The Other Side of Eritrea
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
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