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The Axum Obelisk Coming Home to Ethiopia
yahoo news/AP ^ | Apr 18, 2005

Posted on 04/19/2005 3:24:24 AM PDT by nuconvert

The Axum Obelisk Coming Home to Ethiopia

Mon Apr 18, 2005

By ANTHONY MITCHELL, Associated Press Writer

AXUM, Ethiopia - A teenage Abebe Alenayehu watched Italian soldiers haul away Axum's revered obelisk nearly seven decades ago and never thought he would live to see its return. But if the weather cooperates, he will see the dream he shares with his nation come true Tuesday when a giant cargo plane returns the monument's 82-foot top section to this wind-swept town that was the seat of the ancient Axumite Kingdom.

"The memory still leaves a bitter taste in my mouth," Abebe said about the loss of a monument that Ethiopians consider the symbol of their nation. "Every day for the last 67 years I have thought about the obelisk."

The Italian Foreign Ministry said Monday that the two other pieces of the 176-ton obelisk should be back by the end of April. Lattanzi, the Italian company organizing the return, says no one has attempted to fly such a massive monument before.

Abebe, 81, vividly recalls the day the masterpiece of the Axum civilization was taken away and shipped to Rome.

"All the adults in the town were under curfew," he said. "But we played with the soldiers who gave us sweets and sugar. We didn't realize what was happening, but our parents were hiding their faces and crying."

The huge stone was raised long ago to commemorate Axumite dead, but it had broken into three pieces when it was toppled during a 16th century Muslim rebellion. After his troops overran Ethiopia, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini ordered the monument moved to Rome in 1937.

The weight of the fragments taxed the limits of military vehicles and the makeshift roads and bridges built by the Italians.

And getting it back to Ethiopia has also proved an engineering challenge.

"This is an extremely technical and delicate operation," Lattanzi director Simone Pietero said.

Heaters were installed in the plane's cargo bay to protect the stone from the cold of cruising altitude, and workers wrapped the obelisk fragment in steel bars to stabilize it in case of turbulence during the six-hour flight, Pietero said.

Engineers also prepared Axum's tiny airport for the huge Antonov cargo plane's landing and set up two cranes to lift the stone onto trucks that will drive to its original location a few miles away, where it will join several smaller obelisks.

Weather will be a key factor Tuesday. Pietero said a temperature above 60 degrees would further reduce the air density in this town 6,562 feet above sea level and make it impossible for the heavy aircraft to approach the runway at a safe speed.

Axum, now home to about 60,000 people, was the capital of a kingdom established between 200 and 100 B.C. and that at one time stretched across the Red Sea into parts of the Arabian Peninsula. The Queen of Sheba reigned in the region eight or nine centuries earlier, and her bathing pool and substantial remains of her palace can be seen in Axum.

Obelisks are among the few tangible remains of the past glory of Axum, which sits about 530 miles north of Ethiopia's capital in the shadow of the Adwa Mountains where Emperor Menelik II defeated the Italian army in 1896 — the greatest modern victory of an African army over a European force.

"The obelisk is a symbol of pride, of civilization and part of the Ethiopian identity," archaeologist Teckle Hargos said.

Ethiopians hope the monument's return will highlight the rich historical heritage in the only African nation that European powers failed to colonize. Italian troops occupied Ethiopia in 1936-1941, but it was never a colony.

"People outside of Ethiopia often think of famine, of war, of drought and don't realize the wealth of heritage that this country does have," Teckle said.

The obelisk will not return home unscathed from its stay down the road from Rome's Colosseum. It has been damaged by pollution, and a lightning strike in 2002 knocked several large chunks from the top.

That does not worry Abebe.

"We are just happy to get it back," he said. "After all this time my body is a little weary, like the obelisk. But this is its home."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: axum; ethiopia; godsgravesglyphs; mussolini; obelisk; rome

1 posted on 04/19/2005 3:24:24 AM PDT by nuconvert
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To: nuconvert

Italian tourist look at the numerous obelisks in Aksum some 500 kilometers north of the Ethiopian capital Addis Abba in this Thursady Jan. 17, 2002 file picture. The collapsed obelisk in the foreground is believed to have collapsed shortly after it was erected. In 1937, what was then the tallest standing obelisk was carted off to Rome by Italian soldiers that occupied the country between 1936 and 1941.If the weather cooperates and 'Operation Restoration' goes to plan the top piece of the 1,700 year-old, 24-meter (82-foot) tall obelisk will be rolled out of the back of a giant Antonov-124 cargo plane on Tuesday April 19, 205 ending the dispute over the religious monument taken on the orders of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini in 1937.(AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)

2 posted on 04/19/2005 3:27:04 AM PDT by nuconvert (No More Axis of Evil by Christmas ! TLR)
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To: nuconvert
You know, I'll never understand why Italy invaded Ethiopia. I can imagine the conversation between Hitler and Mussolini.

Hitler: What's up.
Mussolini: I invaded Ethiopia.
Hitler: WTF?
3 posted on 04/19/2005 4:01:19 AM PDT by HKTechBoy (There is no gray area in Life)
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To: HKTechBoy

here's some background info sourced from The Library of Congress...........

http://workmall.com/wfb2001/ethiopia/ethiopia_history_mussolinis_invasion_and_the_italian_occupation.html


4 posted on 04/19/2005 4:19:49 AM PDT by nuconvert (No More Axis of Evil by Christmas ! TLR)
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To: HKTechBoy

That was great. You should do a series "History in 10 Words or Less"!


5 posted on 04/19/2005 4:55:29 AM PDT by wildandcrazyrussian
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To: HKTechBoy

The simplest answer to the question of why Fascist Italy conquered Ethiopia is that it could. The Fascists dreamed of reviving the Roman Empire (without having a clue what made that empire work in the first place), but it turned out that Ethiopia and Albania were the only countries they could defeat.


6 posted on 04/19/2005 5:13:56 AM PDT by Christopher Lincoln
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To: Christopher Lincoln

Also Ethiopia was the only place left in Africa that some other European country already didn't control.


7 posted on 04/19/2005 5:26:00 AM PDT by Strategerist
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To: Strategerist

Strictly speaking that's not correct: there was Liberia also. Agreed, Liberia was a quite different case, because it was effectively under American protection. If America did not choose to assume formal sovereignty, that was nobody else's business.


8 posted on 04/20/2005 2:49:22 AM PDT by Christopher Lincoln
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9 posted on 06/11/2008 9:57:27 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_________________________Profile updated Friday, May 30, 2008)
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To: HKTechBoy

Maybe they were looking for the Lost Ark from Biblical times. It’s supposedly kept in a safely guarded place in Ethiopia. (Not in an army warehouse as shown in Raiders of the Lost Ark).


10 posted on 07/06/2008 7:34:26 AM PDT by senorita
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