Americans usually ask their student guests and their new immigrants: Do you have Thanksgiving in your country? My own reply has not always been as persuasive as I or the questioners would have liked it to be. But, in fact, there is an elaborate form of Thanksgiving tradition among the Oromo of Ethiopia which ought to be told to the satisfaction of American curiosity. This essay attempts to explain the genesis of Erracha and its meaning and purpose for the Oromo cultural identity. It is hoped that the information in this discussion will enable Oromos and Ethiopians, in America and elsewhere, to say they have Thanksgiving holiday.
About the Oromo, it has been said that a cultural or social behavior in which they are equal or ahead of their ethnic counterparts in Ethiopia is their capability to assimilate. Their early conversion to Islam, later to Orthodox Christianity, and to the various protestant faiths, in the past 100 years or so, attest to cultural openness and mental flexibility of the Oromo. While the Oromo have assimilated with the Ethiopian officialdom, Islam, and Orthodox and Western Christendom, very few forms of Oromo cultural identity have been assimilated in the mainstream of Ethiopia’s social and cultural life. Erracha is one of the few mentionable exceptions being revived from dormancy and official neglect into recognition as a festive public affair.
About the Origin of Erracha
Erracha is an old Oromo tradition of Thanksgiving for which there are only few sporadic newspaper accounts and even fewer documentary information. Most contemporary knowledge about Erracha and its synonym, irresa, come by way of oral history passed down to generations. According to oral history, the Oromo are no new comers to the concept and consciousness of the existence of one supreme power over all nature. They called Him, Waqqaayyo, and worshiped Him as their creator and provider for their needs. This Oromo cognizance of God, being One and Supreme, is evidenced by the constant and frequent reference to Waqqa Tookiicha or Tookiicha Waqqayyo. It implies that there is only one God to whom all creatures belong and all humans bow in prayer and thanksgiving. Thus it appears that long before converting to Islam, Orthodox or the Western variety of Protestantism, the Oromo had a concept of a monotheistic God, who is divine, masculine, ever present, all knowing and all powerful. We can thus say that the forebears of the Oromo were no religious primitives, as their views of creation, religion, and attributes for God, have common features with other world religions including, Christianity, Islam and Judaism.
Further more, the Oromo reverence for ancestral spirits, Ayana, reveals their belief in the plurality of ways by which God would be manifest, sought and worshiped; in life after death and the immortality of the soul. The traditional Oromo theology also recognized the role and function of temporal intermediaries, divinely inspired priest, Qaallu, and priestess, Qaallitti. It is one example that the Oromo traditional religion was progressive on issues of gender equality in religious affairs. Seen in contrast, ordination of women for the priesthood has only recently entered the arena of consideration by the Catholic Church and protestant denominations. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church which has a long history of coronating and crowning women queens to rule the country, but has never been known to have had women leadership in ecumenical governance. Islam is even more silent on the issue. The major religions have more gender inequality than the Oromo tradition, either because they know women to be less righteous or because men are more self-righteous.
Official Day and Place of Erracha
As a general rule, the Oromo masses have known Erracha to be celebrated on a Sunday which, coincidentally, follows another Ethiopian national holiday, Meskel, an Orthodox tradition of commemorating the finding of The True Cross of Christ. The popular site of Erracha celebration is in the town of Bishoftu, known as Debre Zeit, the home of many lakes as well as being the hub of the joyful ceremony. Located between the cities of Addis Abeba and Nazareth, the Lake and the town of Bishoftu draw the largest crowds of visitors from other towns, as well as some from foreign lands. The waters of the lakes and the shades of old sycamore trees are the focal points of the ceremony, symbolizing the eternal presence of God in nature. Those reasons, among others, have given the lake and the town of Bishoftu, a status as an official location for the Erracha celebration.
The season of the holiday also has a special feature owed to Ethiopia’s climatic zone and the official calendar. September is the first month of a new year in Ethiopia when people make new plans or correct old ones for better futures. This time of the year brings a collective sense of blissful vigor, because the cold rainy months would be ending. It is the time when the sun shines the brightest and the flowers blossom everywhere; when the roads are dry for mobility to begin and commercial activities to resume after months of hibernation. It is well and as good as Erracha holiday comes at a time when there is plenty to be grateful, but it’s also a nervous time when children and parents prepare for the start of new school term. From my memories of working on the family farm during the months of winter vacation, September still stirs in me some mixed feelings. While happy at the brightness of things as a whole and the prospect of rest from working the soil in the drenching rains, I also felt nervous about returning to the harsh disciplines of the public schools.
Government schools in those days excelled at disciplining their students. The lashes and scolding meted out for arriving late, missing a day of school, or failing to arrive at correct answers to questions were tests of perseverance or banishment for young egos. I recall many bleeding backs and palms, including my own. For me, September was time for a break from the exacting chores of farm work, as well as a time of anxiety if I was going to last another year in school. In my time, the neighboring mission school was envied because corporal punishment was not employed as a disciplinary method. Of course, there were more other reasons for attrition than just the fear of strict disciplines. And some students still survived the trepidations at the public schools and went on long enough to succeeded, and later to give hope and be role models of support for younger relatives to go further in education and find fulfillment in life. But in those old days, few parents, if any, thought sending kids to school was a reason worthy of thanksgiving. Success in school meant little for the families whose livelihood depended on tilling the land and herding cattle. Contemporary students have better educated parents or relatives who would be role models and give them support in schools and careers. In fact, these days, many parents and older relatives would give thanks and celebrate scholastic or career achievement of siblings.
Meaning and Purpose: Galaata Galchuu
Regarding meaning and purpose, Erracha simply is an annual holiday, or a periodic event, consecrated for Thanksgiving, galaata galchuu. The synonym of Erracha, Irresa, infers the habit of daily prayers and blessings. For centuries, the Oromo have practiced this custom of thanking God for His benevolence, blessings and mercies. For God, Waqqayyo, gives the people their good health to work the land, till the soil and plant the crops; He sends the rains that moist the pastures for the cattle to feed, and for crops to grow and produce good harvest. As people who had seen and participated in Erracha explain the purposes for the festive celebration, the following examples illustrate that nearly nothing is taken for granted and no reasons are omitted from mention in the praises and prayers of Thanksgiving:
for God has led us safely through the dreary winter months
for He has enabled us to smell fresh fragrance of flowers
for He allowed us enjoy the fresh breezes of autumn winds
for He led and brought us from the old to the new year
for He made our crops and plants produce for our nourishment
for peace to prevail in homes, neighborhoods and in the land
for God to eradicate illness, pestilence and plagues
so there may be no hunger or famine on our land
so that those who have no children may have children
so that those who toil may prosper and succeed in life
When the throngs of crowds arrive in Debre Zeit and surround Lake Bishoftu, the town would be virtually besieged by multitudes of well-wishers and bliss-seekers. Or, to give another example, the Erracha ceremony is like Timkett, epiphany, an Ethiopian Orthodox tradition of collective baptism by the riverside. At the Erracha ceremony people pay up their due pledges and enter into new ones, submitting themselves to divine authority. The highest point of the event is the Thanksgiving dance known as hateetee sirbuu. It happens after sacrificial animals have been slaughtered and cooked and the foods are consumed and the thankful people are ready to dance. In accordance with the custom, the presiding officer, the main personality, for the hateetee ritual would be a woman chosen for physical and spiritual fitness, as well as for knowledge of tradition. Thus for those who travel long distances, the Erracha ceremony brings the sense of gratification similar to a pilgrimage to a religious holy place or a visit to a religious shrine.
Other Times and Occasions
It would not be the whole story to say that Erracha celebration is held only in one place, or just on one special day or month of the year. To the contrary, there are other localized reasons for thanksgiving occasions, and celebrations at local and regional levels are more frequent than being just once a year. My source for this remark is my lived experience and recollection of seeing Erracha preparations in the household of my grand uncle who lived and functioned well until he was over ninety years of age. While some relatives became Orthodox, and others converted to Islam or Protestant faiths, the grand uncle stayed steadfast with his traditional belief. Being senior in order of birth and having longevity, he was entrusted with the role of custodian and protector of the land, and he had authority to allocate plots to families according to need and ability to work. He also had the judicial function of resolving disputes among his own and the neighboring clans.
After reconciliation, parties to conflict would be ordered to prepare an observance of Erracha and resume hospitable relations. Non-compliance with the norms carried punitive social consequences, and the grand uncle enforced it because he was a father figure, as well as political and social leader. In my chores making trips to announce pending celebrations, I leaned the meaning and values of Erracha. The celebration in September, at Bishoftu, may be more known, but communities do hold thanksgiving ceremonies at various times and reasons, including Thankfulness:
for safe labor and delivery in child-bearing
for the rains of the planting season
for new crops and bounties of harvest
for alleviation of natural disaster: drought, floods, epidemics or plagues
for victory over hostile intrusions
for the healing and well being of the sick
for the multiplying herds population
for cows bearing calves, giving meat and milk
for the steers and oxen tamed to pull the ploughs
And it was common for non-Oromo settlers in the neighborhoods to participate in the festivities. People sang cheerful praises to Waqqayyo, thanking Him for His gifts of cattle, bread and land that sustain their lives. One of the common praise songs has the following refrain:
Nooruu yaa saawa, nooruu yaa buudeenaa;
siif Waqqayyof yoowanna geessee nafseenkoo.
Land and soil are praised for carrying and producing the food crops. Cattle are adored as givers of milk and meat; for their skins and hides tanned into bedding and clothing; and their horns and hooves made into cups and ornaments. In addition, dunk and urine from cattle and other farm animals are the best fertilizers that enrich the soil to produce good harvests; and dried dunks substitute for firewood with which to cook and heat the homes.
Contrast and Comparison in Practice
It was mentioned earlier that the bases of Oromo religion have considerable resemblance to those of other faiths. Similarities are even closer between Oromo practices and the main religious ceremonious in Ethiopia, such that conversion to Orthodox may not have been a radical transition for the Oromo. For example, the Orthodox ceremonies of Tebel, festive and prayerful rituals in honor of the Saints, share common features with the Oromo tributes to the ancestral deity, Ayana. The Oromo concept of waareega, sacrificial pledge for the Ayana, is similar with Orthodox selaat for the Saints. As we have already recalled, Meskel and Timkett, and Kulubi Gebriel, in Harer, are very popular religious events known and observed in Ethiopia.
While those and other Ethiopian holidays have enjoyed greater official support and sanction of the state church, Erracha is only recently beginning to attain comparable recognition. But of the many celebrations that Oromos and others observe in Ethiopia, Erracha is the only one designated for thanksgiving. Like the Erracha, the major Ethiopian ceremonies are held outdoors and generate great abundance of feasting dancing, singing, praying and praising God in thanksgiving. The Erracha, Meskel, Timkett and Kulubi are all collective spiritual exercises of extensive socialization in sharing the gifts of God. The events also involve rituals of washing as symbols of cleansing from the past and starting life anew. During Erracha ceremony, some of the most zealous ones even drive their cattle to drink of the hora, the salty water of the lake, presumed to heal the cattle from any diseases they might have contracted.
As people share foods and drinks freely and openly, the atmosphere of association during the festivities eliminates any feelings of estrangement or strangeness. Sacrificial promises, waareega, or pledges were fulfilled in cash, cattle, crops or other kinds of valuables. Cattlemen would offer up heads of their herds; merchants would give a portion of their profits; farmers give some measure of their produce; and artisans give their services and talents. In addition, community members make contributions for collective sacrifices, Irressa, whereby, sheep, goats and oxen are killed in Honor of God, and cooked and consumed in His praise.
The offering of animal blood is thus another similarity that this Oromo custom has with other religions that recognize blood as an essential sacrifice for atonement of sin. Consistent with the African tradition of ceremonial assemblage, people gather to partake in the solemn feast of thanksgiving, with a prayer offered by the eldest among them. It would not be the political officers of the Ministry of Culture or holders of university degrees; only the qualified traditional elders would initiate the prayer of thanks and ask for blessings. At an invocation for the ritual of breaking and scattering bread and pouring drinks back to the soil, the elder would raise his arms to the heavens and utter the words, Yaa Waqqayyo Hoo Quubba, “Oh, God accept our offering of thanks.” When the people in attendance repeat the words, Hoo Quubba, in unison, they mean “Amen!”, and God is praised and thanked as the source from whom all blessings flow, the original author of all life and giver of all sustenance.
Repression and Assimilation of Erracha
As was mentioned above, Erracha celebration is a cultural identity of Oromo origin which has gone through two contradictory social processes. On the one hand, the policies of the imperial officialdom and the institutions of the Orthodox christendom have discouraged and repressed Erracha as a pagan and heathen practice. Indeed, the political state and the state church of Ethiopia linked up arms so that Orthodox churches were built at sites where the Oromo held Erracha celebrations. Until very recently, no officials of Ethiopia’s regimes or the priests of the Orthodox churches have been known to observe the Oromo ceremony. Rather, Oromos had been warned and threatened against celebrating their thanksgiving, while ordered to obey holidays marked for the Orthodox Church and other secular commemorations named for Ethiopia’s rulers. Many incidents were known when armed police and soldiers had been dispatched to break up gatherings for Erracha ceremonies. At the same time, neither had the Sheiks of Islam or the patrons and leaders of the protestant churches been known as champions of Erracha or other Oromo traditional beliefs.
Thanks to the similarities that its ceremony has with some of the Ethiopian Orthodox tradition, non-Oromos have been adaptive and receptive to Erracha. Thus in spite of official repression by the government and the state church, people of non-Oromo heritages have found some social and spiritual meaning in the yearly event of Erracha tradition. Settlers among the Oromo, Amhara and Tigrean, Christians and those of other ethnic and religious groups, have assimilated the Erracha celebration into their own cultures. As Erracha has transcended the ethnic boundaries, the ceremony in Debre zeit is said to attract as many non-Oromo as Oromo celebrants. It exemplified the degree of Erracha assimilation that an Amhara scholar paid his own money for the construction of the concrete wall around the sacred tree, making a sanctuary of the site of Erracha thanksgiving.
Some of the changes evident since the recent restructuring of government include that, Erracha attracts larger crowds; public officials attend the events; and the ceremonies are accorded security escorts. It also merits a mention that the elevated stature of Erracha has not caused any decline in the celebrations of other holidays. Indeed, constructions of churches and mosques are increasing as evidence of continuous growth in Christian and Muslim populations, and reflective of strong Islamic resurgence and Pentecostal movements among the Oromo. It appears the Oromo are experiencing a dual rebirth of identity, – “born again” in the sense of cultural nationalism and “born again” in the embrace of spiritual renewal. Whether for nationalist ideology or religious dogma, the Oromo ought to be mindful that faith without work has little redemptive value. But a more accurate analysis of identity tension for the Oromo is a task better left for the experts on the subject or, in my case, for another time and context.
Summary and Conclusion
Erracha was discussed as a testimonial that Thanksgiving is an essential feature of Oromo collective spirituality. The revival of its celebration came as the result of a long and costly national struggle in which some people gave their lives and others lost loved ones. The celebration of Erracha, and others like it, can bring some correction to the imbalance inflicted on Oromo identity formation. But, as in most human experiences, most of us simply ride the wave and pay little price, if any. There are also people who would risk nothing, but would be more critical and ungrateful toward those who had put their money, honor or life on the line to affirm the Oromo identity. It goes to show that heroic deeds have double jeopardy, the sacrificial risks taken and the thanklessness of the beneficiaries and those who stay on the sidelines. “The poor will always be with you,” as Jesus was said to have reminded his disciples, There will always be those who, given a hand, would still ask for both arms and demand both legs from those already maimed and exhausted. A permanent relevance of Erracha would be if it is practiced as a corrective for the behavioral anomalies, promoting positive self-concept and self-esteem for the Oromo to aspire to give to human culture and progress. Since the Oromo received Christmas and Easter from Western Christendom, Meskel and Timkett from the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and Ramadan from Islam, Erracha is an opportunity for the Oromo to pay their dues to world cultures, and the ceremony is a chance for others to reciprocate mutual respect.
Finally, by way of conclusion, I extend credit to Mitiku Kura who interested me in this subject and sent some notes used in this discussion. In this, I have tried to provide some information to lay the foundation for Oromos and Ethiopians in America, Canada and elsewhere, Christians, or otherwise, to affirm their shared culture has a Thanksgiving tradition.
_________________________________________________________
Admasu Shunkuri, Ph.D., is a professor at New Mexico State University, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
Feleke v. INS
Janis M. Clay (argued), Minneapolis, MN, for Petitioner.
Joan E. Smiley, Washington, DC, argued (Frank W. Hunger, on the brief), for Respondent.
Before MAGILL,1 BEAM, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
BEAM, Circuit Judge.
1
Wolde Amanuel Feleke appeals the denial of his application for asylum and withholding of deportation by the Board of Immigration Appeals. We remand for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
2
Feleke is Ethiopian. He contends he will be subject to persecution if he is deported. By way of background, Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown by a coalition of opposition groups in 1974. A Marxist/Leninist regime led by Mengistu Haile Mariam (Mengistu) gained power after an intense period of violence known as the “Red Terror.” Mengistu remained in power until 1991, at which time the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) took power after a lengthy civil war. The EPRDF then established the Transitional Government, a coalition of several groups dominated by the EPRDF, which remains in power today.
3
Feleke left Ethiopia in 1973 to study medicine in Greece. He remained in Greece until 1989, except for a one-year residency in Germany in 1982-1983 and a one-month visit to Ethiopia in 1987. He entered this country on a visitor visa in 1989. He is a medical doctor, fluent in six languages, and is presently employed as a translator at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Feleke is associated with an umbrella group, the Coalition of Ethiopian Democratic Forces (COEDF), that opposes the Transitional Government. He joined the group at its inception in Baltimore in 1990 and remains active in the group.
4
Feleke first applied for asylum in 1991. His application was denied and he did not appeal that denial. In 1993, he was served with an order to show cause why he should not be deported. He had a hearing before an Immigration Judge in April 1994 at which he was represented by counsel. Feleke admitted deportability but sought asylum.
5
At the hearing, Feleke testified that he fears imprisonment or assassination on his return to Ethiopia because of his affiliation with COEDF. He also testified that the current Ethiopian regime persecutes members of his ethnic group, the Amharas. He further testified, however, that he has never been arrested, detained, or threatened with arrest or detention. Feleke’s mother, brother, and sisters still live in Ethiopia and have not reported any threats or any instances of people coming to look for him. His family has not been threatened.
6
The record shows that shortly before the hearing, several hundred anti-government activists, not including Feleke, were invited to Ethiopia for a peace conference. On arrival in Ethiopia, seven of those individuals, all COEDF members, were detained by the Transitional Government and were imprisoned for two months. Six of them were freed when they renounced violence. One of the detainees apparently remains in prison in Ethiopia. This episode was the subject of much discussion at the hearing. The Immigration Judge independently reviewed online news sources to ascertain the fate of the detainees and to understand the relationship between COEDF and the Transitional Government. The record additionally contains numerous exhibits including miscellaneous articles and reports about Ethiopia. Also part of the record is Feleke’s earlier asylum application, that, instead of focusing on his affiliation with the opposition groups, relied on a friendship with an official of the former regime as the basis for his fear of persecution.
7
An Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) asylum officer also testified at the hearing. He stated that he had investigated Feleke’s application for asylum and recommended that it be denied. He relied on Amnesty International Country Reports, State Department Country Reports and other human rights publications in making that determination. Those documents were admitted into evidence and are part of the record.
8
After reviewing the evidence, the Immigration Judge found that Feleke had not established eligibility for asylum. He found that Feleke failed to prove that his affiliation with the opposition groups would cause him hardship if he returned to Ethiopia. Although the Immigration Judge found that conditions in Ethiopia were far from ideal, the evidence did not show any particularized danger of persecution to a COEDF activist, like Feleke, who renounced violence and who had not been part of the Mengistu terrorist regime. Accordingly, he denied the application for asylum. Feleke’s counsel then withdrew his representation and Feleke appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals (Board).
9
Feleke filed a pro se letter brief to the Board, along with additional evidence that had not been presented to the Immigration Judge. That evidence consists of several articles regarding the political situation in Ethiopia and a letter dated October 4, 1993 showing that Feleke is a member of the Ethiopian Medhin Democratic Party (MEDHIN), another group opposed to the Transitional Government. The Board declined to consider that evidence. It found that Feleke had not shown that the evidence was unavailable before the hearing and he was bound by his attorney’s tactical decision not to present it. Although Feleke had not filed a motion to reopen the proceedings, the Board further found that if it were to consider the evidence in the context of a motion to reopen, the evidence would not warrant reopening the proceedings. The Board affirmed the denial of asylum for essentially the same reasons set forth in the Immigration Judge’s decision. It determined that the State Department Country Reports comported with the Immigration Judge’s findings that Feleke was not likely to suffer persecution as long as he did not advocate violence and had had no involvement with the Mengistu regime.2
10
On appeal, Feleke contends that the Board abused its discretion in refusing to consider the additional evidence. Feleke has also filed two motions in connection with his appeal: a motion to adduce additional evidence; and a motion to adduce evidence regarding suspension of deportation. Those motions will be considered with the merits of Feleke’s appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Denial of Asylum
11
Feleke’s appeal principally challenges the Board’s refusal to consider additional evidence. Because that issue is inextricably intertwined with the merits of Feleke’s application for asylum, we will consider the merits. An application for asylum is a matter statutorily vested in the discretion of the Attorney General, acting through the Board. Nyonzele v. INS, 83 F.3d 975, 979 (8th Cir.1996). Therefore, our review of the denial of asylum is limited to determining whether there has been an abuse of discretion. Id. Similarly, our review of the denial of a motion to reopen is limited to determining whether the denial was an abuse of discretion. Aiyadurai v. INS, 683 F.2d 1195, 1199 (8th Cir.1982). An abuse of discretion occurs if a decision is without rational explanation, departs from established policies, invidiously discriminates against a particular race or group, or where the agency fails to consider all factors presented by the alien or distorts important aspects of the claim. Nyonzele, 83 F.3d at 979.
12
An asylum applicant bears the burden of demonstrating statutory eligibility for asylum by showing that a reasonable person in his or her position would have a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 U.S. 421, 423, 107 S.Ct. 1207, 1208-09, 94 L.Ed.2d 434 (1987). A well-founded fear is one that is both subjectively genuine and objectively reasonable. Nyonzele, 83 F.3d at 981. Subjectively, the alien must demonstrate with credible evidence that he genuinely fears persecution; objectively, he must demonstrate through credible, direct, and specific evidence that a reasonable person in his position would fear persecution. Id. Fears of economic hardship or lack of opportunity do not establish a well-founded fear of persecution. Minwalla v. INS, 706 F.2d 831, 835 (8th Cir.1983). Even attacks on family members, absent a pattern of persecution tied to the applicant, do not establish a well-founded fear of persecution; nor do isolated acts of violence. Nyonzele, 83 F.3d at 982-83.
13
An applicant for asylum must generally show an objectively reasonable basis for a present fear of particularized persecution on the basis of his political opinion. See id. at 983. Absent any evidence of particularized persecution, an applicant nonetheless may obtain asylum if he can show: (1) a pattern or practice in his native country of persecution of groups of persons similarly situated to him on account of their political opinions; and (2) his own inclusion in and identification with that group of persons such that his fear of persecution upon return is reasonable. Makonnen v. INS, 44 F.3d 1378, 1383 (8th Cir.1995). A “pattern or practice” of persecution is “something on the order of organized or systematic or pervasive persecution.” Id. In addition, an applicant may prove a well-founded fear of persecution even without showing a pattern or practice of persecution in cases where “the more egregious the showing of group persecution–the greater the risk to all members of the group–the less evidence of individualized persecution must be adduced.” Id.
14
The Board’s decision that an alien is not eligible for asylum must be upheld if supported by reasonable, substantial and probative evidence on the record considered as a whole. Nyonzele, 83 F.3d at 981. We are not at liberty to reweigh the evidence. Id. In order for us to overturn a finding that an alien is not eligible for asylum, the alien must demonstrate to us that the evidence was so compelling that no reasonable fact finder could fail to find the requisite fear of persecution. Id.
15
We find that the Board’s determination is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. Although Feleke has shown that there is political unrest, general ethnic conflict, and some intolerance of opposition views in Ethiopia, he has not shown an objectively reasonable basis for a present fear of particularized persecution on the basis of his political opinions. He has shown that other COEDF members have been detained, but he has not shown that his situation, or his position in the opposition movement, is similar to those that have suffered persecution. There has similarly been no showing of a “pattern or practice” of persecution in this case. Feleke has shown that of the several hundred anti-government activists invited to Ethiopia for a conference in 1992, only seven were arrested and only one of those remains detained. As for that individual, there are unrefuted allegations that he committed crimes against humanity in the Mengistu regime and is being held for that reason. We agree with the Board’s conclusion, based on the evidence presented to it, that Feleke did not show an objectively reasonable threat of persecution to COEDF members who have not advocated violence or played a role in the terrorist regime. Nor did Feleke show egregious group persecution so as to lessen the amount of evidence of individualized persecution required. See Makonnen, 44 F.3d at 1383. Here, Feleke has shown tension between certain factions of COEDF and the Transitional Government, but has not shown that he is affiliated with those factions.
16
Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion by the Board in its denial of asylum based on the evidence presented to it. The materials presented to the Board did not show the requisite objective fear of particularized persecution–either as to Feleke individually or as to COEDF as a group. However, because it now appears that Feleke may have new evidence of such particularized persecution and of worsening conditions in Ethiopia, see infra at __, we remand for further proceedings.
B. Motion to Adduce Additional Evidence
17
Feleke seeks to supplement the record with additional evidence that was not considered by the Board. Although we are not to take evidence, we may remand to the Board to consider newly discovered evidence and to create an adequate record. 28 U.S.C. § 2347(c); Makonnen, 44 F.3d at 1385. Any additional evidence sought to be adduced must be material and reasonable grounds must be shown for the initial failure to adduce such evidence to the agency. Id.
18
We find that Feleke has satisfied these conditions. The proffered evidence includes articles discussing increasing persecution and violence by the Transitional Government toward groups opposed to the current regime. The most significant documents are two letters, both dated July 28, 1996, from Mesfin Teferra, an administrator of COEDF, outlining human rights abuses by the Transitional Government and expressing a belief that Feleke would be subject to persecution, as a known COEDF activist, on his return to Ethiopia. Also included is a Department of Justice Profile Report, prepared for use by Asylum Officers and dated December 1994, that discusses increasing violence toward COEDF activists. Also significant, though not so particularized to COEDF, is an Amnesty International report detailing escalating abuses in Ethiopia. This evidence of changing conditions in Ethiopia is relevant to Feleke’s asylum claim. Although neither the Teferra letters nor the Department of Justice report were available until after the hearing, both contain information relating to COEDF in particular. We believe that consideration of this evidence is crucial to the development of an adequate record in this case. Accordingly, we remand to the Board pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2347(c). See Makonnen, 44 F.3d at 1385.
19
C. Motion to Adduce Evidence Regarding Suspension of Deportation
20
In this motion, Feleke seeks to adduce evidence on the issue of his eligibility for suspension of deportation. He argues that while his appeal has been pending, he has become eligible, by virtue of continuous residence in the United States for more than seven years, for suspension of deportation. The law governing suspension of deportation, which is now called cancellation of removal, was amended by the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA), which took effect on April 1, 1997. Under the earlier statute, an alien was generally eligible for suspension of deportation if: (1) he had been physically present in the United States for more than seven years; (2) he was of good moral character; and (3) he could show extreme hardship if he were to return to his country. 8 U.S.C. § 1254(a)(1) (Supp.1996). IIRIRA toughens the requirements for cancellation of removal in that it lengthens the required period of continuous residence in the United States from seven to ten years. 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1)(A) (Supp.1997). It also provides that calculation of that time period excludes any time spent in the United States after the initiation of deportation proceedings. 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1) (Supp.1997). This latter provision applies to motions for suspension filed before, on, or after the effective date of the statute. See IIRIRA § 309(c)(5), Div. C of Pub.L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009.
21
We must first address the issue of jurisdiction since this motion has not been presented to the INS. We have jurisdiction to review all final orders of deportation. Nyonzele, 83 F.3d at 979. Our review includes all determinations made during and incident to the administrative proceeding such as denials of asylum, hardship waivers or voluntary departures. Id. If no final order exists, however, we have no jurisdiction to consider an issue. Minwalla, 706 F.2d at 834. Because there has been no action by the Board on the issue of Feleke’s eligibility for suspension of deportation, we are without jurisdiction to consider it. This matter, including whether and to what extent IIRIRA is applicable to Feleke, is for the Board to consider in the first instance.
III. CONCLUSION
22
For the foregoing reasons, this action is remanded to the Board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
LOKEN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
23
I respectfully dissent. After concluding, correctly in my view, that the administrative record contains substantial evidence supporting the agency’s final action, the court remands for consideration of two unsworn letters that were never presented to the agency and indeed were not written by the author, an Ethiopian political activist, until after the Board of Immigration Appeals decision under review. In my view, this use of 28 U.S.C. § 2347(c) goes far beyond our decision in Makonnen v. INS, 44 F.3d 1378 (8th Cir.1995), and impermissibly encroaches upon the agency’s discretion to decide in the first instance whether a final action should be reopened. See INS v. Jong Ha Wang, 450 U.S. 139, 143 n. 5, 101 S.Ct. 1027, 1030 n.5, 67 L.Ed.2d 123 (1981); Osaghae v. U.S. I.N.S., 942 F.2d 1160, 1162 (7th Cir.1991); Ramirez-Gonzalez v. INS, 695 F.2d 1208, 1213-14 (9th Cir.1983). Accordingly, I would deny the motion for leave to adduce additional evidence and affirm.
1
The Honorable Frank J. Magill was an active Judge at the time this case was submitted and assumed senior status on April 1, 1997, before the opinion was filed
2
In finding that the State Department Country Reports relied on by the Immigration Judge called for the same conclusion with regard to MEDHIN membership as to COEDF membership, the Board actually considered the “new” evidence
Ethiopian Human Rights Council
Special Report – May 13, 1997
EXTRA-JUDICIAL KILLING
Ato Assefa Maru was killed on May 8, 1997 at 8:20 a.m. while he was walking from his home in Woreda 12 Kebele 06 to his office. He was killed in Woreda 11 Kebele 10, about a kilo meter away from his home near the office of the former NGO, DAY (now Good Shepherd). Ato Assefa was taking an uphill road that passes along the stone fence of this office. We went to the place and saw that the spot where he was killed has no access for escape.
According to eye witness reports received by EHRCO, Ato Assefa had almost reached the end of the uphill road when a Toyota pick-up driving towards him stopped in front of him, blocking his way. Apart from the driver and the policeman holding a walkie talkie, the vehicle carried six other policemen armed with kalashnikoves and hand grenades round their waist. Ato Assefa tried to pass the pick-up by turning towards the stone fence. At this point an Opel police automobile with a siren which was following Ato Assefa from a close range drove nearer and a policeman at the back seat fired a volley of shots at him with an automatic gun. Ato Assefa died instantly.
Neither the policemen on the pick-up nor those in the Opel automobile ordered Ato Assefa to stop. The police did not fire warning shots into the air nor did they aim their shots towards the victim’s legs as is normally done to constrain someone trying to escape from arrest, but deliberately aimed at his head and chest and shot to kill him right away. When Ato Assefa fell dead, the Opel automobile drove straight ahead without stopping. Then six policemen on the pick-up got off their vehicle and blocked the road in both directions. Some of them searched Ato Assefa’s pockets and also took away his briefcase. Soon a police Land Rover brought four more policemen, dropped them and drove back.
A while later a police vehicle used for carrying corpses came and picked up the victim’s body and drove off via the backstreet of Entoto Comprehensive Secondary School towards the direction of Sidist Kilo. The 10 policemen too climbed their Toyota and followed the car carrying the corpse. Twenty-five minutes after Ato Assefa was killed (at 2:45 a.m.) policemen carrying walkie talkies and armed with automatic guns and hand grenades arrived at Ato Assefa Maru’s house. After explaining that they had a warrant of search they searched the deceased’s house. However, they did not find any fire arms in his house other than tape cassettes, the reports of EHRCO and ETA’s papers which they took away. Twelve other policemen who took control of ETA’s office at the time that the other policemen arrived at Ato Assefa’s house did not have a search warrant.
However, this did not prevent them from detaining on the premise 34 persons, including ETA’s leaders and staff as well as others who had gone there for private business. It was at 6:30 p.m. that the police allowed them to leave after searching their bodies. The police stood guard at the office the whole night. The next day ETA leaders and staff were denied access to their office. At 5:30 a.m., policemen carrying a search warrant issued on May 9, 1997 came and broke the locks of four of the offices. They searched the offices of Dr. Taye Wolde Semayat (ETA’s President), Ato Gemoraw Kassa (ETA’s General Secretary), and ETA Members’ Affairs and Public Relations Offices until 4:30 p.m. and took away ETA’s various documents. The policemen guarding the head office left the premise at 6:00 p.m. on the same day.
At 10:00 a.m. on the day Ato Assefa was killed, an unidentified man phoned EHRCO’s office and said: “Do you know Ato Assefa Maru? Is he your member? And after receiving a “yes” reply, he said that Ato Assefa had died in a car accident and that we could collect his body from Menelik II Hospital. When asked where and when he died, the caller declined to say so, but he added: “Take the body and bury it if you want to.” EHRCO’s staff soon went to the Hospital and saw that Ato Assefa was shot on the head and chest and that the whole of his face and the front left side of his shirt were covered with blood.
At the lunch time news, the government radio reported: The Federal Police Investigation Coordination Department has announced that the members of the anti-peace group which called itself Ethiopian Unity Patriots Front have been taken into custody and that Ato Assefa Maru, who was said to have replaced the Front’s leader and been coordinating its activities, has been shot dead while trying to escape.
The official Amharic daily, Addis Zemen (56th year, no. 201) reported the following in its May 9, 1997 issue: The Federal Police Investigation Coordination Department announced yesterday that the members of the anti-peace group which called itself Ethiopian Unity Patriots Front had been taken into custody and that Ato Assefa Maru, who was said to have replaced the Front’s leader and been coordinating its activities, was shot dead while trying to escape. Earlier, the leaders of the so-called Ethiopian Unity Patriots Front, which had been engaged in anti-people activities, were arrested and their case is pending before the court. Assefa Maru, who had replaced the group’s leader Dr. Taye Wolde Semayat, was discovered while preparing to launch another terrorist act together with his accomplices and was killed while trying to escape from arrest. The Federal Police Investigation Department informed Ethiopian News Service that the police arrested yesterday morning the other members who were in the process of committing terrorist acts in Addis Ababa. The Department disclosed that those arrested with the killed man were Lieutenant Tegenu Jinka, Private Bogale Tessema, Private Tesfaye Getachew, who were all members of the former regime’s army, as well as Solomon Tekle Wold, Yibeltal Simegne, and Mengistu Kibret.
According to testimonies received by EHRCO, the six other people whom the police claimed to have rounded up together with Ato Assefa are reported to be residents of Woreda 11 Kebele 22 and had been detained three weeks ago. Ato Assefa was a resident of Woreda 12 Kebele 06 and his family say that the deceased had no relationship with these six persons.
Ato Assefa was a member of the Executive Committee of ETA. He had also been a member of EHRCO since 1992. On October 6, 1996 he was elected to serve as a member of the Executive Committee of EHRCO. According to EHRCO’s Articles of Association, although a member of a political organization can be admitted to EHRCO, he cannot, however, be admitted if he is a member of a political organization that has a military wing and pursues its objectives through violence. It is only a non-member of a political organization or a member of a political organization that is engaged in a peaceful political struggle that can be admitted to EHRCO. However, although a member of a political organization that pursues a peaceful political struggle can be a member of EHRCO, no one who is a member of a political organization can be elected to serve on the Executive Committee of EHRCO. EHRCO’s rules mandatorily require that no member of a political organization can hold the post of EHRCO’s Executives Committee. When Ato Assefa Maru applied to be a member of EHRCO he had stated in writing that he was not a member of any political organization. At the time of his election to the Executive Committee, Ato Assefa had also told EHRCO’s General Assembly that he was not a member of any political organization. Therefore, EHRCO could not accept the police claim that he was killed because he was found while acting as a leader of the Ethiopian Unity Patriots Front.
Ato Assefa was 37 years old, married and a father of two children. His son is only one year and nine months old while his daughter is just two months old. Ato Assefa was a responsible person who believed in dialogue and peaceful struggle. One cannot believe that a man such as Ato Assefa with heavy family responsibility will join an illegal clandestine organization and put his family’s well being at risk.
Ato Assefa Maru was the kind of person who would obey even a summon by telephone and appear before the law. The Federal Police could have also arrested Ato Assefa either at his home or at his office if they intend to arrest him, or they could have fired at his leg to restrain his movement if at all there was an attempt to escape. He should not have been assassinated in such a carefully organized and coordinated manner. He ought to have been brought before a court of law even if he were found to be a member of an illegal and violent organization.
Dr. Taye Wolde Semayat was charged for allegedly being the leader of an illegal organization called Ethiopian National Patriots Front (ENPF). On the other hand, the organization which Ato Assefa Maru was accused of leading by replacing Dr. Taye Wolde Semayat is reportedly called Ethiopian Unity Patriots Front (EUPF). The two organizations have different names.
What this indicates is the haste of the police to cover up the murder by linking Ato Assefa with the organization which Dr. Taye was accused of leading. Ato Assefa was killed while he was walking to his office and not, as was claimed by the Federal Police, because he tried to escape when he was discovered together with his accomplices while preparing for another act of terrorism. At the time that Ato Assefa was shot dead, no fire arm was found in his possession; the police only found his briefcase, identity paper and some money in his pockets. Furthermore, there was nobody with him at the time of the incident who had surrendered himself to the police.
EHRCO calls upon the Ethiopian government to investigate the killing of Ato Assefa and to bring to court the killer(s). It is a blatant violation of human rights to organize a death squad and have people shot dead in broad daylight in an open street. Hence EHRCO strongly urges the government to take appropriate steps to restrain the security forces from engaging in such acts. The government is also duty bound to ensure the protection of the rights enshrined in Article 15 of FDRE Constitution and Article 6(1) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (which has been ratified by the government) and which provide that every human being has the inherent right to life; no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life. EHRCO urges all those organizations and individuals within and outside Ethiopia who stand for the protection of human rights to condemn the illegal killing of Ato Assefa Maru and to ask the Ethiopian government to bring the killer(s) to justice.
Fatima Roba becomes First African Women to win Boston in 2:26:24!
Lameck Aguta wins the 101rst BAA Boston Marathon today in 2:10:33. Joseph Kamau of Kenya was second in 2:10:44, with Dionicio Ceron in third in 2:10:58.
At 24 miles, Fatuma Roba, the 1996 Olympic Marathon Champion from Ethiopia has a five second lead over Elana Meyer and thirty seconds over Colleen de Reuck. Roba is running well within her self. At 35 kilometers, in 2:01:12, Pippig in fourth, Asari, Tulu, Machonio and Jones.
No Ethiopian since Mekkonen in 1989 has won the Boston Marathon. At 40 kilometers, Roba has 15 seconds on Elana Meyer of South Africa, Roba’s 40k in 2:18:22. One mile to go at 2:20:35 for Roba…
Roba is on her personal best pace, with less than one mile to go—she is headed toward Boylston. Uta Pippig is currently in fourth place–not bad at all for three months of training. It also should be noted that Elana Meyer is recovering from achilled surgery.
Congratulations to Fatuma Roba of Ethiopia, and her winning time of 2:26:24—First African women to win Boston!
In these days of ethnic madness, many Ethiopians consider Tigreans to be self-centered, and even tribalistic. “Where is the Tigrean sense of Ethiopian nationalism?” they ask. If they are not Ethiopians, who is? I hesitate to make such a gross generalization about all Tigreans since I haven’t been in Tigray lately to survey their true feelings towards Ethiopia. I would hate to speculate about their national integrity. However, from what I have seen, read and heard about the members and supporters of the TPLF who live outside Tigray in the rest of Ethiopia and in the West, I have come to realize that they display a terrific ethnocentric behavior.
The supporters of the TPLF and those Tigreans now in power in Ethiopia, including Ato Meles Zenawi, have implied time and again that they are Tigreans, first and foremost, and then Ethiopians. In other words, they have suggested that their Ethiopianess comes second to their Tigreaness. Contrary to this, many Amharas, for instance, consider themselves Ethiopians, first and foremost, and then Amahras, thus demonstrating their great feelings of Ethiopian nationalism and patriotism.
Running briefly through the pages of Ethiopian history, let us analyze why the members and supporters of TPLF incline to be more ethnocentric and less nationalistic than the Amharas.
There are two reasons why the Amhara in general appear to be more nationalistic than the Tigreans. First, the Amharas are more heterogenious compared with the Tigreans because of their geographical locations and the fact that they have intermingled with non-Amhara peoples such as the Oromo. Second, they have had access to state power for the past 700 years, and because of that they had to bear the responsibility of playing a leading role in preserving the Ethiopian Tewahedo Church and the territorial integrity of Ethiopia during those years. The opposite holds true for Tigreans during the past 700 years except the second half of the last Century (1872-89) when a Tigrean emperor, Atse Yohannes IV, ruled Ethiopia.
Let us briefly examine the backgrounds of the members of the TPLF and their Tigrean supporters by having a glimpse of the history of the Tigre, and compare it with that of the Amhara. Of course, when we say let us examine the history of the Tigre or even that of the Amhara, we, in reality, mean to say, the history of the ruling classes of both peoples, since these classes were the ones which decided the fate of the two peoples and the course their history took for the past 3000 years. The most important leaders of the TPLF who are now deciding the course which Ethiopian history is taking are from the Tigray ruling class whose fathers and grand fathers, as well as some of their family members, bore feudal titles ranging from Kegnazmatch to Dedjazmatch. And as such, the major cause of their hostility towards the Amhara is nothing but sheer power struggle, for they consider the Amhara to be their political rival. The common people of Tigray and even the masses of the TPLF fighters have nothing to do with this hostility.
The history of Tigray has its roots deep down in the Aksumite Civilization and beyond. It is impossible to talk of the history of Tigray without tracing it back to the Aksumite and the pre-Aksumite civilizations.
The history of Aksum has been documented in monuments, coins, artifacts, paintings, inscriptions, books and oral literature. According to these sources, the regions known today as Tigray and Eritrea and even beyond them, were identified as Pount about 5000 years ago. The people of Pount traded with the ancient Egyptians in spices, myrrh, incense, ivory, gold and other minerals, medicinal herbs, hides and various kind of woods, as well as domestic and wild animals.
History has recorded the existence of a strong state in North East Ethiopia between 500 and 100 B.C. preceding the Aksumite civilization. It was identified as the Empire of Daamatt. The people of Daamatt had their own unique alphabet and were architects and sculptors. Some of their statues and monuments have survived to our day. One of their famous statues, a lady sitting on a chair, was discovered in Tigray. Though it is 2500 years old, it is still intact. One of their leaders, King Lemene, in one of his inscriptions which has reached our age, states that he was the king of the Daamatt, Saba, Aberra, and the red and the black. The Daamatt Empire had commercial, cultural, religious and linguistic relationships with Arabia across the Red Sea.
Aksumite leaders who ruled in the early Christian era followed in the footsteps of their Daamatt predecessors and continued to expand the Empire. Among the powerful kings of Aksum in the Christian Era was Zoscales. According to a book entitled, The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, written by a Greek traveller in the Second Century A.D., a young and wise leader by the name of Zoscales was ruling Aksum when he visited that magnificent City. Zoscales spoke Greek and controlled the international commercial transactions which took place in his seaport of Adulis. Zoscales had a close relationship with the then powerful states such as Egypt, Greece and Rome. He extended his territory as far as near Port Sudan and the Aden Peninsula. Aksum attained international respect and recognition during the reign of Zoscales.
The successors of Zoscales colonized Arabia and stretched out as far as Nubia and Egypt. However, within Ethiopia itself, they went southward and occupied only a few territories such as the ones inhabited by the Agew, Agame and Gambela peoples. The colonization of Arabia enabled Aksum to compete in international commerce with the superpowers of the day, such as the Turks, Romans, Greeks and Persians.
The towering figure among Aksumite emperors in the 4th Century A.D. was Ezana. In fact, he is one of the greatest Aksumite emperors. He was himself converted to Christianity first, and then made Christianity the official religion of his Empire, even though Christianity had been practised by Aksumites since the First Century A.D. By so doing, he laid the corner-stone for the development of Ethiopian Christian inspired theology, literature, arts, culture, architecture, history, law and music. Ezana loved to record history. He documented his valor and the affairs of his days and the history of his time on coins and in three languages: Greek, Sabean and Geez. He established a close relationship with the Coptic Church of Alexandria and enabled Ethiopia to obtain patriarchs from there up until the last century for about 1500 years. He expanded the territory of his empire beyond the Red Sea, and to some extent, within inland Ethiopia. The Geez alphabet and literature began to achieve a new dimension during his reign.
Aksum continued to be a profoundly Christian city even after the death of Ezana, so that it attracted foreign missionaries to come and convert the “pagans” outside Aksum. Towards the end of the Fifth Century, a group of nine saints from the different parts of the then Roman Empire including Constantinople, Antioch, Rome and Asia Minor headed for Aksum. Emperor Ella Amida II, who was the grandfather of Caleb, was delighted to have them around. The people of Aksum, too, welcomed them. The nine saints went, boldly risking their lives, into the remotest parts of the Aksumite Empire and fought against “paganism” by preaching the Gospel. Their spiritual activity is supposed to have lasted through the reigns of four emperors, such as Ella-Amida, Tazena, Caleb and even through that of Atse Gebre Meskal. Besides evangelizing Ethiopia, the nine saints were also engaged in the development of theology and in literary activities such as the completion of the translation of the Holy Bible into Geez which had started in the early 5th century A.D. The life history of the nine monks (Gedle) written by Ethiopian biographers by itself became a source of Ethiopian literature. Moreover, the canonization of the nine monks as saints by the Ethiopian Tewahedo Church has deeply affected the spiritual life of all Christian Tigreans and other Ethiopians to this day, since these saints are commemorated in Tigray and the rest of Ethiopia every October, June, March, November, December and January.
Kaleb, the son of Ezana, expanded and consolidated his father’s empire in both Arabia and Ethiopia. In addition, he extended his own territory upto Yemen. He made an expedition to Southern Arabia to subdue a rebellious prince and to restore his colony, besides rebuilding churches and towns. Later, an Aksumite soldier by the name of Abreha became the king of Arabia including Yemen, after murdering the new appointee of the Aksumite Emperor. The Emperor forgave him and approved of his kingship. Abreha colonized almost all of Arabia on behalf of his Emperor, built his capital at San’a, constructed marvellous churches, expanded commerce and attempted to invade Mecca and destroy its Ka’ba to stop the people from worshipping idles before the rise of the Prophet Mohammed. After Abreha’s death, his son failed to rule Arabia as effectively as his father. Eventually, assisted by the Persians, who were Ethiopia’s commercial rivals, the indigenous Arabs were able to free themselves from the domination of the Aksumites.
Kaleb’s son, Gebre-Meskel (534-548) A.D., was as great a leader as his pious father. He held his father’s territory tightly as soon as he ascended to the throne. Moreover, he devoted his time to supporting and building churches such as the Debre-Damo and St. Mary of Zion. He is also supposed to have supervised the construction of the Zur Amba Church in Gaynt, Begemedir. He befriended with St. Yared, the greatest poet-composer of Ethiopia, and appointed him to be his “minister of culture.” The respect and support of a great emperor as Gebre-Meskel helped Yared to compose such great lyrics, hymns and melodies that still thrill the souls of Ethiopians of the Tewahedo denomination. His verses became a model for Geez poetry. Yared and Gebre-Meskel introduced the celebration of Hosanna in imitation of Jesus’ return to Jerusalem riding a donkey. The tradition is still observed in Northern Ethiopia. It was Gebre-Meskel who initiated the crowning of an Emperor in a church. It seems that Gebre-Meskel’s contribution to Aksumite Civilization is more of spiritual than material.
In spite of the fact that Aksum lost Arabia at the end of the 6th Century, its influence on its former colony was remarkable. Those Ethiopians who survived in Arabia continued to participate in the military, political and cultural activities of Mecca. Their impact upon navigation was particularly significant. Many of the Arabic vocabularies which had to do with ships and navigation were of Geez origin. On top of that, Aksum continued to dominate the religious life of Arabia in the early 7th Century when the Prophet Muhammed was yet a young man in Mecca. He had the opportunity to hear both the Torah and the Gospel read aloud and discussed in public by the Ethiopian priests with whom he was a friend. Their impact on him has been evidenced by his knowledge of the Bible and his use of numerous Geez vocabularies in the Koran. His connection with Ethiopia, however, was deeper than that. His nurse when he was a baby was an Ethiopian lady. It was to Ethiopia he sent his followers and relatives to find safe-haven with the Aksumite Emperor when they were persecuted in Arabia at a time when Islam was at its infancy. A significant number of Ethiopians was present among the Prophet’s soldiers and entourage.
In addition to Arabia, the Aksumites went as far as Nubia (Sudan) to help the Christian churches there in many ways until the rise of Islam. In the long run, the rise of Islam proved to be an obstacle to Aksum’s spiritual and material progress. Aksum was cut off from Arabia and Christian Europe so that its cultural, spiritual, economic and political developments were thwarted for nearly a thousand years when “the Ethiopians slept forgetful of the world by whom they were forgotten,” as Edward Gibbon put it rightly.
In the 10th Century, the advent of Islam, the lack of a patriarch from Alexandria without which the Ethiopian Emperor and Church were powerless, and the rise to power of a female Jewish (Felasha) warrior named Yodit (Gudit), caused the downfall of the Aksumite Empire. Yodit destroyed many monuments, castles and churches including the illustrious cathedral of Aksum, St. Mary of Zion. She burned countless books of immense value. She persecuted Del Ne’ad, the last Aksumite Emperor of the Solomonic Dynasty and reigned over Aksum for 40 years. When she died, Dil Ne’ad, who had been in exile in Menz, Shewa, restored his Dynasty. He was overthrown again probably around 1030 A.D. by his Agew servant Mera Tekle-Haimanot who claimed connection with the Solomonic Dynasty and established the Zagwe Dynasty.
With the ascension to the throne of Mera Tekle-Haimanot, the link of the chain of the Solomonic Dynasty was broken. The capital city, Aksum, was also replaced by Lasta in Wello, thus moving away the spiritual, political, economic and cultural nerve center of the Aksumites. This way the glorious Aksum lost its significance as one of the cradles of Ethiopian civilization. After the decline of Aksum up until 1974 for about 1100 years, Tigray was first ruled by the Agew, later by the Amhara, Oromo and a few Tigre governor generals who were appointed by the Amhara emperors excluding the time (seventeen years) when the Tigrean Emperor Yohannes IV reigned over the entire Ethiopia.
The Agew are one of the indigenous inhabitants of Ethiopia. They were there and even took part when the Aksumite Civilization was in the making. However, they never had a chance to rule Ethiopia directly until about the 11th Century when they established the Zagwe Dynasty. The greatest leader among them was Emperor Lalibela. It was during his reign that the Amhara started to play a leading role in Ethiopian history. To seize power, when Lalibela waged war against his brother Harbe’ who was supported by the majority of the Agew, the Amhara fought along Lalibela’s side. As a reward for this service, he distanced himself from the Agew and promoted the Amhara to high ranks in his government. As the high ranking officials and soldiers of Lalibela’s government, the Amhara became prominent in Wadla & Delanta, Begemedir, Saint and Weleka. From this time on, the Amhara appeared in the scene to play a vital role in Ethiopian history for more than seven hundred years.
According to Aleka Desta Tekle-Wold, the word Amara or Amhara means people who are free. According to Aleka Taye and Aleka Asme-Giorgis, the Amhara are the descendants of Ethyiopis, one of the settlers of North East Africa, whose name probably Ethiopia bears. Unlike the Tigre, there was no one particular place or defined territory in which the Amhara lived. Nevertheless, it was observed that by the 13th Century, they had settled in Gonder, Gojam, Shewa, Wadla & Delanta, Lasta, Saynt, Meket and Shadaho. The Amhara were as much Christian as the Tigre. Gradually, the word Amhara and Christian became so synonymous that when a non-Amhara was converted to Christianity, it was said of him that he became an Amhara. It has been reported that Emperor Lalibela used the technical know-how of the Amhara to build one of the wonders of the world, the rock-hewn churches of Roha.
The Amhara probably spoke Geez before they created Amharic during the reign of Lalibela out of a mixture of Tigrigna, Arabic and Hebrew, in order to convey across a secret message. Later, when the Amhara mixed with the Oromo, Amharic enriched itself with Oromo syntax, vocabularies and idiomatic expressions. For this reason and as a result of the subtlety of the Amharic language, Aleka Asme-Giorgis asserts that even the Amhara of Gonder and Gojam, let alone of Shewa, would not communicate easily with each other. Gradually, during the reign of Yekuno Amlak, Amharic spread like wild-fire and non-Amhara peoples all over Ethiopia began to speak it. Consequently, they were considered to be Amhara, even as the non-Amhara converts to Christianity were seen as Amhara.
Despite the fact that Emperor Lalibela of the Zagwe Dynasty raised the Amhara to higher ranks and inspite of the fact that he granted them land and tenants, their hearts were yearning for the restoration of the Solomonic Dynasty. This they were able to realize through the help of a famous Amhara monk, Aba Tekle-Haimanot of Bulga, who plotted against Ne’akuto Le’ab, the last Zagwe Emperor, partly because of the promise which the claimant of the Solomonic Dynasty, Yekuno Amlak, made to him to grant the church a third of his Empire if he would help him to dethrone Ne’akuto Le’ab. (Ironically, Yekuno Amlak was in the service of Ne’akuto Le’ab, the last Zagwe Emperor, even as Mera Tekle-Haimanot was in the service of Dil Ne’ad, the last Emperor of the so-called Solomonic Dynasty whom he had managed to overthrow). Moreover, the Patriarch, representing the Church would sit next to the Emperor’s throne at public ceremonies and the Akabe Se’at would control the affairs of the Church in relation to the State. In other words, the Church would have an immense wealth and power in the land. As a result, Christianity, the Emperor and the motherland became synonymous for the Amhara upon Yekuno Amlak’s ascension to the throne. This interrelationship lasted up until 1974 when the Derg separated State and Church after the overthrow of Emperor Haile-Selassie I, who claimed to be the descendant of Yekuno Amlak.
Abune Tekle-Haimanot, supported by the Ethiopian clergy including Aba Iyesus Moa of the Haik Monastery, Aba Yohannes of Debre Damo, and even the Nebure’ed of Aksum as well as the Patriarch of Ethiopia, Abune Kerlos, convinced the pious and God-fearing last Emperor of the Zagwe Dynasty who revered Abune Tekle-Haimanot immensely, that his dynasty was illegal, that he should hand over power without bloodshed to Yekuno Amlak, the “rightful” heir to the throne. After a series of negotiations Ne’akuto Le’ab, whom you can consider either naive or a great man of God, agreed to let Yekuno Amlak sit in the Ethiopian throne upon his death providing the descendants of the Zagwe Dynasty are given due respect and homage as long as the descendants of the Solomonic Dynasty reigned. This way the Amhara throned an Emperor of their choice claiming that he was one of the descendants of the last Aksumite Emperor, Del Ne’ad.
In reality, however, three hundred years had elapsed ever since Del Ne’ad was overthrown. Therefore, the integrity of the lineage was debatable. To legitimize Yekuno Amlak’s Solomonic lineage, he and the Amhara had the Kebre-Negest composed. The Kebre-Negest narrates how, about 1000 B.C., Queen Maqda of Ethiopia traveled to Jerusalem to hear the wisdom of King Solomon by whom she was impregnated to give birth to a son, Menelik, who became the first Ethiopian Emperor of the Solomonic Dynasty. Numerous Aksumite emperors claimed descent from him. Among the Amhara, Haile Selassie claimed to be the 225th Emperor of this Dynasty. The whole story of King Solomon and Queen Maqda is a legend. If he had indeed impregnated her, since King Solomon, who was the greatest womanizer of all time with over 900 concubines, without counting his wives, the fact that he impregnated a dignified Ethiopian Queen who was his guest was not something to be proud of. However, because of the greatness of Solomon and because of Ethiopia’s attachment to Judaism and Christianity, the legend was accepted positively. Consequently, it helped Yekuno Amlak and his descendants to rule Ethiopia for 700 years.
Yekuno Amlak is supposed to be the 9th descendant of Del Ne’ad the Tigrean. If this was true, then the Amhara who had no ethnic relationship with him contrary to the Tigreans, used Yekuno Amlak by whom they were used mutually to seize power. If Yekuno Amlak was indeed the descendant of the last Aksumite Emperor, and as such a Tigrean, then all those emperors who succeeded him and reigned in Gonder and Shoa including Fasiledes, Menelik and Haile Selassie, were all of Tigrean and not of Amhara descent. In that case, the allegation that it was Amhara emperors who sat upon the Ethiopian throne for the past 700 years has no foundation. In the final analysis, it doesn’t matter whether Yekuno Amlak and his descendants were Tigreans or Amharas who usurped the Solomonic Dynasty like the Zagwe emperors. The fact is that they ruled Ethiopia for 700 years supported by the Amhara and the Ethiopian Tewahedo Church. This Church, though Aksumite in origin, empowered itself during the Shoan era, and became for the Amhara the foundation of their monarchy, history, arts, and culture and the source of their inspiration and courage. The Amhara thought that if their Church was threatened their livelihood was at stake. The Tewahedo Church indeed enabled the Amhara, at least nominally, to have an access to the power which the Tigreans had lost about 1100 years ago.
Since Yekuno Amlak was born among the Amhara, even assuming that he was not an Amhara, there is no doubt that he spoke Amharic as his mother-tongue. As a matter of fact, it was during his reign that Amharic began spreading fast throughout the Ethiopian Empire. He made Tegulet (Debre-Berhan) in Shoa his Capital city. Nevertheless, he didn’t stay there all the time. He roamed about the empire to consolidate his power and to build his nation, a tradition which almost all Ethiopian emperors followed.
Contrary to the Aksumite emperors, who made their presence felt mainly in the North and across the Red Sea, Yekuno Amlak and his descendants expanded South, West and East within Ethiopia. Yekuno Amlak, Amde-Tsion (r. 1314-1344), Dawit I (r. 138O-1412), Zera Yacob (r. 1434-1468), Be’ede Mariam (r. 1468-1478), Naod (r. 1494-15O8), Lebene Dengil (r. 15O8-154O), Gelawdewos (r. 154O-1559), Sertse Dengel (r. 1563-1597), Susenyos (r. 16O7-1632), Fasilidas (r. 1632-1667), Yohannes I (r. 1667-1682), Iyasu I (r. 1682-17O6), Bekaffa (r. 1721-173O), Iyassu II (r. 173O-1755), Iyoas (r. 1755-1769), Menelik II (r.1889-19O9) and Haile Selassie (r.193O-1974), all these emperors defended the territorial integrity of their country against foreign powers, upheld Christianity strongly and withstood the forces which used Islam as a pretext to wage war and seize power. They also intermingled with the Oromo and shared with them blood and culture, after a long fight with them.
The Aksumites, in their heydays, crossed the Red Sea, seized Arabia, colonized it and converted their subjects to Christianity. In other words, they were the ones who were aggressive. The Amhara, because of the historical time they were in power, i.e., after the rise of Islam and during the age of imperialism, had to be defensive for the most part. However, it doesn’t mean that they didn’t invade and occupy foreign countries. As a matter of fact, they raided Nubia (Sudan) from time to time. According to his Gedl, Atse Fasil (1632-1667) colonized Nubia and a part of Egypt successfully. Besides trying to expand Ethiopia’s territory, the Amhara played a leading role in defending the territorial integrity of Ethiopia from foreign aggressors.
The Turks were the first foreign aggressors towards the end of the 16th Century who had an immense ambition to colonize eastern and northern Ethiopia, control Ethiopia’s commerce and communication with the outside world, and impose their religion upon her. This they attempted to exercise first by using Muslims of Yifat, as well as Somali and Afar Ethiopians. Gragn Muhammed and his successors were instrumental for the Turks to weaken Christian Ethiopian emperors. The Turks were then one of the super powers of the day.
Besides occupying the coast of Eritrea and the Red Sea islands of Ethiopia such as Harkiko, they even came as far as Tigray to wage war against Ethiopia. One of the Amhara emperors who fought the Turks ferociously was Atse Sertse Dengel. In 1588-89 he mobilized a large army and waged a decisive war against them in Tigray and what is now called Eritrea. He managed to wipe them out of Eritrea and Tigray liberating Massawa and Debarua. They escaped to the sea and either hid in the island of Arkiko or fought back with canons mounted on their naval fleets from the Red Sea. Since Ethiopia’s great navy had ceased to exist with the decline of the Aksumite Empire, Sertse Dengel could not pursue them with ships. As a result, he kept his troops at the coast of the sea for a while and due to scorching sun and lack of provisions, he retreated inland lest his solders die from dehydration and starvation. The Turks returned and seized the Red Sea coast including Massawa and Debarua. Later, another emperor, Atse Fasil, realizing the futility of fighting with them, chose diplomacy and made a pact accepting to live with them. History repeated itself in time of Menelik II. Atse Sertse Dengel’s defeat of the Turks and Atse Fasil’s pact with them is amazingly similar to Menelik’s defeat of the Italian imperialists 308 years later at the Battle of Adwa. Emperor Menelik, too, had to make a pact with the Italians who were in Eritrea and return to his Capital lest his soldiers die from drought and starvation if he were to pursue the Italians any further to the sea. In any case, in 1896 and 1936, the role of leadership in defending Ethiopia twice from European imperialism during the scramble for Africa and the rise of fascism, was played once again by the Amhara and Amhara emperors, Atse Menelik and Atse Haile Selassie, who mobilized the various ethnic groups to resist the aggression.
The reason why the Amhara and their emperors played a leading role in defending Ethiopia was not that they loved Ethiopia more than the Tigreans or other ethnic groups. It was because they happened to rule Ethiopia when her independence was at stake. The Tigreans and Emperor Yohannes IV, too, had fought the Italian and Mahdist aggressors on several occasions when the Tigreans once again were ruling Ethiopia albeit briefly. In fact, it was while fighting against the Mahdists that Atse Yohannes lost his life. The time in which the Tigreans once again ruled Ethiopia after they lost power for about 1100 years were too short (seventeen years, 1872-89) to create in them a strong feeling of nationalism for the entire Ethiopia. Moreover, in contrast to the Amhara who went to Tigray several times from southern, central and western Ethiopia to liberate Tigray including Eritrea from the Turks and Italians, the Tigreans were fighting against the foreign invaders only within Tigray proper (except Metema where Yohannes IV died to avenge the Mahdists for raiding Gonder) to liberate their own land. The fact that the Amhara were defending Tigray and the rest of Ethiopia for 700 years helped them to develop a strong sense of Ethiopian nationalism.
Before the rise of Islam, the Afar and the Somali peoples were first under the sovereignty of the Aksumites, and later under those of the Zagwe emperors to whom they paid tribute. With the rise of Islam, however, Aksum began to decline and these Ethiopians were converted to Islam. Later, during the reign of Yekuno Amlak and his descendants, supported by the Arabs and the Turks, they rebelled against their Christian sovereigns who ruled them from Shoa. They defied their authority and waged Jihad wars against Shoan emperors such as Amde-Tsion, Seife-Ar’ed, Dawit, Zere-Yacob, Be’de-Mariam, Lebene-Dengel and Gelawdewos. Though there were other Ethiopian Muslim leaders (for instance, the Sultans of Yifat such as Sabredin, Kadi Selehi, Hakadin and Se’adadin) who had waged unsuccessful Islamic wars against the Shoan emperors, Ahmed Gragn, who was based in Harer, was able to defeat them and rule a good part of Ethiopia for about 16 years, until he was killed by a Portuguese soldier in a battle in 1543. Ahmed Gragn’s nephew, Nur Ahmed, avenged his uncle later by killing Emperor Gelawdewos in 1560. After that, the Amhara emperors didn’t resume fighting against their Afari and Somali countrymen until 1577 when Sultan Mohamed IV rose against Emperor Sertse-Dengel in a battle at the Wabi Shebele region. He lost this battle and his life. To temper the aggression of the Afar, the Shoan Emperors sought marriage with the daughters of the Afar chieftains. This strategy helped them to some extent.
In 1887, Emperor Menelik II established a total dominion over Harer and ended the emirate and sultanate once and for all. The fact that the Amhara were ruling Ethiopia until the rise of Emperor Yohannes IV, who empowered the Tigreans once again, made them historically responsible to defend Ethiopia and to play a leading role in her expansion and unity. This situation stirred in them a strong national feeling as well as unbreakable bond to and an identity with Ethiopia for whose sake they shed their blood willingly.
Whereas the expansion of the Aksumites within Ethiopia was very limited, the Amhara, basing themselves in Gonder and Shoa, stretched to the peripheries in their nation-building endeavor in which they succeeded to bring together Ethiopia under their sovereignty, so that when the Derg collapsed in 1991, the TPLF and EPLF were able to inherit the present large territory of Ethiopia including Eritrea. Of course, there were two non-Amhara emperors who have also contributed to the expansion and unity of Ethiopia, namely, Atse Tewodros of Quara and Atse Yohannes of Tigre. Even though these emperors were not Amhara, they followed in the footsteps of Amhara emperors linking themselves to the Solomonic Dynasty and maintaining the status quo which the Amhara had established.
The Amhara were not lucky enough to live in peace. Shortly after the Islamic wars were over, they engaged in a war with their other countrymen, the Oromo, who had started expanding into their territories in the 1520s when the Amhara were busy with their Muslim brothers. Compared with the Tigre, the Amhara lived in the most fertile regions of Ethiopia. Initially, the different Oromo tribes fought the Amhara wherever they happened to be, looking for ideal grazing lands for their cattle. Tigray being arid, the Oromo were not interested in it. So, they looked at it from afar and ignored it. After the Amhara moved their capital city from Shoa to Gonder in order to be less accessible to the Muslim invaders, the Oromo had engaged in many battles with the Amhara in Gonder and Gojam. In one of such battles, a little “Amhara” prince by the name of Susenyos was captured by the Oromo and was adopted by one of them. He learned the Oromo language and grew up in accordance with the Oromo culture. After he lived six years with them, he reunited with his royal family in Gonder. Upon the death of his father his power rivals chased him out of Gonder. He found refuge among his former Oromo friends and persuaded them to follow him claiming that he was their king. Indeed, they accepted him as their leader and fought for him in Shoa and other parts of central Ethiopia where he emerged victorious. Gradually, he marched with them to Gonder and seized power and became emperor. He filled the court with his Oromo friends and soldiers and spent most of his leisure time with them ignoring the Amhara. He appointed them to higher posts in his empire. Whenever the Amhara of Gojam and Gonder rebelled against him, he sent the ferocious Oromo fighters whom he allowed to rule over the rebellious Amhara as governors and landlords. This way the Oromo rooted themselves in Amhara territories consolidating their power and exerting their influence upon the Amhara. Their presence and influence were felt more in Gonder when Emperor Iyasu II married an Oromo lady by the name of Wabi and begot Iyoas. Later, Wabi appointed her Oromo brothers and relatives to higher positions in the empire, and her son, Emperor Iyoas, favored them more than the Gonder Amhara. Elsewhere in Shoa, Wello, Meket and Shadaho, the Amhara got tired of fighting with the Oromo and intermingled with them through marriage and Oromo adoption systems known as Mogassa and Gudifecha.
Eventually, the Amhara and the Oromo, besides mixing blood, influenced each other’s language, religion, culture, arts and crafts, warfare and horsemanship to mention just a few. This mixing of blood and culture resulted in creating great emperors, kings and empresses of Oromo descent such as Iyoas, Tekle-Haimanot of Gojam, Menelik II, Haile Selassie I, Itege Tewabech, Itege Taitu Betul and Itege Mennen, even without mentioning the myriads of Oromo princes, Rasses and Dedjazmatches. This phenomenon coupled with the fact that the Amhara were more or less dispersed all over the length and breadth of Ethiopia, expanded their world-outlook and sense of belonging to the entire Ethiopia. Instead of being locked within their own ethnic shell, they broke out of it and achieved universality. Instead of feeling being only Amhara, they considered themselves, first and foremost, Ethiopians. Further more, the fact that the Amhara were dispersed in different provinces mixed with various ethnic groups by whose languages, religions, culture and psychological makeups they were influenced, each Amhara group, depending on its location, evolved as a unique entity with its own characteristic features, which to a degree distinguish it from the others. In other words, it lacked homogeneity to be so ethnic-minded. Particularly the Shoan Amhara which both the TPLF and EPLF resent extremely, formed an independent state with its own unique political, economic, cultural and social system unlike that of the Gonder and Gojam Amhara, when they refused to pay tribute to the Gonder Amhara in 1738. Atse Iyasu Adiam-Seged, who was then the Emperor of Ethiopia, sent his army to subdue the Shoan Amhara, who, led by Mered Azmatch Abiye, won the battle, thus cutting off Shoa from Gonder for about 125 years until Emperor Tewodros II captured young Menelik upon the death of his father King Haile-Melekot in 1863. This lack of homogeneity among the Amhara turned out to be a positive factor which helped them to evolve as Ethiopians first and foremost, and as such, to develop a strong feeling of a “wider nationalism” as opposed to narrow nationalism.
That was not the case with the Tigreans. Since the Tigreans, compared with the Amhara, were confined to their own province without mixing with the Oromo or other ethnic groups, which would imprint a lasting impact upon them for the past 1100 years, kept themselves homogenous. For this reason, their language (inspite of the fact that many of them spoke Amharic), religion, culture, psychological makeup and geographical territory (except Eritrea’s separation from it), remained predominantly the same as they were for hundreds of years. This fact made the leaders of the TPLF so ethnocentric that their most articulate members such as Meles Zenawi and his associates declared that they were Tigreans first and foremost. Hence, their lack of Ethiopian nationalism. Hence their opting to wage ethnic war against Mengistu Haile-Mariam’s regime, whereas the great majority of the Amhara youth chose to fight for all Ethiopian oppressed masses irrespective of their ethnic origin.
After the fall of Aksum, Tigre was ruled first by the Agew, later by the Amhara and Oromo emperors, regents, Dedjazmatches, Rasses or by Tigrean chieftains appointed by them. The Tigrean ruling class submitted to the Amhara emperors or the enderasses of Ethiopia (regents) whether they were Oromo or Amhara, and expressed their allegiance to them whenever they (the Tigreans) were weaker. On the other hand, when they felt that they were strong enough or oppressed too much, they defied their authority, refused to pay tribute and even fought them. One typical example of such Tigre warlords was Ras Se’ul Mikael. In 1745, when he felt that he was powerful militarily, he rebelled against Emperor Iyasu Birhan Seged, but when he realized that he couldn’t withstand him, he submitted to him. Around 1805 Ras Wolde-Selassie rebelled against the Oromo Regent of Ethiopia, Ras Gugssa. After his death, Dedjazmatch Sabagadis defied the Authority of his son, the Regent Ras Mariye. After the death of Ras Mariye, his brother, Dedjazmatch Dori became the Regent of Ethiopia. Dedjazmatch Sabagadis’ son, Dedjazmatch Kahssaye, refused to submit to Dedjazmatch Woube who was appointed by Dedjazmatch Dori.
After the death of Atse Yohannes IV, Ras Mengesha, who claimed the throne, supported by Ras Alula and Ras Hagos, did not express his allegiance to Menelik and submit to him in the beginning. It took Menelik a long time to reconcile with both Ras Mengesha and Ras Alula of Tigre.
In the days gone by, in the regions known as Tigray and Tigre, located on both sides of the Mereb River, the ruling classes used to fight each other for the sake of territories and power. For example, the ruling family of Shum Agame Woldu, the father of Dedjazmatch Sabagadis from Agame, the family of Shum Tenben Mircha, the father of Atse Yohannes IV from Tenben, the family of Ras Wolde-Selassie from Enderta and the family of Kentiba Tesfa and Zeray, Dedjazmatch Wolde-Mikael and Dedjazmatch Hailu from Hamassien, were bitter enemies who battled often for the acquisition of land and power. Nevertheless, they were all united in their opposition against and their feelings of resentment towards the Amhara, even though this or that group may have appeared to be preferred by the Amhara or seemed to favor and collaborate with the Amhara.
In the 20th Century, the Tigre ruling class persuaded by the British, stirred the peasants to rise (the Woyane Uprising) against the Shoan Amhara and Emperor Haile Selassie, after the liberation of Ethiopia from fascist Italy in 1943-44. A special force led by Ras Abebe Aregay suppressed the uprising. Taking the place of the Italians, the British had a scheme to rule both Tigray and Eritrea as one entity of Tigre-Tigrigna. To this end, they attempted to use Atse Yohannes’ close relatives such as Ras Seyum and Dedjazmatch Haile-Selassie Gugssa who had already been appointed as the Governor General of Tigre by the Italian fascists. Ras Seyum accepted the British offer to be the Governor General of Tigre, and then changed his mind when he found out that Emperor Haile-Selassie had arrived in Ethiopia from exile. The British replaced Ras Seyum with the opportunist banda Dedjazmatch Haile-Selassie Gugssa whom they promoted to Ras. The Emperor had to put immense pressure on the British government to assert his sovereignty. Despite Ras Seyum’s expression of his allegiance to Emperor Haile-Selassie, the latter was at times suspicious of the former, remembering his initial collaboration with the British. Even the young Ras Mengesha Seyum, who was then only 16 years old was implicated with being a part of the Woyane Uprising and brought to trial in Addis Abeba.
Evidently, the leaders of the TPLF sympathize with the Woyane Uprising and regret its failure since they have named their organization the Woyane Harenet Tigray. Some of the important leaders of the TPLF such as Meles Zenawi and Hayelom Araya (TPLF’s militia leader who was posthumously promoted to general), to mention only the two as an example, were from the Tigre ruling class. Ato Meles’s grandfather and Ato Hayelom’s father were Dedjazmatchs. Usually, the son of a warlord had a chance to inherit the title of his father if he was favored by the Emperor of Ethiopia. Ato Zenawi, the father of Meles, did not either serve fully under Emperor Haile Selassie, or if he did, obviously was not favored by the Shoan Emperor, since he didn’t confer upon him his father’s or any title for that matter. It is not surprising then if he disliked the Emperor Haile-Selassie, in particular, and the Amhara ruling class in general, and if he passed on this sentiment to his son. Tigrean leaders and warlords who disdained the Amhara ruling class, in particular, and the Amhara, in general, are likely to influence their children including some of the important leaders of the TPLF with their negative attitude towards this class and ethnic group. Therefore, the hatred towards the Amhara by some of the TPLF leaders is primarily subjective and vindictive. The feelings of the leaders of the TPLF towards the Ethiopian feudal system and its officials was the same as that of the progressive Amhara youth. However, their resentment of the Amhara ruling class, in particular, and that of the Amhara, in general, originates mainly from the influence of their families.
There are a few more reasons behind why Tigrean elites resent the Shoan Amhara, and all Amhara, in general. These Tigreans have a contradictory relationship with the history of Tigray. Even though because of their Marxist orientation they tend to label the history of Tigray as feudal, in essence, deep down inside, they are proud of Aksum’s glorious past. The fact that Aksum declined, that Tigreans in general lost power, that the capital of Ethiopia moved from Tigray first to Lasta, then to Shoa and Gonder and back to Shoa, that Tigray is arid, less attended and poverty-stricken pains them deeply. As mentioned previously, since it was the Shoan Amhara who throned emperors who claimed to be of the Aksumite, Solomonic Dynasty and ruled Ethiopia including Tigray for the past 700 years with the exception of the time when Ras Mikael Se’ul as the Enderasse of Ethiopia was governing Tigray and the rest of Ethiopia before the Era of Princess (Zemene Mesafent) for whose occurrence he himself was partly responsible, and the reign of Atse Yohannes IV (1872-89) during the last century, they make these Amharas as an scapegoat for the demise of Tigray. That is one reason.
Another reason why they accuse the Amhara is to consolidate their power since they are afraid of the greatness in number of the Amhara, their seasoned experience for 700 years in warfare, diplomacy, the political arena and bureaucracy. In order to withstand all of these and survive, the leaders of the TPLF have resorted to demonizing the Amhara to unite against them the other Ethiopian ethnic groups including the Oromo who are actually related to the Amhara. That was why the TPLF regime neither protected when innocent Amharas were butchered mercilessly in Harer, Arsi, Shoa and elsewhere, nor cared to bring the criminals to the court of justice.
With the exception of some individuals, the majority of Tigrean intellectuals have chosen to remain silent about the division of Ethiopia along ethnic lines and the attack on the Amhara. First of all, because of the historical reasons given above, ethnicity has always been in their blood regardless of how well they have been educated. Therefore, they feel at home with the division of Ethiopia along ethnic lines. Moreover, this scheme can weaken for them the Amhara, whom they consider to be their fiercest rivals. Most important of all, they think that the status quo is in favor of their home province which is prospering and developing rapidly at the expense of the rest of Ethiopia. Consequently, they have “ye egna lijoch nachew gid yelim yigzu” kind of attitude towards the TPLF leadership. For the opportunist Tigreans, there is no better time than this to secure power and amass wealth. So, why should they oppose the present Tigrean government which, in their opinion, is working around the clock to make up what Tigray has lost for the past 1100 years?
Even though their political system was far from being perfect, the Amhara leaders at least did not so openly campaign to promote only the interest of their own ethnic group and take total advantage of the fact that they were in power. Striving to accommodate all, they somehow shared power and wealth with the ruling classes of the other major ethnic groups including the Oromo and Tigre. The Amhara people were not treated in any special way by the ruling Amhara class. Consequently, the Amhara of Gonder, Gojam, Wello and Shoa remained as poor and as miserable as the common folks of Tigre, Harer, Sidamo, Keffa, and the other regions.
Whereas the Amhara, and particularly the Shoan and Wello Amhara, because of the vastness of their territories, their active engagement in war, politics and commerce, as well as their open-mindedness, easily intermingled and assimilated with various non-Amhara peoples of Ethiopia, whose ways of life, language and culture they inherited and by whose religion and tradition they were deeply affected, the Tigreans who lived in Tigray proper, as indicated earlier, were intact and all alone by themselves with no other non-Tigrean people settling amongst them to influence them linguistically, culturally and psychologically for at least 1100 years. True, some Tigreans found their way to other provinces such as Gonder, Wello and even as far as Shoa to seek out their fortune. However, the number of such Tigreans is insignificant in relation to the vast majority of Tigreans who have never been out of Tigray proper. In our time, though these Tigreans have been exposed to the life-style, language and culture of their “hosts,” many of them remained to be a closed society preferring often to speak their own language even in the presence of non-Tigrigna speaking friends of theirs, sticking together as much as they could. Even those who were born and raised away from Tigray and Eritrea portrayed themselves as foreign nationals with their hearts craving for Tigray and Eritrea where they have never been. Indeed, they were mightily ethnocentric. That was why they used to support financially and otherwise their own ethnic political organizations such as the TPLF and EPLF. This, of course, excludes those Tigreans and Eritreans who were broad-minded enough to join non-ethnic Ethiopian political organizations such as the student movement, the EPRP and Meison. Unfortunately, some of these Tigreans abandoned the student movement and the EPRP and joined their own ethnic fronts eventually. I know of numerous Tigreans and Eritreans who were born and raised in Addis Abeba and elsewhere in Ethiopia, who struggled in the Ethiopian student movement until they joined their own ethnic front. What is more, they waged a war against the EPRP and chased out its members from Assimba, Tigray, claiming that they were not of the Tigre ethnic group to operate there militarily.
Those who consider themselves Ethiopians first and foremost have responded bitterly to the division of Ethiopia along ethnic lines; to the way the referendum was conducted in Eritrea; to the fact that Eritrea is still the economic and political burden on Ethiopia despite her declaration of independence; to the sacking of Amharas from government institutions en mass and their replacement with Tigreans and Eritreans; to the disbanding of the Ethiopian army; and to the political and economic domination of Ethiopia by the political organization of a single ethnic group which safeguards only its own interest though it was supposed to cater to the welfare of the whole of Ethiopia. Even some Ethiopians, who in the beginning welcomed the TPLF when it seized power from the Derg regime, have now withdrawn their sympathy from and are disappointed with the TPLF Government. These Ethiopians fear that TPLF’s ethnic policy will lead to genocidal conflict like that of Ruwanda, Somalia and Bosnia and destroy Ethiopia. Ato Meles contends that his policy will stop this from happening. What he refuses to admit is that there is ethnic-cleansing albeit on small scale going on in Ethiopia, which may transform itself into a larger scale unless it is checked now. That is not all. This policy has established the political and economic domination of one ethnic group, namely the Tigre, over the rest.
I am not of the opinion that the TPLF deliberately designed its ethnic policy to annihilate Ethiopia totally. It organized itself ethnically to overthrow the Derg. Mobilizing some of the people of Tigray by exploiting their hatred for the Derg, it liberated Tigray. In the same way, it marched to Addis Abeba exploiting the hatred for the Derg by the rest of the Ethiopian people including the Amhara and the military which refused to continue the fighting. Instead of dragging Ethiopia back to an outdated form of social order after she had already achieved statehood as a result of 1000 years of struggle by visionary Ethiopian leaders, it would have been correct to only implement a policy which will secure Ethiopian unity based on equality and regional autonomy.
As things now stand, it is unlikely that the TPLF will destroy Ethiopia and return to Tigray, as numerous Ethiopians fear. The TPLF will lose its economic resource if Ethiopia is eliminated totally. It keeps Ethiopia in such a way that she is neither united to resist the TPLF nor totally fragmented to be controlled by it. That is why it suppresses any ethnic movement which seeks complete independence from its grip, though on paper, it grants such rights. In the long run, however, I don’t think it can continue to play this game effectively. The people of Ethiopia, whose level of consciousness is rising every minute, will definitely challenge it.
The reason given by Ato Meles Zenawi for the current economic, industrial, educational and cultural boom in Tigray and the absence of these elsewhere in Ethiopia is that the Tigreans are working harder under a peaceful circumstance, whereas the other ethnic groups of Ethiopia are fighting each other instead of using their energy in constructing their respective killils. What Ato Meles has lost sight of is the fact that it is his administration which has created such a hostile atmosphere which encourages ethnic clashes. On top of that, the TPLF doesn’t allocate as much funds to the other regions as it does to Tigray. Ato Meles’s assertion that Tigray is not the most favored killil of his government is far from the truth. There is no doubt that, under the pretext of reconstructing war-torn Tigray, the TPLF is pumping into the region money donated and borrowed in Ethiopia’s name. I have no objection if Tigray makes economic, educational and cultural progress as long as the downtrodden people of Tigray can benefit from it. In fact, I will be delighted about it as I deem the downtrodden Tigreans as my own people. Nevertheless, I want to see the same progress in Gojam, Gonder, Illubabur, Keffa, Bale, Sidamo Harer, and the other regions of Ethiopia. As long as these forgotten Ethiopian provinces do not get the same attention as Tigray, then the TPLF is indeed out there to plunder Ethiopia. I don’t think Ethiopians will tolerate this sort of injustice for a long time.
Will the people of Tigray get anything out of TPLF’s undertakings? I doubt that they will. Since almost all of the industries are owned by a few TPLF officials and supporters, it is this group of the “new rich” which will have the lions share of it, and not the Tigray people.
Some enraged Ethiopians accuse all the peoples of Tigray to be the supporters and collaborators of the TPLF. They also assume that since the TPLF had an army of about 100,000 Tigreans, by proportion, all Tigreans must be its supporters. The Derg too, had about 500,000 soldiers and militiamen. Does it mean that the Derg was supported by all Ethiopians just because it had a large army? Of course not! It was the Derg itself which created all the forces which united against it. When the EPRP was waging guerrilla warfare against the Derg in Assimba, Tigray, before the formation of the TPLF, or when it was yet in its infancy, many Tigre peasants embraced the EPRP. After the EPRP was forced to leave Assimba due to TPLF pressure, however, the people had no choice but to side with the TPLF since it was the only group operating in Tigray against the tyranny of the Derg. That was it. The only way any government can gain the total support of its people is by winning their hearts. Even if the people of Tigray were to profit from all the projects launched by the TPLF, it wouldn’t be that easy for the TPLF to win their hearts by buying them out with material luxuries. Individuals who have travelled to Tigray and Addis Abeba witness that there is more freedom in Addis Abeba than in Tigray. How could then the TPLF win the hearts and total support of the Tigray people as some of us think?
For any political entity to succeed in Tigray without resorting to violence, it should base its philosophy and cultural policy on the historical, traditional and spiritual foundation of the Tigray people. This holds true to the TPLF and even to Tigrean Alliance for National Democracy (TAND), which is opposed to government of Meles Zenawi; for neither of these political organizations could deeply root itself and last long without taking into consideration the cherished values of the Tigray people.
So far, I attempted to explain why the members of the TPLF and its Tigrean supporters are ethnocentric. Pertaining the Tigre people who now live in Tigray, as I pointed out in the beginning, one cannot know for sure their exact feelings towards the TPLF and the rest of Ethiopia, since they haven’t yet been granted the opportunity to articulate their true feelings. Theoretically speaking, however, most of them can’t be the supporters of the TPLF, since the TPLF doesn’t have much regard for their religion, history and culture which it negates as being feudal and backward, regardless of the fact that it is working round the clock to industrialize Tigray.
Upto the present time, the Amhara have voiced their sad condition through the All Amhara People’s Organization. This Organization was necessary in the beginning in exposing the atrocities committed against the Amhara. Now, however, in the best tradition of the Amhara, it should transform qualitatively and call itself, All Ethiopian People’s Organization, and champion Ethiopian nationalism and unity by uniting with all Ethiopian ethnic groups including the Tigre, which genuinely believe in Ethiopian unity based on equality. By so doing, it will win the support of the other ethnic groups to protect its members more effectively and to realize Ethiopian unity based on equality and mutual respect, for whose attainment the Amhara have shed their blood the past 700 years. Otherwise, it will contribute indirectly to the ethnic division of Ethiopia against which it has struggled upto now.
The death of Asfa Wossen, Crown Prince of Ethiopia since 1930, almost certainly marks the final demise of thousands of years of Ethiopian monarchic tradition.
He was born in 1916 in the ancient Adare walled city of Harar, for centuries an important Islamic centre of learning and trade in the Horn of Africa. Thirty years previously, in 1887, Harar had been captured and incorporated into the expanding (and traditionally Christian) Ethiopian Empire by Emperor Menelik II, King of the Kings. Menelik had appointed Asfa Wossen’s grandfather, Makonnen, to be its first “Abyssinian” Governor, and in due course Makonnen’s son Tafari (Asfa Wossen’s father, later the Emperor Haile Sellassie) succeeded to the Harar governorate.
It was an unsettled period throughout Ethiopia. With the decline of the historic power centres in Northern Ethiopia and Tigray and the growing role of influential Muslims, Menelik’s grandson and heir, Eyasu (who ruled uncrowned from 1913) spent a lot of time in the conquered provinces. In 1916 Tafari, then governor of Harar, was recalled to Addis Ababa, where he played a prominent role in a coup d’etat against Eyasu being prepared by the traditional Orthodox Christian leaders and the Shewan nobility, with clear foreign support. Tafari had his wife, Menon (grand-daughter of the Negus – king – Mikael of Wello, Eyasu’s father) and son smuggled out of Harar. The young Asfa Wossen was left, in a traditional cradle attended by two servants, at the British Legation in Addis Ababa, to the supposed embarrassment of the Minister, the Hon Wilfred Gilbert Thesiger (father of the explorer).
On 27 September 1916, at a meeting of notables and Orthodox clerics in Addis Ababa, Abuna (bishop) Mattheos announced the deposition and excommunication of Eyasu, accusing him of apostasy, by way of submission to Islam, and treason. Eyasu’s angered father, the Negus Mikael, at once took the field against the Shewan conspirators but surprisingly was defeated.
On 11 February 1917, Zaudito, a barren daughter of Menelik, was crowned Queen of the Kings; a Ras (leading nobleman) was made Negus and the youthful, modern Tafari became Regent with the title of Ras.
It was still some years before Asfa Wossen’s position was further secured. His father was created Negus in 1928 and, finally, on 2 November 1930, crowned King of the Kings Haile Sellassie (Power of the Trinity); Asfa Wossen was himself given a Shewan royal title, Merid Azmach. In conversation most people began to refer to his new status by the popular term Algorash. He grew up fast in the strict court, fashioned after that of Sweden by the reformist Emperor with the help of an adviser from that neutral country. Asfa Wossen was only 16 when he, in turn, was married to Walata Israel, great-grand-daughter of the Tigrean Emperor Yohannes. Although, with others at the coronation, he had publicly pledged his loyalty to his stern autocratic father, and accompanied him on state duties whenever possible, Asfa Wossen was always closer to his mother.
Over the years a seeming gulf developed between the prince and his father, who openly favoured his second son, Makonnen. Asfa Wossen was appointed governor of Wello in the early 1930s, and after a major flare-up, in which his mother interceded, he began to spend more time in Dessie, Wello’s capital city. The wily and suspicious emperor filled his son’s household with informers. In the early 1930s Mussolini sought to create a situation by which he might invade Ethiopia without incurring military reaction from members of the League of Nations, particu- larly Britain and France. Ethiopia’s feudal and ethnic divisions were exploited by Italy, but Asfa Wossen and his father – unlike several other nobles – resolutely refused all offers to their own advantage, endeavouring to safeguard the last outpost of African independence.
When in 1935 all else failed and the Emperor’s mobilisation order arrived, Asfa Wossen and his mentor Dejazmach Wodajo Ali found it difficult to raise troops, for the local people were bribed and many retained some allegiance to the Negus Mikael and Eyasu, unaware of the latter’s mysterious death that year at his prison near Harar. Eventually, Asfa Wossen had to slip out of Dessie to the capital via Warra Hailu, after being warned of imminent treachery. The under-equipped Ethi-opian armies were repeatedly defeated and on 2 May 1936, the Imperial Ethiopian family fled by train to the coast and on to Jerusalem and Bath in England, but not before Asfa Wossen had witnessed the horrors of modern warfare.
The Italian forces had used mustard gas, which burnt the soldiers’ often bare feet and their lungs. Even Red Cross field hospitals which the prince visited were bombed by Capronis which enjoyed undisputed control of the skies. In exile, Asfa Wossen amicably divorced his wife, who had been unable to give him a son, and married Medfariashworq Abebe. For years he kept in secret touch with several patriot leaders who fought on in the Ethiopian mountains and meantime studied at Liverpool University and, once Italy declared war on Britain, at the Sobat Military Academy in the Sudan. There he lived at the “Pink Palace” on the Nile north of Khartoum, but was with his father and younger brother when, on 20 January 1941, their small force crossed the Dinder River into Ethiopia. British Commonwealth forces had already invaded Eritrea and Somalia and were converging on Addis Ababa.
Asfa Wossen accompanied his father, Orde Wingate, Brigadier Sandford and others into Gojjam. After its liberation, he travelled north to co-ordinate the patriot forces in the last phase of the liberation struggle at Gondar. Having been promoted Major-General by his father, he resumed his governorate in Dessie, Wello. Leul (prince) Makonnen was increasingly favoured in the capital until, in 1957, he is said to have been accidentally killed in a car crash. Most Ethiopians believe there was a cover-up, for he had acquired a reputation as a philanderer. Attention reverted to the first son, though his relations with his father did not improve. He was reticent, but always dignified, and was kept so short of funds by the Emperor that his mother, a rich land-owner, was constrained to make him a secret allowance.
As the winds of change swept over Africa in the 1950s, Asfa Wossen’s name was linked, most probably without his knowledge, to a number of conspiracies. Then, on the evening of 13 December 1960, he was escorted to the Headquarters of the Imperial Guard by its commander, Brigadier General Mengistu Neway. He, with his brother Girmame and the heads of the Police and Intelligence, conspired peacefully to change Ethiopia into a modern constitutional monarchy. The Emperor was away on a series of state visits and that night many, but not all, of the empire’s powerful officials and ministers were rounded up on the pretext that the Empress was ill. The Crown Prince broadcast more than once in support of peaceful change and the myth has developed that he had a pistol at his back and also later that a loyal officer shielded him from machine-gun bullets. In fact, although he had no prior knowledge of the coup attempt, there was no coercion and his speeches were tape- recorded in an office and taken to Radio Addis Ababa. He left the Palace during the confusion and fighting and was of course at the airport to welcome the Emperor on his return, inspiring much press speculation – the headline, “The Once and Future King”, was fairly typical – but Haile Sellassie made no public display of his anger. Privately, he was sad and often furious. “We forgive you and forget you,” he is said to have told Asfa Wossen, and although he thought it prudent to excuse the prince from participation in the show trial of the surviving conspirators – several had taken their own lives – the Emperor spent many evenings listening to secret tapes of the trial grasping for hints of what had really happened.
In later years, Asfa Wossen’s mother and younger brother Leul Sahle died. For several years he remained in the background, not invariably unpopular with the new generations, although they were becoming increasingly radical in their disaffection with the imperial regime. Then, in 1973, he suffered a serious stoke, and paralysed down one side and, barely able to communicate, was flown to London. When the revolution eventually occurred the following year, some announced that Asfa Wossen would be their choice for constitutional monarch, but they were soon displaced by more radical forces. Surviving royals were incarcerated and in subsequent struggles for power many atrocities occurred. However, even the revolutionary regime (1974-91) which the most violent eventually established in Ethiopia, could not cope with the regional and ethnic pressures which had played so large a role in the rise to power of Tafari’s family. Abroad the descendants of other prominent nobles began to adopt styles and titles and otherwise promote themselves until, in 1989, resentful and probably equally ambitious relatives prevailed on the ailing prince to hold a reception at the Ghibbi (palace) on a third floor in Portland Place, in London, to declare himself Emperor Amha Sellassie, his son Zara Yacob Crown Prince and his late father “Haile Sellassie the Great”. It was a non-event and ill- advised.
In 1990, the family moved to the United States. In north-east Africa today, distantly related sons of important northern families and their followers have re-established independence in Eritrea, and in Ethiopia the influence of Tigray has been greatly restored. The national President is an Oromo, but the absorption of Negus Mikael’s people and particularly their cousins in the south-west and south, is by no means complete. There remain many questions to be answered about the Somali peoples on all sides of Ras Makonnen’s borders.
Had his son Haile Sellassie not clung to power for so long and had his son Asfa Wossen’s own health not failed him, the basic realities of Ethiopian politics would still have had to be addressed. Richard Greenfield Asfa Wossen, crown prince: born Harar, Ethiopia 27 July 1916; Merid Azmach 1930; Governor General of Wello Province, Ethiopia; married 1932 Woizero Walata Israel (marriage dissolved; one daughter), Woizero Medfariashworq Abeba (one son, three daughters); died Fairfax, Virginia 17 January 1997.