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Alemseged Tesfai. An African People’s Quest for Freedom and Justice: A Political History of Eritrea, 1941–1962. C. Hurst & Co., 2025. 536 pp. Notes. Illustrations. Bibliography. Index. $29.55. Paperback. ISBN: 9781805265078.

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Alemseged Tesfai. An African People’s Quest for Freedom and Justice: A Political History of Eritrea, 1941–1962. C. Hurst & Co., 2025. 536 pp. Notes. Illustrations. Bibliography. Index. $29.55. Paperback. ISBN: 9781805265078.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 February 2026

Kifle G. Gebremedhin*
Affiliation:
Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University CALS , United States kgg1@cornell.edu
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Abstract

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Type
Book Review
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2026. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of African Studies Association

Alemseged Tesfai’s latest work, An African People’s Quest for Freedom and Justice, a Political History of Eritrea, 1941–1962, marks the culmination of his acclaimed Aynfelale trilogy, originally published in the Tigrigna language. The trilogy: (1) Aynfelale (1941–1950), (2) Federation Eritrea ms Ethiopia kab Matienso ksab Tedla (1951–1955), and (3) Eritrea kab Federation nab Gobetan Sewran (1956–1962), captured key chapters in Eritrea’s modern political history. This new volume, however, weaves together the entire period in a single, cohesive narrative, offering both depth and continuity.

The book centers on three decisive turning points in Eritrea’s political journey. The first, covering the 1940s, recalls Britain’s failed attempt to partition the country between Ethiopia and Sudan (a British colony at the time), a plan thwarted by popular resistance that preserved Eritrea’s territorial integrity. The second, in the 1950s, details US–Ethiopian maneuvering to annex Eritrea with Ethiopia, which was countered by Eritrean opposition that secured a tenuous federal arrangement. Though deeply flawed, the federation allowed the Red Sea State (Eritrea) to exist under its own flag and institutions for another decade. The third milestone, the beginning of the armed struggle in 1961, is presented not as a reaction to the flawed federal arrangement but as a response to its (the federation) fundamental illegitimacy from the outset. Together, these episodes, meticulously narrated in Alemseged’s book, underscore the resilience and resolve of the Eritrean people in safeguarding their identity and sovereignty.

What distinguishes Alemseged’s work is not only the scope of his research but also his method. A lawyer turned historian, and later an intellectual turned freedom fighter, Alemseged brings both scholarly rigor and lived experience to his writing. This volume, like his earlier works, is meticulously researched, richly referenced, and supplemented by extensive interviews with participants who shaped the events themselves. His narrative style is legitimately refraining from imposing his own judgments, instead allowing history’s actors to speak in their own voices. This commitment to credibility, integrity, and authenticity gives the book an authority that is rare in political histories.

Reading this book is not merely an academic exercise. For Eritreans in particular, it is an act of self-discovery. To learn one’s history is to understand one’s own identity, where one comes from, the struggles endured, and the values preserved. The decades of political and armed struggle methodically chronicled in this book were ultimately a quest for freedom, justice, and the preservation of nationhood. Alemseged’s narrative captures both the sacrifices and the spirit of those years, making the work deeply personal for readers who see their own collective journey reflected on its pages.

Equally significant is the perspective from which this history is written. Too often, accounts of African liberation struggles have been told by outsiders, leaving out the aspirations, emotions, and lived realities of the people themselves. By contrast, Alemseged writes as both a witness and participant, preserving the voices and experiences of those who lived through the turning points. His contribution enriches Eritrean historiography while also challenging future generations of Eritrean scholars and writers to continue documenting their people’s story in all its richness.

While Alemseged Tesfai’s mark on Eritrea’s armed struggle for independence is well established, his contributions to enriching Eritrean literature, particularly Eritrean political history, are arguably legendary. His book, An African People’s Quest for Freedom and Justice: A Political History of Eritrea, 1941–1962, is a meticulously researched work, rich in dates, events, personalities, and historical contexts central to both African and Eritrean political history.

This book should be a must-read and a must-have on the bookshelves not only of historians, educators, researchers, and students of political history, but also of anyone seeking to understand what happened, how it happened, and why events unfolded as they did during the formative years of Eritrea between 1941 and 1962. The work unveils the intricate web of political maneuvering, exposing sham arrangements such as the federation, betrayals by powerful governments of the era, the United Nations, and the Ethiopian monarchy, that collectively denied the Eritrean people their legitimate rights and aspirations. At the same time, it powerfully documents the resilience and resistance of the Eritrean people in the face of these injustices.

Beyond its scholarly value, the book stands as a deeply resonant narrative of endurance, sacrifice, and the unyielding pursuit of justice. With this work, Alemseged Tesfai once again makes an essential and enduring contribution to Eritrea’s literary and historical canon.