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Abdisa Aga was an Ethiopian patriot who was captured by the Fascist Italian army in 1936. He escaped from a concentration camp in Sicily and became a leader of a partisans. force. When WW2 broke out, the Allied forces recognized his group and made him commander of a battalion. At the end of the war, he returned to his homeland and joined Holeta Military Academy. Later, he was given the rank of colonel and served as a body guard to Emperor Hailesillasie. He died a few years after the 1974 Ethiopian revolution.

Birth and joining the Ethiopian army
Colonel Abdissa Aga was born in 1920 in Welega, Ethiopia. His father lost his temper and killed his own brother when Abdissa was about 12 years old. Though he went as far as Addis Ababa to appeal for the release of his father, he was executed. Sad and embittered, he joined the Ethiopian Army around the age of 14 and fought against Fascist Italy in 1936 in second Italo–Ethiopian war.

Capture, imprisonment and escape
Abdissa Agga was caught and briefly jailed in Addis Ababa by the Italian authorities. He was whisked to Italy via Eritrea and imprisoned in a concentration camp in the island of Sicily, Italy. There he met Captain Julio, a Yugoslav hero. The two became friends and escaped from the concentration camp along with twelve other prisoners. A few days after their escape, Abdissa led the group back to the camp to free the other prisoners. The operation was a complete success. They killed a few prison guards and took off their uniforms and guns. Two of the former prisoners wore the uniforms and stood at the gate of the camp pretending watchmen while Abdissa and Julio, followed by the other partisans penetrated the camp and released all the prisoners. They robbed ammunition, supplies, and trucks full of weapons from the concentration camp.

Formation of a partisan army
Abdissa and the partisans continued freeing prisoners and robbing concentration camps, banks, government warehouses. Their number grew to a small army and started battling the Italian army fiercely. The partisans chose Abdissa to be their leader and called him Major. The Italian Fascists were terrified since they knew how brave Ethiopians were recalling the Battle of Dogali, Ambalage, Adwa, Maichew and remembering the bravery of Zerai Deres, whom later, Abdissa tried in vain to see and hug. Taking advantage of the fear of the Italian people, Italian gangsters painted their faces black and started robbing banks and pillaging villages imposing as Abdissa and other Ethiopians who were also partisans together with him. Abdissa caught these awe-inspiring gangsters and executed them, since they were discrediting his name by their atrocious acts. The Italian Government did all it could to catch Abdissa by force. As they failed to do so, they tried to cajole and allure him by promising him a big post and by begging him to stop fighting and join their ranks. If I recall correctly, Abdissa shot the Italian officer who brought him the letter from the Italian Government.

Role in the second world war
Finally, the Second World War broke out. The Allied forces, Britain, the USA, France and Russia recognized Major Abdissa, Captain Julio and the rest of the partisans and began to supply them with arms and provisions. Major Abdissa Aga was chosen to lead the international army of partisans (former prisoners) which consisted of Americans, English, French, Ethiopians and other nationals. Captain Julio became the commander of the Yugoslav partisans. This way the partisans weakened Italy and contributed to their defeat. Major Abdissa Aga was the first hero who entered and captured the city of Rome sitting in a jeep, waving first and foremost the flag of Ethiopia, which was also tied around the arms of his international soldiers including Americans, French and English. When the armies of the allies reached Rome, they honored Major Abdissa Aga highly. The British made him the Commander of the British Military Police and sent him to Germany to fight against the German Army. He battled with the German Nazis in different cities, defeated them, controlled the cities and villages, and entered Berlin triumphantly again waving Ethiopian and British flags. He was in the spot light all over the world.

At the end of the war, the British, the Canadians and the Americans wanted him to join their armies promising him high ranks. He refused adamantly saying that though his motherland, Ethiopia, was poor, he would still return to her and see the face of his Emperor whom he had missed for so long. This incensed the Allies, and believe it or not, they accused him of ravaging the Italian Fascists when he was a partisan. The French, the British, the Americans, even the Russians to some extent condemned him. Fortunately, a noble British general who had decorated him with medals previously fought for his release changing the prison sentence to financial fine, which was paid by Abdissa himself and the British Government.

Back to Ethiopia
The great Ethiopian hero finally returned to Ethiopia longing to see his country and Emperor. The Emperor welcomed him and sent him to Ras Abebe Aregai, the then Minister of Defense so that he would employ him. Ras Abebe and some of the most important patriots Ethiopia were scared of Abdissa's valor and feared for their own positions. So, instead of promoting him to a general, Ras Abebe sent Major Abdissa to the Holeta Military Academy as a simple cadet. After several months of hardship in Holeta he graduated as a first lieutenant, to the surprise of the British officers whom Abdissa used to command when they were in Europe. Abdissa was oppressed in the Ethiopian Army. He was sent to the Ogaden and fought against the Somali invaders displaying incredible courage and military tactics. In spite of what he did to raise the pride of Ethiopia and to safeguard her territorial integrity, he didn't rise above the rank of a captain for many, many years until somebody (they say Captain Julio and Marshal Tito) drew the attention of the Emperor towards the end of the Emperor's life and regime. The Emperor raised his rank to colonel and made him his bodyguard. Colonel Abdissa Aga the great died a few years after the 1974 Ethiopian Revolution.