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71 pages 2 hours read

Mawi Asgedom

Of Beetles and Angels: A Boy’s Remarkable Journey from a Refugee Camp to Harvard

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | YA | Published in 2001

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Chapters 13-14Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapter 13 Summary: Father Haileab

The focus of Chapter 13 is the final days of Haileab’s life. Haileab dies in 1997, while Mawi is a junior in college. Recalling the last time Mawi saw his father alive, he remembers sitting with his younger brother Hntsa on their family sofa, listening to Haileab tell stories. Specifically, Haileab tells stories about how he enjoyed helping other habesha when they first came to America. In these stories, we see Haileab standing up for different members of the habesha community: “My father…also used his own powers to help others, especially the most recently arrived refugees” (129). 

Although Haileab is a poor man in America, he helps so many people over the course of his life that his legacy lives on even after his passing: “Life as a beetle had often cloaked it, but that same source of greatness still pulsated here in the States. That greatness continues to pulsate–if not in my father, then in those he helped and the stories they still tell of him” (130). Haileab, we learn, is killed by a drunk driver while riding his bicycle on the side of the road. Mawi concludes this chapter with a selection of words that community members said about Haileab at his funeral, all of which are stories of Haileab helping others.

Chapter 14 Summary: IzgihareYihabkoom

Izgihare yihabkoom is an expression in Tigrinya that means “May God give to you.” This final chapter, at just two pages long, offers some words of reflection on the experiences and people that help facilitate Mawi’s remarkable accomplishments. 

First, Mawi wonders how his father would have reacted if he had been able to see Mawi deliver the commencement speech at Harvard. By graduating from Harvard, Mawi has fulfilled his parents dream. However, along the way, he has learned something even more valuable: “And while Harvard University taught me well, my true education has come from less-likely sources. As I look back to the angels, the Charlenes and the Beth Raneys; as I look back to God’s servants, dressed as beggars and as beetles; as I look book to my inspirations, to the Mamas and Tewoldes, I see true guidance staring back at me” (134). While formal education is valuable, the moral lessons about kindness and generosity taught to Mawi by his fellow refuges is priceless. 

Chapters 13-14 Analysis

This section is the emotional apex of the book, with the tragic death of the powerful figure of Mawi’s father Haileab. For a young man that has experienced a great deal of tragedy, the loss of Haileab brings a new dimension to his pain. The irony of having both father and brother killed by drunk drivers is a particularly disturbing detail, and one among many unique features of Mawi’s story as a whole. 

Tradition, once again, plays a role in comforting the habesha community, as we see when the Tigrinya language is used to honor Haileab at his funeral. In fact, the final words of the book are in the Tigrinya language: “Izgihare Yihabkoom,” which means “may God give to you” (134). Ending the book with a phrase in his native language -- and a religiously oriented one, at that – is a gesture signaling to the reader that the customs and the traditions of the habesha are important and will live on.  

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