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OIN
News
July
19, 2001
Thousands
of Oromos from across the globe will be congregating
in the Twin Cities for annual community conventions,
academic conferences, professional seminars, cultural
shows, and soccer tournament. The activity-filled events
run from July 21st to August 5, 2001. Despite
numbering 30 million and accounting for over 50% of
the population in Ethiopia, Oromos have been politically
marginalized, economically exploited and culturally
suppressed since the 19th century under Ethiopian
occupation. The Ethiopian state hoped to hide the huge
Oromo nation, if not write it off the face of history,
by destroying its language, culture and identity. However
thanks to the potency of the human spirit, the Oromo
is not only a vibrant society today, even under the
shackles of tyranny, but also a rising force in the
Horn of Africa.
Americans
and the outside world hardly know about the suffering
of the Oromo people. It is ironic that while American
foreign policy acknowledges and tries to redress the
grievances of the less than a million Kosovars, Macedonians
and East Timorese, the distressing plight of the over
30 million Oromos subjected to brutal dictatorship by
Prime Minister Zenawi of Ethiopia is little known until
recently. Oromos have been resisting this unjust rule
and denial of their fundamental rights for decades.
The ongoing conflict has forced many to flee their picturesque
and fertile homeland, Oromia, and seek asylum from persecution
in continents. Minnesota is home to over 12, 000 Oromos.
The hundreds who will be coming from as far away as
Australia, Europe, Middle East, Africa and Canada this
summer will boost this already staggering figure. Many
more will also arrive from all the fifty states in the
US.
In
addition to affording homesick new refugees and long
time residents of the US a chance to socialize and take
pride in their unique Oromo identity, the annual gathering,
going on since the early 1970s, helps to galvanize their
efforts and raise their voice as a nation. For two weeks
Minnesota will be bustling with various kinds of Oromo
activity. While Oromo Lutherans
(contact 612-337-0374) conduct a spiritual
conference from July 19th to 22nd,
Oromo Muslims (contact 612-338-5940)
would do the same from July 21st to 22nd.
The annual Oromo Studies Conference (contact
651-639-9001), which brings together academics,
practitioners and professionals of all fields of study,
take place on July 28th and 29th.
On July 30th the Association of Oromo Communities
in North America (contact 612-340-0282)
will be formally inaugurated to spearhead the effort
to improve the overall quality of life of Oromos and
address their increasing needs in their new homeland.
ABO activists from Canada and the US will be conducting
their Regional Congress (contact
952-493-5390) from July 31st to
August 2nd. Oromo Convention 2001, which
is organized by ABO and open to the public, takes place
on August 3rd. On the evening of August 3rd
all major Oromo musicians and artists would perform
at the University of Minnesota, Willey Hall. This year’s
activities are organized slightly differently with the
view to engage Oromos in substantive national issues
and entertain them as well. The soccer tournament (contact
763-488-9727), which is increasingly becoming
popular, goes from July 29th to August 5th.
The matches are in the afternoons so that people exhausted
by the conferences and seminars will have time to relax
and cheer for their favorite teams.
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