MEMOIR
The cigarette seller
of Addis Ababa
A child unlike any other
David Carlin
THE cigarette seller of Addis Ababa works her corner, near the entrance to the
compound. She buys her cigarettes by the packet at the wholesale shop a twenty‑
minute walk away, and sells them one by one to the men who pass by on the
street. Some days a man will buy a whole packet at once and she has made an
afternoon’s fortune in a minute.
At the beginning, the cigarette seller of Addis Ababa needs only enough
capital to buy her first packet. She works her corner in the afternoons after
school. The cigarette seller lives with her family in the compound of the St
George beer factory, because her father has an important job there. He is
responsible for the smooth running of all of the machinery. If anything goes
wrong, day or night, the cigarette seller’s father has to fix it. Her father’s job is so
important that, if he goes to the stadium to watch the St George soccer team on a
Saturday afternoon, which he loves to do, he has to tell his men in which section
and row of the stadium he will be sitting, so that if there is a problem with the
machinery, one of them can run into the stadium during the soccer match and
fetch him from his seat. They don’t have mobile phones at this time, in Addis
Ababa or anywhere.
Her father’s job is so important that, two times, His Royal Highness the
Emperor Haile Selassie (to use only the bare minimum of his titles) came to the St
George beer factory in his imperial vehicle, a luxury car imported from Europe,
and paid her father his monthly salary in person. The Emperor Haile Selassie
happens to be the owner of the St George beer factory. He is remarkably small
and slight, as everybody knows, but he has a power. The entire world respects
him. He stood up to Mussolini. It is said that he is descended in a direct line from
King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. Even if this hasn’t been confirmed, it is
true he has a power.
From Griffith REVIEW Edition 37: Small World
© Copyright 2012 Griffith University & the author.