Product Details
I Didn't Do It for You : How the World Betrayed a Small African Nation

I Didn't Do It for You : How the World Betrayed a Small African Nation
By Michela Wrong

List Price: $25.95
Price: $8.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

16 new or used available from $7.76

Average customer review:

Product Description

Scarred by decades of conflict and occupation, the craggy African nation of Eritrea has weathered the world's longest-running guerrilla war. The dogged determination that secured victory against Ethiopia, its giant neighbor, is woven into the national psyche, the product of cynical foreign interventions. Fascist Italy wanted Eritrea as the springboard for a new, racially pure Roman empire; Britain sold off its industry for scrap; the United States needed a base for its state-of-the-art spy station; and the Soviet Union used it as a pawn in a proxy war.

In I Didn't Do It for You, Michela Wrong reveals the breathtaking abuses this tiny nation has suffered and, with a sharp eye for detail and a taste for the incongruous, tells the story of colonialism itself and how international power politics can play havoc with a country's destiny.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #123309 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-06-01
  • Format: Bargain Price
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 448 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Much like Wrong's In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz (2001), covering the reign of Zaire's brutal dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, this book taps at the world's conscience, asking who is to blame for the suffering and neglect of postcolonial African states; it takes Eritrea as case study—and victim. A veteran Africa correspondent for the Financial Times, Wrong writes in a pointedly digressive style full of narrative side roads that accommodate a daunting level of geographical and historical detail. Historical highlights include a colorful profile of the late 19th-century writer and Italian parliamentarian Ferdinando Marini that draws on his extensive memoirs about his tenure as the first civil governor of the region as an Italian colony. The early 1960s conflict, occupation and independence of this small neighbor to Ethiopia also make for a terrible, gripping story, including border disputes and bloody war with Ethiopia. A complicated history so punctuated with violence is not exactly easy to read about, but the author's extraordinary grasp of the postcolonial psyche and tormented national identity of this country makes it fascinating. Agent, Joy Harris.(June 14)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post
National identity is always woven out of many different strands: ethnicity, language, religion, geography, culture, economy and history. An outsider struggling to convey the essence of another nation's character may be tempted to simplify -- a temptation to which the British journalist Michela Wrong succumbs in her new book. I Didn't Do It for You portrays the east African state of Eritrea as a product of but one strand of its national tapestry: its history.

Eritrea's history, she writes, is a story "about betrayal, repeated across the generations, and how the expectation of betrayal can both create an extraordinary inner strength and distort a national psyche." Wrong's book provides a rare and convincing review of the policies and motives of Eritrea's colonial masters, but the history she recounts is less satisfying as an explanation of Eritrea's character and post-independence policies.

I Didn't Do It for You offers a highly readable, well-researched depiction of the region's serial exploitation by a parade of foreign predators. Italy ruled with "apartheid" brutality from the 1870s up until World War II (when it lost its east African colonies to the Allies), committed "mass killings" in Eritrea and resorted to "widespread use of mustard gas" against Ethiopian civilians; Britain, reluctant inheritor of Italy's surrendered colony after 1941, dismantled Eritrea's Italian-made infrastructure and shipped much of it to Her Majesty's more prized and longer held African outposts, such as Egypt, Sudan and Kenya. After 1952, the United Nations failed, as trustee of Eritrea's autonomy, to stop its annexation by Ethiopia in 1962 or even to respond to Eritrean diplomats' protests. Years later, Wrong discovered, the United Nations lost all documents related to this sorry chapter in its history, having "expunged [Eritrea] from the record." Thus the world abandoned Eritrea to decades of Ethiopian repression -- facilitated by massive foreign military aid, first from the United States and Israel, later from the Soviet Union after the Marxist Derg regime shifted Cold War loyalties in 1976. Finally, Eritrea, the underdog nation, gained its independence from Ethiopia by referendum in 1993, after three decades of rebellion.

Wrong excels as a storyteller, providing evocative descriptions of Eritrea's dramatic topography and gripping dollops of military history, especially the dramatic British defeat of Italy's best Alpine forces at Keren in 1941. She paints fascinating personal portraits, including those of the grandiose Italian governor Ferdinando Martini and the British suffragette Sylvia Pankhurst, a relentless critic of her own government. The stories of Eritrean fighters such as double agent Melles Seyoum (who stole valuable medical supplies from his Ethiopian employer), a bicycle-mounted hit man known as Asmerom and John Berakis (the famous field-hospital chef who studied European hoteliers' books and served great battlefield chow to thousands at a time, making the most of limited ingredients) offer enthralling insights into the liberation struggle.

But Wrong takes her storytelling off on a bizarre tangent when recounting the perversions of "the Gross Guys," a band of Americans based at Kagnew Station in Eritrea, a massive Cold War listening post from 1953 through 1977. Her chapter -- whose title cannot be printed in a family newspaper -- delves in lurid and gratuitous detail into the drunken sexual exploits of these servicemen. Indeed, this chapter seems misplaced -- however accurate its depiction of some Americans' lewd behavior may be.

Wrong's greatest failure is her portrayal of Eritrea's colonial past as an excuse for its troubled present: "If Eritrea today so often comes across as dangerously impervious to criticism and bafflingly quick to anger, she is largely that way because colonial masters and superpowers made her so." This conclusion diverges sharply from the premise of her fine first book, In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz, in which Wrong rightly blamed the late Mobutu Sese Seko for many of the crises of post-independence Zaire (now Congo).

But for Wrong and the many "well-intentioned Westerners" whom she calls "True Believers," Eritrea, which defied the odds to expel Ethiopia's Derg regime in 1991, held a unique promise born of its peoples' perseverance, self-reliance and inventiveness. True Believers saw in Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki and his Ethiopian counterpart Meles Zenawi the full potential of the much-touted African Renaissance of the 1990s. They were committed leaders, frugal and scrappy -- the antithesis of the rapacious, corrupt African big men like Mobutu or Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe.

But five years after independence, "the national character traits forged during a century of colonial and superpower exploitation were about to blow up in Eritrea's face." Ethiopia and Eritrea, led by once-friendly leaders, had never bothered to demarcate their common border. In 1998, when a small skirmish occurred in the border region near the "nondescript," "one hotel, two-bar village" of Badme, Eritrea launched a massive invasion of Ethiopian-held territory. Ethiopia escalated the brutal two-year war, which claimed an estimated 80,000 lives. True Believers and sympathetic policymakers (myself included) were shocked and disillusioned. In contrast to her detailed chronicles of colonial excesses, Wrong treats this recent history superficially. "Nations that believe they cannot lose slide into war more easily than states that suspect the contest will be close," she unhelpfully notes.

After this conflict ended in 2000, many Eritreans began questioning their leader's judgment and pressing for democratic reform. Isaias responded by closing independent media outlets and holding without charge the country's most senior leaders (including government ministers) and countless others who dared question government policy.

Refusing to blame the Isaias regime for Eritrea's plunge from international darling to Zimbabwe-style pariah oversimplifies matters and, ultimately, condescends to the Eritrean people. Though Wrong writes that Eritreans "are losing the black-and-white certainties of the past," she ends her book by reprising the image of Eritrea as a youthful victim. Wrong approvingly quotes a former fighter and kidnapper: "We are like a child, going for the first time to . . . kindergarten. At the start, his mother has to stay with him. The West must stay with us now. It has to be patient. . . . Instead of slapping our government and saying: 'You did a stupid thing,' it should be saying: 'He will learn.' "

Indeed, we should all learn. Eritrea's tragic history teaches that it should not be underestimated by foreign powers or treated with condescension or pity. Nor should Western governments condone or dismiss Eritrea's post-independence failings as mere growing pains, as Wrong suggests. The Eritrean people have earned too much respect for that.

Reviewed by Susan E. Rice
Copyright 2005, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.

From Bookmarks Magazine
Wrong, an Africa correspondent for the Financial Times, is no stranger to African politics. In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz (2001) covered Zaire’s brutal history; this book attempts to put Eritrea in the public conscience. While chronicling each stage of the nation’s history, Wrong creates lively profiles and successfully dissects geopolitical rivalries. Highly readable, the most compelling parts address the colonial and postwar eras, when the U.N. failed to act against Ethiopian repression. Other pages, including her discussion of the presence of U.S. military personnel, received mixed reviews. Some critics even wondered if Wrong’s "True Believer" optimism didn’t create a simplistic morality play. But all told, I Didn’t Do It For You is an important book, one that will help put Eritrea back on the world map.

Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.


Customer Reviews

They Didn't Do It For Us4
Even in a continent full of doomed revolutions and post-colonial misery, the story of the plucky Eritreans is a fascinating and tragic one. As an experienced world news correspondent on Africa, Michela Wrong has the chops to give us an informative history of this tough and self-sufficient people who endured centuries of colonial exploitation and a 30-year struggle against their Ethiopian overlords, before finally becoming independent in 1993. The author does just that throughout most of the book, starting with a strong examination of the national character and unique cultural traits of the Eritreans, then later ending the book on a melancholy but instructive note as their inspiring struggle for self-determination went sour.

The problem here though is with the middle sections of the book, which devolve into disconnected snippets and vignettes that highlight persons and events of interest but detract from the historical and political narrative. (This is the same problem that afflicts Wrong's other major book, the nearly-masterful Congo study "In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz.") The worst example is a useless tangent in Chapter 10 into stories of debauchery by American servicemen in Eritrea in the 1960s. Also, Wrong has a hard time effectively separating the histories of Eritrea and Ethiopia, and while that's surely difficult with so much historical interaction between the peoples, the Eritreans are missing from large parts of this book that is supposed to be about them.

Fortunately, Michela Wrong finishes strongly with useful examinations of the historical lessons to be learned from the long and still-ongoing struggle of the Eritreans. Based on the book's title, I'm not convinced that the world betrayed Eritrea, but the world certainly ignored that small nation's unique struggle through centuries of historical ignorance and political myopia. The hard-working Eritreans deserve the tribute delivered by Wrong in this book. [~doomsdayer520~]

highly recommended4
This book is as well-written and well-researched as Ms. Wrong's earlier book on the Congo ("In the footsteps of Mr. Kurtz") if not better. It offers a rare glimpse into Italian colonialism. But this real-life story on the long fight for independence of a small developing nation and how it has coped with neo-colonialism, imperialism, multilateralism, dogmatism and superpower cynicism is painful to read, if only because the heroes of the book -the remarkably resourceful and resilient Eritrean people- are denied their happy end. Highly recommended.

I Didn't Do It for You:How the World Betrayed a Small African Nation.Harper Collins Publishers, 2005 5
What a book! Shall I call it a novel? For me it read like a suspensful novel rather than an ordinary narrative about an obscure Afrcan nation.I commend the young writer for her lucid style and insightful observation The narrative for the story takes place mainly in the Sahle Mountains and the main characters are the Eritrean fighters and the other charcters- the villains are the Ethiopian Army, the Italains, the British, the Russians, The Americans, last but not least the UN.Like in a good novel, at the end the protagonists- the heroes or the winners are the Eritreans