The Caste System in Lowland Eritrea
Posted: 27 Dec 2023, 23:54
(Before the 1970s, life in lowland Muslim Eritrea was not different from the life of the poor tenants in southern Ethiopia or the black Muslims in Darfur and Nubia of Sudan, that is until the EPLF arrived and leveled the field)
This is forwarded message previously partially posted in Dehai:
The well written book review of The Deluge: A Personal View of the End of Empire in the Middle East, by Sir Kennedy Trevaskis, of Professor Asgede Hagos, reminded me of this subject.
There are many aspects in the Eritrean Muslim lowland history that are deliberately hidden under the carpet, whitewashed or misleadingly avoided, none other than the long history of serfdom and the racist caste system in the Eritrean lowland and the Sudanese eastern lands. This system was defended by "the existing religious institutions and authorities in the region, particularly the leadership within the dominant Khatmiyya Muslim Sufi order".
This serfdom and cast system which organized society for centuries in its social and economic order that borders between slavery and feudal system existed to some extent in limited parts of this region of Eritrea until around the early 1970s. Some of this landless and former serfs were able to receive for the first time a cultivable plots of land and the dignity that comes with it, after the EPLF arrived in the region.
Although a great deal of research had been done and documented on the issue serfdom and its generational caste system, by the Italians and later by the research department of the EPLF, very little had been published for the public in local languages. This puzzles me even more because in Ethiopia the feudal system of landlord-and-tenant relationship had been researched and published for decades in which the "meriet larashu" slogan of the Ethiopian student movement had been based.
More work needs to be done on the Eritrean side of the issue because this work opens some of the dark side of our love and hate relationship with our own languages, history and identity. Until a brave and un-enslaved mind writes about this subject and publishes it, we are forced to read what the Ferenji researchers dig about our own past and way of life, including the history slavery and Arab slavery in the region and its impact.
Here is Joseph Venosa on:-
“Serfs,” Civics, and Social Action: Islamic Identity and Grassroots Activism during Eritrea's Tigre Emancipation Movement, 1941–1946
Abstract
This article examines the growth of political activism within various Tigre-speaking communities across Eritrea during the early and mid-1940s. Using previously overlooked archival as well as oral sources, it explores how some tigre “serfs” became increasingly proactive in challenging their subordinate position against local landlords, even as communities experienced a haphazard transition from Italian to temporary British colonial rule. Refusing to comply with the traditional payment of customary dues and taxes to local landlords, disenfranchised tigre across Eritrea's Western Province pressed their claims for economic and even political independence. In the process, some tigre leaders also demonstrated the complex and often problematic nature of Islamic “identity” as the emancipation movement expanded. Activists' overall success also depended upon their ability to articulate a broad, Islamicinspired understanding of the need to rectify social and economic injustice, even though such actions challenged the existing religious institutions and authorities in the region, particularly the leadership within the dominant Khatmiyya Sufi order. Ultimately, the surge in antifeudal activism helped enrich the emerging public discourse across the colony, which fused ideas of political independence with the need to ensure the collective security of the region's various Muslim communities, including those residing beyond the country's Tigre-speaking areas. ...
https://www.jstor.org/stable/islamicafr ... fd43&seq=1
This is forwarded message previously partially posted in Dehai:
The well written book review of The Deluge: A Personal View of the End of Empire in the Middle East, by Sir Kennedy Trevaskis, of Professor Asgede Hagos, reminded me of this subject.
There are many aspects in the Eritrean Muslim lowland history that are deliberately hidden under the carpet, whitewashed or misleadingly avoided, none other than the long history of serfdom and the racist caste system in the Eritrean lowland and the Sudanese eastern lands. This system was defended by "the existing religious institutions and authorities in the region, particularly the leadership within the dominant Khatmiyya Muslim Sufi order".
This serfdom and cast system which organized society for centuries in its social and economic order that borders between slavery and feudal system existed to some extent in limited parts of this region of Eritrea until around the early 1970s. Some of this landless and former serfs were able to receive for the first time a cultivable plots of land and the dignity that comes with it, after the EPLF arrived in the region.
Although a great deal of research had been done and documented on the issue serfdom and its generational caste system, by the Italians and later by the research department of the EPLF, very little had been published for the public in local languages. This puzzles me even more because in Ethiopia the feudal system of landlord-and-tenant relationship had been researched and published for decades in which the "meriet larashu" slogan of the Ethiopian student movement had been based.
More work needs to be done on the Eritrean side of the issue because this work opens some of the dark side of our love and hate relationship with our own languages, history and identity. Until a brave and un-enslaved mind writes about this subject and publishes it, we are forced to read what the Ferenji researchers dig about our own past and way of life, including the history slavery and Arab slavery in the region and its impact.
Here is Joseph Venosa on:-
“Serfs,” Civics, and Social Action: Islamic Identity and Grassroots Activism during Eritrea's Tigre Emancipation Movement, 1941–1946
Abstract
This article examines the growth of political activism within various Tigre-speaking communities across Eritrea during the early and mid-1940s. Using previously overlooked archival as well as oral sources, it explores how some tigre “serfs” became increasingly proactive in challenging their subordinate position against local landlords, even as communities experienced a haphazard transition from Italian to temporary British colonial rule. Refusing to comply with the traditional payment of customary dues and taxes to local landlords, disenfranchised tigre across Eritrea's Western Province pressed their claims for economic and even political independence. In the process, some tigre leaders also demonstrated the complex and often problematic nature of Islamic “identity” as the emancipation movement expanded. Activists' overall success also depended upon their ability to articulate a broad, Islamicinspired understanding of the need to rectify social and economic injustice, even though such actions challenged the existing religious institutions and authorities in the region, particularly the leadership within the dominant Khatmiyya Sufi order. Ultimately, the surge in antifeudal activism helped enrich the emerging public discourse across the colony, which fused ideas of political independence with the need to ensure the collective security of the region's various Muslim communities, including those residing beyond the country's Tigre-speaking areas. ...
https://www.jstor.org/stable/islamicafr ... fd43&seq=1