The OAU & Emperor Haile Selassie’s Rightful Place in History


By Nebyat Aklilu

May 8, 2013



As Addis Ababa prepares for grand
festivities, galas and events in celebration of the 50th Anniversary
of the establishment of the African Union (AU), formerly known as the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), on May 25, 2013, we, Africans, and peoples
of African descent, pay homage to the visionary leader of the OAU, His Majesty
Emperor Haile Selassie. We honor the “Father of Africa,” Emperor Haile Selassie,
for his visionary leadership and everlasting contributions to the freedom and
independence of Africa and African peoples, and for the key role he played in
establishing the OAU/AU.

We, Africans and peoples of African descent, appeal
to the OAU/AU to build and erect, center front of the OAU/AU building, a statue
of Emperor Haile Selassie in symbolic honor and respect for his unparalleled
dedication, commitment and contributions to African independence and unity, and
to the establishment of the Organization of African Unity.

It is a well-known fact that prior to the
establishment of the OAU/AU, a major rift existed between African nations on
how the concept of African Unity should be implemented. This divide resulted in
the establishment of two main separate factions: The Monrovia and Casablanca
groups. These two groups had opposing philosophical beliefs regarding the
implementation of African Unity. The Monrovia and Casablanca groups also
differed in opinion on the autonomy or scope of authority that should be
warranted to an organizing body tasked with the responsibility of making the
vision of African Unity come to fruition. As the philosophical differences
between these two groups in the late 50s and early 60s continued to grow, the
prospects of achieving African Unity appeared bleak.

It was not until after the relentless diplomatic
efforts of the then Foreign Minister, His Excellency Ketema Yifru, and under
the visionary leadership of Emperor Haile Selassie, that the Monrovia and
Casablanca groups reconciled their differences in Addis Ababa, culminating in
the establishment of the OAU/AU on May 25, 1963. History can neither forget nor
deny the riveting and compelling speech made by the “Father of Africa,” Emperor
Haile Selassie, who, in uniting the two splinter groups by hosting the First
Conference of African Heads of State, also declared in his address:

“This Conference cannot close without adopting a single
charter. We cannot leave here without having created a single African
organization possessed of the attributes We have
described. If We fail in this, we will have shirked
our responsibility to Africa and to the people we lead. If we succeed, then,
and only then, will we have justified our presence here.

It
was this call of duty Emperor Haile Selassie bestowed upon African Heads of
State, many of whom were assembled out of the great admiration and respect they
had for him and the gallant history of Ethiopia, that a single unifying charter
was drafted and ratified enabling the vision of African Unity to become a
reality.

It is an undeniable fact that Ethiopia and,
particularly, Emperor Haile Selassie played a pivotal role in the establishment
of the OAU/AU more than fifty years ago. In reflecting on the Ethiopian
contribution to the creation of the OAU, Gwendolyn Carter, in her book
entitled, National Unity and Regionalism
in Eight African States
, affirmed that “What
Nasser or Nkrumah or the Casablanca or Monrovia… grouping could not do, [Emperor]
Haile Selassie accomplished with little difficulty.”
Carter further attests
that during Emperor Haile Selassie’s era, “Ethiopia
committed itself to Africa…[and that] the Ethiopian government [was] an
important spokesperson for Africa not only in the United Nations, but also in
diplomatic exchanges with the United States and other countries.”
This may
also be said about the role Ethiopia and Emperor Haile Selassie played on an
international level as well.

As recorded in history, Ethiopia joined the
League of Nations on September 28, 1923. This was seven years after Emperor Haile
Selassie was appointed Ras, one of
the highest rankings in the Ethiopian nobility, and approximately forty years
prior to the establishment of the OAU. Emperor Haile Selassie’s conscientious
decision for Ethiopia to join the League of Nations, and the subsequent role
Ethiopia assumed in the UN representing not only itself, but the interest of
Africa and Africans as well, arguably served as the impetus towards the
establishment of the OAU, in which Emperor Haile Selassie undeniably played a
formative and leading role.

 Emperor
Haile Selassie was a firm believer in and strongly committed to the principles
of collective security and world peace. Despite being abandoned by the League
of Nations when Ethiopia was invaded by Fascist Italy in 1935, Emperor Haile
Selassie demonstrated his commitment to collective security when Ethiopia was
called for duty. In 1951, in support of the United Nation’s (UN) mission during
the Korean War, Emperor Haile Selassie sent over 3,000 Ethiopian troops,
including those from his own Imperial Guard, to fight as part of the
American-led UN force supporting South Korea. The Ethiopian troops gallantly
fought as part of the US 7th infantry division, at a time when the
US military just started to become racially de-segregated. The heroic Ethiopians
fought in 253 battles, including the Battle of Pork Chop Hill, against the
communist North and its ally, China. Ethiopia was the only country in which not
one of its citizens was taken prisoner of war.

Emperor Haile Selassie demonstrated his
unwavering commitment to the principles of collective security and the
independence of Africa and Africans in the case of Congo as well. In an effort
to liberate the Congolese from Belgian rule and ensure the existence of a
unified and independent Congo, Emperor Haile Selassie sent 3,000 Ethiopian
troops, constituting ten percent of Ethiopia’s military resource at the time,
to Congo from 1960-1964. The outcome resulted in the restoration of
independence, peace and stability including the prevention of Katanga’s
secession from Congo. There is a section in Addis Ababa Stadium that was named
in honor of the Ethiopian patriots sent to Congo by Emperor Haile Selassie as
part of the UN peace – keeping force. That section to this day is known as Katanga and represents the area where
the Ethiopian troops sent to Katanga previously sat.   

Ethiopia and Emperor Haile Selassie, in
particular, played an instrumental role in supporting liberation movements in
Africa to ensure freedom, independence, stability and lasting peace. The highly
adorned freedom fighter and African leader, former South African President,
Nelson Mandela, confirms this assertion as well. In his Autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom, President Mandela
asserts the significance of Ethiopia and Ethiopianism as the inspiration for
his political party, and the struggle for freedom in South Africa:

“[The] fundamental
tenets of the Ethiopian movement were self-worth, self-reliance and freedom.
These tenets drew the advocates of Ethiopianism, like a magnet, to the growing
political movement. That political movement was to culminate in the formation of
the ANC in 1912. It is in this sense that the ANC traces the seeds of the
formation of our organization to the Ethiopian Movement of the 1890s.”

Prior
to the establishment of the OAU in 1962, Nelson Mandela met with Emperor Haile
Selassie, and explained the plight of South Africans under Apartheid rule.
During his time in exile, Nelson Mandela received military training in Ethiopia,
and was provided with a Bulgarian made handgun. He was also issued an Ethiopian
passport and given the chance to re-enter South Africa under an alias name and
Ethiopian identity to continue the struggle for freedom and independence.

In his Autobiography, Nelson Mandela stated,
“Ethiopia always has a special place in my imagination and the prospect of
visiting Ethiopia attracted me more strongly than a trip to France, England and
America combined. I felt I would be visiting my own genesis, unearthing the
roots of what made me an African.” As the former President of the last African
country to gain its independence from White colonial rule, and Africa’s
de-facto Spiritual leader, Nelson Mandela is unarguably the most respected
leader in Africa since Emperor Haile Selassie. As an African leader of Nelson
Mandela’s stature, morality and contributions, despite being deserving
of accolades and admiration in his own right, Nelson Mandela demonstrates the
utmost respect and deference to the “Father of Africa,” Emperor Haile Selassie,
and to Ethiopia as his spiritual homeland. The same sentiment about Emperor Haile
Selassie and the significance of Ethiopia expressed by Nelson Mandela and
countless others in the Black Political movement and beyond is also shared by millions
of Africans and peoples of African descent around the world.

There are many other examples that demonstrate
why Emperor Haile Selassie has been dubbed the “Father of Africa.” During the
repatriation or back to Africa movement, to his children of African descent
that had been dispersed in foreign lands, Emperor Haile Selassie, the “Father
of Africa,” provided a spiritual homeland. To his sons and daughters throughout
Africa, Emperor Haile Selassie, the “Father of Africa,” provided scholarships
to the then Haile Selassie I University, now known as Addis Ababa University,
so that the dream of African Unity could be realized.

In 1937, under the direction of the “Father
of Africa,” Emperor Haile Selassie, Dr. Melaku Bayen, an Ethiopian
foreign-exchange student, established the Ethiopian World Federation, Inc.  (EWF) in Harlem, New York.
The EWF was arguably the first international organization encompassing of all
peoples of African descent that physically linked Africans and the Black
Diaspora for a common purpose in Africa. This organization galvanized African
Americans to sign up and actually fight alongside their Ethiopian brethren for
Ethiopia’s independence against Fascist aggressors. It was an unprecedented
event in history, the first of its kind, which physically linked the struggle
of African Americans and Africans towards collective action.

If it has been established by history that
Ethiopia, and, Emperor Haile Selassie, in particular, played a key, formative
and instrumental role in establishing the OAU/AU, then why is it that Emperor Haile
Selassie was denied the symbolic honor of a statue in front of the newly built
African Union building? Was this intentional or indicative of a conscientious decision
made by African Heads of State, a particular committee, sub-committee or the
idea of a select few? What was the criteria and process for selecting the former
President of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah, another great African leader also deserving
of recognition for his contributions to the OAU? Did his selection rule out the
possibility of a statue being built in honor of Emperor Haile Selassie or for
that matter other founding fathers of the OAU? What was the rationale behind
building a statue in the first place? We, Africans and peoples of African
descent, want to know the details.

More importantly, we Africans and peoples of
African descent, with utmost conviction compellingly call for a statue of
Emperor Haile Selassie to be erected center front of the OAU/AU building in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Emperor Haile Selassie is more than deserving of this
honor for his demonstrated vision and leadership in establishing the OAU/AU,
and for his everlasting contributions to the freedom and independence of Africa
and African peoples.

Let us all join hands in supporting this
initiative and appeal to luminary African Leaders, like-minded institutions of
the world in general and the OAU and its leadership in particular, to see to it
that His Majesty, Emperor Haile Selassie’s statue be erected and take its
rightful place alongside President Nkrumah, front and center of the AU/OAU
headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.


To sign the petition, click
here.

The author can be contacted at [email protected]


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