document was not distributed widely as [was] the intention’. Pool (1998, p. 24) takes the opposite position, arguing that the manifesto was ‘distributed widely amongst Eritreans’. Ammar (2004) concedes that ‘the majority of Eritrean highlanders whom the document wanted to address and appeal to’ may not have been reached, but a segment of the Eritrean people ‘came across the message and then got infected by it’. Despite the limited channels of communication and dissemination of information in those days, Ammar argues that ‘hand-written and typed versions of NHnan Elamanan were copied and recopied in many forms and in many places in the neighbouring countries, in Europe and the USA’. Kidane (2009) notes further that the document has current impact and still casts its shadow over the whole of Eritrea's political history.
Determining its value and its impact has, however, been difficult, as the document has not until now been readily available, except to scholars expending many hours on research and extensive correspondence. Almost all Eritreans below the age of 40 have not read it, and the current government has not reissued it. In addition, the opposition tends to cite the document in a negative light but does not bring it to the young generation as it is. As Zere (2004) wrote, if a Christian opposition political junkie at the level of university student never had the opportunity to read the document before 2000, ‘then it is more likely that the majority of Eritreans never read it’. A translation of the text has also not been available.4
The document is originally written in Tigrinya, an Eritrean language lacking consistency and standardisation in spelling and grammar at that time. Furthermore, in the style of many such political diatribes, the document is replete with verbosity, rhetoric and extremely long sentences. These factors make translation difficult and non-standard.5 For example, the very title itself is translated differently. ‘Our struggle and its goals’ seems dominant probably because the other version had this title (Mehreteab 2004, p. 71; Connell 2001, p. 24; Leonard 1988, p. 134; Gebre-Medhin 1989, p. 202; Abbay 1998, p. 234; Iyob 1997b, p. 126). ‘We and our objectives’ or ‘We and our aims’ were used elsewhere (Ammar 2004; Markakis 1988, p. 60; Iyob 1997a, p. 659). For these reasons, the following is a close approximation but not an exact replica of the original.
Our struggle and its goals
Eritrean People's Liberation Forces (EPLF) November 1971
For long, from time to time, we have been distributing written materials that explain who we are and our standing in some political affairs of our country. However, owing to financial and material limitations, we know and understand that our brochures have not reached the places we desired to reach.
Now, availing ourselves of this great opportunity and favourable time, we present an historic document under the title ‘Our Struggle and its Goals’. Cognisant of its importance to the affairs of our country, to our people, to our supporters in particular and to the international community in general, we remind and advise that the document should not be taken lightly. The document contains answers not only to those who ask who we are but also to those who want to know our country, the people and its revolution.
We, Eritrean fighters standing before you and addressing you at this moment, are the ones who in March 1969 split from the administration of ‘Qyada al Ama’. It is true that almost all of us or most of us are Christians by birth, tradition and history. For this reason, a distant observer may take us as ‘religionists’. However, we do not want to negligently ignore this branding saying that one who does not know our goals can be excused in holding that opinion. Rather, we plead to everyone who cares to know our identity and our goals to read our document from beginning to end. In addition to providing written and verbal explanations, we are ready to meet in person anyone who has questions about us.
We understand in depth the main reason why we have split from, and why we are finding ourselves in this kind of situation. However, we also understand that observers and sympathisers are being bothered for want of satisfactory answers for why ‘Christians’ split from; how they split from; when did they come apart; what are their goals; what are their aspirations; are they nationalists or religionists, fighters or religious people, reactionaries or revolutionaries … how and why. Beyond this, we do not miss that there are those who gossip and hate us based on information from third parties. It is not that only questions are being asked about our affairs; opinions too are given. Disguised as our sympathisers, many welcome that we walked away. Others support our decision to walk away understanding that staying together is too much to tolerate. Some say that we are ‘religionists’. There are those, being on a bed of dreams, who say this and that. In short, the opinions given to cheat, commend, intimidate, correct or lure us or to use us to achieve plans with different goals are, perhaps, more numerous than their authors.
We do realise that it is not somebody's but our responsibility to provide those inquisitives with a satisfactory answer; to tell those who try to cheat us to stop wasting their energy; to convey words of gratitude to those who appreciate us; to stress to those who try to lure us that we do not get tempted to change our appearance; to welcome those who would want to correct us and to clarify to those who would want to purchase us that we are not for sale like firewood or animals. Given that we know well our goals better than those asking questions or simply chattering, realising that explaining our identity and clarifying our goals is not somebody else's responsibility but ours, we hope this document will be a notable clarification.
A short note on our country, Eritrea, and its population
Nobody misses the fact that we, Eritreans, belong to a country with a clearly delimited national boundary, a separate history, separate culture and tradition. The international community is a witness to the fact that we have been struggling for many years because we were held back by African oppressive colonisers who have become puppets of imperialism; because our history is distorted, our languages outlawed, our cultures and traditions dominated and our dignity and human rights violated. The struggle we are conducting now against Ethiopian oppression is a continuation, albeit in a military form, of Eritrean resistance against colonial oppression. Our sacrifices are aimed at freeing ourselves from the oppressions of Haile Selassie and his bosses because we want the Eritrean people to progress to being the master of their destiny. However, what we need to realise is that oppression is not linked to colonisers only; a coloniser is not always and not the only oppressor. There is repression and resistance in one community, too. There are those economic and political oppressions which the rich impose on the poor, the master on the slave, the powerful on the weak, the village chief on the villagers, the modernists over the traditionalists … etc. Nevertheless, given that oppression cannot indefinitely remain unopposed, history has confirmed that sooner or later the poor and the workers in union rise against the rich, slaves against the masters; villagers arm against their chief, and the weak come together against the powerful. When different types of oppression ferment and explode, it is not beyond human imagination that the might of the oppressed rises and wipes them away.
As long as freedom based on equality of every citizen of a nation is not realised, oppression and resistance do not stop. Even though we Eritreans generally have a unifying history, economic resources, political development and related or affiliated languages and traditions, as any other community, the Eritrean population also exhibits many conflicting features. One example that is the main drive for this document is the tendency of presenting Eritrea in terms of a Muslim/Christian divide instead of as a unified nation. For this reason, let us examine and know Eritrea and its population.
A. Geographic location
Eritrea is a neighbour to Ethiopia, the Sudan and the Red Sea. In terms of topography, generally it is divided into highland and lowland. All the coastal area and the area bordering the Sudan is hot lowland called Quola while the remaining areas bordering Ethiopia is an elevated highland called Kebesa. In terms of religious affiliation, in Eritrea the division of the population more or less matches the topographic categorisation. Most of those who live in the highlands are Christians while those who live in the lowlands are Muslims. According to the districting system introduced by Italian colonisers, Eritrea is divided into eight provinces. The highland encompasses Hamassien, Serae and Akele-Guzai; the coastal lowland encompasses Semhar, Sahel and Denkel while the western lowland encompasses Senhit and Barka. The lowlands constitute three-fourths of the area of Eritrea; the highlands make up the other one-fourth. The geographic position of Eritrea is of great strategic significance. For this reason, it is clear for the whole world that alien oppressors look at it with greedy eyes.
B. Economic resources
Eritrea is endowed with natural resources such as land, vegetation, animals, minerals … etc. that can sustain itself. However, the majority of its population subsists on farming and pastoralism and it is at the beginning of development. Colonisers have exploited and shipped away the extracted resources of the country. As a result, the Eritrean people, deprived of economic development, have been living in poverty. The people in the highland depend on relatively improved farming practices while the rest of the people in the coastal and western lowland are nomads who survive moving from one place to another. Given that our people's oppression is mainly economic, history has witnessed that colonial oppressors have, with the aim of exploiting Eritrea's resources unhindered, ridiculed and continue to ridicule the Eritrean people by dividing it along religious, ethnic and other factional lines.
C. Population size
The more than three million population of Eritrea is not evenly distributed on the surface of Eritrea. The people on the highland, unlike the smallness of the area, could as well be more than half of the total population. Large parts of the coastal and western lowland are arid and thus few people live there. There is no recent census of the population of Eritrea. The one conducted in 1957 indicated the percentage of the population of Eritrea, divided by provinces, as follows:
D. Political awareness
When we carefully look at political awareness in our country, we find that colonisers and their puppets that were desirous to and did endeavour to run their interests smoothly, found religion as the main instrument in the realisation of their objectives. For this reason, when the Eritrean revolution against colonial oppression which, as other centuries old revolutions elsewhere in the world, started, it has since 1940 been divided into two camps. In the 1940s, most Christians opted for ‘union’ with Ethiopia while most Muslims opted for ‘union’ with the Sudan. For this reason, our political history makes it clear that the Eritrean people, who had become a victim of a United Nations' verdict, has fallen into agony and is suffering.
E. Language
Even though more than nine languages are used in Eritrea, the two languages most widely used by the Eritrean population are Tigrinya and Tigre. Derived from Geez, these two are Semitic languages. The other languages not derived from Geez are Bilien, Beja, Baza, Baria, Saho and Denkel. More details on these languages are given below. However, on a general note, the Eritrean population is linguistically divided into two. The language of most of our people in the highland is Tigrinya while the language of most of our people in the coastal and western lowland is Tigre.
Tigrinya: Native speakers of this language are those Christians in the highland but few amongst them, such as the Jeberti, are Muslims. Tigrinya is spoken not only in Eritrea but also by those in a northern province of Ethiopia called Tigray.
Saho: Native speakers of this language are called Saho. They live in eastern Akele-Guzai and northern Semhar. While most of them are Muslims, some are Christians. As other languages, Saho is not confined to Eritrea but also used by some tribes in northern Ethiopia.
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Tigre: Native speakers of this language live in the eastern costal lowland and western lowland. While most of them are Muslims, there are some Christians such as the Mensa-e in eastern Senhit. Tigre is also used by many Sudanese in east Sudan.
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Afar: Native speakers of this language are Muslims who live in eastern Eritrea in Denkel province. The Afar have their kinsmen in the adjacent areas of Ethiopia and Djibouti.
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Blien: Native speakers of this language are half Christians and half Muslims who have been called the Bogos. They live in Senhit. Given that the origin of this language is Agew, speakers of a language similar to Agew are also present in Ethiopia.
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Beja: Native speakers of this language are those few Muslims who live in northern Sahel and western lowland. Most speakers of this language are Sudanese who live in the eastern side of Sudan.
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Baza: Native speakers of this language are those called Baza. They live in the western lowland near river Gash and Setit. Though they have few Christians most of them are traditional believers.
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Baria: Native speakers of this language live in the western lowland at the northern part of Gash. Like the Baza they are few in number. Though they have few Christians most of them are traditional believers.
F. Culture and tradition
When we come to culture and tradition of the Eritrean population, they vary across ethnic groups, provinces and dialects. These cultural and traditional variations are generally linked to livelihoods, political awareness, history, topography and beliefs. The people in the highland have similar culture and tradition. The people in the lowland are, though not as uniform as the people in the highland, unified by a common faith.
As explained above, the Eritrean people, as peoples of other countries, are diverse. However, because for centuries they have together endured colonial oppression, intermarried, shared a common history, related livelihoods, political development, language, culture and tradition; they cannot be divided and factionalised for any reason.
The people in the highland may have religious affinities with those Christians in Ethiopia. They may as well be especially related to those provinces of Ethiopia bordering Eritrea such as Tigray by a common language (Tigrinya) and traditional and cultural features. As history has it, this people may have history linked to the ancient Kingdom of Axum.
In addition, the Eritrean people in the areas bordering the Sudan may relate to the tribes in eastern Sudan in terms of old history, common religion, language, and some traditional and cultural attributes. The Eritrean people in the costal lowland, considering that it is proximate to overseas culture and tradition, may have a closer link to and understanding of overseas tribes in the Arab countries than the tribes in other parts of Eritrea.
Generally, throughout the world, peoples on border areas have stronger links and closer relations with those across the boundary than with those in their country's mainland. This is not peculiar to Eritrea. However, transboundary demographic similarities are not sufficient causes for dismembering a country. Our country will thus remain as one country. It will not be partitioned to parts that would merge with the Sudan or Ethiopia. When we compare the Eritrean people close to the Sudanese border with the Sudanese all over the Sudan, they are very different people. In addition, if we compare the Eritreans closer to the border with Ethiopia with the entire Ethiopians, it is a very different people. The variations in livelihood, ethnicity, language, geography and culture prevalent in Eritrea, are present in Ethiopia and the Sudan. In fact, the diversity is bigger and more extreme in the other two countries. If we revert to old history, it cannot link to the century we are living in. If we try to map the world based on centuries-old history, we would find an entirely new world rather than a few new states.
In Africa in particular, if we attempt to draw states based on the history of the last few centuries, let alone the distant history, we would find Africa divided into thousands of tribes and races. In short, the demographic diversity in Eritrea is present in other countries as a normal given. For this reason, it is not shameful nor something that threatens a unified Eritrea. The main point we tried to clarify is that religion is used as an instrument for oppression and exploitation but it cannot in itself stand as a cause for a struggle. In other words, can we say that the diversity we explained above is rooted in religion? If we have truly examined matters, religion is one of the more than ten elements of diversity within the Eritrean people. To say that every divide or oppression or cause for struggle is religiously motivated is to pass a blind judgment. Considering the fact that many of the elements of diversity more or less match the Muslim/Christian divide, it is true that the prevalent differences appear as anchored on Muslim/Christian dichotomy. We should understand and realise that this Muslim/Christian divide appears sharper than it is because colonial chiefs and opportunistic citizens exaggerated it for the sake of their private gains.
The main aim of the explanation given above is to explain Eritrea's unity and that the basis for differences within the Eritrean people is not religion. Any citizen or foreigner who denies these facts we have just presented is either ignorant, at fault or simply hegemonic. Now, we shall revert back to our main message. If these are the facts, then, what should be the reason that forced us to split? The reason for our split is a long history that starts from the birth of Jebha [ELF] and the Eritrean Freedom Party [Selfi Netsanet Ertra]. For this reason, we shall explain in brief starting from 1961.
A. [Haphazard revolution]
Revolutions around the world have confirmed that a struggle that is not based on revolutionary principles and which lacks specific plans cannot succeed. The Eritrean experience is a big lesson that firing and wandering around with guns on your back without specific purpose is a futile effort.
Many Eritreans have spoken about our struggle that started randomly in 1961 without a clear political programme. Those who established or started Jebha in 1961 simply rang the bell of struggle without sufficiently studying the affairs of their country and their people in advance; without revolutionary plans and principles and without specific task-plans and political leadership.
B. Islamisation
No one misses the fact that the absence of sound revolutionary plans and principles are caused by lack of qualified revolutionary leadership. The founders of the struggle felt shame to convey to their fighters a nationalist message. They thought that preaching Islam in Eritrea and in the Arab countries is the better way of strengthening the struggle. For this reason, they presented us as Muslim both here and outside. The chiefs of Jebha who assumed the highest authority and [controlled] external relations frequented Islamic countries and institutions presenting themselves as ‘Muslim brothers’ who are fighting oppression from Haile Selassie, King of Christian Habesha, on Eritrean Muslims who they claimed constitute 80% (eighty per cent) of the total population. In this mission of containing Christian hegemony, they asked for assistance and sympathy from brotherly Muslims. By welcoming assistance obtained on the basis of Muslim brotherhood, they gave their front a shocking image. Their followers who have been carrying guns and doing the actual fighting in Eritrean fields started asking the gullible public if they liked the Christian king, Emperor Yohannes, whom they presented as the one who destroyed Islam and expanded Christianity. They preached that the present king is the grandson of Emperor Yohannes and, as his grandfather did, he is an infidel resolved to destroy the peoples' Islamic faith while they claimed to be Jihadists and an Islamic messiah who are resolved to resist the king. Their struggle is thus a holy war. Preaching along these lines, they made our [Muslim] people indiscriminately hate any Christian regardless of where one lives. An Eritrean Christian was called atheist, cruel and a traitor. The Muslim part of Eritrean people started to consider their problems as religion-induced oppression and started chanting jihad fi lebis Allah to rally behind the holy war.
However, the public, who were not aware of the preaching of Jebha and who now felt the conspiracy of the colonisers in using religion as a dividing card while the pre-federation divide was still there, innocently continued to be inspired by [ELF guerrilla leader Hamid] Awate and remained tuned day and night to the struggle launched in 1961. What turned the public to the armed struggle was the experience of the political movement from 1950–60. It is to be recalled that this political movement, that appeared free from religious divide and that brought Muslims and Christians and highlanders and lowlanders to a common fold, had enlightened and unified the Eritrean public. Inspired by this era, every Eritrean was ready to join the struggle. Even though Eritreans in all parts of Eritrea were morally and materially supporting Awate's revolution, the whole or most of the fighting force in Barka along with Awate was Muslim. Why at that time Eritrean highlanders did not join the struggle could only be because of a geographic factor. Otherwise, the claim that highlanders did not join because they did not want a revolution launched by Muslims is far from the truth.
Participation in the armed struggle continued with increasing momentum up to 1965 without changing much of its composition. However, inside ‘Jebha’ preaching of Islam did not stop.
C. Ethnic tension
Given that most of the fighting forces in the field were Muslims, did the preaching and guidance of Islam unite and solidify them as it was intended? If we ask this question, we will get an astonishing answer. In any community, the unjustified gains of one or few cannot settle well with the interests of the masses. The first leaders had no disciplined national programme. In addition, as their number grew, they immersed in a competition of running the show and towering higher in the leadership ladder than the other. To use the forces under their command in the realisation of their ambitions, they started to be creative. Having realised that ethnic tension is the card that meets their ambitions, they ignited a serious tension by splitting the forces along ethnic and regional lines.
The chiefs residing outside Eritrea did not make their ambitions explicit. However, they had to pretend that they were seeking solution for the tension in the field. Thus, at the end of 1965, they left their offices to the field to split the army into many divisions. They divided the army into four divisions. The main reason for splitting the army was to appease those who were seeking to ignite ethnic tension and thus win one or the other of them as a support base. Of course, the official explanation they gave was that it is effective to disperse the army and thus expand operational areas. Expansion with the aim of assisting and mobilising the public is good. However, this should have been done under a favourable time and circumstances, in an organised manner, after conducting an in-depth study of the Eritrean people and working out specific political and military strategies. This can only be done step by step and not like a slicing of a cake where one force is randomly assigned to Barka, the other to Senhit, the other to Hamassien, Seraye, Akele-Guzai, Semhar or Denkel. In short, we understand that the dispersal of the army conducted in 1965 was an anti-popular military strategy implemented to serve the interests of one or two individuals.
D. [Participation in the fighting force]
Generally speaking, the participation of Christians or highlanders in the armed forces increased as time passed even though it may not have been in par with the number of Muslims. Highlanders were dispersed in the four divisions. When, as one segment of the Eritrean population, highlanders started to realise their role in ‘Jebha,’ one question frequented their mind. The four divisions were based on the premise that only a leadership and rank that belongs to a specific ethnic group and locality can mobilise that group. For this reason, the leader of the Barka Division was from Barka and together with the rank from Barka operates in Barka. It was the same with the other divisions. However, the highland provinces (Hamassien, Seraye and Akele-Guzai) were under a Muslim leader. For this reason, highlanders started complaining that an exception had been made in their case.
In resolving any crisis, leaders of Jebha consider first their self-interest. If any action fits their interests, they take it regardless of consequences. Thinking that allowing the Christians to have their own military division would permit the latter to grow in number, they collected fighters from the four divisions and sliced parts of the territorial zone of the third division in Hamassien. Putting their man at the top, they thus formed a fifth division in 1996. Instead of fixing the mistake they made a year ago, they added to it.
E. Religious tension
Adding a fifth division on top of the four was akin to teaching ethnic tension and it did not solve the prevalent crisis. As we mentioned before, the actions the leaders of Jebha were taking were based on religious, ethnic, regional and other related backward principles which were bereft of revolutionary clues and thus they were anti-popular war strategies. For this reason, the five divisions they created together with their leaders started to drift away from the nationalist path.
The leaders of the divisions were not enlightened, and from the very beginning they were not driven by a national mission. Competing against each other, they created five empires and fronts just in one nation and in one front. In order to acquire a huge force and obtain capital that supports their dictatorship, they started to take actions not permitted by any imagination of human morality. To realise their individual ambitions in a short span, and because they could not put a limit to their religious fanaticism, citing one or two old tensions and feuds between some ethnic groups as evidence, they revealed their thinking and they resolved to ignite religious crisis by presenting Christians and highlanders as their enemies and Christians and highlanders as siding with Ethiopia.
After this, they created smaller military units and instructed them to raid the wealth and cattle of the Christian population. The number of cattle raided and taken to the environs of Kassala (Sudan) at different times from the lowland, Serae and banks of Hamassien were estimated to be ten thousand. The raids were conducted by those military units of the Third and First Division that were in the lowland, Serae and banks of the Anseba River in Hamassien. In addition, houses of innocent civilians were put on fire and monies and property of the public was robbed. Those citizens who opposed the theft of their cattle and destruction of their property were brutally killed. This shameful inhuman action was tasting sweet to Jebha leaders. Intoxicated with blood, while calling every peasant an infidel, they killed 50 peasants in a cruel manner at a place called Senber. It did not stop here; killing and raiding innocent citizens was gaining momentum. From the property they seized, leaders of Jebha gathered a huge capital. In Sudan, they built villas, bought trucks, and got married while the already married ones added two or three more women. They spent the money they brutally took from the Eritrean people acquiring wealth in Arab countries, buying property and drinking and womanising.
When these evil deeds intensified, the covert colour of leaders of Jebha became overt. The top chiefs and divisional leaders of Jebha made an oppressive class in Eritrea at the expense of the Eritrean public whom they oppressed politically, economically and by use of sheer force. The fighters under their command turned into hired mercenaries at the service of leaders of Jebha. In general, Jebha became a new oppressive class in Eritrea. The Eritrean people, who were fighting for liberty from the oppressive Haile Selassie, found itself under the unexpected oppression of Jebha. When this happened, the highlanders who were specifically at the receiving end of the oppression, having found the front they supported in realisation of independence turned into an oppressor, started to not only distance the front but also to protest. Haile Selassie found this crisis as a great opportune moment. Having got evidence for his long-lasting campaign that Eritrea is deeply divided along religious lines, he soon supplied arms and turned the betrayed public against Jebha and the latter was forced by circumstance to fire against Jebha. Leaders of Jebha took the situation recklessly. In addition, instead of seeking revolutionary solutions, on the pretext that now the public is armed against them, they aggravated the tension and conflict by intensifying their campaign of raiding and killing. When the matter drifted far away from a national cause to assume religious tension, the ordinary fighters in Jebha did not register their objection. For this reason, availing Jebha's principle that harm on your people hurts more, those mostly Christian fighters who were in the Fifth Division started to care and worry more about the situation.
These Christian fighters protested against these evil deeds not only in the field but also in Kassala [Sudan] before Jebha's office. As they presented their grievances to the office, they were instructed to return to the field under the ploy that the discord prevailing in the Sudan did not permit their presence there for long. When, in defiance, the petitioners stayed in Kassala, they were detained by Sudanese authorities. As a result, they were very demoralised to the extent that they defected to Haile Selassie's consulate in Kassala. Having got another excuse, leaders of Jebha dispatched a message to the field to kill Christians. More than one hundred Christians were forced to the edges of hills and shot to death there. As a consequence of this disgraceful administration, the oppression which first targeted civilians started to face the military unit too. Religious conflicts mounted inside Jebha. After those who were killed and defected, the number of Christian fighters who remained in Jebha was reduced to the number of fingers. When the propaganda machinery of Ethiopia presented the situation in an exaggerated version, the desire of the highland people to join the struggle dwindled and they started to look at Jebha through resentful eyes.
It may seem that all these evil deeds took ages. It is indeed surprising to note that they happened from the end of 1966 to the end of 1967. At the beginning of 1967, the killings, abuses and raids leaders of Jebha perpetuated against the public was escalating. Given that at this time top leaders of Jebha needed more time to count the money they get from the sale of raided cattle, they started to run the divisions from Kassala. The fighters were engaged in raiding cattle and shuttling them to Kassala and then back to the field for another raid. Even though the leaders and their fighters thought that they were prospering, the public was distancing them and intensifying its protests.
F. From the bath to the sludge
The fighters disheartened by the situation never stopped from contemplating and inventing ways to end the ongoing abuses. Realising that the force that was fanning the religious tension was that of the enemy, they understood that it was their revolutionary duty to resist this force. Given their big number, they resolved to radically reform the construction of Jebha.
The dispersal of the army into five divisions that took place in 1965 was not revolutionary. Thus, challenging the five leaders of the divisions and persuading and bringing the army which has been instrumentality of the dictatorship into a single force under a unified command was identified as the main solution. To this end, many well-intentioned fighters exerted intensive efforts. This measure was against the interests of the top and division leaders of Jebha. The nine-month-long effort at unifying all the divisions was not entirely successful. While the Third, Fourth and Fifth divisions eventually unified together with their training centre and relief supplies, the First and Second divisions remained as they were.
As one step towards the correctional measures, the three divisions were united under one name and one political and military measure in September 1968. While advancing well in this relationship, it is to be recalled that one or two puppet chiefs of Jebha used the other two divisions to launch strong opposition to the united divisions. In addition, many wolves in a sheep's skin infiltrated the three unified divisions. In any case, after the inception of the unification measures, the distancing public, particularly the disheartened highland Christians, again reverted from where it were to participate in the front.
The progressiveness of the unified force worried not only adherents of Jebha but also the government of Haile Selassie which was met by a heavy blow and left with unfading mark from regular fighters and spying forces. This unified force was set to reform the abusive actions, but it did not have political plans and principles based on a revolutionary foundation. Those who infiltrated the unified force in disguise issued a proclamation prohibiting new recruitments. The proclamation was passed on the pretext of intelligence measures. In reality, they were driven by backward religionist mentality to block Christians from raising more military.
While the prohibition of recruitment was a simple act of provocation, poisonous situations spread within the administration of the unified force. There were those wolves who being in the non-united second force were vying for an opportune moment of confusion. Availing of the discord in the united force and with a conviction that they will score victory over the unified force, they started moving here and there pretending that they are resolved for a bigger unity of all the forces. Those forces in Jebha who initially were keen to see unity of all forces believed the pretensions and met with the two forces in a place called Adobha for unity which materialised and at which a leadership called ‘Qyada al Ama’ was elected. They resolved to meet again in a national congress to be held in less than a year before September 1970.
G. Second chapter of abuses
There is a saying in Tigrinya: that a kitten does not depart from its mother's manners. Those religious fanatics who lost the opportunity for religious war for a moment, regained an opportune moment when command of Jebha's administration fell onto their hands once again. To butcher those whom they identified as undesirables from their religious perspective, they started to sharpen their swords and flex their muscle. To do this they thought eliminating their adversaries in leadership position is the first measure to be taken. Thus, they arrested six of the members of Qyada al Ama and made them suffer under cruel conditions of imprisonment. In continuation, they killed Kidane Kfle and Welday Gdey – two who have been tirelessly working for years to reform the revolution – at the centre of Kassala. Their ploy was that once they have killed the two strong and wise men, the rest can do nothing. They put the dead bodies in sacks and loaded them on a taxi bound to a place called Hafira where the bodies were supposed to be dumped. En route, because the road was very rough, the dead bodies were tossed over on the road and left there.
After the death of the two brave martyrs, similar to what they did in 1967, instructions for indiscriminate killing of Christian fighters were dispatched. More than 200 innocent fighters were butchered and dumped. More than 200 fled in earnest and defected to the enemy [Ethiopia]. As reinforcement to the ‘kill the Christian peasant’ order already issued, Jebha leaders armed ordinary people and intoxicated them with old feuds between Christians and Muslims. They dispatched the ordinary people to kill militia but they did not make them understand what militia is. The ordinary folks were dispatched to the highland to throw bombs and metryes 6 at assembled people they come across and snatch jewellery from Christian women. Massive abuses were done and they are still being done. Because of such abuses, some even worse, Christian fighters in Jebha were more or less liquidated as some of them were also killed and the rest of them defected.
H. What should be done?
In this situation, which alternative is better: to submit yourself to the sword of the evildoers merely because you are a Christian or to surrender to the enemy? Dying in the hands of religious fanatics or surrendering to the enemy is equivalent to death. Both alternatives are abominable. Both options are bitter. Not picking either of the options is the same as sitting on the edge of a blade. Nonetheless, it is better to sit on the edge of a blade than to opt for either one of the two alternatives. For this reason, dear readers, we are the ones who have decided to sit on the edge of a razor blade. Instead of dying in the hands of puppets of Jebha or run to Ethiopia, we are the ones who decided to sit on the edge of a blade. As one Eritrean saying goes, he who did not partake in combat appears more brilliant than the actual combatants. Those who did not partake in what we were engaged in; those who did not witness or have a test of the bodily and psychological pain we endured may talk and gossip about us a lot. They are right. We walked away from the fascist administration of Jebha; we did not split from the ordinary fighters. In an Eritrean party, we thought it is disgraceful to see segments based on religious, ethnic, regional and other similar considerations. We, as fighters, in particular should eradicate these poisonous divides within the Eritrean people. We must not be champions of factionalism.
However, what can you do if you are chased away while working for a national cause? How do you react if you are oppressed while you are struggling for liberty? For the fighters, the answers are simple. Perhaps the way we have been gathered gives a religionist look to our situation. But, what else could have we done? We do not regret our current situation because we understand that the nation and the people give priority to religion. What we deeply regret is the reason that forced us to split from and assemble separately. We are fighters, not missionaries. What drove us to split is a revolutionary conviction as opposed to a religious fervour. And, we consider our action as honesty, determination and love of the country.
We are liberation fighters, not missionaries of Christianity
We do not want to contest the fact that with the exception of few traditional believers, half of the population of Eritrea is Christian while the other half is Muslim. Yet, instead of teaching our national goals, leaders of Jebha preach and write that 80% of Eritrea's population is Muslim and 20% is Christian. We know quite well that advocacies are made on behalf of Muslims instead of the people of Eritrea as a whole.
We believe that the Eritrean people, as the rest of the people of the world, were and are being oppressed. In this context, what we aspire for is liberty for our people and the oppressed people of the entire world. We do not care about counting the number of Muslims or Christians in Eritrea. Let this bother those who distribute the Bible and the Qur'an. When a Muslim in Eritrea is oppressed, that is oppression of an Eritrean. Likewise, oppression of a Christian is oppression of an Eritrean. We do not think that oppression discriminates based on religion.
If there is a revolution aiming at liberating Muslims only, we will oppose it. We also oppose endeavours within Jebha aimed at oppressing and dominating Christians. We stand against any kind of oppression.
We will not keep our eyes closed while Christians are being oppressed fearing that some may call us Christian defenders of Christians. We will oppose that. We oppose it not because we are advocates of Christianity but because it is oppression. At this juncture, what we would like to clarify to those peoples or nations who care about religion is the fact that Eritrea's population is composed of equal number of Muslims and Christians. We affirm that Muslims in their Mosque and Christians in their Church will have the freedom of faith. For anyone interested to get evidence that Jebha's presentation of 80% Eritreans as Muslims is false, we invite him to visit Eritrea or read Eritrea's history.
A revolution is a national mission. It is neither a jihadist's nor a crusader's mission. If there are individuals who believe otherwise, we want them to stand corrected; if there are individuals who work on that premise, we remind them to stop. We would like to affirm to them that assistance earmarked for the advocacy of Christianity or Islam is valueless to us and a waste for those who donate it. In addition, to those Eritreans who want to use religion for unjustified enrichment, we want to remind them that doing so is not only forbidden but also they are registering a black history in the records of their people and the people of the world. We also remind our liberation fighters and the fighters in the world that we are fighting to eliminate oppression based on the indivisibility of Eritrea and unity of its people without caring about a religious divide, and we call them to join us in condemning those opportunists who profit by employing and bringing religion into the mix.
We are Eritreans, not Arabs
Leaders of Jebha use Arabism in the same manner they used Islam for profiting and as a game of identity politics. They say that except the less 20% Habesha,7 80% of our people is Arab; our country is Arab and our language is Arabic. Given that Eritrea is located in north-eastern Africa, geographically it is true that Eritrea is close to the Arab world. As a result of the geographic proximity, it is clear that our revolution has joined the international revolution in the struggle against Zionism and has become part of the revolutions in the Middle East not only because of revolutionary duties but because of strategic imperatives. Our participation in this front together with our Muslim brothers is because of our revolutionary mission, responsibility, and strategic interests and because the situation of our revolution permitted. It is not because we are Muslims or Arabs. Participating in revolutions in the Arab world does not mean we have forgotten our revolution.
No matter whether the people of Eritrea are Muslims or Christians, nobody misses the fact that from the perspective of genealogy they have Arab blood. However, we need to realise that above anything else the people of Eritrea are Eritreans, not Arabs. Yet, we will fight together with those peoples who are close to us in terms of race and colour of skin. If we come across a revolution based on race and colour of skin, we will oppose it for the reason that we are race- and colour-blind fighters. If the revolution in the Arab world discriminates based on religion, colour of skin and race, we would like to make it clear that we are Eritreans who do not discriminate based on these factors.
In addition to Islam and Arabism, leaders of Jebha preached on the false premise that the language of the people of Eritrea is Arabic, while other languages such as Tigrinya and Tigre are belittled to a mere usage. Many who do not know the languages of the people of Eritrea could be misled. In the preceding sections, we have said something about languages in Eritrea. Even though leaders of Jebha could not deny the position of languages under the federal arrangement, they have endeavoured and they continue to work to realise their ambition of eliminating all other languages of Eritrea and crown Arabic alone as the official language. Except for the insiders, others may not know well that inside ‘Jebha’, Tigrinya and the other languages are marginalised. Fanatics in Jebha get a headache when they hear Tigrigna being spoken. At the extreme, it cannot be missed that there are some foolish individuals who forget and erase their language and dream of becoming Arabs.
What we want to make clear to the Arab peoples and Arab countries is that we do not hold grudges against Arabs and Arabic. We realise that we have not only historical ties but we also have, and we want, strategic relations in the present century. However, we are not going to erase our languages and buy others for want of assistance from Arab peoples and government or to please their leaders. Nor do we want to cheat them thinking that they would not know us. It is true that the reactionaries who want to obtain help by distorting the truth are many. For this reason, based on the information supplied to them by leaders of Jebha, many Arabs and their governments speak and write that the language of Eritrea is Arabic and the Eritrean people are Arab and they, accordingly, draw the map of Arab. Had we been Arabs or had our language been Arabic, we would not have shied away from presenting ourselves as Arabs and speaking Arabic. However, we cannot and do not want to betray our Eritrean identity nor erase our language from our tongue. In addition, there is no shame in telling the truth.
At present, there are many international languages. When we need to communicate at the international level, we need to master many international or widely used languages. However, the way to introduce our people and our country to the international community is to develop our people's languages and educate the public using its own languages. When we work to educate and mobilise the public using alien languages, and when we try to elevate ourselves by selecting one language as better than the other, we become merchants of languages. As a consequence, instead of advancing one step ahead, we will be held back one thousand steps. We had better refrain from this dangerous path.
Italian colonisers tried to erase our languages and teach theirs. The British also spread their language. Even in the current new era of oppression, the Haile Selassie regime that has erased our languages and burned our books is trying to expand the Amharic language. However, the brave Eritrean public has strongly opposed and continues to oppose such expansionism. Many Eritreans have been dispersed in many Arab countries and throughout the world either as students or refugees. If they want us to speak, work with, and teach using the languages they have come to master in their adopted places, they are asking us to cease being liberation fighters and to erase our Eritrean identity for which reason we will reject them. We want to reiterate repeatedly that those peoples or governments who would want to help us should help us in the realisation of our just cause. Or else, we will not accept assistance from all those who resolve to help us to carry different goals because such goals are not ours. To those who do not know the Eritrean people's culture, tradition and languages and who would want to help us, we invite them to tour our country.
If not, we urge those governments which are guided by the information from deceitful merchants to refrain from violating the dignity and rights of the Eritrean people. If there are governments out there which, disregarding our Eritrean identity, want to expand their sole interests, we would like to affirm that in defence of our identity, we are unflinching heroes.
We want to make the Eritrean people realise that it is its responsibility to affirm its identity to those who are profiting by saying that we are Muslims, we are Arabs, we are white, we are light-skinned. In addition, we want the public to tell those who are misleading our sympathetic governments that any assistance obtained by changing our identity does not benefit but harm our goals and for this reason they should refrain from lying.
We are neither ethnocrats nor regionalists
Opportunist leaders of Jebha have divided our people into numberless factions in order to serve their personal gains. This diffusion has affected our front too. This segmentation is continuing. As factions multiply and become narrow-focused, there are fears that factionalism may eventually descend to the level of villages and clans. It is not the segmented public that is benefiting from this sectarian project of leaders of Jebha who are rushing to claim this and that as belonging to them. Nobody is benefiting from this sectarianism except those few opportunists.
Our conscience does not permit us to oppress our people for the sake of the interests of a few. We do not want to immerse ourselves in ethnic tension and consequently depart from our just goals. We, however, oppose those who work based on this divisive premise and profit from it. Given that we see inside our front competition in clientelism based on ethnic favouritism and aimed at enlarging one's force which is being done by pronouncing one individual as being on this side and the other on that side, we want to make it clear that we do not like ethnic favouritism. We also want to remind those who, engaged in ethnic favouritism, would want us to serve them as an eyelash decoration not to fool themselves, asking who this individual is or where he came from. We just want to tell them that we appreciate the support of innocent fighters.
Our goals
We will discuss with Eritrean liberation fighters the plans we have for the realisation of our goals. Pending the issuance of a second part of our document which will contain a detailed explanation of our goals, now we explain them briefly. Our goal is to create a society free from political and economic oppression of some over others; to build an advanced and prosperous nation based on agriculture and education – a nation which will have a united Eritrean front that does not discriminate based on religion, ethnicity, regionalism and gender and that in cooperation with the people of the world in general and with those progressive peoples and governments in Africa, Asia and Latin America in particular, fight American-led global imperialism and destroy Israel. Our first goal is to engage in armed struggle with the aim of freeing ourselves from Ethiopian oppression.
Notes on contributors
Simon Weldehaimanot's formal training covers international human rights law and democratisation, with a specific focus on the African human rights system and, thematically, on the right to democratic governance, the right to self-determination, rights of minorities and indigenous peoples, and the effect of these rights on forms of government and the constitutional frame of multi-national states. This article emanates from Mr Weldehaimanot's ongoing research aimed at identifying ideological diversity within the Eritrean political spectrum.
With a political science background, Emily Taylor holds an MA in the theory and practice of human rights from the University of Essex. Ms Taylor's commitment to human rights has brought her into contact with the human and political situation in Eritrea and with many Eritrean human rights activists, one of whom is her co-author, Mr. Weldehaimanot. Active with the daily needs of Eritrean refugees in Phoenix, Arizona, this work shows Ms Taylor's increasing familiarity with Eritrea in the past many years.