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Oromia: A National crisis, open dialogue, and building National
consensus.
By Asafa Jalata | December 18, 2011
We have reached at the dead end in our national struggle. The Oromo
national movement has lost its steam and direction as its leadership
and ideology have faced deep crises. The leadership of the Oromo
national movement, specifically the OLF, could not effectively lead
an Oromo revolution due to some external and internal factors. The
external factors have included regional, domestic and international
forces (i.e. Ethiopian, regional and global forces) that are
determined to destroy the Oromo struggle. The internal factors have
included the lack of substantial coherent revolutionary Oromo
elites, the explosion of opportunist and mercenary Oromos, the
failure to transform Oromo awareness to Oromummaa (Oromo
nationalism), the lack of ideological clarity, and the political
ignorance, passivism, and the fatalism of the populace. These
internal problems were mainly caused by the policies of the
successive Habasha governments that have conspired against the Oromo
people by destroying their independent leadership and institutions
and by denying an education to the Oromo majority. This piece
focuses on the problems of the human agency the Oromo elites and
society, and proposes some urgent practical solutions.
The Oromo Elites: Recognizing Shortcomings and overcoming them The
division of the OLF into three wings due to political ineptness and
immaturity, the lack of understanding of the complexity of the Oromo
nation and its politics, false competition for political power, low
level of nationalist consciousness, and the use of the cheap
politics of clan and region have created deeper crises and
confusions among the Diaspora Oromo. Furthermore, the inability of
one of these branches to develop itself as a formidable liberation
front has complicated the crisis of the Oromo national movement. In
addition, the three branches of the OLF have failed to learn from
their past mistakes and to reconcile in order to unify and rebuild
the Oromo national movement. Unfortunately, other Oromo independent
organizations have also drastically failed to carry out their
political missions and objectives. All these conditions have given
an ample opportunity for the external and the internal enemies of
the Oromo nation to attack clandestinely and openly the Oromo
movement in order to reduce its effectiveness or to destroy it
totally. What are our national responsibilities for those of us who
have understood these chains of problems and dangers for our
struggle and our nation? To solve our internal problems and to
mobilize and organize our people in the Diaspora in this age of
apathy and confusion are going to be an upward battle.
The Oromo elites whether they are in leadership or not lack
ideological coherence, political maturity, and skills for national
consensus building. They focus on their narrow perceptions and
agendas. Hence they jump to form political organizations that
promote such perceptions and agendas at the cost of the national
interest. Those in leadership position are determined to maintain
their dead-end politics and status quo without effective
contributions. There are also some Oromo elites who have commitment
to serve the enemies of the Oromo people. In the 1970s, some Oromo
elites joined Ethiopian and Somali organizations while a few created
the OLF. Furthermore, the lack of ideological and political maturity
led to the division of the OLF in the 1970s, and recently, in the
2001 and 2008. Without creating the Oromo national power, the Oromo
elites fight on non-existence power. Some Oromo elites have also
formed several nominal liberation fronts and other political
organizations without engaging in armed and real political
struggles. Overall, the Oromo elites did not yet establish a
political and cultural mechanism that helps in resolving their
contradictions. Consequently, they have failed to understand that
they are on one team that must work together to organize the Oromo
nation for its self-defense and liberation.
It is impossible to build an effective institutional order or
organization without integrating formal and informal rules of the
society. As a result of the lack of bureaucratic codes and
procedures in Oromo tradition, Oromo political leaders and the Oromo
community at-large have had no immediately-available,
culturally-consistent models to draw upon when confronted with the
need for establishing the bureaucratic structures that are an
essential part of the overall liberation struggle. As a result, the
Oromo elites have reacted in a number of different and contradictory
ways. This lack of coherence in the leadership in turn has created
conditions in which suspicion has flourished creating conditions
that have prevented open and honest dialogue among leaders and
between leaders and followers. In the absence of a coherent
organizational milieu, rumor, gossip, and impression management have
replaced a critical and open dialogue within the movement. Like any
movement, the Oromo national movement must develop a collective
identity that results in collective action. Oromo nationalists
cannot develop an Oromummaa that facilitates collective action
without critical discussion and open dialogue. The role of the
leader is very important in building a leadership core through
persuasion, analytical capacity, capacity to communicate, and
capacity to listen and learn. The leader is responsible for the
creation of formal and informal networks that allow for the
development of an effective leading political team by bringing
together layers of people who share strategic ideas to win over
others.
Recently, the Oromo movement
has tried to create an exclusivist leadership that does not fit
Oromo-centric democratic values. While the Oromo love their heroes
and heroines and admire them, they expect open dialogue and
interaction consistent with their democratic political tradition.
The Oromo also reject the leadership style of the Habasha. The Oromo
dislike exclusivist leaders who equate their personal interests with
the interests of the organization they lead and separate themselves
from the rank and file members. Practically speaking, the Oromo
political leadership is neither coherent nor exclusivist, although
there has been an attempt by a few leaders to develop an exclusivist
leadership modeled on the Habasha political culture. However, there
is no question that the leadership of the Oromo national movement
manifests some exclusivist characters. Just as the Oromo nationalist
leadership lacks political coherence, some Oromos lack
organizational discipline and engage in political anarchism or
passivism. Without challenging anarchism and passivism among the
Oromo populace and the exclusivist political tendency of the
leadership, the Oromo nationalist movement cannot search for
combinations of forms of organization and leadership, which are
practically compatible with larger struggles for popular
self-emancipation. Oromo nationalists need to speak up and struggle
to develop leadership for self-emancipation through facilitating the
integration of “leading” and “led” selves of the Oromo political
leadership. While struggling to build a democratic and coherent
political leadership, Oromo nationalists must fight against
political anarchism, passivism, and anti-leadership sentiment that
emerge in some Oromo sectors. Anarchist and anti-leadership Oromo
elites discourage the emergence of strong leadership by engaging in
endless debate on secondary issues—such as clan, religious, and
regional identity—and by making personal attacks on prominent Oromo
leaders and organizations as a means of avoiding substantive debate.
While demanding accountability from their leadership, the Oromo must
fight publicly against an anti-leadership ideology. The Oromo need
to acknowledge, value, encourage, and support an emerging democratic
Oromo political leadership since strengthening the leadership of the
Oromo movement is essential in the struggle to defeat dangerous
enemies. Since an amorphous and less structured leadership is
functionally ineffective, the Oromo national struggle must have a
more structured leadership that can provide the organizational
capacity necessary to eventually take state power and establish a
functioning democracy consistent with the principles of Oromummaa.
Oromo nationalists cannot build a more structured leadership without
clearly understanding the processes of leadership and followership.
Just as Oromo leaders do not adequately understand the essence and
characteristics of their followers, the followers lack information
about their leaders and leadership. While Oromo political leaders
like to lecture their followers and sympathizers, they are less
interested in establishing formal and informal relationships with
their followers and sympathizers in order to engage them in
dialogical conversation. Because they care little about the opinions
and experiences of their followers, they fail to ask for the input
from their followers. Leadership is a processing of influencing
followers and others by changing their perceptions through closely
relating and communicating with them. Similarly, much of the Oromo
populace has yet to develop constructive mechanisms by which they
can influence their political leaders and hold them accountable. As
a result, sometimes they engage in personal attacks and debates on
peripheral issues blunting the impact of their personal political
efforts and delaying the development of an effective political
leadership. It is difficult to identify the weaknesses of the
leadership without identifying those of the followership. I
recognize that the role played by the Oromo national political
leadership is dangerous, complex, and difficult. This leadership has
been politically, ideologically, and militarily attacked both
internally and externally.
To date the movement has been able to survive by developing shared
meaning, purpose, language, and symbols. But as the complexity of
the Oromo movement increases and as the number of Oromo nationalists
expands, the leadership will not be able to improve its
organizational capacity without simultaneously developing a degree
of internal cohesion, leadership expertise, and widespread support
through the establishment of effective coalitions within and beyond
the Oromo nationalist movement. Without (1) changing the past
habits, ideologies and approaches, (2) building internal cohesion by
developing Oromummaa on the individual, relational and collective
levels, and (3) fully mobilizing Oromo human and economic resources,
the current Oromo political leadership will continue to face more
crises and may eventually become a political liability. The Oromo
national political leadership must be challenged to abandon its
reliance on a narrow political circle and borrowed political
ideologies and practices. In addition, it must be encouraged to
embrace Oromo-centric democratic values, using them to develop
different forms of organizational leadership in Oromo society thus
making the dynamic connection between the values of Oromo society
and its organizational structure. The Oromo leadership should be
pressured to speak with the Oromo people and listen as well,
allowing the Oromo community at-large to engage in the process of
self-emancipation by participating in and owning their national
movement. More than any time in its history, the Oromo national
struggle now requires a more centralized structured organization and
matured national leadership that can learn about the Oromo people in
order to organize and lead them to take any necessary actions for
national survival and liberation. The maturation of the Oromo
national leadership will be recognized by many factors; one of these
factors is to know the defining characteristics of Oromo society.
The Main Characteristics of Oromo Society
After the Oromo were colonized and until Oromo nationalism emerged,
Oromoness (Oromumma – Oromo identity and culture) primarily remained
on the personal and the interpersonal levels since the Oromo were
denied the opportunities to form national institutions. Oromoness
was targeted for destruction and colonial administrative regions
that were established to suppress the Oromo people and exploit their
resources
were glorified and institutionalized. As a result, Oromo relational
identities have been localized, and not strongly connected to the
collective identity of national Oromummaa. The Oromo have been
separated from one another and prevented from exchanging goods and
information on national level for more than a century. Their
identities have been localized into clan families and colonial
regions. They were also exposed to different cultures (i.e.,
languages, customs, values, etc.) and religions and adopted some
elements of these cultures and religions. Consequently, today there
are members of Oromo society and elites who have internalized clan
and externally imposed regional or religious identities because of
their low level of political consciousness or political opportunism
and the lack of clear understanding of Oromummaa or Oromo
nationalism. What makes these problems complex is that some Oromos
who claim that they are nationalists confuse their sub-identities
with the Oromo national identity. Oromo relational identities
include extended families and clan families. Historically and
culturally speaking, Oromo clans and clan families never had clear
geopolitical boundaries among themselves. Consequently, there are
clans in Oromo society that have the same name in southern, central,
northern, western and eastern Oromia. For example, there are Jarso,
Gida, Karayu, Galan, Nole and Jiru clans all over Oromia. The
Ethiopian colonial system and borrowed cultural and religious
identities were imposed on the Oromo creating regional and religious
boundaries. Consequently, there were times when Christian Oromos
were more identified with Habashas (Amhara-Tigray) and Muslim Oromos
were more identified with Arabs, Adares, and Somalis than they were
with other Oromos. Under these conditions, Oromo personal
identities, such as religion replaced Oromoness, central Oromo
values, and core Oromo self-schemas. There are Oromos who still
confuse such identities with the Oromo central identity. Colonial
rulers saw Oromoness as a source of raw material that was ready to
be transformed into other identities. In the colonial process,
millions of Oromos lost their identities and assimilated to other
peoples. Consequently, the number of Amharas, Tigrayans, Adares,
Gurages, and Somalis has increased at the cost of the Oromo
population. The Oromo self was attacked and distorted by Ethiopian
colonial institutions. The attack on Oromo selves at personal,
interpersonal and collective-levels has undermined the
self-confidence of some Oromo individuals by creating an inferiority
complex within them. Without the emancipation of Oromo individuals
from this inferiority complex and without overcoming the ignorance
and the worldviews that their enemies imposed on them, they cannot
have the self-confidence necessary to facilitate individual
liberation and Oromo emancipation. Because of internal cultural
crises and external oppressive institutions, Oromo collective norms
or organizational culture is at rudimentary level at this historical
moment. So some comrades in an Oromo organization do not see
themselves as members of a team, and they engage in undermining
members in their team through gossips and rumors. For sake of self-
promotion, they belittle their comrades in his or her absence. Such
individuals do not have strong organizational culture or norm. Such
individuals cannot develop a core of Oromo leadership that is
required in building a strong liberation organization.
Today, the Oromo are diverse and heterogeneous people, and it is
impossible to organize them for liberation without understanding
these complexities. Some Oromo elites do not understand these
issues. Collective identities are not automatically given, but they
are essential outcomes of the mobilization process and crucial
prerequisite to movement success. Oromo nationalists can only reach
a common understanding of Oromoness through open, critical, honest
dialogue and debate. Fears, suspicions, misunderstandings and hopes
or aspirations of Oromo individuals or groups should be discussed
through invoking Oromo cultural memory and democratic principles.
Through such discussion a single standard that respects the dignity
and inalienable human rights of all persons with respect to
political, social, and economic interaction should be established
for all Oromos and their neighbors who support the rights to
national self- determination. Oromo personal and social identities
can be fully released and mobilized for collective actions if
reasonable Oromos recognize that they can freely start to shape
their future aspirations or possibilities without discrimination.
This is only possible through developing an Oromo identity on
personal and collective levels that is broader and more inclusive
than gender, class, clan, family, region, and religion.
While recognizing the unity of Oromo peoplehood, it is important to
recognize the existence of diversity in Oromo society. The lack of
open dialogue among Oromo nationalists, political leaders,
activists, and ordinary citizens on the issue of religious
differences and/or the problems of colonial regional identities have
provided opportunities for those who profit from the continued
subjugation of the Oromo people to employ a divide and conquer
strategy by exploiting religious and regional differences among the
Oromo people. Since Turks, Arabs, Habashas, and Europeans imposed
both Islam and Christianity on the Oromo in order to psychologically
control and dominate them, Oromo nationalists must encourage an open
dialogue among adherents of an indigenous Oromo religion, Islam and
Christianity and reach a common understanding of what it means to be
an Oromo and the positive role religion can play in Oromo society.
Also, issues of clans and colonial regional identities must be
addressed openly and honestly. Since these issues are not openly
addressed, reactionary forces and opportunist Oromo individuals and
groups turn Oromo on one another to use them. Basing our
understanding of these Oromo issues on Oromummaa eliminates
differences that may emerge because of religious plurality and
regional differences.
The Ethiopian colonial regions do not correspond to Oromo group or
regional identities. As a result, the political diversity of Oromo
society can and should transcend regional identities based on the
boundaries of colonial regions. The Oromo political problems have
emerged primarily from low level of political consciousness,
attitudes, behavior, and perceptions that have been shaped by a
culture that valued domination and exploitation and have seen
diversity and equality as threats to the colonial institutions most
Oromos passed through. These problems still play a significant role
in undermining the development of Oromummaa and the organizational
capacity of the Oromo national movement. The behavior and political
practices of most Oromos and elites and leaders of Oromo
institutions in the Diaspora—like churches and mosques,
associations, and political and community organizations—demonstrate
that the impact of the ideology of domination and control that was
impacted by Ethiopian colonial institutions and organizations is
far-reaching. Despite the fact that the Oromo are proud of their
democratic tradition, their behavior and practices in politics,
religion, and community affairs indicate that they have learned more
from Habashas and Oromo chiefs than from the gadaa system of
democracy. While the social and cultural construction of the Oromo
collective identity is ongoing process, this process cannot be
completed without the recognition that Oromo society is composed of
a set of diverse and heterogeneous individuals and groups with a
wide variety of cultural and economic experiences. Hence, Oromo
nationalists need to recognize and value the diversity and unity of
the Oromo people because “people who participate in collective
action do so only when such action resonates with both an individual
and a collective identity that makes such action meaningful.” Today,
those Oromo political leaders who are fragmenting the OLF into three
branches and those who are claiming to have nominal political
organizations cannot adequately understand the crisis and danger
that the Oromo national movement is facing. In every society,
personal and social identities are flexible, and are not rigid and
monolithic. Similarly, Oromo self-identity exists at the personal,
interpersonal, and collective levels with this confederation of
identity being continuously shaped by Oromo historical and cultural
memory, current conditions, and hopes and aspirations for the
future. The Oromo social selves emerge from the interplay between
intimate personal relations and less personal relations. The former
comprise the interpersonal or relational identity and the latter are
a collective identity. The relational-level identity is based on
perceptions or views of others about an individual. Thus, individual
Oromos have knowledge of themselves from their personal viewpoints
as well as knowledge from the perspective of significant others and
larger social groups. The concept of individual self emerges from
complex conditions that reflect past and present experiences and
future possibilities. The self-concept allows individuals to have
“the capacity to reinstate a past situation and locate themselves in
it;
they also have the capacity to project the self into future
contexts, anticipating possible actions and their consequences for
the self.” Some Oromos are more familiar with their personal and
relational selves than they are with their Oromo collective self,
because their level of Oromummaa is rudimentary.
Oromo individuals have intimate relations with their family members,
friends, and local communities. These interpersonal and close
relations foster helping, nurturing, and caring relationships.
Without developing these micro-relationships into the
macro-relationship of Oromummaa, the building of Oromo national
organizational capacity is illusive. Organizing the Oromo requires
learning about the multiplicity and flexibility of Oromo identities
and fashioning from them a collective identity that encompasses the
vast majority of the Oromo populace. This process can be facilitated
by an Oromo political leadership that is willing to develop an
understanding of the breadth of the diversity of Oromo society
looking for those personal and relational identities that can be
used to construct an Oromo collective identity, expanding Oromummaa.
Change starts with individuals who are both leaders and followers.
Culture, collective grievances, and visions connect leaders and
followers in oppressed society like the Oromo. Consequently, to be
effective the Oromo political leadership must be guided by
Oromo-centric cardinal values and principles that reflect honesty,
fairness, single standard, equality and democracy in developing
Oromummaa. As one source notes, “a critical task for leaders may be
to construct group identities for followers that are both appealing
and consistent with a leader’s goals. Indeed, this is a critical
aspect of political leadership. Effective political leaders do not
simply take context and identity as given, but actively construct
both in a way that reconfigures the social world.” The political
leadership of Oromo society needs to understand the concept and
essence of the changing selves of the Oromo. These self- concepts
include cognitive, psychological and behavioral activities of Oromo
individuals. Collective grievances, the Oromo language and history,
the historical memory of the gadaa system and other forms of Oromo
culture, and the hope for liberation have helped in maintaining
fragmented connections among various Oromo groups. The emergence of
Oromo nationalism from underground to public discourse in the 1990s
allowed some Oromos to openly declare their Oromummaa without
clearly realizing the connection between the personal and
interpersonal selves and the Oromo collectivity. This articulation
occurred without strong national institutions and organizational
capacity that can cultivate and develop Oromummaa through
transcending the political and religious barriers that undermine the
collective identity of the Oromo. Oromo nationalists cannot build
effective national institutions and organizations without taking
Oromo personal, interpersonal and collective-level Oromo selves to a
new level. Oromo collective selves develop through relations with
one another.
Good interpersonal relations and good treatment of one another
create sense of security, confidence, sense of belonging, strong
andeffective bonds, willingness to admit and deal with mistakes and
increase commitment to political objectives and organizations. The
individuality of an Oromo can be observed and examined in relation
to the concept of self which is linked to psychological processes
and outcomes, such as motivation, affection, self-management,
information processing, interpersonal relations, commitment, dignity
and self- respect, self-preservation and so forth. The Oromo
self-concept as an extensive knowledge structure contains all pieces
of information on self that an individual Oromo internalizes in his
or her value systems. Every Oromo has a self-schema or a cognitive
schema that organizes both perceptional and behavioral information.
An individual’s self-schema can be easily captured by accessible
knowledge that comes to mind quickly to evaluate information on any
issue. The Oromo self is the central point at which personality,
cognitive schema and social psychology meet. The Oromo self consists
both personal or individual and social identities, and the former is
based on an individual’s comparison of oneself to other individuals
and reveals one’s own uniqueness and the latter are based on
self-definition in relation to others or through group membership.
Without recognizing and confronting these issues at all levels, the
Oromo movement cannot build its organizational capacity. The social
experiment of exploring and understanding our internal selves at
individual, relational and collective selves must start with the
Oromo elites who aspire to organize and lead the Oromo people. Since
the ideological and organizational tools that Oromo elites have
borrowed from other cultures have reached their maximum limit of
capacities and cannot move the Oromo movement forward in the quest
for achieving self- determination and human liberation, Oromo
nationalists must reorganize and practice their approaches based on
Oromummaa and the gadaa democratic heritage. The Oromo elites have
passed through schools that were designed to domesticate or
“civilize” them and to mold them into intermediaries between the
Oromo people and those who dominated and exploited them. They have
been disconnected from their history, culture, language, and
worldviews, and have been trained by foreign educational and
religious institutions that glorified the culture, history, language
and religion of others. Consequently, some Oromo elites do not
adequately understand Oromo history, culture and worldview. Today,
some of such individuals have emerged as agents of the Tigrayan
elites by joining the OPDO and are terrorizing the Oromo people.
Although the Oromo movement has achieved many important
accomplishments, the organizational and ideological tools that it
has used did not provide an effective basis for organizing the Oromo
people and enabling them to defend themselves from their enemies. At
present, the Oromo human and material resources are scattered and
used by the enemies of the Oromo nation. Without a structured
organization and national leadership, the Oromo people cannot take
effective political actions that involve national self-defense and a
popular and wide rebellion through the total mobilization of the
nation. For many generations, young Oromos have been forced to fight
as mercenaries and defended the interest of the Ethiopian state
elites that have repressed and exploited their society. Even the
Siad Barre government of
Somalia
used Oromo fighters as mercenaries. The Habasha elites and their
Oromo collaborators claim that the Oromo fighters have built Ethiopia, and
hence they are Ethiopians like Amharas and Tigrayans. To be forced
to fight for their colonizers cannot make a people to share identity
and to own a country with their colonizers. Therefore, fighting for
the Ethiopian state could not make Oromo fighters equal citizens
with their colonizers; the Ethiopian state they have fought for has
maintained their second-class citizenship status through violence.
Therefore, the Oromo elites and society must stop the utilization of
the Oromo youth as raw materials by the Ethiopian state elites or
others. The Oromo national movement by learning from the gadaa
system must be able to mobilize and organize the Oromo youth to
fight for the liberation of their nation and their fatherland,
Oromia. In addition to the major problems that I have discussed
above, the Oromo national movement has some constraints that it must
overcome and some opportunities that it must capture to be
successful.
The Major Opportunities and Constraints for the Oromo Struggle The
Oromo national movement that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s by a few
determined nationalists reached the Oromo populace in the early
1990s. It took almost three decades and heavy sacrifices in the
lives and sufferings of these few nationalists to resurrect the
Oromo name, language, nationhood, and the name of Oromia from the
dustbin of history. In this process, Oromummma—Oromo national
identity, culture, and nationalism—has been resurrected. Currently,
the external and internal enemies of the Oromo people use the
resurrected names and the Oromo language while attacking and
suppressing the Oromo nationalists and self-respecting Oromos. Since
they could not stop the rising wave of Oromummaa, the Tigrayan
colonial elites have used Oromo mercenaries to gradually destroy it.
Ethiopian colonialism had disconnected the Oromo nation from the
international community for more than a century. However, with the
resurrection of the Oromo national identity, culture, and
nationalism, the Oromo people have started to be represented in the
world by its political refugees. For the first time in Oromo
history, the Oromo people started to have its Diaspora that has a
great potential to link Oromia to the global community. The
imposition of Ethiopian state terrorism on the Oromo to suppress
Oromo nationalism created and expanded the Oromo Diaspora in the
world. In this process, a few serious Oromo intellectuals emerged on
the global level and dug the graveyards of history to uncover Oromo
history and culture and to publish books and journals that are
stored in world libraries. Furthermore, in Oromia, millions of the
qubee generation (Oromo youth educated in the Oromo language)
emerged as demonstrated by the recent Oromo student movement. The
national projects that were designed by the Oromo national movement
have produced fundamental results that have become the cornerstones
of the Oromo national struggle. These achievements are great
political opportunities for the Oromo nation. Unfortunately, since
the Oromo national struggle did not yet achieve its main objectives,
the enemies of the Oromo people have created political constraints
to abort the struggle. There are millions of Oromos who have
betrayed their nation to satisfy their economic interests. By
creating and building the OPDO and recruiting such Oromos to this
subservient organization, the Meles regime uses them to attack the
OLF and other organizations and to suppress and control the Oromo
people. The regime has also mobilized several ethnonations against
the Oromo people and their movement. There are also anti-Oromo
forces such as Amhara colonial organizations and others who use any
opportunity to undermine the interest of the Oromo nation. The
constraints of the Oromo struggle are not limited to these problems.
The Oromo national movement did not yet secure adequate sympathy and
support for the Oromo cause from the international community. It is
very clear that the Tigrayan-led government with the support of
global powers and its agents terrorize and rule the Oromo not
because of their strengths but because of the weaknesses of the
Oromo movement, political leadership, and Oromo society. If some
elements of Oromo society are well organized under one structured
organization and leadership, they can rebel and dismantle the Meles
regime within a short period. The Tigrayan soldiers, cadres, and
their agents can be easily dismantled in Oromia if substantial
numbers of Oromos engage in self-defense and coordinated uprising.
If the Oromo people intensify their struggle, the international
community will recognize the political problem of the Oromo nation.
The Oromo people will achieve their national self-determination by
intensifying their national struggle by any means necessary and by
receiving international recognition.
The crisis of the Ethiopian Empire that started in the early 1970s
still continues. The popular uprisings of ethnonations, classes, and
social groups have challenged the collapsing Ethiopian state for
several decades and introduced some changes. These uprisings have
resulted in the overthrowing of the Haile Selassie and Mengistu
regimes and caused the emergence of the Meles government and
Tigrayan ethnocracy. But these changes have failed to change the
nature of Ethiopian colonialism. Ethiopia is still ruled by an
authoritarian-terrorist government that practices colonial terrorism
and clandestine genocide on the colonized peoples such as the Oromo,
Somali, Sidama, Annuak and others. The Tigrayan-led regime that
emerged in 1991 has intensified the crisis of the Ethiopian state
and created the conditions that will give a death-below for this
state. We know that the Oromo nation lost its political
opportunities in the 1970s and the 1990s and remained politically
insignificant force. Learning from the past experiences of the
Ethiopian state, we can understand that the Meles regime has already
dug its own grave. This regime is already rotten from inside, and it
only survives because of the weaknesses of different political
forces in the empire and financial and diplomatic support it receive
form powerful countries. What will happen if the Meles regime
collapses? Are the Oromo liberation fronts and political
organizations ready to use this political opportunity? Oromo
nationalists, liberation fronts, political organizations, community
organizations and associations should start a serious national
political dialogue to overcome their political naiveté and
immaturity in order to build a national political consensus that
will enable them to capture state power in Oromia by any means
necessary and to build multinational democracy with other nations
that accept the principles of self-determination and democracy.
While preparing themselves to use any available political
opportunity, the Oromo national movement and society must start to
fashion a national Gumii Gayyo to produce a designed political
results. These designed political results can be produced through
determination, hard work, sacrifice, and a collective effort of all
Oromo liberation fronts, political organizations, and associations.
Immediate Political Tasks for Genuine Oromo Nationalists History
demonstrates that the determined people can liberate themselves. The
Oromo elites in general and that of the Diaspora in particular must
start to determine the destiny of their nation by taking the
following concrete steps immediately. First, in the Diaspora, they
must initiate town hall meetings in every town where the Oromo
community lives and discuss about the fate of the Oromo people by
focusing on their achievements, failures, challenges, opportunities,
and constraints as a nation. This is not possible in Oromia because
the Oromo people are denied the freedom of self-expression,
organization, and the media. Second, the Oromo in the Diaspora must
stop the politics of self-destruction by avoiding engaging in clan,
religious, and regional politics, and by isolating the Oromo
mercenaries from every Oromo community. Since the Oromo mercenaries
use clan, religious, and regional politics to divide the Oromo
people and turn them against one another, the Oromo community must
reject them and their politics. The Oromo community must ostracize
them by not relating to them and by refusing to participate in their
social events such as death and marriage. Every Oromo community must
identify, expose, and expel the Oromo mercenaries from their
networks, churches, mosques, associations, and other social worlds.
Third, the Oromo Diaspora must challenge the Oromo activists who
have built their separate organizations in order to break down
barriers among different Oromo organizations and unite them under
one structured organization and leadership. Fourth, Oromo youth and
women should be mobilized in order to actively participate in
national dialogues and town hall meetings; they must play a leading
role since they are less corrupted by the ideologies of egoism,
clan, religious and regional politics. Fifth, Oromo nationalists
must establish the rule of law fashioning on the principles of gadaa
and other democratic traditions to use it in running their national
affairs. Sixth, since unconscious people cannot liberate themselves
from colonial domination, the Oromo Diaspora should receive
liberation knowledge through regular dialogues, seminars,
conferences, workshops, lectures, and study circles. The Oromo must
learn their history, culture, language, and traditions; they also
need to learn about the world around them. At this historical
moment, the number one enemy of the Oromo people is political
ignorance; Oromo nationalists must smash this enemy.
When this is accomplished, the Oromo people are going to play their
historical roles that will commensurate with their number. When this
sleeping giant nation will be awakened, others cannot use the Oromo
as raw materials. One of the main reasons why the forty million
Oromos are terrorized and ruled by the elites that emerged from
about four million Tigrayans is the low level political
consciousness. Low level of political consciousness results in
passivism and fatalism. Seventh, every self-respecting Oromo must
realize that he or she has power to determine the destiny of Oromia.
Every Oromo must be educated about his or her potential power and
what he or she must do to translate it to real power. Eighth, the
Oromo Diaspora movement must start building from bottom-up a
confederation of Oromo political, religious, community, and
self-help organizations to create a Global Gumii Gayyo of Oromia
that will contribute ideological, organizational, and financial
resources for consolidating the Oromo struggle and the Oromo
Liberation Army and self-defense militias in Oromia. Ninth, most
members of the Oromo Diaspora must engage in public diplomacy by
introducing the Oromo and their plight to the international
community. Tenth, Oromo nationalists in the Diaspora must start to
build a well-regulated system that can provide support and security
for Oromo’s who are determined to advance the Oromo national
interest whenever they face hardship beyond their control. Finally,
the Oromo must believe that they will liberate themselves by any
means necessary. There is no any doubt that, despite hardships and
sacrifices, the Oromo “social volcano” that is being fermented will
soon burn down Ethiopian colonial structures that perpetuate
terrorism, genocide, diseases, absolute poverty, and malnutrition in
Oromia and beyonders.
Asafa Jalata (ajalata@utk.edu)
is a Professor of Sociology, Global
Studies, and Africana Studies at the
University
of Tennessee,
Knoxville.He has published and edited eight books and authored sixty
refereed articles in regional and international journals and several
book chapters.
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