Название: I Didn’t Do It For You: How the World Used and Abused a Small African Nation
Автор: Michela Wrong
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Историческая литература
isbn: 9780007370016
isbn:
I had telephoned from Asmara, keen to meet a man who I had been told personified a closing chapter of colonial history. âHeâs the last one in Massawa,â an elderly Italian friend in the capital had said. âWhen all the other Italians left, he stayed, through all the wars. He canât come up to Asmara now, the airâs too thin for him.â When Cicoria lifted the receiver, I heard a farmyard chorus of honks and clucks, so loud I could barely make out his words. He had sounded ratty, but not openly hostile. âIs there anything youâd like me to take him, since you havenât seen him for a while?â I asked my friend. âErrr ⦠No.â âWell, Iâll just pass on your best wishes, shall I?â I suggested. âYes, hmmm, that would be nice.â The reticence was puzzling.
The Italians have a word for those who fall in love with Africaâs desert wastes, putting down roots which reach so deep, they can never be wrenched up again. We say âgone to seedâ, or âgone nativeâ. The Italians call them the insabbiati â those who are buried in the sand â âpeopleâ, as Cicoria pronounced with lip-smacking relish, âcompletely immersed in the mireâ. At 77, Cicoria was happy to count himself amongst their ranks and indeed, when Iâd arrived for my appointment with Massawaâs last Italian, my gaze had initially flitted to him and skated on, looking vainly for a white face. Cicoria was as dark as a local, evidence of a lifetime spent working in the sun and the squirt of Eritrean blood that ran in his veins, inheritance of an Eritrean grandparent. A skinny wreck of a man, wearing a T-shirt that drooped to reveal his nipples, he sat hunched on the bed he had ordered to be carried out of his house and deposited in the centre of his metalwork collection. âIn there, I felt like a beast in a cage, out here, at least I can swear at my animals.â They say menâs ears keep growing when everything else has stopped, and in Cicoriaâs case it seemed to be true. The onslaught of the years had turned his face into a gargoyle of ears, nose and missing teeth. Shrunken by time, this once-active man had gathered on the table before him what he clearly regarded as the bare necessities of human existence: two telephones, a roll of toilet paper and a slingshot.
He was as ravaged and pitted as the port itself. Massawa is a town with two faces. At the setting of the sun, when everyone heaves a sigh of relief, it becomes a place of hidden recesses and mysterious beauty, the lights playing softly over warm coral masonry. Tiny grocery shops, their walls neatly stacked with shiny metallic packets of tea and milk powder, soap and oil, glow from the darkness like coloured jewels. As the cafés under the Arabic arcades spring into life, naval officers in starched white uniforms sit and savour the cool evening air, watching trucks from the harbour chugging their way along the causeways, taking grain back to the mainland. Crouched in alleyways, young women sell hot tea and hardboiled eggs, the incense on their charcoal braziers blending with the pungent smell of ripe guava, the nutty aroma of roasting coffee and an occasional hot blast from an open sewer. But in the squinting glare of daytime, when only cawing crows and ibis venture out into the blinding sun, Massawa is just an ugly Red Sea town, scarred by too many sieges and earthquakes.
The townâs geographical layout â two large islands linked to the mainland by slim causeways built by the 19th-century Swiss adventurer Werner Munzinger â always meant it was an easy town to hold, a difficult place to conquer. In the Second World War, a defiant Italian colonial administration had to be bombed into submission by the British and the port was then crippled by German commanders who scuttled their ships in a final gesture of spite. When the EPLF guerrilla movement first tried to capture Massawa from the Ethiopians in the 1970s, its Fighters were mown down on the exposed salt flats. Thirteen years later, the rebels succeeded, but the town took a terrible hammering in the process. Pigeons roost in the shattered blue dome of the Imperial Palace, shrapnel has taken hungry bites out of mosques and archways, walls are pitted with acne scars. Near the port, a plinth that once carried a statue of the mounted Haile Selassie, pointing triumphantly to the sea he worked so hard to claim on Ethiopiaâs behalf, stands decapitated. The Marxist Derg regime that ousted him tried to destroy the statue, the EPLF made a point of finishing the job. Occasionally, youâll come across a building in the traditional Arab style, its intricately-carved wooden balcony slipping gradually earthwards. But some of Africaâs most grotesque modern buildings â pyramids of glass and cement â leave you wistful for what must have been, before the bombs and artillery did their work on the coral palazzi. The handwritten sign propped next to the till of a mini-market round the corner from Cicoriaâs workshop captures what, in light of Massawaâs history, seems an understandable sense of foreboding. âOur trip â long. Our hope â far. Our trouble â manyâ it reads.
Cicoria had lived through it all, surviving each military onslaught miraculously unscathed. âOnce, they were shooting and one person dropped dead to the left of me, one was killed to the right and I was left standing in the middle. Iâve always had the devilâs own luck.â Heâd come to Massawa in the 1940s, a 15-year-old runaway escaping an unhappy Asmara home. âMy mother had died and I never got on with my dad. I hated my father terribly. He was an ignorant peasant.â His grandfather had been one of the areaâs first settlers, a constructor dispatched by Rome to build roads and dams in an ultimately fruitless attempt to win the trust of Abyssinian Emperor Menelik II. âMy family has a chapel in Asmara cemetery. You should visit it.â Cicoria must have inherited from his grandfather some technical skill that drew him to the shipyards, where Italian prisoners-of-war and Russian, Maltese and British operators â âthe ones whoâd gone crazy in the warâ â were repairing damaged Allied battleships. After the machinists clocked off, the boy would sneak in and mimic their movements at the lathes. âI learnt how to make pressure gauges, spherical pistons and starter machines. No one ever taught me anything, I just watched and learnt. I can make anything, just so long as itâs black and greasy,â he boasted.
This was the talent that had allowed him to play the inglorious role of Vicar of Bray, adapting smoothly to each of Eritreaâs successive administrations. When Massawaâs other Italians were evacuated, Cicoriaâs skills meant he was too valuable to lose. Under the British, he worked on the warships, under the Ethiopians he was summoned to repair damaged artillery and broken domestic appliances. âAll the Derg officers used to bring me their fridges to repair.â When the Eritrean liberation movement started up, he claimed, he turned fifth columnist and joined an undercover unit, using his privileged access to sabotage the Ethiopian military machine. âIâm one of theirs. Iâm Shabia, a guerrilla.â But his eyes darted shiftily away when I pressed for details.
One quality his survival had certainly not relied upon was personal charm. As his Eritrean wife, a statuesque woman of luminous beauty, prepared lunch, I began to grasp what lay behind the hesitation in my Italian friendâs voice. Cicoria, it turned out, was good at hate. During a career in which I had interviewed many a ruthless politician and sleazy businessman, I had rarely met anyone, I realized, harder to warm to. His malevolence was democratically even-handed â he loathed just about everyone he came into contact with, the sole exception being the British officials who had recognized his skills all those decades ago. The American officers he had worked for had been âcrass idiotsâ, the Ethiopians hateful occupiers. He despised his contemporaries in Asmara â my friend, it emerged, was a particular object of scorn â for not bothering to learn Tigrinya (âa bunch of illiteratesâ). Modern-day Eritreans were useless, cack-handed when it came to anything technical. His life had been a series of fallings-out with workmates and relatives, most of СКАЧАТЬ