I came across a clip of a VOA interview from Ethiopia. It is about the
unveiling of a new statue in Oromia Kilil (Bantustan), Arsi Zone, Hitosa
Wereda named Anole Statue and Museum. From the video that came with the report the ugly contraption seems to be
sitting in the middle of acacia forest and depicts a cut off human hand
with a cut off what we are told to be depiction of a female breast
resting on the palm stretched to the sky. I am assuming the Museum is
there to explain the reason for the erection of such a strong and ugly
visual in such a serene place.
The picture you see above is captured off the video and it shows the
statue under construction. The Video makes it look to be in the middle
of nowhere with no buildings or road nearby. I have no idea if the
location has any significance to the story being told. The report does
not tell us where the museum is located in proximity to the statue. Ato
Eskinder Frew the VOA reporter promised to give us an in-depth interview
soon.
Ato Eskinder talked to a few people to give us differing perspectives
on this monument. I found the exchange very enlightening. Oromia Kilil
(Bantustan) Culture and Tourism Bureau Head Ato Mohamed Jilo was
interviewed to shed light on the meaning of this twenty million Bir
project. This is what he said.
‘this is not to exact revenge the act was not done by a certain
nationality the government of Oromia Kilil or the people of Oromia do
not view it like that , the fight was with the system and it was that
sacrifice paid fighting against the system that enabled us to have the
democracy we have today. The revolution of Ginbot 1983 got rid of the
‘neftegna’ system. Some people claim this statue is built to exact
revenge on the Amhara of the time but we say ‘Neftegna’ Minilik was born
an Amhara but we are not condemning all Amhara to be Neftegna. Rather
than exact revenge it (the statue) is to make sure such act does not
take place again, it is to teach future generations.’
and when he was informed by the reporter that All Ethiopia party does
not have a positive view on such a statue here is what he said.
‘we expect such opposition from them it is not only the statue they
oppose but they are against Oromo self rule and use of our own language
further more they claim our Federal system is based on ethnicity and
they are against it so we are not surprised by their opposition to the
statue anyway we still claim the atrocity (cutting women’s breast) is
done by individuals not by a certain Nationality …. there were Oromos
with Minilik such as Gobena Dache that savaged his people allied with
Minilik it is also possible other nationalities were involved in
this…..thus the individual that committed this could emerge from a
nation like Minilik did but he also brutalized his own people …. .he did
not lift his own people from poverty all of the people of Oromia are
aware of that today his people (Amhara)are as poverty stricken as the
Oromos .’
What do you think? Has any other country faced such a problem? Can
children of the same mother depict each other in such terms and continue
to live together? Why would anybody do such harm to so many millions in
the name of what and to what end?
The report states the permission to erect such a statue was approved
by the Oromia (Bantustan) Kilil. Knowing how the current system works it
is doubtful that the TPLF did not give tacit approval if not early
inception of the idea itself. It is the stated mission of TPLF to create
a wedge between the various people of Ethiopia. This incident is a TPLF
victory. It is a hate message aimed at the Amhara and all of Ethiopia’s
children. It is a sad day to be Amhara or Oromo. It is definitely a
crazy and disturbed person that would come up with such diabolic idea.
It is totally gullible and clueless individuals that would give life to
such ugly thought.
With all due respect Ato Mohamed Jilo is parroting a rehearsed
response void of reason, emotion and psychological impact on society as a
whole. My question to him is was this act and its ramifications
discussed before it was approved? Did someone ask the purpose of it all
and demanded for a verifiable proof such things did happen as part of a
policy? Did the OPDO thought out historians to get perspective,
psychologists to see its impact both on the Oromo youth and their Amhara
cousins and seek advice from elders of both groups to make sure there
would be no lingering animosity?
I doubt all that was done. Ato Mohamed dismissed Ato Abebaw Mehari’s
of All Ethiopia’s concern as irrelevant. That is a curious and callous
response to the grave accusations of mass atrocity as vividly displayed
by the Anole statue. No matter how much my friend Ato Mohamed tries to
dance around the issue the finger is pointing at the same old Amhara as
the perpetrator. His attempt to separate Minilik from the Amhara is
definitely out of this world logic.
The issue here is more than history. It is about today. How could a
party in charge resort to fanning the flames of hate and intolerance and
solve the daily problems faced by our people? We are in the middle of a
mass migration of our youth, there is talk of impending food shortage,
the inflation is double digits, do the esteemed leaders of OPDO believe
that putting up such an offensive statue that would injure many of their
citizens a priority? How does one justify spending twenty million
dollars to weave a fairy tale just to promote hate?
Oromo’s conquered Amhara, Amhara’s conquered Tigrai and Oromo, today
the Tigrai’s are in the process of digesting conquered Amhara, Oromo and
the rest of Ethiopia we always seem to forget about. Should every Kilil
go out on a statue building binge with Amharas recounting the Oromos
Conquer of Gondar, with Tigrais reliving Amhara domination, Christians
lamenting the expansion of Muslims and burning of Churches and
Monasteries and so on. Where does this lead us to?
Isn’t forming brotherly love part of the requirements of living
together in harmony? How could we live and form a lasting union if we
accuse each other of ugly behavior from the past and not even based on
verifiable fact nor true? How does this depiction affect the
relationship between our people? How does viewing such ugly and
offensive statue affect our children?
It is very sad to see people such as Ato Mohamed Jilo being used by
those with ulterior motive to weaken the bond between our people. We do
not see the TPLF warlords building a monument depicting their people as
weak victims but heroic fighters that stood up to oppressors. They have
built monuments that reach the sky showing them to be bigger than life.
No Ethiopian objects to that. A positive depiction of one’s people is
always appreciated as long as it is not done at the expense of one’s own
family.
The practice of building a monument is prevalent in all human
history. Every Nation’s capital is full of statues and memorials showing
heroism and gallantry of past leaders and average people. The US has
Lincoln Statue, MLK Memorial and library, the French built Arc de
Triomphe, the Russians have Red Square as a focal point of their
glorious past among many others I can mention. Anole Statue and Museum
stands all by itself erected not to celebrate past achievements of our
Oromo forefathers but present them in a negative and victimhood state
which is far from the truth.
So my simple question to Ato Mohamed Jilo and the OPDO mini warlords
is what exactly are you trying to accomplish when you spend twenty
million Bir to build such a statue that shows the Oromo as victims? How
does it help the people of Oromo that are starving as we speak and the
children of Oromia that lack paper, pencil or a decent school? Do you
think that money could have been better spent to train teachers, build a
clinic or bring clean water to the villages instead of an offensive and
demeaning statue in the middle of nowhere?
Today thousands of our Oromo people are running from the hell created
by TPLF as an architect and OPDO, ANDM, SEPDM and other opportunists as
running dogs. There are thousands of Oromos in TPLF prisons, thousands
are walking to all parts of Africa, thousands of our young girls are in
servitude in the Middle East and the puppet OPDO true to its nature
choose to build a monument to create hate between children of the same
mother. Does that sound to be the responsible and grown up thing to do?
Does that add a spoonful of nutrition to our starving and destitute
people?
My dear OPDO the claim that your statue is a strange and bizarre
sight is an understatement. To say that it is ugly and rude is not far
from the truth. I do not know what it would look like when finished but
the picture we see today is a crude idiot inspired and not to scale
rendition of a hand and whatever is being held by it. It must have been
created by a committee of men without the presence of a woman since a
female with two nipples on one breast is not the norm and because no
artist worth his salt would claim ownership of this work that cries for
imagination and creativity if nothing else.
All Ethiopians should demand the statue be dismantled without further
discussion. We believe it does not serve any useful purpose other than
create mistrust, hate and poison the relationship between our peaceful
people. We believe it is not possible to build a harmonious society
based on hate and negativity. Our people have fought each other, loved
each other and always managed to come together when it matters. We want
to build on our positive side while working on our negative to make life
better for our children. We reject all those that choose cultivating
hate and negativity for fame and fortune. The Ethiopian people are tired
of mad and unstable leaders and opportunist followers that cannot see
beyond their nose. We only accept leaders that would emphasize our many
good qualities and help us harvest the bounty that come out of common
toil. Live free. Die free.
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