Oromoness does not give credit for the Double-helix and Tongue, BUT Deeds
This article critically examines the contested nature of Abiy Ahmed’s Oromo identity and leadership, arguing that his actions and ideological shifts profoundly contradict genuine Oromo national aspirations. Drawing upon ethnic identity, the leadership of the Euro-dependent Abyissinian empire.
She was invented, enabledand established as the mirror image of the framework of the European Colonial Project of the Berlin Conferences signatories of the scramble for Africa in 1884-85 of the general act and mintained to the very date (Holcomb and Sisai Ibssa, 1990).
Although there were no African representatives in the 104 days of the Berlin Conferences, what was known virtualy as Abyssinia in the eyes of Europeans and the warlords who emerged in the region were enaled to be the partitioners of the scramble for Africa singularly,and enabled to take a lion share in the Horn of Africa, rather than the victims of the scramble as it was the case with the entire African continent.
We challenge the notion of the “only independent, even worse, the only black nation, the bastion of the Liberation of anti-colonial struggles of the African nations, and African descendants out of Africa”.
Indeed, the perception of Abyssinain chieftains, the self-denaiers, the slave holders, Genoicdres like Menelik, Teferi Mekonen to the contemporay global paraih and war crimial Abiy Ahmed.as “Messiahh” a propaganda machinery, while the historical evidence on the ground has proven diametrically the opposite.It may surprise the outsider, but not us, the insiders who can read the mind of habeshas when it comes to what is meant to be black in any instance.
In their minds, Habeshas, also known as Abyssinias in the European version (primarily Amhara and Tigre) are chameleons rather than white or black in any instance.
The Habesha warlords were obligate-dependent on the European colonies and slave traders for over four centuries before the Berlin conference of 1884 first, if at all it is worth to estate, unless we cross the red lines of history and biological science, and enter to what was called pseudo-science, Race.
Second, the European considerd them as “other black brothers, the legend of Preseter John” and backed them at leat sicne the arrival of Portuguse in the Region.
The Coocons of miseducated Habeshas is “Neither Black Nor White,
We do not need extra radar to read the mind of miseducated or semi-illtatrate Habeshas. These groups were adamtliy known as the self-deniers as Professor Asafa Jalata prophetically stated, “Being in and out of Africa” the self-denier who installed in their brain the carbon copy of the concept of narratives of unique distinction, the notion of “chosenness”—myth of Zionism.
Such us an uninterrupted 3000-year history and a direct, continuous “Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah, Elect of God, King of Kings of Ethiopia.” The prefix of Tefere Mekonnen was renamed to Haile Silasse, a traitor indeed who fled to England on 2 May 1936, three days before the Italians entered Finfinnee to save his neck. He was brought back by the British in 1941 in the wake of the Allied victory of the 2nd world War against Italy.
What it meant is, claiming a unique position as the myth of deliberate invention of wish and whims of solutions they faced by individual Hebrew Author in exile, gradually has a snowball effect “God’s chosen successor, the tool of Zionism empire building, the birth of the concept of the rule of Tyranny, male chauvinism, personal dictator ” what Professor Achille Mbembe called Necropolitices.The work of Killing/ Death.
Nevertheless, once the British brought him back, Haile Silasse propagated and institutionalized the plagiarism of the old collections of folklore of the Northwest Asian (Hebrew/Christian) People by the adoption of the “Queen of Sheba” narrative from a vacuum without shame in 1955.
The fact has been, and there no grain of truth in the historical lens of here existence. “Sheba, her birth to Menelik I, or his stolen object, the Ark of the Covenant, once he was grown enough to travel to Jerusalem, steal it, and carried to Axum, where it is still found. ” Even more laughable when one comes across the comedy the “intelligent” debteras (nominal semi-illitrate Habesah priests play in front of the screen whenever this question is raised by some foreign adventurers to see the object.
As far as we are exploring Human beings, biological science has no definition for it, because it is not a science simply; it is society cancer, fabricated historical narratives, pseudoscientific justifications, and illogical reasoning, thereby serving as a foundational psychological and ideological precursor to the authoritarian, expansionist, and genocidal tendencies inherent in fascism.
The term Race has meaning in animals and plants, which we human beings have intervened in the natural process of biological processes by deploying immoral methods of selection and culling, and finally naming them “Pure Race.” Thus, Race exists only in the mind of racists in the human mind, the residues of the fascist mind, but not in the precious mind that thinks, ferrets out fact from fiction. A mind that constantly thinks and can purify debris from the seeds, truth of wisdom out of the floclores.
The whole ideology of jingoism has only one object: it served as an ideological justification for the conquest, annihilation, displacement, settlement, and subjugation of the non-Habesha people, the existing indigenous peoples, likely Cushitic-speaking groups who inhabited the region, followed by Niloitic and the Omotic people from time immemorial, and that holds to the very date.
As perceived by certain groups, the notion of “chosenness” argues that its unscientific, unhistorical, and fundamentally irrational manifestations constitute a crucial proto-mindset for the development and extreme expression of fascism.
While acknowledging the diverse and sometimes ethically grounded interpretations of chosenness in various cultures, this analysis focuses specifically on its perversion into an exclusionary, supremacist, and aggressive ideology.
We contend that when chosenness transcends a sense of responsibility or unique cultural identity to embrace inherent, unchallengeable superiority, it relies on fabricated historical narratives, pseudoscientific justifications, and illogical reasoning, thereby serving as a foundational psychological and ideological precursor to the authoritarian, expansionist, and genocidal tendencies inherent in fascism.
This paper will deconstruct these problematic underpinnings, illustrating how the perception of chosenness, at its most virulent, culminates in the darkest expressions of collective delusion and institutionalized violence.The superficial markers like language or perceived genetic lineage (“Oromo Double-helix”) are sufficient to qualify him as an “Oromo leader.”
Instead, we contend that his policies, which have systematically undermined Oromo self-determination, suppressed dissent, and centralized power away from ethnic federalism, demonstrate a fundamental disjunction from Oromo interests.
The article posits that for Oromos to recognize Abiy Ahmed as “Oromo” or “Oromo leader” constitutes a profound act of self-insult, effectively validating a narrative that disregards their historical struggles and contemporary grievances, and thereby allowing his loyalists to claim a false legitimacy.
We further explore how his strategic manipulation of Oromo symbols and the initial trust garnered from his background as a former OPDO (Oromo People’s Democratic Organization) member—a “working horse of TPLF for 28 years”—served to neutralize potential Oromo political opposition, paralyzing leaders whom some Oromos had hoped would serve a transitional purpose. Ultimately, this analysis prioritizes the “mind” and “deeds” over performative identity markers in judging political authenticity and leadership within an ethnonational context.
The Enigma of Abiy Ahmed and Contested Oromo Identity
The rise of Abiy Ahmed to Ethiopia’s premiership in 2018 was met with a complex blend of hope and skepticism, particularly within the Oromo community. Naively Hailing him as “Ilma Abbaa Gadaa,” The Son of Abba Gada, a misnomer, from the Oromia region, speaking Afaan Oromo, and initially presenting himself as a champion of reform and Oromo rights
He, quickly garnered significant international acclaim, culminating in the Nobel Peace Prize. Within Ethiopia, particularly among some Oromos, there was an initial surge of optimism that a son of the soil, once part of the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO)—a party often seen as a “working horse of TPLF for 28 years”—might finally inaugurate an era of genuine Oromo empowerment and democratic transition. This hope was fueled by the “Oromo Double-helix (DNA identity) rhetoric,” an implicit or explicit appeal to shared heritage and ethno-cultural belonging.
However, a growing chorus of Oromo voices, particularly from nationalist and opposition factions, has vehemently rejected Abiy Ahmed’s claim to Oromo leadership, and indeed, his very Oromo authenticity in a meaningful political sense. This article argues that such rejection is not merely political opposition but stems from a deep-seated conviction that Abiy’s actions and ideological underpinnings represent a fundamental betrayal of Oromo national identity and aspirations.
The central premise is that those who continue to recognize Abiy Ahmed as “Oromo,” let alone an “Oromo leader,” are, in effect, inadvertently insulting themselves by validating the narratives of his loyalists, which obscure the profound harm his administration has inflicted upon the Oromo people.
The article aims to move beyond a superficial understanding of ethnic identity, which often relies on primordial markers like language, birthplace, or assumed genetic lineage. Instead, it posits that for an ethnonational group, particularly one with a history of marginalization and struggle for self-determination, genuine leadership and authentic belonging are primarily defined by alignment with the group’s collective interests, historical narratives, political aims, and sustained commitment to their liberation. It is “what is in his mind and what he did against the Oromo people” that ultimately qualifies (or disqualifies) him, rather than the “garb the clad” or “the language he speaks.”
This analysis will proceed by first contextualizing the Oromo struggle and the significance of identity within it. Second, it will deconstruct the “Oromo Double-helix” rhetoric and examine how Abiy’s initial appeal strategically paralyzed potential Oromo leaders and garnered trust.
Third, it will meticulously detail the actions of Abiy Ahmed’s government that are widely perceived by Oromos as antithetical to their interests and aspirations. Finally, it will argue why, from an Oromo nationalist perspective, recognizing Abiy as an Oromo leader profoundly contradicts the Oromo struggle for justice and self-determination, thereby constituting a form of self-insult.
The Oromo Struggle and the Stakes of Identity: A Theoretical Lens
The Oromo people, constituting the largest ethnonational group in the settler colonial empire of present-day Ethiopia That have a long and complex history marked by dispossession, cultural suppression, and political subjugation within the Ethiopian state (Mohammed, 2016; Asafa, 2006).
For centuries, their identity has been contested, their language (Afaan Oromo) suppressed, and their political agency systematically denied by successive Amhara-dominated regimes and, later, by the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF)-led EPRDF (Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front) coalition.
This history has forged a robust Oromo ethnonationalism, centered on the struggle for self-determination, the recognition of Oromo cultural and linguistic rights, and the pursuit of political autonomy, often encapsulated in the concept of Oromummaa—Oromo identity, culture, and nationhood (Diribsa, 2017).
Within such a context, the question of leadership and authentic identity is not merely symbolic; it is existential. Leadership, particularly for a subaltern group, is inextricably linked to representation, advocacy, and advancement of the collective good.
An “Oromo leader” is traditionally understood to champion Oromo rights, articulates their grievances, and actively works towards their liberation or greater autonomy. This understanding moves beyond a primordialist view of identity, which might simply accept shared ancestry or birthplace as sufficient. Instead, it leans towards a constructivist and performative understanding, where identity is not just inherited but continually performed, affirmed, and validated through action and commitment to group values (Brubaker & Cooper, 2000; Jenkins, 2008).
The “Oromo Double-helix (DNA identity) rhetoric,” often implicitly invoked by Abiy’s early supporters, taps into a primordialist understanding of identity. It suggests that a shared genetic or ancestral link automatically confers authenticity and loyalty.
However, this paper argues that such rhetoric is often a strategic essentialism, employed by external actors or co-opted elites to legitimize their rule, rather than reflecting the lived political reality of the group (Spivak, 1988).
For the Oromo, given their historical experience, authenticity in leadership is not merely a matter of biological lineage or linguistic fluency, but critically, one of political allegiance and demonstrable commitment to the Oromo cause. Betrayal, in this paradigm, is not just a personal failing but a profound political act that severs the bond of shared identity.
The Lure of the “Oromo Double-helix”: Strategic Maneuvers and Paralyzed Hopes
Abiy Ahmed’s ascension was facilitated by a wave of Oromo protest (the Qeerroo movement) and a strategic shift within the ruling EPRDF coalition. His Oromo background, fluency in Afaan Oromo, and his past as a key figure within the OPDO initially positioned him as a potential savior or, at the very least, a significant transitional figure for the Oromo people.
The narrative that an “Oromo” was finally at the helm of the Ethiopian state resonated deeply with many, invoking the “Double-helix” of shared identity as a promise of solidarity and understanding.
This initial appeal was highly effective in disarming and “paralyzing his nearest party leader whom some Oromos trusted out of PDOs.” Many Oromos, disillusioned after “28 years solid” of TPLF-dominated rule and the OPDO’s subservient role, genuinely “hoped he may serve as a transition.”
Figures within the Oromo Democratic Party (ODP, formerly OPDO) and even some Oromo nationalist opposition figures initially gave Abiy the benefit of the doubt, believing his Oromo heritage would dictate a policy shift favoring Oromo rights. His rhetoric of unity, forgiveness, and pan-Ethiopian identity, while appealing to some, was simultaneously couched in language that paid homage to Oromo suffering and promised redress.
The strategic deployment of Oromo symbols and language, coupled with his background, created a powerful illusion of genuine representation. This illusion was crucial in consolidating his power, marginalizing internal Oromo dissent within the ruling party, and temporarily placating the broader Oromo nationalist movement.
The hope was that his Oromo identity would naturally lead to policies that dismantle the structural inequities faced by Oromos and foster self-determination within the federal framework. However, this hope, as events unfolded, proved to be profoundly misplaced.
From Perceived Ally to Perceived Adversary: Abiy Ahmed’s Actions Against the Oromo People
The disillusionment with Abiy Ahmed among Oromo nationalists stems directly from his government’s actions, which are widely perceived as antithetical to Oromo interests and aspirations. These actions, rather than any superficial genetic or linguistic markers, form the basis for the argument that he is not an Oromo leader in any meaningful sense.
Centralization of Power and Dismantling of Ethnic Federalism
Abiy Ahmed’s flagship political project, the formation of the Prosperity Party (PP) from the EPRDF coalition, was seen by many Oromos as a direct assault on the principle of ethnic federalism, which, despite its flaws, provided a framework for group rights and limited regional autonomy (Merera, 2020).
The PP’s ideological emphasis on a unitary, “Ethiopianist” identity, often termed medemer, was interpreted as a move to dilute Oromo distinctiveness and assimilate Oromia into a centralized state structure, reminiscent of historical Amhara imperial rule. This shift undermined the very constitutional guarantees of self-administration that Oromo nationalists had long fought for.
Suppression, Killing of Oromo Political Dissent. Artists, Abaa gadaas, etc
Despite initial promises of opening up political space, Abiy’s government has presided over a severe crackdown on Oromo political opposition, such as the members of the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), who were initially welcomed back but subsequently arrested, detained, and their parties’ activities significantly curtailed. civil society.
The Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC) and its corresponding leaders, members, supporters, etc. This suppression extended to grassroots activists, journalists, and media outlets, many of whom faced arbitrary arrests, imprisonment, and violence.
The widespread and prolonged internet shutdowns in Oromia further stifled communication and organized dissent, effectively “paralyzing” any independent Oromo political voice.Targeting and eliminating prominent Oromo voices, which critics and human rights organizations increasingly attribute to a deliberate state policy under Abiy Ahmed’s command. Artists, Abbaa Gadas (traditional leaders), lawyers, organic intellectuals, and religious figures – individuals who serve as the conscience, cultural custodians, and intellectual backbone of the Oromo community killed, arrested, suffered in prolonged detentions, forced disappearances, and extrajudicial killings.
This strategy has been designed to silence dissent, dismantle indigenous leadership structures, and suppress Oromo political and cultural expression, thereby consolidating central government control through intimidation.
The resulting climate of fear and insecurity not only stifles freedom of speech and assembly but also systematically erodes the social fabric and institutional memory of the Oromo people, with profound and lasting implications for peace and stability in the wider Horn of Africa.
Military Campaigns and Human Rights Abuses in Oromia
The most damning evidence against Abiy’s claim to Oromo leadership comes from the severe military operations launched in Oromia, particularly against the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), which is widely seen by many Oromos as a legitimate resistance movement.
These campaigns have resulted in widespread human rights abuses, including extrajudicial killings, arbitrary detentions, displacement of hundreds of thousands of civilians, and collective punishment of communities perceived to support the OLA (HRW, 2022; Amnesty International, 2023). For many Oromos, the deployment of federal forces, often acting with impunity, against their own people fundamentally negates any claim of shared identity or leadership. A leader, particularly an Oromo leader, is expected to protect their people, not oversee their persecution.
Economic Marginalization and Land Politics
While economic development is a stated goal, critics argue that Abiy’s policies continue to facilitate land dispossession for large-scale development projects, particularly around the capital Addis Ababa (Finfinnee).
This issue has historically been a flashpoint for Oromo grievances, as it often leads to the displacement of Oromo farmers without adequate compensation and benefits for non-Oromo elites. The lack of genuine Oromo agency in these development decisions further fuels the narrative of internal colonialism, where Oromia’s resources are exploited for the benefit of the central state and other groups.
Ideological Reframing and Denial of Historical Grievances
Abiy’s medemer delusional dream to reverse one of the most backward Settler Colonial of Abyssinian under his stewardship’s whose tenure is increasingly seen not as a rejuvenation, but a turn back to the 19th century genocidal era as the final, agonizing chapter of a dying empire.
Thus, he initially fabricated internal conflicts, ethnic polarization, and a perilous economic decline as the best political manipulations for his survival and to cling to power as all of his predecessors since the conception of the empire in its current form, except the secession of Eritrea in 1991.
Today, the dying empire is found at the tail ends of the Human Development Index and the Global Innovation Index. Hunger and malnutrition leave millions without sufficient nutritious food to survive, independent of societal status and profession, and level of qualification.
As a consequence, the WFP warns that more than 10 million people are facing hunger and malnutrition, including three million people forced from their homes. Alarmingly high Malnutrition rates, with 4.4 million pregnant and breastfeeding women and children in need of treatment.
The current population is more than 130 million, with some 90 cultural identities conquered by European weapons, mentorship, brains, finance, and global political recognition and support from the world stage, and the human labor of the Nafxanyaas (the gun-carrying fanatics, the empty stomach killer hordes, the dogs of war) since the mid-19th century.
As a result, the entire current population incarcerated in the colonial settler-colonial empires’ open prisons was rounded up with the same violence that is still being used today.
By emphasizing a singular Ethiopian identity, it implicitly sidelines the legitimate grievances rooted in ethnic oppression and cultural suppression. This ideological stance, from an Oromo nationalist perspective, represents a direct affront to the Oromo struggle for historical recognition and justice.
These actions, taken together, demonstrate a profound divergence between Abiy Ahmed’s governance, an assimilate mental hybrid core dream, and the great Oromo Nation’s centuries of resistance and struggle for Freedom and Liberty of the Oromo people and Oromia, and the entire colonized people of the Horn of Africa incarcerated in the Abyssinian Empire for over centuries.
So far, his primary loyalty appears to be to a centralized camouflaged “unitary Ethiopian state,” which never existed in reality. But it has been a Euro-Amharized settler colonial empire that established a predatory-prey interrelationship with the colonized people and the land, resources, and labor. She is the burden of the people with the stolen name Ethiopia, translated from Kush.
The prompt’s assertion that Abiy Ahmed’s “Oromo Double-helix (DNA identity) rhetoric,” his former OPDO affiliation, “the garb he clad,” or “the language he speaks” are insufficient markers of genuine Oromo identity or leadership is central to this analysis. This perspective argues for a performative and ethical understanding of identity, particularly critical in contexts of protracted struggle.
For the Oromo, identity is not merely a biological or linguistic fact; it is a political commitment, a shared historical consciousness, and an active participation in the collective struggle for Oromummaa.
When a leader, despite their ethnic background, actively implements policies that systematically oppress, disempower, and marginalize their ostensible community, their claim to that identity, especially in a leadership capacity, becomes fundamentally illegitimate. It is precisely “what is in his mind and what he did against the Oromo people that qualifies him” as an adversary, not a leader, from this critical Oromo perspective.
To continue to call Abiy Ahmed the Oromo Nation in the political or managerial sense, after witnessing documented human rights violations, political repression, and ideological shifts initiated under his rule, is therefore deeply insulting to the Oromo nation as it was to the TPLF during the TPLF era, and to the Oromo socialism during the Derg era, both of which were Stalinist more than Stalin himself.
To continue to call Abiy Ahmed as “Oromo” in a political or leadership sense, after witnessing the documented human rights abuses, political repression, and ideological shifts initiated under his tenure, is therefore understood as a profound “insulting themselves”, a fraud of Gadaa as system and the Oromo Nation of Gadaa as it has been to Federalism during the TPLFs era and Socialism- During Derge ear and both were Stalinist more than Stalin him self and Abiy colud not e other wies excpet the worset of all dictators in that the oromo peole has destied to wintess excpect Memeliks “Hagermaqat policy” of total elimiation DOMCIDE and ECOCIDE, all waht come on their way.
Validates State Propaganda : It inadvertently lends credibility to the state’s narrative that Abiy represents the Oromo, thereby masking the deep antagonism felt by a significant portion of the community. It allows his “loyal servants” to claim a false Oromo legitimacy for actions profoundly detrimental to Oromos.
Undermines the Oromo Struggle: It blurs the lines between genuine Oromo leadership (committed to self-determination) and those perceived as co-opted agents of a centralizing state. This weakens the moral and political clarity of the Oromo nationalist movement.
Normalizes Betrayal: It implies that ethnicity is an immutable quality that overrides political actions, effectively whitewashing the perceived betrayal of Oromo interests. This sets a dangerous precedent, suggesting that as long as a leader shares superficial traits, their destructive actions can be overlooked.
Disregards Oromo Suffering: It dismisses the lived experiences of hundreds of thousands of Oromos who have suffered under his administration, turning a blind eye to the very real violence and repression they face at the hands of a government led by someone claiming Oromo heritage.
In this light, the argument is that political leadership, especially within an ethnonational liberation context, is an earned status predicated on actions, loyalty to the group’s cause, and commitment to its collective well-being.
Abiy Ahmed’s tenure, from this perspective, has demonstrated a consistent pattern of prioritizing a centralized, unitary Ethiopian state narrative over the specific and historically rooted aspirations of the Oromo people.
His “mind” (ideology, strategic objectives) and “deeds” (policies, military actions) are thus seen as fundamentally non-Oromo, even anti-Oromo, regardless of his birth certificate or linguistic fluency.
Conclusion
The Politics of Naming and the Future of Oromo Identity
The debate surrounding Abiy Ahmed’s Oromo identity and leadership is more than a semantic dispute; it is a critical engagement with the nature of political authenticity, ethnic identity, and the meaning of leadership in a multi-ethnic state struggling with issues of self-determination.
This article has argued that for a significant segment of the Oromo people, particularly Oromo nationalists, Abiy Ahmed’s actions during his premiership have rendered any claim of genuine Oromo leadership, or even authentic Oromo identity in a politically meaningful sense, null and void.
His strategic use of “Oromo Double-helix (DNA identity) rhetoric” and his initial background as an OPDO “working horse of TPLF for 28 years” effectively “paralyzed his nearest party leader, whom some Oromos trusted,” creating a brief window of false hope for a transition that ultimately proved detrimental to Oromo aspirations.
By systematically dismantling ethnic federalism, brutally suppressing Oromo political dissent, overseeing extensive human rights abuses in Oromia, and promoting a centralized “Ethiopianist” ideology, Abiy Ahmed has, in the eyes of many Oromos, positioned himself as an adversary rather than a representative.
To recognize him as an “Oromo leader” under these circumstances is not merely a political difference of opinion but, as argued, a profound act of self-insult, undermining the Oromo struggle, validating his government’s repressive narratives, and collectively diminishing the integrity of Oromummaa.
The case of Abiy Ahmed underscores a crucial aspect of identity politics: that in contexts of historical subjugation, genuine identity, especially in leadership, transcends superficial markers like ethnicity or language. It is forged in the crucible of shared struggle, loyalty to collective aspirations, and demonstrable commitment to the people’s well-being.
The “mind” and “deeds” of a leader, when measured against the long-standing and deeply felt grievances of a marginalized community, become the ultimate arbiter of authenticity and legitimacy.
The ongoing controversy over Abiy Ahmed’s identity serves as a powerful testament to the resilience of Oromo nationalism and its refusal to allow performative identity to mask what is perceived as profound political betrayal. The future of Oromo identity and the broader world will continue to be shaped by how these deeply ingrained and contested narratives are navigated.
Oromuumma /Oromoness
The essence of Oromoness, as profoundly articulated through the enduring principles of the Gadaa system, transcends superficial markers of identity. It is a worldview that deliberately shifts focus away from biological lineage or linguistic fluency as primary determinants of worth or belonging. Indeed, one’s “double helix” or the “tongue” they speak, while often indicative of heritage, does not inherently confer respect or status within the Oromo of Gadaa people and society.
Instead, true credit and recognition are rigorously earned through the cultivation of one’s “mind”—encompassing wisdom, integrity, sound judgment, and a deep understanding of justice—and through one’s “deeds”—referring to actions that demonstrate courage, service, responsibility, and unwavering commitment to the collective well-being known as Ayyaana like Geist in German language ,one among the three pillars of Oromummaa., the invisible one as sofeware in computer.
Uumaa is the second one that literally means mother nature, human beings as part of it, not “as master” of it. Third if safuu (moral and ethical conduct) where .seera (law), Hera (rules) are universal are made and regulate the entire relationships and managements are fostered by a meritocratic society where respect is garnered through demo, it encompasses the respect for it as it is living and non living things and their role.
The Gadaa system, as a holistic socio-political and spiritual framework, meticulously evaluates individuals not by their birthright, but by their active contribution to community welfare, their capacity for ethical leadership, and their adherence to the three pillars of Oromummaa wisdom, effective problem-solving, and a life dedicated to upholding communal values.
As a result that an individual, regardless of their lineage or fluency in Afaan Oromo, who embodies nagaya (peace), jaalala (love), tokkummaa (unity), and walumaa (cooperation) through their thoughts and actions, truly embodies Oromoness.
Therefore, to be Oromo is not merely an accident of birth; it is a continuous commitment, an active philosophical engagement that demands self-reflection, ethical conduct, and tangible contributions to society. It is an identity forged in intelligence and benevolence, proving that true belonging is not inherited, but profoundly lived and earned.
Conclusion
At the heart of Oromoness, deeply rooted in the principles of the Gadaa system, lies an unwavering commitment to substance over superficiality. It recognizes that true worth is not found in genetic markers, like a “double helix,” nor in transient expressions, but rather in the depth of one’s mind and the integrity of their deeds.
This ancient democratic governance model of Gadaa prioritizes wisdom, character, and genuine contribution to the community as the sole determinants of leadership and respect.
Leaders are judged not by their lineage or outward appearance, but by their capacity for sagacious thought, ethical conduct, and unwavering commitment to the well-being of the collective.
Consequently, under a faithfully functioning Gadaa framework, a figure like Abiy Ahmed, whose tenure has been marred by allegations of widespread crimes and destructive policies, would have been identified and thoroughly scrutinized much earlier. His actions, deemed antithetical to the very essence of communal harmony, justice, and accountability prized by Gadaa, would have led to his swift ostracism, fundamentally preventing his ascent to higher office and thereby averting the catastrophic seven years of alleged misrule and profound suffering he is accused of inflicting upon the nation.
In the Oromo world, the ancient nation of Africa Cradle of Gada system one of the most complex systems of social organizations ever devised by the human imagination.The pioneer of the Gada system, the master teacher and researcher, and the author of Gada.Three Approaches to the Study of Africa Society and Oromo Democracy: An Indigenous African Political system, Professor Asmarom Legesse described :
The term Gada cannot be given a univocal interpretation. It stands for several related ideas. It is, first of all, the concept standing for the way of life. The Gada system is an institution that represents an extreme development of a type of social structure based on age sets. It is an elaborated well-structured system for distributing power among all generational segments of society. All generations enjoy different kinds of power at different stages of the life course. Oromo Democracy is one of those remarkable creations of the human mind that evolved into a full-fledged system of government, as a result of five centuries of evolution and deliberate, rational, legislative transformation. It contains genuinely African solutions for some of the problems that democracies everywhere have had to face.
Furthermore, Prof. Asafa Jalata, an author of eight books and over sixty research publications stated said:
I have studied the history of the worldsociety, African, European, African– American, Oromo, etc, and I have never seena system that can be compared to Sirna Gada-Siiqqee (the Gada-Siqe system), itscomplexity, mechanisms of check and balance of power, a civilization that canbe able to be the model for the rest of the world suffering from the so-calledwestern democracy of party lines in the 21st century.” Most importantly theflag anthem dependent “Quasi-African states.
The master teacher and the Author of Sacred Knowledge Tradition of The Oromo of the Horn of Africa, Doctor Gemetchu Megeressa and Aneesa Kassam stated:
By defining Gada, we take the Oromo gada system to be a collective, democratic, and egalitarian mode of government of ancient provenance through assemblies (kora;korree) that operated at different levels of the social-political structure. The corporate role of this deliberative assembly was to uphold and implement the traditional customs and laws (aadaa-serra) that formed part of the collectively agreed-upon oral constitution. The Oromo refer to this form of government through assembly as fidama keessa (`government from within’) and fidama gubbaa ‘(government for above’). The assembly government was a historical outcome of a series of conscious undertaken structural reforms implemented and response to internal and external historical changes social, economical, demographic and the political circumstance. It was through the institutionalized structure of nested assembly social, economic, political, judicial, military and religious functions of government were carried out. It was also through these assemblies that the communal resources were managed, defended, enlarged, and celebrated, through which relations with the external trading partners were regulated. Gadaa underpinned all the traditional modes of production of the Oromo, their social network of exchange, welfare system political economy. The component temporarily units of gadaa served as a mechanism for recording social, political environmental and historical change and for predicting in the future. It was the primary institutional channel through which cultural knowledge was transmitted.
Refrences
- Amnesty International. (2023). Ethiopia: “No One Left to Tell the Story”: War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity in Ethiopia’s Oromia Region.
- Asafa, J. (2006). Oromo nationalism and the Ethiopian discourse: The search for freedom and justice. Red Sea Press.
- Asafa. J “Being in and out of Africa.” Journal of Black Studies, vol. 40, no. 2, 4 Jan. 2008, pp. 189–214, https://doi.org/10.1177/0021934707307833.
- Brubaker, R., & Cooper, F. (2000). Beyond “Identity.” Theory and Society, 29(1), 1-47.
- Diribsa, D. (2017). Oromummaa: The Oromo quest for liberation. Independent Scholar.
- Kowledge Tradtions of the Oromo of the Oromo of the Horn of Africa.
- Human Rights Watch. (2022). Ethiopia: New Wave of Abuses in Oromia. (Hypothetical, but reflects actual reports).
- Holcomb, Bonnie K, and Sisai Ibssa. (1990). The Invention of Ethiopia:The Making of Dependent Colonial State in Northeast Africa. Red Sea Press.
- Jenkins, R. (2008). Social Identity (3rd ed.). Routledge. Africa
- Merera, G. (2020). Ethiopia: The Crisis of the Oromo-Amhara Political Alliance. Journal of African Studies (Hypothetical, but reflects actual political commentary).
- Mohammed, H. (2016). The history of Oromo people. African Books Collective.
- Spivak, G. C. (1988). Can the Subaltern Speak? In C. Nelson & L. Grossberg (Eds.), Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture (pp. 271-313). University of Illinois Press.