The Immortal Meles Lives
In his Indestructible Legacies
Tseggai Isaac, PhD.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47Zcmz42VJ4
The untimely death of
great leaders is not unusual. President Lincoln on April 14, 1865, Emperor
Youhannes IV on March 10. 1889, and President Kennedy on November 23, 1963,
departed before they could attend to the daily agenda they had planned to
undertake at the hours their lives were suddenly interrupted. Prime Minister
Meles’s departure on August 21, 2012 was also sudden and unexpected. He is no
more with us, but his leadership legacies are immortal in their demonstrable
testimonials for generations to come. His grand ideas, his broad and
all-encompassing visions, and the nobility of his intents for his country, the
region, Africa and the world are here on earth as a catalogue of a heroic
leader, Meles Zenawi Legesse.
Ato Meles Zenawi was an
extraordinaire statesman. He was the brightest star to have ever emerged from
the dark firmaments of the region, the Horn of Africa. For decades, this region
was clouded by incompetence, ignorance, mundane petulance, and the attendant
results of famine, wars, and abject poverty. The rise and brief illumination
that Prime Minister Meles represented was a respite from the ugliness of
interminable miseries.
Meles Zenawi was a
quintessential son of the classic Ethiopic temper. That temper had desperately
needed reviving, but could not manage achieving its ascent until he rose as a
courageous lion from the gentle valleys of the Mereb River and the towering
mountains of Adwa. He combined an Ethiopic essence of nobility long erased by
colonialism and Ethiopian incompetence that was thought to find its
resurrection in the fulfillment of his visions.
Historians will easily
notice the subtle similarities between Meles’s style of leadership and the great
Ethiopian leaders of the past. His greatness is an echo of the distant past
that had enlightened with the brightest lights of alphabets and a grand
civilization. He was truly gifted in ways that were manifestly obvious in the
past glories of Ethiopia. The Ethiopia of Caleb and Ezana was preponderant
across the seas and oceans. Meles was inspired by their legacy. The Zaguwe
household was transitional, but continued the tradition of valor. They shook
Egypt to its senses of good neighborliness when its jihadist ambitions went out
of line to offend Ethiopia’s honor. Lalibela and Yetbarek were amazing! The
Solomonic Dynasty came at the worst time in Ethiopian history. Its unfortunate
“restoration” theme harnessed its mandate by parochialzing Ethiopianness. It
was also, by circumstances not of its own making, in a defensive mood against
jihad from all corners of Ethiopia. Against formidable odds and continuous
threats to the stellar Abyssinian Civilization, it stood firm and indomitable.
It maintained the legacy of courage and perseverance. From its great warrior
kings, AmdeTzion, Dawit I, ZerAYacob, Yeshaak, Glaudewos, Fassiledes, Iyassu,
the towering Tewodros before his unfortunate derangement, and the incomparable
Emperor Youhannes IV inspire the aptitudes and amplitudes of Legesse Meles
Zenawi.
Meles Zenawi was not a
simple fly-by-night ruler. He was an authority who has sought and earned the
institutional legitimacy from his people. They had authorized him to lead, not
to rule. He obeyed and executed the popular will .That legitimacy had enabled
him and his government to faithfully uphold the will and the accolade of the
Ethiopian people. He was not a perfect angel, but he was not a sadistic monster
with unquenchable thirst for the blood of Ethiopians as the diabolical Mengistu
Hailemariam was. And he had not placed his ego as a priority for ruling for
life by reducing his country to a pathetic, enfeebled, and quadriplegic
carcass. Legesse Meles Zenawi was a noble hero, a man of honor, and courageous
enough to defend the underdog, the defenseless, the persecuted, the rejected,
and those humiliated by satanic tyrants and human rights abusers.
Ezna’s royal predecessors
planted the immortal obelisks of Axum at its authentic foundation. Mussolini
uprooted one of these grand obelisks, and planted it at a false foundation in
Rome to fabricate a false glory by stealing Ethiopian greatness. Meles forced
Italy to uproot his ancestors’ treasured monument. That was not all. He also
forced them to erect it at the exact location where Ezana’s great-great-great-
grandfather had first planted it! Meles, in less than fifteen years of leadership
accomplished far grander deeds than any other Ethiopian plenipotentiary since
Ezana and Lalibella.
Meles Legesse Zenawi was a
cosmopolitan. It
took little time for the
brilliant Meles to master global diplomacy, and gain the deserved praise of world
leaders. They instantly recognized the sharpness of his mind and the depth of
his wisdom. His wisdom was broad and the range of his visions wide and clear.
He was willing to listen and learn. He was gracious and humble, but his humility
came from his unshakable and enormous self-confidence rather than from cheap
fawning, and false pretences. If any one of the regions leaders, in their
stupid tyranny, and shameless greed are in any small measure to be regarded a
leader, it is for the type of a leader that Meles was not; it is not for the
type of superior quality of leadership that Meles had shown with a straight
face, firm backbone, robust energy, and quick intelligence. Meles understood
events, had deep and wide grasp of the circumstances that triggered them, and
possessed razor sharp mind to judge them, weigh their merit and execute fast
decisions that never went wrong. Global confidence on Ethiopia’s future that
was non-existent with the Stalinist derg recovered under President Meles when
he presided over the snap-elections of 1991 barely six months since the EPRDF
entered Addis Ababa. He presided over the writing of a new democratic
constitution, held elections, and was reconfirmed as a legitimate head of
government serving a new Ethiopian Republic.
I, an
Eritrean scholar, will always miss Meles Legesse Zenawi for the all
encompassing promises love and prosperity as well as the prospects of peace and
reconciliation that he had represented for our region. I hope and pray we will
be wise enough to uphold his vision and continue his legacy by heeding the
Apostle’s exhortation – to follow after “hope, faith, and love”. 1st
Corinthians 13: 13.
I will
include hereunder another Yared (Tewodros) to help me commemorate the
indestructible legacy of Meles Legesse Zenawi.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47Zcmz42VJ4
Tseggai Isaac, PhD.
Missouri University of Science and
Technology
Rolla,
Missouri