HAILE SELASSIE. 1892 – 1975. EMPEROR OF ETHIOPIACHAPTER XI.THE
EMPEROR MENELEK
The Emperor
Theodore, owing largely to a series of family misfortunes, became disturbed in
his reason and thus got into serious political trouble with the British
Government by putting all the European residents in chains, having got the idea
fixed in his mind that they were conspiring against him. Repeated requests by
the British Government for the release of the prisoners having been refused the
Government was forced to send an expeditionary force to release them. This
would have been a very good excuse for the British to have annexed the country,
but having given their word that the release of the prisoners was their only
objective they immediately evacuated the country when this was achieved. Those
who paint King Theodore in terrible colours must at
least remember that though he killed himself he did not harm the prisoners,
which, having decided on suicide he might very well have done.
After
Theodore’s death in 1868 it was the Emperor John who succeeded him as Emperor
of Ethiopia. It was during his reign that Menelek, who first ruled under him as
King of the Shoa Province, began to conceive great ambitions. It was also at
this time that the Italians had been given Massawa, an Egyptian port, because
the Emperor John (to whom the Egyptians had first promised it in return for his
services at the relief of Kassala which was besieged by the Sudan Mahdi) had
felt unable to undertake the responsibility. The Italians, having obtained a
footing on the coast, immediately began to penetrate inland, and thus came
constantly in contact with the Emperor John, whose trusted general Ras Alula
fought them in a dozen minor engagements and always drove them back. Finding it
impossible to make headway in the north the Italians began their Machiavellian
tricks in the south, their victim being King Menelek of Shoa. Finding him young
and ambitious to secure the Imperial crown they promised to supply him with arms
so that he might defeat his suzerain and become Emperor. Being unacquainted
with European diplomacy he accepted their protestations of friendship at their
face value.
The Emperor
John, hearing of this intrigue and of Menelek’s increasing friendship with the
Italian Government, wrote and told him that he would grievously regret placing
any trust in these foreigners whose only aim was to steal. But Menelek, grossly
enthralled by ambition, continued his course of action, and when at length the
valiant and far- seeing Emperor John was killed in battle with the Dervishes,
Menelek, with Italian aid, became Emperor. In gratitude for the Italian help he
handed over the northern province of Hamasen to his
wily friends.
Warqneh C. Martin.
Menelek was of heavy build and slightly over six feet in height. The
most attractive characteristics of his somewhat heavy features were his high
philosopher’s forehead and his frank and laughing eyes in which his power of
clear thought was strikingly visible. His frown was terrible; but when he chose
to exert his charm of manner he had a most winning personality.
His mouth and
his chin indicated strength of character, and his short and rather curly beard,
which he combed with the greatest care, added considerably, when he stroked it,
to the general impression of affability. The lowest of his subjects could
approach him; for he realised that a monarch who wins
the common people has less to fear of his rivals among the aristocracy. Hence
it was sometimes his practice to teach humility to his courtiers, and on one
occasion, having seen a member of his bodyguard, an officer of noble birth,
use unnecessary roughness in clearing an old peasant woman from the royal path,
he stopped his escort and directed that the noble should place the old woman
upon the horse which he was riding and lead her wherever she wished to go.
It is easy to
attribute such actions to oriental strategy and to say that it was the
abasement of the noble which was the king’s purpose rather than the helping of
the old woman. But that is only part of the truth. Menelek went to church with
great regularity, and frequently showed that for all his martial prowess and
the fear with which he inspired his whole realm, he understood the teaching of
Christ concerning humility.
Translation of a Letter sent by the Emperor Menelek of Ethiopia to
Theophilus Waldmeier, in the Year 1871.
In the name of
Jesus Christ of Nazareth, the King of Kings, Lord of Lords, The only true light
which will never be extinguished, The only King who lives for ever and ever. To
Him belongs Honour, Glory and Power for ever. Amen.
This letter is
sent from King Menelek of Ethiopia to Mr. Waldmeier. How are you? I am, thank
God, quite well. My people and my whole kingdom prosper through the mercy of
God. I received your letter which caused me great pleasure. I will hear and
accept your good counsel that the Gospel of Jesus Christ should be preached to
the heathen nations, and I will never hinder or prevent you from proclaiming
the Gospel. Two points in your letter especially gladdened my heart. The first
is that the Gospel of Christ should be preached to the heathen Galla tribes,
and the second is that you will bring some good artizans with you who will work for me. Now, come quickly. I give you permission to
preach the Gospel among the heathens that they should be enlightened. And bring
those men, and also buy me instruments for the work. I have sent for your
journey the sum of one thousand dollars. Receive them from Messrs. Benden &
Mayer in Aden. Send me word when and where you will come that I may receive
you. I send you two copies of this letter, one by Tatschurra and the other by Aden and Massawa. When you come, come by the coast of Tatschurra. I have prepared the road, do not be afraid.
Written in Shoa
in the city of Boussan, May 15th, 1871.
Signed with the
King’s seal—a lion and crown with the sceptre.
There was in
Menelek far more than the force and cleverness of an oriental tyrant who seized
by strength and held by guile the whole of modern Ethiopia. He was in some ways
an idealist, and it is noteworthy that the common people revered him as their
especial protector. His breadth of view was astounding when it is considered
that he met civilisation only through its diplomats.
He did not read a great deal but knew how to listen. And he was renowned for
his prodigious memory.
History, too,
attracted him. He knew how to distinguish fact from legend, and when some
priestly man of letters recited to the court tales of the miraculous deeds of
the saints, the king, though ever courteous in the extreme to holy men, was
known to smile into his beard.
“Alas that we
have no such men nowadays,” he would exclaim. And the priest would be quite
satisfied with this compliment to his story, never suspecting that there was
quiet irony concealed in the words.
He knew that
only by appointing his own representatives to administer outlying areas could
he obtain a real hold of these provinces and make sure that justice was done.
Thus he gradually formed a corps of trusted and well- informed public servants
who could be sent wherever there was need. These men were very different from
the grasping tax gatherers and petty chiefs who had been wont to terrorise the land. When national need compelled it Menelek
was both summary and severe in his confiscation of whatever food supplies were
needful to his campaign, but it was well recognised in his realm that such action was exceptional and designed to meet special
dangers. When the danger was ended he frequently adopted a policy of
compensation to set trade moving again, and twice in time of famine he organised a very competently administered system of relief,
distributing grain from the royal granaries.
Not only did he
set up courts of justice throughout the length and breadth of Ethiopia, but he modernised the code which the courts administered. It is
one of the peculiarities of law that it always lags behind the thought of a
nation. This is so in Britain, where almost within living memory amazing
survivals of Saxon times have been at last abolished. Take ‘deodand ’ as a
fair example— how many people know what this was ? Yet it existed long after
its uses were outworn. Menelek was confronted with much the same sort of
thing. Practices which dated from before Christ were still jealously maintained
by the priesthood. Some of them showed a hopeless confusion of thought; others
were clearly intended to work to the advantage of either priestly of secular
authority. The king did his best to clean them out, but was careful not to
travel too fast for the imaginations of his people.
Often rather
than abrogate an old and illogical law his keen brain devised some means of
circumventing it while still apparently observing its provisions. The classic
example—what our lawyers would probably call a leading case—came before him, it
is said, in the twentieth year of his reign. It arose from a charge of murder,
and presented a nice specimen of the sort of obstinate refusal to think clearly
with which he was continually faced.
A man of some
substance, while climbing a tree to obtain a better shot at the game which he
and a party of his friends were pursuing, slipped and fell upon one of them who
was standing below. By an unfortunate chance he fell in such a way that his
friend was picked up dead with a broken neck.
The relatives
of the dead man claimed that he who had caused death must himself die. Killing
was murder they insisted, and they invoked the ancient law in support of their
claim. No one of any intelligence was deceived by their outcry, which was
obviously directed to that provision of the old code which made a heavy fine
payable to the near kin of the dead man from the wealth of the slayer.
Nevertheless, they persisted, and it was difficult to deny their contentions
since the law read “if any man shall cause the death of another...” and showed
no perception of the distinction between accident and design.
Menelek was
equal to the occasion.
“You have
invoked the Law of Moses,” he told the clamouring relatives of the dead man, “and I will administer it to you justly. None shall
say that there is no justice in my kingdom and that your monarch tampers with
the law.”
There was a
murmur of applause when this sentiment was conveyed to the petitioners by the
officer known as “the breath of the king.” (It is the custom in Ethiopia that
the royal verdict shall always be uttered through a mouthpiece, who is
condemned, by the ancient code, to the most drastic penalties if the king’s
words are altered by him in passing them on.)
“The Law of
Moses says,” continued Menelek, “‘an eye for an eye.’ It further provides that
if a man slay another he shall himself be slain—and in like manner. It is also
the duty and privilege of the slain man’s relatives to execute sentence. I
therefore pronounce that he who has killed must die in the same manner as that
in which he inflicted death. The next of kin of the slain shall climb the tree
and himself fall upon the slayer. This he shall do until death results. This is
my judgment in accord with the Mosaic Law.”
There was a
murmur of discussion among the petitioners. The tree was some thirty feet high.
The dead man’s next of kin was fat. He might well inflict death on anyone he
chanced to fall upon, but the chances were equal that he would suffer it
himself in the process.
He announced at
length that he did not propose to exercise his privilege but would be content
with the fine, for which the law provided.
“Tell him not
so,” said the great Menelek. “He who appeals to the law must take the whole law
or none at all. Release the prisoner, and bring no more such cases before me.
Death by chance is no murder. Let every judge in all Ethiopia hearken to my
words.”
The story
continues that the priests were dissatisfied with the judgment and approached
the king. An ill-deed had been wrought and someone must be punished. It would
bring the law into discredit if nothing were done.
Menelek
listened patiently to their case and gravely considered how he might appease
them.
At length he
asked: “How came the man to fall?”
“A branch of
the tree broke beneath him,” was the reply.
“Then,” said
Menelek, “I find the tree guilty of causing the death of one of my subjects. No
tree shall do such an act and live. It shall not be said that I, Emperor of all
Ethiopia, am not quick to avenge the wrongs which my subjects suffer. The tree
shall be cut down—nay, utterly uprooted, that all may see that I rule justly
and respect the law.”
So the priests
and the dead man’s relatives made a great ceremony of uprooting the tree which
they chopped into many pieces, savagely proclaiming that the dead man was thus
avenged. And the great Menelek smiled into his beard.
Doubtless the
story has lost nothing in the telling. It may well be that it is a modernised version of some ancient tale. But it is related
still with much circumstantial detail by the story-tellers of Ethiopia, and
appeals very much to the sense of humour of the new
generation which is growing up in Addis Ababa, and to whom any triumph over the
old superstitions is good news.
The value of
the story lies not in its literal truth—though there is no reason to doubt
it—but in the fact that a king’s character is bound to emerge in the stories
told concerning him. Whether the actual incident occurred or not is
comparatively unimportant. What matters is that it shows the manner of man
Menelek was, and how his people thought of him.
Another story
which is told in Ethiopia, being attached to the name of any king deemed wiser
than the rest, is also found in many other parts of the world, though it is
specially connected with the wisdom of Jewry. It is said that a father having
died and having left his land equally between his sons, they disputed bitterly
over the details of the actual division.
At length the
king decreed that it was the privilege of the elder son as nearest to the
father to divide the inheritance and was hailed by the elder son as a wise and
righteous judge.
“And you, too,
will deal justly,” said the king. “You swear that you will make the division
equal?”
The elder son
was profuse in his protestations.
“Then,” the
king continued, “it will matter nothing to you that when the property is
divided it shall be for your younger brother to decide which portion he will
take.”
This story is
also related of Menelek. The subtle irony of the king might well have been his.
The British
diplomats were well-liked by Menelek, for they were shrewd enough not to
underrate him. He was secretly amused, but naturally also a little irritated,
by the approach of certain other European representatives who treated him as though
he were a childish savage. On one occasion when a tinkling musical-box was
brought to him as a great curiosity he accepted it graciously and at once, in
the ambassador’s presence, caused it to be conveyed to the women and children
in the palace. This gentle indication that he was not to be won by such toys
was typical of one side of his character. He could show great wrath on
occasion, and this even when he was dealing with Europeans. But when rightly
treated he knew how to express his gratitude. Speaking to the delegation who
were sent to him in 1897 for the purpose of concluding what is now known as the
Rennell Rodd Treaty, he said: “Other nations have treated me as a baby and
given me musical boxes, magic lanterns and mechanical toys. You, on the other
hand, have brought me only what is of real use and value. Never have I seen
such beautiful things before.”
He showed a
great appreciation of the power over disease which the white races exercised by
means of medicine, and he astonished an English visitor in the last years of
his life by saying:
“My body is a
battleground and the powers of evil are gaining the day. I have asked the
physician to send into my blood the forces of Christ that they may do battle,
as the British did to many of my people who were attacked by the plague. But he
tells me it is beyond his power.”
It was plain
from the remarks which followed that the Emperor had grasped the main
principles of vaccination with a clearness shown by few oriental monarchs. In
the years after Adowa, when small-pox devastated the country (to which sickness
he was referring when he spoke of plague), it is recorded that he ordered the
priests to double their prayers, and at the same time published an edict that
all his subjects were to be vaccinated. This treatment was explained as a kind
of sacrament, but the king was well aware that it was a medical and not a
magical process, its sacramental nature arising from the truth that all good
things are of Christ.
When the
electric light was introduced into his palace the king set himself to master
the principles which governed this latest wonder of the white man. But he never
succeeded in understanding how light was possible without flame; and when he
was one day the victim of a slight shock as the result of a faulty switch on a
damp wall he very nearly had the whole installation dismantled. “I have never
feared sword thrusts,” he said, “but this pain which seized me is clearly of
the devil.”
About that time
it was brought to his notice that a white wizard was astonishing the chieftains
near Harar. The method adopted was simple. In a bowl of water the magician (an
Armenian trader) placed twenty thalers, and to anyone who paid three thalers or
its equivalent permission was given to plunge in his hand and take as much
money as he could.
He warned them,
nevertheless, that if they were not pure in heart the demon who dwelt in the
water would seize their hand. None of the various applicants were of the
necessary degree of purity, although they often went to the priest for
purification beforehand. When they placed their hands in the water the demon
immediately clutched them and caused them agony of pain.
Menelek
listened to the tales that were brought him. Then he said: “You will find that
the demon lives in a small box. This you can seize without fear for he will be
powerless to harm you.”
The Emperor had
mastered the subject sufficiently to know that the white wizard had somewhere
an electric battery.
King Menelek
was a man of agile and determined thought, never afraid of new ideas merely
because they were new, but always seeking to select which of them were likely
to be of use to his country without delivering it into the hands of grasping
white men. Thus he instituted a postage system which, though it did not
operate over a very great area, being principally used to communicate with
Jibuti, represented the beginning of civilising influences which, had continuity of administration been possible after
Menelek’s death, would probably have made far greater strides by now.
In his
marriages Menelek was not altogether fortunate. His first wife, a daughter of
Theodore, made his life a misery, for she could not in her heart forgive him
for having turned her family from the throne. He divorced her and married
again, this time with fair success; but his third wife, who, strangely enough,
had the same name as the first, a circumstance which Menelek frequently
lamented should have warned him, proved what modern terminology would describe
as a butterfly and a gold- digger. She showed a weak-minded partiality for
everything foreign and courted the notice of Europeans in the capital.
Further, she wasted money on cheap and flashy wares, which she allowed traders
to sell her at exorbitant prices. Menelek at length rebelled, and after rather
complicated negotiations the lady was persuaded, in return for handsome
“alimony,” to retire to a convent. Menelek’s fourth wife was a remarkable
woman. She was tall and regal in manner and had a very fair skin. She also had
been married four times previously, which fact was popularly supposed to be
particularly lucky. Each of her four husbands had occupied a responsible post,
and while she had no great education, she had inherited from her father, the
powerful Ras of Gondar, abundant if rather obstinate good sense.
In the year
previous to her marriage she had won widespread fame, for she had led her own
troops against the Italians at the advance on Makale. This deed, which has
never been forgotten, is always told to the women of Ethiopia to inspire them
with patriotism. Few foreign observers have realised the part which women play in determining the policies of the land.
The Empress
Taitu was a generous, strong-minded woman, passionately devoted to her country
and suspicious of all foreigners. She was opposed to innovations, and
particularly disliked the European diplomats who, she was convinced, had only
one object—to steal as much of Ethiopia as they could lay hands on.
It cannot be
denied that in this last belief she was very close to the truth. The gradual
encirclement of the country and the various pretexts for encroachments seemed
to show beyond doubt that the white men were determined, as the Empress so
often said, “to eat up” her native land. Though a devout believer in the
national faith and a friend of religion, she always insisted to her husband
that the Moslems were much less to be feared than the Christians, who were
cruel and deceitful beneath a mask of fine words.
When a dispute
arose over the Ucialli Treaty with Italy, it was
Taitu who, having listened with anger while an Italian envoy raised his voice
and spoke sharply to her husband, seized the offending document and tore it in
pieces; and in the Councils which preceded Adowa she took her full share.
Her bitter
dislike of all things Italian was no secret in Addis Ababa and endeared her to
the common people; but her attitude sometimes embarrassed Menelek in the
handling of delicate foreign affairs. It was Menelek who insisted that when he
denounced the Ucialli Treaty he must pay back the
loan which had been advanced to him after the signature of the document—a sum
amounting to 4,000,000 francs. He was adamant concerning this obligation, for
the customs of Harar had been mortgaged as security for the loan and there was
a clause that in the event of non-repayment the whole of that province should
be taken by Italy. Taitu could not see that to refuse repayment of the money
would be to play into Italian hands since it would give them a legal claim to
Ethiopian territory. To her mind the Italians had, by their conduct, lost all
right to any consideration from Menelek, and she is known to have urged her
husband to keep the money. Menelek was wise enough to see that public opinion
in Europe was a force to reckon with, and that the denunciation of the treaty
would appear as fraud to the European mind unless accompanied by the immediate
discharge of the loan with which a supplementary agreement had provided him.
It was a typical instance of the sound judgment which the Emperor displayed
throughout his whole reign. Taitu was delighted, however, when in 1896, in the
earlier brushes before the Adowa campaign, Ras Makonnen, having besieged 1,500
Italians in the town of Makale and having cut off their water supply, refused
to raise the siege until the Governor of Eritrea had sent one million thalers
as reparation. Menelek was encouraged by this to demand 25,000,000 thalers as
indemnity for the Italian attacks, and it was as the result of this demand that
the ill-fated Baratieri advanced towards Adowa.
The prestige
which accrued to Menelek after Adowa was immense. In the following year several
envoys arrived at the capital to make cordial representations on behalf of
their countries. Most picturesque among them was Prince Henri D’Orleans, the Duc de Valois, who brought many very beautiful
presents, including a magnificent service of Sèvres china, complete in every detail, some pieces of which are
still used in the Palace.
By 1905 Menelek
was at the peak of his power and prosperity, his failing health being the only
factor in the Ethiopian situation which caused the least anxiety. But when in
the following year he lost Ras Makonnen, who was to have succeeded him, he
showed great sorrow and ceased to have so keen an interest in foreign affairs.
So great was the power of his name, however, that the chiefs did not think it
safe to rebel even when it was known that he was on his deathbed, though
doubtless it was his clever policy which contributed towards this attitude on
their part.
He had only
replaced those chiefs who proved intractable and had shown more than once that
he requited good service and regular payment of taxes by according privileges
to the chiefs who did not attempt to shuffle out of their obligations. Thus
there was a considerable degree of self-government to be found in the outlying
provinces, where the chiefs, who could use the might of Menelek’s name as a
bulwark against invaders, were neither humiliated nor unduly taxed by him. It
was thus in their interest to keep him on the throne, for the weaker ones knew
that the Emperor was their guarantee against aggression from the stronger
provinces, and the stronger chiefs were bitterly jealous among themselves.
Taitu was a
tower of strength in these last years. She was an efficient wife in every way,
her only failing being a complete lack of tact. She had heard a great deal
about Queen Victoria and always thought of herself in terms of the great White
Queen, whose story, coupled with that of the Queen of Sheba, obtained a great
hold on her imagination. This did not please the chiefs who were bitterly
resentful and swore that no woman should rule them.
On one occasion
they were outraged by her casual treatment when several of them had journeyed
considerable distances to the Palace, and raised a miniature revolt against
her. Fearful of her life she meditated flight to the British Residency, but a
friend of the Emperor’s persuaded her that the best course was to go out, meet
the rebels, trusting to Menelek’s name to protect her, and to promise them
better treatment in the future. This she did, and her royal bearing,
conciliatory attitude and evident sincerity (for she had been thoroughly
scared, probably for the first time in her life) made so great an impression
that the chiefs and their followers cheered her before they dispersed.
However, it was
obvious that the question of the succession must be decided and that with every
postponement discontent would grow. Menelek at last proclaimed Lidj Yassu, son of his second daughter by her husband, Ras
Mikael, chief of the Wollo Gallas, his heir, making
the young Prince’s tutor Regent.
Ras Tessama,
the tutor, was a man of the same cast of mind as Ras Makonnen, of whose
personality and distinguished career there follows a brief account.
CHAPTER XII.THE VISION OF RAS MAKONNEN
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