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	<title>Debteraw : Ethiopian News and Politics Journal &#187; The New York Times</title>
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		<title>Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin, an acclaimed Ethiopian playwright</title>
		<link>http://www.debteraw.com/tsegaye-gabre-medhin-an-acclaimed-ethiopian-playwright/</link>
		<comments>http://www.debteraw.com/tsegaye-gabre-medhin-an-acclaimed-ethiopian-playwright/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Feb 2010 13:39:42 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[The New York Times]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Obituary, Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin &#160; Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin, Ethiopian Poet Laureate, Dies at 69 By JESSE McKINLEY, New York times, Mar 9, 2006 Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin, an acclaimed Ethiopian playwright who was also the country&#8217;s poet laureate, died on Feb. 25 in Manhattan, where he had lived since 1998. He was 69. His death was announced by his]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Obituary, Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin</p>
<p class="style1">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="style1">Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin, Ethiopian Poet Laureate, Dies at 69<br />
By JESSE McKINLEY, New York times, Mar 9, 2006</p>
<p>Tsegaye Gabre-Medhin, an acclaimed Ethiopian playwright who was also the<br />
country&#8217;s poet laureate, died on Feb. 25 in Manhattan, where he had lived<br />
since 1998. He was 69.</p>
<p>His death was announced by his family.</p>
<p>Born in the small mountain town of Boda,  near Ambo, Mr. Tsegaye became one<br />
of his country&#8217;s most prominent literary figures as well as an international<br />
emissary for its culture. Considered by some to be Ethiopia&#8217;s  greatest<br />
playwright, Mr. Tsegaye (pronounced say-GAY) wrote more than 30 plays, most<br />
in Amharic, Ethiopia&#8217;s official language, and  translated many Western works<br />
into Amharic, including those of Shakespeare, Brecht and Moli&egrave;re. (His<br />
native tongue was Oromifa, but he was also fluent in Amharic, several other<br />
African languages and English.)</p>
<p>He was even more prolific as a poet, publishing countless poems on topics<br />
from war (his father had fought for his country during the Italian<br />
occupation, 1936 to 1941) to peace. Steeped in the mythology of his region,<br />
he viewed the history of Ethiopia  &#8211; an ancient kingdom with a tradition of<br />
independence from colonial powers &#8211; as symbolic of a continent&#8217;s pride and<br />
potential.</p>
<p>&quot;In order to bring about a better future, one must learn from the  past,&quot; Mr.<br />
Tsegaye said in 1993 interview with The Ethiopian Review. &quot;You cannot  build<br />
a future based on hatred because hatred is the enemy of hope.&quot;</p>
<p>Ayele Bekerie, the director of undergraduate programs for African studies at<br />
Cornell University, called Mr. Tsegaye &quot;a pioneering figure&quot; who used  &quot;the<br />
medium of poetry to advance the idea of national unity among the diverse<br />
populations of Ethiopia,&quot; a nation that Mr. Tsegaye saw as too often<br />
splintered by coups, uprisings and famine.</p>
<p>&quot;To him,&quot; Mr. Bekerie said, &quot;the stability and unity of Ethiopia lay in  its<br />
respect for different cultures.&quot;</p>
<p>&gt;From an early age, Mr. Tsegaye excelled at school and at 13, wrote his  first<br />
play, which was staged at his school and seen by Emperor Haile Selassie, the<br />
final Ethiopian monarch. (Mr. Tsegaye was buried at the national cathedral<br />
in Addis Ababa,  in the same compound as the emperor.) A scholarship student,<br />
he graduated from the Blackstone School of Law in Chicago in 1959. But<br />
dramatic ambitions soon impinged on his legal career, and by 1960, he had<br />
studied experimental theater at the Royal  Court Theater  in London and the<br />
Com&eacute;die-Fran&ccedil;aise in Paris.</p>
<p>&gt;From 1961 to 1971, he was the artistic director of the Ethiopian National<br />
Theater, and in the late 1970&#8242;s, he founded the department of theater at<br />
Addis Ababa University, the nation&#8217;s largest. In  1964, his wrote &quot;Oda Oak<br />
Oracle,&quot; a play steeped in Ethiopian legend but written in English; it had<br />
productions in Britain and  the United States,  and elsewhere around the<br />
world.</p>
<p>A decade later, as the national theater&#8217;s general manager, he was arrested<br />
and held without formal charges after the country&#8217;s military junta, the<br />
Derg, banned his writing. Over the years, other regimes would also forbid<br />
the production of Mr. Tsegaye&#8217;s work (18 of his 33 plays were banned at one<br />
time or another), but he eventually saw his work mounted either at home or<br />
abroad. Mr. Tsegaye traveled, spreading the word of Ethiopia&#8217;s ancient and<br />
modern culture through lectures, essays and international conferences.</p>
<p>In 1998, Mr. Tsegaye was forced to leave Ethiopia to receive treatment for<br />
kidney disease. He is survived by his wife, Woizero Lakech Bitew, of<br />
Manhattan; his  daughters, Yodit, Mahlet and Adey; and his sons, Ayenew,<br />
Estifanos and Hailu.</p>
<p>Despite his poor health, he was active until his death.</p>
<p>In 2002, the newly formed African Union adopted one of his poems as its<br />
anthem.</p>
<p>&quot;All sons and daughters of Africa, flesh of the sun and flesh of the  sky,&quot;<br />
the anthem reads, &quot;Let us make Africa the  tree of life.&quot;</p>
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; * Copyright 2006The New York Times Company</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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