Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase was born on April 30, 1910 in Gorat area, which is the border of Yifat district and Menz district. Son Nega Hailesilase spent most of his childhood and childhood in Ifat (Kingdom, Gorat, Amach Amba, Kutakaz Amba, Kobo).

When they were 4 years and four days old according to the ancient Ethiopian custom, they completed the traditional color education from counting the letters to repeating the word of David with the bookkeeper Gebre Kristo, and then to their uncle Chief Gebre Kristo, who also hired them as a teacher. At that time, they received the lessons of discipline, gun shooting, swimming, horse riding and horsemanship that were given to all decent children.

In 1917, son Nega Hailesilase, along with his brothers, son Asefe Hailesilase and son Lema Hailesilase, followed their mother Mrs. Sadha Abaye and approached Addis Ababa Ras Teferi Mekonen to marry their deceased father Hailesilase Molan as a traditional object for the government. Son of Nega Hailesilase Ras Teferi Mekonon saw them for the first time on this day. The feelings of sadness and words of comfort they expressed to them about their father's passing away were forever etched in their childhood minds.

Even though Ras Teferi Mekonen said that it is our duty to educate the children of Hailesilase's son, since the children's age does not allow them to live away from the family, they asked Mrs. Ukshan Adera to bring them back from Yifat after 2 years.

                       Nega With Zewde

Along with Dejazmach Zewde Asfaw Darge, Ras Abebe, the old man, and the great patriotic leaders, they fought and fought with great bravery in various battles that cannot be listed here, and won great fame and special appreciation among the barbarians.

If the British government, which was ruling Sudan as a colony at the time, had approved Ethiopia for Italy, on September 19, 1931, Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase and the soldiers who followed him, crossed the coast of Sudan and were captured by the British army guarding the coast. A few months after Gadaref and Khartoum were prisoners of war, Italy declared war on Great Britain and the prisoners were released.

Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase sent the message from the army (the letter announcing the level of the patriotic struggle and the results achieved, establishing a relationship with the emperor, and asking them to send materials and food aid to the veteran as soon as possible) to the emperor through the British authorities, and to return to Ethiopia, 2 thousand to march with them. When they gathered and organized the immigrants for patriotism, they received the goodwill and military support of the Great Britain government.

                           Nega In Khartoum

On June 27, 1932, when the emperor returned to Khartoum from Britain, he summoned Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase and ordered him to lead the newly established St. George's Military School in Soba, a Sudanese kebele, together with the British army officers.

At the time, Asfawesen Hailesilase, the leader of the massacre, had the military rank of Shaleka, so Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase, whose rank was one step lower, was ordered by the emperor to continue his work with the rank of Shaleka. Colonel, Janhoi, my issue is with the job, not the title; They accepted.

When Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase was the Minister of State in the Ministry of Defense in 1953, when he was asked about the 5 year history of patriotism, he ignored the 50 year anniversary of the 70th Victory Day commemoration, "The patriotism of 1928 1933 It reveals how it has evolved and expanded." It would be very helpful to see their 12 page article titled (For more, the patriotism of 1928-1933, prepared by Wole Nega, which reveals how it developed and spread.

                            Final Of Nega Hailesilase

After 32 years of exile in England, Lieutenant General Nega Hailesilase returned to his beloved country Ethiopia on April 8, 1999 with his wife, and settled in Addis Ababa for one year and three months. He rested on July 15, 2000 AD.

The funeral of Honorable Lieutenant General Nega Hailesalase was held on July 19, 2000, at the Holy Trinity Church, Addis Ababa, in the presence of family, relatives, friends, and a large number of people, accompanied by mourners.