The Lion and The Condor
The Lion and The Condor
The Lion and The Condor
Robinson was the first African American aviator licensed in the US, the
first African American aviation instructor in America. He taught the first African
American women pilots in America and the first Ethiopia women pilots. It was his
idea that gave birth to the famous Tuskegee Airmen of WWII fame. Known as the
"Brown Condor of Ethiopia," he became an international hero and legend fighting
against Mussolini's fascism in Ethiopia in 1935.
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YAHOSHUAH ISRAEL
Copyright © 2015 by Yahoshuah Israel
ISBN: 978-1-63490-677-7
All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner
without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief
excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to the
International Council for the Commemoration of Col. John C. Robinson.
Headquarters - Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - www.blackhero.org - 909-319-7700 or 909-
319-8228 or e-mail: [email protected]
First Edition
The Lion and the Condor: The Untold Story of Col. John C. Robinson and the
Crippling of Ethiopia, and other books by Yahoshuah Israel may be purchased in
bulk at special discounts for sales promotions, corporate gifts, fund raising, or
educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For
details, contact the International Council for the Commemoration of Col. John C.
Robinson at the above address.
Introduction
1
THE LION AND THE CONDOR
I had read a little about Col. John Robinson and knew about his being
asked by Emperor Haile Selassie to come to Ethiopia and train
2
The Untold Story of Col. John C. Robinson and the Crippling of Ethiopia
After spending long hours, day after day, at the National Library of
Ethiopia, the archives of the Ethiopian Study Center, and the archives
of the Ethiopian Herald, I would be exhausted and would make my
way back to my apartment. After assembling the information and
facts that I had gathered that day, I would fall asleep, drained. Often I
would have a dream related to the characters from this great historical
period. When I awoke in the morning, I would be refreshed and
energized by the awareness that what I was searching for was bigger
than Col. Robinson and even bigger than the combined stories of the
other unsung heroes. I realized that I was pursuing the restoration of
an important segment of black American history, Ethiopian history,
and most importantly, American history, which had been lost and
forgotten. And as I followed its path, I realized that this awesome
chapter missing from the history books had been distorted and twisted
to the point that it was almost unrecognizable.
3
THE LION AND THE CONDOR
4
The Untold Story of Col. John C. Robinson and the Crippling of Ethiopia
5
THE LION AND THE CONDOR
The Lion and the Condor describes how Emperor Haile Selassie
found himself “liberated” from one colonial-minded nation, Italy,
which sought to enslave Ethiopia, only to find himself in the iron grip
of the biggest colonizer of the day, Britain. It describes how the
British military plundered and pillaged an Ethiopia whose Italian
occupiers had industrialized to such an extent that, as she stood at the
end of the Italian occupation, Ethiopia would have been one of the
leading African nations of the day—if not the leading nation—and
might have ranked among the so-called First World nations of today,
along with South Africa and Japan. The book explains how the
emperor of Ethiopia was positioned, due to the immense respect and
reverence that the colonized world had for him, to become a global
leader of a stature not seen before or since.
Indeed, I began this work in search of the man called the Brown
Condor, with the intention of telling his story—the story of a
forgotten legacy that has been covered up and lost for more than
seventy years. Buried to such an extraordinary degree that despite his
having what has been called a state funeral, attended by members of
the royal family, ambassadors, and high officials of the Ethiopian
military and elite, the grave of this great black American, who made
the ultimate sacrifice for the people of Ethiopia, seemed for many
decades to have been hopelessly lost to posterity.
But I did indeed find him. After much digging and toiling and
following long, winding roads, I found the man who had become an
international war hero. The man who had been the first Westerner to
fight against Fascism in defense of a nation wholly deserted by all the
“freedom-loving and defending” nations of the world. Like the
proverbial phoenix of mythological lore, I found him rising from his
ashes, demanding to be acknowledged and given his rightful due. And
as I rediscovered this long-lost American and Ethiopian hero, I found
him pointing like a sentinel, not to his plight and his own
disappointment, but that of an ill-destined nation that was betrayed
and pillaged by the very “saviors” who have been credited with her
deliverance.
6
The Untold Story of Col. John C. Robinson and the Crippling of Ethiopia
I found a story of masterful cunning and guile that has yet to be told
in its entirety. A story that condemns Britain and America, as well as
others, for the unforgivable deed of making sure that Ethiopia would
remain the least of all nations, despite its having withstood the
colonizing machinations of a deceitful League of Nations and the so-
called civilized nations of the world.
I found a Col. Robinson who was even greater than the Col. Robinson
who figured in the story I had been told on that bright, sunny day at
President Girma’s home. A man deserted initially by the American
government when it refused to provide him the support and backing
that would certainly have changed the outcome of Ethiopia’s war
against Fascism. And secondly, by the very emperor who sought his
help in establishing the Imperial Ethiopian Air Force—the man for
whom he repeatedly put his life at risk, doing, in his own words, “my
part in the defense of Ethiopia.”
7
Col. John C. Robinson was the first African American aviator licensed in the US, the
first African American aviation instructor in America. He taught the first African
American women pilots in America and the first Ethiopia women pilots. It was his
idea that gave birth to the famous Tuskegee Airmen of WWII fame. Known as the
"Brown Condor of Ethiopia," he became an international hero and legend fighting
against Mussolini's fascism in Ethiopia in 1935.
Booklocker.com
http://www.booklocker.com/p/books/8270.html?s=pdf