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Theatre and the Eritrean Struggle for Freedom: the Cultural Troupes of the People's Liberation Front
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 January 2009
Abstract
The thirty-year Eritrean struggle for independence – during which a small and poorly-armed guerrilla force eventually triumphed over a highly-equipped enemy, supported by foreign powers – is also the story of a social revolution in which the theatre played its part. The Eritrean People's Liberation Front not only employed theatre as a propaganda weapon, but also recognized its value as an agent for educating its people – concerning education and women's rights, and on the benefits of modern medicine and farming methods – and with victory came measures to stimulate the growth and development of theatre as part of Eritrean culture. Following Jane Plastow's contextual history of Eritrean theatre in our previous issue, Paul Warwick here makes the first attempt to reconstruct its undocumented role in the independence struggle, and the efforts of the rebels to create theatre for the first time in a rural context. A graduate of the Workshop Theatre, University of Leeds, Paul Warwick made this the subject of his research when he visited Eritrea in the summer of 1995 as part of the Eritrea Community Based Theatre Project. Since his return he has collaborated on a translation of The Other War by Alemseged Tesfai, written during the independence struggle, and given a reading at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in December 1996: this is due for publication later this year in an anthology of African drama from Methuen. Paul Warwick is currently Artistic Director of the Unlimited Theatre Company based in Leeds.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997
References
Notes and References
Collecting and organizing the information used in this article would not have been possible without the considerable help of my research team, Samson Ghebregziabher, Elias Lucas, and Yonaten Stephanus. I am also most grateful to all the interviewees, as noted below, and for the support of Jane Plastow and the rest of her team on the Eritrean Community Based Theatre Project.
1. Interview with Solomon Tsehaye, Asmara, Eritrea, 17 August 1995.
2. Ibid.
3. Interview with Ato Zemerhet, Asmara, Eritrea, 15 September 1995.
4. Interview with Solomon Tsehaye, as above.
5. Interview with Hajait Mendal, Asmara, Eritrea, 22 August 1995.
6. Ibid.
7. Interview with Solomon Tsehaye, as above.
8. Interview with Zahra Ali, Asmara, Eritrea, 23 August 1995.
9. Interview with Hajait Mendal, as above.
10. Interview with Solomon Tsehaye, as above.
11. Interview with Zahra Ali, as above.
12. Interview with Alemseged Tesfai, Asmara, Eritrea, 26 September 1995.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid.
15. Alemseged Tesfai, The Other War.
16. Interview with Alemseged Tesfai, as above.
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