History

This Eritrean hero was locked up in an Italian criminal asylum for publicly devoting himself to his country in 1938

Zerai Deres’s act of devotion towards a religious memorial would forever change the course of his life.

Zerai Deres at 16 years of age…Wikimedia Commons

On June 15, 1938, Deres went to the Princess of Piedmont Boulevard and knelt down at the Monument to the Lion of Judah in Rome, Italy. As he prostrated, a small crowd attempted to stop Deres. Deres then brandished a scimitar – a sabre with a curved blade and stabbed an officer, a private, a state employee and an infantry chief. The mayhem ended when two soldiers fired their guns. Deres was struck in his thigh; he endured four shots.

Derai’s violent protest was considered an act of madness. Derai was hospitalized then taken to the criminal asylum, Vittorio Madia.

Deres was born in 1914 in Italian Eritrea.  More specifically, in the province of Serae.

He was a member of the Tigrinya ethnic group.

He converted to Catholicism and attended colonized schools which enabled him to speak Italian fluently.

After the Yekatit 12 massacre, Deres was hired as a translator for Ethiopian aristocrats deported to Italy. He arrived in Rome in the summer of 1937. He was 23-years-old.

As Deres stayed informed about the colonial war occurring in Ethiopia, he became angrier and felt hopelessness about the state of affairs occurring.

Deres planned a trip back to his native land.  Before he was due to leave, one day during lunch he knelt at the base of the Monument to the Lion of Judah.  The monument was a symbol of monarchy in Ethiopia; dedicated to the coronation of Emperor Hailé Selassié in 1930.

The Monument to the Lion of Judah was transported to Rome as ruins of war by the Italian fascist regime in 1935.

As Deres carried out his devotions, a crowd gathered around him and attempted to dissuade him.  Deres pulled out his sword and stabbed an officer while denouncing Italy and the Duce and praising the Negus.

At the end of the violent confrontation, Italian Railways private Vincenzo Veglia, State employee Ferdinando Peraldi and Infantry Chief Marshal Mario Izzo had all been wounded.

There was also documentation that stated that a butcher boy who was passing by as the incident unfolded was also injured.  The boy reportedly threw his bicycle at Deres.

Two soldiers fired shots, four of which hit Deres.

Because of the attack at the monument, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini accelerated the deportation of Abyssinian nobles who were not welcome in Rome.

After being hospitalized at the Umberto I Policlynic, Deres was transported to the Barcellona Pozzo di Gotto, the portion which housed the criminal asylum.

Deres was incarcerated for seven years. During that time, he kept in contact with his brother, Tesfazien Deres.

Deres also professed his sanity. He stated, “I’m fine. Always have been, and still am, in full possession of my mental faculties. I am in the Asylum only on account of government policy.”

Tesfazien advocated for his brother’s freedom by writing a letter to Emperor Selassié and approached Minister of Foreign Affairs Ambaye Wolde Mariam to present the case to the Imperial Palace. Both efforts proved to be unsuccessful.

Tesfazien finally reached his brother in 1939 but could do nothing to gain his freedom.

Deres died on July 6, 1945, after being imprisoned for seven years.

Tesfazien fought a lengthy battle to send his brother’s body back to Eritrea. Deres was finally buried in St. Mary’s Church in Hazega.

After his death, Deres’s story was dramatized and he is revered as a National folk hero in Ethiopia and Eritrea.

In 1966, the sculpture of the Lion of Judah was returned to Ethiopia. Selassié spoke about Deres’s religious and political gesture at the dedication ceremony at Addis Ababa.

In 2016, Deres’s likeness was depicted on Ethiopian stamps as part of the Ethiopian Postal Service’s national hero’s series.

Farida Dawkins

Farida Dawkins is a blogger, video content creator and staff writer at Face2Face Africa. She enjoys writing about relatable and controversial lifestyle issues that pertain to women in Africa and the African diaspora.

Recent Posts

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton says his little brother was racially abused while watching him play

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton has said that his little brother was subjected to racial abuse,…

1 day ago

This is how Reggie Bush got his Heisman Trophy back after 14 years

Reggie Bush has regained his place as the 2005 Heisman Trophy winner after over a…

1 day ago

Nick Cannon says he is a lupus warrior as he undergoes blood treatment after decade of battle with condition

Since 2012, actor Nick Cannon has openly shared his struggle with lupus to support others…

2 days ago

Here’s how much NFL draft’s No. 1 pick Caleb Williams will earn

Former USC superstar Caleb Williams has been drafted by the Chicago Bears as the No.…

2 days ago

Stephen A. Smith on the money mistake he made that got him fired from ESPN

Stephen A. Smith is an ESPN analyst. People widely regard him as the face of…

2 days ago

‘Hip-hop’s best basketball player’ Lil Durk is giving HBCU students a chance to win $333K in scholarships

Lil Durk is an American rapper and one of the most influential voices in the…

2 days ago

Kevin Hart’s Gran Coramino Tequila donates over $1 million to small Black and Latinx businesses

In 2022, Kevin Hart added a new title to his impressive resume: a tequila entrepreneur.…

2 days ago

‘Nothing was handed out to me’: Swerve Strickland on becoming the first Black AEW World Champion

AEW's latest pay-per-view, Dynasty 2024 on Sunday night saw Swerve Strickland defeat Samoa Joe to…

2 days ago

Opal Lee: 97-year-old ‘Grandmother of Juneteenth’ to receive 8th honorary doctorate

Renowned civil rights activist Opal Lee, known as the "Grandmother of Juneteenth," will be awarded…

2 days ago

Gun violence: Mississippi mother’s two sons fatally shot in the space of a month

Violet Horne lost her two sons to gun violence within the space of a month.…

2 days ago

Ohio police released K-9 on man after mistakenly believing he was driving stolen car

An Ohio man said a K-9 bit him seven times after he was pulled over…

2 days ago

Namibia: Outrage after tourists are spotted posing naked at Big Daddy dune

Three male foreign tourists who were spotted posing naked in a popular dune in Namibia…

2 days ago

Will.i.am partners with media veterans to acquire Uproxx, HipHopDX and more to form new studio

Will.i.am is partnering with other prominent figures to revolutionize the digital media scene by forming…

3 days ago

Meet Eritrea’s Sabelle Beraki who built a thriving toy business out of frustration

Sabelle Beraki's childhood was inundated with the lack of representation when it came to a…

3 days ago

How an entrepreneur used LinkedIn to raise $13.8 million

Benjamin Harvey is the founder of AI Squared, a third-party software company that helps organizations…

3 days ago