First American Edition 1986
THE RED SEA PRESS,
556 Bellevue Avenue.,
Trenton, N.J. 08618
Copyright © John Markakis
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in
any form or by any means electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior
written permission of the publishers.
Cover design by Adjoa Jackson-Burrowes
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 85-62178
ISBN: 0-923415-04-0 Cloth
ISBN: 0-923415-05-9 Paper
To the brave youth of Ethiopia
May its vision of the future never darken
SUDAN
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KENYA
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E.T-HIOPIA
l'~OVl~CIAL "V"ION'
C.A~llAL~ e
MAJO~ TOWt.lS O
50MALIA
Go nda,
MAJOR LANGUAGES OF ETHIOPIA
A~n Ga<ta - T,gre ~ Somal• /// r,grai ,'/,
,, ., $idama \\\
Gunge I 11 Alar ; II -- Soho '// e.ia ,'~~ Undasihed
111
RELIGIONS OF ETHIOPIA
MAJOR AREAS OF CONCENTRATION
Contents
In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
PART ONE: THE ANCIEN REGIME
1. The Feudal Foundation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 1
2. Imperialism and Transformation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
3 . Peripheral Capitalism and Development . . . . . . . . . 44
4. Capitalism and Agriculture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
5. Eritrea . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
6. A Post Mortem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
PART TWO: THE REVOLUTION
7. The February Revolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
8. The Soldiers' Revolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
PART THREE: THE MILITARY REGIME
9 . Reforms and Contradictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
10. Dictatorship and Counter-Revolution . . . . . . . . . . . 146
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178
Salute the dead
because they died
Salute the dead
for they made living possible
Salute the ones who have given life to the future
by becoming the past
(An unnamed Ethiopian revolutionary poet)
Introduction to ·American Edition
political struggle was raging in Ethiopia when this book was
written. Though many groups were involved, essentially it was a
lhr-~-~ c~orn.en:~d_~Q!1f!u;t involving the IJ}jl_itary., who claimed
control of the state following the overthrow of the imperial
regime, the c~~Llia]).~,.QQQOsitio.n which forcefully contested the
soldiers'. ~laim, and the nationalist liberatipJ! .. JP..Q~ill~S that J
we~e striving to detaclr--rtreir"'te-gr~ffi5mthe Ethiop~~~
· was conce ecnrs-·~rsuifimary15Te~11tation·TI1c omp1ex
events that were little known, and even less understood, abroad.
Its purpose was to lend support to those who were fighting at
that time to establish popular democratic foundations for their
country's political future and who acknowledged the rights of
national minorities for self-expression and autonomy. We
argued that imposition of military rule was inimical to the cause
of popular participation and the aspiration for a socialist
transformation. Neither surprisingly or undeservedly, our work
attracted considerable criticism. Those who regarded the
military intervention as a positive factor dubbed this argument
an extremist 'betrayal of the revolution' thesis, while those who
regarded the Dergue as the embodiment of the revolution
denounced it simply as 'counter-revolutionary'.
The. batt!~£.J~9~- -9.~.9JJ!!L~ . .rY!~ .. .hA-~.!l~-~<~-,l~~.:... The
civilian opposition was destroyed, and the regime was able to
consolidate its hold on the state. The Ethiopian Peoples
Revolutionary Party, MEI SON, and lesser groups were
obliterated leaving the field clear for the regime to fashion its
own politi~al support structures. Achieved with great violence,
this victory was not without a price for Ethiopia. A generation
of militants was neutralized; its members dead, self-exiled, or
cowed into pass1v1ty. The revolutionary ferment they had
sustained for several years died down, and it was in stagnant
political waters that the Workers Party of Ethiopia was founded
in 1984. This party can be counted upon to provide reliable
political support for military rule, but it can hardly be said to
constitute an alternative to it. It appears that the destruction of
the Left condemned Ethiopia to an indefinite period of
authoritarian rule by its soldiers, a heavy burden for any
country to bear.
The ongoing conflict has narrowed to a contest between the
regime and the nationalist movements. The continuation and
steady escalation of this bloody struggle into the tenth year after
the revolution underlines a crucial feature of the incumbent
regime. This is its determination to preserve, at all costs, both
the domain and the highly centralized structure of the state it
inherited from the ancien regime. The enormity of this task has
dwarfed all other national concerns for a decade. Its cost has
been enormous and continues to mount, while progress in other
fields awaits its outcome which remains uncertain. Locked in
this struggle, Ethiopia's rulers were unable to prevent the onset
or to halt the growth of a famine ten times worse than the
disaster of 1972-74. Thus, the tenth anniversary of the
revolution that had been proclaimed in their name found many
thousands of Ethiopian peasants dying of starvation and
millions of others facing the same fate, while many of their
compatriots trekked to refugee camps in neighboring countries
to find relief.
Writing an introduction to the second printing of this book, I
see little reason to revise the tentative conclusions we reached
some eight years ago.
John Markakis
Crete, 1985
1 1
In Memoriam
The notion to write this volume was conceived in the summer
of 1975. It was Nega Ayele who first broached it, during my
visit to a famine relief station, at the edge of the plateau overlooking the Danakil desert, in Wallo province. The station was
operated by the University and Nega was in charge of it. I
hadn't se~n him for six years. He was much heavier than the
slim student I had known in the late 1960s, and wore a beard,
as did nearly everyone else at the time. His health, never too
good, had deteriorated markedly, but his spirits were high. It
was a time of exuberant hope. The campaign in the countryside
was in full swing, and the students and teachers who participated
were determined to make the most of it. The University team
was distributing grain, teaching the nomads to plough, digging
a canal to divert the waters of a river for irrigation, and teaching
young shepherds to read. It had also organized peasant associations, operated a clinic, prepared to set up a clothmaking cooperative, and was planning a dozen other projects, all new and
wondrous things to the peasants of the isolated district which
had been devastated by the famine.
Peasants, students and teachers worked together. It was a
time of mutual acquaintance, not without surprises and second
thoughts. The peasants could not quite grasp the notion of
outsiders coming in their midst with selfless motives, particularly when they had the authority of government. They were
inclined to see the students as agents of the new regime, and
exasperated Nega by calling him 'governor'. The students marvelled at the peasants' wit and loquacity, and were disturbed
by their deviousness, a defence mechanism honed to perf ec-
_tion during ages of oppression. In fact, many of the students
12 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
were of peasant origin, but had been insulated from their past
through long years of schooling in the towns. Nega himself
was born into a peasant family in Gojjam province. After taking
a degree in political science at the University, he studied for a
master's degree in the United States, and returned in 1974 to
join the teaching staff. Now he recalled his past through flashes
of recognition. 'This is exactly what my father once said', he
would say after an exchange with some wizened peasant.
Most evenings, after a meagre supper, the campaigners
gathered around the fire. Gaunt bearded figures and pigtailed
girls in khaki uniforms, most of them in their teens, talked of
the day's events, exchanged impressions, gave voice to their
misgivings. Their relationship with the peasants was their main
concern. How could the gap be bridged? How could they
identify with the peasant and his problems? How could they
help him assert himself in a world which lay beyond his understanding? Invariably the talk turned to the political situation
and the military regime. Voices turned hoarse with emotion,
and daylight optimism gave way to gloomy, even desperate
thought. How could they hope to persuade the peasant to
seize the initiative when men with uniforms and guns were
still enforcing the orders of a distant government. Had anything
changed in that respect? Weren't they, themselves, acting as
agents of that government? Shouldn't they abandon the campaign and return to the cities to battle against the regime?
Oughtn't that to be the first priority?
Nega did not attempt to soothe their feelings. The nationalization of a few factories and the extension of a smallholding
pattern of land tenure throughout the country, he said, would
not alter the situation of Ethiopia materially. Only a thorough
mobilization of the masses in a planned development effort
could accomplish that task. The masses in their vast majority
were peasants, and the peasantry would not respond to any
government which did not truly represent it. Only a popular
government could give them this chance. That had been the
goal of the popular movement, which was betrayed by the
intervention of the military. The soldiers were not going to
relinquish power; it had to be wrested from them. However,
only an organized movement could hope to accomplish that.
IN MEMORIAM 13
Therefore, organization was the highest priority. Nodding
towards the students who were returning to their tents one
night, Nega predicted: 'They will fight, you'll see.'
These were still the halcyon days of the revolution, and I
was surprised and disturbed by the intensity of such feelings.
Nega and I talked at length, and he was surprised, in tum, by
what he called my 'illusions' regarding the true nature of the
new regime. He was also disturbed to learn that these were
generally shared by people abroad. He suggested that I study
the matter at greater depth and, while I was at it, write something on it that others could read. I proposed that we work
together and Nega agreed. Soon afterwards, he took leave and
came to Addis Ababa. For several weeks we sat in his office
at the University, sifting through and discussing the material
available. Colleagues on their way to and from their campaign
stations dropped in and joined the discussion, offering fresh
data and viewpoints. Nega left to return to Wallo, and I continued on my own. Colleagues, former students and friends,
many of them recently appointed to responsible posts, were
able and eager to help. The result was a wealth of information
that proved truly embarassing, since the first draft turned out
to be a bloated piece, which Nega pronounced simply 'terrible'.
A mutual friend at the University was asked to help. A leading
political activist with a brilliant mind, he outlined a new approach which turned out to be quite suitable. In the hope that
he remains alive, though long now a captive of the regime, our
friend must remain nameless.
I returned to Addis Ababa the following summer. Ethiopia's
quaint capital had the oppressive air of a town under alien
occupation. The campaign in the countryside was over, and
returned students thronged the streets staring at the army jeeps
patrolling the city. The season of mass discontent had set in;
the regime had bared its fangs. Ethiopians were learning to
dread the shrill traditional war song which introduced the ever
more frequent execution announcements over the radio. Nega
was back at the University. His health continued to deteriorate.
He seemed fatalistically resigned about it. 'It doesn't matter
how long you live, if you can accomplish something during that
time', he said. We discussed the manuscript, but it was obvious
-~
14 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
that Nega's mind was not on it. He was preoccupied by things
I knew nothing about. A sense of foreboding filled the air. We
drank a lot, and said little. People who had been close friends,
had now grown distant. Familiar faces were missing from
Nega's circle of friends. I had not heard of their being arrested.
'They've disappeared', Nega said with a smile, when I mentioned it.
Nega himself disappeared in September 1976, when the
battle against the military dictatorship was joined in earnest.
His name was entered on the regime's wanted list; in effect,
an automatic death sentence. He managed to avoid capture for
several months. On 10 March 1977, Nega and two of his comrades were caught inside a factory at the town of Akaki, near
Addis Ababa, and were murdered on the spot. Three days later,
the newspapers announced that he had been killed while trying
to run away. In fact, Nega's leg muscles had been wasted· by a
debilitating disease, and he could walk only with difficulty.
His story is told here not because it is unique, but because
it is typical of an uncommon generation of young people, for
whom life itself was not the highest end.
John Markakis
Athens, May 1977
15
Introduction
Not so long ago, an erudite member of the ruling class drew a
portrait of the typical Ethiopian. He depicted his compatriots
as a people who are innately conscious and respectful of class
status. The typical Ethiopian, he wrote,
'/ by instinct, he knows what he is, what is the exact measure of the
'(\ place which he occupies within his family, and at what height is found
S
t; the level occupied by his family in the social scale. He is convinced that
it is the Good God himself who put him where he is and put the others /y~ where they are, but he tries to elevate himself all the same by his merit.
However, in his respect for those who are placed higher than he, he
entertains always a sentiment that is quasi-mystical, and he accommodates himself with good grace and never transgresses.
1
This complacent view of social inequity enjoyed the formidable
support of the Ethiopian Church, the venerable custodian of the
country's dominant culture. Not long afterwards, the chief administrator of .l,.J,J.u.i;:1.iJ.L~~~-t'-w,1,,,o.~.w..n-his-own-tltt>tigh,ts.,.011.,..n
the subject. e described a social hierarchy comprising four
eves; 1gh, middle, low and lowest. Fate dictates a man's
position, and its edict is unchallengeable and unchangeable.
'Therefore, any human creature should keep his position in the
hierarchy and should know his capacity', he wrote, 'and if he
lives according to the position assigned to him by Fate, he will
not be 1mse or 't'W~~'2
=--------.....,
ile Ethiopians in all sectors of society were per ec y
1. Mahteme Selassie Wolde Maskal, 'Portrait de l'ethiopien typique'. Paper presented
at the Third International Conference of Ethiopian Studies, Addis Ababa, 1966,
p.6.
2. Amde Tsion Tessema, Bahl na Siltane (Tradition and Civilization), Addis Ababa,
1967, p.50.
16 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
aware of their position in the social structure, apparently not
all shared the complacency and self-satisfaction expressed in
these views. Indeed, an increasing number had begun to reject
the supernatural in favour of purely mundane conceptions of
the human condition. 'We shouldn't follow only scientific
and philosophical lines', warned our Church author. 'To be
sophisticated in knowledge and progress, to work and climb up
in the hierarchy, to profit in trade and produce through farming, all these are gifts of God or Fate. '
3 The warnings were
obviously to no avail. Before much time had elapsed, the ranks
of the doubters grew to become legion, and their combined
strength easily toppled the sacrosanct hierarchy, bringing down
to earth a class of men who believed themselves ordained to rule
over their fellows.
Today one might well wonder what caused the typical
Ethiopian to transgress so violently against the ordained social
order. What led the low and the lowest of the low to attempt to
seize Fate and bend it to their own requirements? Why were the
former ruling classes incapable of resisting this onslaught? Was
this, their end, fated as well? If Fate is to be dispensed with
from now onwards, what forces will determine the pattern of
a new social structure in Ethiopia?
This study represents a modest effort to suggest plausible
answers to these and related queries. The key to them will be
sought in the evolving relationships between the various social
classes of Ethiopia, before and after the 197 4 revolution. Though
cast in a feudal mould, the ancien regime was not immune to
change. During the first half of this century, social and political
transformation was induced as a result of the great expansion of
the Ethiopian state southwards. Subsequently, economic and
social change was promoted by endogenous forces interacting
with western capitalism. This connection fostered a degree of
modernization, which also served as a facade for development.
The true nature of such development lay in the swift ripening of
social contradictions within...the_Q_od of a socieJy..r_i_y_~.!!..QY class . 1 cleava e , · . . . -ocess was:ilie -j'
opular revolt of 1974. ur first task is to depict the changing
3. Ibid.
INTRODUCTION 17
position and altering relationships among the various social
classes during the lifetime of the farmer regime. This process of
fairly rapid evolution, the prelude to revolution, is traced in the
first part of this study.
Part Two follows the course of the revolutionary current
since it broke through the medieval dam in February 1974. The
uprising brought together a number of social groups in a spontaneous, convergent, but unorganized and leaderless assault on
the imperial regime. Among the active participants were the
lower levels of the armed forces, the first sector to have its
established hierarchy disintegrate as the result of class conflict.
When the beleaguered regime began to crumble, and before the
popular movement could evolve its own organization and political leadership, the soldiers thrust themselves forward to claim
power, and the revolution was diverted into the stagnant
channel of military rule. The enthronement of the military
dictatorship betrayed the popular movement by rejecting the
basic demand for a people's government.
In an effort to gain support, the military regime proved
responsive to other popular aspirations, and adopted for its own
a number of proposals for economic and social reform advocated by the country's progressive elements. On the basis of
these accomplishments, it claimed legitimacy in the name of
revolutionary socialism. This claim, and the soldiers' often contradictory behaviour, created considerable initial confusion
at home, and seemingly lasting perplexity abroad. Nevertheless, the regime was not able to impose itself as a credible
political force in Ethiopia. On the contrary, it soon became the
target of a concerted and increasingly militant opposition on
the part of the same social groups which had initiated and sustained the revolt against the ancien regime. The character of the
new regime became clarified in the struggle to contain this
opposition. The facade of collective leadership was violently
tom to reveal the consolidation of a personalized dictatorship
based on force of arms, a familiar enough type. Its primary
goal, equally commonplace, was to cling to power at all cost.
However banal this might seem, it threatened to have profound
consequences for the popular movement and the future of
Ethiopia. The annihilation of the progressive forces became the
18 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
essential requirement for the regime's survival, and the ruling
clique set about this task with ruthless determination. Regrouped
underground, militant elements of the popular movement fought
back with grim tenacity, suffering heavy losses, while succeeding
in exposing the hollowness of the regime's revolutionary creed.
The outcome of the new struggle lies in the future. The forces
and factors involved are described in the last chapter of our study.
PART I
The Ancien
Regime
. '
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21
Chapter 1
The Feudal Foundation
Geography and history endowed Ethiopia with two distinct
regional profiles; conventionally, if not precisely, denoted as
North and South.* The distinction is not simply geographical,
nor merely-~ historical. I ts importance compels us to consider
each region separately, and we begin with the North for reasons
that will become obvious. Our aim is to depict briefly the
traditional class structure in both regions by analysing the
dominant economic relationship between social classes. This
relationship concerns land and its produce.
Unlike nearly everywhere else in sub-Saharan Africa, land in
he northern highlands of Ethiopia was never abund~nt. Indeed - ,
the ·ratio· of population to land is rev·erseclhere:anJ people have
been forced to till increasingly diminishing plots of declining ------...-- ,.. - ......... ____ ~ -------- ........... _ ...a....-
p rod ucti vi.ty caused by continuous use over the centuries. Con-··
sequently, the value o~ d as an instrument of production has
always ranked very highly, anc;Lposs.ession.of it has always been
a factor of paramount socio-economic significance. The use of .. ~--~- ·.,...,._,_ ... .-:-..r..1--..-~---~-1•~ ·----- -·~---........ ·- ... . - ·,•-----
the ox-pulled plough made intensive cultivation·· possible, and a
regular surplus was produced. The surplus was adequate enough
to support -a c ass-cl1Vttre'trsociety representing t~~~Jtinjty
of peaS3!_1,!~ w~rrj.9r-xule~_.i!,!1 ... d. priest. The relations of production
exhibfied the intricacy charac teristic of Afric n s ste_ms.-anclarh
not easily reduced to conventional cate ories Briefly and very
---sfmply, ih'eyaree ·xpressed in two basic kinds of rights super- ,
imposed over the same area of land. The foundation of the
stem is the peasant's right to a share of land derived from his
* A ugh dividing c wash rivers with
Addis Ababa at the centre. Shoa province in central Ethiopia is bisected by this line.
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