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As in every good story there's a beginning. And as always it's about man and woman. We know the man -- King Solomon. The wise, the powerful, who ended up in disgrace and madness. The Bible doesn't say why. One has to read Ethiopian books to know what really took place then, three thousand years ago.
The book is very old -- "Kebra Negast" -- "The Glory of the Kings." According to a tradition and old books, in the beginning of the Sellassie's family was a love story. Makeda, the young virgin queen, who lived in the Virgin Land, had a dream. That was the name given to Ethiopia -- Virgin Land -- because of the queen. That's how Ethiopia became known for the first time by the world. The capital of her kingdom was Axum. Makeda reigned over parts of Southern Arabia in Sabea, called Sheba, and because of this was called Queen of Axum and Sheba. Sometimes saw was called Saba, by the Ethiopians. Arabs called her Belkis or Bilkis, depending on how you want to spell it. It were the troubled times when a generation came that would
not believe in God unless a sign was shown them. That's why, being
angered by their disbelief, Our Lord said, "The Queen of the South
shall rise up in judgement with this generation and shall condemn it;
for she came from the uttermost parts of the
earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and behold, one greater than
Solomon is here." All books are agreed on that -- Hebrew, Arab and
Ethiopian. Sheba was young and beautiful. And Queen Saba said, "And I
love him merely on hearing concerning him and without seeing him, and
the whole story of him that hath been
told me is to me as the desire of my heart, and like water to the
thirsty man... Through wisdom I have dived down into the great sea and
have seized in the place of wisdom's depth, a great pearl whereby I am
rich. I went down like the great iron anchor whereby men anchor ships
for the night on the high seas, and I received a lamp which lighted me,
and I came up by the ropes of the boat of understanding. I went to
sleep in the depths of the sea, and not being overwhelmed with the
water, I dreamed a dream. And it seemed to me that there was a star in
my womb and I marvelled there at and I laid hold upon it, and it
lighted me with the splendor thereof." That's what she wrote to king
Solomon. They say that she sent the letter with a pigeon, but we know
that the traders brought it to Jerusalem.
King was angry and the dazzling sun came down from the sky. Not the sun
of Israel, but the bright disk of liquid gold. It came down and then it
moved away. He wanted to stop it, he waited for the return of this
African sun. But the sun did not come back to his city. Jerusalem was
in darkness. The sun went
away down south. It was gone to the country of the Southern Queen. And
then the king cried out - "Greetings from Solomon, Son of David, and
servant of the Most High God to Belkis, Queen of Saba..."
That night she couldn't sleep.
"Rise, therefore, not up against me but come and surrender yourself
unto me..." Solomon saw the Zar for the first time and the Spirit who
ruled the land of his queen was dark and big. The demon-blacksmiths
appeared behind their demon-king. They were struck with fear upon
seeing Solomon, and asked him what he had in his belly. Solomon
answered that he was full of the grace of God, and that this grace
protected him against all evil spells. Then Solomon spoke some Words of
Power. The King of the demon-blacksmiths was angered and ordered his
servants to kill Solomon.
"Lofham, lofham," said Solomon. And the executioner's mouth was locked
up, the Zar had no eyes. The waters and fires came down on them. Some
of his followers were drowned, others were reduced to ashes. The king
alone survived. Solomon seized him by the throat,
struck him, and commanded him to give up his secrets. The Zar revealed
to the king his evil spells for appearing in many forms -- with the
face of an ass, a horse, a dog, a lion... The journey was long, longer than the Jews' road from Egypt. But she was in love and covered the distance not in forty years but forty days. Even today Ethiopia has no highways; only roads, sometimes tracks. For thousands of years they lived in isolation. Why would they need roads? Why should you travel the world when you live in paradise? Go in all four directions, to every corner of the world from the heart of this mountain kingdom and see for yourself. East, West, North -- heat and deserts. South -- jungles and diseases.... Wait! Let me see! Which gate of the city did Sheba enter? There's David's Hill south of Jerusalem and from where you can see the whole city. Good place. She reached the town at the end of the day, when the dying sun makes the air blue like the waters of Abby. Was the new Solomon's Temple complete for her to see? We don't know. They stopped; Sheba's caravan was enormous; like an army, the people and horses were tired. Jerusalem saw the multitude of the never-seen-before dark people -- and panicked. But the king calmed his people; he knew that the Queen of the South had arrived.
What do we know about the past? There were no news crews, no photographers, no reporters. Only pictures and poetry could tell us was took place in Jerusalem at the time of Sheba's visit. They say that she talked and talked with Solomon on matters of religion, and before long she abandoned the worship of the sun and the moon and the stars and worshipped the God of Israel. Love of poetry, which was a true indication of their love of God, brought them together. The first of the Song of Songs, which is Solomon's, was her song.
Well, after Sheba had spent six months in Jerusalem, she informed King Solomon that while she would like very much to remain in his capital, and continue under his tutelage in order to grow in wisdom and in the knowledge of the religion of Israel, the time had come when duty required that she return to her own land....
Draw me after you, let us make haste. When Solomon heard that time has come for her to leave, he understood, he was a king himself, but the man in his heart said, "A woman of such splendid beauty has come to me from the ends of the earth. Will God give me seed in her?"
The king was most reluctant to part with his gracious and lovely visitor, and pondered the matter of marrying her. With this in mind, Solomon pleaded with the queen not to leave him in haste but to prolong her sojourn for yet another season in order that he might complete her instructions of wisdom:
Following one of those dinners at which highly seasoned meats were featured, Solomon invited the queen to spend the night in his quarters. She agreed to do so on condition that he not violate her person; Solomon accepted that on condition that she not take anything of his. Having thus reached an agreement, the two retired for the night. During the night the queen awoke and took a drink of water, only to find that Solomon had expected this. He thus justified taking her to his bed because she had broken the agreement.
"Thou hast broken the oath that thou hast sworn not to take
anything by force that is in my palace." Solomon seized her arm.
As they slept together the king dreamed a dream, and he saw that the sun came down to the land of Judah and illuminated it very brightly, and presently it removed to Ethiopia and shone there. And a second time it came to the land of Judah, but the Jews hated it and strove to destroy it, and it departed to the lands of Rome and Ethiopia.
Next day Solomon gave the queen a ring, saying, "If thou hast a son, give it to him and send him to me." Sheba knew that she was pregnant. The wise king didn't know his future. Solomon didn't know that he will end his life in the kingdom of madness. Oh, friends, love is more powerful than wisdom.... No, no, this not the end of the story, only the beginning.
THE STORY OF MENELIK AND THE ARCH On her journey back the queen gave birth to Ebna-Hakim, or Menelik.
The royal youth, after being brought up in Ethiopia, was sent to
Jerusalem to receive his father's consecration; he was anointed as the
sovereign of an Empire which stretched from the of Egypt to the West,
and from the south of Shoa to Eastern
India. He had the Solomon ring with him when he stopped with his
caravan at the walls of Jerusalem. The city was in a panic seeing how
many camels, horses and people were at the gates. Menelik stepped out
to greet them and they went away in fear. In the King Palace they saw
their king -- again! "Our Lord," they cried, "We see the miracle! We
know that you are Master of Spirits, but we never saw two of you
before!" Solomon knew that his son was here. He exchanged his dress
with one of his servants and gave him his royal costume." Only then he
sent his people to call Menelik.
After months in Jerusalem, the days with his father passing to young
man his wisdom, one morning the pigeon flew into the Palace and the
bird had the tears of Sheba on its wings. The son knew that it was time
to return to Axum and rule his kingdom. Solomon loved Menelik so much
that he wanted to keep him in Jerusalem and to make him his heir.
Menelik's heart was torn apart between his love for his mother and his
father. His new friend, the son of the High Priest, said to Menelik --
"If we take the Holy Ark with us to your kingdom, God would bless it as
bringing the faith to the New Zion." So they took the Ark of the
Covenant from the Temple and together with twenty sons of nobles and
Levities fled the city. That is why from that time a new Emperor, on horseback, has to
appear before the daughters of Axum, who bar his way with a length of
cord. He has to challenge them three times before cutting the cord with
his sword. Then the people all say: "Verily, verily, Thou art the King
of Zion, son of David and of
Solomon!" Only on such a day the Ark could be brought under the light
of the sun, so the new Emperor could be blessed. The end of Great Solomon came before his death. The man of wisdom ended up in madness. The king of joy wrote the book of Ecclesiast. This blessed man was cursed and his blood line was broken... Then Solomon had finished building the house of the Lord and
the king's house, the palace, and all that Solomon desired to build. He
excelled all the kings of the earth in riches and in wisdom. He made
silver as common in Jerusalem as stone, and he loved many foreign
women. He had seven hundred wives, princesses,
and three hundred concubines; and his wives made him not forget the
Queen of Sheba. He could find love and her ring with black stone. He
could not find love in his soul and never wrote another song again.
Saba was dead, and their son came to him and left for his own kingdom.
There was no love in the world. He couldn't pray, and God never spoke
again to Solomon. The nights were long
and empty. The Lord was angry with the king and took away his mind.
Solomon went mad, and out of mercy God send him death to save the old
man from his misery. I have to stop here; the end of Solomon is too painfull for me to write about. I myself fear madness more then death... Ethiopia, you are old and your stories are long. I'll finish the tale of the first king Menelik some time later...
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