Description:Harris, an Australian, & his nurse-wife served at Red Cross hospitals & relief stations in Ethiopia during the cresting famine & here testify to the bureaucratic idiocy & inhuman meretriciousness of the country's leaders--while casting a supportive but amazed eye upon the minds of the stricken peasantry. The Harrises weren't novices at relief work when, in '84, they were called to Red Cross headquarters in Geneva, shown films of the encroaching famine & then dispatched with a small international team of nurses to one site of the disaster. The government had long denied the famine's existence, since it was happening in the usually indestructible agricultural heartland, an area that had survived many earlier famines. To admit the disaster meant that the country's rulers would lose face. Harris is scathing about the Marxists, the Ethiopian bourgeoisie & the country's boss, Mengistu Halle Mariam. The opening chapters show the team overcoming or outlasting the sheer bureaucratic madness by which they're allowed to remove hospital stocks & provisions from their own warehouses, for trucking inland to the famine sites. The nation is celebrating a 10-day anniversary of the birth of socialism while peasants die by the thousands. Middle-class Ethiopians walk down the street without even seeing the dead & dying underfoot. Meanwhile they're beautifully mannered to a point of utter unreality ("Ethiopians will weep if they are argued with..."). Among the dying, "the very weak, the very sick & the very ill would almost certainly surrender their [relief] cards to those their families felt had a far better chance of survival. Peasant life is unsentimental...To the peasants our attempts to feed the weak & to stop them from giving food to the strong were terrifying & evil." A boldly written, at times searing book about "an inverted world where murder was ignored, evil praised as enlightenment & grotesque xenophobia billed as anti-racism.--KirkusWe have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Breakfast in hell: A doctor's eyewitness account of the politics of hunger in Ethiopia. To get started finding Breakfast in hell: A doctor's eyewitness account of the politics of hunger in Ethiopia, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
—
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
Poseidon Press (NY)
Release
1987
ISBN
0671632728
Breakfast in hell: A doctor's eyewitness account of the politics of hunger in Ethiopia
Description: Harris, an Australian, & his nurse-wife served at Red Cross hospitals & relief stations in Ethiopia during the cresting famine & here testify to the bureaucratic idiocy & inhuman meretriciousness of the country's leaders--while casting a supportive but amazed eye upon the minds of the stricken peasantry. The Harrises weren't novices at relief work when, in '84, they were called to Red Cross headquarters in Geneva, shown films of the encroaching famine & then dispatched with a small international team of nurses to one site of the disaster. The government had long denied the famine's existence, since it was happening in the usually indestructible agricultural heartland, an area that had survived many earlier famines. To admit the disaster meant that the country's rulers would lose face. Harris is scathing about the Marxists, the Ethiopian bourgeoisie & the country's boss, Mengistu Halle Mariam. The opening chapters show the team overcoming or outlasting the sheer bureaucratic madness by which they're allowed to remove hospital stocks & provisions from their own warehouses, for trucking inland to the famine sites. The nation is celebrating a 10-day anniversary of the birth of socialism while peasants die by the thousands. Middle-class Ethiopians walk down the street without even seeing the dead & dying underfoot. Meanwhile they're beautifully mannered to a point of utter unreality ("Ethiopians will weep if they are argued with..."). Among the dying, "the very weak, the very sick & the very ill would almost certainly surrender their [relief] cards to those their families felt had a far better chance of survival. Peasant life is unsentimental...To the peasants our attempts to feed the weak & to stop them from giving food to the strong were terrifying & evil." A boldly written, at times searing book about "an inverted world where murder was ignored, evil praised as enlightenment & grotesque xenophobia billed as anti-racism.--KirkusWe have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Breakfast in hell: A doctor's eyewitness account of the politics of hunger in Ethiopia. To get started finding Breakfast in hell: A doctor's eyewitness account of the politics of hunger in Ethiopia, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.