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Debre Libanos: Ethiopia's Monastery of Prophecy and Power
Description
In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the thousand-year history of Debre Libanos, Ethiopia's most influential monastery complex. Founded by Tekle Haymanot, the saint who supposedly stood on one leg for seven years, this monastery became a royal necropolis for the Solomonid emperors and a center of religious learning that produced the Ge'ez literary masterpiece, the Mashafa Berhan. Lucas recounts how Debre Libanos served as a spiritual counterweight to the Jesuit-backed Emperor Susenyos in the 1620s, with its monks resisting Catholic influence and preserving Orthodox traditions. The episode also covers the monastery's role in the 18th-century Zemene Mesafint, when it became a power broker amid warring regional lords. Finally, Lucas examines Debre Libanos' tragic modern history: the 1937 massacre of monks by Italian fascists under Rodolfo Graziani, and its transformation into a symbol of Ethiopian resistance. Names like Tekle Haymanot, Iyasu I, Susenyos, Graziani, and the Battle of Maychew are woven into a narrative that connects ancient faith with colonial violence.