Professor Tekie Fessehatzion: Brief Life Story


Dr. Tekie was born on January 1st, 1941, in Asmara, Eritrea. He was the first born to his late parents ato Fessehatzion Woldemichael and weizero Letekidan Ghebru. After completing his elementary and high-school study in Eritrea, he came to the U.S. to pursue higher education. He earned his BA in economics from the University of Connecticut (1968), an MA, again in economics, from the State University of New York at Binghamton (1970), and a Ph.d. in
development economics from the University of Pittsburgh (1976).


Upon graduation, he worked as an Assistant Professor at the Department of African American Studies, University of Pittsburgh (1976-1980), as an Associate Professor at Jackson State University (1980-1991), and as a Professor and Chair of the Department of Economics at Morgan State University.

Through his prolific writing, he was a champion of the Eritrean people’s right to selfdetermination to which he gave all he could. In this endeavor, he was Eritrea’s finest. His ability to explain complex matters in simple language was unmatched. He was a master word-smith, excellent teacher, and superb researcher. Dr. Tekie was an expert in all aspects of Eritrean history, but the focus of his work was the history of the ill-fated Eritrea-Ethiopia Federation of 1952-1962, the result of the 1950 UN Resolution 390 A(v) that denied the people of Eritrea their right to independence and led to a 30-year long war of independence. Dr. Tekie was an expert in the history of this federation from its inception to its unilateral abrogation by Ethiopia. His 1990 monograph, Eritrea: From Federation to Annexation, 1952-1962, published by Eritreans for Peace and Democracy (EPD), is a prime example of his deep understanding of that period. His 1997 Eritrean Studies Review article: A Brief Encounter with Democracy: Eritrea in the Federation Years, stands as another testimony to his expertise.

Dr. Tekie was also a member of the Eritrea Constitution Commission that drafted the Eritrean Constitution. In this capacity, he was one of three Eritreans who tirelessly toured major U.S. and Canadian cities in 1994 to 1997 to ensure the participation of all Eritreans in the constitutionmaking process.

In the few years before and after Eritrea’s independence, Professor Tekie was hopeful that the countries in the Horn of Africa would realize the benefits of economic cooperation about which he wrote and lectured a great deal. Two prime examples were the topics: Prospects for Economic Cooperation Between Eritrea and Its Neighbors (1991) and Economic Cooperation in the Horn of Africa (1996). Unfortunately, his hope was shattered when Ethiopia declared war on Eritrea in May 1998. That prompted him to pen his seven-part series, “An Economist’s Lament.”Between 1998 and 2000, Dr. Tekie’s pen was busy explaining to the world the complex Eritrean- Ethiopian conflict in simple and clear language. His umerous essays from this period have been compiled in his book, Shattered Illusion and Broken Promise: Essays on the Ethiopian-Eritrean
Conflict, published in 2003 by the Red Sea Press.

In addition to his intellectual prowess, Dr. Tekie was a wonderful human being. No adjectives are sufficient enough to describe him. However, people who knew him will agree that he was a man of character, high intellect, humble and modest, patient and tolerant, kind and generous, and compassionate; the list goes on ad infinitum.

Tekie’s plan was to retire in a year or two and go to live in Asmara, his childhood home. However, the Creator’s plan for him turned out to be different. After a brief but gallant struggle against a brain tumor, and medical treatment at the Johns Hopkins Medical Center, he passed away peacefully in the presence of his family and friends on April 19, 2010. He is survived by his son Michael Tekie Fessehatzion, his siblings Haregu, Asghedet, Kahsay, Ghenet and Teferi (Togorba) Fessehatzion and thousands of his Eritrean compatriots who felt for years that he was speaking for them. Though the void he leaves behind is hard to fill, his gentle and humble spirit will live on forever. So long beloved father, brother and compatriot. May you rest in
peace.

April 24, 2010

source Tekie Foundation

Publications

Professor Tekie Fessehatzion’s Partial List of Scholarly Work

source http://www.tekie.org/works.html


  1. “Eritrea’s Remittance-Based Economy: Conjectures and Musings”, Eritrean Studies Review, Vol. 4(2):165-183, 2005.

  2. Shattered Illusion and Broken Promise: Essays on the Ethiopian-Eritrean Conflict, Red Sea Press, 2003.

  3. “Explaining the Unexplainable: the Ethiopia-Eritrea Border War.” Presented at the Bonn Seminar on the Eritrean-Ethoipian Border Conflict, March 19-21, 1999.

  4. “Eritrea & Ethiopia: from conflict to cooperation to conflict.” Special Issue Guest Ed., Eritrean Studies Review, Vol.3 (2), 1999.

  5. “A Brief Encounter with Democracy: Eritrea in the Federation Years,” Eritrean Studies Review, Vol. 2 (2):19-64, 1998.

  6. “Economic Cooperation in the Horn of Africa,”  From Conflict to  Peace, (ed) Amare Tekle, Red Sea Press, 1996.

  7. “The Eritrean Referendum of 1993”, Commentary, in Eritrean Studies Review, Vol. 1 (1) :167-175, Spring 1996.

  8. “We are ALL Free at Last! ” 1993 (incomplete citation).

  9. “Prospects for Economic Cooperation Between Eritrea and Its Neighbors,” Emergent Eritrea: Challenges of Economic Development, (ed) Gebre Hiwet  Tesfagiorgis, Red Sea Press: 16-27, 1991.

  10. “A Simultaneous Equation Model of Interstate Migration in Mexico”, co-author, Business and Economic Review, 1991.

  11. “An empirical test of the augmented todaro model of labor migration:  The case Mexico.”, co-author, Business and Economic Review, Vol. 4(2), Spring 1991.

  12.  “Prospects for Regional Economic Cooperation Between Eritrea Its Neighbors.” A paper presented at the Economic Policy Conference, Asmara, Eritrea, Summer 1991.

  13. Eritrea: From Federation to Annexation, 1952-1962, monograph, published by Eritreans for Peace and Democracy (EPD), Working Paper No. 2, March 1990.

  14.  “The implications of Eritrean independence in the Horn of Africa.” Proceedings of the International Conference on Eritrea, Baltimore, MD, 1990.

  15. “Child care services in the labor force participation and income distribution of working mothers in the US”, co-author, International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 17 (4):49-56, 1990.

  16. “Public assistance and job search behavior of the rural poor-evidence from the Mississippi Delta” , co-author, The Review of Black Political Economy, Vol.18 (3):79-91, 1990.

  17. “Merger targets in the food and related industries”, co-author, American Business Review, Vol. 8(2), June 1990.

  18. “A child born to a mother in Trinidad and Jamaica has a much better chance of surviving its first year than black children born in the Delta." Black Enterprise, Vol. 20 (5), December 1989.

  19. "The Effects of Government Public Assistance Programs on the Economic Well-Being of the Mississippi Delta Poor", co-author, The Common Good: Social Welfare and the American Future, 1989, Research Funded by the Ford Foundation Project on Social Welfare and the American Future.

  20. “'Eritrean Options and Ethiopia's Future', A Reply to Paul Henze“, August 1, 1989, (incomplete citation).

  21. “Eritrea & Ethiopia: from conflict to cooperation to conflict.” Guest Ed., Business and Economic Review, Vol. 2 (1), Summer 1998.

  22. “The Effectiveness of Transfer Payments in Reducing Poverty:  Evidence from Mississippi”, co-author, Midsouth Journal of Economics & Finance, Vol. 12 (3), Fall 1988.

  23. “But Tekie Fessehatzion, an economist at Jackson State University, noted that poverty still haunts the lowland county, with a fifth of personal income coming from welfare assistance, food stamps and other transfer payments.” New York Times: Fish Tale: Mississippi To Moscow, May 21, 1988

  24. “Reflections on the African economic predicament”, Presented at a Seminar Sponsored by the African Development Foundation, Washington, D.C, December 5, 1985.

  25. “Rethinking Aid” (incomplete citation).

  26. “The International Dimensions of the Eritrean Question”, Horn of Africa, Vol. 6 (2), 1983.

  27. Contributing Editor, The Horn of Africa, Vol. 6 (3), 1983.

  28. “Comment: One Eritrean View”, Cuban Studies, Vol. 10(1), Jan. 1980.

  29. “The Eritrean Struggle for Independence and National Liberation”, Horn of Africa (Summit, N.J.), Vol. 1(2), April-June 1978.

  30. “The 'Rediscovery' of Africa: An Analysis", Point (Washington Bureau, Urban League), Vol. 1(1), July/August 1978.

  31. “Internal population movements and urban unemployment in Kenya“, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Pittsburgh, 1976.

  32.  “Eritrean public intellectuals and the development of the national purpose” (incomplete citation).

  33. Unedited dehai articles, 260 pages. (most of these articles have appeared in his book, (Shattered Illusion and Broken Promise: Essays on the Ethiopian-Eritrean Conflict)


 



 

 

 

 


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