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Formats
Paperback Details
  • 08/2021
  • 9780648828723 0648828727
  • 328 pages
  • $13.99
Ebook Details
  • 08/2021
  • 9780648828716 B09CG32CGZ
  • 413 pages
  • $USD 5.99
Janet Bastyan
Author
Lucy's People: An Ethiopian Memoir

"This is a gripping story, well-told." ___SHEGER FM RADIO 102.1

Lucy’s People skilfully documents an intimate perspective on an ethically complex time and place.”___Ben Claessens
​​​​​​​
Lucy's People: An Ethiopian Memoir is the inspiring true story of a country and a life. Young Mesfin is a UN scholarship recipient, breadwinner to a dozen, and an engineer. He is wired to defend the helpless. Under the communist Derg 1974 to 1991, he holds his head high throughout random arrest, torture and forcible military conscription.
Related to Emperor Haile Selassie I, Mesfin's parents are models of initiative. His mother and grandmother are patriots that resisted Mussolini’s 1935 invasion, and his father is a colonel. As a youthful Airborne lieutenant, Mesfin saves the innocent from military madness. Then, as project engineer for water development and construction, he protects local environments and traditions.
Mesfin is steeped in Ethiopian culture, attending the emperor's Jubilee in Palace School. Ethiopia's sun and moon are female, and women walk tall; he defers to them. His Jewish heritage inspires him, as does Abyssinian Engineer Queen Saba (Sheba). Then there is Lucy, the early hominid fossil. Her skeleton has survived intact for 3.2 million years. 'To Ethiopians, she was a symboic mother. Hers was a story of miraculous survival. So was ours.'

'To Ethiopians, she was a symbolic mother. Hers was a story of miraculous survival. So was ours.'__Mesfin Tadesse

Reviews
Advance Reviews

"In my humble opinion, your book "Lucy's People" is the absolute best book I have read since I started being involved in this podcast. I am deeply moved by what I read. I also appreciate the erudite details you provide. I love that this is a faith-friendly book, and that wisdom pours out of every page." ___Ari Barbalat, New Books Network

"Humming with heartfelt energy, Mesfin Tadesse’s memoirs span a transformative and troubled era. Bright and charismatic, Mesfin cuts his teeth under the reign of Emperor Haile Selassie I. In horror, he watches the communist Derg coup of 1974, and, alongside his compatriots, struggles to endure the ensuing atrocities. As a headstrong young man, Mesfin must not merely survive, but must do so without compromising his convictions or his love of Ethiopia. Engaging to the last, Lucy’s People runs the gamut of human emotion. It strikes the tone of an affectionate elegy, such that it feels, at one moment, warmly descriptive, and at yet another, quietly indignant. In this manner, it weaves between the personal and the political: a feat widely accomplished with playful, acerbic wit. Readers can expect an appetising dose of flavourful detail, but without fear of excessive nostalgia or sentimentality. The storytelling remains consistently inventive, and rewards with gripping vignettes starring spirited personalities. These memoirs thereby tell the story of many – a story of resilient compassion and defiant pride.The result is compelling; Lucy’s People skilfully documents an intimate perspective on an ethically complex time and place." __Ben Claessens 

“A unique depiction of Ethiopia from a native's point of view, highlighting not only under appreciated historical details but also cultural aspects and day-to-day activities, which gives the reader a broad, holistic understanding of the nation." __OnlineBookClub  

 

indiereader.com

A memoir about growing up Ethiopian in the 1970s and ‘80s.

History is written by the winners, which is why literary memoirs are so important. They often tell the other side of history experienced by those suffering under political and social upheaval. War memoirs like Night by Elie Wiesel, and The Diary of Anne Frank are taught in classrooms across the world. Mesfin Tadesse’s LUCY’S PEOPLE: AN ETHIOPIAN MEMOIR (translated by Janet Bastyan) is also a war memoir of sorts but it’s impossible to tell the story of modern Ethiopia without delving into the country’s violent past.

Ethiopia is the birthplace of mankind. The book’s title refers to “Lucy,” the world’s oldest hominid skeleton, discovered there. The country’s ancient civilizations rivaled those of Egypt in terms of technology and sophistication. Ethiopia was one of the first nations to adopt Christianity, even before Rome, which often put it at odds with the Islamic nations surrounding it. During WWII, the country was invaded by Italy, but the Ethiopian army fought hard to repel the fascists. From 1974 to 1991, the military-backed Derg took over, leading to decades of famine and conflict. When Ethiopia isn’t being invaded by neighboring countries, it’s divided by in-fighting. In 1993 the coastal section of Ethiopia broke off, leading to the formation of a new country, Eritrea, and leaving Ethiopia as the most populated landlocked nation on earth.

Author Tadesse lived through the years of Derg oppression, and longs for a strong, unifying Ethiopian leader, like Haile Selassie. Rising to power in 1916, Selassie is seen as an Ethiopian hero for resisting the Italian invasion and helping form the United Nations in 1945. Selassie was deposed by the Derg in 1974. “Throughout my youth, Ethiopia was the land of suffering,” Tadesse writes. Fighting is a way of life in Ethiopia and Tadesse is proud of his family’s “warrior” heritage. Father was a high-ranking military official, while Mother and Grandmother took up arms against fascist invaders. (“Mum was a crack-shot patriot.”) “Our family treasure was a patriot’s sword. During a raid, the Derg stole four. After 10 years Mum got one back.”

Indoctrination into violence started early for Tadesse. “When I was four, I took Dad’s service pistol. It was probably loaded. I refused to hand it over, loving the feel of it in my hand.” Violence, sex, and concepts of masculinity blend together. “At 16 he received the gun, his to keep. He could not obtain a wife without skill in using it. A mark of prowess was to shoot through the center of an orb-weaving spider’s web without breaking it. I did this before the age of nine. A general whispered, ‘You are ready for a woman now.’” It is not until Tadesse joins the military himself, battling Somalian invaders in the Rift Valley, home of Lucy, and soldiers from the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, that he gets a firsthand glimpse of the visceral horrors of war. There’s nothing glamorous, glorious, or heroic about seeing friends die.

Military experience, combined with an engineering education, leaves Tadesse more contemplative. He discovers the true heart of Ethiopia in Konso, where systems of engineering, agriculture, and social equity mirror the values of ancient Ethiopia. At times LUCY’S PEOPLE veers toward tall-tale territory, and some of Tadesse’s prideful boasts may need fact-checking. But his claims about Ethiopia’s natural healers could prove beneficial to Western doctors. “Healers in the country found innovative ways to cure cancer without chemotherapy and invasive surgery.”

Is Ethiopia as progressive and forward-thinking as Tadesse portrays? Like many countries in the region, homosexuality is illegal in Ethiopia, and the country leads the world in kidnap marriages and female circumcisions. In 2024 Ethiopia is slotted to join the BRICS alliance of communist nations. Despite years of harassment under the Soviet-backed Derg, the nation’s leaders have chosen again to ally with Russia. Those who don’t learn from the past are doomed to repeat it. Perhaps this is why Tadesse’s memoir ends with him leaving his homeland and walking to a refugee camp in Kenya. Ethiopia drives its best and brightest away; or gets them killed in endless military conflicts. Tadesse digs beneath the violence to find Ethiopia’s essence.

LUCY’S PEOPLE is Mesfin Tadesse’s fascinating love letter to Ethiopia and looks at the turbulent history of the birthplace of humanity and how multiple leadership changes have resulted in little progress.

~Rob Errera for IndieReader

 

News
12/23/2020
Mesfin Tadesse, author of "Lucy's People", interviewed for television series

Mesfin Tadesse, author of Lucy's People is interviewed for the "Former Veterans" series. He is "Meto Aleke", which means lieutenant. Mesfin speaks after 5 minutes. ianet is also interviewed at the end.

Balageru Television. "Yekedimo Serawit Episode 13, Series 1".  December 23, 2020. YouTube video, 26:57.

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 08/2021
  • 9780648828723 0648828727
  • 328 pages
  • $13.99
Ebook Details
  • 08/2021
  • 9780648828716 B09CG32CGZ
  • 413 pages
  • $USD 5.99
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