At last, the Minnesota Oromo share their secret

Who knows the Minnesota Oromo?
Who knows their dark secret?
Fifteen thousand Oromo live in Minnesota but they blend in almost invisibly, like a stealthy, anonymous population in the state.
They are teachers, doctors and lawyers; they run retail shops and corporations; they attend Viking games, relax at coffee shops and stroll at malls. They are sometimes called "Ethiopian immigrants" because they are indeed from Ethiopia.
But among friends and family, or if you ask them specifically, they carefully call themselves "Oromo."
Who are the Oromo?
They are the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, numbering 31 million, and they are the subject of a new report, "Human Rights in Ethiopia: Through the Eyes of the Oromo Diaspora," prepared by The Advocates for Human Rights, based in Minneapolis.
The report describes how the Oromo began immigrating to Minnesota from their homeland 30 years ago, and in the process explains why, despite their mostly successful assimilation, they remain relatively little-known here.
First, though, a warning. This column contains language that represents an awful reality, an affliction that at first may seem distant from us, but is actually as near to us as our neighbors -- that fellow at the football game, the woman at the mall.
State Power
A century of history, summarized in the report, provides the context for understanding the Oromo in this state. From the days of Emperor Menelik II of Ethiopia in the late 19th century, and continuing through the tyrannical regime of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi today, the Oromo have been crushed down by state power.
The Oromo's low profile in Minnesota reflects a century of focused, systematic, brutal campaigns by Ethiopian rulers to render them impotent and voiceless.
Successive Ethiopian governments for more than a century have defined the Oromo as second-class citizens holding severely limited rights to government representation, education, employment, free speech and property.
These strictures have prompted the Oromo to flee their homeland to a worldwide diaspora that numbers in the tens of thousands or possibly more - with Minnesota hosting probably the largest concentration of Oromo refugees in the world.
But there is yet another reason for the Oromo's relatively quiet presence in Minnesota all of these years.
Trauma Relived
That reason is their secret, which is that they have been tortured, or deeply scarred by torture they have personally witnessed, or suffered in their family or among their friends.
"Few Oromos that the Advocates for Human Rights interviewed were unaffected by torture," the report says. "The particular experience of the Oromo people, victims of torture in extremely high numbers and of repressive practices designed to undermine their very culture, also continues to be felt by those in the diaspora.
"Traumatic experiences are relived over and over again by torture
victims, and this trauma has lasting effects on even those not directly on the receiving end of the torturer's abuse," the report says.
Here are three personal stories told by Minnesota Oromo, chosen at random from scores of similar interviews collected in the new report:
"I was turned upside down. They started beating the bottoms of my feet with a piece of tire. Each time they whipped me they ripped my skin. The brought a bucket full of water and bleach in it. When they stopped beating me they put my face in the bucket. I thought I would die."
And this story:
"The killing of Mustapha created fear in us. They brought him to the city center where everybody could see his body. They nailed him to the ground. They removed his skin and took out his two eyes. They forced people to come and watch. At first I couldn't believe my eyes. I couldn't recognize him. I fainted when I saw him."
And this:
"It is hard for us to talk about this. They put flashlights in the sexual organs of the ladies. There is a woman that they put flashlight batteries in her vagina. She couldn't hold her urine and she used to urinate on herself."
Let me confess, I have some beefs with The Advocate's new report.
The biggest is that its historical sweep dilutes its potential present-day impact.
As horrific as they were, the human rights crimes of earlier Ethiopian dictators are now a part of history.
Meanwhile, the current dictator, now a bloody 18 years in office, urgently requires accountability that a more contemporary report could have provided with greater force.
The report's scope also leads to weakness in specifics. The cursory treatment of a massacre of 426 men of the Anuak tribe of Western Ethiopia, on Dec. 13, 2003, fails to mention the exhaustive evidence that the massacre was part of a government-planned genocide of the tribe.
The scant two-paragraph mention of the most urgent crisis in Ethiopia today, in the Ogaden region, is also troubling. As is the timidity, even the naivete, of calling upon the present Ethiopian government, which long ago showed the world its spots, to "immediately cease" its abominations.
Yet the report fulfills its most important function.
It helped the Oromo of Minnesota reveal their long-held secret.
With help from The Advocates, the Oromo have shown great bravery in speaking out. Will we return that courage by bravely listening?
After that, what will we do?
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Comments
not so secret
I agree that it is a very important step to recognize the perspectives of the Oromo and other ethnic groups in Ethiopia in order to address human rights abuses by an oppressive and corrupt government. The situation is very complicated, and includes a long history of American involvement in the region -- involvement that has sometimes had positive results but more often has had negative consequences for the people living there. The legacy of past regimes is relevant to the current regimes, because all are part of the same world system. Overall, I'm pleased that you have published this article. However, I'm not sure the word "secret" is appropriate. For the past ten years or so, Oromo have been holding rallies, organizing public festivals, soccer tournaments, and 10K races in Minnesota, and they have been publishing quite a bit of stuff on-line. For instance, the Oromia Times has been around for quite a qhile, and an Oromo arts journal <www.ogina.org>, which I help to edit, has been around for almost two years. In addition, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and Oxfam have been talking about the on-going human rights abuses in Ethiopia, and have worked with various Oromo organizations. A local fair trade coffee company called Equal Exchange started working with the Oromo farmer's union in Ethiopia and markets an "Oromo blend" in Minnesota. The mayor of Minneapolis has on previous instances publicly stated his welcoming of the Oromo, and I think Minnesota should be proud of being the state most welcoming of Oromo people. So, there is no secret. It has been well known for some time. Unfortunately, knowledge is not enough. One also has to act.
"Not so secret"
Steven,
It's a fair point you raise. I struggled with this while writing the piece, and perhaps didn't reflect enough the many activities the Oromo have undertaken since they arrived in Minnesota, to assimilate and to be known.
At the same time, I'm pretty sure if you asked 100 people in Minnesota "Who are the Oromo?", you'd get a pretty low percentage of correct answers.
In my experience, the Anuak of Ethiopia, who number only 100,000 in Ethiopia, are almost better known today in Minnesota than the Oromo, who number 31 million in Ethiopia!
More to the point, this report is the first time the Oromo, in a major way, have exposed to the Minnesota public this very particular aspect of their experience -- torture in large numbers, with lasting trauma to the diaspora population.
That fact has been held as a kind of secret, similar to the secret so often held by all victims of such intimate abuse. We are into psychogical territory which is difficult to articulate, but "secret" seems as good a metaphor as any, for this inward holding of painful knowledge. Anyway, I've added to the story above a couple of paragraphs from the report that spells this out:
"Few Oromos that the Advocates for Human Rights interviewed were unaffected by torture. The particular experience of the Oromo people, victims of torture in extremely high numbers and of repressive practices designed to undermine their very culture, also continues to be felt by those in the diaspora.
"Traumatic experiences are relived over and over again by torture
victims, and this trauma has lasting effects on even those not directly on the receiving end of the torturer's abuse."
Thank you for writing.
"The cursory treatment of a
"The cursory treatment of a massacre of 426 men of the Anuak tribe of Western Ethiopia, on Dec. 13, 2003, fails to mention the exhaustive evidence that the massacre was part of a government-planned genocide of the tribe."
you can't pick and choose information from the report. you seem to choose only the anti-ethiopian government parts of the report that you enjoyed and cut/paste your views of i guess genocide of another group, even though the same report disagrees with you
In general, your article seems too emotional, selective and lacking substance.
a Response to John998
Mr. McGill reserves every right to be against the Ethiopian Government based the substantive reports he had been reviewing for over a decade. John998 could have comne with his/her argument by substantiating the deficiency of the Report.
If he/she utters to deny the facts in the report, then it is in the nature of those atrocious beasts who always take comfort in the human carnage.
Luckly, John998 & Co have exhausted their hay days where as the suppressed Majority has a bright future, ultimately!
Oromia Shall be Free!!
Long Live OLF!!
thanks
Thank you so much for sharing this.
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