For nearly 40 years, Norman Tveit has
carried around a scrap of leather embossed in ornate, gold letters,
clearly some humble artifact of regalia. But he never knew what to do
with it. Donate it to a museum? Sell it on the Internet?
Now
he’s sharing the image, believed to be the only known example of the
royal seal of Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, as part of a campaign to
help the late emperor’s country now suffering from drought.
The
royal seal bears the initials of Selassie, who died in 1975 after a
coup d’etat. Selassie helped usher in the creation of the League of
Nations, the forerunner of the modern United Nations.
Selassie also gained a following of
many Rastafarian believers who think him to be the returned messiah and
an incarnation of God. He was also known as the last blood descendant of
King Solomon and the queen of Sheba.
“He was a great leader in Ethiopia and Africa – and globally,” Tveit said.
With
a legacy like Selassie’s, it’s only fitting this image of his royal
seal be shared with the world as part of an effort to alleviate
conditions brought on by drought in an otherwise robust country. He’s
selling posters with the image with proceeds going to Save the Children,
an international aid organization.
“It’s a legacy thing,” he said. “I’ve had it for a long time and never knew what to do with it.”
When
he saw the footage of Ethiopia’s drought — brought on by El NiƱo winds
since June 2015, making once-lush regions barren and causing food
shortages — everything came together. “I thought the seal was a perfect
fit. In a way, the hope is to resurrect Haile Selassie to help the
people of Ethiopia,” Tveit said.
Ethiopia
is considered one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, but the
drought has affected life to the point that Save the Children calls that
situation and the war in Syria the worst humanitarian crises.
“There’s
so much misery and strife in the world,” Tveit said. “You can only do
what you can do. This gave us the opportunity, in our little way, to
begin to turn the tide.”
For
the moment, Tveit is getting the word out about the seal, poster and
Ethiopian drought. His home, tucked into the Arroyo Hondo valley, is the
base of operations of what he hopes will become a global initiative.
“We’re moving this all over the world,” he said.
But while getting the word out, Tveit reminds himself that “everything begins with baby steps.”
As Tveit describes the Haile
Selassie seal, it’s “a pretty rare image that has been relatively
unavailable.” From talks with the Smithsonian Museum as well as private
collectors, it appears this image is the only known example of
Selassie’s personal seal. In gold lettering, it shows some of the
letters of Selassie’s initials, wrapped in a royal crown.
The image came from a scrap of leather Tveit received after his father’s death in 1978.
Tveit’s
father, Thor Tveit, was a furniture maker and industrial designer, who
worked for Selassie while visiting Ethiopia in the early 1950s and again
later in Norway. During one of those two trips, Tveit told The Taos
News, his father acquired the seal image.
The
elder Tveit died in 1978 and left his 20-year-old son the artifact. “I
didn’t understand what he was talking about then. I’ve been carrying
this with me for a long time. To be able to share this now …” he said,
getting a little choked up, “… it makes me feel good.”
The posters and campaign information are available at http://r.ebay.com/x04XJt.
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