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Welcome to
everybody! It is great to be back in Oakland. The last time I was here was
almost two years ago. At the time, I was invited by the Oakland Kinijit chapter
to talk about the human rights abuses in Ethiopia. That was also the premiere
showing of the documentary film, produced by the Anuak Justice Council, the
“Betrayal of Democracy.” It was also the time when the opposition leaders were
in prison. A lot has changed since that time for the worse in Ethiopia.
Before I go on to
the topic I am going to speak about, I would like to take this opportunity to
thank Mr. Yilma Bekele who put this together. Without his work, this round
table discussion would never have been possible. Mr. Bekele was also the first
person to pick me up at the airport when I came here two years ago. He is one
of the many Ethiopians I have met through this struggle who has become not only
a friend, but someone who has enriched my life. As I have told Ethiopians many
times, I got into this struggle because of the loved ones I have lost, but God
has brought more people into my life as a result of this tragedy.
The second person
I would like to thank is Elizabeth, who could not be here today because she is
in Washington D.C. for her friend’s daughter’s wedding, but she was one of the
people who helped Mr. Bekele put this event together. I also want to thank Mr.
Agonifer who also contributed to make this event possible. Without these three
great Ethiopian, it would have not have happened.
Above all, I would
like to thank the owner of the Ethiopian Restaurant, for allowing us to use
this place for our meeting. I would also like to thank everyone who took the
opportunity to be here today. I am blessed and honored to be here with you. I
hope to learn new things from you and I also hope you will learn something from
me.
As I look around the table, I see everyone as humans
first and as Ethiopians second. I see all of us as brothers and sisters and I
want this dialogue to continue in this spirit where brothers and sisters can
disagree but will always be there for one another. One thing I will not
concentrate on and hope we will not pay attention to is blaming, accusing,
attacking, insulting each other or attacking political leaders or political
parties.
As we know, there
is so much division among our people and we cannot afford more. I am here to
represent all Ethiopians because I do not believe in one group, but in all
groups having the right to represent their varying interests. This is because
deep in my heart, I believe that the problems and challenges we have ahead of
us are tremendous and that the only way they can be confronted and ultimately
defeated is if we try to work together.
This is the theme
I want to concentrate on today as I talk about “The Obama Factor”. As a
preface to this, I would like to say a little bit about how I came into this
struggle.
I came to Canada
as a young man, finishing high school in Saskatoon and going on to the
university there. After graduating, I
traveled back home to Gambella and was shocked with the lack of progress during
my years away. I was struck with how much could be possible if even small steps
were taken to bring development to not just the Anuak, but to all of the people
of Gambella.
The images of
suffering and hardship of the people inspired visions and dreams of
possibilities that continued to stir in me and led me and some close friends to
start a development agency in order to do my part to bring a better life to the
people of Gambella who were thirsting not just for clean water, but for
development and the kinds of opportunity it might provide.
We began the
Gambella Development Agency and tried to work with the current government in bringing
development to Gambella for three years before I was forced out of it by the
most horrible event of my life—the massacre of the Anuak. The government that was supposed to protect
the Anuak and to aid in development had turned on them like a lion devours a
weakened prey. The Anuak were
defenseless.
Years of work—not
only mine, but that of others also—was destroyed that December of 2003 and
continued to be further destroyed for many months following. The already
limited infrastructure—wells, schools, health clinics, granaries, crops and
homes—were laid waste. Worse than that, some of the brightest and most
committed Anuak leaders were killed and Anuak society devastated.
In desperation, I
called many authorities for help. The US State Department was one of the first.
The response I received was disinterest, “Africans are always killing other
Africans.” I then called back and said, there were American citizens there and
the response was totally different. United States troops were immediately sent
to Gambella to rescue the Anuak American citizens caught in the slaughter.
Before I am done
with this talk, you may realize why I am telling you these details related to
speaking about “the Obama Factor.” For one, you will see that development work,
without a government that values its people, can be destroyed in days. Secondly,
investments in educating the people ultimately can jeopardize their very lives
as these educated people know their rights and can challenge a corrupt and
repressive government. Thirdly, we cannot depend on other governments to
protect our people. Fourthly, development and improvements to the lives of
Ethiopians will not be sustainable until we have a government in place that
values its people.
Obama and his
message is resonating with Ethiopians and I want to explore the pros and cons
of this phenomenon for us as Ethiopians. This is not a political rally for
him meant to persuade more people to vote for him. This meeting is for both
Obama and McCain supporters.
In fact, before I
focus on Obama, I want to also give credit
to John McCain who has been one of those senators who has been an
advocate for human rights and democracy when he was the Chairman of the International Republican Institute
(IRI). The International Republican Institute was founded in 1983, after
President Ronald Reagan's 1982 speech before the British Parliament in
Westminster in which he proposed a broad objective of helping countries build
the infrastructure of democracy. The IRI's stated mission is to expand what it
interprets as freedom throughout the world. Its activities include teaching and
assisting with political party and candidate development, good governance
practices, civil society development, civic education, women’s and youth
leadership development, electoral reform and election monitoring, and political
expression in closed societies. In June 2005, Senator McCain was one of the signers of a resolution on behalf of the
Anuak. If Senator McCain wins, he could be an advocate for Ethiopia and we
should be prepared to work with him.
Right now, though,
many Ethiopians have rallied behind Obama. There are Amharas for Obama,
Anuak for Obama, Oromo for Obama, Tigrayans for Obama, Sidamo for Obama, Afar
for Obama and the list goes on. Record numbers of Ethiopian voters are
expected. More Ethiopians are involved in Obama’s campaign than we could have
ever believed possible. These Ethiopians are not from one ethnic group,
political group, religious group, region, educational background, economic
level, gender and even include Meles supporters and those opposed to this
regime. What accounts for this?
Yes, his father
was an African from Kenya. This is a great story of a second-generation African
success, whose American mother at times used food stamps, yet he has made it to
this level of opportunity. It gives us renewed hope in the “American Dream!”
It’s an inspiration to all immigrants.
Yes, if elected,
he would be the first African American to be President of the United States and
the first African descendent in the Western Hemisphere to gain such an office. Was
this the dream of Martin Luther King, Jr that he envisioned fifty years ago
when he spoke to thousands in his, “I Have a Dream” speech during the movement
for Civil Rights? I think even he might
be astonished by Obama’s run for President!
Yes, Obama is
calling for change and we know that change is needed not only in the United
States, but also between the US and Ethiopia, between the US and African as
well as others. However, all of these
things add up to more—something greater than the sum of the parts—and that is
why I am calling it “the Obama factor.” If he stands for one thing it is
hope and if there is anything we Ethiopians are lacking right now, it is such
hope!
No political
figure has unified Ethiopians in America as much as Obama has done. This does not
only apply to Ethiopian Americans, but to Ethiopians all over the world who
have also shown an extraordinary excitement for Obama, watching this American
election like none other. They are committing time, resources and financial
support, but most of all, they are placing enormous hope in him for
Ethiopia.
Prior to this
“Obama excitement” where were we as
Ethiopians?
1. Disunity and
divisions within all our groups
2. Cronyism by
political group, ethnic group, etc.
3. Suspicion,
lies, deceit, secretive dealings underneath the surface
4. Ethnic
hatred, revenge, anger
5. Despair
Why? Some of these
have historical roots in parts of our culture that have been destructive,
oppressive and traumatizing, but there are three major recent disappointments
upon which I want to focus:
1. Failed
Ethiopian National Election of 2005
2. Division of
Leaders
3. Disillusionment
with all Ethiopian leaders and political organizations
What have these
recent disappointments led to?
1. Cynicism and
even greater suspicion
2. Apathy
3. Hostility
towards politics
4. Giving up
5. Opportunism—“if
you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em”(like many Ethiopians who used to be part of
Kinijit who are now making business deals, buying land, etc)
6. Disconnection
with all things Ethiopian except the superficial—marathon runners, the
Ethiopian flag, New Years celebration, sports, music, food, etc.—all of which
contribute greatly to the joy of “Ethiopianness,” but can cover over our real
problem.
7. Diverted
attention to where there is more hope—Obama—this is part of the reason the “our
Obama factor”.
In the last year,
it has been nearly impossible to get Ethiopians committed to tackling the
struggle within Ethiopia because of all of these reactions.
Does this mean
that Ethiopians are unwilling to sacrifice, to work hard, to commit time,
resources and financial capital?
Does it mean that
Ethiopians are all opportunists, hopelessly divided, uncaring and
uncompassionate people?
I answer you, “NO”, to all of the above!
I think the way
Ethiopians have committed to helping, working and sacrificing for the Obama
campaign has shown differently.
I think the unity
Ethiopians have enjoyed in working with people from all different groups has
shown that Ethiopians can work together regardless of diversity of background. The
reason they could not do it before was greatly influenced by “dirty politics!”
This new-found
activism shows how much Ethiopians care about their new country, America, but
also how much they are working for or supporting Obama because they believe he
can help Ethiopia! I want to repeat
this. Ethiopians are not forgetting about Ethiopia, but are supporting Obama
because they are hoping that Obama can help Ethiopia!
What this means to
me is that Ethiopians still care very
deeply about Ethiopia! Even Ethiopians throughout the world are hoping that
Obama can help Ethiopia and also Africa!
Let me tell you
something else I see. Ethiopians care about the starvation of their people. This
hunger crisis, which is affecting people all over the country, is uniting us in
ways we never could have predicted.
I regularly hear
from Ethiopians who want to help the starving regardless of ethnicity,
religion, culture or political preferences because a starving child is a
starving child and we Ethiopians care about them. We have 58 groups of
five, each now sending $100 per month to help the poorest of the poor. We can
have confidence that this money will get to the most needy of our people
because we are sending it through our own trusted relatives and friends. This
is bringing many new people together.
This Obama factor
and our hunger crisis have brought out some of the best in Ethiopians and have
brought us together in new ways. Ethiopians have risen to the challenge and
learned something new about themselves and their people. The best qualities of Ethiopians—strength, compassion, integrity and
commitment—have surfaced under these challenging and difficult days and it
gives me hope.
Ethiopians may
have been disillusioned with the state of Ethiopian politics, but that does not
mean they do not care. They want leaders
who care about the people. They want leaders with integrity and vision. They
want leaders who can bring about healing, reconciliation and change. They want
leaders like Obama. Ethiopians want leaders who will see the poor as human
beings worthy of opportunity rather than to be ashamed of or to steal from them
because they are so weak.
If we had leaders
who cared about the people, Ethiopia might not be one of the most critically
weak developing countries in the world as shown by a recent index on failing
states.[i] Why does Ethiopia have the fifth lowest per
capita income in the world--$180 a year?
Why is Ethiopia the absolute lowest out of 141 developing countries in terms
of access to clean water? Why is the Horn one of the most failing,
impoverished, conflict-ridden regions in the entire world despite all of the
foreign aid? We know that the Ethiopian
government has a huge responsibility in all of this.
Our country is in
chaos, almost beyond repair leading to starvation, the lack of hope, tribal
hatred, HIV, skyrocketing inflation, a deepening financial crisis and the
collapse of institutions. Due to the
tightening of controls within Ethiopia, it is nearly impossible for those in
the country to accomplish their objectives without strong support from outside
of the country. That means all of us.
In fact, it is
potentially dangerous for them to be too closely associated (at least publicly)
with groups in the Diaspora due to the increasing repression in the country;
yet, the closure of doors to outside groups will make it all the harder to
address the growing hunger and starvation problem, the horrific human rights
abuses all over the country and many other problems affecting the country.
A new draft law, Charities
and Societies Proclamation is a serious threat to NGO’s working within
the country advancing human rights, the empowerment of women, children’s
rights, the rights of the disabled and conflict resolution. What kind of
government would enact such a law? This law prospectively would include any who
receive more than 10% of their funding from foreign sources, which is of
course, all non-Ethiopian groups as well as many Ethiopian groups. If this law
is enacted, as most believe will happen with the Ethiopian Parliament being
under the tight control of this government, violators could receive penalties
of up to 15 years of imprisonment for such crimes as reporting on human rights
violations.
It is an indication of how repressive this government
has become. It is all the crazier because it also is a threat to much of the
work being done by Ethiopia’s biggest donors—the US, the UK, the EU, individual
European countries and the UN as well as such groups as CARE, the
International Red Cross and others. It comes as criticism from such donors as
the UK, threaten to pull back its aid to the millions of starving Ethiopian
citizens because they believe the Ethiopian government is actively covering the
extent of the starvation and blocking humanitarian efforts to reach the people
who most greatly need the aid. Some humanitarian groups have been kicked out of
the country for reporting human rights abuses and others have left the country
due to bureaucratic obstacles like arbitrary detentions and bureaucratic
obstacles.
The only way for
us to have a future is for Ethiopians to create their own movement like
Americans are doing today. Ethiopians must create alternatives based on a
grand strategy of how to deal with all of these things. We need a change from
the kind of leaders who have taken advantage of us over the years and Obama has
begun to signify that kind of leader and Ethiopians have gotten behind him.
Ethiopians have
shown we can rise up and contribute to a better America. Ethiopians have shown
that they will work at all costs for American leaders who they believe can help
Ethiopia. Ethiopians Americans have shown they want change, not only in
America, but also in Ethiopia.
When we called for
groups to form to support starving Ethiopians, Ethiopians have shown they are people
of heart and generosity. They have shown unity and freedom from prejudice. This
is the Ethiopia I envision for the future. This is the Ethiopia for which I
have a dream!
This unity and
commitment we are achieving is amazing. It is showing something about
Ethiopians that I am thrilled about, but my question is, can this energy, new
life and sacrifice be harnessed for the good of Ethiopia so we can redirect
this momentum towards deep and sustainable change in our own country?
Amidst all of
this, we must carefully assess how we might join and capitalize on this rising
wave of change so we are not unprepared should Obama win and so we are not set
back if McCain wins. We must be ready to work with either administration, yet,
I want to focus on this “Obama factor,” because many Ethiopians have
elevated him to a position that may be beyond what any human being is capable
of fulfilling and if he does not fulfill our expectations in the way and as
soon as we had hoped, what will happen to us? We must be prepared and
soberly ask ourselves some questions.
Can Obama
possibly meet all of our expectations? Are our expectations realistic? What are
the dangers if they are not?
Let us review our
last few years to better understand where we have come from and how to best
prepare ourselves for the future if Obama does indeed win. If Obama does
win, he will be President of the United States, not Prime Minister of Ethiopia.
The US has huge challenges right now with the financial crisis plaguing the
economy, the war in Iraq, the deteriorating infra-structure of US roads,
bridges and transportation systems, with unemployment, health care and security
threats in the world.
Where does
Ethiopia fit in and when? Will it come up the first day in office, the second
or the hundredth day in office or even in the third years?
What does this all
mean? How can we be prepared so we do not set ourselves up for disappointment
by setting our expectation too high or by failing to understand how we might be
preparing ahead?
One Ethiopian last
night in Yilma’s house said Obama was our only hope and another Ethiopian said,
no we are! How would you respond?
What will Obama
expect from us? Do we expect him to improve everything in Ethiopia by simply
replacing Meles?
Remember, Ethiopia
is a sovereign country, which we want it to remain, even though we know the
biggest donor country to Ethiopia—the US—may influence what happens through
many non-invasive, non-violent actions like foreign aid for starters.
However, Obama
might ask what our goal is—in other words, he might ask us, “With what
or with whom should I replace Meles?” Do we have a reasonable, realistic and
better alternative ready for him? Right
now, the US State Department and others in the international community have
made it known that the most important issue to them in Ethiopia is its
stability, taking precedence over human rights violations, the repression of
the media, the lack of political space and the mounting numbers of starving
Ethiopians because the current authoritarian Ethiopian regime is preferable to
what they most fear—chaos and a failed state like Somalia—meaning, it is better
to not awaken a sleeping giant unless they can offer something better.
In other words, until Ethiopians can create a larger
and stabilizing solidarity movement of Ethiopians, united across ethnic,
religious, political and regional lines and able to work together for the
advancement of freedom, the respect of human rights, justice, the rule of law,
equality and prosperity for all, Ethiopians cannot expect the US and others to
take as active of an intervention role regarding human rights abuses,
oppression, repression of freedoms and humanitarian crises.
The only real antidote to our
dilemma must come out of a unified collective effort that includes and respects
all Ethiopians. The goal of this
collective effort must be carefully guarded by God-given principle of truth,
justice, human rights, freedom and civility not by certain leaders or people so
that it prepares the way for genuine political expression. This movement is not to run the government but to prepare
the soil for good government.
This is the
Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia that I have been talking about. It
started as early as when I spoke before Congress in March 2006, speaking not
only for the Anuak, but also for others oppressed and suffering in Ethiopia.
Later I talked about the virus of disunity and tribalism that was infecting
Ethiopia. This is not a solidarity movement for a certain pre-set government
or political group, but a grass roots movement of the people based on core
values all emanating from the most important—human beings come first and no one
will be free until we all are free. People can join or not join based on
whether or not they agree with these principles.
Some
may ask me why I did not wait for their input, but this vision is not new. I
have been calling on leaders to unite, but most have not come forward to do it
so I and some other committed Ethiopians who share this vision are taking the
initiative because we can wait no longer.
When
Kinijit divided, I called for mediation and for coming together under a larger
umbrella that could promote peace, justice, prosperity and human rights so we
could achieve a stronger voice, but there was no response.
On
November 17, 2007, I called for leaders from diverse groups from Ethiopia to
form a Solidarity Movement for New Ethiopia, but hardly anyone came. In
May of 2008 we called a World Wide March and most of the leaders did not show
up, but the average Ethiopians responded to the call in many cities and
countries throughout the world and we thank those who participated.
On
June 21 we wrote an article saying, “Meles will Ultimately Fail, Are We Ready?”
Again we reminded people that the only way we can be ready is through
solidarity.
On
August 30, we called all Ethiopian civic organizations to a meeting to join in
solidarity, but again, many of them did not show up. We continued anyway.
One of Obama’s
statements that has touched so many people is when he has said, “There is no blue America, no red America,
no liberal America, no conservative America, but only the United States of
America.” In the same vein, he would
not support an Ethiopia that was only for one group rather than as part of the
united peoples of Ethiopia.
When
Obama campaigns, you don’t hear him talk about freeing the black people, but
instead he campaigns for an America where all are free. Meles’s language cannot be understood by Obama. Whose language will
shape Ethiopia, Obama’s or Meles’s?
When Obama
disagrees with Hillary Clinton or John McCain or if Fox News is pro-McCain and
criticizes him, he has maintained his focus in what he believes. For
Ethiopians, we should do the same as it is the only way for us to move ahead. If Ethiopians want Obama to help, the
backward way we have been doing things must change.
The
goal of the Solidarity Movement is to educate Ethiopians to value
humanity and to be the voice of the people of Ethiopia who have been screaming
in silence. They are the ones being killed and arrested, not us here in the
free world. They should be our focus. In the meantime, joining the Solidarity
Movement does not have to stop people from continuing their agenda in their
political party.
If
you don’t like this idea of a larger, non-political solidarity movement, that
is fine; however, if you believe in it, join and contribute in any way you can.
This is why I have came Oakland and is the reason for this campaign. We have to learn to sit together and bring
our groups together.
We
have already started with a few committed people who see and believe in this
larger vision. We tried to bring people together so everyone could agree, but
we cannot wait until everyone agrees so we are moving ahead. Injera can be
made by one person and eaten by hundreds. If this movement starts with only a
few, it may later be enjoyed by many. This is our dream.
Moreover,
even though Obama inspires me, he is not the one to lead Ethiopia to freedom,
we Ethiopians have to do it for ourselves. If we expect a foreigner to cook
Dora Wat, it won’t be Ethiopian Dora Wat that we get!
This means we
must capitalize on the momentum and excitement of this American election in
order to be prepared to offer a genuine alternative and that alternative is us,
but only if we are guided by these God-given principles including coming with
humility and in the spirit of reconciliation, building laws and institutions
that set up accountability, transparency and protection for ourselves and against
ourselves because God also knows how often we have failed to live rightly.
If
we place all of our hope in Obama and don’t discover the core of our problem,
Obama cannot help us. If this man
does not reach out as we expected, we may again be so disappointed, that
Ethiopians will close down in greater despair. To avoid this, we must create
our own movement, not the movement of Obama, but our own Ethiopian movement so
he can see the people doing something truly remarkable and see himself able to
step in and add his part.
As
one Ethiopian from Australia recently told me, this is the message not only for
Ethiopians in California, but it is a message for all of us to hear. I
will be bringing this same message to Minnesota on November 16 and in
London, UK on November 23. It is a message Ethiopians should pass on to others
from every different group and faction. We must create an alternative to what
we have so Obama or McCain can hitch on to the momentum we have created for our
own change in Ethiopia. Neither Obama nor McCain can do it without us.
Look
at what we need to address. There is
disarray all over in the Ethiopian community. How can Obama step in to help people in ten different parties who do not
talk to each other? Who
should he talk to who represents the collective interests of the Ethiopian
people?
Our expectations
of Obama are so high that I ask you, how can they ever succeed unless we
capitalize on this newly found unity and momentum in order to create our own
movement—a movement that can be clearly seen by those in the West that
Ethiopians are ready for change, just like so many Americans, who are coming
out to vote for the first time.
Ethiopians
must do it in order for Obama and others to see and say, “Ethiopians ready for
change!” Look at the response Obama
has received when 100,000 people show up at a rally like what is happening in
the US. Why do people throughout the world stay up to watch this guy or 200,000
people show up in Berlin?
We
must do the same for Ethiopia! Others will see it and they will have NO choice
but to support it. Therefore, it comes to us. We have to do the
job.
Deep inside,
Ethiopians are showing by their participation that they still care. So many
problems of Ethiopia could improve if a mass movement of enough people pushed
for sustainable change and the right leaders who would have to operate under
such standards of accountability. If we had such a movement, it could provide
answers to starvation, human rights abuses, lack of access to clean water,
insecurity, corruption and our failing agricultural system.
If
one hundred thousand showed up for a rally in Washington DC, flooding the
streets, Washington would be overwhelmed! What if 50,000 or more did the same
in the UK, in Brussels or in Ottawa, Canada? The West will not ignore such an
outpouring. This is the Solidarity Movement we need to create now.
If Obama is elected, we
will show him we are capable of doing it in our own way like Americans are
capable of doing it in their own way. It will scare Meles to death like the
rally of 2005 when nearly two million Ethiopians came out in Addis Ababa. Those
two million Ethiopians who came out are still there. The reason they are not coming out is not
because things are better, because they are worse, but because there is no
leader or organization that can really guide them, especially in that
repressive environment! This is why the strength of the movement in the
Diaspora is critical to supporting the efforts back home.
If we can do
this, then opportunists Ethiopian will know their days are numbered and join
us.
We do not need to beg for our
freedom. We do not have to beg Western countries to do this for us. We
Ethiopians must free ourselves and no longer will we beg others for our
freedom!
It
all comes back to us Ethiopians creating a broad-based and genuine movement
- with true leaders who
are fighting for all Ethiopians
- where no one is
excluded—
- where human rights are
for all of the people—
- where we can cooperate
even if we don’t agree,
- where principles take
precedence over politics and
- where all opposition
parties are invited to be part.
As I said, and I repeat, if Obama is elected, his administration cannot
be expected to simply tell Meles to leave because Ethiopia is a sovereign
country. If we hope for this, we are failing, putting our whole hope in
leaders, this time, an American leader, instead of taking our own action.
Be
reminded Ethiopians, if Obama is elected,
- He is elected for his own country—the United
States.
- Don’t expect change to happen in Ethiopia
overnight!
- His priority must be placed in his country—the
US.
- If Ethiopia gains his attention, there must be
proven readiness on part of Ethiopians that they are ready for democracy.
- Ethiopian cannot assume that Obama is the
solution to our Ethiopian problem or we are creating false expectations
that can never be fulfilled and we will end up being crushed with
disappointment like what happened to us before.
- What happens in Ethiopia is ultimately in the
hands of Ethiopians!
It
is good that Obama has inspired us, but now, Ethiopians must use this unifying
factor—the Obama factor—where they have learned how to work in unity of
purpose.
When
an American Ethiopian passes you in his car, you might see an Obama sticker. It
might be on the bumper of an Anuak car,
an Amhara car, a Tigrayan car, an Oromo car—you name it! Go by region of Ethiopia and it will be the
same—an Afar for Obama, a Southern Nations for Obama, a Benishangul-Gumuz for
Obama, a Harere for Obama, and so on. This is a great visualization of
what we have been saying—humanity before ethnicity and no one is free until
we all are free! This is what we
mean. This is what can mobilize
Ethiopians. This is what must now take place for Ethiopia!
Ethiopians are great people. A huge reason
why they are so cynical is because they have not had a good government and any
opportunity for many years. This is why so many continue to risk their lives to
come to a free country and this has been going on for the last thirty years.
Why? It is to run away from destruction, oppression, lack of opportunity and
poverty. If they had had a good government, they would never have left. Ethiopians
here would go back with knowledge and skills, but cannot return to this kind of
repressive environment.
The reason so many Ethiopians don’t want to
focus on Ethiopia is because they are so upset with politics and politicians. We
need to demand more from our politicians and choose who we support like we
might choose a pilot to fly the plane we get on. You would not get in a plane
with a pilot who does not know how to fly or he may be killed and so will
you. Choose leaders with vision,
integrity, wisdom and a heart for the people.
When
the November election is over, the Obama campaign will end. Let that end be the beginning of the movement
of Ethiopians for Ethiopia. Let Ethiopians rise up from wherever they
are, let them do something their children and grandchildren will be proud
of—let them be something more meaningful and bigger than themselves. Let them be
part of something the world remembers and something that could help unshackle
the slavery and misery going on in Africa for centuries.
Ethiopians should consider themselves like
responsible farmers who know the rain is coming and that they must start preparing
the ground so when the rain comes, they are ready.
When
November 4th is over, it should be the beginning. It is time for Ethiopians to inspire Obama or McCain so
our new president says when he sees our unified action, “Wow, I have never seen
anything like this!”
It can be done. Pray for God’s help and do
what is right. Now is our time!
Here
is one last image. Imagine the mall in
front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC where Martin Luther King, Jr
spoke. Now imagine what it would look
like if one million Ethiopians from all over the Diaspora came out in
solidarity that they flooded the mall with a sea of Ethiopians.
Imagine
seeing all the diversity of the beautiful garden of Ethiopia there, all
calling for a new and better Ethiopia—one with freedom, with justice, with the
rule of law, with the respect for human rights, with equality, with
transparency, with civility and with opportunity!
No
one will ignore such a strong and massive outpouring! It would be a shock, but
immensely inspiring to the whole world! This can be done and all that is needed
is for Ethiopians to believe it is doable and to come together in solidarity
around God-given principles.
If we Ethiopians can do this, the whole world
will know that there is no justice in Ethiopia. The whole world will know there
is no freedom in Ethiopia. The whole world will know there is no peace in
Ethiopia. The whole world will know that Ethiopians are ready for change! The
whole world will know that God has not forgotten about Ethiopians—that is, if
Ethiopians remember that God is in charge of the nations, their coming and
going and that God created and knows every human being and hears their
individual cries for His intervention.
May God be in
charge of bringing about a changed nation of changed people who know that God
made them each of them to be not partially human but fully human and
valuable.
Everyone will then know that, yes,
Ethiopians are hungry and thirsty for that kind of Ethiopia, a revived Ethiopia
that can bring life and blessings to its people and to others in the Horn, in
Africa and beyond.
This
alone is something that Meles will not ignore. He may even come to his
knees.
This alone
could bring back dignity to our country and replace the image of Ethiopia from
a begging, starving nation to a nation of people, ready to take a courageous
stand for righteousness.
Would
not every Ethiopian alive today want to be part of this, including those taking opportunity to go back and
invest, including TPLF supporters who would know they are only investing in
short-term pleasure? All you need to do
now is to spread the word and to get down to work.
May
we follow God and seek His help and mercy.
May Ethiopians bring honor to His name throughout the world.
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“If my people, who are called by my name, will
humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways,
then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their
land.”(II Chronicles 7:14 )
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For
more information please contact me, Obang Metho, Executive Member of the
Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia, Email at: Obang@anuakjustice.org
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