Birth and early influences Daniachew Worku was born in a village south of
Debre Sina, the eldest of five children. His family moved to the town of Debra Sina when he was four. His father, Worku Bezabih, went to France in 1914 and served in
World War I before returning to Ethiopia and marrying his mother, Asegedech Habte-Wold. His early life was shaped by the
Italian Occupation and a number of encounters the family had with occupying troops. As a result of this, his father fled the family home for a year. He attended a government school in Debra Sina and also briefly attended the
Lycée Guebre-Mariam. His education was unusual at a time when most children attended a church school. During these early years Daniachew started to write poems and record folk tales told to him by his mother. He also read works by
Kebede Michael,
Makonnen Endelkachew, and
Heruy Wolde Selassie.
Schooling Daniachew left home at 12 to join Haile Selassie Secondary School in Kotebe, Addis Ababa. While there he wrote ሰው ኦለ ብዬ (
Saw ‘ala beyé), a play with friendship as its major theme. It was published some years later. He went on to Teacher Training School in Addis Ababa before becoming a teacher of Amharic at Medhane Alem Secondary School in Harar for two years. While in Harar he wrote another play called ሰቀቀንሽ እሳት (
Seqeqenish isat), which depicts a traditional hierarchical society. This was staged at the school and later in Addis Ababa, where he taught for a further two years at the Technical School. It was with the money raised from these performances that he published ሰው ኦለ ብዬ (
Saw ‘ala beyé). Kurtz argues that some of Daniachew's writing during this time provided the basis for his English-language novel, The Thirteenth Sun.
Return to Ethiopia Daniachew returned to his university teaching post after his year in America. During the next five years, and leading up to the
Ethiopian Revolution of 1974, he published two novels and numerous short stories and articles. Many of these stories and articles appeared in the
Ethiopian Herald newspaper. One, The Voice, later appeared in the Iowa Review.
አደፍርስ (Adefris) Daniachew's first novel, አደፍርስ (
Adefris), was written in Amharic and published in 1969. It is described as providing a panoramic view of Ethiopian society before the revolution. The novel begins in the village of Armanya, near Debre Sina, where a wealthy and conservative widow lives with her daughter, her land agent and his daughter. The widow rents rooms to Ato Tiso, a judge visiting the area from Addis Ababa to rule on local disputes. The judge is accompanied by his own daughter, his sister, and her son, Adefris. Adefris is a university student sent to the countryside to complete his national service as a teacher. A love triangle develops between Adefris and the two daughters of the house, before conflict ensues. Adefris continues his teaching assignment, challenging traditional attitudes. Students then begin to demonstrate in the town and Adefris is struck and killed by a stone. This criticism led to the author trying to withdraw circulation and stockpiling unsold copies in his house. He considered this his most important work, but following the negative response he announced he would no longer write in Amharic. It was only later that the novel began to receive widespread appreciation. Its release in Ethiopia was disrupted amid concerns that it would be censored by the government of
Haile Selassie, with small numbers reportedly sold under the counter of the United Nations bookshop in Addis Ababa. In 1974, the first demonstrations of what would become the Ethiopian Revolution created an opportunity for a wider release, and Heinemann took the opportunity to import additional copies.
Later years and death After the revolution Daniachew worked for the Ethiopian Standards Institute, as an external examiner at Addis Ababa University and at the Kuraz Publishing Agency. During these years he published a writing guide (የጽሔፍ ጥበብ መመሪያ), contributed to a dictionary of geographical terms (የአማርኛ የጂኦግራፊ መዝገበ ቃላት) and co-authored a book of Amharic idioms (የአማርኛ ፈሊጦች). Daniachew died of food poisoning at
Yekatit 12 Hospital and was buried at the Medhane Alem church in Debre Sina. At the time of his death he had reportedly completed a 650-page manuscript entitled 'Shout It From the Mountain Top'. ==Bibliography==