Tag: Eritrean intellectuals

  • The Normalization of Self-Censorship in Eritrea

    The Normalization of Self-Censorship in Eritrea

    When self-censorship becomes pervasive, a society forfeits more than the right to open dissent; it forfeits the very conditions that make common knowledge possible – the shared awareness of what others know, think, and believe. In such an atmosphere, individuals can no longer reliably gauge the convictions of their peers or distinguish private doubt from

    Read more

  • Zemihret Yohannes: A Revolutionary Legacy in Eclipse

    Zemihret Yohannes: A Revolutionary Legacy in Eclipse

    “Once reckless in the face of danger, Zemihret became a docile servant of power—how a roaring lion, at last, learns to purr.”

    Read more

  • Alemseged Tesfai: Is that all what you are?

    Alemseged Tesfai: Is that all what you are?

    Debunking Ethiopia’s memos of late 1940s claiming ‘the return of Eritrea to its motherland,’ Margery Perham, a British historian, wrote in 1948 that every sentence in those memos “cried for comment and correction.” That expression came to my mind this week while reading Almseged Tesfai’s five-page Epilogue for the translation of his worthy three volumes

    Read more