In that day shall this song be sung in the land of Judah;
we have a strong city; salvation will Jah appoint for walls and bulwarks.
Open ye the gates, that the righteous nation which keepeth the truth
may enter in.
Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee:
because he trusteth
in thee. Trust ye in the Lord God Jah Rastafari for ever: for the LORD
JEHOVAH is
everlasting strength.
For he bringeth down them that dwell on high; the lost city, he layeth
it low: he layeth it
low; even to the ground; he bringeth it even to the dust.
The foot shall tread it down, even the feet of the poor, and the steps
of the needy.
The way of the just is uprightness; thou most upright, dost weigh the
path of the just.
Yea, in the way of thy judgements, O Lord, have we waited for thee;
the desire of our
soul is thy name, and to the rememberance of thee.
With my soul have I desired thee in the night; yea with my spirit within
me will I seek
thee early; for when thy judgements are in the earth, the inhabitants
of the world will
learn righteousness.
LET FAVOUR BE SHOWN TO THE WICKED, YET WILL HE NOT LEARN
RIGHTEOUSNESS; IN THE LAND OF UPRIGHTNESS WILL HE DEAL
UNJUSTLY, AND WILL IDIOT BEHOLD THE MAJESTY OF THE LORD GOD
JAH RASTAFARI.
selah, When thy hand is lifted up, they will not see, but they shall
see, and be ashamed
for their envy at the people, yea, the fire of thine enemies shall
devour them.
Lord, thou wilt ordain peace for us; for thou also hast wrought all
our works in us.
O Lord our God Jah Rastafari, other Lords besides thee have had dominion
over us; but by
thee only will we make mention of thy name. They are dead, they shall
not live; they are
deceased, they shall not rise; therefore hast thou visited and destroyed
them, and made all
their memory to perish.
Thou hast increased the nation, O Lord, thou hast increased the nation;
thou art glorified;
thou hast removed it far unto all the ends of the earth.
Jah, in trouble have they visited thee; they poured out a prayer when
thy chastening was upon
them. Like a woman with child, that draweth near the time of her delivery,
is in pain, and crieth
out in her pangs; so have we been in thy sight, O Lord.
WE HAVE BEEN WITH CHILD, WE HAVE BEEN IN PAIN, WE HAVE AS IT WERE
BROUGHT FORTH WIND; we have not wrought any deliverance in the earth;
neither have
the inhabitants of the World fallen.
Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise;
awake and sing, ye that
dwell in dust: for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall
cast out the dead.
Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers and shut thy doors about
thee; hide thyself as
it were for a little moment, until the indignation be overpast. For,
behold the Lord, God Jah
Rastafari, cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the
earth for their iniquity; the
earth also shall disclose her blood, and shall no more cover her slain.
ISAIAH 26
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Blessed is the name of the Lord God Jah Ras Tafari, and blessed is
he who comes in the name
of Jah, His Imperial Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie I and let the name
of His glory be blessed.
So be it, so be it, so be it blessed.
This is the product of the combined effort of the Ras Tafari Brethren
whose undying faith is
in the Almighty, Everliving God, Jah Ras Tafari.
He has given us the wisdom and understanding of His words that we might
publish and manifest
them among men.
Special mention goes to: Bro. Bob Blake, Bro. Clive Brooks, Sis Yvonne
Brooks, Sis. Shirley
Burke.
UNITED AFRICA
CONTENTS
THE BIBLE
RELIGION
MORALITY
HUMAN RIGHTS
UNITY
GOVERNMENT
LEADERSHIP
EDUCATION
RESPONSIBILITY
PLANNING
WORK
SELF HELP
DEVELOPMENT
LAND POLICY
RESOURCES
AGRICULTURE
FINE ARTS
HEALTH
INTER AFRICA
ETHIOPIA'S POSITION
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
FATE
LIFE
DEATH
MISCELLANEOUS
His Imperial Majesty
HAILE SELASSIE I
Emperor of Ethiopia, says:
WE IN ETHIOPIA HAVE ONE OF THE OLDEST VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE, but
however old the version may be, in whatever language it might be written,
the Word remains
one and the same. It transcends all boundaries of empires and all conceptions
of race. It is
eternal.
No doubt you all remember reading in the Acts of the Apostles of how
Philip baptised the
Ethiopian official. He is the first Ethiopian on record to have followed
Christ, and from that
day onwards the Word of God has continued to grow in the hearts of
Ethiopians. And I might
say for myself that from early childhood I was taught to appreciate
the Bible and my love for it
increases with the passage of time. All through my troubles I have
found it a cause of
infinite comfort.
"Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give
you
rest" who can resist an invitation so full of compassion?
Because of this personal experience in the goodness of the Bible, I
was resolved that all my
countrymen should also share its great blessing and that by reading
the Bible they should find
truth for themselves. Therefore, I caused a new translation to be made
from our ancient
language into the language which the old and the young understood and
spoke.
Today man sees all his hopes and aspirations crumbling before him.
He is perplexed and knows
not whither he is drifting. But he must realise that the Bible is his
refuge, and the rallying
point for all humanity. In it man will find the solution of his present
difficulties and
guidance for his future action, and unless he accepts with clear conscience
the Bible and its
great Message, he cannot hope for salvation. For my part I glory in
the Bible.
RELIGION
We are gratified in particular, to note that the work of this conference
has been concerned
purely with religious, spiritual matters free from extraneous political
considerations.
This is only fitting and proper, for the church, as a symbol of peace,
must follow the path of
peace in all parts of the world. For world peace can only be made abiding
by the grace of God,
through the prayers of the Holy Fathers. The truth of this cardinal
fact is evident to all
mankind.
Therefore, it has become the noble responsibility of Christians, and
peoples of other faiths
and their leaders throughout the world, to pray and to work hard for
the preservation of world
peace.
We have always been religious, ever since childhood, ever since the
day our father, Ras
Makonnen, taught us the commandment of Our Lord the Creator.
But we don't consider our religion alone valid and have granted the
people the freedom to
observe any religion they please.
We believe in the reunification of the churches, which is why we were
so happy to meet Pope
Paul VI during our voyage to Italy. We were greatly taken with him,
we judged him a man of
superior capacity, especially as regards his intention to work towards
church unity.
He received us with great friendliness.
MORALITY
ITS BETTER TO GIVE
Wise men have always known the deep and pervading truth that it is
better to give than to
receive, for even as it conflicts with selfish and ambitious desires,
it moderates and
controls them.
Giving always demands sacrifice. To overcome the temptation to enjoy
mere daily comfort, to
press resolutely and patiently forward on the scheduled way, are true
tests of the high degree
of determination that should bind you together. Memories of past injustices
should not divert
us from the more pressing business at hand.
We must live in peace with our former colonizers, shunning recrimination
and bitterness and
fore-swearing the luxury of vengeance and retaliation, lest the acid
of hatred erode our souls
and poison our hearts.
Let us act as befits the dignity which we claim for ourselves as Africans,
proud of our own
special qualities, distinctions, and abilities. We must speak out on
major issues, courageously,
openly and honestly, and in blunt terms of right and wrong.
If we yield to blandishments or threats, if we compromise when no honourable
compromise is
possible, our influence will be sadly diminished and our prestige woefully
prejudiced and
weakened.
On this day which men of earth and angels of heaven could neither have
foreseen nor known, I
give thanks unutterable by the mouth of man to the living God who has
enabled me to be present
among you.
Today is the beginning of a new era in the history of Ethiopia.
Since this is so, do not reward evil for evil, do not commit any act
of cruelty like those
which the enemy committed against us. Do not allow the enemy any occasion
to foul the good
name of Ethiopia.
We shall take his weapons and make him return by the way he came.
We believe in cooperation and collaboration to promote the cause of
international security,
the equality of man and the welfare of mankind.
We believe in the peaceful settlement of all disputes without resorting
to force.
And in accordance with the charter of O.A.U. we will strive to eradicate
colonialism, racism
and apartheid from the face of the earth, to frustrate the efforts
being made by foreign powers
to dictate the destiny of the African continent, and we will continue
to stand.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Colonialism and the policy of racism impose soul searching questions
of human rights, weighing
equally on the conscience of all men and nations of good-will. History
amply shows that the
freedom enjoyed by the many becomes fragile when the denial, even to
the few, of basic human
rights is tolerated.
Our efforts as free men must be to establish new relationships, devoid
of any resentment and
hostility, restored to our belief and faith in ourselves as individuals,
dealing on a basis of
equality with other equally free people.
We believe in cooperation and collaborration to promote the cause of
international security, the
equality of man and the welfare of mankind.
We believe in the peaceful settlement of all disputes without resorting
to force.
All well ordered and modern states can only base themselves upon Courts
of Justice and Conduct
of Laws which are just, correct and geared towards the protection of
the rights of individuals.
Justice is a product of education.
Man's ingratitude to man is often manifested in willingness to relegate
human beings to the
scrapheaps of life when they enter the twilight of their careers and
younger brains and
stronger arms are found to replace them
UNITY
Ethiopia is a nation fully committed to African unity and to the greater
guise of world peace
and shall continue to support and strengthen the O.A.U., which was
established as an African
instrument for peace and progress.
O.A.U.
The Organization of African Unity, is an organization which the people
of our vast continent
have established with a view to performing certain specific tasks.
Briefly speaking, the organization is established for the purpose of
protecting in a better
fashion, the independence of African States.
It is also meant to expedite the economic and social progress through
cooperation of African
peoples. It also has the important task of assisting in the maintenance
of international peace
and security.
We know that unity can be and has been attained among men of the most
disparate origins, that
difference of race, of religion, of culture, of tradition, are no insurmountable
obstacles to
the coming together of peoples.
We stand today on the stage of world affairs, before the audience of
world opinion. We have
come together to assert our role in the direction of world affairs
and to discharge our duty
to the great continent whose two hundred and fifty million people we
lead. Africa is today at
mid-course, in transition from the Africa of Yesterday to the Africa
of Tomorrow. Even as we
stand here, we move from the past into the future The task on which
we have embarked, the
making of Africa, will not wait we must act, to shape and mould the
future and leave our
imprint on events as they pass into history.
We seek, at this meeting, to determine whither we are going and to
chart the course of our
destiny. It is no less important that we know whence we came. An awareness
of our past is
essential to the establishment our personality and our identity as
Africans.
This world was not crested piecemeal. Africa was born no later and
no earlier than any other
geographical area on this globe. Africans, no more and no less than
other men, possess all
human attributes, talents and deficiencies, virtues and faults. Thousands
of years ago,
civilizations flourished in Africa which suffer not at all by comparison
with those of other
continents. In those centuries, Africans were politically free and
economically independent.
Their social patterns were their own and their cultures truly indigenous.
The obscurity which enshrouds the centuries which elapsed beteeen those
earliest days and the
rediscovery of Africa is being gradually dispersed. What is certain
is that during those long
years Africans were born, lived and died. Men on other parts of this
earth occupied themselves
with their own concerns and, in their conceit, proclaimed that the
world began and ended at
their horizons. All unknown to them, Africa developed in its own pattern,
growing in its own
life and, in the Nineteenth Century, finally re-emerged into the world's
consciousness.
The events of the past hundred and fifty years require no extended
recitation from us. The
period of colonialism into which we were plunged culminated with our
continent fettered and
bound; with our once proud and free peoples reduced to humiliation
and slavery; with Africans
terrain cross-hatched and checker - boarded by artificial and arbitrary
boundaries Many of
us, during those bitter yearn were overwhelmed in battle, and those
who escaped conquest did
so at the costs of desperate resistance and bloodshed. Others were
sold into bondage as the
price extracted by the colonialists for the 'protection' which they
extended and the
possessions of which they disposed. Africa was a physical resource
to be exploited and Africans
were chattels to be purchased bodily or, at best, peoples to be reduced
to vasselage and
lackeyhood. Africa was the market for the produce of other nations
and the source of the raw
materials with which their factories were fed.
Today, Africa has emerged from this dark passage, Our Armageddon is
past. Africa has been
reborn as a free continent and Africans have been reborn as free men.
The blood that was shed
and the sufferings that were endured are today Africa's advocates for
freedom and unity. Those
men who refused to accept the judgement passed upon them by the colonisers,
who held
unswervingly through the darkest hours to a vision of an African emancipated
from political,
economic and spiritual domination, will be remembered and revered wherever
Africans meet.
Many of them never set foot on this continent. Others were born and
died here. What we may
utter today can add little to the heroic struggle of those who, by
their example, have shown
us how precious are freedom and human dignity and of how little value
is life without them.
Their deeds are witten in history.
Africa's victory, although proclaimed, is not yet total, and areas
of resistance still remain.
Today, we name as our first great task the final liberating of those
Africans still dominated
by foreign exploitation and control. With the goal in sight and uriqualified
triumph within
our grasp, let us not now falter or lag or relax. We must make one
final supreme effort now,
when the struggle grows weary, when so much has been lost, that the
thrilling sense of
achievement has brought us near satiation. Our liberty is meaningless
unless all Africans are
free. our brothers in the Rhodesias, in Mozambique, in Angola, in South
Africa cry out in
anguish for our support and assistance. We must urge on their behalf
their peaceful accession
to independence. We must align and identify ourselves with all aspects
of their liberation and
not fail to back our words with action. To them we say, your pleas
shall not go unheeded. The
resources of Africa and all freedom-loving nations are marshalled in
your service. Be of good
heart, for your deliverance is at hand.
1.
One important lesson that we have learnt from the experience of the
last ten years is that we
cannot leave the further progress of African unity to take its own
direction at its own pace
without active guidance from us.
The volume of intra-African trade, which at present, accounts for less
than ten percent of our
total foreign trade should be progressively increased, so that by the
end of the decade trade
among African countries should occupy a significant place in the exports
of each of our
countries.
2. African countries should establish progressive targets for reducing
tariffs and other trade
barriers among themselves.
3. Our Ministers charged with the responsibility of economic planning
should hold regular
consultations so as to harmonise our development policies and plans
and to open up potential
avenues for the expansion of intra-African trade.
Through regular consultations, we should undertake to identify the
need for and to establish
industries which may cater to our common needs.
This is important, because the scale on which modern industries can
become viable today
necessitates that we should create in Africa wide economic bases to
support a balanced
economic state.
GOVERNMENT
When a whole nation accepts and maintains a government in existence,
it means that the nation
recognizes that government.
There is always something moving, brewing. There are ambitious people
everywhere. Wicked
people.
The only thing to do is to deal with them with courage and decision.
One must beware of uncertainty, weakness or conflicting emotions -
they lead to defeat.
It is our opinion that the world has not changed at all. We believe
that such changes have
modified nothing. We don't even notice any difference between monarchies
and republics: to us,
they appear two substantially similar methods of governing a nation.
Democracy, Republic:
What do these words signify?
What have they changed in the world?
Have men become better, more loyal, kinder?
Are the people happier?
All goes on as before, as always.
Illusions, illusions.
One should consider the interests of a nation before subverting it
with words. Democracy is
necessary in some cases and we believe some African peoples might adopt
it. But in other cases
it is a handful, a mistake.
We are all adherent, whatever our internal political systems, of the
principles of democratic
action. Let us apply these to the unity we seek to create.
Force must be used against force.
We ourselves, by virtue of our descent from the Queen of Sheba and
King Solomon, ever since we
accepted in trust, in 1916, first the regency of the Ethiopian realm
and later, the Imperial
Dignity, right up to the present, we have set out to the best of our
ability, to improve,
gradually, internal administration by introducing into the country
western modes of civilization
through which our people may attain a higher level.
In explanation of the notion 'gradually': unless it is through coaxing
a child and getting it
accustomed, it will not be pleased if one takes from it what it has
seized with its hand. When
one gives such a baby any sort of food, it will not wish to eat it,
unless one shows it to the
child and lets it taste it. Unless they give it milk or other soft
food until it grows teeth, it
will not be able to eat when they place bread or meat before them.
And similarly with people who have lived by custom only, without learning
at school, without
absorbing knowledge by the ear or observing and searching with the
eye, it is necessary to
accustom them, through educations to abandon habits by which they have
for long been living,
to make them accept new ways. yet not by hasty or cruel methods but
by patience and study.
gradually and over a prolonged period.
Only a system which tolerates dissent can survive
It gives us great pleasure to appear before this distinguished assemblage
and we bring you the
fraternal salutations of the Ethiopian people.
The people of Ethiopia and Trinidad and Tobago are joined in a massive
and continuous effort to
create for themselves a new and better way of life. They face many
of the same problems.
The hopes and aspirations which they share derive from the same essential
beliefs in the nature
and destiny of man. It is thus inevitably true that there should exist
between those two great
peoples strong and lasting ties of friendship and understanding
Your role as the representatives of the people is a particularly critical
one in the councils of
the twentieth century. The manner in which a representative of the
people should properly
discharge his responsibilities has long been a matter for learned discussion
among philosophers
and political scientists.
The world of the developing nations is creating new problems for the
scholars to ponder as
new societies are emerging to deal with the intricate and explosive
questions of national and
institutional development.
Is a representative responsible only to a constituency or to the particular
group or interest
which has chosen or appointed him? Certainly this responsibility Must
be an element in the
thought and action of such a man, but there are higher values and greater
interests and
responsibilities than these.
Obstacles
Sectional, tribal and other divisive factors often pose major obstacles
to national
development. In their expanded sense, as narrowly national and ideological
interests, they
threaten unity and progress.
No one is today so foolish as to believe thay any one nation constitutes
a perfect monolith
of faith and ideology. Nor could anyone wish that there should be such
utter vanity of thought
and aspiration.
The systems of Government which have sought to impose uniformity of
belief have survived
briefly and then expired, blinded and weakened by obsessive reliance
upon their supposed
infallibility. The only system of Government which can survive is one
which is prepared to
tolerate dissent and criticism and Which accepts these as useful and
in any case, inevitable
aspects of all social and political relations.
The tolerance of dissent and criticism within a Government proceeds
from a single essential
premise: that the Government exists to serve the people generally.
Government servants, whether
designated as representatives or not, have a trust to work for the
general welfare.
The same trust exists among the member states of international organizations.
The members of
such organizations must adhere to some tacit or expressed conception
of international welfare.
Common Goals
In the case of the Organization of African Unity, it is an African
Unity, it is an African
welfare; in the case of the United Nations Organization, it is world
welfare.
In one way or another, the member nation must accept in thought, spirit
and action the basic
premise of their institutions that men of all races, beliefs and status
share some essential
common goals.
From this premise, no great and easy actions follow as corollaries.
The representatives of
peoples and nations can only come together with open and objective
minds and willing hearts
to engage in dialogue, without rigid dogmas and slogans and without
violence.
Working in this way achieves no instant Utopia. It may, however, enable
us to achieve together
what it is possible to achieve and to move forward steadily, if not
always in great haste, with
some degree of harmony and mutual understanding.
Domestically, we can build strong and happy and resourceful societies.
internationally, we can
force the end of oppression of man by man and nation by nation. We
can bring about the security
and mutual trust which will open the way to the greater human achievements
for which the needs
of mankind now cry out.
(He concluded:)
Permit me to express my heartfelt gratitude for the reception accorded
me by the people and
Government of Trinidad and Tobago.
LEADERSHIP
Leadership does not mean domination. The world is always well supplied
with people who wish to
rule and dominate others.
The true leader is a different sort; he seeks effective activity which
has a truly beneficient
purpose. He inspires others to follow in his wake, and holding aloft
the torch of wisdom, leads
the way for society to realize its genuinely great aspirations.
The art of leadership is in the ability to make people want to work
for you, while they are
really under no obligation to do so. Leaders are people, who raise
the standards by which they
judge themselves and by which they are willing to be judged. The goal
chosen, the objective
selected, the requirements imposed, are not mainly for their followers
alone.
They develop with consumate energy and devotion, their own skill and
knowledge in order to
reach the standard they themselves have set.
This whole-hearted acceptance of the demands imposed by even higher
standards is the basis of
all human progress. A love of higher quality, we must remember, is
essential in a leader.
The true leader is one who realizes by faith that he is an instrument
in the hands of God, and
dedicates himself to be a guide and inspirer of the nobler sentiments
and aspirations of the
people.
He who would be a leader must pay the price in self-discipline and
moral restraints. This
details the correction and improvement of his personal character, the
checking of passions and
desires and an exemplary control of one's bodily needs and desires.
To be first in place, one must be first in merit as well.
He who has not learned to render prompt and willing service to others
will find it difficult
to win and keep the goodwill and cooperation of his subordinates.
A leader will kindle interest, teach, aid, correct and inspire. Those
whom he leads will
cooperate with him in maintaining discipline for the good of the group.
He will instruct his
followed in the goals towards which to strive, and create in them a
sense of mutual effort
for attaining the goal.
EDUCATION
A strong nation and a free nation can only base itself upon education.
In order to make life worthwhile it is also necessary to acquire other
things that can only
come about after the acquisition of learning. Learning and technical
training must be nurtured
by faith in God, reverence for the human soul, and respect for the
reasoning mind.
There is no safer anchorage for our learning, our lives and our actions
than that provided by
divine teachings coupled with the best in human understanding. The
leaders developed here
should
be guided by the fundamental values and the moral power which have
for centuries constituted
the essence of our religious teachings.
These are crucial times when nations rise against nations, tensions
increase and disaster is
possible at any moment. Distances are shrinking. Peace and life itself
are threatened by
misunderstanding and conflict. Now is the time when man's relationship
to God must be the
foundation for all his efforts toward enlightenment, and learning the
basis for understanding
cooperation and peace.
The existence of a skilled and trained manpower is an absolute necessity
for the progress and
development of any country. Therefore, it is the sacred duty and responsibility
of students and
parents to see to it that the mistakes of the past are not repeated
and that time which should
be devoted to the pursuit of learning is not wasted by students heedlessly,
following the
instigation of a few misguided troublemakers who have yet to understand
the value and the true
meaning of education.
The salvation of our country Ethiopia, we have repeatedly stated to
you, lies primarily in
education. As Ethiopia is one, all Ethiopians are also one and education
is the only way to
maintain the condition.
In all countries of the modern world, special competence is required
to deal with the
advancement of agriculture, industry, commerce and the civil service.
That competence, can be
secured only through the facilities provided in modern universities.
We believe that the universities today stand as the most promising
hope for constructive
solutions to the problems that beset the modern world, problems which
prevent the peaceful
cooperation of nations and which threaten the world and humanity with
death and disaster.
From universities must come men, ideas, knowledge, experience, technical
skills and the deep
human understanding vital to fruitful relations among nations. Without
these, world order for
which we have so long strived, cannot be established.
A well informed public opinion is essential to the growth of political
and social awareness.
Only he who is informed can comment intelligently on his nation's development
and only by such
comments can errors be corrected and progress stimulated.
We must draw on what is valuable and meaningful in our history and
tradition, merging this
with the best in modern learning.
We expect from you, to whom we have given the opportunity of education
in your chosen field
great and productive service to our country.
If women develop in education, they can overcome the natural weakness
and serve their country
as men do.
It is our wish to assure the spread of education among all African
People as much as among our
own subjects.
A father should bequeath not only wealth but also provide proper education.
Education has value
when it is established in individuals of good character with respect
to God. We wish that your
destiny shall be embraced in an education firmly based in good character
before men and respect
before God.
Any who may wish to profit himself alone from the knowledge given him,
rather than serve
others through the knowledge he has gained from learning, is betraying
knowledge and rendering
it worthless.
A man's happiness is to make his brother happy, and to serve his country.
Thus it is possible
to justify for knowledge its high and deserved place. For knowledge
is power. If it is not
applied to its proper purpose, to create, let there be no doubt, it
will destroy.
If we have made so many sacrifices for the education of our youth,
it is because we are
convinced that only through intellectual progress and education can
Ethiopia come into its own
and make it's just contribution to the history of the Middle East.
We believe that from truth alone is born liberty and only an educated
people can consider
itself as really free and master of its fate. It is only with an educated
people that
representative and democratic organs of government can exercise their
influence for national
progress.
RESPONSIBILITY
It is both the duty and responsibility of the world's fortunate few
to help fulfil the
legitimate aspirations of the unfortunate many.
As man's faculty attains higher level of development and sophistication,
so do his wants in
life.
As generations come and go, those assuming responsibility for the period
do not cease to try
and improve on the past in order to meet newly arising demands. In
this respect, it is quite
evident that to march with the time members of the coming generation
should build on what their
forefathers have bequeathed to them.
It is because the present generation is cherishing and keeping intact
what it has received
from the past that it has succeeded in attaining its present stage
of development, by making
the necessary changes and improvements called for by conditions now
existing. This would
require great foresight and the-work accomplished as far as regards
to this task of great
responsibility is no small matter. It has been fulfilled as a result
of God's blessing and His
Divine guidance.
It is both the responsibility of the governor as well as elders to
create harmony among the
people in initiating them to discuss their common problems and work
towards the problems and
the betterment of their standard of living.
It is the duty of teachers to direct the thought and outlook as well
as mould the character of
their students. For this reason, the responsibility of teachers in
training student-teachers
aimed at the future progress and development of our country and the
proper upbringing of
students, could hardly be underestimated.
In the age in which we are living especially when different philosophies
of life are competing
against another, the responsibility of teachers has been even more
exacting. Those who will be
serving the people in future should follow this same path in endeavouring
to develop their
country and maintain her freedom. This is one of the main responsibilities
of teachers.
In this age when man, through his knowledge of science, has created
dangerous weapons to
destroy himself the responsibility of the great powers for the maintenance
of world peace is
well known to everyone. We believe that the exchange of visits by statesmen
to talk over
matters on which their points of view will greatly help remove the
misunderstandings and
mistrust prevailing among States.
PLANNING
Planning is the basis of the rational and sustained use of capital,
manpower and time in the
acceleration of economic development.
The history of planning shows that no pioneer plans were ever executed
even partially, much
less wholly.
Planning is indispensable for the rational utilization of both a nation's
resources and
foreign aid or loans.
As a basis of, and working procedure for, a national socio-economic
policy, a plan is a means
whereby a nation can be developed through the rational utilization
of manpower and machinery for
the most important aspects of he country's needs.
The execution of any such plan needs, however, national participation.
You must ensure that
in your desire to achieve immediate goals, long term considerations
of equal or greater
importance are not ignored or irrevocably prejudiced. Plan your time
and use both your
physical and mental powers purposefully and productively. Military
planning for the security
of this continent must be undertaken in common within a collective
framework.
WORK
Every labourer is a father, his labour is his child. Choose your project
carefully and achieve
it worthily.
Once a person has decided upon his life work and is assured that in
doing the work for which
he is best endowed and equipped, he is filling a vital need, what he
then needs, is faith and
integrity, compiled with courageous spirit so that no longer preferring
himself to the
fulfilment of his task, he may address himself to the problems he must
solve in order to be
effective.
Rich and poor have always existed and always will.
Why? Because there are those that work and those that don't, those
that wish to earn their
living and those that prefer to do nothing.
Those that work, that want to work, are not poor. For it is true that
Our Lord the Creator
sends us into the world as equals, but it is also true that when one
is born one is neither
rich nor poor. One is naked.
It is later on that one becomes rich or poor, according to one's desserts.
Yes, we too are aware that giving alms serves no useful purpose. For
there is only one means
to solve the poverty problem. work.
We have said that whoever doesn't work because he doesn't want to is
poor. We have said that
wealth has to be gained through hard work. We have said those who don't
work starve. And now
we add that the capacity to earn depends on the individual: Each individual
is responsible for
his misfortunes, his fate. It is wrong to expect help to fall from
above, as a gift: Wealth has
to be deserved. Work is one of the commandment of Our Lord the Creator!
If each and everyone endeavours to cooperate and work in as much as
his capacity permits, our
faith rests upon the Almighty God that he would bless the results for
us.
It is not sufficient simply to see and admire the natural beauty and
fertility of Ethiopia.
It is our obligation to work upon and benefit from this country whose
fertile soil has been
granted us by the Almighty God. We have to gain honour and pride for
the country.
Whatever the task may be, man may begin it but he cannot complete it,
unless God sustains
and supports him. If he fails to accomplish the task on which he has
set out, having worked to
the best of his ability, he is not to be maligned by being called lazy.
SELF HELP
The people themselves must come to realize their own difficulties in
the development of their
community and try to solve them by collective participation following
an order of priority and
taking their potentiality into account.
It is well known to you all that recognizing one's problems and striving
hard to challenge
them is a mark of an attempt at self-sufficiency. Self help in the
benefits to be acquired
through education, will save the individual from asking someone's assistance.
DEVELOPMENT
Although the beginnings of civilization of each country vary in time,
the fundamental factors
which gave impetus to each country to awaken and embark on the road
to progress to reach their
present level of development, are those qualities which are enshrined
in the nature of man,
namely desire and fortitude.
The partner who places his own short-range ambitions ahead of the long-range
interests of the
partnership has embarked on a course which will ultimately result in
the dissolution of the
partnership itself.
It is by the understanding of past difficulties that we can bequeath
fundamental guidance
which would be of pride to the coming generations we therefore urge
our people to struggle and
to make sacrifices for those things which will enable them to ameliorate
their conditions of
life and leave a richer heritage.
Economic Development
Where enterprise and initiative are not lacking, the pace at which
the growth of a country's
economy normally proceeds can be quickened or slackened by global developments
far or near. In
our effort to raise the living Standard of our beloved people, in our
endeavour to bring
prosperity to our country, the feeling of cooperation and understanding
has always characterized
our people.
A special case is the recent development in certain provinces where
the people are seen
voluntarily raising funds to build schools, clinics, roads and similar
other projects.
What can give one more pleasure than to see such a measure of self-help
in one's life time,
for the prosperity and progress of his own country? Let every citizen
of our empire strive
hard to strengthen this espirit de corps everywhere.
We entrust the spirit of good-will to our people to work diligently
and cooperatively in order
to arrive at the realization of this socioeconomic development that
has been launched by either
our government or our people. You have a rich land that yields a variety
of products, do not
be contented with the satisfaction of your bare needs but instead,
cultivate your land among
others with oleogenous plants, the seeds of which you can export for
your greater benefit. Use
the forest woods to make furniture and implements and exchange them
for money. Your
workmanship will be a monument to your name.
One should realize that thriftiness is the basis for the accumulation
of wealth and the
economic growth of a nation. One seldom minimizes the value of money
earned by the sweat of
the brow however small it may be, but for the extravagant even a huge
amount of money is
worthless.
The co-operative movement has long been known throughout the world,
and we Ourself have on
numerous occasions urged Our people to join increasingly in cooperative
enterprises.
Co-operatives must, ultimately, play a highly important role in the
growth of our economy, and
no time can be lost in availing ourselves of the benefits to be derived
from therm During the
past year, we decided upon a programme designed to provide specific
encouragement to the
creation of agricultural co-operatives, and a number of Government-sponsored
co-operatives,
farms have been established by Our Ministry of National Community Development.
We have
provided lands, agricultural machinery and expert assistance to these
farms and we entertain
high hopes that their success will spur Our people to embark increasingly
upon co-operative
endeavours. Should Our people fail to avail themselves of this opportunity,
the consequences
will be regrettable indeed.
Community Development
The fundamental purpose of a community development movement is to teach
the rural people of
Our Empire that through cooperative self-help and a united approach
to common problems, the
vast potential for their own self-improvement which they themselves
represent, can be
translated into effective programmes which can do much to
improve their standard of living.
Social Development
Lasting progress can only be built on deep and enduring foundations.
When a solid foundation
is laid, if the mason is able and his materials good, a strong house
can be built.
To develop oneself, one has to develop one's own initiative and perseverance
- a man has to
strive in order to grow. Let us work out our own programmes in all
fields - political, economic,
social and military. Man's contributions which live to influence the
life and progress of
posterity, are the most permanent monuments that can ever be created.
We must become
increasingly willing to analyze our efforts, to experiment, to admit
our failures as we take
pride in our successes.
LAND POLICY
For those of you who possess the land and labour but lack capital,
we have made credit
available at low interest. For those of you who have the necessary
finance but do not possess
land to work on, we have, in accordance with our 'Proclamation' which
entitles every Ethiopian
to ownership of land, established offices in every province through
which you may be able to
acquire land. Those who have neither land nor money will be granted
land and financial loans
at low interest. For those of you who possess land, who have financial
resources and manpower,
we have made experts available to furnish you with the necessary guidance
and advice in your
various undertakings.
Land Reform
The essence of land reform is, while fully respecting the principle
of private ownership, the
landless people must have the opportunity to possess their own land,
that the position of
tenant farmers must be improved, and that the system of taxation applying
to land holdings
must be the same for all.
It is our aim that every Ethiopian own his own land, in implementation
of this principle. We
have ourselves set the example by ordering that certain lands in Arussi
Province heretofore
administered by our Ministry of the Imperial Court be distributed to
the tenants working on
them, against payment by each man only of the nominal fees charged
for the transfer and the
registration of this property in his own name.
This has been the basic objective of virtually every modern programme
of land reform; this
is the ultimate goal of the study now being undertaken by the Committee
of Land Reform.
RESOURCES
The ultimate resource of a nation is its people.
Unless this resource is employed for the benefit of the nation, unless
the latent good which
it represents is exploited to the maximum for the common good the nation
will languish, poor
in spirit, lacking in achievernent.
But no people can make their full contribution to the life of the nation
to which they ovve
allegiance unless they possess and enjoy those few fundamental prerequisites
indispensable
to rendering their participation in the affairs of their country both
possible and
significant.
The growth of a people is complex and inter-related. Man must be educated;
he cannot come to
grips with or cope with or understand the modern world unless he has
been taught about it. He
must be assured of a minimum economic security; concern himself with
matters going beyond
the day-to-day satisfaction of his physical needs. unless he is fed
and clothed and sheltered,
nor can he acquire a sufficient degree of social consciousness to be
able to support his
own personal interests to the good of the nation and the development
of its society.
Freedom, liberty, the rights of manùthese mean little to the
ignorant, the hungry, the
ill-clothed, the badly housed.
It is our desire to see a much larger number of our young people benefitting
from the
resources we have our own and have received as aid from abroad, and
our young people
graduating in the fields of technology and industrial relation.
It is essential that, however great the sacrifice needed to curb economic
stagnation may
be, available resources be as judiciously used as possible on a carefully
selected list of
priorities.
AGRICULTURE
Since Ethiopia's economy is predominantly agricultural, agriculture
must play a large role
in the plans which have been drawn up, at our command, for our empire's
development.
It is the duty of all to apply the skill of their minds to the factories,
the trading centres
and the roads and communications which are also evidence of Ethiopia's
prosperity, of
Ethiopia's strength.
During the past year (1958) the abrupt cessation of rainfall during
the growing season
caused considerable damage to Ethiopia's crops. This experience has
demonstrated that
the rivers of our country should be devoted to irrigation, so that
the food needs of our ever
growing population will no longer be left at the mercy of the whims
and caprices of the
elements.
The fruits of the farmer's labour must be enjoyed by him whose toil
has produced the crop.
The uses of trees are many and varied. Groves of trees protect our
fields and plantations
from being desiccated by the desert winds which blow from neighbouring
regions During the
summer months, they provide moisture and shade. If trees are not presently
planted to replace
those being cut down from time to time, our constant efforts to conserve
and develop the
wealth of our country through the welfare of present and future generations
will be rendered
ineffective and futile.
We are greatly grieved to observe the many thousands of gashas of rich
forest land being
destroyed every year by reckless timber-cutting, thoughtless forest
burning, unregulated
forest grazing and other misuses of our forest wealth, due to popular
ignorance and desire
for temporary advantage on the part of our people.
The existence or non-existence of forest wealth in a country is one
of the most important
factors influencing its development and progress. The increasing pace
of deforestation and
the growing dearth of timber in Ethiopia, caused by unregulated tree-cutting
and the failure
to replace these by new plantings, give us occasion for anxiety that
a severe economic
problem will confront the coming generation. It is essential that steps
be taken here and
now to stop this wastage and check this destruction.
In these days when all nations of the world, in recognition of the
tremendous importance of
forest wealth, have launched intensive progranmes for forest conservation
and re-forestation,
it behoves our county also to take the appropriate measures to solve
this problem.
It is our wish and our desire that each and every citizen of our country
follow the example
we set on this Arbour Day in planting this tree, and himself plant
as many trees as he can,
for his own benefit as well as for the benefit of future generations.
Without agricultural expansion, industrial growth is impossible. Great
strides, it is true,
have been made in introducing industries into Ethiopia in recent years.
But in any
less-developed agrarian country possessing only limited possibilities
for selling the
products of its factories in world export markets, industry can grow
only if there exists
an increasingly prosperous rural consumer population. Industrialisation
is not an alternative
to the development of agriculture; rather, the development of agriculture
is the essential
pre-condition to the growth of industry.
Measures will shortly be proposed to Parliament for action to be taken
to preserve, for
the benefit of present and future generations, the nation's forests
which are not only
valuable in themselves as a source of wood, but act as nature's guardian
against the forces
of erosion, which, unchecked, can transform fertile areas into barren
and sterile desert.
FINE ARTS
A purely materialistic art would be like a tree which is expected to
bear fruit without
flowering and to sacrifice grace and beauty for mere utility.
Our admiration for the creator's handiwork should not be limited to
those things he has
provided us with for our daily needs, but should include all that is
good and beautiful.
It is these tender feelings of deep and silent admiration evoked from
our hearts by the
beauties of creation that should find adequate expression in the fine
arts.
Music, drama and the other arts are rooted in the ancient history of
our empire, and their
development to an even higher peak of perfection will be possible in
the atmosphere of a
university. Ethiopia possesses an ancient literature and its study
can be fostered here so
thag the Ethiopian youth inspired by this national example, may raise
it to yet higher levels
of excellence.
The study of the heroic history of our empire will stimulate the imagination
of building
authors and teachers.
HEALTH
There is nothing as precious to man as a sound mind in a sound body
and it is essential that
the physical well being of our people merits as much attention as its
spiritual welfare.
INTER AFRICA
There is absolutely no doubt that Africans will eventually obtain their
freedom and
independence in spite of their present difficulties.
The people of African origin have emigrated to all parts of the world,
but wherever they may
be, they have similar historical experience and the problems that await
them depend on
sympathy and this can be used by all of us as the basis for the establishment
of greater
cooperation, which will be for our mutual benefit.
Haile Selassie to Parliament in Jamaica:
The people of Jamaica, by and large, have originated in Africa. This
gives us another basis
upon which we can contract a healthy relation because of the fundamental
similarity between
us, that will in the long run contribute to a better maintenance of
international peace and
security.
The Organization of African Unity is an organization which the people
of our vast continent
have established with a view of performing certain specific tasks.
Briefly speaking, the
organization is established for the purpose of protecting in a better
fashion, the independence
of African States.
It is also meant to expedite the economic and social progress through
cooperation of African
peoples. It also has the important task of assisting in the maintenance
of initernational peace
and security. And in accordance with the Charter of O.A.U., we eradicate
colonialism and
apartheid.
ETHIOPIA'S WORLD POSITION
Because of her unity and independence, Ethiopia had and still has jealous
enemies and
aggressive dissidents.
It is therefore the primary duty of every Ethiopian to safeguard the
unity and freedom that
has been fortified since time immemorial by the courage and bravery
of our forefathers.
We have to maintain its integrity, to work and benefit from its existence.
Ethiopia is a nation fully committed to African unity and to the greater
cause of world peace
and subsequently shall continue to support and strengthen the O.A.U.,
which was established
as an African instrument for peace and progress.
Ethiopia is, by her own choice, a nonaligned state. Our Policies on
the vexatious
international issues of the day have been declared to all, and our
adherence to them is
steadfast: the urgent imperative of universal disarmament, the settlement
of disputes by
peaceful negotiation, the supremacy of reason and logic over force
and irrationality.
We insist that the way to peace among men and nations rests in the
even-handed application
and enforcement of the principles of the United Nations and Organization
of African Unity:
non-interference in the internal affairs of others, self determination
for the remaining
dependent peopies of the world, respect for the territorial integrity
of independent states
In the conduct of the international affairs of our nation, we have
placed high value upon
personal contacts between peoples and leaders of nations.
Ethiopia is a peace-loving nation. Except for those times when it had
to rise up in arms to
fight-off aggression or to advance the cause of collective security;
there is not one instance
in history of Ethiopia provoking a conflict by violating territorial
integrity or by
interfering in the internal affairs of others, and there will never
be any such instance.
However, Ethiopia will never be found wanting in its efforts to strengthen
its defence force,
sustained as it is by the traditional valor of its gallant people,
to thwart the designs of
those who are bent on violating the freedom and unity of its people
and its territorial
integrity.
INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
In matters of foreign policy we have been ever guided by three basic
principles.
First is our deep conviction that, where there is no lack of goodwill,
all international
disputes can be resolved through negotiations, without recourse to
violence. An inevitable
corollary of this belief is our firm conviction that all nations, whatever
their political
persuasions, can live together in peace.
Second is our unswerving devotion to the principle of collective security.
Third, flowing from the principle of collective security, is the necessity,
in these anxious
days when the major powers are engaged in a frantic arms race, for
all countries which have
accepted this principle and assumed a share of the responsibility for
ensuring the peace of
the world, to become ever stronger militarily.
As we have stated time and time again, we are firmly persuaded that
the path to guaranteeing
the peace of the world lies in supporting the principle of collective
security ard the United
Nations Charter, combined with a progressive reduction of the armaments
which are being built
up throughout the world. The billions of dollars which are now wasted
on this fruitless effort
could with great benefit, be diverted into the constructive channels
of aid for the economic
growth of under-developed countries.
Personal Diplomacy
International friendship can be strenthened and deepened by the personal
exchange of ideas
between leaders of nations.
What the economically backward countries are looking forward to, however
is the application
of the money now dumped on destructive armament to the solution of
economic problems.
The Need for Concerted Action
What is called for at this critical time is for the international community
to move from mere
rejection and condemnation to taking action. The international community
has many options,
but what has been lacking so far is political will.
The world is only now coming to realize what Ethiopia and Africa have
long recognized, that
peace, independence and prosperity of mankind can be achieved and assured
only by the
collective and united efforts of free men who are prepared to maintain
eternal vigilance and
abour unceasingly to protect these most precious of God's gifts.
FATE
Whatever the task may be, man may begin it but he cannot complete it,
unless God sustains and
supports him. If he fails to accomplish the task on which he has set
out, having worked to the
best of his ability, he is not to be maligned by being called lazy.
Man may, at the onset, control the direction which events take, but
once his choice is made,
events soon escape his control and history proceeds by its own force
and momentum.
LIFE
What life has taught me on the question of racial discrimination, I
like to share with those
who want to learn.
That until the philosophy which holds one race superior and another
inferior is finally and
permanently discredited and abandoned.
That until there are no longer first class and second class citizens
of any nation;
That until the colour of a man's skin is no more significance than
the colour of his eyes:
That until the basic human rights are equally guaranteed to all, without
regard to race;
That until that day, the dream of lasting peace and world citizenship
and the rule of
international morality will remain but a fleeting illusion to be pursued
but never attained;
And until the ignoble and unhappy regimes that hold our brothers in
Angola, in Mozambique
and in South Africa in sub-human bondage have been toppled and destroyed;
Until bigotry and prejudice and malicious and inhuman self interest
have been replaced by
understanding and tolerance and goodwill;
Until all Africans stand and speak as free beings, equal in the eyes
of the Almighty;
Until that day, the African continent will not know peace. We Africans
will fight, if
necessary, and we know that we shall win, as we are confident in the
victory of good over
evil.
It will be self deceiving and a waste of time to advocate dialogue
with those who are not
ready to listen, because it is obvious that the freedom of millions
is not a commodity subject
to bargaining.
It is a fact that young people have always been impatient. This intemational
movement is
therefore not surprising. Such move ments sometimes bring useful ideas
into the open, but
very often these ideas turn out to be harmful and contrary to ordinary
progress.
This impatience and agitation result in larue part from a rnisunderstanding
of realities. We
are convinced that young people must learn to use their heads rather
than their fists. They
should be heard, but also guided for the common good.
Young people will be young people. You cannot change the uncouth manners
of the youth.
Besides there is nothing new in that: there is never anything new under
the sun. They can't
know it because they lack experience, they lack wisdom. Examine the
past: you'll see that
the disobedience of the young has occurred all through history. The
young don't know what
they want.
Life is like the theatre - One mustn't try to understand it all at
once and immediately. It is
no longer amusing.
There are good men and wicked. The former should be made use of and
the latter punished,
without attempting to understand why the ones are good and the others
wicked. We demand
too much of men to be able to respect them ...
That which man dreams of and to Which he aspires, unless fulfilled
in his own lifetime, can
produce no actual satisfaction to him. It will be self deceiving and
a waste of time to
advocate dialogue with those who are not ready to listen, because it
is obvious that the
freedom of millions is not a commodity subject to bargaining. It is
better to die free than
to live as slaves.
DEATH
Now, however, it has become your fate to obey the order of the great
and merciful Lord, a
lot that befalls each and everyone of us in our turn.
As it were, after you had accomplished what was within your bounds,
you have slept, but
although you depart from us physically, yow works and your name will
always remain among
us.
On the death of Prince Makonnen:
Mortality is man's inevitable course. We must patiently accept God's
resolution in giving us
Makonnen, the one whom he gave us to be the ornament of our life, and
recalling him.
Death changes everything, sweeps everything away. Even mistakes.
MISCELLANEOUS
Throughout history it has been the inaction of those who could have
acted, the indifference of
those who should have known better, the silence of the voice of justice
when it mattered most,
that has made it possible for evil to triumph.
The glorious pages of human history have been written only in those
moments when men have
been able to act in concert to prevent impending tragedies. By the
actions you take you can
also illuminate the pages of history.
When you make man rich in the honours of this world and appoint him
above other creatures,
that it be known that It is not for his merit but only through your
benevolence and generosity,
Since no creature created in Your image and to Your pattern gives up
hope that everything he
begs of You will be done for him until the day You sever his soul from
his body, we beseech
You that Ethiopia should not remain with her freedom extinct and prostrate
under an alien
ruler, so that the mouth of her people be silenced for fear of a foreign
governor, but rather,
that You will save them by Your deeds of kindness lest they remain
with their hearts
oppressed through being deprived of their own Ethiopian ruler who was
leading them towards
civilization under a light yoke and with gladness
O Lord, abode of exiles, light of the blind, truth and justice are
Your thrones. Receive us
who have been exiled for our freedom's sake, who have had to leave
our country on account of
violent assault, In praying to You thus, it is not for our righteousness
but for Your great
mercies.
Technical and scientific advances have combined to raise mankind to
a level of material
achievement never before realized.
A house built on granite and strong foundations, not even the onslaught
of pouring rain,
gushing torrents and strong winds will be able to pull down. Some people
have written the
story of my life representing as truth what in fact derives from ignorance,
error or envy;
but they cannot shake the truth from its place, even if they attempt
to make others believe it.
Sports being the symbol of fraternity and team work there can be no
doubt of its utility or
of the sound virtues which it develops.
Unemployment is harmful if it harms and damages the unemployed himself,
his nation and his
country. Employers should strive to create more jobs. Workers should
attend to their work with
diligence and vigour. These twin attributes are the cornerstones for
progress.
I know of the love which the Jamaican people entertain for the people
of Ethiopia and the
welcome which you have given me this day is evidence of it.
I know that the Jamaican people were very sympathetic when Ethiopia
was occupied during the
fascist regime. During that time, Jamaicans as well as others who had
African blood supported
the Ethiopian Liberation Movement.
And now that we are free we must assume the responsibility to work
for the greater unity of all
peoples of African origin.
It is quite true that a country can achieve material progress alone.
However, we know from the
experiences of the past that internaltional cooperation tends to quicken
the pace for progress of
individual countries.
This is again another area for us to think about and see in what way
we can further expand the
relations of the people of Jamaica and Ethiopia.
From another fundamental point of view, this is precisely why the O.A.U.
has been
established. It is because the African continent, which comprises more
than 250 million people,
if it were to remain divided among more than 30 states, their individual
voices would not carry
weight. It is precisely why, since there is an identity of interest,
we have attempted to include
Jamaica.
Also, so that we can carry this weight in the councils of nations,
u and also through the
process of cooperation and expanded economic relations we might be
in a position to quicken
the pace of development of the individual member countries of the O
A U.