Ethiopia: Haile Selassie anniversary
Uncategorized Sunday, November 1st, 2009The magnificent coronation ceremony for Ethiopia’s last emperor Haile Selassie had a global impact, but 80
years on fewer than 100 people gathered on Sunday to mark its anniversary.
No official celebrations have been organised in Ethiopia, just a few dozen Rastafarians and some of Selassie’s former aides and officers met in a cultural centre in Addis Ababa to commemorate the coronation on November 2, 1930.
Selassie was deposed in a military coup in 1974, ending his 44-year reign.
“This anniversary is very important for rastas because Haile Selassie is considered to be like a god,” the event organiser Ras Aby Tilahun told AFP.
“But it’s important for Ethiopians to commemmorate this event as well, because it is our history.”
The walls of the centre were hung with pictures of Selassie and the old Ethiopian flag: red, yellow and green with the emperor’s seal, the Lion of Judah, in the middle.
Drums beat and a children’s choir sang hymns to the glory of “Living god, Jah Rastafari”, a title for Selassie, who is seen by Rastafarians as a prophet who rescued black victims of slavery.
General Wasihun Negato, a former tank commander, was presented with Ethiopia’s highest military honour by Selassie himself.
