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A Brave Eritrean Pilot and The Real Great Escape

Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. ~Mark Twain   When someone asks what my favorite childhood movie is, The Great Escape sticks out in my mind.

Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn’t.

~Mark Twain

 

When someone asks what my favorite childhood movie is, The Great Escape sticks out in my mind. The Great Escape is based on a true story, with a usual Hollywood spin of a British Air Force pilot, Roger Joyce Bushell, and other allied airmen whose planes crashed on German territory. The movie depicts one of the most famous World War II stories and it shows how several prisoners of war from America, Britain and Australia made an extraordinary breakout from Nazi’s high-security POW camp. This action packed adventure features Steve McQueen, one of the most popular movie stars of all times, with many classic scenes including a memorable motorcycle jump attempt over a barbwire fence and a large amount of German military resources in hot pursuit of the escapees.

The whole escape was timed precisely to the split second testifying to the brilliance of Bushell who masterminded the major plan. Known as “Big X,” Bushell’s character Bartlett succeeded in slipping 76 men out of that notorious prison through a tunnel. Unfortunately, all but three of the escapees were recaptured and Bushell was among the 50 captured prisoners whom Hitler had personally ordered to be executed.

My memories of the movie were rekindled a couple of months ago when I read the remarkable news about Dejen, an Eritrean air force pilot, who managed to escape from a high security Eritrean prison after been incarcerated for 15 years. Dejen’s astounding escape not only brought back memories of the movie but also images from my past; the times, the places, the people and the thoughts that are engraved very deep in my psyche.

I remember our regular Wednesday movie nights with hundreds of school kids sitting in lines on the bank of a riverbed (ruba), a 32 inch wide TV monitor raised high in front of us and a portable generator roaring from several hundred feet to power both the monitor and the VCR. I can continue reminiscing about life in the Revolution School but there is nothing better that I can recollect than watching those videos, which were our only gateway to the outside world.

Most certainly, Dejen was among those hundreds of kids from the Revolution School who were lined up to watch The Great Escape. Little did he know that one day he was going to be betrayed by the very people he trusted, thrown into prison and 15 years later make an extraordinary escape in a similar fashion as the action hero he once watched as a hopeful child. In fact, it is astonishing to see that Dejen’s real story is more similar to the exaggerated actions of the main hero than the true story of an individual the movie is based on. Most characters featured in The Great Escape were composites of two or more real-life individuals and some of the actions in the movie never took place in reality. For instance, Bushell was portrayed as a composite of two people who took part in the real escape. He was the mastermind of the whole escape but he was captured the day after he slipped out of the camp at a nearby train station and was consequentlyexecuted by the Nazis. The character Virgil Hilts, played by Steve McQueen was based on the story of retired US Air Force pilot Major General David M. Jones. In reality, David helped in digging one of the escape tunnels but he never fled the prison camp let alone hijacking a motorcycle and attempting to jump over a barbwire fence. He was rescued by Allied Forces at the end of the war.

Dejen’s real-life inspiring story consists of making split second and life-threatening decisions, hijacking a car, slipping and breaking through four levels of high-security posts and driving the car to safety while being chased and shot at. He quickly found his way out of a crowded city and almost tumbled down a sheer cliff. He passed all these obstacles in a broad day light while hundreds of security and military personnel were deployed to look for him. Finally, he managed to get to safety after suffering 15 years of imprisonment, 2 of which were in dark solitary confinement. As is the case with many Eritrea’s political prisoners, Dejen’s family did not know if he was dead or alive for years. Forced to listen to other prisoners’ screams of torture, not knowing if he would survive and the torment of betrayal by his own people did not discourage this exceptional pilot from the possibility of freedom. Listening to Dejen narrating his ordeal in a calm, clear and composed manner shows those cruel criminals who subjected him to years of terror and neglect didn’t break his spirit.

One day even more information about his darkest hours and details about his escape will unfold. The information we have so far is enough to realize Dejen has won his freedom with profound courage, mental preparedness and determination, and he has undoubtedly masterminded his own escape plan, proving that if Hollywood was to make a movie about him there would be absolutely no need for any spin to ramp up our interest and emotions.

 

Justice Will Prevail!

 

Tomas Solomon

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
45 COMMENTS
  • afro May 31, 2014

    HGDF SUPPORTERS SHOULD BE ASHAMED TO MAKE US BLIEVE THERE IS PEACE AND TRANQUILITY IN ERITREA WHEN THEY TRAVEL FOR A COUPLE MONTHS IN SUMMER AND HAVE SEX WITH LITTLE GIRLS. ADNA TUUM EYU, ADNA MAEBILA WEZETE..ALL ARE LIES.HAKI BR’ESA ENTE KEBERKAYA B’EGRA TWETS’E EYU NEGERU.

    • John May 31, 2014

      Afro,

      It beats having sex with old boys.

  • fetsum abraham May 31, 2014

    We should make a movie out of this story folks; I am sure one day in the bright Eritrean future. One day, the regime will collapse and we will enjoy freedom in Eritrea. Dejen is the example of our suffering under this brutal dictatorship as much as he is our guarantee for success in this struggle for freedom and democracy in the country. Ajoka Dejen, and God bless you!

    • selamawit2 June 1, 2014

      Fetsum, if i wouldn’t know that you are working more than to full capacity, i would say:
      Her is a book project for you with Dejen – write it, I’m already your client!
      (You have to write a book anyway, also if you make a movie out of it…:-)

      • selamawit2 June 1, 2014

        sorry, please read “Here is…”

  • Ghezae May 31, 2014

    Very nice of you Tomas hawey. Indeed, Dejen’s escape is the greatest escape ever.

  • ahmed saleh May 31, 2014

    Yes in deed , Dejen’s success to escape from prison remind us ” the great escape movie ” . But the sad part , in that movie Steve McQueen
    had compatriots who joined in their operation but in Dejen case he was alone without any help . As he said in his interviews nowadays you
    can’t trust anyone which is unfortunate situation .

  • Tsehaye May 31, 2014

    Dejen was a victim from the time he joined ghedli. At an early age, he was taught to believe that there was no greater being than Isias Afeworki. He was brought up to serve one man (the ruthless IA) and his dark kingdom called Eritrea. Ghedli’s child abuse is well documented as in “where had the Eritrean peasants’ children gone?” and no entity had perfected it better than the one-man-owned entity called Shaebia.

    Don’t get too much excited about making a movie about Dejen’s so-called great escape. There are countless and similar tragedies committed by the notorious ghedli and the PFDJ mafia still to be told. Eritrea is a land of astonishing stories of crimes and daring escape from prison cells, containers and deep underground holes.

    Thanks God for saving the life of this young man from PFDJ’s unforgiving guillotine.

  • Sorobeti May 31, 2014

    Many pilots abandoned the regime and are living in the West, why did this these people remained silent on not telling the story of Dejen. For the majority of us the story of Dejen’s imprisonment was a new information which had not taken the appropriate area in the media.

    God bless you Dejen and may he give you health and power as a compensation to all the sufferings and hardships you faced on the hands of those notorious bandits of DIA.

    Great gratitude to Amanuel Eyasu for his continual exposing the mafia regime.

    • Tamrat Tamrat May 31, 2014

      what can they tell you that you have not heard in the last 23 years?

  • Ethiopian May 31, 2014

    What a living story!
    He was prepared to die for freedom and sure enough due to his bravery he is a free man.
    He is not just a hero, he is smart and intelligent and that was manifested in his planning and execution.
    I can see a future movie based on this true story.

    Congrats Dejen

  • Teclay May 31, 2014

    Assena
    Amanuel very professional interview,god job. I think this was the first good news after disastrous year.

    this copy is a gift to the Hero Pilot. Short history of his grand father.

    Zerai Deres
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Zerai Deres

    Zerai Deres (Ge’ez ዘርኣይ ደረስ) died in 1937 in Rome, Italy, in public opposition to the rise of fascist power in Italy and her African colonies. His death is considered part of the movement against Italian occupation. Deres was born in Hazega, Eritrea and is considered a folk hero in both Ethiopia and Eritrea.
    Italian occupation

    Ethiopia was a member of the League of Nations when Italy invaded and occupied it (1936 to 1941). It was a clear violation of the Covenant of the League of Nations and an act of aggression for a member State to invade and occupy another member State. The Ethiopians resisted the invasion until the Italians started to use chemical warfare agents like mustard gas. In June 1936, King Haile Selassie I appealed to the League of Nations to take action against the invasion. But it was ignored.

    On May 21, 1937, in Rome, Italy was celebrating its fourth anniversary of the proclamation of the Italian Empire. The celebratory parade was attended by Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini and King Victor Emmanuel III. Thousands of soldiers from Italy’s African colonies marched during the parade. Among them was a young Eritrean man named Zerai Deres. He was carrying the sword to salute the King, the Führer, and Il Duce, at the grandstand. As the parade marched past the Vittorio Emanuele monument, Zerai Deres looked up and saw the golden Lion of Judah, the symbol of the ancient monarchy, to which his ancestors had long owed allegiance, erected as a war booty in the heart of Rome. The shock was too great for him, and he drew his sword and with it he slew five fascist guards,[1] as well as wounding others, before he was killed[2] on the spot in a hail of gunshots.

    The Lion of Judah monument that provoked his fury has been restored to Addis Ababa, after long negotiations between Ethiopia and Italy in the 1960s.

  • johnny May 31, 2014

    the real hero and the coming a young president is here now.lets support this genuine hero to all eitrean.he does not have any blood on his hand.he is the only person we can rally behind and Eritrea will go to the promise land.
    dejen for president!!!!

  • Haile G. Tensae May 31, 2014

    job well done

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