Thursday, April 12, 2018

THE AWAKENING MEMO TO STAND WITH ETHIOPIAN OBAMA


I would like to express my congratulations, highest optimism and exuding hope with the election of the new Prime Minister, Dr. Abiy Ahmed, who stands for all Ethiopians.
We must, always, remember that every difference of opinion & ideology is not a difference of principle and shouldn’t be construed as a personal vendetta and should be discussed or expressed with respect.

In 2008, making the first black presidential nominee of a major U. S. political party, Barack Obama appealed to the nation in words that millions now hope will never be forgotten by US government: “America, we cannot turn back. Not with so much work to be done. Not with so many children to educate, and so many veterans to care for. Not with an economy to fix and cities to rebuild and farms to save. Not with so many families to protect and so many lives to mend…Let us keep that promise – that American promise – and in the words of scripture hold firmly, without wavering, to the hope that we confess.”

When Barack Obama took office, it was assessed the US faced the worst recession in eighty years, but he managed to fight back with swift decisions.

The economic downturn Obama inherited from President Bush was daunting with the US facing one of the worst financial crises: high debt, growing deficit, huge unemployment, financial institutions on the brink of collapse

After a century of trying, Obama declared the health care in America is not a privilege for a few; it's a right for everybody. Obama’s contribution to healthcare reform, by passing the Affordable Care Act also known as the signature accomplishment, Obama Care, has been a praiseworthy.

Obama put equality of opportunity policies in place to support students a path to college giving the low-income students free tuitions.

Obama also travelled around the world preaching a new world order.

Obama clearly told the African leaders on the future of Africans: “We must start from the simple premise that Africa’s future is up to Africans. I say this knowing full well the tragic past that has sometimes haunted this part of the world. I have the blood of Africa within me, and my family’s own story encompasses both the tragedies and triumphs of the larger African story. …”

“Development depends upon good governance. That is the ingredient which has been missing in far too many places, for far too long. That is the change that can unlock Africa’s potential. And that is a responsibility that can only be met by Africans. … “Africa doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong institutions….”

He also launched the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) – programs that mentors and funds projects for the next generation of ambitious young African leaders.

Obama will be remembered and cherished for long time to come for his contributions to social changes, inspiring and motivational slogans such as “Change We Can Believe In”, “Yes We Can” and “The Audacity of Hope”, thoughts on reclaiming the American dream, that encourages every walk of life to tap their full potential in their pursuit of peace, happiness and equal opportunity regardless of “who they are”, “where they come from” and “wherever they live”.

Having closely watching and witnessing Obama, I found Ethiopia’s Prime Minister, Dr Abiy Ahmed’s liveliness and character is similar to that of Obama.

Abiy Ahmed, like Obama, was a product of two racial families with different beliefs and lifestyles. Like Obama, he grew up with his mother and amassed huge perseverance, resilience, and weighty discipline to succeed in a racially and culturally competitive upbringing.


Like Obama, he’s a new breed of generations: smart, witty, articulate, humble, compassionate, and humanitarian and has a quality & fine-looking stature of a star.

Like Obama, he appeals to the people to work together “from the ground up” not the other way around as this scenario is undeniably not reflected in the past government’s dealings which seem to recycle a status quo in our history.

Therefore, is there anyone out there from any opposition parties or who can be handpicked amongst the crowd who will represent all Ethiopians far better than our own Obama, Abiy Ahmed, so we can start promoting his succession to the throne, in the coming election, by sharing his dreams and aspirations with no conflict of interest?

Why is there so much intra-group conflict, characterized by personal feuds and infighting in our society? And when there is conflict, why is conflict resolution so difficult?

One explanation is that we have been brought up in an environment where certain dysfunctional behaviours that hamper effective communication and cause conflict are the norm.

We can observe chronic feuding and infighting in families, extended families, friends, non-political civic organizations such as professional associations, churches, community organizations, charity organizations, and others.

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 habits 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.

Indeed, the most infectious conflicts occur in apparently homogenous groups whose memberships have not only similar ideologies, but similar frames of reference, perspectives and interests.

The four parties under the EPRDF: the OPDO, the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM), the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) and the Southern Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (SEPDM) need to be vigilant and work together openly with no favouritism.

Marginalized political groups develop an ethno-nationalist discourse as opposed to democratic governance, arguing that their exclusion violates the principle of ethnic representation as outlined by TPLF’s own ethnic policy. The biggest challenge facing the future of democracy in Ethiopia is indeed this notion of ethnic entitlement. One can only hope this troubling form of identity politics has not yet become deeply entrenched to the point where a new order based on democratic norms will not be able to fill the crack created by ethnic division and the related deficit of trust among us.

Today, it’s not enough to create change at the level of symptoms and structures. We need to work together even more deeply to change the underlying paradigms of thought and to connect with our deeper sources of creativity and self in a heterogeneous society.

Ethnically, the population of Ethiopia is extremely diverse and there are more than 80 different ethnic groups declared within Ethiopia. Many languages are spoken by the inhabitants, including Amarigna, Oromigna, Tigrigna, Guragigna, Somaligna, and Arabigna. Numerous other local languages and dialects also are spoken while Amharic is the country's only official language.

Keep in mind that people have full right to exercise their cultural heritages including their languages but it should not be to the extent that shake their own and others survival. We should not run for dominance/ knockout game like in our dominant past, rather we should appreciate our uniqueness for the benefits of everyone in the game.

While we can justly be proud of the fact that every generation of Ethiopians during those centuries have paid in blood to maintain our independence, we cannot but feel deeply insulted that at the dawn of the new millennium ours is one of the poorest countries in the world. Over the course of our second millennium we have gone from being one of the most advanced nations on earth to that of being one of the poorest.

Even donors who continue to support the regime is self-serving while maintaining an economic structure that keeps the poorest of the poor trapped in a cycle of poverty. This heroic country of ours deserve better than tired expressions.

Throughout this process we have not been colonized by any foreign nations, thanks to our hero forefathers and foremothers, and hence we have always been the authors of our destiny, both our successes and failures.

However, heroes can be defined in many ways that satisfies receiver’s views regardless of their differing, fields of endeavors, achievements and triumphs. It may sound like comparing apples and oranges to some who are still wallowing in the old beliefs and assumptions that heroes are only limited to warriors.

There are lots of heroes who have contributed to our social cohesion in their own way and need to be recognized open-mindedly. It’s not a conducive strategy to vent or throw tantrums on anyone one, because they didn’t not act or fulfil our expectations.

 “It's only after we've lost everything that we're free to do anything.” –Tyler Durden.

The apparent inconsistency rested plain the TPLF’s trickery and cynical ploy to divide the country along ethnic lines for the sole purpose of maintaining its hegemony.

The underlying problem is the lack of good governance and the absence of enabling factors: accountability, social justice, transparency and rule of law. Focusing on transient issue of favouritism will only serve to provoke and divert attention from the real struggle that is being waged, and to undermine our resolve to build a just society.

The fallacy of identity politics is its mishandling that created disunity and ethnocracy instead of democracy. Take for example someone who was born in Addis Ababa (a cosmopolitan city by all account) whose parents came from two distinct ethnic heritages - say Amara and Oromo- and yet the only language s/he has spoken is Amharic. Which ethnic group this person ought to be allocated? What if by virtue of his/her upbringing and the multicultural environment of his/her surroundings s/he does not feel allegiance to any of his/her parent’s ethnic heritage? The issue could be complicated even more if we add to the mix of the unavoidable dynamics of intermarriage with other group that constitute the Ethiopian cultural mosaic. I can go on with other complex scenarios, but there is no need to press the point further, for only in the context of democracy that the questions of choice arises. A person's identity cannot be given to them instead a person must achieve a sense of identity through personal experience and self-search as a result of his/her cultural heritage and current surroundings.

Above all one can bear allegiance to multiple identities at any one time. Obviously, Dr Abiy Ahmed’s diverse combinations of generational experiences distinctively qualify him for the highest office in the land.

“No, no, we are not satisfied and will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.” –Martin Luther King Jr.

We need to break free from negative emotions of the past, out-dated beliefs and opinions how we do things which passed on to us via generational setting, inherited collective mind-patterns that have kept our generations in captivity creating so much of their suffering for eternities manifesting in our misery today.

“If you're walking down the right path and you're willing to keep walking, eventually you'll make progress.” –Barack Obama

Let’s accept what is, let go of what was, and have hope & conviction in what will be.

These days in age, we don’t need guns and weapons of mass destruction to change course of history, by sharing practical concepts as an interconnected society, we can write and re-write anything until we get it right, peacefully. The quickest way to change how we feel is to change how we think.

Therefore, my fellow Ethiopian brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, I urge you to fully accept our own Obama, Abiy Ahmed, “because change has come” to Ethiopia, who would bring about those changes he promised for our people to live with dignity, collaboration, high spirit and economic prosperity leading our young generations to a common goal –PEACE, LOVE and the Pursuit of HAPPINESS!

Let’s join together by resolving all trivial differences and strengthen the team spirit to communicate with all Ethiopians by inviting all local ethnic communities and business venders rather than talking about each other, feeling honestly and friendly to talk to each other.

ONE ETHIOPIA FOR ALL, ALL FOR ONE ETHIOPIA!

So, the time has come when we all need to learn new ways of doing things or businesses or interacting with others.

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