An Inclusive Definition of “Who is an Eritrean?” – By Our Voice
An Inclusive Definition of “Who is an Eritrean?” By Our Voice Global Eritrean Democratic Grassroots Movement (GEDGM) “OUR DESTINY IN OUR HANDS!” One of the requirements of conducting a successful grassroots election with the purpose of swiftly forming a people’s Baito
An Inclusive Definition of “Who is an Eritrean?”
By
Our Voice
Global Eritrean Democratic Grassroots Movement (GEDGM)
“OUR DESTINY IN OUR HANDS!”
One of the requirements of conducting a successful grassroots election with
the purpose of swiftly forming a people’s Baito and a Global Eritrean
Leadership Council for regime change is inevitably the formulation of a clear
definition of “Who is an Eritrean?”
This is a thorny issue that leads to a lot of debates and arguments because
there are diverse and sometimes even conflicting interests in the matter.
There are, in fact, some groups and identifiable persons who have tried to
implicitly narrow the definition in such a way that it refers only to their own
group or perhaps even to themselves personally – suggesting that they have
the exclusive right and authority to decide on what happens to the country
and people of Eritrea. We say that this should never be allowed to happen
because it is divisive, grossly unfair and extremely dangerous.
Why is it extremely dangerous? We refer you to the work of the German
sociologist and philosopher Jurgen Habermas. A harmonious and viable
society can exist only when all its citizens become stakeholders and
beneficiaries of it in a fair and equitable manner. Otherwise, the citizens have
the right to rebel and demand their rights and abolish the exploitative
oppressive system.
Thus, the excluded will and should use every means at their disposal to fight
back overtly or covertly to regain their rights as the situation demands. When
they lack power, their disappointment and grudge will still be there but they
may not show it for obvious reasons. But, they will still remain full of anger
and resentment waiting for their time – kem zitedegole hawi. Such excluded
masses of people are, in fact, the major causes of bloody uprisings, civil wars
revolutions and mass killings in the process. Indeed, the excluded have caused
the collapse of many armies and empires in history starting from ancient times.
As a case in point, we shall give an outline of the Battle of Thermopylae in 480
B.C. Greece between the alliance of Ancient Greek city-states led by the
Spartan King Leonidas and the Persian Empire of Xerxes I. The Persians had
an army of about 100,000-150,000 men whereas the Greeks had about 3,000-
7,000. The core of the Greek army was about 300 Spartans. The Greek
strategy was to prevent Persian advance into the mainland by blocking the
enemy army advance in a narrow coastal strip with an overhanging
inaccessible cliff and finish them off one by one. The standoff and battle
continued for several days in favour of the massively outnumbered Greeks. In
short, the Persians were trapped. However, the Greeks were betrayed by a
local resident called Ephialtes of Trachis, who revealed to the Persians a small
path up the cliff that lead behind the Greek defence lines. This enabled the
enemy to outflank the Greek forces, smash their rear guard and defeat them.
King Leonidas and all the 300 men and others were killed in the battle. It was a
complete tragedy for the Greeks.
The point is, why did Ephialtes of Trachis betray his country and people to such
effect? They say that he was a deformed individual with disability which in
ancient Sparta would have led to his infanticide. He was spared death because
his parents took him away to another place. But, he still was bearing the social
disapproval. Thus, he had a grudge to settle – the grudge of exclusion and
humiliation. A bribe offered by the Persians might have also been another
factor, but he never took the bribe.
Look also at the perceived betrayal of the Italians by some of their native
subjects in Eritrea. The expropriation of land in Eritrea by the Italians and the
racism, exclusion, exploitation and humiliation of the natives made many
young Eritreans escape to Ethiopia and turn against the Italians such as Abraha
Deboch and Moges Asgedom and Dr Lorenzo Taezaz. Other Eritreans like
Awalom Berhe, while pretending to work for the Italians, worked hard to
cause the defeat of the colonial army in the Battle of Adwa by misleading the
Italians and giving correct details about the invading Italian formations to the
Ethiopians.
In short, the lesson we can draw from this is that mistreating, excluding,
exploiting, humiliating, name calling and inflicting pain on any citizen or group
or taking their land may rebound and damage us severely to the extent that we
may even lose our country as a result. To a large extent, what we have just
said may explain the weak and failed states around the world where there is
turmoil – such as Somalia, Nigeria and some countries in the Middle East and
other places. It is dangerous, and we should not let it happen to us.
Where there is a serious feeling of exclusion, unfairness and oppression, it is
very easy for those who want to create trouble to put in their seeds of social
rupture and let them grow – as in the proliferation of bacteria in open wounds
gradually forming gangrene. We know that there are political and religious
extremists (we shall not name here) waiting in the wings to exploit our disunity
and areas of dissatisfaction. We should be proactive and not allow them to
take root in our midst.
This is why we are advocating the emergence of a NEW ERITREAN SOCIETY
which is democratic, equitable and fair to all – not only to the majority or few
interest circles – but to all its people regardless of ethnicity, language, region,
religion, race, gender, family background or occupation. We want to
contribute our share to creating such a society where every Eritrean has a say
and a stake – and a sense of belongingness than to no other.
Every Eritrean should understand that he/she has the birth right to expect, ney
demand and get protection and succour from his/her society and state.
Otherwise, the system will have failed, and it has to be changed in that case.
There is no excuse.
In Eritrea, the outgoing PFDJ regime has created a lot of unhappy and
excluded sectors of the population which it has failed to care for. As a result,
we have a big population of refugees (roughly about 1-1.5 million from a small
country) all over the world, including big refugee camps in the Sudan and
Ethiopia. The new state of Eritrea has to quickly own these refugees and
repatriate them with sufficient provisions and opportunities in collaboration
with the international community. To pave the way for this possibility, all
these refugees and indeed all Eritreans should take part in the forthcoming
grassroots elections. But, we need to first know clearly who can participate in
the elections and who cannot.
Here is then the moment of truth: “Who is an Eritrean?”
We suggest the following eight provisional criteria:
1. All those with Eritrean passports and identity cards
2. All those who participated in the liberation struggle
3. All those born from an Eritrean father and Eritrean mother
4. All those whose father or mother is an Eritrean
5. All those born in Eritrea and spent their formative years there
6. All those who lived in Eritrea for over five years and are committed to
the country and people
7. All those who are married to an Eritrean and who remain in a stable
relationship for five years or more
8. All those who are committed to the wellbeing of the people of Eritrea
and who have made significant contributions to the country
On issuance of citizenship, all candidates shall swear to uphold the Eritrean
constitution and defend the interests of the country and people of Eritrea.
It should be made a treasonable serious offence to exclude, malign,
disrespect, insinuate, undermine, humiliate, backbite or discredit an
Eritrean who fulfils any of the said criteria on the basis of race, ethnicity,
family background (history or genealogy), religion, language, occupation,
superstitious beliefs, etc. It should also be a treasonable serious offence to
deny or try to deny any Eritrean who fulfils any of the said criteria from
exercising his/her full rights as a citizen like any other Eritrean.
The reason why such offences should be considered as treasons, or crimes
against the State of Eritrea and not only against the individual victim is
because such crimes damage OUR UNITY and the very fabric of our society
by pitting friends, neighbours, colleagues and compatriots against one
another – thus creating fear, mistrust and enmity. A viable and harmonious
society is not possible under such conditions. Therefore, they should not be
allowed.
This is the only way we can create a forward looking, civilised, prosperous,
advanced, confident, united and strong society that can effectively
compete in the world and is at peace within itself and its neighbours.
Genet-orginal August 11, 2015
“Our-Voice” is being taken down by few pretenders, right from the get go. I think.
“Our-Voice” I think you just jump the gun. Who gave you the right to handout Eritrean citizenship to whomever you think deserve it? Eritrean citizenship was made possible with our peoples blood. You need to slow down.
Genet-orginal August 12, 2015
Assenna/Amanuel
FYI, I am reporting
The mentally ill- subject, Aka “beniam abraham”, “beni” is back with a new name “Abel”
Natnael August 12, 2015
THANK you Amanuel for reporting unwanted participants,
Dear Assena audience !
Assena is for us, the victims of the regime in Asmara, a plattform for exchanging our ideas, narrow down our differences and finaly refine or squeeze the whole to a useful concept that we can move forward through this bridge to a concrete solution to our existing and still never ending problem.
Agressive posts are a sign of disrespect to other people which in turn reflect/expose the littleness or savagery. The tone makes the music!!
Dear country womwn/men! we can post even very critical but sincere ideas as independent as we wish. Attacking others opinion has however nothing to do with democrating principles and the concerned participant has to go out of this forum.
merhaba August 12, 2015
Dear Ogbai, I understand some of your points but I would have wished you could have made your points by being more polite. I am not sure what the resources of this writer of the main article are, if you care so much about it, why don’t you translate it yourself. Having a debate is always useful as it allows us to grow and and being enlightened. The topic of nationalism and citizenship is an important factor in the power for struggle and should be taken seriously. There are some theories for instance niel kinock of the labour party (sorry if the name is written wrongly) did not win against margart satcher because he was Welsh !!!, we now know that Stalin being not russian but georgian mattered massively in developing his paranoia and inferiority complex due to his russian accent. We also know our dictator has serounded himself with dispropriate nr of people from certain origin at the moment and exploited narrow innocent naive regionalistic sentiments to gain power and eliminate the progressive idealistic patriots during the struggle. We continue to be devided and exploited by the regime along the same line of sentiments. Therefore of course it matters to debate what is eritreaness and who is eritrean. Please brothers and sisters stop thinking we are special, we are not. We are today one of the weakest nations on earth and our brothers and sisters are eaten by sharkes everday, how any one can think we are special, I have no idea.
assenna August 12, 2015
Dear merhaba and everyone else @ Assenna,
Kindly keep your comments short and refer to Assenna guidelines.
Thank you
merhaba August 14, 2015
Why does this apply only to me ??
assenna August 14, 2015
Dear merhaba,
It does not apply only to you as we have already made clear in that plea. Another thing: You just happened to be the commentator who posted a long comment just then and we needed to remind everyone at Assenna to refer to the guidelines.
thank you
Genet-orginal August 12, 2015
merhaba
I think you missed Ogbai’s point. We Eritrean are sick and tired of being told by Tigran/Ethiopian that we think we are special. We don’t think we are special at all. But we want what is rightfully ours. The country that we paid with our peoples blood and that is what we want. It makes no sense for this new group, to think they just would explain Eritrean citizenship on their own right and expect no question. Don’t you think they need to build the Eritrean peoples trust first?
merhaba August 12, 2015
Dear Genet, be honest, we do think we are special, the EPLF taught us for many years to think we are special, then even the European believed that, we the Germans called us after independence the Prussia of Africa (prussia is the origin of the Germaness today). We during the struggle achieved very much defeated so many enemies, and rightly we were proud and thought in deed we are special, trust me I know no one who was more proud than myself as being Eritrean. I even abondoned my university studies and went to the field to be with the heroes and contribute my bit. Today I am more ashamed to call myself Eritrean, and even feel guilty that I supported this criminals to come to power, our people are suffering at the hands of their own people, I don’t need a wayane to educate me to hate myself. I know the crime The wayne have commited against our people and our revolution, I don’t expect anything good to come from Wayne or Ethiopians, not in the past nor in Future, I know we are neighbours and aught to be at peace with each other, more importantly we need each other, however they are themselves uncertain about their future, that is the reason they have not sighned the Border ruling of the UN. The minority regime of wayane need the conflict with eritrea to remain in power and the maffia in asmara need also the conflict to remain in power.
Hilbub August 12, 2015
Our voice,
Eritrea is for Eritreans! Our identity does not need lecturing, it has been established socially since hundreds’ of years and politically defined by colonial boundaries.
Let’s talk about how to establish the rule of law and respect for human dignity. Your lectures are also sort of dictatorship style, because, the issues of identity are discussed by parliament as legislative body.
You are scaring us by spoiled historical incidents and trying to convince us that “our voice” doctrine is the only solution or Eritrea will die. No brothers you are deadly wrong, we will survive, our independence never came by coincidence but with high price. Long live Eri my sweet mam! Down with dictator and freedom for G15 and others.
Regards,
Hilbub min adu rema!
ertra n ertrawyan August 12, 2015
Our Voice – Eritrea.
Thanks for your tireless works to freed Eritreans from Jail. But it is not must to give decisions here while you are struggling to remove the dictator. There are some issues which can be decided by parliament or constitution after victory. So i would recommend you not to be hurry for everything. Keep going.
Teclay August 12, 2015
The Voice
In principle you have every right to talk about citizenship, but this will remain only like your organization’s stand or point of view on this matter, just like an individual’s point of view and nothing more.
Priority….I don’t know why are you in a hurry to talk about citizenship.In my opinion this is the least important factor at this existential threatening time.Yes,i mean the exodus…The young and the kids have been leaving Bahre Negash in alarming rate,doing possible and impossible ,legal and illegal,having in their mind only one single goal.This is to reach Europe and gain European citizenship for good…The old generation who left in 70s to liberate Bahre Negash from the so called colonizers have been dieing of diabetic,heart attack, stroke etc in their host countries,holding the citizenship of the world.
So,if what we see is the reality on the ground,does it make sense to talk about citizenship?? Which citizenship??Please be REALISTIC.
Beniam August 12, 2015
Now ‘the voice’ is hitting at the heart of the ‘Eritrean’ problem. We have a lot of identity crisis in Eritrean and the people with identity crisis are the worst enemies of the Eritrean people and the staunch supporters of the brutal PFDJ regime. The list your provided above is a great start to heal our wounds as a people and accept each other. Eritrea is not zoba maekel only. Look everywhere, the people of zoba maekel thing they are more Eritrean than the rest. They are the ones visiting Eritrea twice a year. Now PFDJ is trying to go back 4 generations. Well then good. Try it. The ones that are being disenfranchised by PFDJ will come on top and a large number of our oppressors will not qualify to be Eritrean by birth. The list above should come as great news for PFDJites.
Ogbai Ghebremedhin August 12, 2015
Dear Merhaba,
I am sorry you found (I do not know if all or some of) my words to be impolite. I thank you for your worning, for my intention was to be critically open and to be offensive. In my writing experience, I have never been accused of being impolite, the exception of which I reserved for HIGIDEFITES. The core of my message, however, in case you missed the forest ( the message) distracted by the tree (word you saw as impolite), was that we need to have clearly set PRIORITIES and avoid gualzerebatat, which IS the Achilles heel of our struggle.