Ethiopia was colonised

By Mastewal Taddese Terefe
June 21, 2017
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We kept the imperialists at bay, but it wasn’t enough.
"Growing up in Ethiopia, fluency in English was considered a mark of
progress and elite status." Credit: UNICEF Ethiopia.

“Growing up in Ethiopia, fluency in English was considered a mark of
progress and elite status.” Credit: UNICEF Ethiopia.

Like many African countries that were colonised by the British,
Ethiopia’s educational system strongly privileges the English
language. I learnt this first hand going through school in the capital
Addis Ababa.

Along with my classmates across the vast country, I was taught in my
local language from Grades 1 to 6 (ages 6 to 12). But after that, the
language of instruction switched. History, maths, sciences and the
rest were now taught in English, while Ethiopia’s official language
Amharic became its own separate subject.

Growing up in Ethiopia, fluency in English was considered a mark of
progress and elite status. At my school, we were not only encouraged
to improve our proficiency, but made to feel our future depended on
it. When I was in grade 4, one of my tasks as a class monitor was to
note down names of classmates I heard speaking Amharic during English
lessons or lunchtime. Our teacher would enforce a 5-cent penalty for
every Amharic word that slipped through our lips during lessons.

At the same time, we were proudly educated in Western history and
literature. I learnt to take pleasure in reading books in English. I
listened to American songs. And I looked to emulate the lives of the
people I saw in Hollywood films.

At primary and secondary school, we were taught about Ethiopian
history too. But many aspects of the country – from its philosophy to
its architecture to its unique methods of mathematics and time-keeping
– were neglected. I left school feeling I lacked a coherent
understanding of my country’s history. And today, like most of my
classmates, I would struggle to write even a short essay in Amharic.

My experience no doubts resonates with many people across Africa,
where colonialism elevated European languages and history in the
education system while devaluing local languages, methods of
instruction, and histories. This is what has spurred vigorous
movements across the continent today calling for the academy to be
decolonised.

The strange thing though is that Ethiopia was never colonised in the
first place.
Native colonialism

So how did the country’s school system come to be the way it is?
According to Yirga Gelaw Woldeyes’ brilliant new book, Native
Colonialism: Education and the Economy of Violence Against Traditions
in Ethiopia, the answer is that Ethiopia was “self-colonised” and that
education played a big part.

In the academic’s extensive study, he sets out to show “how and at
what cost western knowledge became hegemonic in Ethiopia”. He suggests
that the 1868 British expedition to Abyssinia, which resulted in the
British looting massive national treasures and intellectual resources
that Emperor Tewodros II had accumulated over time, was a turning
point in Ethiopians’ perception of power. Although the Emperor’s
defeat in Magdala did not result in the country’s colonisation, it
brought about a new, outward-looking consciousness. “This reaction to
the European gaze created the desire to acquire European weapons in
order to defend the country from Europe,” writes Woldeyes.

Successive rulers maintained a contradictory relationship with Europe
– between friendship and enmity – until Emperor Haile Selassie, who
ruled up to 1974, initiated a period of radical westernisation
post-WW2. In that process, Woldeyes explains, Haile Selassie entrusted
certain elites to establish Ethiopia’s modern education system. This
group was educated in Western languages and teachings. They embraced
European epistemology as a singular, objective basis of knowledge,
seeing it as synonymous with “modernity” and naturally superior to the
local.

These elites, who Woldeyes refers to as “native colonisers”,
introduced a system of education into Ethiopia that mimicked Western
educational institutions. Contributions from traditional Ethiopian
educators such as elders, religious leaders, and customary experts
were squeezed out.

The result is that Ethiopia’s schools came to lack a meaningful
connection with the culture and traditions of the communities in which
they are located. Instead, they prepare students in the skill of
imitation using copied curricula and foreign languages. Schooling
today, argues Woldeyes, is as much a process of unlearning local
tradition as it is about learning the art of foreign imitation.

This disconnect at the heart of Ethiopian teaching has many negative
ramifications. An education that doesn’t speak to students’ lived
experience limits their capacity to create, innovate, and deliver
solutions to problems in their surrounding world. It leads young
Ethiopians to feel alienated from their own culture, lowers
self-esteem, and leads to a disoriented sense of identity.

Moreover, without a comprehensive understanding of their country’s
history and politics, graduates lack the knowledge and skills to
confront the nation’s ongoing problems.
Text kills, meaning heals

In Native Colonialism, Woldeyes does not stop at diagnosing the
problem. He goes on to propose remedies – namely that the education
system be reconstituted on the foundations of Ethiopia’s “rich legacy
of traditional philosophy and wisdom”.

He argues that: “before the rise of western knowledge as the source of
scientific truth, one’s political and social status in Ethiopia was
justified on the basis of traditional beliefs and practices”. In the
tradition of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido Church, he says,
education was not a means to an end, but part of “an endless journey”
of knowledge-seeking. This quest was grounded in the two core values
of wisdom and humility.

Woldeyes argues that we need to put these core values back at the
centre of the country’s education, which should reflect indigenous
beliefs, knowledges and philosophies. This does not mean foreign ideas
should be rejected. Students should be exposed to a variety of
teachings. But they should, he says, be disseminated through an
Ethiopian frame of reference.

Woldeyes argues that this approach was the norm in Ethiopian education
for centuries. Through trade and diplomatic relations, scholarship
from as far as Asia and Europe has been making its way to Ethiopia for
hundreds of years. But traditionally, scholars did not simply
translate these works into local languages.

Instead, they used an Ethiopian interpretative paradigm called
Tirguamme “to evaluate the relevance and significance of knowledge”.
Woldeyes defines this as “a process that searches for meaning by
focusing on the multiplicity, intention, irony and beauty of a given
text”. This unique process of inquiry is based on a traditional
principle that literally translates as “text kills, but meaning
heals”. It is apparent in different Ethiopian cultural practices such
as the multi-layered poetic practice of “wax and gold”, allegorical
puzzle games, the art of judicial debating, and storytelling.

Woldeyes’s methodology offers a potential framework for reforming the
current education system in Ethiopia. It envisions a system of
education centred on local priorities and ways of being, whilst also
incorporating ideas from around the world.
Decolonising the academy

Woldeyes’s ground-breaking analysis demonstrates that despite the fact
that no colonial power managed to conquer Ethiopia, the country did
not escape being colonised in other ways.

Moreover, his study shows that decolonising education across Africa
will require an investigation of how indigenous epistemologies were
violently discarded. It will also entail a critical study of the modes
of scholarship previously side-lined as “traditional”.

Woldeyes’s research suggests that the decolonisation movement cannot
be confined to the four walls of elite educational institutions. It
must reach out beyond to members of society that were previously
closed out, such as traditional leaders, elders, and others.

Emperor Tewodros believed that Ethiopia needed European weapons to
defend the country from Europe. Today, we may need native
epistemologies to take back the country from native colonisation.


Mastewal Taddese Terefe

Mastewal Taddese Terefe is a student at New York University School of
Law. She has earned a Master's degree in Public Policy from Oxford
University and a Bachelor's degree in Political Science from NYU Abu
Dhabi. In 2013, she o-founded a youth initiative to improve the
quality of secondary education in Ethiopia.

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