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The Other Side of Eritrea

Podcast de Eritrawi

inglés

Actualidad y política

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History built from archives, not myths. This channel explores Eritrea and the Northern Horn of Africa through research, primary sources, and forgotten records from early printed texts to private letters and overlooked moments in global history. Beyond propaganda. Beyond stereotypes. Reconstructing the past through what people actually wrote, built, and lived.

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119 episodios

Portada del episodio Looking for Eritrea's Past Property

Looking for Eritrea's Past Property

What happens when a society's most important stories survive not in archives, but in memory? In this episode of The Other Side of Eritrea, we explore the history of Eritrean theatre, performance, and cultural memory through the groundbreaking research of Christine Matzke. At the center of the discussion is Zehaleve (1947), one of the most important early Tigrinya plays, produced during a period of profound political change and growing national consciousness. The episode examines how Eritrean playwrights, actors, and audiences used theatre to navigate colonial rule, foreign administration, and emerging anti-colonial sentiment. More importantly, it asks how these histories survived when manuscripts were lost, hidden, confiscated, buried, or destroyed. Drawing on oral testimony, personal archives, interviews, and performance studies, we explore the concept of the "embodied archive", the idea that songs, gestures, performances, and living memory can preserve history when written records disappear. In a world where digital records seem permanent, this story reminds us that for much of Eritrea's past, a single notebook, a remembered line, or a re-enacted performance could be the only proof that a work of art ever existed. This is a story about theatre, memory, survival, and the ongoing search for Eritrea's cultural past. #Eritrea #EritreanHistory #EritreanTheatre #AfricanHistory #OralHistory #PerformanceStudies #TheOtherSideOfEritrea #Tigrinya #AfricanTheatre #CulturalMemory #HistoryPodcast #EritrawiPodcast

21 de jun de 2026 - 17 min
Portada del episodio Missionaries and the Making of Colonial Notables

Missionaries and the Making of Colonial Notables

Missionaries and the Making of Colonial Notables How did institutions created to strengthen colonial rule help lay the foundations of Eritrean national consciousness? In this episode of The Other Side of Eritrea, we explore the unexpected intellectual legacy of European Catholic and Protestant missions in colonial Eritrea. Mission schools were designed to produce skilled workers, translators, clerks, teachers, and loyal intermediaries capable of helping administer a growing colonial state. Instead, they helped create a new generation of educated Eritreans who would use literacy, multilingualism, historical research, and critical thinking to shape their own understanding of the past and their place in the world. At the center of this story is Gabre Mikā’ēl, a mission-educated scholar whose life reflects the complex relationship between colonial service, cultural identity, and patriotic thought. Through his writings, we examine how Eritrean intellectuals employed the very tools introduced by missionaries, reading, writing, translation, publishing, and historical inquiry to reclaim their own history and challenge dominant narratives. The episode explores the rise of Eritrea’s colonial notables, the contrasting educational philosophies of the Italian Capuchins and Swedish Evangelical Mission, the growth of literacy and printing, and the emergence of an intellectual class that bridged the worlds of the colonizer and the colonized. Far from passive recipients of European influence, these men and women transformed education into a vehicle for historical recovery, cultural preservation, and political consciousness. Missionaries came to educate. The colonial state sought administrators and skilled workers. What emerged instead was a generation of thinkers who helped lay the intellectual groundwork for Eritrea’s future. #Eritrea #EritreanHistory #AfricanHistory #ColonialHistory #Missionaries #GabraMikael #HornOfAfrica #Education #Nationalism #HistoryPodcast #TheOtherSideOfEritrea #Colonialism #AfricanStudies #EritreanStudies #HistoricalPodcast

14 de jun de 2026 - 19 min
Portada del episodio Massawa The History and the Earthquake That Nearly Erased The Red Sea City

Massawa The History and the Earthquake That Nearly Erased The Red Sea City

In August 1921, a devastating earthquake struck the Red Sea port city of Massawa, damaging large sections of one of Eritrea's most historic urban centers. For a moment, it seemed possible that centuries of architectural and cultural heritage might disappear forever. This episode explores the history of Massawa before the earthquake, from its distinctive Red Sea architecture and coral-stone buildings to its shaded alleyways, carved balconies, and centuries-old urban fabric shaped by climate, trade, and local craftsmanship. Drawing on research presented at the International Conference on Eritrean Studies, we follow the city's dramatic reconstruction after the disaster. We examine the ambitious plans to replace the historic city with a modern colonial grid, the debates surrounding preservation and redevelopment, and the unexpected circumstances that ultimately helped save Massawa's heritage. We also explore how local artisans, property owners, engineers, and government authorities worked together to rebuild the city, preserving its unique character while improving its resilience against future earthquakes. This is the story of destruction and recovery, of tradition and modernization, and of how one of the Red Sea's most remarkable cities survived a disaster that nearly erased it from history. #Massawa #Eritrea #RedSea #Architecture #Earthquake #UrbanHistory #Heritage #Conservation #HistoryPodcast #HornOfAfrica #CulturalHeritage #TheOtherSideOfEritrea

7 de jun de 2026 - 24 min
Portada del episodio The Difficult Years: Eritrea and the Great War (1914–1922)

The Difficult Years: Eritrea and the Great War (1914–1922)

This episode of the Eritrawi Podcast explores the profound socioeconomic transformation of Eritrea during and after the First World War between 1914 and 1922. Although far from the European frontlines, Eritrea was deeply affected by the war as Italy extracted livestock, labor, and resources for its colonial campaigns in Libya. The episode examines the devastating impact of wartime requisitions, inflation, food shortages, disrupted trade routes caused by the British naval blockade, and the collapse of local agriculture during years of drought and locust invasions. It also explores how certain wartime industries such as hides, salt, and potassium generated immense profits for a small group of merchants while much of the population endured severe hardship. As the postwar recession of 1920–1921 struck Eritrea, bankruptcies, unemployment, and social frustration intensified among Italian settlers. The episode traces how these crises contributed to the rapid rise of fascism in Eritrea and the formation of the Fascio d’Eritrea in 1922. Drawing from historical research and archival material, this episode examines how war, economic collapse, colonial extraction, and political radicalization reshaped Eritrean society during one of the most turbulent periods of the colonial era. #Eritrea #WW1 #WorldWar1 #ItalianColonialism #Asmara #Massawa #EritrawiPodcast #AfricanHistory #ColonialHistory #Fascism #HornOfAfrica #RedSeaHistory #ItalianEritrea #HistoryPodcast #EastAfrica #Colonialism #EritreanHistory #HistoricalResearch #AfricaHistory #LibyaCampaign

10 de may de 2026 - 22 min
Portada del episodio From Warriors to Urban Dwellers

From Warriors to Urban Dwellers

This episode of the Eritrawi Podcast examines how Italian colonial rule reshaped Eritrea through military-driven urban planning between 1890 and 1941. Cities were not built for organic growth, but for control, designed around fortifications, surveillance, and strategic dominance. At the center of this system were the askaris, indigenous soldiers positioned as a buffer class between a small European elite and the wider colonized population. Through spatial segregation, racial zoning, and controlled urban design, colonial authorities transformed Eritrea into a laboratory of social engineering. This episode explores how power was embedded into the physical structure of cities, how loyalty was manufactured through military and economic incentives, and how these systems contributed to the long-term formation of Eritrean identity. Uoldelul Chelati Dirar's From Warriors to Urban Dwellers Ascari and the Military Factor in the Urban Development of Colonial Eritrea #Eritrea #Asmara #AfricanHistory #Colonialism #ItalianColonialism #Askari #EastAfrica #UrbanHistory #DecolonizeHistory #HornOfAfrica #EritreanHistory #HistoryPodcast #HiddenHistory #AfricanStudies #ColonialArchitecture #ModernHistory

3 de may de 2026 - 24 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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