| Pankhurst's Corner continues this
week on the theme of heritage preservation, highlighting the nation's
precious trove of rare manuscripts. The professor illuminates us
on efforts underway in various initiatives, to maintain and establish
the repositories of Ethiopian antiquity.
Ethiopia's Historic Heritage and the Struggle
for its Preservation
(Continued from previous issue)
Manuscripts form an important part of Ethiopia's heritage. - a heritage
which has suffered greatly from depredation by foreigners.
Ethiopia's heritage suffered greatly as a result of the looting
by the British of Emperor Tewodros' capital at Maqdala in 1868.
The entire church collection of around a thousand volumes was seized.
Some four hundred were carried off to Britain, while the residue
was dissipated among lesser churches on the British route to the
coast.
***
Other booty taken by the British included two royal crowns; the
imperial seal; processional crosses; tabots, or movable altars;
church paraphernalia; jewelry, weapons and clothing; large marquee-type
tents - and the icon of the Qwer'ata Re'su, or Christ with the Crown
of Thorns, which Ethiopian rulers had for centuries taken with them
on campaign.
***
Tewodros's successor Emperor Yohannes IV, appealed for the painting's
repatriation to Ethiopia, but was tinformed that Queen Victoria
did "not believe" that it had been taken to England -
though it was in fact at that time in the private possession of
her Librarian at Windsor Castle, Sir Richard Holmes.
The looting of Maqdala is currently condemned in Ethiopia by AFROMET,
the Association for the Return of Maqdala Ethiopian Treasures. It
demands repatriation of the looted articles. This has resulted in
the return of Tewodros's amulet, and sundry manuscripts and weapons
by private individuals - but not, as yet, by any major British museums
or libraries. The National Museum of Kenya has however presented
its Ethiopian counterpart with one of Tewodros's remarkably fine
shields.
***
The French Dakar-Djibouti mission of the early 1930s later played
a highly questionable role, as Anaïs Wyon has shown, when it
persuaded Ethiopian priests in the Gondar area to exchange their
historic wall paintings for more colourful works which the mission
had produced for this fraudulent purpose. Fearing that the presence
of a tabot in their baggage might arouse suspicion they promptly
burnt it.
***.
Considerable illegal export of Ethiopian manuscripts nevertheless
took place in the late 1960s and early1970s. Dishonest persons are
known to have taken genuine old manuscripts, whitened out some of
their pages - thus ruining these antiquities, and filling the whitened
pages with attractive paintings. These, when assumed to be authentic,
greatly increased the manuscript's value.
Over twenty such fabricated "antiques"- examples of which
are on deposit at the Institute of Ethiopian Studies - were exported
to England, with the help of cleverly-executed fake export permits:
Fake permits to export fake manuscripts!
Such dishonest trickery seems to have now been brought to an endand
the illegal export several years ago of a medieval Lalibela cross
was detected in Belgium - and led, through police action, to the
cross's repatriation.
There is however reason to suppose that the illegal export of Ethiopia's
cultural heritage is still going on: the country's frontiers are
wide, and smuggling not so difficult.
A related problem arises from the fact that some Ethiopian churchmen
are currently attracted by the high prices offered for crosses and
other historic treasures, and are disposing of the latter to dealers
linked to the tourist trade.
Such sales, it should be emphasised, are not necessarily either
illegal or immoral, for antiquity-owners, be they private individuals
or institutions, would seem to have the right to sell their property
- especially when facing major financial or other difficulties.
Such articles should however be acquired, wherever possible, by
reputable museums, ecclesiastical or lay.
Ethiopia's manuscript heritage should be preserved also by microfilming
of important or rare works. This was done in the past by various
individuals and organizations, most notably UNESCO, Professor Ernst
Hammerschmidt, of Hamburg, and by the EMML or Ethiopian Manuscript
Microfilm Library, in Collegeville, Minnesota.
It is highly regrettable that EMML microfilming in Ethiopia came
to an end at the time of the Ethiopian Revolution of 1974 - and
has not been resumed. No organization has emerged to fill the gap
produced by EMML's disappearance.
It would seem highly imperative that manuscript microfilming be
recommenced - and that it be extended to include Islamic manuscripts
(which were never included in EMML's work).
Islamic manuscripts, I would recall, are for the most part written
on paper (unlike Ge'ez manuscripts, which are mainly on parchment)
- Islamic manuscripts are therefore of particular need of protection).
***
So far we have been considering Ethiopia's material culture. A word
must be added about the country's literary heritage. Ethiopians
have developed a particularly rich store of folklore, proverbs,
poetry, folktales, children's stories and the like. Not a few ordinary
conversations will make reference to traditional sayings. Much such
material has been collected, and published, by individual scholars,
many of them Italians, such as Guidi, Conti Rossini, Cerulli and
Moreno - but much more work, including institutional research, in
this area is required if valuable linguistic an literary traditions
are not to be lost.
One should also consider the systematic recording of Ge'ez qene,
or ecclesiastical poetry - as Menghestu Lemma and th epresent writer
once did at the Institute of Ethiopian Studies with our serial publication
Qene Collections - and as Alemayehu Moges carried out briefly, but
most usefully, in Gojjam. We need another Alemayahu Moges!
***
The overwhelming importance of oral history must likewise be recognized.
Lip service to this historical source is not sufficient - real systematic
action must be undertaken - before this vast storehouse of knowledge
is lost for ever. And results must be published for all to see,
and study.
***
Ethiopia's traditional culture has been recorded, studied and discussed
over the centuries by scholars from many lands - whose writings
deserve our attention. On the bibliographic side we are greatly
dependent on Hans Lockot's bibliography of works on Ethiopia in
German (1982) - I may add that the Institute of Ethiopian Studies
appeals to Germany for microfilm copies of such German works.
We are all no less indebted to Professor Ulich for publishing Lockot's
corresponding bibliography of work on English (1998).
These two bibliographic publications pose a manifest challenge to
other scholars, particularly to Italian and French scholars to produce
similar bibliographies for works on Ethiopia in their own languages.
The above paragraph is thus an appeal to Italy and France to help
in the production of bibliographies of vital importance not only
for Ethiopian studies, but also for an understanding of Italian
and French scholarship.
We also need similar bibliographies for works in Spanish, Portuguese
and Latin, as well as East European countries and Arabic. Such works
are however available for Russian and Hebrew.
***
It goes without saying that the new Hamburg-based Encyclopaedia
Aethiopica, will be a major source for the investigation of Ethiopia's
historic culture - as of so much else.
Volume 3, out of 5 volumes will be published in a matter of days
- and we should soon be considering how to produce an Amharic translation,
***
In conclusion, returning to the main focus of this and the previous
article I would suggest that the Ethiopian heritage picture is not
as dark as might at first appear.
The later inhabitants of such great civilizations, as Egypt, Greece
and Rome, lost interest in their historic heritage - but later re-found
it. Ethiopia followed - and id following - a similar path. The glory
of ancient Aksum and Gondar was for many centuries forgotten by
later inhabitants of those towns.
But things are changing - and have changed. Ethiopians in recent
years have become increasingly aware - and proud - of their heritage.
They now have a Ministry of Culture - never existing in the past
- expressly committed to the preservation of their heritage. It
is unthinkable that a group of foreign scholars will ever come into
the country and bamboozle the priests to part with their treasures.
Numerous efforts are likewise being made, by Addis Wubet and others,
to preserve historic buildings and other antiquities; as well as
to set up museums, both religious and lay, and to demand the restitution
of looted property.
In this regard the Aksum obelisk returned from Rome will soon be
re-erected - demonstrating that loot can be regained - if demanded
with sufficient resolve.
The dawn of Ethiopia's new Millennium, we may conclude, has opened
the way for a new era in the annals of the country's heritage, and
hopefully will inspire Ethiopia's sons and daughters to struggle
with increasing determination for its preservation.
Ending on a matter I have had occasion to write in the past I would
report that the long-planned project. sponsored by SOFIES, the Society
of Friends of the Institute of Ethiopian Studies (join it today
if you are not already a member!) to establish a New Library for
the Institute of Ethiopian Studies library is at long last advancing
toward fruition - we are led to believe that the beginning of construction
is imminent.
The Library is and will be the world's centre of Ethiopian studies.
Our task must be now to ensure that this fine New Building, designed
by Fasil Ghiorgis, which will soon be rising before our eyes, is
properly stocked. The Library's objective now, as in the past, is
to hold all publications produced in the country, about the country,
or by nationals of the country.
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