Thursday, January 3, 2013

WHAT WE NEED IS SOLIDARITY NOT RETRIBUTION

I wish my friends, former community colleagues and all Ethiopians, including those who have attended this yearly festival organised by both the youth and Ethiopian community association in Victoria and the Ethio-Australian sports federation, a happy and successful new year.

Once again, it was good to see the annual Ethiopian soccer tournament & cultural festival was organised here in the hub of the majority of Ethiopians. However, I am not condoning to organising the occasion only in one city. The festival can be organised wherever the amicable location is chosen by members and organising committee. Nonetheless, I remember the last tournament was held in Melbourne in 2010 on one ground all inclusive.
 
2010 Ethiopian's Soccer Tournament Melbourne
It was good to see that the overwhelming people supported the principle of solidarity not disparity and frugality. I could not help but saddened to see some of my friends chose to be otherwise. All in all, the organisation and the turnout at the festival prepared by the community were to full capacity. There were more families and children with entertainment such as jumping on bouncing carnival castle balloon hired for them.
I went over to Yarraville, where the federation’s soccer tournament was held, not far from Altona North where the community’s soccer tournament was organised, to see some of my friends and observe the outcome. Obviously, there were few crowds and I was told that only few players turnout and they have to forfeit some games. This is what happens when festivals are held on the same days and times creating the unpredictability of the last minute decision by participants. One couldn’t help but think what would have happened had this been organised in unison.
      2010 The Bold & the beautiful Team
I wish to express my deep gratitude and appreciation for all the volunteers, organisers and participants. I am thankful for all of the support and encouragement everyone has given the community irrespective of the festival being held in two venues reprehensibly on the same days and times not far away from each other. Although, disappointed whatever the reason for the predicament to occur, I don’t intend to make it irreparable by naming, shaming and talking evil of the already damaged circumstances and I sincerely plead to others to refrain from abusing this gloomy status quo.     

I wanted to thank everyone personally because being the founding member of the community, it has always been my greatest aspiration for all Ethiopians to be united and celebrate our cultural heritage in an atmosphere of harmony. We all must know that if one is affected, we are all indirectly affected.
As a prominent business stall holder, I was the only proud and grateful individual who has displayed my business promotions based on our cultural ideals and all sales of merchandises and T-shirt prints reflecting on our cultures & positive aspirations.
Zelalem Print Display Stall
2012 is gone now. As our saying goes, ላለፈው ክረምት ቤት አይሰራም, (roughly translated), we can’t build a house for the past winter. We can only hope mutual agreements can be reached for the coming year festival and change of those agreements will not happen again, specially, close to last minute preparation for the festival.
2012 Ethiopian's Soccer Tournament Melbourne
I urge both parties of the organising committee to be committed and make a strong resolution to solve this dilemma and call for solidarity to organise a better, bigger annual festival in 2013 by inviting more business stall holders adding more colours to the celebration. Whatever private or individual differences the other groups or members might have, for the sake of the community and as an Ethiopian we need to look in to our communal responsibilities, no matter how difficult and unmanageable the circumstances might be. “United we stand, divided we fall”. ድር ቢያብር አንበሳ ያስር.
Albeit we all came from different cultural backgrounds, we have incurable enigmas of intolerable secrecy and silence in common impeding the manner to open communication and honest dialogues harbouring fear of retribution and ostracism. Time to accept, appreciate our differences and differing of opinions without hatemongering and work together with those colleagues who have a shared passion for making a difference for individuals & transforming the community for the better. Time for change to take its course!
It is said that those who do not learn from past mistakes are doomed to repeat it. Many mistakes and errors have been committed by successive leaders in the past. These mistakes need to be identified, studied and lessons drawn from them so that they will not be repeated again. We need to build collective agenda to advance and support these mistakes and undertake not to repeat them.

We mustn’t disrespect others who have helped us pave the high way to success and mustn’t engage in character assassination (ye saaw sim matifat) of anybody by giving in to other peoples gossip (waare) & trusting the tall poppy syndrome saga (und saaw ye telawoon hooloom saaw metilat, ye tewededewoon mawooded bana woo qe woom) – to hate or like someone just because everybody does - instead of believing in ourselves to make our own judgement about other people.
We must, always, remember that every difference of opinion & ideology is not a difference of principle and shouldn’t be construed as personal vendetta and should be discussed or expressed with respect.

I am a strong advocate, passionate, rational, and strong leader in human rights and equal opportunity issues affecting, not only Ethiopian community, other African communities, a diverse range of communities, the development of services for the disadvantaged and marginalised groups. I always believed in cross-cultural community building and creating a healthy society when I took the first step navigating through storms to establish Ethiopian community.
It is time to replace bitterness with reconciliation; hate with love that heals the community; revenge with forgiveness; hope with despair; hurt with healing; fear with courage; division with unity; doubt with faith; shame with honour;  deceit with candour and sincerity; anger with reason; cruelty with kindness and caring; enmity with friendship; duplicity with openness; complacency with action; indifference with passion; incivility with gracefulness; suspicion with trust; selfishness with altruism; dishonesty with integrity; convenience with virtue; cunning  with moralities; ignorance with knowledge; benightedness with imagination; acrimony with civility, desire with fulfilment.

If there is one thing I detest and reject in the Diaspora Ethiopians, it is political bluffing, power mongering, egos and self-promotion/centeredness and hypocrisy. Breaking up, narrow group think, personality worships, arrogance, hidden agendas, one group trying to undermine the other and so on will not advance the common cause and or respond to the unity of all Ethiopians especially the youths.
It is that none of us can survive without each other. None of us can hope to prosper while the rest are disenfranchised and subjugated. None of us can make progress while the rest regress or stand still. We are now faced with the fierce urgency of creating the conditions of unity.

Playing the ethnic card game is to fall victim to destructive identity politics that breeds division, hatred, conflict, and cynicism.
The process of unifying people is difficult and the road to unity is often littered with the debris of historical grievances, animosity and resentment.

The realities today are different than they were ten or twenty years ago. Aligning one’s thinking and actions with changing realities and circumstances is a sign of wisdom and political maturity.
In general, society seems to have put power, ethnicity, and profit ahead of humanity. Our world is still struggling with poverty, environmental pollution, disease and the devastation of war while grieving over memories of both world wars, Gallipoli, Korean, Congo and others. Greed, the struggle for power between the haves and have nots has taken us on a path towards competition instead of cooperation paving the way for destruction and we still continue to torture each other while mourning for the past. As a result of all these circumstances, we have been disconnected from our heart and soul and from the earth that sustain us.

Failure can be turned into an opportunity to learn and grow. I say it can because it requires a particular attitude to benefit from our failure. Without that mentality, all our failures will go to waste. This is true in politics as it is in personal life for a leader as well as a follower. So what is that mentality?
It is a mentality that is willing and able to reflect on past experience – past actions and their outcomes. It is only through such reflections that one learns one’s strengths, weaknesses and the environment and conditions in which actions were undertaken and what could have been done differently that could have resulted in a positive outcome. It is not enough to admit collective failure. One needs to evaluate one’s role in the failure. This is even more so if one is a leader under whose watch an organization – business or political – failed. Denying (to one self and others) failures and personal accountability and scapegoating or blaming on “globalization, end of cold war, etc.” will not do. Leaders without such a mentality cannot educate themselves from past failures and therefore deserve no second chance.

To me, being educated means being responsible, accountable, open-minded, tolerant, compassionate, decisive, insightful, considerate, ambitious, realistic, and perseverant.
We see individuals, political leaders, groups and organizations of all stripes stoking the fires of ethnic and tribal hatred, fanning the flames of sectarian and religious violence and instigating all forms of strife, disagreement and enmity.

By reciting my mantra of personal convictions daily & living a life of principles to the fullest in a lifelong journey with steadfast endurance, with so much despair and discomfort, eventually, achieving happiness and contentment in the process, exclusively, knowing the success of founding the institution for all Ethiopians through my life long struggle to survive and continuing to fight for social justice and equality to prevail in our communities everywhere thereby beaming on our homeland, I feel I have fulfilled my mission without regret.

Ethiopia is one of the most mosaic nations in the world, mothering over 80 different ethnic groups all deserving equal opportunities. I do not mind if my leader/president is from dominant (e.g. Oromo, Amara) or minority nationalities (Walaita, Guragie) as long as s/he demonstrates the all the qualities the leader has to offer and based on merit not idolized personality profiles. Indeed, I will be extra glad if the leader/president comes from the tiniest ethnicities. That should be celebrated as it is one powerful way of ensuring social equity and justice thereby transforming society.
In his autobiography, Gandhi wrote, “Man and his deed are two distinct things.  Whereas a good deed should call forth approbation and wicked deed disapprobation, the doer of the deed, whether good or wicked, always deserves respect or pity as the case may be. ‘Hate the sin and not the sinner’ is a precept which, though easy enough to understand, is rarely practiced, and that is why the poison of hatred spreads in the world….”

 If one hates another because of race, colour, religion, ethnicity or other factors, the result is more hate. Mandela said, “No one is born hating another person because of the colour of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.” Needless to say that if hate is learned it can also be unlearned. If love can be taught it can be spread across the land.
We should really follow Gandhi’s precept that if we must hate, we “hate the sin and not the sinner.” It is a tough precept to follow and live by without perfecting oneself with enormous change of attitude & self-discipline. We have all been part of the problem and part of the solution at one time or another. If this is not true, then “he who is without sin should cast the first stone”. But now all of us have an opportunity to become part of the grand solution to the political problems facing all of us in the diaspora and in our country.

Let’s join together by resolving our differences and strengthen our solidarity to organise a cultural festival for all Ethiopians by inviting all business vendors to join by displaying their businesses at the chosen festival venues.
Good Health & Happiness

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