AigaForum
versus Obang Metho: Is there Racism in Ethiopia?
February 12, 2009
On the morning of February 4, an Ethiopian friend called
me and asked, “Did you know you were on AigaForum?”
(For those readers not familiar with AigaForum, it is
well known to Ethiopians as being the EPRDF government
controlled website.) I asked him, “What am I doing
on AigaForum?”
I then learned that my picture was posted alongside
the picture of Michael Steele, the new chairman of the
Republican National Committee (RNC) with the header
over our pictures: “Window Dressing,” accompanied
by a short article where it was claimed that we were
both being “used” by our respective groups
to falsely present the impression that minorities had
a meaningful role within their power structures when
in fact, such roles were only reserved for “insiders.”
My phone has not stopped ringing ever since, with
calls from diverse Ethiopians who are outraged, embarrassed
and ashamed! In less than 24 hours, the pictures and
article were removed, but it is too late. I have already
saved the article. I think an “Ethiopian can of
worms” has been opened!
First of all, I want to apologize to Michael Steele
on behalf of the countless numbers of Ethiopians who
do not support the demeaning statements made about him
on AigaForum. For those who do not know, Chairman Steele
comes to the Republican National Committee (RNC) with
excellent credentials including being the first elected
African American to public office in Maryland when he
became the lieutenant governor there in 2002.
He is recognized by his party to be an outstanding
communicator, recently attaining his position as head
of the RNC through wide grass roots support and due
to the respect of his colleagues, being picked over
four other candidates, including former President Bush’s
own choice for that position. Part of his platform was
to better reach out to “friend and foe alike.”
He said, “This is the dawn of a new party moving
in a new direction with strength and conviction.”
Chairman Steele might be mistaken for Habesha, or an
Ethiopian from the highlands of our country, yet those
behind the AigaForum article, are known to be closely
aligned with the TPLF, which is made up of people who
look very much like him. What must he think of this?
In fact, what would Martin Luther King, Jr., one of
the greatest promoters of equal opportunity for people
of all skin colors, think of this? How about Mandela,
Obama or the RNC?
Some very reliable sources, who do not want to be identified,
indicate that the source of this AigaForum article came
from some in the Ethiopian Diaspora who are very connected
with the Meles government and the Ethiopian Embassy
in Washington D.C., even identifying more specifically
who is behind this—with their names and their
pictures.
We believe that the editor of AigaForum, Mr. Zeru Hagos,
the Ethiopian Embassy in Washington D.C and the EPRDF
should take responsibility for this and publicly apologize
to Chairman Steele, the Republican National Committee
who are being insulted for disingenuously electing him
as well as apologizing to me and the Solidarity Movement
for a New Ethiopia.
I have already contacted Chairman Steele’s office
and shared with them the entire AigaForum article with
our side-by-side picture. They were very interested
and I will be following up with them, possibly meeting
together with him face-to-face within the next two weeks,
so that respect and civility can return to our political
debates.
My hope is to help restore broken
relationships.
Despite the intentions of the EPRDF to point fingers
at others in order to divide us, we must use this very
negative action in a way that will prevent hatred from
overcoming our struggle for “the dawn of a New
Ethiopia.” What man intends for evil, God can
use as an opportunity for good and that is what I intend
to do, but to do so, I must bring up a topic that no
one has wanted to talk about—racism in Ethiopia.
My hope is to help restore broken relationships, stop
the dehumanization of some in our society by others,
to bring greater opportunity for reconciliation, to
help us move ahead together and to embrace all in the
family of Ethiopia.
Let me review the major quote from the AigaForum article
by first explaining that this one is in response to
a previous article written in Amharic by Tekla Michael,
an Ethiopian from Vancouver. The following is an English
translation of his chosen title: ““It used
to be “O” for Obama and Obama has accomplished
his mission but now “O” is for Obang--Ethiopian
Obama has been born,” In his Amharic
article, Tekla compares my ideas and the fact that
I am a minority speaking a message that could unify
diverse Ethiopians, with Obama, who was also a minority
who was unifying Americans with his own message.
In response to Tekla’s article, the author of
the AigaForum article writes:
“So the buzz word “Paradigm Shift”
is being heard by the high priests. The recent “Obgangiyee”
(the same Obang who recently found out the Diaspora
politician in all the meeting he canvassed are all over
50) is as transparently phony as the selection of Michael
Steel for the RNC. Michael Steel has as much chance
to rustle the party form the Rush Limbaugh as any third
party winning the presidency in the USA. The pain of
coming to terms with reality!” (As it appeared
on AigaForum on 2/4/2009)
Meles regime has made an art of
using minorities for their own “window dressing.”
The author of this article, whose position was obviously
supported by AigaForum where it appeared, was accusing
the Ethiopian opposition in the Diaspora and the RNC,
for what was claimed to be a “pretense of inclusion,”
but it is not difficult to see through the motives of
the EPRDF. They would like to divide the opposition
into at least two camps:
- those who would react in defense of me and the basic
principles of the Solidarity Movement, which includes
not only minorities, but also many wonderful Ethiopians
from “the dominant” culture who recognize
the evil of our “apartheid-like” system,
and
- those who are part of the old entrenched power
system that holds tightly to the historic entitlement
of dominant cultural groups, one at a time, controlling
everyone else even while sometimes preaching the gospel
of unity and democracy.
In an overused practice of divide and conquer, the
TPLF leaders want to both outrage the first group against
the second and then embarrass and disempower the second
by suggesting they are talking about inclusion only
for their own self-interests. In this way, they may
have thought they could defeat both at the same time.
The hypocrisy of it is almost a joke because the Meles
regime has made an art of using minorities for their
own “window dressing,” using them when convenient
and discarding them for that same reason.
Even this AigaForum article is “using my skin
color” to discredit others for doing the same
thing, but we can see through it. Yet, it is not only
the TPLF who have smiled, flattered and “strategically”
included minorities as a cover up for an attempt to
sabotage, exploit, destroy or hijack something or someone
else; in fact, many from both minority and dominant
groups, have even personally warned me of the potential
for this happening because some are threatened by “a
new paradigm” that led to the formation of the
Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia (SMNE).
However, I want to calm those fears, for this movement
is not a movement of a tribe, an individual or a political
group, but a movement initiated by diverse people on
behalf of the people because of our past failure as
a society to uphold the rights of all our people. That
is why the core principles of the Solidarity Movement
are summarized in these two statements: “humanity
before ethnicity” and “no one is free until
we all are free.” Anyone agreeing with these principles
is invited to come and be part of this movement because
it is a movement for all people. It is not a movement
to run the country, but to empower the people, to educate
the people and to free the country so we can live in
a healthier society. We will work with existing organizations
and ones still to be formed if we have goals in common.
We must find ways stop the racism
and dehumanization of millions.
In order to pave the way to better work together,
we must find ways stop the racism and dehumanization
of millions of Ethiopians. Many have told me that they
are very nervous about addressing this topic because
they are ashamed and embarrassed by its presence in
our society; however, where has this approach gotten
us?
An African American friend told me that during the
Italian invasion of Ethiopia, some of his family members
had been willing to go to Africa and to fight on the
side of Ethiopia, but later were told that Ethiopians
did not consider themselves as African and black so
they did not go. That was nearly 70 years ago and what
progress has been made through our silence? It is a
pervasive part of our society that must be uncovered
if it is to be corrected.
Some excuse it by saying such racism is only ignorance.
That may be true, but it is also more than that because
the consequences of this thinking have inflicted pain,
suffering and even death. It is based on falsely measuring
the worth of a human being on their skin color, rather
than on the fact that every one of us equally reflects
the image of God.
Therefore, black is not better than white or vice versa;
nor are the shades in-between less or more valuable
than the next; nor is a poor child less valuable than
a wealthy man; nor is a well educated person more valuable
than one who has been born with less ability to learn.
If others can only feel better about themselves by pushing
you, me or someone else down, why should we accept this
as valid?
We now have an opportunity to face this issue that
has never really been openly discussed. I believe Ethiopians
are fully capable of hearing the truth and responding
in ways that will build, not destroy, a society that
must learn how to put humanity before ethnicity and
to care for their neighbors because none of us will
be free until we all are free.
I had the option to become
angry and bitter, but instead chose to reach out to
others.
I would not be part of this struggle except for the
December 13, 2003 massacre of 424 Anuak, followed by
many more, perpetrated by Ethiopian troops who have
still not been held accountable. What attitudes towards
this minority group caused other Ethiopians, especially
those from the dominant cultural groups, to ignore this
horrific event as if it never happened or at least,
was not important?
I had the option to become angry and bitter, but instead
chose to reach out to others, believing that otherwise,
this cycle of violence towards each other would never
stop. What I have discovered is that despite the elitist
attitudes and narrow-mindedness of some, I have met
countless Ethiopians throughout the world from different
tribes, regions, religions and backgrounds who are truly
good and wonderful human beings. These are people who
are not infected with this racist and tribal mentality
that is tearing Ethiopia apart like wild animals attacking
their prey.
This decision to reach out to Ethiopians was opposed
by some within my own ethnic group because many of these
“other” Ethiopians came from the same dominant
ethnic groups who were held responsible for oppressing
us in the past. I knew it would not be easy, but I knew
it was what God wanted me to do, and that for me, it
was the right and moral thing to do.
When I met with these Ethiopians from previously alienated
groups, we discovered our mutual humanity and that the
bonds of friendship and love can replace the chains
of hatred and division. Hate, greed and the devaluation
of other human beings have taken away the precious lives
of many Anuak, but God can see that their lives are
not lost in vain if it opens up new possibilities for
major societal reconciliation and transformation in
Ethiopia.
Our society can move ahead, not
just one or two select groups—but all of us.
I love my fellow Ethiopians and now I want diverse
Ethiopians to love and value each other. This is the
purpose of speaking frankly to you about life in Ethiopia
from the perspective of those who have been left out
for years. Some of the things I am going to say, you
may not like, but it has to be said so all within our
society can move ahead, not just one or two select groups—but
all of us! Are we Ethiopians ready to break our “no
talk” rule and begin our own Civil Rights Movement?
We all are socialized to keep the truth about our systemic
racism a secret from outsiders, but ask any minority
or darker-skinned Ethiopian about its reality and they
will say that it is a major factor affecting them in
daily life and limiting opportunity for them and their
children.
With the election of Obama, it becomes all the more
confusing for some Ethiopians to know with whom to identify.
If one identifies with Obama as being a minority who
has finally “found a voice,” how does that
translate into Ethiopian society? It has become an embarrassing
predicament, but repressing the discussion will not
make it go away.
Let us approach this issue with honesty, respect, civility
and the expectation that change is not only possible,
but is part of becoming a healthy and well-functioning
society. However, this discussion cannot stop at skin-color,
but it is also time for us to rethink our attitudes
that use superficial distinctions such as ethnicity,
gender, education, culture, language, religion and disability
as the reason to dehumanize, marginalize, exclude, exploit
or oppress others.
May I first clarify my belief that there are usually
not clear and easy lines between people as being all
good or all bad or as being only victims or only perpetrators
for a victim can turn around and degrade others just
like Meles has done. He went into to the bush to fight
against human rights abuses only later to become what
he fought against. However, in the case of Ethiopia,
most would admit that the minorities of every type have
remained at the bottom of our power structure. In fact,
there are so many of them, that they could be the majority
of the population of the country.
This entire issue of race, ethnicity,
privilege and exclusion must be faced head on.
If we are to build a “new Ethiopia”, this
entire issue of race, ethnicity, privilege and exclusion
must be faced head on. This is an invitation to all
Ethiopian politicians, human rights activists, scholars,
religious leaders, policymakers, community leaders and
people at the grassroots level to come forward to participate
in this discussion. There must be a unity of the people—not
based on tribe—if there is to be a unity of the
society. Let it start by acknowledging what has been
going on.
To begin with, in the not so distant past, many of
our fellow Ethiopians—especially those dark-skinned
people from the southwest or south—were taken
as slaves, frequently with the help of others from different
tribes and ethnicities. Reminders of this sordid past
are still around us and we cannot simply sweep them
under the carpet.
For instance, the name of the river that runs through
Gambella Town is the Openo River, but the river is still
most frequently called the “Baros River”
or “slave river.” from the Ge'ez ??? or
Baria’ for an individual and Barios for many (Baros
river). There is also a little river east of Gambella
town on the way to the highlands that is called “Baroskala.”
In English it means “slave check point”
or “slave border.”
Our dark-skinned people are still called “Baria”
or “Shanqella ” throughout the country.
This is not unusual, but instead, it is extremely common
and we are talking about millions of people being included
in these degrading categories. The whole of the ethnic
groups in the Benishangul-Gumuz region are called “Shanqella”
which is another word for slave in Amharic. The name
of the region up until 1991 was always called “Shankalla.”
When the Benishangul Liberation Movement was formed,
they changed the name of the region to its current name
of Benishangul-Gumuz, which means “land of gold.”
My job, in addition to defending
human rights, has also evolved into defending Ethiopians
to outsiders as not all being racist.
Because of some of these things, my job, in addition
to defending human rights, has also evolved into defending
Ethiopians to outsiders as not all being racist, while
at the same time informing them that all Ethiopians
are not light-skinned, but that there are millions of
Ethiopians within the country who are dark like me.
An African American from Washington D.C. who used to
work for the US Embassy in Ethiopia told me, “Some
of your fellow countrymen have to come to Washington
D.C. to discover that they are black.” He said
when he had worked in Ethiopia it was sometimes like
being a black in the South during the sixties. I told
him that this may be true, but I told him that this
was not true of many Ethiopians because there were many
wonderful Ethiopians who were rejecting this way of
thinking. Unfortunately, this issue has repeatedly come
up.
Another influential African policy decision-maker of
African American descent told me he had gone to school
“with some of Ethiopian in the fifties”
who similarly denied being black. At the time, he said
he told them that if they did not think they were black,
they should go to the South in Alabama and try to vote.
Do we Ethiopians condemn this kind of exclusion as wrong
for whites in the South, pre-Civil Rights, while not
confronting it in our own society as wrong in 2009?
While I was giving a lecture to students at Columbia
University in 2007, a white human rights law professor
asked a question in front of the group. He said, “I’ve
been in Ethiopia and working with your people, but your
people are racist against the dark-skinned people. How
do you cope with them? If true human rights are to prevail,
you are someday going to have to address racism.”
Again, I said that it is not all Ethiopians, but only
some.
In 2007, I was at a professional office with several
other Ethiopian friends of light skin color. While there,
a young African American woman, serving as an intern,
walked in and another Ethiopian who just joined us turned
to my friends and asked, “Where did this ??? or
baria come from?” No one responded because they
knew I was there. The man who made the comment then
looked at me and said, “Oh, I’m sorry.”
Because the girl was still there, I tried to respectfully
confront him in Amharic on this statement, but said
nothing to the girl because I wondered what she would
think of us.
At another time, I was with four Anuak in Calgary,
Canada, when we went out to an Ethiopian restaurant.
As we entered, the waitress spoke in Amharic to others,
asking them whether Sudanese barias ate injera. One
of the Anuak in our group was very upset and responded
to the waitress in Amharic before walking out of the
restaurant.
We dark-skinned minorities have been dealing with this
for years and even though we can say it comes from one’s
own ignorance, lack of education or need to feel superior
to someone else, we cannot say it is not a big deal
because it is a big deal to people who are repeatedly
treated this way. The word in America for baria is the
“n” word, which is not ever said; however,
this is not the case in Ethiopia where it is widely
accepted, regularly used to insult minorities and even
“affectionately” used at times with darker
skinned people within one’s own family or ethnic
group.
For example, when I was in California, an Ethiopian
invited me to dinner at the home of someone else and
a comment was made about how calling someone a baria
was a way they teased people in their own family about
their darker skin color. One of two sisters present
remarked how her sister never minded being called a
baria, but her sister immediately challenged her, responding
with some frustration and anger as she asked, “What
makes you think I don’t mind, I just don’t
want to deal with it!”
In July of 2008, during the Ethiopian soccer tournament
in Washington D.C., while walking along, an older Ethiopian
man stopped me and asked if I was Obang. I told him
yes and he told me that he liked the work I was doing
and asked if we could talk some time so I agreed to
meet with him right then. He then pulled me aside and
told me that he had been born in the north and was a
darker-skinned Amhara.
He said that the “darkness issues” have
never been addressed in Ethiopia and that he hoped that
one day, I would speak to the public openly about it.
He told me this was an issue ignored by even Mengistu
who some people called him baria at the time he was
a leader of the country because of his own dark skin.
This man said that since he was a young man, he had
been looking for a sense of belonging within his own
country. He described how every time he had been called
a baria, he had felt unloved and unaccepted. He explained
how love was the reason we were all alive. He said that
as a child, he used to ask himself after hearing these
comments, “Where do I go then since this is my
country?” Now and then, we still talk with each
other. Other Ethiopians need to know what they are doing
when they make these comments or exclude dark-skinned
Ethiopians from being “fully Ethiopian.”
Another example was in London when I went to a hotel
with my Ethiopian hosts who had picked me up from the
train station. They were present as the woman checking
me in the hotel commented that she did not know we were
Ethiopians until we started speaking Amharic “because
the guy with us (me) did not look Ethiopian.”
My friend then said, “He is Ethiopia.” She
then responded,” Well, he doesn’t look true
Ethiopian.” My friend was visibly upset with her
comment and kept apologizing for it.
Another friend from Toronto told me how painful it
was being a darker-skinned Ethiopian from a light-skinned
dominant ethnic group, similar to the man’s story
above. He gave an example. He said he recently walked
into a coffee shop and some unknown Ethiopians sitting
down commented, “Who is this baria?” He
said he replied, “No, no, no, I’m not a
baria, I’m Ethiopian.” He said as someone
from the north that he was “one of them,”
making it all the more difficult to confront these insults
that always seemed be accompanied with a certain sense
of arrogance and superiority.
One man from the Southern Nations attended school in
Bulgaria during the communist era and when he went to
renew his visa status to continue his studies there,
the Ethiopian Embassy Councilor called Ato Ayele Mekonin,
did not believe him that he was Ethiopian despite the
ID card he had and so they demanded that he return to
Ethiopia. Some of his Bulgarian friends then helped
him obtain authorization to remain to no credit of the
Ethiopian Embassy. When he told me this two months ago
in London, he questioned if people like this ambassador
were in positions of hiring people, would they give
a dark-skinned Ethiopian a job?
I personally have also experienced and witnessed some
of this many times as have most every person who is
a dark-skinned Ethiopian; however, one particularly
outrageous experience occurred in July of 2003. I was
in Addis Ababa and there was a soccer tournament between
Ethiopia and Uganda, but every time the Ugandese team
scored, the crowd started shouting and screaming “barios”
and I knew the only reason that these insults were not
directed at me was because I was not out on the field.
After coming from Canada, this was a jolting experience
to hear the widespread acceptance of such racial insults
to guests in your own country. If I had spoken up, I
was certain I would have provoked violence. It was an
extremely painful experience.
Here is another example. After the Ethiopian and Eritrean
war of 1998, the BBC went to cover what had happened
and found exposed corpses of dead soldiers who had died
defending Ethiopia. The reporters asked why they were
never buried and were told that it was because they
were the dark ones (from the south or Gambella) and
no one wanted to bother burying them. When I read this,
I cried. Can you imagine how the families of these dead
soldiers would feel about this if they knew? These soldiers
were being used to die for this country, but were not
considered worthy enough for a burial. This is so sad.
That article is still available on line for anyone who
wants to check it out.
No wonder so many within the borders
of Ethiopia want to break away from the country.
This is an issue that has never come out and been
dealt with openly for the last 3000 years. No wonder
so many within the borders of Ethiopia want to break
away from the country—the Afar, the Ogadeni, the
people from South Nations, the Benishangul-Gumuz, the
Oromo, the Gambellan. If you have people from six out
of nine regions saying that they are not proud of being
a citizen of this country and want to separate from
Ethiopia, something must be wrong.
Not only have our current and past government leaders
failed, so have the intellectuals, the political and
civic leaders, the religious organizations, NGO’s
and the public. But there is a light at the end of the
tunnel if we: 1) genuinely acknowledge it as wrong and
that change is needed and 2) individually and collectively
work to bring acceptance, equality and opportunity to
all Ethiopians.
I do not see many political and non political leaders
speaking about this. We cannot simply focus on getting
rid of Meles, but not offer something better. An Ethiopian
from South Africa said this racism is the reason why
many South Africans and others on the continent do not
like Ethiopians; but he told me that if we deal with
our racism and marginalization, other Africans would
more likely embrace us.
The TPLF already are pretending to include minorities,
but only on the surface. For instance, they have frequently
assigned dark-skinned minorities to positions representing
Ethiopia within the African continent or in places like
the UN in Geneva in order to appear as if “African-looking”
Ethiopians had a more meaningful role in Ethiopian society
than they do. If we are to genuinely change, this cannot
just be “faked”, because people know the
truth.
In July of 2007, I met the Ethiopian Ambassador to
the EU when I was in Germany. He pulled me aside and
told me that I should be careful and stop what I was
doing because the Amhara were using me. I asked him,
“How are they using me?” He said that I
should know they consider me a baria. My response was
for him not to worry about me because if he thought
they were using me, this is what his government had
been doing for 17 years, otherwise a tiny minority ethnic
group like his would not be ruling the country for that
long. I also told him, “If your own government
was not using others, why is it that the Ogadeni, the
Gambellan, the Oromo and other ethnic groups in the
liberation fronts that fought and died side by side
with you are not included in your current government?
I concluded by telling the ambassador how ashamed and
embarrassed I was to have someone representing Ethiopia
to the European Union when he was there for the sake
of his own tribe rather than for the sake of his nation.
I also warned him that this kind of dehumanization of
others, coupled with this manipulation, could lead to
a bloodbath or the disintegration of this country.
We must now publicly act as I am
convinced that Ethiopia has reached a tipping point.
In truth, we know that oppressed groups have repeatedly
been manipulated by the TPLF through the TPLF’s
pretense of sympathizing with them.They have a history
of approaching individual groups separately, telling
these marginalized groups—like the Anuak, the
Oromo and others—that they have not been treated
fairly by another ethnic group. But, their motive has
not been justice, but a desire to stir up disunity,
hatred and anger against “a common enemy.”
The problem is that many have fallen for this as there
is always some truth mixed in with the lie and frequently,
some bitterness towards past grievances on the part
of the listener. At the time, I could see that the ambassador
was trying to use the same tactic with me. This is also
the motive of this current AigaForum article, but what
he and others like him do not realize is that I am a
totally free man. I can see that it is they who have
the problem within themselves, not me.
I want to expose this for what it is in order to help
rebuild our country because I see how many Ethiopians
are now privately, but vehemently rejecting this racist
point of view; however, we must now publicly act as
I am convinced that Ethiopia has reached a tipping point.
If we continue to push aside those who have been forever
marginalized, we may not have a country. If Ethiopia
is to move forward to a “New Ethiopia,”
it is going to require new leadership and new thinking
rather than the primitive thinking from a bygone feudal
or imperialistic colonial age.
I also hear the disappointment of other Africans regarding
the attitude of some Ethiopians towards the dark-skinned
people. This rejection is more hurtful to Africans as
a whole because much more has been expected from “Ethiopians”
and our leaders have not met those expectations. For
example, originally, most African slaves in America
were seen as “Ethiopians” even in the early
1900’s, after their emancipation, when a great
African American boxer emerged, Joe Louis, who overcame
all his opponents until his first loss when people said,
“The Ethiopian was finally defeated.” The
word Ethiopia means, “black face,” and was
seen by African Americans as their mother country; yet,
some Ethiopians have never accepted or embraced them
or other Africans.
Within Africa, Ethiopia has been highly esteemed for
being the only African country to successfully defeat
the colonialists. As a result of looking up to Ethiopians
because of this, Ghana and many other African countries,
when they achieved their own independence, took one
color from the Ethiopian flag for their own flag. They
also chose Ethiopia as the mother country of Africa
and put the headquarters of the African Union in Addis
Ababa. However, by rejecting our dark-skinned people,
we are also rejecting our own African-ness. When are
we going to de-colonize our Ethiopian minds?
When someone says “Ethiopia,”
what does this mean?
For example, when someone says “Ethiopia,”
what does this mean? Amhara? Tigrayan? Oromo? Is there
an invisible list that one is required to go by? If
so, who put this list in place anyway—not the
“publicly spoken” list but the “real”
list? Sadly, when minorities are in the room, their
name and issues will be included, but if the minorities
are not present, their name and their issues are not
a priority or our inclusion as Ethiopians is forgotten.
For instance, my Ogadeni friend, who has always lived
in Ethiopia is fully Ethiopian, but when he is with
Ethiopian friends, he is frequently introduced as friend
from Somalia. This is a common oversight because the
question of my Ogadeni friend, or my own “Ethiopian-ness”
has been mostly questioned over the years and even well
meaning friends can slip into this. This is why change
must be more deliberate and led by the countless open-minded
Ethiopians, many of whom I have met.
For years, who is included or excluded for Ethiopian
citizenship seems to shift according to what is advantageous
to those in power at the time and this filters down
to other levels. We must expose the double talk of our
chameleon society that has repeatedly betrayed the trust
between Ethiopians, especially between those in the
entrenched systems of power and those who have been
intentionally locked out.
Yet, not surprisingly, all the previous governments
make sure these latter groups are not “locked
out” during times of war when they are again needed
for fighting while at the same time, the elite in power
send their children abroad for a quality education in
the western Countries. This smiling, praising and pretending
that you care about someone, but then turning around
and exploiting the person because they were trusting
enough to believe you is too common in our dysfunctional
society.
It is truly one of the most despicable things that
anyone can do to a fellow human being. The sneakiness
of it—preying on the trusting—makes it worse
than being openly disrespectful. This devious part of
our culture must be eradicated by good Ethiopians from
every ethnicity, gender, political view and religion.
A nation that does not teach its
truthful history will not go anywhere.
It is only through a genuine transformation of the
present—replacing the past attitudes and actions
with new experiences of respect and appreciation of
each other—that the power of the memories of pain,
hostility and alienation will fade away enough so we
are able to move on. They will not fade though if they
are not dealt with. A nation that does not teach its
truthful history will not go anywhere. Look at America
where people are taught about slavery. It has better
enabled African Americans to rise to the top through
their hard work, skill and creativity rather than to
be regularly pushed aside.
We are also seeing hope for Ethiopia through wonderful
Ethiopian people like our great singers, Gossaye Tesfaye
and Teddy Afro who has brought inclusiveness and the
message of true love for humanity through the lyrics
of his songs. His music has brought more people together
than some of our leaders who have led the country for
years towards destruction rather than towards harmony,
reconciliation, forgiveness, justice, peace and prosperity.
It is these powerful truths about embracing of other
people that led Teddy Afro to be targeted as an enemy
of this government.
Some people may wonder why I am doing this human rights
work. The reason is that I want justice, peace and the
free pursuit of happiness to come to all people. Because
of this, I feel compelled to confront any issues that
devalue human life and that stand as obstacles to these
goals, not just for me, but also for you, my fellow
Ethiopian. In doing this, I also condemn ethnic politics
because it marginalizes a whole society with the exception
of the one tribe that is in power. Some people may disagree
with my remarks, but the dialogue must begin if we are
to survive as a people and as an Ethiopian family. This
is why I always advocate for the unity of Ethiopia and
even potentially, the unity of Africa.
Some may also ask how I deal with these issues myself
and I will tell you. For me, my upbringing and my personal
faith in Jesus Christ, who created me the way he wanted
me, who gave his life for me, who loves me despite my
flaws, who heals all my wounds and who can turn what
is meant to destroy me into what can liberate me, has
defeated all the arguments of those who devalue me based
on superficial reasons that are grounded on lies. The
same is true about my Ethiopian-ness.
No one within the geographical boundaries of Ethiopia
is more Ethiopian than another. It is based on fact.
In other words, I should not need to ask anyone else
for the key to open the door to my own “home”—Ethiopia!
It is already mine.
This allows me to wipe off this contaminated thinking
like undesirable dust on my clothes or skin. Let me
help you, my dear African brother or sister, to wipe
the dust off your back and than you can pass it on and
do the same to the next person until we are all clean
of this destructive thinking.
I hope that more and more Ethiopians—including
Meles, his supporters and others who think like them—will
begin to notice the dust accumulating on their own clothes
and skin so that as a nation we can once and for all
embrace our African-ness and the full image of God reflected
in every human being in this world. Let us be grateful
for our full, rich, unique and beautiful humanity that
comes down as a precious gift from our loving Almighty
God.
Action Steps:
AigaForum’s endorsement of this article is an
example of what has been happening for years to the
disenfranchised people of Ethiopia; yet, it is their
devaluation of other people that I am condemning and
asking them to condemn, not them, for they are our fellow
Ethiopians and our fellow human beings. For if some
are convicted and recognize the wrong they have done,
we must offer hope for the possibility of restored relationships
if we are to ever have a New Ethiopia.
No other Ethiopia can provide a true home for us and
give us the unity of which we speak. This unity is not
a “nationalistic fervor about our flag or our
language, but a unity of the people based on deep respect
for human life. The unity we must embrace for the future
must be the unity of the heart that is based on mutual
trust, genuine acceptance and the God-given truth of
our worth.
I will make several suggestions for action steps that
different parties might take to positively resolve this
issue and bring healing to Ethiopia.
- We ask AigaForum to publicly condemn their article
and apologize to Chairman Michael Steele, the Republican
National Committee, the Solidarity Movement for a
New Ethiopia and myself for the racially-based insults.
- We ask the Ethiopian Embassy in Washington D.C
to also condemn the article, condemn AigaForum’s
posting of it and to condemn racism in Ethiopia due
to what is believed to be their complicity with AigaForum
in being a EPRDF propaganda machine in the Diaspora.
Even if any relationship or complicity is denied,
we ask that a formal statement be made condemning
this type of degrading racial commentary.
- We ask that the many Ethiopians who oppose such
degradation of others, publicly condemn this by any
means possible so that Ethiopians become known as
people who uphold the rights, value and worth of all
its citizens so that a few do not destroy the reputation
of good Ethiopians who are ashamed and embarrassed
by such attitudes and actions.
- We ask that those Ethiopians who have contributed
to the devaluation and demeaning of others based on
skin color, culture, gender, religion, minority status
or other superficial differences, cease from doing
so; and instead, seek to mend broken relationships
and to uphold and maintain the respect and dignity
of all people.
Should not you and I treasure every
one of our people as God equally treasures both them
and us?
This article has been CC to: Michael Steele, the
Chairman of the Republican National Committee, National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People, (NAACP)
and many more influential civil rights organizations
in the United States.
____________________________________________________________
Please do not hesitate to email me
if you have comments to: Obang@anuakjustice.org
Obang Metho, Executive Member of the Solidarity Movement
for a New Ethiopia
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