National War Hero; A man of Peace
Abdullahi Ahmed Jama was born in Erigavo, Northeastern Somalia, in March 13,
1951. He completed his primary education at Dayaha, the storied
boarding school near Erigavo town.
Upon graduation he was accepted into the newly established NTEC (National
Teachers’ Education Center) at the outskirts of Mogadishu, known as Lafole,
where he worked briefly as a teacher. Though he saw teaching as a noble calling,
Jama found the sense of sacrifice in military service more to his liking.
This was no accident. The trajectory of Abdullahi’s career was already set at
an early age by three closely linked facets of his heritage: 1) The fact that he
hails from a prominent Makhir family noted for bravery, 2) the sense of
adventure that his naakhoude father (one of the renowned
captain-owners of the East) had instilled in him early in childhood, and) 3) the
bride that the people of Makhir coast/Puntland traditionally take in doing the
best possible job.
Abdullahi joined the Somali National Army and was sent to the then Soviet
Union for training as a Cadet Officer in 1970.
He attended the prestigious Military Academy in Odessa (Ukraine), earning his
first degree in Military Science in 1973.
In 1980-83 Jama attended the Staff College in Cairo, Egypt earning Masters
Degree in military science.
In 1988-89 Jama attended the US Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania
and earned a diploma in strategy and decision-making.
In 2000-04 Jama attended Bryan & Stratton College at Rochester, NY and earned
a degree in Accounting.
As a career Military Officer and Leader, Jama held many positions in the
Somali National Army: from Battalion Commander to Army Commander. He was by far
the youngest Officer to head the Directorate of Operations of the Somali
National Army, where he distinguished himself as an Officers’ Officer.
Jama is a veteran of the 1977 Ogaden war, where he received two (2) bronze
medals and one (1) silver medal for bravery as well as numerous certificates of
merit for outstanding conduct.
Jama served as a distinguished lecturer at the Somali Staff College. He
authored four (4) publications and numerous articles in Somali for the Somali
National Army in the fields of tactics, operations and military strategy.
General Jama is one the Somali military officers that refused to participate
in the so-called Somali civil war that pitted brotherly communities against one
another to advance the selfish interests of craven faction leaders and atrocious
warlords.
Though he followed closely the situation of his beloved Somalia, General Jama
chose to stay out of the fray of the internecine wars that have been tearing the
country apart for the past 17 years.
The one exception is when he was called back by the community in the early
1990’s to assume the position of Governor of the Makhir/Sanaag region. The
vexing challenge facing the community at time centered on the need to liberate
the region from a well-armed and religious group that had forcibly occupied the
region’s principal seaport, Lasqoray and its environs. Shortly upon arrival the
General mobilized the community’s defenses and was able to put in place a
strategy that resulted in solving the situation peacefully without further
bloodshed.
For the past few years, the General has been living with his family in
Upstate New York. He is now ready to once again answer the call of duty to
return to the motherland to offer the type of transformational leadership that
he uniquely qualified to provide.