Posted on September 1, 2014
I have written about patriotic holidays in so many countries and territories around the world, I keep thinking that I've covered them all...but I still haven't!

With official languages of Tigrinya, Arabic, and English, and with nine different ethnic groups (the majority are Tigrinya), the nation is diverse—but it voted almost unanimously to be independent of Ethiopia. But Ethiopia did not feel the same way—hence the “armed struggles.”
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Rather than show you grisly pictures of a 30-year war, I thought I would just show you some of the beauties of Eritrea. |
Way back in 1890, Italians colonized Eritrea and nearby “Italian Somaliland.” During World War II, in 1936, Italian forces invaded and occupied Eritrea's large southern neighbor, Ethiopia. When Allied forces liberated the African regions, in 1941, Ethiopia once again became an independent nation with its ancient monarchy. Italian Somaliland remained under Italian rule – but as a United Nations protectorate, not as a colony. (In 1960, Italian Somaliland joined British Somaliland to form an independent nation, Somalia.) And what happened to Eritrea?

It seems pretty natural to me that many Eritreans fought back against this takeover, and on this date in 1961, violence between Ethiopian governmental forces and Eritrean separatists broke out. It was the start of a 30-year war!

Now Eritreans celebrate both the beginning and the end of this war. Today is the anniversary of the beginning, and May 24 is Independence Day, celebrating the 1991 takeover of the capital, Asmara, from Ethiopian forces.
Why, oh why?
We often scratch our heads over war, wondering why anyone would go to war over _________ [fill in the blank]. But in this case, I can to some extent imagine why Eritreans were sick of other people taking over their country and insisting that they speak some OTHER language, other than their own... Still, I wonder why, oh why would it be worthwhile for Ethiopia to fight the Eritreans for thirty long years?
Take a peek at this map of Ethiopia to find out why:
Ethiopia is totally landlocked! It has no access to a sea or ocean. Eritrea, Djibouti, and Somalia block it from the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden on the north, and Somalia and Kenya block it from the Indian Ocean on the south and east.
As a matter of fact, Ethiopia is the most populous landlocked nation in the entire world.
Actually, Eritrea's location on the Red Sea explains a lot of the invasions and colonizations it experienced: South Arabians came to conquer, along with Ottoman Turks, Portuguese, Egyptians, British, and Italians. Especially once the Suez Canal was built giving ships access from the Mediterranean to the Red Seas, Eritrea was in a very strategic position.
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