Yona Bogale was born in 1908 in the rural village of
Wolleqa, near
Gondar in Northern
Ethiopia, The eldest of five children of Bogale Birru and Beletu Reda, he was raised in a family of farmers and goat and cattle herders, but showed an early aptitude for language and education. With the help of Dr.
Jacob (Jacques) Faitlovitch and Professor
Tamrat Emmanuel, he completed his primary studies, and at the age of 12, and was one of several young people selected to study abroad. After attending elementary school in
Jerusalem for four years, he spent two years in high school in
Frankfurt, Germany. He attended the
University of Heidelberg in Germany for two years and completed his international studies at the Asher Institute for Jewish Education in
Lausanne, Switzerland, and the
Alliance Francaise Universelle in
Paris, France. After returning to
Addis Ababa in 1932, he taught in the teacher training and boarding school opened there by Faitlovitch, eventually becoming its principal. From 1935, Bogale served as a translator for the
Ethiopian Red Cross at the time of the
Italian invasion and occupation of Ethiopia. Afterwards, he returned to work in several private businesses, before being appointed in 1941 to a position in the Ethiopian government by King
Hailie Selassie I. In 1945, he married
Tayitu Kelkele and began a union that spanned 45 years and produced eight children. After Ethiopia gained its independence, Bogale worked as head of the translation department in the
Ethiopian Ministry of Education for twelve years. Then, with the cooperation of the
Jewish Agency,
Sochnut Hayhudit, Bogale opened and supervised more than 20 Jewish schools in Ethiopia. in 1955, Bogale and Tamrat Emmanuel became the lead advocates for the Beta Israel community. For the next two decades, he was the driving force in opening new schools, medical facilities, prayer houses and agricultural stations in the northwestern part of Ethiopia. His work drew the attention of religious leaders and government officials in Israel, as well as Jewish organizations worldwide, particularly with regard to his goal of
aliyah for all Ethiopian Jews. ==Quest for
Aliyah==