Sunday, January 15, 2006

Scientist Kitaw Ejigu Dies at 58

Ethiomedia.com/African Tribune and Fettan -- Kitaw Ejigu, who worked for NASA as Chief of Spacecraft and Satellite Systems engineer and an Ethiopian political leader, died at 1:00 am on January 13, 2006 four days after he underwent surgery at North Austin Medical Center in Austin, Texas.

Engineer Kitaw, a long time resident of California, traveled to Austin to visit with his extended family over the Ethiopian Christmas holiday on January 7, 2006. A devout Christian and family man, Kitaw was having fun with children when he fell and hurt himself. According to family and friends who were by his side when he passed away, a team of neurosurgeons were unable to stop the internal brain hemorrhage.

Kitaw was born in Bonga, Keffa, Ethiopia in April 23, 1948, and he attended the Miazia 27th High School in Jimma. He then went to Bhar Dar Polytechnic Institute and received his diploma in 1966 as the top student in his class in mechanical engineering with specialization in Agricultural Technology. After graduating from the Institute, Kitaw worked at the Ethiopian Automotive Services and Sales Company (EASSCO) as Chief technical advisor and assistant manager for two years.

In 1972 he won a scholarship from the Japanese Overseas Technical Association and traveled to Japan on scholarship where he studied automotive engineering at Hiroshima University and Language and Japanese economics at Osaka University. He later moved to the United States and began his intensive research and training and earned an MS/MBA in business administration in 1979 and doctorate in space vehicle systems engineering from Northrop University in California.

He subsequently became interested in space technology. While pursuing his academic studies, Kitaw worked for different aerospace companies, such as Garret Air Research and Advanced Bonding Technology Labs. In 1977 he was hired by the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) of California Institute of Technology (a NASA research center) in Pasadena, California and achieved recognition for becoming Chief Spacecraft Systems Design Engineer.

Engineer Kitaw Invented two aerospace mechanisms for JPL/NASA, which were patented under NASA's new technology. Kitaw's brilliant career also included working as Space Technology and Systems Research scientist at Boeing, Rockwell International, and Loral Corp. In that position, he was responsible for the definition, design, development, integration, and test and launching of advanced planetary mission spacecrafts and earth-orbiting satellite systems.. As a systems design engineer at JPL,Kitaw also managed a joint NASA/ESA (European Space Agency) International Solar Polar Mission Spacecraft Systems Interface.

In 1978, Kitaw invented two aerospace mechanisms (patented under NASA's new technologies programs) while working with other NASA scientists and the Apollo astronaut, Buz Aldrin, who was the second man to walk on the Moon. Kitaw managed Martin Marietta's research team and produced outstanding scientific results in several related advanced technology application research efforts on Mars Missions.

Soon after, Kitaw joined Rockwell International (builder of the space shuttle orbiter), Space Systems Division in 1986. He became a Principal Investigator/Chief Research Engineer for several advanced space systems projects at Rockwell. He worked as a Project Manager in the Advanced Programs Engineering Department. He oversaw the development of advanced technologies for Kinetic Energy Weapons Systems in support of the SDI and related programs (ASAT, GBI, E2I, TMD). Kitaw was also a program manager for a Lunar/Mars Micro-Rover research and development effort in support of NASA's future exploration missions.

Kitaw then turned his attention to Africa and his beloved Ethiopia hoping to introduce and advance technology based development. He and colleagues established a global technologies service systems TransTech International, a privately owned satellite and related systems engineering company and Kitaw served as President/CEO until he passed away.

In 2001 Kitaw visited with former Ethiopian university students who were dismissed from the national university and took refuge in Kenya, and founded the Ethiopian National United Front (ENUF) at the urging of the students. He was incensed at the loss of young talent and brain drain menacing African states. He attempted and succeeded in enrolling and supporting some students at the University of Nairobi. Others chose to join him in the struggle for freedom and democracy and a political organization was born. Because of his deep concern and love for his motherland Ethiopia and her people, he dedicated most of his latter years serving as a visionary leader of this major opposition party -The Ethiopian National United Front.

Among Ethiopians in and out of the country, he was known for his determination to build a democratic nation first by removing the current tyrannical ethnocentric regime through multi-pronged strategies. He had earned the respect of millions of followers due to his visionary leadership, generosity, examplenary personal achievements, and his mentoring and inspiration for young scientists. Members and supporters of the Ethiopian National United Front are determined and sworn to dedicate their energies to complete the mission that he envisioned and defended so vigorously. He will be truly missed.

He will be missed the most by his spouse and ardent supporter Stella Ejigu and his three children Sarah Abigail, Benyam and Yared and the extended families and friends that he dearly embraced.

Engineer Kitaw Ejigu
Engineer Kitaw Ejigu

3 comments:

  1. Anonymous1:46 PM

    he was a great man.....Hagere meche new yemiyalflish?

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  2. He was a hero..... God Bless Ethiopia!

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  3. he is really a visionary so we need peoples like him who have good vision for their country and for the next generations. There fore our educated Ethiopians brother whom living out side the country please stand up lets work to our mother land development together that is the only way to see the better Ethiopia tomorrow.
    Thomas

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