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It was a year
in which Ethiopian Americans organized effectively to launch a
controversial bill designed to promote democratization efforts,
thereby provoking the Government of Ethiopia to fight back by
spending a huge amount on lobbyists. What all those resources
diverted to American legislative processes might have done for
Ethiopian relief and, yes, Ethiopia’s own democratic
processes!
Indeed, what
good might have been done if all Diaspora Ethiopians had also made a
serious contribution to improve life at home in an area like
medicine, engineering, education, IT, or water resources?
The public
processes needed for Ethiopia’s democratization are what I sought to
advance during the past year when I attempted, through a series of
short statements, in a bid to enhance communication among
Ethiopians. To be sure, at times this meant I became no more than a
ferinji target for both sides to vent against.
Each time I
credited the Government with something, certain opposition elements
accused me of having been bought out by an unscrupulous regime; each
time I credited the opposition with something, some Government
apologists accused me of having been brainwashed by revanchist
Diaspora extremists.
One critical
reader in Sweden, after following my suggestion to re-read what I
had written, changed his mind: “I have read the material you sent to
me and I understand more what this is about. Your view is very
balanced and may not be accepted by those who own the only ‘truth’
”.
Some
respondents who were disappointed with certain of my points
encouraged this effort nonetheless, as did Marta Tesfaye.
“I beg you to
forgive those who have not given you the benefit of the doubt and
continue to stand up for Ethiopia. As you yourself said we have a
long way to go before we start learning how to treat each other with
respect even when we disagree. But try to do your best and I know I
am asking for a lot, their discouragement and the misunderstanding
get in the way. As you know the situation is getting worse and even
more polarized and we need your help,” Marta said.
And once in a
while, my efforts elicited comments such as this from Yohannes Abebe:
“Thank you for your courageous efforts to start an honest
intellectual debate about the current Ethiopian political crisis.
You have no idea the level of impact you are having with my
generation.”
Whether or not
that is so - of course I hope it is - I attempted in each article to
present “both sides” - as though there are only two; sadly, that is
how the game is being played as of now. It was an effort to let
each side see that its position could be understood while at the
same time inviting it to consider the perspective of the other.
In my first
article, I encouraged the Government to become less repressive
toward the media and encouraged journalists to develop more
professionalism and integrity in their reporting. A visit to Kaliti
Prison occasioned a portrayal of contrasting viewpoints in following
article, with a call for “room for dissent, protected by just laws
and civil institutions, as well as a willingness to fight
nonviolently for divergent views even when in a disadvantaged
minority.”
In the “Two
Tales of One City,” I sketched seemingly incompatible narratives
about Ethiopia’s history that underlie surface resentments in the
present. What followed was an overview of political developments in
Ethiopia since the May 2005 election, listing both achievements and
mistakes made by the EPRDF regime, the opposition parties, and the
EU observers.
The others
moved beyond this monopolization of public discourse by the non-stop
antagonism between EPRDF and CUD advocates. “What Happened in the
Past 12 Months?” simply drew attention to a number of other
neglected happenings.
“More People
More Hunger” focused on the looming catastrophe posed by Ethiopia’s
unchecked demographic explosion. Drawing on the pioneering work of
Professor Mesfin Wolde Mariam, Daniel Assefa, and Sahlu Haile, I
showed that spiraling population growth figures in a vicious cycle
including smaller farming plots, deforestation, soil despoliation,
chronic hunger, and widespread malnutrition.
In my articles
which concerned Tigrayawinet, Oromo options, and Beta Israelis,
respectively, I dealt with issues of ethnic separatism, arguing that
although different groups may have distinct interests and agendas,
the historic reality of a successfully multiethnic nation needs to
be respected.
In the wake of
all these purportedly even-handed interpretations, one of my readers
wrote: “You have done an excellent job representing the different
sides empathetically. But you have not told us what can be done to
move beyond the current impasse.”
Perhaps not
explicitly enough. But a number of Ethiopians have done so,
eloquently.
Consider
Professor Alemayehu Mariam’s astute analysis of the principles and
dynamics of nonviolent political action. Consider Ambassador Samuel
Assefa, who urges Ethiopians of all persuasions to meet together in
small groups to begin to talk to one another openly, honestly, and
respectfully. Consider Michael Aman Andom’s remark regarding my
efforts to bring such groups of Ethiopians of diverse perspectives
together: “It’s good to hear anytime fellow Ethiopians can gather
and communicate effectively . . . It’s positive whenever we can make
such progress because it’s a precedent nonetheless” – and his
conviction, despite all, that “there are open-minded folks who are
tempered with pragmatism, understand the modern economic world and
how it functions, have respect for the opinions of others, are not
quick to judgment, not hot-tempered, know how to lose battles and
win wars, respect rule of law, and have a fundamental and profound
respect for human life and empathy and desire to cure the Ethiopian
people’s plight.”
Or listen to
Dr. Costantinos Berhe Tesfu (PhD), longtime advocate of Ethiopian
think tanks to provide nonpartisan, professional investigations into
the problems of Ethiopia’s development, who commends “innovative
political partnerships . . . to marshal our knowledge to play a
constructive role in the renaissance of our politico-cultural
make-up, values and institutions.”
Listen to the
appeals of Abate Kassa, Brehanu Abegaz (PhD), and other signatories
of the Citizens’ Charter for a Democratic Ethiopia, who “call on
political parties (including the TPLF/EPRDF) and civic organizations
to hold back on their sectarian concerns and instead focus on a
common agenda” – one that “embraces the diverse Ethiopian family and
aims at expanding the political space for exercising those human,
civic, and political freedoms that are enshrined in international
conventions.”
Consider the
spirit behind the proposal of Ambassador Imru Zeleke to convene an
all-inclusive conference to which all civic organization and
political parties will be invited to discuss all issues regarding
Ethiopia: “our diversity is our heritage and our wealth, and the
emblem of our civilization, of which we are all proud.”
What impedes
adherence to such evidently constructive visions?
Forty years
ago, in Wax and Gold and related statements, when I hoped for
a concerted effort by modernizers to form groups devoted to
professional development, political democracy, and cultural
inclusiveness, I identified a few factors from the traditional
culture that impeded such an advance: narrow individualism, verbal
sadism, chronic suspiciousness, and circumlocuitous communication
(wax and gold).
Many Ethiopians
agreed with this diagnosis, most recently Dessalegn Shiferaw who, in
a round-up of a dozen related traits such as sem matfat (character
assassination), teretary (chronic mistrust), getterenet
(stubbornness and lack of compromise), and meqeyem (holding
grudges) declared it “time to declare war on dysfunctional
behaviors”.
At the same
time, I encouraged Ethiopians to respect and draw on factors from
traditional culture that could energize the quest for democracy and
national development. These include a time-honored passion for
fairness and justice, and a deep pride in their nation and its
independence that transcends narrow local interests. They also
include an exceptional capacity for compassion and forgiveness,
manifest in such customs as those concerning illness and death of
close ones, stories like those of Mariam forgiving the cannibal of
Khmer, and traditions of political forgiveness following the defeat
of enemies. They include the remarkable ways in which Oromo gumi
gayo assemblies are organized to promote respectful deliberation
and achieve their constant goal of peace, nagaa.
Indeed, all of
the cultures of traditional Ethiopia have admirable mechanisms of
conflict resolution. Ethiopia’s positive factors include the
distinctive way in which followers of different religions, despite
obvious tensions, got along remarkably well together, sharing
holiday celebrations, going on pilgrimages together, and
intermarrying.
Ethiopians’
realism about the limits of human nature can serve to curb the
excessive ambitions of modernization ideologies, their ability to
show humor in adversity can cushion the inevitable bumps on the
roads to modernity.
Indeed, all
Ethiopians deep down have more that links them together than what
pushes them apart. I suggested this in Greater Ethiopia in
1974; I sense it more strongly than ever now. I wish all my readers
could have shared the experience of talking to the prisoners at
Kaliti in the same week that I talked to those responsible for
detaining them. I have never heard such similarly eloquent
professions of faith in the destiny of Ethiopia and in the vision of
a multiethnic country whose citizens were guided by the rule of a
common set of laws.
This deep
commonality of sentiment should be sufficient to prod partisans to
step back briefly from their emotionally-driven mindsets, even if
the country were not facing troubles from unstable and hostile
neighbors.
If there were
one single commitment that could sweep the archaic dysfunctional
habits away, it might be to enact an Ethiopian variant of the
Japanese example depicted in Eiko Ikegami’s book The Taming of
the Samurai (1995): to effect a change in the warrior ethic,
thereby uniting the courage, hardiness, and social commitments of
the old-style gwebez warrior with the values of compassion
and justice. The New Warrior employs the tools of nonviolence to
destroy the enemy completely – by turning him into a friend. All
concerned must practice ways to embody constructive disagreement.
Many Ethiopians
have taken steps to promote civility in public discourse and
nonviolence as a way of life, including the Ethiopian Institute for
Nonviolent Education and Peace Studies, research on civility such as
Yodit Zenebe Mekuria’s study on civic education in the Somali
province, Makeda Tsegaye’s studies with the University for Peace
Network, the nonviolence education programs of the Awassa Youth
Campus, Mercy Corps’s work in conflict resolution, the UN-supported
Ethiopian Peace and Development Institute, and many others.
Troubles
internal and external require Ethiopia to rise to new levels
of societal health, yet the political crisis of the past year grows
like a cancer on the Ethiopian body politic. The crisis can be
resolved even if only one of the two parties musters the courage to
do the right thing.
The challenge
is clear. For the Government, it means to acknowledge its
election-related mistakes: to apologize and make amends for its
over-reactions that resulted in excessive killings and
imprisonments, for starters; to commit itself more publicly and
aggressively to actions that implement reforms of the judicial
system, the press legislation, and the human rights record; and to
bring the trial to a prompt conclusion. This would show the world
how far they have come since harboring the hardcore revolutionary
doctrines with which they took power in 1991.
For the CUD
leadership, it means to acknowledge the mistake they made in not
taking over the task they were elected by the people to perform – to
administer the capital city and to represent all their constituents
in Parliament – thereby provoking protests that led to so many
unnecessary deaths. This would show a willingness to acknowledge
those changes and manifest a loosening of the hardened images of the
other side, which undergird their antipathy to the “system.”
It will
probably require at least as much courage to take such stands as
Ethiopian warriors showed in fighting the Italian armies at Adwa and
as underground arbeññotch during the talat gize.
Ferinjis
have played a constructive role in Ethiopia’s modernizing
developments over the past century, but they have exacerbated
domestic tensions as well. In any case, the issues at hand can be
resolved only by Ethiopians themselves. The inner strengths and
quest for national self-determination represented by the spirit of
Adwa can be recovered and fortified.
My counsel to
Ethiopians is not to depend on ferinji governments and
institutions to save the situation. To move toward a national effort
to promote democratic institutions and economic development, the
motto should be: Simuññ y’agare lijjotch Yihé neger ye-ityopiawiyan
new!
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