Begna Dugassa, Ph.D | November 14, 2014
Dear the Secretary General & the Minsters of the Ethiopian Federal Government:
I am writing this letter to defend the latest Amnesty International
(AI) report BECAUSE I AM OROMO’ Sweeping Repression in the Oromia Region
of Ethiopia1 from the attacks and mischaracterizations of the Ethiopian
government presented on BBC Radio and other media outlets. I believe I
am entitled to do this for four reasons.
The first reason is, I was born and raised in Oromia among the
followers of the Oromo indigenous religion– Waqefaata. I have witnessed
human violations perpetuated by consecutive Ethiopian regimes. During
the Haile Selassie regime, I witnessed my family members giving a
quarter of their harvests to the Abyssinians and paying taxation without
representation in the government. I witnessed many Oromo family members
tried not to allow baptizing their children in the Abyssinian Orthodox
Church. In the belief that if someone first goes through the Waqefaata
ceremony known as Amachisa, the person will remain Waqefaata, my
community members developed strategy to take their children through the
indigenous ceremony first. Accordingly, in the Amachisa ceremony I got
the name Tolera = things are good. After that, they had me baptized
because the Oromo people were forced to baptize their children in the
Orthodox Church. In the ceremony of baptism they gave me a name Gebre
Giyorgis = the slave of George. I leave it to the readers to compare the
differences in meaning between the two names.
I heard many stories about many innocent Oromo persons being charged
with the crimes they did not commit. In most cases it was to free the
Abyssinians from crimes they had committed. There is a case that I well
knew- about an Oromo person being penalized for referring to the Supreme
Court judge as (አንች=anchi) ‘you’, a term used in Amharic in reference
to women,-instead of (እርስዎ=irswo) ‘you’ used in reference to the higher
officials. The person did not use the term አንች (anchi) to undermine the
Supreme Court. The reason was that he did not fully understand the
Amharic language. This means that the Oromo people’s cultural rights are
regularly violated and such violations are legal. As the UN document
clearly states “human rights are indivisible, interrelated and
interdependent”; the rights of the Oromo people to social, economic,
political and cultural rights are being violated and this is clearly
demonstrated in this case of a person being penalized for making a
grammar mistake.
— Full Document in PDF
=>ayyaantuu
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