Today in History: IDF Airlifts 14,500 Ethiopian Jews to Israel

Israel Defense Force

“Next year in Jerusalem” are words spoken by Jews all over the world. For the Jews of Ethiopia, this dream was a promise.

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Exactly 23 years ago , the IDF carried out Operation Solomon, a massive airlift that brought Ethiopian Jews to Israel. After 34 planes and 36 hours, the Israel Air Force safely carried 14,500 Jews to Israeli soil. The mission remains the largest aerial expedition in Israel’s history.

In the 1970′s, the Israeli government made the decision to authorize the use of the IDF to enable the immigration of thousands of Jews who were living in Ethiopia, a country that at the time prohibited its citizens from emigrating to Israel. Beginning in 1984, the IDF brought Ethiopian Jews to Israel in three airlift operations, the last of which was Operation Solomon in 1991.

“Operation Solomon truly represents what Zionism is,” said Israel’s air force commander of the time, Maj. Gen. Avihu Ben-Nun. “It demonstrates the purpose for the State of Israel: to provide a home and shelter for Jews around the world who have suffered and were prosecuted merely for bearing the Jewish religion.”

It was a great operation on a global scale. “Never before, did so few pilots transport such a great number of people in such a short time,” Maj. Gen. Ben-Nun said.

Turmoil in Ethiopia

In 1991, Ethiopia was experiencing great political instability. The acting government was weak, and the likelihood of it falling to Eritrean rebels was high. Ethiopia’s Jews were in danger. On March 7, Uri Lubrani, an Israeli diplomat, reported on the worsening military situation in Ethiopia, and advised the formulation of “an emergency plan, for the protection and evacuation of the Jewish community.”

Leading up to the operation, $35 million were raised almost overnight in order to pay the Ethiopian government to allow the Jews to leave.

The operation begins

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The Israel Air Force allocated six Boeing 707 and 18 Hercules planes capable of carrying 18,000 people. The mission had two stages: a three hour flight to Addis Ababa (using the Boeing 707 plane) and another five hours to Israel, using the Hercules aircraft. A modern version of the Hercules, the C-130J-30 Super Hercules, is still in use in today’s IDF missions.

The first Hercules landed in Addis-Ababa around 10:00 AM, and the crew immediately began assembling the command room. “The first control tower in the northern part of the country did not even respond to our call, as the local city was taken over by rebels, hours earlier,” recalled Lieut. Col. A., who landed the first Boeing in Ethiopia. “There was a lot of traffic over the airport at Addis-Ababa, and we had to wait for 30 minutes before we could land. The airport itself was very organized, and ground services worked very well”.

The ground plan involved gathering everyone at the Israeli embassy, and transporting them to the planes using specially designated buses. Each bus was to be escorted by an Israeli soldier, of Ethiopian origin.

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In order to accommodate as many people as possible, the seats of the planes were removed and up to 1,200 passengers were able to board a single plane. Those who planned the operation expected that the planes would hold only 760 passengers, but the Ethiopians – many of whom were malnourished – were so light that many more were able to fit.

Almost 20 years later, IDF Chief of the General Staff, Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, who led the ground operation as commander of the IAF’s elite Shaldag commando force, spoke of the mission: “As commander of Shaldag Unit, I had to deal primarily with technical details. Only during the mission did I get a sense of how meaningful it was to be part of this crucial event. It’s a turning point in my service which encompasses both my Zionist values and the meaning of our existence in this country.”

“I vividly remember those images from Addis Ababa,” recalls Maj. B., an IAF pilot at the time. “An incredible number of people walked towards the plane, organized in groups of 200. The doctors and paramedics provided ongoing support.” The first Boeing plane took off at noon, followed by the rest. At one time, 27 planes were in the air.

On the ground

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At 5:00 P.M. the first plane landed in Tel Aviv. As the passengers walked out, Prime Minister Itzhak Shamir and other leaders greeted them on the ground in Israel.

The children came out first. “Everyone looked tired and scared”, described Anat Tal-Shir, a reporter for the newspaper “Yediot Aharonot.” “The people who arrived during Operation Solomon fled their country with nothing but the clothes they were wearing. The children stayed close to their mothers. A young man carried his elderly father on his shoulders. They both bent down and kissed the Israeli soil”.
The arrivals were met with cheer and celebration. “We didn’t bring any of our clothes; we didn’t bring any of our things,” said 29 year old Mukat Abag at the time. “But we are very glad to be here.” After one of the most complex and emotional operations in IDF history, Ethiopia’s Jews had finally landed safely in Israel.

Italdraghe: New Dredger for Ethiopia

New Dredger for Ethiopia

The start of May saw the commissioning of an Italdraghe SGT 250 dredger in Gorgora on the northern shore of Lake Tana, Ethiopia.

The dredger, purchased by the National Ministry of Water and Energy, was assembled in and launched from the town’s port facilities. Following commissioning Italdraghe technicians stayed onsite to provide both theoretical and practical hands-on training to the new local team responsible for dredger operation on and around the lake.

New Dredger for Ethiopia.

The entirely-containerisable SGT 250 dredger is 24 metres long and can dredge down to approximately 8 metres. Designed and built in the Italdraghe shipyard in Italy, it features a spud carriage as well as a tilting-spud mechanism.

This dredger is the latest of a long line of dredgers that Italdraghe has delivered to clients in Africa.

Italdraghe

The company has in fact been supplying small and medium-sized cutter suction dredgers and booster stations to the African continent for over the last forty years, starting back in 1972.


 

Ethiopian Scribes Trying to Preserve the 4th Century Art of Parchment Making

DEBRE LIBANOS, Ethiopia, May 9 2014 (IPS) – It is generally agreed that the origin of parchment making found in Ethiopia today likely lies with Christian monks who braved crossing the Red Sea around the 4th century and brought the bible with them.

Methods exist in Ethiopia that have not been used in European parchment production for over a thousand years, Richard Pankhurst, a renowned authority on Ethiopian manuscript illustration, tells IPS.

“This makes Ethiopia unique in keeping the tradition so far into the modern age,”Pankhurst adds.

Concerns are mounting that Ethiopia’s manuscript tradition and the many livelihoods and skills associated with it—such as calligraphy, parchment production, book binding, and illustration arts—are under threat.

 

Artist reflects on Ethiopian trip

By Amy Watkins loughboroughecho.net Hayley Fern, who works as a community arts development co-ordinator at Rawlins Academy in Quorn, was asked to visit a school in Gondar by David Dipple, a teacher in Barrow-upon-Soar, after she painted a mural in his classroom. Hayley Fern is pictured with some of the children on her visit to Gondar. A

The post Artist reflects on Ethiopian trip appeared first on 6KILO.com.

Abebe Gellaw’s letter to Obama

President Barack Obama
1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC 20500
May 8, 2014
Dear Mr. President,

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It is a great honor and privilege for me to attend this unique reception organized in your honor at the Fairmont Hotel, San Jose.

There is probably no greater place in the United States than the Silicon Valley that truly exemplifies the transformative power of freedom. Transformative Silicon Valley companies like Facebook, Twitter, Google, Yahoo, Oracle and HP, are more veritable expressions of America’s power and dynamism than its military might.

Mr. President, can you imagine Silicon Valley if all the visionary innovators and dreamers that have made it possible are unjustly locked up in harsh jails to break their spirit and silence them? Mr. President, the answer is simple and obvious. Fortunately, the United States is not ruled by mindless and ruthless criminals like Ethiopia.

Mr. President, as an exiled journalist and freedom activist trying to raise the voices of the oppressed people of Ethiopia, I can tell you that Ethiopians have genuine respect for this great land of freedom and your inspirational leadership. But it pains and frustrates me and millions of Ethiopians to see that for over two decades the United States has overridden its core values and forged a questionable alliance with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, a terrorist group that has continued to oppress, massacre, jail, torture and displace defenseless Ethiopians.

So many Ethiopians were glad that you sent Secretary of State John Kerry to Ethiopia last week on a mission of promoting “democracy and human rights,” among other things. They were also pleased that Secretary Kerry demanded the tyrannical government to release Zone 9 bloggers including Nathnael Feleke, a young blogger he had a chance to meet and inspire last year in Addis Ababa. Nathnael, Eskinder Nega, Reeyot Alemu and so many journalists, activists and dissidents locked up in rat infested prisons have committed no crimes except for dreaming about freedom, justice and equality for their country. Still worse, a few days after Mr. Kerry returned home, over fifty defenceless civilians have been gunned down and countless others have been detained and tortured for opposing land grab and displacement of the poor in Oromia region and Gondar.

The young men and women condemned confinement in dark jails are dreamers and visionaries that want to see the transformative power of freedom, dignity and justice. Like Martin Luther King Jr., they too have a dream that one day children of oppressors and the oppressed will sit together as citizens of a nation to decide the destiny and fate of their country. They do not dream of revenge and retribution but forgiveness and peace. As Secretary Kerry correctly said during his recent trip to Ethiopia, “Africans have an opportunity to bend the arc of history towards reform, not retribution; towards peace and prosperity, not revenge and resentment.” That is exactly what we aspire to see in Ethiopia, a country wallowing in the quagmires of poverty, tyranny and backwardness.

Mr. President, it is, therefore, with utmost hope that I urge you, to do your level best not to compromise our freedom and dignity in exchange for short-term security concerns. While the security concerns of the United States in the Horn of Africa is understandable, forging alliance with a terrorist regime will have far more destabilizing impact in the long term. If this tyranny and terrorism continues unabated, Ethiopia will be another Rwanda or Somalia. We Ethiopians do not wish that to happen, a specter that is becoming more and more imminent with each passing day under the terrorist TPLF regime oppressing our people with impunity.

Mr. President, we remember your speech and promise to Africa that you made standing in Accra: “No person wants to live in a society where the rule of law gives way to the rule of brutality and bribery. That is not democracy, that is tyranny, and now is the time for it to end.” Mr. President, we Ethiopians need to end the corrupt tyranny that has made our lives meaningless. Help us to end Apartheid and state-sponsored terrorism in Ethiopia at least by desisting from propping up those who are oppressing and tormenting our people.

Mr. President I loudly and clearly appeal to you to help Ethiopia move in the right direction. Yes, you can!

– Mr. President, Ethiopia needs freedom and justice.
– Help us free our bloggers and journalists.
– Help us free Eskinder Nega and all political prisoners.
– Help us free Zone 9 bloggers.
– We need freedom, more than food aid.
– Mr. President, help us free all political prisoners.
– Help us stop the massacres and terrorism against Ethiopians.
– Unites States, don’t support dictators in Ethiopia.
– TPLF is a terrorist group. Don’t support it.
– President Obama, please stand with the people of Ethiopia.
– President Obama help us to end Apartheid.
– Mr. President thank you for inspiring us to tell the truth.

I sincerely apologize for the interruption and inconvenience. I do hope that you understand and stand with the oppressed people of Ethiopia.

Most respectfully,

Abebe Gellaw

በጎንደር ተኩሱ ቀጥሏል፣ በግጭቱ 6 ሰው ሞቷል

ሰበር ዜና፣ በጎንደር ተኩሱ ቀጥሏል፣ በግጭቱ 6 ሰው ሞቷል
May 1, 2014 
ነገረ-ኢትዮጵያ – ጎንደር ከተማ ውስጥ ቀበሌ 18 ልዩ ቦታ አርምጭሆ ሰፈር፣ ገንፎ ቁጭና ህዳሴ የተባሉ ሰፈሮች የከተማው 
አስተዳደር ‹‹ህገ ወጥ ሰፈራ ነው፡፡›› በሚል ቤቶችን ለማፍረስ መዘጋጀቱን ተከትሎ አፍራሾቹ ከህዝብ ጋር በፈጠሩት ግጭት 
ከ6 በላይ ሰዎች ሲሞቱ በርካቶች መቁሰላቸውንና መታሰራቸውን ከቦታው የደረሰን መረጃ ያመለክታል፡፡ ግጭቱ ከሶስት 
ሰዓት እስከ አራት ሰዓት ተኩል ድረስ ቀጥሎ የነበር ሲሆን ምንጫችን ደውሎ በሚነግረን ወቅት (ከቀኑ 6፡ 43) ተኩስ 
እንደነበር ለመረዳት ችለናል፡፡ 
የአካባቢው ነዋሪዎቹ ሚያዝያ 7/2006 ዓ.ም ቤታቸውን እንዲያፈርሱ ትዕዛዝ በተላለፈበት ወቅት ህገ ወጥ አለመሆናቸውን፣
ካልሆነም መንግስት ቅያሬ ቦታና ጊዜ መስጠት እንዳለበት በመግለጽ አንለቅም ብለው እንደነበር ይታወቃል፡፡ በዛሬው ቀን
ግጭቱ የተነሳውም አፍራሾቹ እንዲፈርሱ የተወሰነባቸውን ቤቶች ቀለም በመቀባታቸውና ህዝቡም እንዳይቀቡ በመከልከሉ
መሆኑ ታውቋል፡፡
በግጭቱ ፖሊስ፣ ፌደራልና ልዩ ኃይል የተሳተፈበት ሲሆን ከተገደሉትና ከቆሰሉት በተጨማሪ የአካባቢው ወጣቶች ላይ
ድብደባና እስራት እየፈጸሙባቸው እንደሆነ ከስፍራው የደረሰን መረጃ ያመለክታል፡፡ ‹‹ወጣቶችን እንደ እንሰሳ በአንድ
ገመድ አስረው እየደበደቧቸው ነው፡፡ ህዝብ በጅምላ እየታሰረ ይገኛል፡፡ ግጭቱ ቢያቆምም በአሁኑ ወቅት በሶስቱም ሰፈሮች
ጥይት እየተተኮሰ ነው›› ያሉት የነገረ ኢትዮጵያ ምንጮች የተወሰደው እርምጃ የጎንደርን ህዝብ በማስቆጣቱ ከዚህ የባሰ
ግጭት እንዳይፈጠር ያሰጋል ሲሉም ገልጸውልናል፡፡ በግጭቱ ወቅት የመጀመሪያዋ የሞት ሰለባ የሆነችው ልዩ ኃይል ቤቷ
እንዲፈርስ ቀለም ሲቀባ የተቃወመች የልጆች እናት እንደሆነችም ታውቋል፡፡

Zone9 – Compiled Book of Year One

By zone9

የዞን ፱ ጥንካሬ እና ምን ያህል በፅሁፎቻቸው በሳል እንደነበሩ ለማታውቁ አንዳንድ ካድሬዎች እንዲሁም ሰለ ዞን ፱ ግንዛቤ ለሌላቸው አንባቢዎች ይሀው የአንድ አመት ፅሁፎቻቸው በዚህ መልክ አጠናክረው መፅሀፍ መሆን ቢገባውም በነፃ እንኩ ብለውናል።

Zone9 – Compiled Book of Year One