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OverviewAs the sun was setting on Sunday, March 28, 1976, Colonel Beshu, a high-ranking Ethiopian military commander, was killed by Eritrean freedom fighters in the center of Asmera, the beautiful East African capital city of Eritrea. The reprisal by Ethiopian authorities was swift and horrific. Scores of civilians were massacred in their homes through a long, lonely night of terror. A young electrician was among the victims, as soldiers of the Ethiopian government broke into his home and gunned him down in the presence of his loved ones. His family was left to tend to the slain body, in utter loneliness. The young electrician was my father, I was fifteen years old, and I was forced to flee across wilderness and war zones to become a refugee in the Sudan. The Tigrayan Electrician - Memories of my Father and His Beloved Motherland retraces the desolation of that night and the flight it compelled. On the night of my father's murder, the Ethiopian authorities went on a rampage to execute defenseless civilians under the cover of darkness. A half-century later, the same crime is being perpetrated on a massive scale, by the Ethiopian government, against my father's birthplace, the Tigray region, in northern Ethiopia. The Ethiopian government, led by a Nobel Peace Prize-winning premier, isolated the six million people of Tigray under a total communication and transportation blockade and launched a vicious war. Out of sight of the world's attention, the Ethiopian army and their allies committed unspeakable atrocities, including ethnic cleansing, mass killing, and widespread sexual violence. The brutal onslaught was followed by a merciless siege of Tigray that has now been in place for two years. Tigrayans who did not die of bullets and bombs are now perishing from hunger and disease, totally isolated from the rest of the planet. Genocide is being perpetrated in Tigray with very little concern from the rest of the world. This book is dedicated to the memory of the victims of the ongoing genocide in Tigray, and all proceeds will be donated to support the survivors. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Issayas Y BahtaPublisher: Isaias Irgau Imprint: Isaias Irgau Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.218kg ISBN: 9798986970004Pages: 184 Publication Date: 31 March 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviews"""This book is part memoir, part history, part pilgrimage, part celebration of life in a little-known part of the world, Eritrea. The poetic narrative takes the reader on a nostalgic journey to magical places, especially Asmera, where traditions, loyalties, and rituals were once familiar to the exiled author. Having survived so much suffering, the author may, like his country, have a 'fractured identity', and possibly an ambivalent attitude to the fervent freedom fighters, but his loyalty and love for his father and his country prevail.""Dr. Stephany Evans Steggall, author of The Eritrean Letter Writers: Dear Mr. President. ""What I found fascinating about the book is that it gives the reader a vivid account of the tormenting years the civilian population had to endure during the liberation war when Eritrean young men and women resorted to an armed struggle to reclaim the independence of their country."" Araya Debessay, Ph.D. - a member of the 13 Eritrean scholars and professionals (G-13)" Author Information"Issayas Yrgaw Bahta was born in Eritrea, East Africa. During the Eritrean war of independence, he witnessed the killing of his father by Ethiopian government soldiers. He was fifteen years old. He escaped through wilderness and war zones to reach a refugee camp in the bordering country of the Sudan. His search for safety and a better future led him to Italy two years later, where he completed high school. He was finally granted refugee status in the United Kingdom, where he won a scholarship to study medicine and fulfill a lifetime dream of becoming a physician. He received his medical degree from the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom and completed his surgical training in the United States. ""The Tigrayan Electrician - Memories of my Father and His Beloved Motherland"" is his first book detailing the tragic loss of his father and his flight to safety." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |