“Organic Clinicians: Medicine, Sovereignty, and Sustainability in Eritrea, 1961-2022”

My dissertation focuses on the relationship between sovereignty and medicine in Eritrea through an examination of the vernacular medical infrastructure Eritreans devised to deliver victory in Eritrea’s armed struggle for independence against imperial Ethiopia (1961-1991). This study examines how contemporary renderings of independence are shaped through lenses of injury, conflict, and medicine particularly concerning the evolution of medicine and infrastructure. At its core, this research seeks to answer the central question: what does framing independence through physical injury tell us about post-independence infrastructure? To address this question, this study harnesses historical data and ethnographic research, conducted in the central and southern regions of Eritrea as well as the United States Eritrean diaspora community. Unveiling the multi-layered understandings of injury, war, and medicine, my dissertation delves into the long history of foreign invasion and illness that generated a medical crisis in Eritrea and eventually spurred Eritreans’ liberation struggle. My dissertation also archives and probes ad hoc clinical techniques Eritreans developed in the trenches of war, the local paradigm and practices of sustainability that defined the war effort, and how the domestic and diasporic political-medical geography that Eritreans forged during this period of war for liberation continues to inform statecraft in Eritrea. Ultimately, this dissertation yields insights about understandings of medicine and governance in Eritrea as a critique of colonial rule and the implications of Eritrea’s national independence as a political project amid competing geopolitical agendas in the Horn of Africa.

Other Projects

Alex Chen and Randy Burson, MD-PhD students at the Perelman School of Medicine and Department of Anthropology, and I created an installation piece based on my dissertation project: “Underground Hospital.”

 

INSTALLATION

Underground Hospital: Combat Medics in the Trenches of the Eritrean Struggle for Independence

Guerrilla strategy sustained the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF) during the Eritrean Armed Struggle for Independence (1961-1991) against Ethiopia, which was backed by the Soviet Union and the United States. Amid challenges like insufficient provisions, arms, and medical instruments in a hazardous mountain geography in the rural town of Nakfa, the EPLF (Eritrean People’s Liberation Front) constructed underground trenches complete with schools, armories, and garages; its centerpiece was an underground hospital called ‘Orotta.’ Here, combat medics or agar Hakaim - “barefoot doctors” in the Eritrean language of Tigrigna - developed situationally-appropriate medical practices in order to manage life threatening injuries caused by the advanced weaponry Ethiopia received from its powerful Western allies. This installation invites participants to sensorially experience the trench as an agar Hakim — navigating the socioecological features of the underground habitat that shaped their medical practices.