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Letter Asking OLF Leaders to Follow Through with Agreements

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By Yaadasa Dafaa

To the Leaders of OLF Nov. 27, 2012


“ Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell

together in unity.”


Dear Friends and Compatriots,



We have welcomed warmly the good news of reconciliation and unity made

between OLF-SHG and OLF-QC which was awaited long enthusiastically by

all Oromo. We are very grateful to the leaders of both sides for the

positive response they made to the wishes and demands of

reconciliation posed to them by their people. It is a good start and

we would wish them all the best in reaching the decisive and

victorious destiny together.



Mistakes were done, and it is humane to make mistakes for a person

who works. Mistake is said to be a best teacher for those who are

willing to learn from it. By learning from the past mistake and

committing oneself not to repeat the same mistake is a wise man’s

character, but persisting in it is deadly foolishness Mind you, even

wandering beasts and flying birds do not fall into the same trap.

There are no charges for making mistakes but malice like that of your

ex-comrades of the so called ODF which passes normality and becomes

inexcusable in its any measurement.



As you have come to agreement to iron out all the problems that

hindered the liberation of our nation for long period of time, it is

obvious that there could be hurdles to be removed away in order to

fully implement the reconciliation process. That will not panic us at

all, because there is always a black sheep in every flock and prickle

in any field. What matters most is your determination and zeal to

bring the agreement to a full fledged success.



Having said that, we understand that you have a lot to do and a long

way to travel to bring about a true and complete oneness. To do this

you have to turn back and contemplate on the first day you left all

your comfort zones to join the struggle for liberation of your nation,

your determination, your commitment, your courage and your willingness

to die for this noble cause. Again, you remember your sufferings, your

thirst, your hunger and your destitute lives in the jungle of Oromia.

Those of you who suffered an inhuman treatment in the prisons of our

enemy at different levels and places for the cause of your people,

forget not what happened to you when you are dealing with the

reconciliation you have made with one another. You remember your dear

comrades who sacrificed their lives for this big nation in front of

your sights in battle fields, in prison, on fields and streets of

their mother land. Remember your comrades and fellow Oromos who are

suffering behind prison bars for this cause, think of those who are

tortured and persecuted by the brutal and ruthless Habasha government.

Think of these innocent Oromos uprooted from their own land thrown

away and facing an indescribable plights.



What impression and feeling does the above paragraph give you? Losing

hope or more determination to renew your pledge to your people? The

latter is the better. It is clear that the above paragraph brings bad

and hardly good memories back to minds in which our human entities are

highly tested: they detect us to tell even if we are really competent

human beings and people with determination and guts: as we are having

such devastating and tragic history of being a majority in everything,

but still subjugated, oppressed, exploited and completely destroyed by

a minority.



Once again, we congratulate you for now as two sides of a coin and be

delighted most to call you as a would-be one OLF with deeply touched

hearts and joyous feelings. At last not least, as of the day you came

to your mind to serve and save your nation as one body and blood, and

lead us towards common goal, we also would like to renew and express

our commitment to do our shares in anyway possible and stand by your

side to accomplish the job. No more bystanders, but partakers.

United We Stand, Divided We Fall!

Oromia Shall Be Free!



From;

Oromos from State of Georia

Oromos from State of Ohio

Oromos from State of Texas

Oromos from State of Michigan

Oromos from State of Washington

Oromos from State of Oregon

Nov. 26, 2012.


Oromia's White House Rights Petition Garners 1,064 of 25,000

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Oromo Diaspora Speaks, But Not Loud Enough

An Oromo petition created by Jabessa W. on the White House Website that asks the Obama Administration  to "pressure Ethiopia to release Oromo prisoners of conscience, Bekele Gerba, Olbana Lelisa, Laggese Dhaba, Riqitu and Sisay..." garners only 1,064 of the goal of 25,000 so far. Compared to the number of Oromos who live in the North American Diaspora and other Western and  African Diasporas, the signatures collected  are still far too short from reaching the target. The United States and Canada combined are home to an  upward of  168,143 Oromo Diaspora members.

Many Oromo Websites such as Gadaa.com, Ayyaantuu.com and Oromo Press have featured the human rights petition for the last 25 days. The petition expires on Sunday, November 9, 2012. The signatures collected are likely to go to waste. Some commented that the 25,000 goal that the White House fixed for the petition was bound to garner the low figure we now see. 

Although it is difficult to say what the causes of of this low performance by the Oromo Diaspora are, but the initiative of some who have signed shows that the Oromo people care about the thousands of Oromo political prisoners languishing in Ethiopian jails. 

The other achievement of this petition might be that the Oromo have  been able to rally some Oromo and some friends of the Oromo people behind the cause of freeing Oromian political prisoners. In this sense, the White House petition can be said to have played a key awareness-raising role. Even if the petition will not make to the desk of the Obama Administration  because of the low number of signatures collected thus far, it is still very important in that it is searchable by U.S. authorities under the topic of "foreign policy and human rights" on the White House petition site.  That means White House authorities will see the issues that are going on regarding the Oromo people. It is an admirable effort in internationalizing he Oromo cause from its current position of obscurity.


Some complained that the personal account creation process was complicated enough for people who lack skills in technology usage. Several individuals have shared the word about the petition via their Twitter and Facebook accounts. Oromos on social media have not done as much as they should have in promoting the petition. Fatigue and giving up is generally observed among many Oromo social media users who still use social media for personal and trivial purposes.   

Petition Highlights Two Important Issues 


  • that Oromo leaders are still a long way from rekindling the tens of thousands of passive or disengaged Oromos residing in the Diasporas. The passive and apathetic diaspora has access to the Internet and computers. If there is no interest, access to the best of technologies does not mean a thing. 
  • not surprisingly, the Abyssinian/Ethiopianist diaspora has shown that it has no desire  in joining the Oromo even on a seemingly common ground of human rights advocacy.  This is despite the fact that the Abyssinians still want the Oromo to continue to be part of the Ethiopian empire. Their absence is proof that Habeshas  rejoice at our suffering; Habesha are only  interested in Oromo land and resources, not in the well-being of the Oromo people. It also reaffirms that the Oromo and the Abyssinians don't have a common destiny and a common political goal. In fact, it is naive to expect a perpetrator to join you in advocating for your human rights. One cannot simply expose one's own crimes. 

The efforts by some Oromo to sign needs to be commended. However, failure in reaching the desired goal calls for a strategic thinking in how to turn large numbers into collective actions.  More work needs to be done to make the Oromo voice heard by the U.S. Government. Such initiatives are critical in engaging the U.S. government on the issues that matter to the Oromo people of Oromia and the Horn.

Complicit International Actors: 'Waking Up One Who Fakes Sleeping' 


The thought of  lobbying the  Obama Administration is a right one given the fact that the United States is a major international actor, donating the largest amount of various types of assistance to the military regime of  Ethiopia, which uses the aid in massive repressions.


 Reports abound that Oromia is a battleground state for Ethiopia's repressions, including for abuse types such as political repression, pre-trial detention and torture. In Oromia, freedom of expression and association are severely curtailed. The Oromo face ever-growing discrimination in accessing government services in the mono-ethnically controlled Ethiopian state.


 The international actors are not holding Ethiopia accountable although they are aware that the Ethiopian military junta has put strict restrictions on the works of international human rights organizations in Oromia, including the work of Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.


In 2011, Amnesty International delegation was expelled for meeting with Bekele Gerba and Olbana Lellisa of Oromo Federalist Congress, an Oromo opposition party. Now both leaders are sentenced to 25 years in prison. Restricting human rights research and reporting  is an effort by the regime not only to stifle the work of international human rights workers, but more importantly a premeditated effort to blackout  all forms of information coming out of Oromia on egregious human rights violations.   


Theorizing Waaqeffannaa: Oromia's Indigenous African Religion and Its Capacity and Potential in Peacemaking

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In most of Africa, indigenous African religions have been pushed to the margin because of a number of factors. The implied and open relegation of indigenous African religions to the levels of inferiority and inconsequentiality in world affairs by colonial powers and post-colonial contemporary African states not only undermines and stereotypes the examination of the unique contributions of these religions to peacemaking, but also discards with them unique mythologies, values, laws, cultures and meaning-making systems. I argue that applying North American conflict resolution models without considering African religious values that existed for many millennia before the arrival of world religions will be an enormous hindrance to building lasting peace from the bottom-up in the vastly rural and agrarian Africa that is still steeped in traditions and rituals .   
Contributing to a range of negative stereotypes about African religions (example, uncivilized, barbaric and conflict-generating) is the fact that many of them have been orally transmitted from generation to generation and lack written major holy books unlike the world religions. The purpose of this paper is to shift attention from common misconceptions about African religions to a productive examination of the constructive roles they can be made to play.
I will focus on the case of Waaqeffannaa, an Oromo indigenous religion of East Africa, and its core values and laws. It will be significant to examine Waaqeffannaa’s complex concepts such as concept and view of Waaqaa(God), Eebba (prayers and blessings), safuu (the place of all things and beings in the cosmic and social order), issues related to cubbuu (sin) and other religious and ritual practices. Although there is no holy book for Waaqeffannaa thus far, I will obtain my data from published ethnographic books, journal articles, periodicals, relevant reports and press releases. The interactions between Waaqeffannaa and other organized religions such as Christianity and Islam will be examined in context. 
The paper will seek answers to three related questions:
What are the contributions or lack thereof orally transmitted values and laws of Waaqeffannaa to peacemaking and relationship-building? If there are any contributions, how can they be compared to other forms of conflict resolution?   What will be the role of Waaqeffannaa in peacemaking in the ever changing global and local contexts of religious diversity and difference? 

The Concept of God in Waaqeffannaa’s Monotheistic System

In order to examine the hermeneutic advantages and disadvantages of Waaqeffannaa and compare it to modern or Western conflict resolution methods, it is essential to examine the concept of God (Waaqaa) in the religion in its own right.  There is a consensus among researchers and observers of Waaqeffannaa—the most prominent of whom are pre-colonial European missionaries, explorers and anthropologists and local religious leaders and scholars—that Waaqeffannaa is one of the ancient indigenous African monotheistic religions.[1]The Oromo, the Cushitic African people of Ethiopia, among whom this religion emerged and developed, call their one God Waaqaa or more intimately and endearingly Waaqayyoo(good God).  It is difficult to capture with one definition the complexity of the ways in which the followers of this religion (Waaqeffataas) relate to God and make sense of God (not gendered) is hard to capture just with one definition.  The question of ways of understanding and relating to God is a question of Waaqeffannaa’s worldview that is indigenous and unique, in some ways, and thus, different from ways in which followers of major world religions understand and relate to God.
While monotheism is a key similarity it shares with Judaism, Christianity and Islam, Waaqeffannaa has the following worldview of its own:  
We believe in God who created us. We believe in Him (sic) in a natural way…We believe in God because we can see what God has done and what he does: he makes rains and the rains grow greenery, and crops that we consume. He lets the sun shine. So believing in him is instinctive and inbuilt. It is as natural as the desire we have for food and drink and as natural as the reproduction of living things. We go to the nature, the nature that He created: mountains and rivers to praise and appreciate Him impressed by His works...[2]
This contemporary declaration of the faith centers on nature and creation that can be pragmatically seen and experienced in daily life. There is no mention of “heaven” and “hell” here.  Concerning the followers’ perceptions of the residence of God, Bartels writes, “They do not visualize Waqa (sic) existing outside this world in time or space…In this sense Waqa is as much of this world as the vault of the sky.”[3]Bokku concurs with Bartels findings that God exists among people on earth, but Bokku makes a radically different claim as follows: “Waaqeffataas don’t [sic] believe in after life. They don’t believe that God would come in the future to judge people and send the righteous to heaven and the sinful to hell. God is with us always.”[4]Bokku’s claims can be controversial because in much of the literature I reviewed, I found that the question of “after life” is either overlooked or ambiguously treated, except in the work of Father De Salviac whose much older field research (1901) explicitly states the existence of the belief in life after death among Waaqeffataas in eastern Oromia as follows:
They acknowledge three places destined to receive the souls after death. The paradise, which they call: the ‘Happiness of God’, Ayyaana Waaqaa; or the: ‘Response of God’, Bayanacha Waaqaa; or even Jenneta Waaqaa ; ‘Paradise of God’, is reserved for the just who go there to enjoy the company and infinite blessings of the Lord…they say of death ‘That he passed on to Waaqaa;’-‘That he entered into Waaqaa,’-‘That he went to his eternal house with Waaqaa’.[5]
Reference to life after death, punishments and rewards in hell and heaven respectively are very rare features of the religion. Nonetheless,   the argument that De Salviac makes about the existence of the belief in life after death in Oromo society is enough to make  Bokku and other writers’ denial of the existence of “life after death” contested and curious. The issue of justice and how people relate to each other may hold for every writer. The question of relationships between peoples and peoples and peoples and nature and justice will be treated in later sections for safuu.   
Waaqeffataas generally view and worship Waaqaa based on their amazement with the ingenious works of Waaqaa’s hands that they experience and find them overwhelming to comprehend and explain. Even family prayers around the hearth contains many such instances: “UNIQUE AND SO GREAT GOD SUPPORT WITHOUT PILLAR THE DOME OF THE BLUE SKY.”[6]
Waaqeffataas view the earth as one of the major ingenious works of God. The earth is viewed inseparably from God. The image that followers of this religion have of the relationship between Waaqaa and the Earth “comes close to that of a human couple”[7]: ‘the earth is Waqa’s wife—Lafa niti Waqa,’[8] According to Bartels, there are four manifestations of the close connection between Waaqaa and the earth in four spheres of the Waaqeffannaa religious life:[9]
1.      Blessings
May the Waqaa and the earth help you.
May Waaqaa and the earth cause you to grow up (a blessing for children.)….
2.      Curses
Be not blessed either by Waqa or the earth.
May Waaqaa and the earth burn [make dry] your kidneys and your womb (the curse is addressed to a woman).
3.      Oaths
The man who takes the oath breaks a dry stick, saying:
‘May the earth on which I walk and Waqa beneath whom I walk do the same to me, if I have done such and such a thing.”
4.      Rituals
There are rituals of slaughtering a bull or sheep for Waaqaa and making libation (dhibayyuu) under a tree for the earth.[10]
 Waaqeffannaa rituals honor both God and the earth. Followers of the religion seem to take cue from God himself who created the earth to inform their ways of relating to Waaqaa and earth (lafa).  Evidence that suggests a relationship based on fears, intimidations or punishment between God and persons is less prevalent than those that are mostly based on respect for God, one another and for the earth.  Waqeffataas embrace and celebrate the egalitarian view of God and the diversity of names people call God. Despite some differences among people, research points to followers’ similar attitudes towards God. “…it has become clear that their attitude towards him [sic] is not only inspired by awe but also marked by familiarity and even, from time to time, by lack of respect. In his despair a man may claim: ‘Waaqa does not exist!’”[11]This just shows Waaqeffataas have a more liberal relationship with God. It does not mean that they are less pious as there is enough evidence to suggest many magnificent examples of humility, piety and obedience.
The question of Waaqeffataas’ acknowledgement of the oneness of God and the multiple names various religions call Him does not only show the openness of the concept of God to various interpretations, but it also shows the religion’s acceptance of religious diversity. It is easier to engage in interfaith or other conflict resolution activities when such an acknowledgement is extant than when religions claim “my way or the highway.”   The ways some prayers are rendered testify to this progressive values of Waaqeffanna: “O Black God who created the dark sky and the clean waters, who is one but called by multitudes of names, who has no competitor, the omniscient, the omnipotent, the omnipresent, who is eternal and ever powerful, whose power can never decline.”[12] Because of the view of God described here, Waaqeffataas believe that God is patient and that it is not in his nature to become angry if people believe in other things abandoning Him.  Bokku holds the Waaqeffannaa God is too self-confident to be angered into punishing people who do not obey or defect to other religions.[13]
Prayers and Blessings
Boran society sometimes appears to float on a river of prayers and blessings...
Paul T. Baxter.[14]
Common to private, collective and family prayers is the focus of Oromo/Waaqeffataas’ prayers on the material conditions and well-beings of the self, the family and the group. Prayers mediate conditions of people to God so he can intervene and alter their current conditions.[15] The faithful pray for peace, health, deliverance from wrongdoing and harmful sprits and things, human and livestock fertility, growth of babies (little ones), long life for adults, for the goodness of the inside and the outside, rain, harvest and development, inter alia.
The Waaqeffannaa prayer is barely about inheriting the kingdom of heaven nor is it about seeking the help of God in a battle against Satan and sin.  Evidence suggests that the concept of Devil/Satan does not exist in Waaqeffannaa while spirits that cause all kinds of suffering and misfortune or harm (ayyaana hamaa) are believed to exist.[16] Instances of talk about Devils by Waaqeffataas are generally understood as the borrowing of a religious vocabulary from the adjacent/co-existing major faiths such as Christianity and Islam.  For instance Waaqeffataa pray to God to prevent them from wrongdoing and errors committed in ignorance. The religion has no room for addressing anxieties and fears arising from the imaginary realm of the devil/evil. For instance, words used in prayers include, “Prevent us from wrongdoing…” (dogogora nu oolchi).  In terms of how people experience and understand misfortunes and fortunes (good things) Oromo proverbs capture the peoples’ dependence on Waaqaa. Indeed, the proverbs below indicate how Waaqaa is perceived as the source of good and bad things that happen in real life:[17]
A house that is built by Waqa will be completed.
It is Waqa who brings hunger;
It is Waqa who brings a full stomach.
The one Waqa clothes will not go naked.
Who trusts on Waqa will not lack anything.
Man wishes, Waqa fulfills.
Waqa is there [therefore] the sun rises.
It is Waqa who makes a person sick;
It is Waqa who restores him to health.
Waqa is never in a hurry;
But he is always there at the proper time.
There are standard prayers that have been codified in oral tradition and bequeathed down to generations. The codification of prayers, rituals and ceremonies in oral traditions serve the purpose of making Oromo worships definite and unarbitrary. The question of precise transmissions of  spoken messages are always  up for debates as there are obviously some room for improvisation and modification as the word of mouth (message) travels through time and space. I believe that the improvisation aspect of oral narratives will add an interesting dimension of dynamism to the hermeneutics of Waaqeffannaa. 
De Salviac praises the endurance of Waaqeffannaa for many millennia in spite of the oral mode of transmission. De Salviac aptly critiques the West for generally believing that the sole sources of “valid” or “authentic” knowledge are written texts (books) as follows: “We, accustomed to the cycle of knowledge by turning pale over the books, our careless memory resting on the permanence of typography, we hardly take into account the power of tradition, which sufficed, for centuries, for the civilization of many peoples. With the Oromo, religious and secular traditions are formulated in thousands of short sentences…”[18]
What I understand from De Salviac is that Western or modern industrialized societies privilege written knowledge. His critique is on tangent because preference for written and formal communication in the west will certainly shape intervention policy-making, official diplomacy and the attitudes of interveners towards indigenous cultures. Third party interveners with  fixed or rigid approaches are not only likely to disrespect and shun local knowledge systems, but they are also likely to impose rigid and unproductive conflict resolution processes developed in the context of limited civilizations.
One can only anticipate the stiff resistance that locals are likely to put up against western models in today’s Africa where there is an increasing awareness about the importance of self-reliance and going back to the roots in order to solve indigenous problems. The true superficiality of strict western models of dialogue, mediation, problem-solving workshop can be revealed by observing how in most of Africa’s peripheries cut of modern laws, bureaucracies and infrastructures, people thrive on the strong indigenous knowledge systems. This is how most conflicts are resolved and how people do communal work in either irrigating the land or protecting the environment. In the contexts of corrupt and partisan politics these efforts by local people to overcome the daily challenges must be given credit because some of them are providing themselves important social services that that their governments have failed to provide them. In any effort of conflict resolution or peacemaking in such dire circumstances it is imperative to bring local knowers (the wise men and women) into the sphere of diplomacy and peacemaking.    
Prayers, sometimes synonymously called blessings or benedictions, in the form of litany and chants are integral parts of indigenous communities. Every communal activity whether it is weddings, funerals or dances and music begins with blessings or prayers. Eebba is aimed moderating the way people relate to each other at certain venues and beyond. They are about building constructive relationships even in times of wars. Here are some examples of Oromo prayers/blessings of different periods and crowds’ responses.
Pre-colonial prayers[19]:
Ya Waaq, have pity on us;              Yes, yes, have pity on us
Ya Waaq, bless us;                          Yes, yes, bless us.
Ya Waaq give us happy days;             Yes, yes, happy days.
Ya Waaq in our discussions inspire us;  Yes, yes, inspire us.
Ya Waaq in our counsel give us light;            Yes, yes, give us light.
Ya Waaq bring back rebellious son to his father; Yes, yes, bring back.
Ya Waaq bring back unruly son to his mother;   Yes, yes, bring back.
….
Ya Waaq to good man give cows;                  Yes, yes, give.
Ya Waaq preserve our house from ruin;                     Yes, yes preserve.
….

Contemporary prayers:[20]
Yes! Yes! Yes!
God of Nature and of Creations;
Waaqaa who created the Haroo Walaabuu (lake)[21];
…..
Waaqaa who let us spend the night in peace;
Let us spend the day in peace;
Prevent us from entering into fatal errors;
Guard us against straying from the right path;
Guard us against mistakes/wrongdoings;
May the Creator we pray to hear us!
May Waaqaa guard us against the harmful!
May Waaqaa bring good things our way!
           May children (the little ones) grow up!
                                   May the grown-ups live longer!
May the ignorant know!
May experts/the wise last!
May Kormaa (uncustrated bull) reproduce!
May pregnancies stay healthy and hold!
Let Him keep away harmful things!
Gadaa (social system) is the system of rain and peace!
The year is the year of abundance/development and full stomach.
            These contemporary prayers cited from the Waaqeffannaa magazine are powerful. They are usually used in order to open any public/communal gatherings secular and spiritual. This is how things are called to order. The religious prayers give authority or credibility to whatever event that is to take place. At the center of this messaging is reaching the hearts and minds of parties to an event by cleansing the air of any hard feelings and ensuring that the heart and minds are softened and ready for the secular or non secular events and exchanges that will proceed from that.
Historically Oromos made ecumenical pilgrimages to holy sites of Abbaa Muudaa, Spiritual Father,[22]in order to receive blessings for them and to bring back blessings into their communities with them. Blessings are still considered serious religious activities that serve as glues of social life. Spiritual Fathers can give blessings to people on a range of personal and communal matters: such as long life, being alive, more property and wealth, peace in the household, on productions (calves, children, crops).
I have not come across modern mediation, negotiation or other third party intervention processes that start with prayers. Obviously, if blessings are not built into the processes, an attempt at conflict resolution in African societies such as the Oromo will be in vain. In the first place, people will not recognize what is not authorized and endorsed by their own knowledge system. Most importantly, empowering and funding Abbaa Mudaas or elders to engage in conflict resolution is likely to be accepted and bear fruit because of the tremendous reputations these people wield in society. They are highly regarded in society and leaving them out of official processes simply works against peace.
In Waaqeffannaa, one sees from the content of the payers and blessings above that most of them take on the nature of what Gopin succinctly characterizes as “Premordial prosocial moral/spiritual values.”[23]Although many of the conflicts in Ethiopia (Africa) are not religiously driven, the application of religious values will have a huge impact on conflicts driven by ethnicity, nationalisms and competition over resources and power. People listen when one reaches out and talks to them at their own level.  Gopin provides a detailed critique of why current modern conflict resolution approaches fail to understand the importance of using prosocial religious values in the context of the Arab/Israel conflict in the Middle East, but his appraisal also holds true for the Horn of Africa region, where the volatility and intractability of conflicts are comparable to the ones in the Middle East.  Among the important reasons Gopin cites are the West’s refusal to recognize non-Western models and knowledge systems. Gopin articulates the consequences of modern cultures failure to reckon with indigenous religious and cultural systems as follows:
As religion becomes more important in the lives of hundreds of millions of people, the political power generated by this commitment will either lead to a more peaceful world or to a more violent world, depending on how that power is utilized….Methods of peacemaking that continue to focus only on political and intellectual elites or that fail to address the broadest possible range of religious believers are leading to systematic and potentially catastrophic diplomatic failures in key areas of the world…[24]    

Survival through Religious Diversification and Rituals
It is accurate that Waaqeffannaa and similar Africa indigenous religions are being reincarnated and are slowly starting to become explicitly important in the lives of so many people.  Religious traditions, including those from indigenous religions, form the bedrock of the values of those Africans who converted to Christianity and Islam. Often these values moderate the foreign values associated with the cultures from which these major religions originated. It is not just the Waaqeffataas who only follow the indigenous religion, but a swathe peoples seem to have accepted double or triple religious lives.  They shuttle between various religious and cultural values in their daily decision-makings so as to adapt to changing socio-economic circumstances. Pointing to the loose nature of individual’s and group’s negotiations between multiple religious identities, Aguilar[25]presents a case of the importance of “religious diversification for survival” among the Kenyan Boran/Oromo in northern Kenya.  Aguilar provides the best illustration for survival and adaptation by accepting diverse religious values. He cites how Muslim and Waaqeffaannaa parents send their children to Catholic schools in northern Kenya and that the children do perfectly well shuttling between religious worldviews without facing physical dangers.[26]The same religious rituals performed by followers of Waaqeffannaa form the cores of the rituals and daily cultural practices of the followers of Islam and Christianity, as a mechanism of preserving and transmitting their identity. For instance, some of the religious traditions and rituals kept by Oromo communities who converted to major religions in north Kenya include similar types of blessings, prayers, and peacemaking through rituals of coffee beans-slaughtering and symbolic prayers.[27]These subtle practices of syncretism not only form the core identity of Oromo in north Kenya and connect them to the mainland (Oromia-Ethiopia), but they also play stabilizing roles in a families and communities there.[28] 
The phenomenon of syncretism/ “religious diversification” serves as a survival strategy where minority communities cut off into another country from the mainstream because of  colonial map-making try to cope with the alien majority they are swallowed up by. The case of Kenyan Oromos imitating the Waaqeffannaa values of the mainland is an example of such an essential survival strategy. Aguilar puts this as, “It is clear that the strategy of diversification provides the household (and a manyatta [place of settlement]) with security should something happen to either of the herds.”[29]
 It is no accident that somebody whom an outsider may perceive as a follower of one religion is actually found at the crossroads of multiple religious values. It takes a deeper look to discern such subtle and significant dynamics. For an intervener who has no interest or who is not patient to take time and learn, the subtlety of the power of tradition will ever remain inaccessible. Because one has no access to the right cultural tools, the very people he/she trying to reach and help will become inaccessible and unresponsive, especially if one attempts to impose some ivory-tower (imported) conflict resolution framework or process on local situations. People have been handling   their affairs everyday for centuries independently of outsiders. To assume that they somehow do not or their methods are not in par with modern approaches will defeat the purpose of thinking to help others in the first place.  

Safuu in Peacemaking and Social Harmony
This section analyzes the role of Safuu as one of the key elements of Waaqeffannaa. Safuu is a prosocial variable that needs a deeper analysis to see its roles in indigenous peacebuilding. Safuu is a broad concept that governs relationship in and between families, communities, national groups and relationship between people and nature and things.
Bartels provides a nuanced anthropological definition of the term Safuu:[30]
Saffu is a fundamental and all-pervading concept in the Matcha’s [Oromo] life. It implies that all things have a place of their own in the cosmic and social order, and that they should keep this place. Their place is conditioned by the specific ayana [good sprit] each of them has received from Waqa. Every creature, and especially man, has to act according to its own ayana and to respect the others’ ayana. Saffu implies both rights and duties. In the people’s eyes wisdom is ‘knowing saffu and abide [sic] by it.’
 Gemetchu  Megerssa, a leading Oromo anthropologist and former research assistant to Lambert Bartels,  probably influenced by Bartels himself, states that safuu is one of the key founding concepts in Oromo culture and Waaqeffannaa tradition.[31]  Bartels definition is more encapsulating, while it shares one central common feature with Megerssa’s definition, “…the concept of saffu(mutual relationship between elements of the social and cosmic orders) which maintains practice obligatory [sic] through ethical conduct.”  They both agree that safuu governs relationships between people and people, and people and nature, but Megersa introduces a newer and more specific idea of safuu as “an ethical conduct.”
Another leading expert on Waaqeffannaa, Bokku quotes Bartels directly and extends the concept of Safuu to broad areas of “morality”, “norm” and “laws” that govern social and ecological order.[32]  Bokku states his extended definition building on Bartels: “Safuu is the understanding of differences and appreciation of differences for the peaceful coexistence of all natural things.”  For Bokkuu, as opposed to man-made laws “safuu is not subject to change.” He concludes that safuu as laws of nature is necessary for the “smooth operation of life”, which is harmony.  Everyone invokes the notions that Safuu owes its authority over social relationship because it derives from the will or the spirit of God (ayyaanaa). Thus, experts agree that Safuu is one of the fundamental principles of Oromo culture that governs relationships and keeps society together.
            In Waaqeffannaa in particular and Oromo culture in general, it is believed that “breaking safuu would cause some sort of trouble.”[33]Breaking safuu laws is seen as committing sin. The consequences of breaking   various categories of safuu are understood as generating unhappy reactions from God. In Waaqeffannaa when someone sins, God turns His back on him/her. The meaning behind this is that if one misses the face of God, it means that one lacks ayyana (a guardian, blessings or will of God). This core law encourages people to maintain friendly relationships between themselves and with nature. Safuu is a law of rights and obligations. Since Safuu is not something in people, but something between them, it is assumed to promote collective harmony. Paying attention to the concept of “sin” in the meaning system of Waaqeffannaa is important because it comes from the Oromo word, “‘balleessuu’,which actually means ‘to destroy, to damage, to spoil’”[34] 
When one engages in destructive activities one is considered to be destroying, damaging, and spoiling relationships between at least three parties: God, creation (nature) and other human beings. In Oromo life, not damaging relationship between oneself and creations is given more importance than not damaging relationship between human and God.[35] 

The Dynamisms of the Indigenous Faith System
It is hard to understand how one can be effective in conflict resolution in Africa without having at least the working knowledge of important key principles governing all-rounded relationships, such as safuu. Religious values of Waaqeffannaa  may not require so much hermeneutic transformation because they already exist in pro-social form. Keeping natural and social orders is already a stringent requirement on top of acceptance for differences of any sort.
In Waaqeffanna, destroying (for example killing humans in conflict) is prohibited by the religion’s laws. Those who violate traditional laws and destroy anything will face alienation and banning from God as well as from fellows humans. They are denied opportunities to sit and eat at a table with family members and others; they become social outcasts. My evidence does not suggest any anti-social principles/laws in the Waaqeffannaa worldview so far. Even some of the curses that are put on people have the goal of ensuring social harmony and can be viewed positively. If I had come across anything that says, “if you kill your enemy or someone, God will reward you with heaven or sainthood or some other rewards,” I would have paused and thought, this is a justification for war and destruction that needs to be hermetically transformed. Transformation may be due if violence is made into something sacred. In my opinion the values of this religion particularly those about safuu are poised to play important peacebuilding and relationship-building roles at least in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa.
One can think of the lack of written scriptures (there are oral ‘scriptures’) for African religion as both advantages and disadvantages.  In terms of the creativity and improvisation of transmissions of oral values/laws, the lack of written scriptures is an advantage because followers or leaders of indigenous religions will have the ability to interpret the concepts in ways that meet the physical and spiritual needs of their time.  But that can also be a disadvantage since some lament that African could not have converted to Christianity and Islam if they had written scriptures and transformed their religions into organized faith systems.[36]
 The question of whether Africans had concepts of God or not or whether they were ‘pagan  hordes’ as the colonialists viewed them is now an outdated and irrelevant question because a number of scholars have produced research revealing that indeed Africans had believed in one God even before the advent of Middle Eastern religions.[37]Mbiti’s findings are credible because he stayed in Africa for 15 years and conducted studies on about 300 African communities and their belief systems.
Because indigenous African religions, including Waaqeffannaa, lack written scriptures, culturally biased scholars who judge everything according to Western standards may think religions such as Waaqeffannaa are inferior, static and things of the past. In rebuttal, one can respond to that arguing that oral mode of transmission makes African religions dynamic, ever-changing and ever-adapting to social changes even after some converted to other faiths. This happens because African religions do not punish defections and because their religious leaders are less likely to make claims to the permanence of specific oral texts or think of the values/traditions of their religion as the only “Truth” to die for. 
About the locus of the existence of African religions, Mbiti writes, “Religion in African societies is written not on paper but in people’s heart, minds, oral history, rituals, and religious personages like the priests, rainmakers, official elders…African religions have neither founders nor reformers.”[38] Mbiti’s notion of the lack of founders and reformers can be contested because it could be that founders and reformers might have existed millennia ago and simply no written records were kept about them.  The key point here is that words of mouth are dynamic. The best way to reach the hearts and minds of the vast peoples of rural Africa should be through oral traditions and spoken language. The prevalent practice by third party interveners shows an opposite tendency of bureaucratizing everything and transmitting messages via the written medium (forms and documents) through the agency of “rational professionals”. 
Authors caution against viewing Waaqeffannaa religious traditions as part of a static tradition of the past[39], and encourage us to view them as dynamic traditions that are continually changing based on wider experiences that are part of their present. Aguilar is succinct about the advantages of the dynamism of Waaqeffannaa’s hermeneutics: “…traditions are transmitted, never as static forms but as changeable manifestations of an Oromo religion [Waaqeffannaa] that interacts [sic] with other traditions and other ethnic groups, and therefore becomes capable of reshaping society itself.”[40] 

Lessons for Conflict Resolution 
The values and laws of Waaqeffannaa identified and analyzed in this research suggest the importance of recognizing African indigenous religious systems and the prosocial contributions of their values and laws to conflict resolution.
I deliberately tried not to impose a theoretical framework over my analysis although my approach was influenced by hermeneutics.[41]Engaging in peacemaking in indigenous African communities requires the use of what Gopin, drawing on Lederach, calls “elicitive and cross-cultural methods.”[42] Concepts such as safuu, the Waaqeffanna worldview, prayers, blessings, harmony are predominantly about building relationships between people and people, and them and nature. The most effective way of arriving at these principles and using them in interventions is to do one’s best to involve indigenous peoples, religious leaders, elders and parties to conflict and to elicit from them the best practices they have evolved over centuries in peacemaking.
 Indigenous African religions are caught up in multipronged challenges such as lack of recognition from interveners, states and richer and more organized religions despite their prevalence and appeal to many African communities.  Established conflict resolution methods such as mediation, negotiation, facilitation, problem-solving workshop and dialogue are often too Western, rationalistic, elitist and foreign to accommodate other grassroots approaches to peacemaking such as obeying safuu. If we look at official mediation, for instance, we find the reliance on rigid processes and professionals as its main features. Such formal stages may include collecting data, building hypothesis about a conflict, searching for theories, selecting theory, making intervention, and verifying and nullifying hypothesis.[43]  It is not necessarily bad to prepare for mediation in stages, but when everything is prefigured, there is a danger of learning very little on the field while doing the intervention itself. In most rationalistic conflict resolution methods listed above, the immediate settlement of conflict is desired. This may turn out to be a shortcoming because long-term relationship-building and peacemaking, which is the hallmark of indigenous systems, are and sidelined.    
  Limitation of the Indigenous Religion
The most important limitation of many African indigenous religious values and traditions, including Waaqeffannaa, is that the practice of peacemaking is inbound to groups in which these traditions originated.  There are also perceptions and tendencies to associate the good prosocial aspects of religious principles this religion with ethno-nationalist competitions of the day, and therefore, to readily dismiss them as unrepresentative of the whole. A much productive approach, however, is to see the commonalities of multiple African religious traditions and to take key principles from each of them and combine them in order to make everyone feel good about their faiths. There is so much to learn from this culture if one is willing to follow the elicitive path to conflict resolution. 
The second obvious limitation is the lack of written scriptures and the challenges of accessing oral scriptures for outsiders due to language barriers, but which can still be overcome with translators and interpreters.
Thirdly, African indigenous religions have not been given the places they deserve in some continental interfaith organizations whose member religions tend to be organized and rich major religions. For instances, the United Religious Initiative (URI) Africa chapter, an international faith network that operates in 25 African countries, professes that it aims to look for solutions to Africa’s challenges at community levels in the areas of corruption, human rights violation, poverty and HIV/AIDs[44], but unfortunately no indigenous African religious tradition from any community is represented by such an important organization. The network carries it activities in Africa through major faiths such as Christianity and Islam.  Another domestic (Ethiopian) interfaith network, Interfaith Peace-building Initiative (IPI), a member of the URI, has no indigenous Ethiopian religions (Waaqeffannaa included) as its members.
 The problem with URI and IPI is not only a simplistic and envious question of who is represented or who is not, but it appears that the mentioned interfaith networks have been systematically coopted  and used to advance the interests of the Ethiopian state since  Ambassador Mussie Hailu, is serving  simultaneously as the Regional Director of URI and the Board Chair of IPI.[45]The more intractable and absurd aspect of IPI is that it is an interfaith organization as far as the major religions are concerned, but the founders and its leaders are members of a single ethno-national group who are publicly known to lean toward the ruling party from the same group. This is a clear negative messaging to others in Ethiopia where the issues of ethnicity are sensitive. To be sure, it is possible to have an interfaith organization with wonderful goals like IPI, but with ethno-nationalist ideological agenda at same time. That will do more to keep peoples apart than bring them together.
Despite its growing popularity in Oromiya regional state, the most populous in Ethiopia,  Waaqeffannaa’s attempts to transform itself into an organized religion have failed many times so far because the Ethiopian state has first denied and then revoked the license of the group citing that its leaders sympathize with the Oromo Liberation Front[46], a secular rebel group in conflict with the government on the question of autonomy and self- determination for Oromiya.  

Conclusion

            Waaqeffannaa’s pro-social principles, laws and values did and will contribute to building constructive relationships between communities. In addition to improving human relations, laws such as safuu that emphasize the need to maintain good relationship with nature, can  be extended and used in areas of environmental conflict resolution, specially where climate change is threatening pastoralist and agrarian communities in many observable ways today.
I explored and discussed the ways in which the egalitarian but respectful views of God by Waaqeffataas can be helpful in curbing extremist tendencies. Neither oral scriptures of the religion nor its leaders condone acts of violence as something leading to rewards or sainthood. Prayers and blessings function as authoritative moderators and they can be used in opening and closing any intervention efforts. Waaqeffanna is a very pragmatic religion whose most themes are linked to and earthbound to the material conditions of people. Therefore, people in conflict may have the same questions they want answered through prayers to be answered through interventions.
The potential and capacity of the religion in national or regional peacemaking is promising if it be recognized and the multi-pronged obstacles in its way are removed. 
References
Abu-Nimer, Mohammed. Nonviolence and Peace Building in Islam: Theory and Practice.
      
Gainesville:  University Press of Florida, 2003.
Aguilar, Mario I. The Politics of God in East Africa: Oromo Ritual and Religion.  Trenton, N.J.:
         The Red Sea Press, 2009.
Appleby, Scott R. “Retrieving the Missing Dimension of Statecraft: Religious Faith in the
            Service of Peacebuilding.”  In Faith-Based Diplomacy: Trumping Realpolitik,
           
ed. Douglas Johnston, 2003. Oxford: OUP.
____.  The Ambivalence of the Sacred: Religion, Violence and Reconciliation.Lanham: Rowman
         & Littlefield Publishers, 2000.
Bartels, Lambert. Oromo Religion: Myths and Rites of the Western Oromo of Ethiopia-An
           Attempt to Understand. 
Berlin: Dietrich Reamer Verlag, 1983.
Bokku, Dirribi Demissie.  Oromo Wisdom in Black Civilization.  Finfinne, Ethiopia: Finfinne
           Printing & Publishing S.C., 2011.
De Salviac, Martial.  An Ancient People: Great African Nation: the Oromo. Translation from the
            1901 original French edition by Ayalew Kanno. Paris, the French Academy, 2005.  
Douglas, Johnston. Faith-Based Diplomacy: Trumping Realpolitik. Oxford: Oxford University
         Press, 2003.
Gopin, Marc. Between Eden and Armageddon: The Future of World Religions, Violence and
       Peacemaking. 
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.
____ Holy War, Holy Peace:  How Religion Can Bring Peace to the Middle East. New York
       :Oxford University Press, 2002.
Megerssa, Gemetchu. “Oromumma: Tradition, Consciousness and Identity.” In Being and
            Becoming Oromo: Historical and Anthropological Enquiries,
Edited byP.T.W. Baxter,
            Jan Hultin and Alessandro Triulzi.  Lawrenceville, N.J.: The Red Sea Press, 1996.
Montville, Joseph V. “Psychoanalytic Enlightenment and the Greening of Diplomacy.”
           
In The Psychodynamics of International Relationships, Eds. Vamik D. Volkan,
            Demetrios A. Julius, and Joseph V. Montville. Lexington Mass.: Lexington Books
            (1990-1991): 177-192.
Moore, Christopher W. The Mediation Process: Practical Strategies for Resolving Conflict.
           3rd Ed.  San Francisco:  Jossey-Bass, 2003.
MTA. Waaqeffannaa: Ayyaana Irreechaa Birraa, 2010.Vol. V. No. 1. Finfinnee: MTA, 2010.
         (trans. Waaqeffannaa: Thanksgiving Holiday of  Fall 2010.)
Sandole, Dennis J.D. “Paradigm, Theories, and Metaphors in Conflict and Conflict Resolution:
             Coherence or Confusion?” In Conflict Resolution Theory and Practice, Ed., Dennis
            Sandole. Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, (1993): 3-24.
Stenger, Mary Ann. “Gadamer’s Hermeneutics as a Model for Cross-Cultural Understanding and
         Truth in Religion.”   In Religious Pluralism and Truth: Essays on Cross-Cultural
        Philosophy of Religion,
  Ed., Thomas Dean. New York: State University of New York
        Press, (1995): 151-168.
Volkan, Vamik D. “Psychological Processes in Unofficial Diplomacy Meetings.” In The Psychodynamics of International Relationships, Eds. Vamik D. Volkan,
            Demetrios A. Julius, and Joseph V. Montville. Lexington Mass.: Lexington Books
            (1990-1991): 207-219.
          



[1]De Salviac, 1901:43; Bartels, 1983:89; Bokku, 2011: 54). The two previous books on Oromo religion (now named Waaqeffannaa) by European missionaries are widely regarded as authoritative secular scholarly sources closest to the source ever to be published on an indigenous African religion of antiquity. Bokku adds his own recent perspectives on the religion and revises his predecessors’ perspectives without altering the essence of their work. 
[2]Bokku, 2011:54.
[3]Bartels, 1983:91.
[4]Bokku,2011:73.
[5]  De Selviac, 1901;155.
[6]De Selviac, 1901:173, emphasis in the original.
[7]Bartels, 1983:108
[8]Haberland 1963 in Bartels, 1983:108.
[9]Bartels, 1983:108-109.
[10]Bartels, 1983: 109.
[11]Bartels, 1983;107
[12]Bokku, 2011: 66. The quote was an English translation the author provides  from the  Afaan Oromoo (Oromo language) version, which runs: “Gurraacha garaa garbaa, leemmoo garaa taliilaa, tokkicha maqaa dhibbaa, guddicha hiriyaa hinqabne, kan waan hundaa beeku, kan waan hundaa gochuu danda’u, kan bakka maraa jiru, kan hinkufine, kan hinduuneefi kan hincabne.”
[13]see footnote number 11.
[14]P.T.W. Baxter, Age, Generation and Time, 155 in Aguilar, 2009:13).
[15]De Salviac, 1901:153, 163; Bartels, 1983:96; Bokku, 2011:66-67; Megerssa, 1996:92-103.
[16]De Salviac, 1983:120; Bokku, 2011: 67.
[17]Bartels, 1983:95.
[18]De Salviac
[19]De Salviac, 1901:163.

[20]  Translated by me from Afaan Oromoo into English from the Waaqeffannaa magazine, p i.
[21] Haroo Walaabuu is considered the origin of Oromo community and the source of all walking humans on earth.  It plays an important symbolic/mythic role in standard prayers. Water bodies are considered sources of life.
[22]De Salviac, 1901:177.
[23]Gopin, 2000:84.
[24]Gopin, 2000:35.
[25]Aguilar, 2009:13-32.
[26]  Aguilar, 2009:28.
[27]See footnote 24
[28]Augilar, 2009:
[29]Ibid., p.27.
[30]Bartels, 1983:170.
[31]Megersa, 1996:96-97.
[32]Bokku, 2011:75.
[33]See footnote 31.
[34]Bartels, 1983:339, Bokku, 2011:76.
[35]Bartels, 1983:339.
[36]Bokku, 2011: 61.
[37]Mbiti, 1992:29.
[38]Mbiti, 1992:4.
[39]Megerssa, 1996:98; Aguilar, 2009:5.
[40]  Aguilar, 2009:5
[41]Stenger, 1995.
[42]Gopin, 2000:60-61.
[43]Moore,2003:66
[44] URI. “Purposes and Activities.” http://www.uri.org/cooperation_circles/explore_cooperation_circles/region/africa
[46]   U.S. Department of State on Religious Freedom in Ethiopia, 2010: 4.


List of Top 14 Ethiopianist Trojan Horses in Oromo National Struggle

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Saboteurs of Oromo National Struggle 

In recent years, we have witnessed the rise of the home-grown Ethiopian nationalists who have deliberately sabotaged the Kaayyoo of the Oromo national struggle. Trends in recent years unmasked the rise of collaborators within the Oromo who aim to destroy or sabotage the Oromo quest for independence or even regional autonomy. 

At some point or another, Ethiopianist saboteurs of Oromo descent have joined many anti-Oromo parties such as the OPDO, Ginbot7, Jijjiirama, Oromo Dialogue Forum, Coalition for Unity and Democracy only to serve the interests of Abyssinians by appending the label "Ethiopia" to the  universal suffering of the Oromo people. They lined their pockets and filled their tummies from their masters' handouts--financial or material. They suffer inferiority complex and double-bound identities.

To help the Oromo people know those among us who are actively working against Oromo national interests, we put together a partial list of individual Trojan Horses with thumbnails and affiliations.

TIER 1: OLD GUARD TOROJAN HORSES



1. Kemal Gelchu --affiliation- Ethiopian National Defense Forces/Jijjiirama/Ginbot7




2. Nuro Dedefo. Affiliation--Ginbot7




3. Hassen Hussein-affiliation-- Oromo Dialogue Forum






4. Junedin Saddo--affiliation OPDO/EPRDF/







5. Girma Wolde Giorgis. Affiliation -EPRDF/OPDO




6. Nagasso Gidada. Affiliation--OPDO/EPRDF/ CUD




7. Lenco Lata. Affiliation--Oromo Dialogue Forum




8. Bayan Asoba. Affiliation--Oromo Dialogue Forum (ODF)







9. Dima Noggo Sarbo. Affiliation--ODF






TIER TWO RECRUITS :  NEW HOMEGROWN  ETHIOPIANIST CADRES 

10. Mohammed Ademo/Oromsis Adual--Affliation (OPDO/Ginbot7/Jijjiirama)











11. Jawar Siraj Mohammed. Affiliation--OPDO/Ginbot7/









12. Urgessa Ganamo Tura. Affiliation-- OPDO/Ginbot7









13. Ayantu Tibesso. Affiliation--Ginbot7/OPDO







14 Mekonnen Firew Ayana-Affiliation (OPDO/Ginbot7/CUD)













What do these top 14 homegrown Ethiopianists have in common? They all think that Oromo must be subservient to Ethiopian nationalism; they reject the Oromo right to self-determination up to independence. They believe OLF must be destroyed, and they said that in public over and over. If they were to vote at referendum, they will say "YES" to being part of "Ethiopia", but say "NO" to Oromia's independence or even genuine regional self-government. They are self-interested opportunists and saboteurs of the Oromo national movement. They love when Oromos suffer at the expense of Ethiopia's unity. 


The list is only partial. These are only the ones that are most prominent. The junior ones were  sent by OPDO/EPRDF to study in American universities upon satisfying their roles as Trojan Horses . The junior recruits were sent to divide the Oromo by region and religion.  The older ones (#3,7,8, & 9) are dropouts from OLF and still want to cling onto something else destructive. Think of where  Oromo/Oromia could have been without them ? Oromo, you know why we are not free? It is because of people like these. Men who failed their nation and served the cause of the "diina ilmaan Oromoo." We must judge them now--we must not wait until history judges them or they will continue to destroy anything that is in their way.  You have the right to know those who have stunted your struggle from achieving its goals. All in the list are connected and networked.
--
Notes: 

Names come first and pictures follow. 

Oromiyaan Oromummaafi Tokkummaadhan 2013tti Tarkaanfatti

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Afaan Oromoo

Oromiyaan Oromummaafi Tokkummaadhaan  2013tti Tarkaanfatti 

Viidiyoo kana keessatti, hayyoonni duradeemoon Oromoo lama, Piroofeesar Dok. Asafaa Jaalataafi Pirofeesar Dok. Mahaammad Hasan, seenaafi hawaasummaa Oromummaarratti dubbatu. Dok. Asafaa Jaalataa mataduree, "Oromummaa Bebbeekisisuufi Ijaaruu," jedhuratti waraqaa dhaleesse/dhiyeeche. Dok. Mahaammad Hasan immoo mataduree, "Seenaa Keenyarraa Baruun Karaa Kamiin Oromummaa Jabeessina" jedhuratti dubbate.


Asafaa Jaalataa jamaatti/hirmmaatotatti kan beekisise Obbo Abarraa Tafarraati,  dubbi-laaffisaa (moderator) gameessa waltajjii Oromummaa. Obbo Ahmed Huseen, manguddoofi hayyuun kabajamaa Oromoo, Dok. Mahaammad Hasan jamaatti/hirmmaatotatti beekisise.


Jamaan (hirmaattonni) galma keessa ture dhumarra olka'ee dhaabbachuun dinqisiifannoofi kabaja Oromummaafi dhiyeessitootaf qaban mul'isan. Kuni Oromummaan umna Oromoo hunda akka biyya tokkotti sochoosu danda'u ta'uu calaqqise.


Galmeen vidiyoo kuni iddo "Waltajjiin Oromummaa," itti raawwatetti waraabbame. Waltajjichi guyyaa tokko guutuu fudhate. Hirmaattonnis hojii gamtaatti (workshop) hirmaatanii jiru. Walmari'achuun kuni Howard University tti Jaarmiyaa Hawaasa Oromoo Washington DC'tiin saganteeffamee dhiyaate gaafa Fulbaana 1, 2012. Galakkisini viidiyoo kanaa kan tureef sababii teekinika uunkafi dabarsa vidiyoorraa kan ka'e. Kana akka kennaa isa guddaa wagaa haaraatti fudhadhu.  Oromummaa labisi, tamsaasi. Oromiyaan hammannaa Oromummaa hunda keenya tokkoomsuun haajiraattu, haa hojjettu. Oromummaan eenyummaa uumaadhaan arganne kan eenyummaa xixiqqoo kaan of jalatti hammatu. Oromummaan akka gaaddisa Odaa Oromoonni gabrummaa didan jalatti boqotani.
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English 

Oromia Marches into 2013 with Oromummaa and Tokkummaa


In this video, two leading Oromo scholars, Professor Dr. Asafa Jalata and Professor Dr. Mohammed  Hassen speak on the historical and sociological aspects of Oromummaa.


Dr. Asafa Jalata spoke on the topic titled: "Promoting and Developing Oromummaa." Dr. Mohammed Hassen spoke on the topic: "Learning from Our History is the Key for Revitalizing Oromummaa"Asafa Jalata was introduced by Obbo Abera Tefera, a seasoned moderator for the Oromummaa Forum. Obbo Ahmed Hussein, a  respected and knowledgeable Oromo elder,  introduced Dr. Mohammed Hassen. 


The audience showed their appreciation for Oromummaa and the presenters with standing ovation at the end.  This showed Oromummaa is the power that unites and energizes Oromia as a nation.


 This documentary was filmed at the "Oromummaa Forum," a day-long seminar/workshop organized by the Oromo Community of Washington DC. The seminar was held at Howard University on September 2012. The release of this video was delayed because of video  format and transfer issues. Consider this the most valuable gift for the 2012 Holiday season from Oromo Press. Spread the word of Oromummaa. Let Oromia live and act in the spirit of Oromummaa that unites us all, as an overarching national eenyummaa/identity .


Oromia Marches into 2013 with Oromummaa and Tokkummaa

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In this video, two leading Oromo scholars, Professor Dr. Asafa Jalata and Professor Dr. Mohammed  Hassen speak on the historical and sociological aspects of Oromummaa.


Dr. Asafa Jalata spoke on the topic titled: "Promoting and Developing Oromummaa." Dr. Mohammed Hassen spoke on the topic: "Learning from Our History is the Key for Revitalizing Oromummaa" Asafa Jalata was introduced by Obbo Abera Tefera, a seasoned moderator for the Oromummaa Forum. Obbo Ahmed Hussein, a  respected and knowledgeable Oromo elder,  introduced Dr. Mohammed Hassen. 


The audience showed their appreciation for Oromummaa and the presenters with standing ovation at the end.  This showed Oromummaa is the power that unites and energizes Oromia as a nation.


 This documentary was filmed at the "Oromummaa Forum," a day-long seminar/workshop organized by the Oromo Community of Washington DC. The seminar was held at Howard University on September 2012. The release of this video was delayed because of video  format and transfer issues. Consider this the most valuable gift for the 2012 Holiday season from Oromo Press. Spread the word of Oromummaa. Let Oromia live and act in the spirit of Oromummaa that unites us all, as an overarching national eenyummaa/identity .


XEFENFERUU

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                         XEFENFERUU

Saxil Norway irraa.

Bara humni jiru yoggaa dargaggummaa
Arihanii qabuun
Figanii qaqqabuun
Ajjeesanii dooruun
Addaanyii filachuun
Addaanuu dibachuun
Booka Lulluqqachuun
Cooma jajihachuun.
Namarraa midhaga yowwaa humni jiru
Iddoo humni dhumee maalsaa xifirferu
Marii manguddummaan maal fiduuf xibaaru
Yeroo humni dhumu
Yogguu galgalawu
Afuurri dulluma yeroo dide hadhaawu
Kunis baasa tokko, seenadhaaf maal kaahu.
Manguddoon yeroo raagu, akka adaa orootti sawwani dachaasa
Lammii wal-mufate walitti araarsa
Yoggu lolli hammatu, waraana eebbisa
“Lolaa mirgaan gala
Irree diinaa cabsaa
Seenaa gadaa darbee bakkatti deebisaa!”
Jedhee eebbisa malee yubni hin gadoomu
Ni gorsa malee waraana hin abboomu
Kan baranaa raja maal rakkate yubni? Gorsaa tahuu dhiisee yogguu dabsaa tahu!!
Gaafa inni hogganu taa’e Sudaan keessa
Qabsootu finiine kijiba odeessa.
Yoree angoon isaa badiin mulqamu
Qabsootu hin sosone tasa hin abdatamu
Gafa Xiyyaran Kanaadaa qubatu
Waraanni kumatama rasaasaan dhumatu
Passportin matiidhaaf yerootii rabsamu
Waraanni dirreedhaa yogguu beelaan waxalamu
Hogganni meqatamni yeroo ofiin of fixu
Isaan warri marii masaraa Miniliki shaampaanyiin of dhiqu
Tikkeeta xiyyaaraa dhaqaa gala kutu
Yerootii qabeenyaa shittooni dhiqatu
WBOn dirree hundaa yogguu lolaa jiru
Isaan miliyoonaan qarshii waliif hiru.
Dimaan maadhee ijaara Nayiroobii keessaa
Kaan Kanadaarraa Impaayera faarsa.
Hayyuu ganfa Afrikaa Impayera ijaaru
Waaan seenarra hin jirre kijiba xibaaru.
Yohaannis gabaabaa jaarsaa dardaroome dulluma keessa
Ijaarsa lakkisee guyyuu diiggaa odeessa.
Gaafa lola beegii eenyu ka lolchiisu
Yogguu urgaan baarudaa si  ho hollachisu.
Osoo lola dheeftu ka Roobiin si nyaate
Qeerroon si gombistee
Kara lama albaate.
Haamleekee kamiini kan hoggana qeeqxu
Akka re’etti gannaa badhee nyaattee qeentu.
Goota hafaa summii abiddaan qorame
Cichaa kaayyoo danfaan waxalame.
Niyaadatta laata gaafa lola Toobisii
Dushqaa jala ciftee ya rabbi na eegii.
Qeerroo kudha lama hableen qalamte
Eenyu si baraarraan deebitee of barte.
Eenyu ka dhukaase dhukaasa jalqabaa dirree dhiyaarratti
Silaati garaankee wareegama Baaroo fi ka Badhoohuu ni bahatti
Eeeyyee himi malee Garaan gumbii miti
Dilbi itii hin kuusani dhugaa jiru golguun haadhoo wal hin ficcisisani
Lammis walitti hin kaasani.
Yoom dhugaa dubbatta yeroon kees geesse
Silaatu cobakeef cubbuu guddaa keesse.
Dhiifaman gaafadha haadhoo jal Nagaasaa
Gantuu waliin dhaabbattee maqaakee facaasa
Hin gorsine laataa Garbichoo nu hin baasu wayeen Impayera
Isheetu gubate ekeraadha soora.
Qaroo haadhoo gootaa shamarree sabboontu
Duutee baddi malee Kuween goobuu hin soortu.
Oh! “ Ya goobu! Ya goobu yagoobanaa
Ya gadhee gadii namaa.
Gaangeen kee tabba hin bahiin nyaatiin kee waggaa hin gahiin
Kan facaafatte hin margiin
Ijikee aaga hin argiin.
Gufuu balbalaa tahi re’een sitti haarigattu
Xuwwee galgalaa tahi gadheen sitti ha dhiqattu
Gobanni inni Daacee yeroo kaadhimamu Oromoon hin teeny hin callisne himu.
Yaa orobo battee yaa oroboo batte
Yaa oromoo ni bade yaa oromoo ni badde
Hora finfinnee buune sawwan obaasuun hafe
Hurufa Boombiiratti jabbilee yaasuun hafe
Bosona Gafarssaarras Qoraan cabsuun ni hafe.
Erga jarri dhufani sawwan keenyas ni dhumani!
Bara qaroominni jabanaa hin jirre
Oromoon Gadaadhaan ilma isa bu’ure.
Nuti oromoo boonaa warra abbaa gadaati
Gadheetu nu cabse nu marsite hallatti.
Bara nuti tifkatte annan sawwaa dhugnu
Isaan nu cabsuudhaaf bar gama quunnamu.
Habashaan gootummaan( jagnummaan) nu hin caalle
Gorsaa warra adii ka tooftaan nu caale
Isaan meeshaa ammayyaa nuti bakaraan lolla
Dhiigni gootowwani lola’e akka lolaa
Xiyyaarri samiirraa boombi nutty roobsa
Tokko hin sodaanne yoom jalaa sokoksa.
Goobuu lammikeessaa garaaf nu gurguru
Qaama ofii ganuun halagaaf kurkuru
Biddeenni oromoo furdaan osoo jiruu
Maa kajeellaa dhaqxe ganda Waldegabruu
Jedhe ilmi Dandaanaa yeroo warri marii Mallasaaf kurkuru
Kan wallisaan dhaame hayyuun Gaanfa Afrikaa ka biyya gurguru
Waaye’e goobanoota yoggutin katabu
Otoo na waxalu guggube na waadu
Jooteen Daarbush qalee yeroo irraa dhaddatu
Gidaadan Lammataa  yogguu achii dhalatu
Ni barree jedhu Doktoraan/Injineeraan dhaaddatu
Kabajaa jibbanii dantaaf gangalatu
Dachii Abdiisaa Aagaa, Oliliikaa Dingilu
Warra adiijajiyee Allaattiif foon hiru
Gidaada quxusuun maal isaa xefenferu!!

Galatoomaa!
Saxil Norway irraa.









Oromia Marches into 2013 with Oromummaa and Tokkummaa

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In this video, two leading Oromo scholars, Professor Dr. Asafa Jalata and Professor Dr. Mohammed  Hassen speak on the historical and sociological aspects of Oromummaa.


Dr. Asafa Jalata spoke on the topic titled: "Promoting and Developing Oromummaa." Dr. Mohammed Hassen spoke on the topic: "Learning from Our History is the Key for Revitalizing Oromummaa" Asafa Jalata was introduced by Obbo Abera Tefera, a seasoned moderator for the Oromummaa Forum. Obbo Ahmed Hussein, a  respected and knowledgeable Oromo elder,  introduced Dr. Mohammed Hassen. 


The audience showed their appreciation for Oromummaa and the presenters with standing ovation at the end.  This showed Oromummaa is the power that unites and energizes Oromia as a nation.


 This documentary was filmed at the "Oromummaa Forum," a day-long seminar/workshop organized by the Oromo Community of Washington DC. The seminar was held at Howard University on September 2012. The release of this video was delayed because of video  format and transfer issues. Consider this the most valuable gift for the 2012 Holiday season from Oromo Press. Spread the word of Oromummaa. Let Oromia live and act in the spirit of Oromummaa that unites us all, as an overarching national eenyummaa/identity .



License to criticize Oromo struggle

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By Yaadasaa Dafaa,

Criticism of any struggle can emerge from different corners, by different constituents aiming to accomplish, or convey a deliberate message. One need not be blind sighted assuming that critics are a fair reactions, feedbacks, or simple statements without intentions.  Depending on the identity of the criticizing individual, one can expect within a negligible margin of error the parameters and directions of the intended message without falling into the trap of "self-fulfilling prophecy".  Frankly, this is a very narrow path to walk on.  But once the whole picture of any given message becomes clearer and clearer, it alleviates the doubts and can easily be channeled to its proper category. But it is at this stage where the authors and the intended audiences could descend into the cycles of arguments and counter arguments. An author who may have a natural absence of decency, may continue to claim that his/her message is/was misunderstood or misinterpreted, even if the message is/was received by his/her audiences accurately. Such authors' original message was/is not intended to be understood in its proper context, but to conceal its vicious agenda from the general public while appearing to promote their genuine struggle and general interest.  As for the majority of the Nation, usually it takes time to differentiate these hyenas in sheepskin, from the real advocates for  "in the best interest" of that Nation. 

It is a public secret to know naturally, the struggle for the Nation of Oromia did cultivate unselfish, and highly dedicated children of Abbaa Gadaa, as well as a very close friends for its journey for freedom from the century old Abyssinian Colonialism. At the same time, Oromo national struggle does present it'self with its own fair share of limited opposition from within, in addition to the Abyssinian colonial machine.  These partially seasonal internal oppositions are all cornered around two different persuasions.  The fist one comes from the Nation of Oromo themselves in different shapes and forms.  This type of opposition is natural, expected, and driven by no evil calculations/intentions.  For best intentions or worst, it is expressed by our middle class citizens themselves.

Presumably, nearly considerable number of any Nations' middle class are described, and comprehended as a fluid and mobile segments of all other classes. The middle class citizen includes: professionals, para-professionals, and other learned citizens, including the people in the private and non-private sectors of the economy.  This sector of the society are the most measurably affected by the presently burning circumstances that happen to disturb their every day natural flow of life such as: shortages of oil, prices of consumed products, ...........including (but not limited to) particular religious frames of references, in addition to their sharing the sufferings of every day subjugation and exploitation with the rest of their respective Nations. Here, we need to conceptualize that the above description does not apply to all middle class citizens of every and all Nations, as other vital factors also leave their heavy footprints a well.  In the case of the Nation of Oromia, (of-course this subject had been a taboo to discuss so far), it is conclusively true for a few groups of people to be objecting (at a surface value) to their Nation's struggle, as they happen to emerge from their own individualistic interpretation of life. It is a natural journey for the Oromo Nation's struggle to be tolerant (within the limit) at this stage of its own people who unconsciously fall into this category.  It also should be part of an area where the struggle needs to make more effort to involve them in their own struggle more inclusively.  This segment of our Nation does not present a vivid threat to our struggle and the long journey towards the freedom, but only has the potential to be more assets. This is a valid accommodation and they deserve to know this concerns upfront. As for the enemies of the struggle of our Nation, our middle class may appear to them to have the real potential for antagonistic view points of the ongoing Oromo Nation's struggle.   These short sighted aliens, and their agents may conceptualize; once the comfort zones of Oromo middle class is being threatened, the middle class will be on our (the enemies) side.   This can readily be inflamed often by the enemies' purposeful, and intentionally divisive propagandas as seen so far at different levels within the struggle. They were wrong about Oromo's middle class then, now, and in future.  Because, once the dust settles, and the Oromo struggle regain its momentum, the potential for Oromo middle class to join their own national struggle increases very rapidly as proved in 1990 when OLF entered Finfinnee.  What happened after that is another shenanigan with the other Abyssinian regime. But suffice to say that OLF did leave behind a remarkable and on-forgettable foot print beyond the expectations of the Abyssinian rulers within a very short period of time. It was/is this natural potential of the political organizations of Nation of Oromia to mobilize its Nation so rapidly, unimaginably and superbly that continues to haunt our enemies every time they happen to hear about any Oromo political entities even those who they (the Abyssinian regimes) happen to call them "Legal opposition Parties", let alone OLF with a clear manifesto for pure Gadaa Democracy, and independence!!!!!!!!!!!!! 

The second internal opposition comes from the few Oromo citizens who are consciously used as a tool and foot soldiers for the enemy of their Nation.  The driving force for such few unpatriotic opportunistic Oromos do not hold that much secrecy than material GREED, and Individualistic power hunger.   Yet, it remains beyond the natural Oromo cultural DNA to understand these causal factors for a pure Oromo citizen(s); for being intoxicated and blinded, and descend to such a degrading low level of Orommummaa, and allow themselves to be utilized for the continued colonization of their own Nation. It was such Oromo elements who used the weakness within the Oromo National struggle, particulars within the OLF to desynchronize the steps towards freedom and turned around and abused those teachable moments, while using those weaknesses as a license to criticize the struggle of the Nation of Oromia. No competent Oromo compatriot denies the existences of mistakes when the dedicated Oromo people are engaged in an organized fashion to combat the backward Ethiopian Colonialism including daily societal heterostructure rebuilding in the only honest way they happen to know how. Therefore, it is fair to conclude, that wherever there is a purposeful activities, expecting a perfect results would not be within the norms of human-beings capacities. But not grasping the momentums, including failing to lend the organization to learn from the past wrong decisions is an easily predictable formula for an organizational disaster. As the Oromo proverb goes "kan mamni biroo nama arrabsuurra, kan abbaan ofiisaa of arraabssutu caalaa nama guba" jedhaa Oromoon durii. The journey for freedom starts from within each and every Oromo citizens themselves.  One can not free his/her Nation unless he/she frees him/her self first from the psychology of establishment, and the colonial frames of minds which had been perpetuated by exploitative alien entities through the Nation's Educational institutions, Health systems, Financial enterprises, and all Social media....etc. Through out the past century, this topic is/was also viewed as a taboo to discuss within our communities in most areas. But it is inescapable social phenomenon that deserves appropriate exhaustion.  Yes dwelling on it may produce unfavorable result for our Nation. Therefore, assuring those who still needs to be assured that there is nothing wrong with your culture, language, and history should be among the "to do" lists for all the Oromo compatriots.       

It is part of Oromo culture not to view one-self better than any of the other Oromo brothers and sisters because of going to School in Oromia in a particular period of time, say in the 60s, 70s, or 80s when Amharic was the Oromo School's recognized official language.  As a matter of facts, the absences of afaan Oromo in the Oromia Schools during those days were one of the inspiring forces that made "Hirmaata Dubbii" the widely studied book among Oromo Students in the middle 70s, and 80s.  Thanks to OLF and the dedicated compatriots as well as the founding fathers of OLF, Qubee became the media of instruction in Oromia Schools starting the 1990s.  Even if the "Land Reform" and the introduction of the Qubee as an officially recognized afaan Oromo means of instruction (both engineered by Dr. Haile Fidaa) did deliver a huge blow to the Ethiopian Colonial system, the Nation of Oromia remains with a long way of journey towards becoming a free Nation. It is at this juncture that OLF recognized the importance of standing together by working on eliminating all artificial hindrances that drove the able Oromo forces apart for more than 12 years. This is just a start, and we all do have more homework to be done, including utilizing the active and consciously motivating inclusiveness frames of references at the basic and grass-root level in all Oromo societal activities at all levels and places. Remember!!! "What we commonly share as Oromos, much over weighs our differences".       

Organizationally, it is one thing to comprehend the appropriate and the length of journey it entails for National struggle to succeed.  But at the same time, it is inexcusable shortfalls to repeat the same mistake all over again at an individual level, let alone at the National stage. This is why we need to exercise our honored gadaa cultural heritage by respecting our elders, our neighbors, our brothers, and sisters including our selves.  One of the fundamentals according to Gadaa is to be humble and listen to your people, including your elders, and, even adversaries.  It is when you become humble and reflect back on your past deeds, with the ability to listen and accept the criticism with a respectful manners that you learn a great deal about your accomplishments.  You may even surprise yourself by gaining more wisdom to make a decisive decisions on what you need to do more, or alter your ways of approach all together. In this manner one gains respects for him/herself, as well as earning the rightfully deserving admiration for his/her National cause. Otherwise, one easily becomes part of the problems, and gives the seal of approval for those who continue to run around in search for any visible reason to utilize as a license to criticize the struggle of the Nation of Oromia. So far, one way or the other, be consciously, or unintentionally, yes, we have facilitated more opportunities, and ample open venues for the struggle of Oromia to be targeted for unfair criticism. It is true that as far as there remains struggle, there will be always those who criticize the struggle of our Nation just for doing what needs to be done, or falling short of accomplishing what to be done.  But, it becomes another level when we, ourselves provide a fertile ground for rumormongers to acquire the license to criticize the struggle of the Oromo Nation with a sheer quackeries!!!!

The reconciliatory agreement between the two OLF groups was great news and our people from every corner of the World congratulated this overdue news enthusiastically. The reconciliation and unity agreement that was accomplished between OLF-SHG and OLF-QC in November 2012 took considerably a lengthy time, but was concluded with consorted efforts from the shakers and movers of both OLF groups.  This was/is what most of the Oromo people had been patiently waiting for years.  We all said: "it is much better to be late than never". On the other-hand, the pessimists wasted no time, afforded no regrouping chances, but commenced on their hunt for rumors to justify their license to criticize the validity of the announced reconciliatory agreements between OLF-SHG and OLF-QC.  There is nothing wrong with a constructive criticism.  We all do that, and I am one of the strong believers that "constructive criticism" from an independent mind is critically essential for the Oromo cause advancement, and eventual success.  But we need to differentiate between those who criticize while dreaming to demoralize, discourage, and defeat the cause of Oromo Nation. Such individuals have take criticism to totally a new level as observed. On the other side, the procrastination of the implementations of the agreed upon points also facilitates an erroneous message both for the pessimists, as well as positively sentimentalists. Furthermore, it can indirectly bread the seal of approval for those did convince themselves to posses the license to criticize the struggle of the Oromo Nation unfairly.


Ulfina wojjin,
Yaadasaa.  

Weellisaa Abdii Nuressaa Waliin Simannaa Waggaa Haaraa Waashingitanitti

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Gumaachaan Sabaahimaa Oromoo (Oromo Press) Waashingtan Diisiitti Abdii Nuuressaa Hawaasa Oromoo simannaa bara haaraa 2013 irratti yeroo bohaarsu argee gaaffiifi deebii waliin godhee turetti qaamaaf qalbiin dhiyaadhaa.  Gaffiif deebichi dhandhamannaadhaaf kiliippii sirba waltajjiiratti inni sirbeen banama. Siidii isaa kan fuulduratti baasu keessayis sagaleedhaan gara dhumaarratti sirba tokko nu dhagessisee jira Abdiin. Baga bara haaraa geessani; barri kan bilisummaa, kan badhaadhinaafi kan  fayyaa isiniif haata'u jenne.


Gaafiif deebii kana keessatti, Aartessaa Abdii Nuuressaa akka weellisaa ogeessaatti muuxannoofi dandeettii isaa isiniif qooda. Weellisaa Abdiin barbaachisummaa/cimina sirboota aadaa Oromoo kutaalee Oromiyaa garagaraa sirbuurratti yaadaafi gorsa gadifageenyaa laate.


G fi Dn kuni guddina muuziqaa aadaafi ammayyaa Oromiyaarrattis yaada Abdii Nuressaa isiniif dhiyeessa. Aartiin/muziqaan/sirbi Oromoo akka hinguddanne haalota gurguddoo  dhoowwaa jiran tokko tokkorrattis muuxannoo isaa nuuf qoode jira aartessichi. Gumaachaan SO akka daawwatetti, Abdiin weellisaa sirba goggogaa sirbuu miti. Aartessaa haamileedhaan waltajjiirraa utaalee bu'ee ummata jidduu buhuun bashannansiisuuf dursa kennu malee. Dandeettii akkasii akkamitti akka horates Abdii dubbisneerra, itti dhiyaadhaa. Matadureewwan akka mirga waraabbiifi rakkoowwan baranee weellistoota Oromiyaa qunnamaa jiranis ka'aniiru.

Call for Peaceful Protest of all Oromos Living in and Around Washington D.C.

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Jointly Organized by the Oromo Studies Association (OSA), the Oromo Community Organization (OCO) of Washington D.C. area, and Oromo Youth Self-help Association (OYSA) 

".... These are few of the recent examples of the rampant human right violations of the Ethiopian regime perpetrated on the Oromo and other oppressed nations and nationalities demanding their lawful rights. Overall, it is estimated that more than 20, 000 Oromo nationals languish in prison at any given moment over the last 20 or so years of the EPRDF rule.  

To bring these abuses to the attention of the US public and decision makers, the Oromo Studies Association (OSA), the Oromo Community Organization (OCO) of Washington D.C. area, and the Oromo Youth Self-help Association have jointly organized a protest in Washington D.C. We call all Oromo nationals and Oromo friends living in and around Washington D.C. to participate in this peaceful demonstration. 

Let’s get together, stand in unison and speak on behalf of those whose voices have been unjustly silenced. Protest Date: Friday, January 25, 2013 Protest Time: 8:30 AM– 12:00 noon Protest Place: US State Department, 2201 C Street Northwest, Washington, D.C. 20520 Contact: Oromo Community Organization, Washington D.C.: Tel. 202 234 1151 Oromo Youth Self-help Association, Washington D.C.: Tel. 202 705 6585 ....

--------------------------------

Waamicha Hiriira Nagaa Oromoota Washington D.C. fi Naannoo San Jiraataniif


Waldaa Qorannoo Oromoo, Jaarmaa Hawaasa Oromoo Washington D.C.fi Waldaa Walgargaarsa Dargaggota Oromoon wajiin  Gamtaan kan Qindeessan.

 

Mootummaan Itoophiyaa Wayyaaneedhaan  hoogganamu akkuma amala isaa saba Oromoo yakka tokkon maleetti  hidhuu, ajjeessuu, dararuu, biyyaa dhabamsiisuu fi ragaa sobaa itti funaanee murtii hidhaa bara dheeraa fi du’aa itti jigsuu itti fufee jira. Erguma dhiheenya kanaa asi:


1.       Gaafa Sadaasa 1, 2012, hogganoota saba  Oromoo beekkamoo kan ta’an Obbo Baqqalaa Garbaa, Obbo Olbaanaa Leellisaa fi Oromoota  torba kan biroo irratti seera “Farra Shororkeessummaa” jedhuun sobaan himatee murtii yakkaa haqa hin qabne itti muree jira.


2.      Gaafa Fulbaana 30, 2012, lammiileen Oromoo 200 ol tahan bakka nagaadhaan ayyaana Irreechaa kabajaa jiran Malkaa Arsadii, Bushooftuu irraa qabamanii mana hidhaatti darbaman. Erga qabamanii ji’a lama darbus, lammiileen kun hanga ammaa mana murtiitti osoo hin dhihaatin mana hidhaatti ugguramanii hiraaraa jiru.


3.      Gaafa Ebla 6, 2012,  hawaasa Oromoo amantii Islaamaa hordofan nagaadhaan masgiida magaalaa Asaasaa, Arsii, keessaa salaataa Jum’aatirraa  bahanitti dhukaasudhaan Oromoota Afur gara jabeenyaan guyyaa adii ajjeesee, kanneen 200 ol tahan mana hidhaatti darbe. Oromoonni ajjeefaman kunniin: Musaa Gabii, Kamaal Irranaa, Aliyyii Waaqootiifi  Shaafii Jaanoo jedhamu.


4.      Hawaasa Muslima karaa nagaatiin gaaffii mirgaa gaafatee hiriira bahaa jiru hiraarsuu, hidhuu fi ajjeessuun bal’inaan itti fufee jira. Hoogganoonni Musliimotaa 30 caalan sobaan himatamanii ammallee mana murtiitti deddeebi’aa jiru. Musliimonni kumaatamaan lakkaayaman, sababa mirga amantii seeraan kennameef gaafataniif qofa ammallee mana hidhaa keessatti dararamaa jiru. Gaafa Onkoloolessa 21, 2012, Muslimoota Afuritu magaalaa Garba, Wallootti hidhattoota mootummaatiin ajjeefame. Warra ajjefame keessaa sadan isaanii Sa’id Abdallaa, Abduu Odaa fi Husseen jedhaman.  Namoota baay’eetu reebamanii madayan, hedduunis hidhaman.
Kanneen asi olitti tuttuqaman hiraarsa maqaa “shororkeessummaatiin” ummata Oromoo irra geessifamaa jiru keessaa hanga muraasa dha. Yeroo ammaa yoo xiqqaate Oromootni 20, 000 ol tahan sababa Oromoo ta’an qofaaf shakkamoo ta’anii mana hidhaa keessatti rakkachaa akka jiraan tilmaamama.


Roorroo bifa hundaan lammiilee Oromoo biyya keessa jiraatan irratti raawwatamaa jiru mormuu fi mootummaa Ameerikaa fi mootummoota addunyaa dhageessisuuf jecha Waldaan Qorannoo Oromoo, Jaarmaan Hawaasa Oromoo Washington D.C., fi Waldaan Walgargaarsa Dargaggoota Oromoo walta’uudhaan hiriira nagaa magaalaa Washington D.C. keessatti geggeeffamu qindeessaniiru. Hiriira kana irratti ummanni Oromoo Washington D.C. fi naannoo ishee jiraattan akka hirmaattan dhaamsa lammummaa isiniif dhiheessina. Tokkummaan humna! Tokko taanee, harka wal qabannee, lammiilee keenya hiraarfamaa jiraniif haa falmannu!

Guyyaa: Jimaata (Friday), Amajji 25, 2013
Sa’atii: Ganama 8:30 AM – 12:00
Bakka: US State Department, 2201 C Street Northwest  Washington, DC 20520
Quunnamtii:  Waldaa Hawaasa Oromoo, Washington D.C.: Tel.202 234 1151                           Waldaa Walgargaarsa Dargaggoota Oromo, Washington D.C.: Tel. 202 705 6585 -----

For a multimedia announcement of this rally, please see Gadaa

TV Oromiya's Visual Presentation: Social Media Revolution

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Bultum Omer, anchor of TV Oromiyaa Magaalaa Toronto English service, does an excellent visual presentation/narration of Oromo Press's, "Becoming Part of a Social Network Revolution," Bultum Omer adds many interesting examples of how Oromo journalists are using social media at TVOMT in Canada. These are all worth your time watching it. The visual  presentation opens with one of the best Oromo rap music on Oromia as of yet,  and ends with a freedom song by Taaddalaa  Gammachuu. This video needs to be revisited as we believe that social media are the ultimate tool for mobilizing the Oromo for collective actions in the diaspora and in the homeland, Oromia. If you are a visual-learner type who can get easily tired of reading long texts, this video  can be your good learning tool. Feel free to share it if you find it useful.  

Meanings of State-Sponsored Attack on Oromo University Students

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By Qeerransoo Biyyaa
 
Turning Learning Grounds into Hunting Grounds

 
For the last one week, Oromo online and social media have been abuzz with the news, reactions, press releases, tweets and status updates of EPRDF/TPLF regime's large-scale "federal police" raid on unarmed Oromo university students at the Science College of Addis Ababa University. Obviously, the students represent the most brilliant minds of our society in the empire. 


The policy of turning universities that are supposed to be learning grounds into hunting grounds for Oromo students is part of the age-old systematic campaign of depriving the Oromo nation of its brightest intelligentsia as a way of fulfilling what the TPLF regime states as "finding a final solution to narrow nationalism/nationalists" in its party publication known as Abiyotawi Demkorasi (Revolutionary Democracy) and Hizbawi Adera (People's Custodian).

The crackdown constitutes an intentional action that isolates and subjects Oromo students to physical and emotional trauma as well as well as to the abrupt ending of their academic career by armed state security forces.


Beyond Isolated Incidents  


Qeerroo, Oromia's visionary youth movement that is known for its signature symbol of clenching barbed wire with bare fists and raising hands in a show of unity, broke the news that over 113 students-- a large number for university students predominantly from one nationality--were raided, and detained without arrest warrants from their dormitories. According to Qeerroo and the Human Rights League of the Horn of Africa's (HRLHA) Urgent Action, of the 113 students arrested and immediately subjected to torture, Gammachuu Abdii has already died from heavy beating. HRLHA reported that several Oromo students "have received from minor to major life-threatening injuries."


It is important to note that killing, maiming, disrupting the education of, denigrating and demoralizing Oromo school children following racial slurs is not an isolated incident; it is a recurring phenomenon that dates back to 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.  But in the 2000s, the pattern has taken on a massive form in terms of the number of Oromo students attacked. This attack, as past ones, has been provoked by the Tigirean security agents on the Science Faculty campus. Consistent with the OLF statement "It is the Oromo that is insulted, the victim, who is arrested and beaten as well," authors of the ethno-racial slurs were spared violence by mere belonging in the ethnicity of the most powerful minority elites of the day. 


Their tormentors/colonizers fear the sheer potential of these students in becoming the voice of the Oromo after graduating. For the TPLF regime these phenomenon is a strategy of eliminating actual and potential dissent from the brains that can think gazillion times farther into sophisticated abstractions, ideas and practices. Losing hundreds of young Oromo scientists, researchers and engineers overnight from fields of study, which Americans call "the STEM fields", is a huge loss for our nation. 


The profile of the students range from 1st year to 4th year, majoring in Engineering (s), Math, Biology, Chemistry, Geology, Physics, Computer Science, Health Science etc. These youth did not just suddenly arrive at these moments of their achievements. Oromo students had to study for at least 17 years of their lives before they enter college, overcoming the odds of harsh and impoverished life in rural and urban Oromia, where access to good schools and amenities is still very few and far between. By disrupting the lives and the education of these teenagers, the regime is just doing what ethno-racist apartheid systems do--maintain dominance over others via brute force.


Root Causes

Don't be surprised that I have not discussed what led to this in the first place. I think you know it if you grew up being an Oromo or if your brain is wired the Oromo way. The root causes of the sufferings of our people is not the daily denigrating posters Abyssinian students post on the walls of campuses, in toilets and shower rooms, or utter from their hateful mouths to instigate violence. The root cause is the fall of Oromia into the hands of uncivilized aliens who are proud of savage verbal and physical violence against our civilians. The regime's security intervention  in support of  Tigirean students against Oromo reveals where the ethno-racism and apartheid-ness lies.  

Colonizers are selling away the lands of our ancestors to foreign landgrabbers, and taking away the degrees of our students, shutting all means of survival available to the Oromo people.   Oromo can't farm because their land is sold off to wealthy foreigners  and habeshas; Oromo can't learn because they are dismissed and jailed en masse. Those who graduate can't find jobs because the economy is controlled by others.  


What Can We Do?

Amplifying the dwindled voices of Oromo students in particular and the Oromo people in general is essential at this time when the Oromo own no single independent media in the Ethiopian empire. Editorials, press releases can  lend useful moral support for local struggles in Oromia and show that we cannot be silenced, but in and of themselves words won't become the solution to Oromia's long-standing problems.  Actions can! Yet, we have to keep speaking up against injustice. 


Advanced preparedness/preemptive collective actions are ways toward true freedom that will allow us to raise our youth to become what they have dreamed to when they were innocent kids--scientists, medical doctors, pilots, engineers, social scientists, lawyers, artists and teachers. Until then, the wishes our children make, the dreams  they dream, and the hopes they espouse will be controlled by those with real power who want to extinguish them.       


In short, assaults on Oromo students in Ethiopia's higher education institutions are a significant part of targeting the Oromo people for continuous genocidal destruction. "God helps those who help themselves," said Benjamin Franklin. Let's help ourselves so God can help us. In fact, our own Oromo action leader J/Gammachiis Ayyaanaa eloquently said "Biyyi jagina [Goota] lubbuu isaa isaaf kennu hinqabine yeroo hundaa garba," [A nation that does not have heroes who can offer up their lives to defend it will always remain in slavery."]

 





Meet Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas: The Unusual, Long Journey of Oromo East African Slave to North America circa 1820

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By Qeerransoo Biyyaa



Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas, 1820-1942

"Grandpa Charlie":  The Man and the Story 



In this feature multimedia story, Oromo Press presents the unusually compelling story of how Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas (circa 1820 to June 19, 1942, Texas), an Oromo (African American) slave who ended up on North American plantations nearly two centuries ago, according to our source Xerkell Plamer and Lucas's surviving family. 





Histories and stories of East African slaves who crossed the Atlantic and arrived on North American shores is a less familiar  story compared to a relatively well known history of slaves of  West African origin.  In particular, the history of slaves of Oromo descent arriving in the United States on  ships two centuries ago is less heard off since the Ethiopian elites deny involvement in enslaving the Oromo people.  While the travel routes of  Oromo sold into slavery in Europe, the Arabian peninsula and South Africa are relatively better understood, those slaves who were taken to America across the Atlantic are less/unknown among the general public and historians alike so far.

Research into this story began with Twitter interactions with Xerkell Palmer, one of the youngest descendants of Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas, who lives in Texas. At age 9 Xerkell developed a strong curiosity in discovering her multi-great grand-father's origin.

Xerkell, 23, who said her own baby photos resembled "Grandpa Charlie"'s commented "Most people today don't know that any  people, any Ethiopian, any Oromo were ever slaves. They think it only happened on the West part of Africa."

Despite the absence of official documentary evidence substantiating whether Charles Lucas spoke Afaan Oromoo or he  self-identified as an Oromo as of yet,  his family for years conducted painstaking research in forms of collecting photos, hearing and comparing stories and faces of various slaves of East and West African origins and examining the history of slavery in Ethiopia. Based on this and other developing evidence, the family of Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas have traced his place of origin to be Oromia of  the 1820s.


Xerkell talked about two familiar story lines in her family  about Charles Lucas: a) that Charles was brought to America with his father at age 12 , and (b) that he was brought to America with his entire family from Oromia.  Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas, known for his quick mind and stubborn personality, moved around from plantation to plantation in Virginia and Georgia,  eventually settling down in the Lucas plantation in eastern Texas where he was buried with his wife. After emancipation, his former owner gave him a parcel of land and he became a share-cropper.  His descendant, Xarkell, explains that Charles Stanford Lucas learned how to read and write soon after emancipation. However, the family has not discovered  whether Charles Lucas used  his new-found reading and writing skills to write a journal about his formative years.

Evelyn Lucas-Palmer, Charlie's great-granddaughter, and Xerkell's  great-grandmother, who met  "Charlie" twice during his final years when he was 120 years old, related to Xerkell that "Charlie left a great impression on me." The young girl Evelyn Lucas-Palmer imparted to the family that Charlie and his wife Alie Prothro-Lucas were survived by 10 children.

  Learning About  Roots Changes Life

Xerkell describes her feelings of the the moment she discovered her root:

"...I feel privileged to learn about my ancestry that far back...I was really fortunate my great, great grand-mother was able to bridge this many generations...I was born in 1990 and he was born in 1820, we are 170 years apart, but I feel incredibly close to  him and his experience..."

Our source spoke at length about  the importance of learning one's origin, especially in present America, where "younger people [Africans] want to become Westernized, and abandon their culture."  She emphasized how discovering her Oromo East African root has changed her life when she states, "If you don't know where you are from, you don't know where you are going."


Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas's  Descendants in Pictures



Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas, 1820-1942
Alie Prothro-Lucas (Wife, Jan. 1848- May 1928)












Cornelius Lucas (Son, born May 1877)
Evelyn Lucas-Palmer (Charlie's great-granddaughter, Xerkell's great-grandmother)
Mona Palmer (Xerkell's Grandmother)
Rydell Martin, descendant (Cousin)

                                                                                                   














Xerkell Palmer, Youngest Descendant of  Charles "Charlie" Stanford Lucas, and our informant. 

We hope that this will spark further interest in creating  a much desired and overdue connection between the Oromo community and the African-American community in the United States.  We also hope  that researchers and historians look into this and other less known areas of the Oromo or East African origin of African Americans. We wish Xerkell the best of luck in finding the missing members of Charlie's family.

Photo Credit:

All pictures used in this story were supplied by  Xerkell Palmer, to whom Oromo Press owes a great deal of gratitude and credit. 







OROMO CIVIC SOCIETY GROUPS CALL FOR PEACEFUL PROTEST IN WASHINGTON DC, LONDON

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ANSWER THE CALL: WIPE THE TEARS OF OROMIANS  IN GULAGS/ CONCENTRATION CAMPS OF EMPIRE    


Dear All,

The Oromo Community Organization of Washington DC Metropolitan Area (OCO), The Oromo Studies Association (OSA) and The Oromo Youth Self-help Association (OYSA) call upon all Oromo nationals, friends and family members living in and around Washington D.C as well as in other states of the United States of America to participate in a peaceful protest scheduled for Friday, January 25, 2013 in front of the US State Department.The location, date and time of this protest is indicated below.The protest is jointly organized by OCO, OSA, and OYSA and its objective is to bring the human rights abuses of the current Ethiopian government against Oromos and other peoples in Ethiopia to the attention of the US public and decision makers.We once again call upon all Oromos to participate in this peaceful protest.Should you have any question regarding this matter, please do not hesitate to contact us via phone numbers: 202-234-1151 and 202-705-6585. For additional information, please see the attached flyers.

With best regards, Joint Organizing Committee


MAPS AND DIRECTIONS TO the RALLIES IN DC AND LONDON

Washington DC 
Location, Date and time
Location: US State Department
2201 C Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20520
Date: Friday, January 25, 2013
Time: 8:30 am – 12:00 noon



View Larger Map


London: Date and Time




Place: In front of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, King Charles Street, London SW1A 2AY
Date: January 25, 2013
Time: 10am – 5pm More info on the London Protest here


View Larger Map 



AFAAN OROMOO   FLYER                           
             ENGLISH FLYER 





Misappropriated Foreign Aid Funds Used to Ramp Up Repressions in Oromia, DC-London Demonstrators Said

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Picture credit: VOA Afaan Oromoo Service 


Oromo residents in the United States and the United Kingdom staged protests on January 25, 2013, being  exemplars of unity for Oromos from all walks of life in the Diasporas and the homeland, Oromia.  

According to  the civic society organizations who organized these rights demonstrations, the objective was  "to bring the human rights abuses of [by] the Ethiopian government against [the] Oromo and other peoples of Ethiopia to the attention of the U.S. public and decision-makers." A joint statement by five Oromo civil society organizations--Oromo Studies Association, Oromia Support Group, The Human Rights League of the Horn of Africa, The Oromo Community Organization Washington DC, and the Oromo Youth Self-Help Association-- further highlights the official core demands and issues raised by the demonstrators in London and Washington.  In addition to demanding the release of all Oromo political prisoners in Oromia and Ethiopia, the statement cites the "wrong" foreign  policies followed by the British and American governments toward the ultra autocratic regime in Ethiopia:

Ethiopia receives$3 billion in aid each year. Donors claim it is on the road to democracy but this is wrong. Scores of Thousands of political prisoners are being tortured in Ethiopian prisons. Millions get food aid while millions of hectares of arable government [sic] [Oromo]  land are rented cheap to foreign investors. Ethiopia has one of the biggest and best-equipped armies in Africa, but over one third of its budget is given in aid. We call on the US Government to promote real democratic change [???] in Ethiopia...
The joint press release pinpoints to major  aid misappropriations by the donors and the Horn's biggest  client or "dependent colonial  state," Ethiopia.  Foreign aid  is complicit in massive human rights violation in Oromia and Ethiopia in that the regime has used it to: forcefully and illegally evict millions of farmers of Oromia and the south from ancestral lands they have  used for subsistence farming;  build-up and sustain the largest repressive partisan military on the African continent  (a mono-ethnic  group army in a multinational empire) and vicious Janjaweed-like paramilitary  groups such Liyu Police ; rhetorically use the language of "development", "terrorism", and "democracy", to mask the repressive super-architecture  the ruling party, EPRDF/TPLF, has built over two decades with foreign aid money.      



 The transatlantic protests, which were well organized and well-implemented both in England and the U.S., can be said to have achieved their goals.  The thoughtfulness of the messages on the placards such as "Justice and Liberty for Oromo People!!, We Are All Bekele Garbaa!, Oromia Shall Be Free, and USA Stop Supporting Dictatorial [terrorist] Regime in Ethiopia" show just how much hard work and talent the organizing youth and adults put in in the weeks leading up to the protest.  Overcoming all odds, including distance and inclement winter weather conditions,  the messages of the plight of the Oromo people were indeed taken to these governments regardless of what they will do with them. 


The human rights rallies send some strong thematic messages to: 

1) the Oromo to continue engaging collectively (in unity) like they just did in London and Washington DC; 
2) the United States and the United Kingdom to stop "supporting Ethiopia's dictatorial  regime with tax-payers' dollars and pounds" ; 
3) to Olbana Lelissa and Bekele Gerba and to close to 50,000 Oromo political prisoners that the Oromo people are out to free them in every way and to free the entire Oromo nation from long-standing colonial occupation.  
4) the Ethiopia's regime that Oromos are fighting back for their rights and no one can stop them.  

Outstanding Message of Practical Unity 

The most appealing part of this protests is the kind of outstanding unity that the Oromo Diaspora showed in years by agreeing upon core common national issues at stake and coming together. This is despite slowly healing and disappearing differences and factionalism of the past.  One would be impressed with the renewed  sentimental conviction and reassertion by the crowds that the Oromo/Oromia is one nation under God.  

 The next stage of the rally would be to to follow-up with the U.S. and the British governments to see what they are doing with the demands. 


Foreign Media Turn Blind Eye 

 The Oromo are hungry for the attention of international media commensurate with massive rights violations against them in the Ethiopian empire.

 It is unfortunate that American and British mainstream media, except the VOA, have ignored to cover these events for whatever reasons.  Obviously,  it is up to us to struggle and free ourselves although a press coverage in the Washington Post, the BBC or the New York Times would be nice, but difficult to get due to the supposed alignment of these media with their own nations' primary interests.  If we believe that America and the U.K. governments are financially supporting one of the worst brutal minority dictatorships in Africa, namely the TPLF/EPRDF Ethiopia regime, there is no reason to expect that the media of these countries will listen to our side even when we stand in their face and shout human rights.  Media take their cues from the policies of their governments and corporations for "manufacturing consent," to use Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky's articulation of how the powers that be use media  to dope humanity. 


Perhaps, we are also to blame for not relentlessly working on creating rapport and contacting the international press in times of great needs.  It would be productive to think about how to win the international media over so that they would dedicate a coverage commensurate with the Darfur-scale violence visited upon the Oromo people by the narrowly-based regime in Finfinne.


It is inviting to launch oneself into conspiracy theory when answering legitimate, perennial questions such as:



  • Why are Oromo stories globally uninteresting despite a Darfur-scale state violence against them? 
  • How do we explain a global system that accepts perpetrators of injustice, but rejects real victims of systematic violence?


    Above all else, Oromo must keep up with this tradition of independently telling one's own stories of human rights. The best solution to entrenched problems are often found by looking within for resources and insights.  
     

    Please watch the following excellent YouTube videos for other powerful messages these  peaceful demonstrators sent to all of us and to others: 

    Multimedia Coverage of the London and DC Human Rights Marches 

      DC Rally by Dagalee Media

     

    Washington DC Rally by VOA via Gadaa.com 
    London Rally by Qeerroo in London

    Aleellaa WMOn Mirga Dubbachuu Dubartoota Oromoorratti Bane

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    Guraandhala 3, 2013, Galma walga'ii  Awustraaliyaa dhiyeenya magaalaa Miilboornitti godhame keessatti, waardiyyoonni Waltajiin Marii Oromoo (WMO/ODF) galma eegaa turan kan afur ta'an dubartii Oromoo tokkittii, Minishaa Girmaa jedhamtu kan gaaffii gaafachuuf yaalaa turte, callisiisuudhaan galma keessaa dhiibanii baasuuf yaalanii ture. Minishaa Girmaa dorsisaafi aleellaa jara WMOtiin irratti banameef osoo hinjilbbiinfatin galma keessatti viidiyoo waraabuu ishee itti fufuudhaan keessi WMO maal akka fakkaatu golgoleessitee ummata achi hinturreef saaxiltee jirti. Mormii Lencootaa lamaaniif  qabidu akkasitti ibsite Minishaa Girmaa : "...ani akka isaa Booleedhaan nama ba'ee miti! Ani [QBOtti] maatii dhabeetan itti ba'e [biyyaa ba'e]!" 





    Galata viidiyoo: Minishaa Girmaatiif

    Durumaanuu dhabini akka fedhii Itoophiyanummaa tarkaanfachiisaa jirutti ummata Oromoo heedduu biratti laallamaa jiru kuni, amala surrii keessa riphee ture haaraas agarsiisee jira. Amallii inni haaraan kuni kan baayyee nama naasisuufi tarsimoon WMOn mirga shamarraniifi dubartootarratti hordofu dubartootarratti waraana banuu akka ta'e calaqqise.  Gochi dhiibbaa WMO dubartittii Oromoo Minishaarratti godhame "eenyummaan warra dhaaba kanaa hogganuu eenyu?" gaaffii jedhuuf, sammuu ummataa keessatti  fedhii baruu qabsiisee jira. Namoonni tokko tokko hoggantoonni olaanoon WMO " isaan warra dubartoota Oromoo jibban sani!" jechuun sabaahimaalee hawaasaarratti yaada garagaraa laachaa jiru. Dhaabichi ejjennoo farra-dubartootaa qabatee as bahuun isaa gocha Minishaa Girmaa dhiibuufi callisiisuu sanarraafi deeggartoonni dhaabicha kan yaadota jibbaa dubartii (misogynistic comments)  marsaaleerratti kennanirraa hubachuun nidanda'ama.


    Hoggantoonnifi miseensonni WMO  tokko tokko dhiitaa mirga dubbachuu dubartittiirratti godhameen mormuurraiyyuu, dubartittii arabsuu, maqaa-xureessuufi balaaleffachuurratti xiyyeeffatani. Fakkeenyota kanneen haa laallu:


     saani jedhe: yaa Biyya Faranjii hundaa wal qixxeesse,intaloo karaa irra bulaa turtetu dhufee akkas namatti haasawaa,Safuu dhabuu nama salphisatti ufii uf salphifte,Ergaa Tigree ti moo ergaa Shanee dulloomteeti,dhaamssa eenyu akka isiin bakka buutee geggeessu jirtu namaaf hin galu,namni mana haadhaa abbaatti guddate akka kanaa miti,ollama gaariillee qabdi hin fakkaattu intaloon,kun waan teedaati.

    Faajjii jedhe: This lady must know how to talk and ask queation [sic] ,she [sic] so ingnorant [sic] bad manarisim [sic] . [Dubartiin kuni akka itti dubbattuufi gaaffii gaafattu dirqama baruu qabidi. Baay'ee walaaltuufi amala-badduudha] 

    Qeentee jedhe: Waan Adde Minishaan dalagde hedduu nama qaanessa. Garuu eenyummaa ishee agarsiifte malee waan biraa miti. Haala kanaan waan akkasii kun yoo fooyya’uu baate eessa iyyuu hin geenyu. Namuusa dhabuun kun guddisa baduu irraa madda.
         gurmesa jedhe: such type of arrogance can never take her anywhere .. learn how to debate. She has to go to School. [Oftuulummaan akkasii essanuu namuu hinga'u...akkatti dubbatan bari. Isheen mana barumsaa galuu qabidi]

           Abdeta jedhe: isheen marattuun tuni ajandaa jeequu qabattee waan seente   fakkaatti...


    'Dubartiin Oromoo ulfoodha ykn kabajamtuudha' aadaafi safuu jedhu cabisuudhaan, warri WMO dubartoota keenyarratti waraana jechaafi qor-qalbii banaa jiru. Mirga gaaffii gaafachuufi yaada ishee walbaan ibisachuu otoo qabiduu dubartiin kuni maaliif akkasitti arrabsamti, dhiibamti? Kuni ejjennoo dhabichaa ta'uun isaa ifadha haga ibsa baasanii dubartoota Oromoo maraa dhiifama gaafatanitti. 

    Gochi dhiibbaa Minishaa Girmaarratti godhame kuni lammiileen Oromiyaa gocha isheetiin boonanis  faaruu akka dhangalaasaniififi akka "ishoo nitolchite gootittii Oromoo jedhaniin" taasiseera. Fakkeenyaaf, warri mirga dubbachuu dubartootaaf dhaabbatan Gadaarratti akkas faa jedhani:

    Daannoo jedhe: Oromtitti Goobanootatti bookiste, qeerranty akka keety waqayyo nuuf haadabalu, safuu. 
    birmadu  jedhe: Safuu safuu tun salphian guddaa dha. Baga salphattan .Oromoon mirga isaa irratti eennuun illee hin dhiisu usaa gadi ta’a!!
    obsaa jedhe: Ummanni Oromoo aadaa dimokiratawaa waan qabuuf malee jarri ODF ofiin jedhamtu kun kan waraanni itti banamuu qabudhayyu ture. Garaagarummaan isaan Oromota gidduutti uumaa turanii fi jiran diinota Oromoo fayyade malee Oromoof bu’aa tokko illee hinbuusne....
     CaaltuuOromiyaa jette: It is sad that Oromo Dialogue Forum/Waltajjii Marii Oromoo is turning into such an anti-Oromo women and sexist organization. [Nama gaddisiisa WMOn gara dhaaba farra-dubartoota Oromoofi dhaaba saalarratti hundaa'etti of geeddaruun isaa] Did you see how many men tried to drag the poor lady out of the hall? [Dhiironni meeqa dubartittii miskiintittii [goota] tana kutaa sana keessaa harkisanii baasuuf yaalaa turan argitee?]Walakkaan ummata keenyaa dubartoota. Dhaabini dubartii salphise kun essayyyuu gahuu hindanda’u. Dhironni asirratti dubartittii arabsuu/tuffachuun yaada kennitan mee irra deebi’aa viidiyoo sana laala akkatti dubartitti kutattuu kana afaan cufsiisuuf yaalan hubadhaa; amma dubartii sanaa geenyaa jedhaa of madaalaa? Ija dunuunfannee tiifoozoo  ta’uu otoo baanne wayya. Dubartii kabja dhoowwuudhaan wallaalummaa keenya osoo agarsiisuu baannee gaariidha! Nagaan.

    Yaadalaattonni biroo immoo, hoggantoonni olaanoon WMO QBOn akka duubatti deemu ummata qoqooduufi qabsicha diina jala galchuurratti bara dheeraaf hojjechaa akka turan himannaafi gaaffii dhiyeessani. Gabaasa guutuu yaadota dubbistoota Gadaa.com laaluuf as xuqi.

    Walga'ii WMO Awustraaliyaatti ta'erraa kan hubatamuun danda'amu dhimmi inni ijoon hoggantoonni olaanoon isaanifi warri ija dunuunfatanii isaan faana deeman jibba dangaa hinqabine dubartoota Oromoof qabachuu isaaniiti. Hoggantoonni WMO dubartootafi shamarran keenya jilbiinfachiisanii callisiisuufi cunqursuu yaalanis, dubartoonni Oromoo tole jedhanii akka hinfudhaneefi mirgoota isaanii  guutuuf akka irratti qabsaa'an Minishaa Girmaa akka fakkeenyaatti Awustraaliyaatti nutti agarsiistee jirti. WMOn ibsa ejjennoo idilee baasee mirgoota dubartoota dhiituu isaaf dhiifama gafachuufi ummata keessatti nama salphisuuf beenyaa kaffaluu qaba.



    Haga qaama saba keenya walakkaa warri ta'an dubartoonnis bilisoomanitti, gonkumaayyuu bilisoomuu hindandeenyu! Injifannoon dubartoota Oromoof!






    MAIN REASONS WHY OROMO DIALOGUE FORUM SHOULD BE DISSOLVED

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    By Observer2013

    Top 10 reasons why Lenco Lata and Co. should consider dissolving  Oromo Dialogue Forum (ODF) and doing something productive for themselves and the Oromo people.

    1. Oromo/Oromia has too many leaders who are capable of leading the struggle other than them;

    2. They have the right to create a party, but anything they establish, ODF included, is going to fail because they lack popular credibility because of unsuccessful  credentials in leading the struggle for over 40 years; What changed now? Did the Lencos morph into other superhero figures all of a sudden?

    3. Lack of struggle-related methodological clarity won't make them different from OPDO or Oromo Federalist Congress; they will surely lose if they go home. They will be thrown into jail like Bekele Gerba, Olabana Lelisa, Birtukan Midekssa, Andualem Arage and Eskinder Nega and so on;

    4.Gracefully retire (gadamoojja'uu ykn soorata ba'uu) and write books/memoirs  specific to their field experience in the Oromo national struggle so people can learn from why they failed;

    5. ODF has already held way too many pointless public meetings and wasted valuable time and money. We have never seen any new party that has gone on meeting-spree in such a short time in our entire life;

    6. Be around their families and prepare for  personal health issues related to the last years of their lives;

    7. Get over memory failure that no Abyssinian would give up power for majority or democratic rule without military + diplomatic victories;

    8. Alliance with G7 and northern reactionary parties is a wrong and unsustainable path to freedom. Alliance with oppressed peoples of the South  such as  Oromia, Afar, Ogaden/Somali, SNNP, Gambella, Gumuz would have made much more sense given the common history of colonization and persecution. As always, ODF leaders have no plan B,C, D, E... and Z; ODF just wants to create unnecessary divisions/confusions  to no avail while the Oromo camp is in the process of consolidating historic unity;

    9.   Western governments respect and support only those opposition groups who have demonstrated  strength or real-politkal power (military strength, popular support). "Haatuu ilma dadhabaa hinjaallattu!" jedha mitiiree jechamini Oromootuu? [Even a mother does not like a weak and submissive kid.]; and

    10. A party established out of personal vendetta for being fired from OLF because of disciplinary issues is a house of cards; it will fall apart if a strong pro-liberation wind blows and shuns these big losers, I don't mean weight although that is also true.

    "...Rakkadhe jettee hindhaqin mana gumaa, Si gaafata lubbuun goota kumaa"

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    Matadureen maxxansa biloogii kanaa sirba weellisaa Oromoo haaraa Ashannaafii Diinqarraa fudhatame. Ergaan isaa warra siyaasa ayyaan-laallattummaa geggeessan maraaf barumsa haa ta'u. Ashannaafii Diinqaa aartessaa haamileefi kaayyo gariin sirbu ta'uu namoonni cidha sirbaa inni irratti weelliserraa nibeekitu, keessumaayyuu warri naannoo Minisootaa-Oromiyaa Xiqqoo-  magalaalee lakkuu Miniyaapoolisiifi Seentpool jiraattan.   Aartessonni ykn og-uumtonni haaraan gaafa warra turanitti makaman, aadaafi afaan keenyatu guddata; qabsoo keenyatu jabaata. Kanaaf, asbahuun raawwiiwwan akkasii nu gammachiisuu qabu.

    Reading and Reacting with Excitement to Helen Epstein-Expanded

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    For the record, a portion of this blog post is a reaction of satisfaction to Helen Epstein's latest article on sub-Saharan Africa or Black Africa: "Obama: Failing the African Spring?" The article appeared in The New York  Review of Books.She is known for authoring another well-written piece titled "Cruel Ethiopia" before.  This version is the expanded version  based on some additional basic research.

    In the current article she looks at cases of Ethiopia, Uganda, and Kenya  in light of the failed Obama Administration's foreign policy that keeps repeating the same mistake made by several generations of American presidents about supporting narrow-based elites that lead Ethiopia and the Horn who make best fortune out of the broad peoples' miseries. 

    I recommend your read both articles. I personally got inspired to see a very rare writers who stands for the "Truth"  in Helen Epstein. I personally don't know Helen Epstein, but I know her excellent work  is tingling to the intellect, at least to mine. Below is an excerpt of an off-the-cuff  remark I posted on The New York Review of Books after reading the current article. A Waaqeffataa by faith, where the Waqeffannaa religion faces persecution as much as Islam does in Ethiopia , I sympathize with the peaceful cause of Ethiopian Muslims whose questions for religious freedom are yet to be answered.  Below  is the raw comment:

    HelenEpsteinizing EPRDF/TPLF Politics 

    A balanced piece of work. I read your earlier work "Cruel Ethiopia"! Your articles are well-researched, written and honest. Many other special-interest writers and talking heads on Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa have done a great disservice to broad-based quest for human rights, democracy and equal opportunity in  "Cruel Ethiopia".  This is so to the extent that the words, "democracy" and "development" have become dirty words  or empty signifiers in popular understanding.

    Supporting reform is overdue! Secular or religious, social movements are suppressed in Ethiopia. Movements (e.g. OLF, ONLF, Ginbot7) start out peacefully and are often forced to take violent turns by government provocation itself. The Ethiopian government is obviously dominated by ethnic Tigire minority elites. These elites are unwilling to share power or resources with nations such as Oromo, Oromia, Ogaden and all other marginalized regions in the country.

    It is a tragedy of power politics as you pointed out that the Obama administration, much like Bush, follows a militarized policy towards purely brutal dictatorships in the Horn of Africa. I completely agree with your assessment: 
    " More than half a century of post-independence African history has shown that focusing on stability, security and development while ignoring democracy and human rights is self-defeating, because it undermines those very goals."--very, very articulate, indeed! Your material is worthy of quotes and respect.

    This preoccupation on misplaced counter-terrorism efforts by bolstering up the military capacities of unpopular regimes, like Tigrean-led Ethiopia, is fundamentally destroying the fabric of Oromia, Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa. The stories of development propaganda we hear on the state television every day for years are all what they are--propaganda. 


    The "Our Great Leader" narrative  interwoven with "development" mantras relating to Hidase Gidib (an ambitious dam project on the Blue Nile) and Gilgal Gibe II (hydro-electric project) is just a proof for a general worship for tyranny within the EPRDF/TPLF even after Meles Zenawi was long gone.  Human rights organizations testify to the fact that these projects are "devastating the lives of remote indigenous groups" in southern Ethiopia and Oromia.   

    Zenawi died, but his one-party-one-man-one-ethnic-group system remained in place without alteration. The change in personality as head of state to Hailemariam Desalegn itself did not save the Omo Valley, located in the SNNP region where the man hails from a minority Walayita group. Since security structures, the military and the money are controlled by Tigreans behind the scene, this replacement is  rightly "a change without improvement," where human rights abuses are spiralling out of control in Oromia and other regions prone to cheap land-grab deals.  

    For rare species of Oromo elites in the empire, including young students from universities, their fate is one of being hunted in several hundreds--jailed, killed, tortured and fired from universities.  As commented on this blog before, Tigirean leadership can be more vicious under Hailemariam Desalegn than under Zenawi because this man does not have his own stance and because he does whatever invisible powers behind the scene tell him to do.  Some have not hidden their excitement that Hailemariam Desalegn is "more moderate" than his predecessor, but this claim is largely nullified by  the bleakest human rights conditions that we see in Oromia in years.  Not an insult, but the new strongman is  a "jellyfish", without his own spine/backbone to make decisions or not to make decisions that are devastating.      

    Today, no official employment/unemployment figures are available for the Ethiopian empire or its oppressed and underdeveloped regions. The misery can be deeper than we know.  The only statistic we know about employment is for  those 4 to 5 million who were forcefully recruited into EPRDF membership since 2005 with a party-enlarging strategy developed by Hailemariam Deslagn known as the "1-to-5 model" (one member recruits five new people) .  

    The country is behind on every indicator, be it life expectancy, satisfaction of basic needs and human development index,  despite the occasional face-lifts it gets from some misguided foreign humanitarian foundations on things like "reduced child mortality", calculated solely based on the factoid stats furnished by the regime. Statistics supplied by unelected Ethiopian authorities are not trustworthy whether on economic growth, child mortality or population sizes. So, I view them carefully, with deep suspicion.

    The increasingly militarized U.S.-policy towards Ethiopia and the Horn,which has a long history, is specially destroying the fabric of members of dissident and unrepresented nationalities such as the Oromo (over 50 million) who are readily accused of "terrorism" because of dissenting, wanting self-governance or for  imputed views they hold or simply for membership in the Oromo nationality. The Ethiopian Muslims' case is another key area, where the regime has played a destructive role, instead of resolving it, as Helen Epstein's article treats it in detail.

    Thanks for reading,

    Visit our Blogzine at:
    http://oromopress.blogspot.com/



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