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- ╚January 6, 1936Man of the Year:Hailie Selassie
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- The alert U.S. citizen last week could pick from among his
- fellow citizens as Man of the Year at the close of 1935 whom?
-
- When accountants had added up box-office receipts, Miss
- Shirley Temple emerged as the Cinemactress of the Year.
-
- Crime's grisly Man of the Year was the German carpenter who in
- his death cell in Trenton, N.J. last week heard that Charles,
- Anne and Jon Lindbergh were in the act of becoming the Exiles of
- the Year.
-
- The Schechters, with their Supreme Court suit which sent NRA
- crashing, proved themselves Brothers of the Year.
-
- In 1935 an unsmiling Negro named Joe Louis fisticuffed his way
- up from $50 fights into a $215,375 sensation as Heavy-weight of
- the Year.
-
- In all the world no transport achievement in 1935 equaled that
- of President Juan Terry Trippe of Pan American Airways with his
- inauguration of Cippers winging the Pacific to Manila.
-
- On Broadway appeared four successful plays all by Playwright
- of the Year Clifford Odets.
-
- On the thin edge between Science with its august curiosity and
- Mankind with its idle curiosity, Dr. Alexis Carrel awakened in
- 1935 with his best seller, Man, The Unknown, fresh and healthy
- faith in medicine's sounder marvels.
-
- Yet from Hauptmann to Carrel, from Temple to Trippe, from
- Louis to Odets and from the Schechters to the Lindberghs the U.S.
- obviously produced no Man of 1935 with the world weight of
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt when he was Man of 1932 or Man of 1934.
- In 1936 voters may make him President again and perhaps for the
- third time Man of the Year.
-
- In 1935 Europe's perennial Men of the Years, Stanley Baldwin,
- Benito Mussolini, Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Kamal Ataturk and
- Dr. Eduard Benes held undiminished sway. The outstanding
- exhibition of the century in French political tight-rope walking
- was given in 1935 but as the year entered its last hours the fate
- of Premier Pierre Laval, 1931's Man of the Year, continued to
- tiptoe. In Asia practical control of North China was obtained by
- Japan in 1935 so adroitly and inconspicuously that it was a major
- Japanese triumph to have avoided producing a Man of the Year.
- China's perpetually harassed Man of the Year, Generalissimo
- Chiang Kai-shek, entered his most excruciating morass of
- dilemmas.
-
- Both as human beings and as crowned symbols George & Mary in
- the glory of their Silver Jubilee were the King-Emperor & Queen-
- Empress of the Year, inseparable in the public mind. The year
- restored George II as King of Greece but his Throne trembled last
- week as he sought to master Greece's ousted Dictator.
-
- King of Kings. In 1935 there was just one man who rose out of
- murky obscurity and carried his country with him up & up into
- brilliant focus before a pop-eyed world. But for the hidden
- astuteness of this man, there would not now be the possibility of
- another world war arising out of idealism generated around the
- League of Nations in behalf of Ethiopia. But for His Majesty
- Haile Selassie the year 1935 would have been a distinctly
- different year. If by some unhappy chance the Italo-Ethiopian war
- should now spread into a world conflagration, Power of Trinity I,
- the King of Kings, the Conquering Lion of Judah, will have a
- place in history as secure as Woodrow Wilson's. If it ends in the
- fall of Mussolini and the collapse of Fascism, his Majesty can
- plume himself on one of the greatest feats ever credited to
- blackamoors.
-
- Above all, Haile Selassie has created a general, warm and
- blind sympathy for uncivilized Ethiopia throughout civilized
- Christendom. in the wake of the world's grandiose Depression,
- with millions of white men uncertain as to the benefits of
- civilization, 1935 produced a peculiar Spirit of the Year in
- which it was felt to be a crying shame that the Machine Age
- seemed about to intrude upon Africa's last free, unscathed and
- simple people. They were ipso facto Noble Savages, and the
- noblest Ethiopian of them all naturally emerged as Man of the
- Year.
-
- Outside Italy, the Emperor was clapped and cheered during 1935
- in almost every cinema house in the world. His name entered the
- U.S. vocabulary in such homely exclamations as, "Well! If that's
- so, then I'm Haile Selassie!" In the last week of 1935, Haile
- Selassie reached Broadway as a character in the new George
- White's Scandals. Cries he: "Boys, our country am menaced! What
- is we gwine do?" From then until the curtain falls amid applause
- which almost stops the show, His Majesty and guardsmen execute a
- hilarious tap dance.
-
- Goodness & Wisdom. Without quibble or qualification the best
- and wisest rule ancient Ethiopia has ever had is the present Man
- of the Year.
-
- Ethiopia, contrary to popular misconception, is not a
- Christian country. It is not even Coptic Christian. Unroll an
- authoritative religious map of the Empire, such as that in the
- current January issue of Foreign Affairs, and the facts are
- evident. In trifling quantity a few Christians are to be found
- near Addis Ababa, and the Coptic Christians, to which faith the
- Imperial Family appertains, form an island in the Mohammedan and
- pagan sea of peoples which is Ethiopia.
-
- Until 1935 the country was known mainly to foreign savants as
- a "museum of peoples" who remarkably preserve the habits and
- customs of their various antiquities. It was known, incorrectly,
- to hasty readers of a popular book, as the Hell-Hole of Creation.
- Actually the high plateau on which Addis Ababa stands and which
- comprises about half the Empire is suited in climate to the taste
- of an ordinary U.S. citizen although the altitude is trying.
- Rushing rivers criss-cross the plateau with deep gorges.
- Transportation of fantastic difficulty is enhanced by
- unimaginable mud in the rainy season, but the obstacles of Nature
- on the plateau are in every sense susceptible of being overcome.
-
- In the desert regions, blazing and scorching some 8,000 ft.
- below the plateau toward the sea, are the Hell-Holes of Creation,
- inhabited by tribes of extraordinary hardihood and savagery.
- Explorers report that "some of these peoples have never heard of
- Haile Selassie." It is they who today with complete impartiality
- harry, snipe at and loot any small detachment of soldiers, be
- they Ethiopian or Italian.
-
- The peoples of Ethiopia are very old but the Empire is very
- young. When Chief Justice Charles Evans Highes was a youth of 18
- there was properly speaking no Ethiopian Empire and the future
- Emperor Menlik ruled, as King of Shoa, the vicinity of Lake Tana,
- Aduwa, Aksum and Dessye. Three-quarters of the present Empire,
- including Harar and Ualual, he did not rule. Haile Selassie was
- born 44 years ago at Harar and in 1930 succeeded his cousin
- Menelik's daughter, Empress Zauditu, on the Throne.
-
- The legend that Ethiopia's Imperial Family is descended from
- the seduction by King Solomon of Sheba's Virgin Queen is pure
- myth. Last month Oxford's University Press exploded it anew with
- A History of Abyssinia in which the adoption of this legend by
- Coptic priests to give Ethiopia's present dynasty a savor of
- ancient lineage and of Biblical if not Divine authority is traced
- with British scholarship.
-
- Intimate Glimpse. Although good and wise, Haile Selassie, as
- recently pointed out by Dr. Sassard, his French physician of
- many years, has never been popular among his turbulent subjects.
- Every conversation the physician has had with his Imperial
- patient, writes Dr. Sassard, "gave me further reason
- to admire and respect this Sovereign, who is so different from
- those who surround him and from his own people, and who is so
- superior to them. . . . In his motionless face only his eyes seem
- alive -- brilliant, elongated, extremely expressive eyes. They
- bespeak boredom as well as polite indifference, cold irony, or
- even anger. The courtiers know these different expressions well
- and retire suddenly when the monarch's glance becomes
- indifferent, then hard. On the other hand, especially when he is
- dealing with Europeans, his eyes know how to be soft, caressing,
- affable -- even sincere."
-
- Referring to his royal patient's frequent and serious
- illnesses, Dr. Sassard observes:
-
- "I have always been surprised by the reserves of energy and
- courage that exist in so frail a body. . . . The attention of the
- public and of Europe is directed at the two sons of the
- Sovereign. The first, the Heir Apparent, is now 19 years old. He
- generally lives far removed from the capital, surrounded by
- spies, restricted in any independent action he may take,
- frequently and harshly rebuked by his father. . . . Prince
- Makonnen, who is 12 years old, is his father's great favorite. .
- . . Whereas a teacher was not accorded the Heir Apparent, a whole
- retinue of French educators has been designated to take care of
- the last-born son. . . . He has good sense, but he is perhaps a
- little too aware of his exalted birth and the destiny that he
- believes to be awaiting him. In any case it is unquestionably in
- Prince Makonnen that all his father's hopes are centred.
-
- "We must give the Emperior credit for having lent prestige to
- moral values in his country and for having made courage, work and
- persistence respected in a land where only physical force had any
- value. . . . The numerous Ministers are generally more or less
- related to the Emperor and the Emperor considers the granting of
- a Cabinet post a simple method of calming a noisy cousin or a
- belligerent vassal. . . . Disorder and misadministration make
- each Ethiopian Ministry a bottomless barrel into which money
- flows. . . . Emperor Haile Selassie inherited a savage country. .
- . He will never be a leader of men, the chief of the wild hordes
- that his predecessors were. The Emperor knows this and the
- knowledge saddens him."
-
- Gold Chains; Ice Water. After so intimate a glimpse through
- the eyes of Man of the Year's longtime physician, His Majesty's
- achievements in 1935 are all the more staggering. They are the
- ripened fruit of a physically frail Semite's lifetime of goodness
- and wisdom. It was good to cast into golden chains the Ethiopian
- who would otherwise have been Emperor instead of Haile Selassie,
- for this individual had strayed into the Mohammedan faith. Had
- the late Lij Yasu been on the Throne today the League of Nations
- might not have displayed such anxiety for the country of an
- infidel.
-
- His greatest wisdom is the result of meditating on the fact
- that in 1914 his beloved Ethiopia was saved from being
- dismembered by the Great Powers by the assassination of the
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand. After the establishment of the League
- of Nations, the Emperor, or Prince Tafari as he then was, figured
- out wisely that if Ethiopia could possibly win membership in the
- League, she might never need another World War to distract the
- Great Powers from dismembering her. To get into the League,
- though, was most difficult. Egypt was then and is still barred,
- for the reason that Britain suspected then and now knows for
- certain that Egypt, once inside the League, would scream bloody
- murder for the British to evacuate Egypt. Ethiopia was at first
- barred. Then Ethiopian statesmen, largely inspired by Prince
- Tafari, began yielding deceptively to French and Italian efforts
- to obtain more important concessions in the empire than had ever
- been granted before.
-
- In 1923 the French and Italians congratulated themselves that
- a most profitable and pleasant era of Latin-Ethiopian co-
- operation and economic exploitation was about to open with mutual
- goodwill. To top off the deal with pink icing, Ethiopia at Latin
- insistence was admitted to full membership in the League. Only
- three years afterward Tafari, who had become Regent, complained
- of Britain and Italy to the League, having caught them exchanging
- notes with a view to recognizing the possession of "spheres of
- influence" by each other in Ethiopia. With the same technique
- that the Man of the Year used in 1935, but without causing an
- explosion of world interest, Regent Tafari in 1926 shamed and
- reproved white men thus: "We should never have suspected that the
- British Government would come to an agreement with another
- government regarding our Lake Tana!" Ethiopia quietly won the
- first League round then & there, causing Italy and Britain to
- drop the matter, much as the Hoare-Laval Deal was to be dropped
- nearly a decade later with a crash heard around the world.
-
- Suckers. Many white men personally familiar with events in
- Ethiopia since then say that the Emperor for years played Italian
- and other foreign concessionaires for suckers until Benito
- Mussolini gradually evolved his theory that the White Race is
- being aggressively menaced and must recover the dynamic attitude
- of Victorian England or ultimately suffer eclipse. Japan, during
- Depression, secured virtually the whole of Ethiopia's import
- business in cotton piece goods, while Italians were supplying
- Haile Selassie with a powerful radio station at cut rates. As
- soon as it was in working order, His Majesty turned around and
- fired the whole Italian staff of technicians, made a sucker out
- of the great Italian electrical firm of Ansaldo Lorenz.
-
- Fatefully in December 1934 the issue between Italy and
- Ethiopia was joined. Each shrieked to heaven that a collection of
- mud huts called Ualual, located variously on various maps, had
- been subjected to aggression by the other. Months afterward a
- League of Nations commission decided that for the Ualual Incident
- neither Italians nor Ethiopians nor anyone else was to blame. By
- that time, though, the Man of the Year was fully in the making.
- He flashed off cables smoking hot with pathos, righteousness,
- defiance and more-in-sorrow-than-in-anger which made front pages
- throughout Christendom. It was sheer genius for Haile Selassie to
- deny that Italians used dumdum bullets instead of charging them
- with that military offense. It was again genius for him to cable
- out that in Ethiopia the local press had been ordered by the
- Emperor never to apply discourteous epithets to Benito Mussolini.
- Finally only genius could enable the Emperor to put himself -- a
- frail, exquisite Semite who speaks French -- on terms of friendly
- respect with robust Anglo-Saxon correspondents when they arrived
- in Addis Ababa and promptly nicknamed him "Little Charlie."
-
- If the Covenant of the League of Nations be law, then in law
- Ethiopia and Haile Selassie are right and Italy and Benito
- Mussolini are wrong. The only trouble is that that portion of the
- white race represented by 44,000,000 Italians has opened
- hostilities and in the sphere of law Italy contends -- much too
- late for popular acceptance -- that under the League Covenant,
- membership in the League of Nations is barred to states in which
- slavery still flourishes, as it unquestionably does in Ethiopia.
- Therefore, argues Italy, the original mistake of admitting
- Ethiopia to the League should be corrected by ousting Ethiopia,
- after which Italy would have exactly as good a right there as
- Britain has in Egypt.
-
- In successfully brushing aside these contentions of a Great
- Power; in dexterously pitching the issue of war on such grounds
- that the white race in general feels the future of the League of
- Nations to be at stake in the future of a Museum of Peoples in
- Africa; and in impressing even his own French doctor with his
- courage, his elevated moral stature and his peculiar genius for
- brow-beating Ethiopians while he charms foreigners, Emperor Haile
- Selassie emerged in 1935 not only as Man of the Year but as the
- world's own inimitable "Little Charlie" for as many years to come
- as health sustains him.
-
- So What? In the actual zones of Ethiopian war, the number of
- square miles over-run by Italian forces as the year ended was
- about 30,000 -- a mapmaker's fact of doubtful significance.
- Neutral military experts in Washington, Berlin, Paris and London
- consider that Premier Mussolini's deepest purposes have not yet
- been revealed, but that unquestionably he has hamstrung his
- soldier's war in East Africa by political and diplomatic
- back-seat driving from Rome. Darting raids by Italian bombers,
- unaccompanied by troop operations on the ground, have resulted
- in little more than the enemy's terror and disorganization. After
- major advances there have been sudden, desultory lulls. Because
- concurrent maneuvers on the Diplomatic Front have been secret and
- clandestine, Il Duce is perhaps as good a judge as any of whether
- bombs and calms judiciously sprinkled in the world press have
- much affected the game on Europe's green tables. In soldiers'
- eyes the Italians have made a wretched showing in Ethiopia, and
- to soldiers Italy's diplomatic showing looks even worse, with
- Anthony Eden up.
-
- The first and drier half of Ethiopia's "dry" season, in which
- alone military operations are possible, is now over. Bombs
- sprinkled around the Man of the Year have failed to get him. If
- Calvin Coolidge and the U.S. Marines, unhampered by Sanctions,
- never did succeed in bringing General Sandino to reason in
- Nicaragua, all the more reason for Haile Selassie to feel that
- his goose hangs high. On the other hand, should Mussolini decide
- that the diplomatic game is up, Italy's forces should be able to
- give a better account of themselves than they have thus far.
-
- New Deal. Few months ago Dr. Sassard wrote of his patient:
- "The Emperor will undoubtedly fight at the head of his troops."
- In ringing proclamations His Majesty has more than once promised
- to do so. Simple Ethiopians expect any ruler worth his salt to
- remain for the duration of the war physically in the thick of the
- fight. Instead, both before hostilities began and since, Haile
- Selassie has kept Europe's diplomats well supplied with offers to
- make peace by selling or bartering parts of the empire, emitting
- at the same time declarations to the world press that he will
- part with "not an inch" of Ethiopian soil. If these Imperial
- activities resemble a Semitic tradesman's strident, righteous
- protestations and simultaneous readiness to compromise, they are
- not the Man of the Year's fault but aspects of his God-given
- character.
-
- In Addis Ababa warrior chiefs of the Noble Savage type
- bitterly and contemptuously complain, "Our Emperor is a
- businessman!" They should thank Ethiopia's stars. The astounding
- marvel is that Africa's unique Museum of Peoples has produced a
- businessman -- with high-pressure publicity, compelling sales
- talk, the morals of a patent medicine advertisement, a grasp of
- both savage and diplomatic mentality, and finally with plenty of
- what Hollywood calls IT. The Emperor was "too smart" only once in
- 1935, when he tried by granting the Rickett Concession to
- Standard Oil to embroil the U.S. directly in Ethiopia's defense.
- In His Majesty's favorite phrase the entire situation is still
- "subject to negotiation."
-
- Fortnight ago the Imperial Businessman had instructed Al
- Smith's publicity director, Josef Israels II, to tell the world
- that His Majesty was willing to settle on terms only slightly
- more generous to Ethiopia than those offered by The Deal of Hoare
- & Laval. He was willing to yield a great chunk of his empire in
- exchange for peace and a corridor to the Red Sea. The resignation
- of Sir Samuel Hoare and the tribulations of Premier Laval last
- week caused the Imperial Businessman to propose a completely New
- Deal. Ethiopia's new "basis for discussion," with which the Man
- of the Year masterfully closed 1935, are that: 1) Mussolini's
- forces are to withdraw; 2) Italy is to pay an indemnity to
- Ethiopia, and 3) the Great Powers excluding Italy are to be
- invited to a new game of giving economic, administrative and
- financial "assistance and advice" to Ethiopia, with Haile
- Selassie holding all the trumps and calling it Civilization.
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