By Abebe Gellaw
Angelina Jolie is doing a “favor” by lending her name to raise awareness on abduction, or rather kidnapping of girls in countries like Ethiopia. She is leveraging her star power to promote Difret, despite the twisted saga behind its production.
The feature film, which is hitting the silver screen across the U.S. later this month, is based on the riveting story of Aberash Bekele, who was abducted, beaten and raped at the tender age of 14. She escaped after she shot and killed her abductor with his own gun. But she faced the wrath of her community and an unjust legal system in Ethiopia, which silently endorsed the kidnapping and rape of girls for the purpose of forced marriage.
The kidnapping that has made one British and two American girls from Texas to ask and act is a rare phenomenon. The victim isn’t one of the usual suspects but a fierce freedom fighter, who is in the forefront of the struggle to free the people of Ethiopia from injustice and tyranny. Andargachew Tsigie, 60, is an Ethiopian-born British citizen who was brazenly kidnapped at Sana’a International Airport while transiting via Yemen and taken to Ethiopia.
A daughter rising
A daughter rising
When Andargachew was kidnapped on June 23, 2014, his daughter Helawit was just fifteen. That same day she was having a good time at a friend’s birthday party in North London.
What can one expect a 15-year old girl to do when her beloved father is kidnaped by a brutal regime? Maybe she would lock her bedroom doors and cry her eyes out day and night. She may even get detached from the rest of the world, get depressed and withdrawn. She could feel helpless and hopeless.
Let alone a teenage girl, most stoic adults can easily resign themselves to such a heartbreaking reality. It is natural to feel desperately hopeless in the darkest hours of life. But such a reaction does not concern the exceptionally talented and courageous Helawit.
Instead of suffering from despondency, Helawit is fighting back and shining hope in the darkest hours of her family and others. She has become her father’s most authentic and vocal advocate. She needs his release sooner rather than later. She is campaigning, writing petitions, knocking on doors and using the power of words and creativity. Helawit is now an award-winning human rights activist whose campaigns and activism may not end with the release of her father from the dungeons of injustice.
She has created a new play, Ask, which vividly depicts her father’s plight and asks the hard questions why the British government is not doing enough to secure the freedom of their citizen facing the death penalty. Made in collaboration with the Royal Court of Theatre, Ask raises the thorny issues surrounding the abduction of her beloved father.
In partnership with her friends, she has made Ask from an idea conceived in her head to a reality on the stage. Her relentless effort is not in vain. She has recently graduated as an up-and-coming activist by winning Liberty’s 2015 Human Rights Awards.
Ask features her friends and herself from Islington Community Theatre, where she has been an active member for a while. Helawit’s extraordinary courage and creative activism has been noticed. Helawit was recognized with the Christine Jackson Young Person Award at London’s Southbank Center last month. Shortlisted for the award were Cardiff Law School Innocence Project and Tami Mwale, the founder of Get Outta the Gang, a group that tackles gang violence in London.
“I wish the reason behind this award wasn’t my dad’s abduction,” she said in her acceptance speech.
She took the opportunity to thank all those who have helped her to stay strong. One of the names she mentioned was the rock of her family, her mother Yemi Hailemariam. Yemi has proven to be a formidable fighter in her own right. A petition she has started online with Helawit and her twin boys, Menabe and Yilak, 7, to demand PM David Cameron to press for her husband’s freedom has already gathered nearly 130,000 signature.
The girls from Dallas
A few weeks ago, I travelled to Dallas, Texas, for a meeting and a fundraiser. What attracted my attention the most was an amazing handmade painting (above). It was a portrait of none other than Andargachew Tsigie. It looks so real that Andargachew seems gazing at the crowd emitting vision beyond the dark horizon. That painting was auctioned and raised $36,000 to the pro-freedom movement Andargachew has ignited.
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