Read I Didn't Do It for You Online
Authors: Michela Wrong
Chapter 1 The City Above the Clouds
1
Two photographic books capture the wonders of urban Asmara: Edward Denison, Guang Yu Ren and Naigzy Gebremedhin,
AsmaraâAfrica's secret modernist city
, Merrell, 2003; Sami Sallinen,
Asmara Beloved
, Kimaathi, 2004
2
Presidential interview with Scott Stearns of Voice of America and Richard Dowden of
The Economist
, April 9, 1999
Chapter 2 The Last Italian
1
Cesare Correnti, addressing the Italian Geographical Society, April 18, 1875. Maria Carazzi, âLa Societa Geografica Italiana e l'esplorazione coloniale in Africa: (1867â1900)',
La Nuova Italia
, 1972, pp 144â57
2
Pellegrino Matteucci took part in an 1879 expedition, subsidized by northern Italian industrialists, to assess Abyssinia's commercial potential. His conclusions were damning. âAllowing Italy to nurse any illusions about a country's wealth, if it doesn't exist, strikes me as anti-patriotic,' he recorded in his memoirs: Angelo del Boca,
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale
,
Vol 1
, Mondadori, p 93
3
Ferdinando Martini,
Nell'Affrica Italiana
, Fratelli Treves Editori, Milan, 1891, p 332
4
Foreign Minister Pasquale Mancini, January 27, 1885:
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 1
, p 182
5
Dizionario Biografico De Guberatis
, Firenze, 1879
6
Former army officer Cesare Pini, who served in Eritrea, recalled a âflood' of death sentences in Asmara following the Massawa scandal.
Haunted by those executionsâhe said he bore personal witness to around 40âhe was struck by the fortitude shown by the condemned: âI never saw a single one of those blacks, even those who were very young, almost boys, humiliate himself, rage or weep: not once!'
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale,
Vol 1, p 447
7
Achille Bizzoni,
L'Eritrea nel passato e nel presente
, Milano, Sonzogno, 1897
8
For more on this episode,
see
Massimo Romandini, âIl “dopo Adua” di Ferdinando Martini, governatore civile in Eritrea',
Studi Piacentini
, 20, 1996, pp 177â204; Massimo Romandini, âDa Massaua ad Asmara: Ferdinando Martini in Eritrea nel 1891',
La Conoscenza dell'Asia e dell'Africa nel X1X Secolo
, vol III, 1989, pp 911â33; Robert Battaglia,
La Prima Guerra d'Africa
, Einaudi, 1958;
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 1
, pp 435â61
9
For more on colonial theories of biological determinism,
see
Sven Lindqvist,
Exterminate all the Brutes
, Granta Books, 1992
Chapter 3 The Steel Snake
1
The idiosyncrasies of Eritrea's system have won it a keen following amongst railway experts around the world. For details,
see
âRailways Administration in Eritrea', Imperial Ethiopian Government, 1965. âEritreaâRebirth of a Railway', a video by Nick Lera, Locomotion Pictures, tracks the rehabilitation project; www.trainweb.org/eritrean has a site dedicated to the subject and a book by Jennie Street is due to be published by Rail Romances in 2006
2
Richard Pankhurst,
The Ethiopians: a History
, Blackwell, 2001
3
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 1
, p 740
4
Ferdinando Martini,
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 1
, Vallecchi Editore, 1946, p1
5
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 1
, Foreword
6
ibid
7
ibid
8
ibid, p 165
9
ibid, p 29
10
ibid, p 60
11
ibid, p 23
12
ibid, p 165
13
ibid, p 159
14
ibid, p 89
15
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 2
, p 121
16
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 1
, p 758
17
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 3
, p 328
18
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 1
, p 3
19
ibid, p 94
20
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 3
, p 3
21
ibid, p 424
22
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 4
, pp 48â9
23
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 3
, p 248
24
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 2
, p 472;
see also
, Massimo Romandini, âIl Problema Scolastico Nella Colonia Eritrea: Gli Anni 1898â1907',
Africa
, September 1984
25
Massimo Romandini, âFerdinando Martini ad Addis Ababa',
Miscellanea di storia delle esplorazioni geografiche
, IX, Genoa, 1984, pp 201â43
26
Il Diario Eritreo, Vol 4
, p 606
27
Author's interview
28
Emilio de Bono,
Anno XIII: The Conquest of an Empire
, Cresset Press, 1937; Angelo del Boca,
The Ethiopian War 1935â1941
, University of Chicago Press, 1969, p 4
29
The Ethiopian War 1935â1941
, p 21
30
The Ethiopian War 1935â1941
, p 210
31
Giorgio Maria Sangiorgio, see
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 3
, p 219
32
Richard Pankhurst, âThe Legal Question of Racism in Eritrea during the British Military Administration',
Northeast African Studies
, vol 2, part 2, 1995; Richard Pankhurst, âFascist Racial Policies in Ethiopia 1922â1941',
Ethiopia Observer
12, pp 92â127
33
Martino Moreno, head of political affairs at the Ministry; see
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 3
, p 239
34
Araia Tseggai, âHistorical Analysis of Infrastructural Development in Italian Eritrea 1885â1941', Part 2,
Journal of Eritrean Studies
, vol 1, no 2, 1987; see also
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 3
, pp 236â23
35
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 3
, p 239
36
Gazetta del Popolo
, May 21, 1936. Once again, top-level attempts to prevent interbreeding proved stunningly unsuccessful. In 1950, the Associazione Meticci dell'Eritrea estimated the number of half-castes
at 25,000, although that number, confusingly, included Eritrean mothers
37
Author's interview
Chapter 4 This Horrible Escarpment
1
âRetrospect'âLecture by Lieutenant-General Sir William Platt, Khartoum, 1941
2
AJ Barker,
Eritrea 1941
, Faber and Faber, 1966
3
The tale of the Italian officer who staged the cavalry charge is told in Sebastian O'Kelly,
Amedeo: A true story of love and war in Abyssinia
, HarperCollins, 2002
4
Imperial War Museum, London; Sound Archives 7373/3 A
5
Archibald Harrington, Imperial War Museum; Sound Archives 8332/7 A
6
âRetrospect'
7
Author's interview
8
Eritrea 1941
, p 101
9
Peter Cochrane,
Charlie Company
, Chatto & Windus, 1977, p 64
10
Imperial War Museum, 7373/3 A
11
Eritrea 1941
, p 136
12
âRetrospect'
13
Author's interview
14
Charlie Company
, p 72
15
Imperial War Museum, 7373/3 A
16
General Nicola Carnimeo,
Cheren
, Casella Editore, 1950, p 212
17
âRetrospect'
18
Alberto Rovighi,
Le Operazione in Africa Orientale, Vol 1
, Officio Storico SME, Rome, 1995, p 256;
Gli Italiani in Africa Orientale, Vol 3
, p 433
19
âThe Abyssinian Campaigns', The Official Account, London, 1942, p46
20
MAJ Trimmer, West Yorkshire Regiment, letter of September 1942
21
Imperial War Museum 7373/3 A
Chapter 5 The Curse of the Queen of Sheba
1
GKN Trevaskis,
Eritrea, a Colony in Transition
, Oxford University Press, 1960, p 21
2
Commander Edward Ellsberg, a former US naval officer, was sent
to Eritrea in 1941 to clear the scuttled ships from Massawa port. He must have been in charge of the shipyard labourers from whom Cicoria learned his skills. Ellsberg was nonplussed by the scene that met him on Asmara's streets. âApparently every Italian officer captured in the East African campaign the year before was out, magnificently caparisoned, strutting along the Viale Mussoliniâ¦Every one of these prisoners of war was armedâclinging from his waist was an automatic pistol protruding from its holster! There were enough armed Italian officers in sight easily to take over the country.' Edward Ellsberg,
Under the Red Sea Sun
, Dodd, Mead and Sons, 1946
3
The Jewish prisoners were highly inventive, digging tunnels, donning mocked-up British army uniforms, requisitioning buses and disguising themselves as Arab women in their attempts to escape across the border. David Cracknell, deputy police commissioner in Asmara at the time, told the author his men once fished Yitzhak Shamir from the tank of a water container in which he had been hiding, hoping to pass through police checkpoints unnoticed. Cracknell was proud of the fact that 106 of the 107 men who escaped from Sembel internment camp were recaptured. Eliyahu Lankin was the only man to slip through his clutches, reaching Djibouti via Addis. âI'll never forget that name,' Cracknell said
4
Author's interview
5
Richard Pankhurst, âThe Legal Question of Racism in Eritrea during the British Military Administration',
Northeast African Studies
, vol 2, part 2, 1995
6
The political scene was always more complicated than this summary suggests. Woldeab Woldemariam, regarded as the founding father of the Eritrean independence movement, was a Christian highlander who started his political career with the Unionist Party. Moslems were not the only citizens suspicious of Ethiopia, and not all those who believed in Union were Christians
7
Wilfred Thesiger,
Arabian Sands
, Penguin, 1985
8
For an exhaustive account of the theories surrounding the Ark's location, see Graham Hancock,
The Sign and the Seal
, William Heinemann, 1993. Hancock concludes, somewhat surprisingly, that the Ark may well be in Axum
9
Translation used by Miguel Brooks,
Kebra Negast, The Glory of the Kings
, The Red Sea Press, 1995
10
Author's interview
11
SKB Asante,
Pan-African Protest: West Africa and the Italo-Ethiopian Crisis 1934â1941
, Longmans, 1977, p 60
12
Report of the United Nations Commission for Eritrea, General Assembly, Fifth Session, Supplement No 8 (A/1285), New York, 1950, p 46
13
âThe Ethiopian Revolution and the Problem in Eritrea', cited in David Pool, âThe Eritrean CaseâEthiopia and Eritrea: the precolonial period', Research and Information Centre on Eritrea, Rome, 1984
14
ibid
15
Massimo Romandini, âFerdinando Martini ad Addis Ababa',
Miscellanea di Storia delle esplorazioni geografiche IX
, Genoa, 1984
Chapter 6 The Feminist Fuzzy-Wuzzy
1
FO 371/108261, Public Record Office, Kew