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Fetsum: Eritrean opposition forces under examination IV

Fetsum: Eritrean opposition forces under examination IV Special guest: Eritrean Nahda Party - ENP As you know I have been dealing with the opposition parties in the EDA and with this one out of the way, I

Fetsum: Eritrean opposition forces under examination IV

Special guest: Eritrean Nahda Party – ENP
As you know I have been dealing with the opposition parties in the EDA and with this one out of the way, I believe I will have done my brief analysis on 10 of them as of today with about three more to go besides the EPDP which is not a member of the EDA.
In searching for reasons that could have motivated this group to make this party, I found the following in the network.
“Treatment of Jeberti People by Government Authorities: Sources describe the Jeberti as “marginalized”. The Senior Research Fellow indicated that the Eritrean government “discriminates against and marginalizes the Muslim communities in Eritrea in general, including the Jeberti community””
Comment: I don’t think any person from the Christian Kebessa would experience what our Jeberti family is claiming to have been experiencing because of its religion like no Eritrean man can feel the oppression of our women directly. Rejecting this grievance should then be a terrible mistake we can do in approaching this situation. I do believe our society should have gone through the experience of religious and ethnic discrimination like any other similar societies in the world. This is unavoidable human mode of existence that will survive until the end of time and that can only be substantially rectified by Democracy and fair justice system. Yet, a society can only control the consequence of prejudice through laws but it cannot eliminate the biased mentality of individuals; only the individuals in question can. A Redneck racist can hate people of color within one’s democratic right but that person does not represent white Americans except his/her individuality. I have no problem with a Redneck’s outlook of life but I have one with a lawless society that allows him/her attacking or discriminating me without dire consequences. It is not because the US has eradicated racism that makes it a safe place for people of color to live but the existence of law that protects everyone in relatively acceptable equality.
One can be biased against Moslems or the vise versa (you cannot stop feelings) with full constitutional right to practice; we can only make laws that will make the hater suffer the associated emotional consequences alone. Further, that mentality only represents the person in question and not all Christians or Moslems in the society. Remember that we are requesting for religious and ethnic equality and not to convert haters to lovers which is impossible. This is a moralistic or an ethical issue that the individuals in the darkness should deal with, needless to say that I care less about, as long as the law protects me from them.
Whatever I am saying here, nevertheless, does not justify the discrimination of our Moslem family by some Christians or the vise versa but I know that there is only one remedy here and they call it constitutional democracy.
I further believe that the government uses division for political survival creating frictions between our people based on land, religion and ethnicity throughout its administration; meaning that this part of our society should also have been a victim of the state sponsored division like the rest of us. I am comfortable entertaining our Jeberty family’s conclusion that the regime may be Christian dominated although I cannot prove it statistically because of lack of scholastic freedom in the country. I take this for granted resenting the damage inflicted upon its member like I do in relation to the entire society by the common enemy so said to be the Christian dominated regime in Eritrea. This Christian dominated regime, however, does not represent the Christian portion of our society that is suffering similarly in all aspects of life. All we can do is fighting the common enemy in unison until we secure democracy in our country but no ethnic group is responsible for what the regime did to our Jeberti and Moslem family members for the same enemy is responsible for the suffering of the Christians as well. I also believe that there are few Christian denominations (Jehova Witness and Pentecostal) that have been suffering the regime’s offense probably more than the conventional believers of the society. Moslems and Christians from the Orthodox Church at least have more freedom to exercise their respective rituals than the believers of Jehova Witness and Pentecostal, which are Christians in denomination!
 “The Senior Research Fellow indicated that the Jeberti have the “same social duties as other Eritreans, such as serving in the military and national service for unspecified periods of time” (ibid.). The ENP Central Committee Chairperson indicated that, due to their faith, most Jeberti families do not want their daughters to join the military, but they are still forced to do so.”
Comment: I do think the ultimate decision on the question of Jeberti women joining the Army should be exclusively left to said women at the end of the day because there is a question of gender equality embedded within the subject matter in discussion that male chauvinists can take advantage of to oppress their women.
This imposition cannot be seen in isolation from discriminating women from the Army on the basis of gender or violating their constitutional right and equality to decide for themselves.The reason American women are in the Army today is not because their men want them to be there but that women insisted to have the right to do so within the context of gender equality. FEMINISM was the cause of women’s equality to men in this regard and our society must accept gender equality in all aspects of life including the Army that serves the nation overall. You cannot ask for protection from any system in society if you refuse to defend it at equal point of the ethnic relationship nor can you ask for equal treatment in it by simultaneously advocating exceptional treatment based on religion. I don’t think one can ask for exceptional treatment without compromising one’s equality in society! A society has to protect itself using all its resources equally: we did this during the struggle where our women in general fought for their equality in action. We cannot take away their equality earned by their blood and sweat and they should not allow it.
The saying “ due to their faith, most Jeberti families do not want their daughters to join the military, but they are still forced to do so” applies to all Eritreans for one to make a distinct sense out of.
The Sawa Slavery Camp is against the interest of all Eritreans as a unit. It is an offense to every citizen of the land; it hurts them all equally without discrimination. Clearly, Islam does not approve women to indefinitely serve in the military but neither does Christianity. Our Christian and Moslem families are forced to involve their daughters in there with equal depth of spiritual resentment. What may happen in Sawa to our Moslem daughters also happens to our Christian daughters by both Moslem and Christian officials of the regime. We are equal sufferers of the common problem as Eritreans by common enemies from the society, heinous individuals from the two religions.Our Moslem family members cannot feel this pain more than the Christians in the same situation without crossing the line of fairness and suffering the guilt of bias and selfishness.
This issue is not exceptional to Islam but common to all religions in the world, meaning that all forms of spirituality condemn the application of slave labor on any human being irrespective of gender and religion. The Bible says this as good as the Koran words it down for all of us to respect and defend our people at equal spiritual intensity and activism. The Bible may teach to respect authority but never advocates forced labor slavery. I would imagine the Holy Koran does too, though I don’t know for sure. In my understanding Allah does not discriminate between Moslem and Christian young ladies, nor does he appreciate a religious group discriminating others on a common problem. I think this is considered a SIN in view of Allah that impartially treats all members of the human races.
A diverse society must as a unit fights the problem that commonly affects the people and it does not sound fair for a group asking exceptional treatment because of religion in a society that equally suffers the suffering in discussion. It is not fair for me to discriminate Amina from Abeba or Mohamed from Girmai in any aspect of the Eritrean life or experience; I cannot and will never do it.
We cannot focus only on our specific interest ignoring the rest in the dangerous pool and claim being spiritual and democratic, at least in my common sense. All our kids, daughters included are suffering together in this dilemma and we need to concentrate on their salvation without discrimination if we want a decent society ahead. I did not find this request beneficial to any portion of the society including the Moslems for it would be a bad precedence bound to back-fire generating destructive and divisive issues from the Christians at a point in our mandatory coexistence as Eritreans. I also found it insensitive and immoral to ignore the pain of our Christian daughters condemned to the same forced labor slavery. How can I discriminate the daughters of Ali Abdu and Mahmood Sherifo from the daughters of Petros Solomon and Haile Drue in this situation just because I happened to come from a Christian family? The ethical challenge gets down to that point of ugliness!
“There is no implemented constitution [in Eritrea], and no freedom of press and speech. Both police and the military are dominated by the largest ethnic group, the Christian Tigrinya. They often discriminate against Muslims, including the Jeberti, and label them as Jihadists, fundamentalists or terrorists if they show any kind of protest against or criticism of government policies. The Jeberti community as a Muslim is no exception in this regard and suffers from the same degree of discrimination as other Muslim population groups. “
Comment: Once again the problem is directed against all Eritrean Moslems and only the government is responsible for this divisive characterization. We better concentrate on democratizing the country that we earned together by means of equal sacrifice so that we can equally protect all Eritreans through the law. No Christian Eritrean benefited from the common enemy and we should at least be equally compassionate to all Eritreans in the society because; “The Senior Research Fellow indicated that ‘[g]generally, all Eritreans who fled from the mandatory and timely unlimited national service as draft evaders or deserters face incommunicado detention of undefined periods without due process, torture and other cruel forms of treatment, if they are forcibly returned to Eritrea. There is no distinction between ethnic groups in this regard and this applies to the Jeberti in the same way as to any social group of Eritrea. An Amnesty International (AI) representative stated that “all returnees, of whatever ethnic identity, are treated with suspicion and hostility if forcibly returned to Eritrea; most, according to reports we receive, are arbitrarily detained and tortured for information about their attempts to claim asylum abroad
Apparently, “Members of the Jeberti created the Eritrean Al-Nahda Party (ENP) which is part of the opposition against the Eritrean government. The ENP is “seeking the removal of the Eritrean dictatorship” and “to govern Eritrea in peace and unity for all Eritreans, with all Eritreans.” The Chairman added that, although the “Jeberti cause is the ENP’s main cause … the party is not only concerned with Jeberti, but rather all Eritreans.”
Comment: This sounds good to me because I believe any group in the resistance should focus on the interest of all Eritreans as a family, not in fragmentation.
“Overview: Sources indicate that the Jeberti people are Muslims that live in the highlands of Eritrea as a Muslim minority within the highland population. Although the Jeberti are a Tigrigna-speaking group and their mother-tongue is Tigrigna, their cultural language is Arabic. Sources state that the Eritrean government does not recognize the Jeberti as an ethnic group but that it does consider the Jeberti to be a part of the Tigrigna ethnic group. Some members of the Jeberti have been seeking official government recognition as an ethnic group.”
Comment: True is that the Jeberties live as a Muslim minority within the Christian highland population but they originally came from the same roots to say the least. The only difference with the other Highland Eritreans is their religion which actually was imported or probably enforced to our society from the Middle East (my subjective view). It is told that this portion of the family was originally Christian because Islam came into existence many years after Christianity and that we all are equally indigenous to the motherland. Please take this easy, it is just my speculation with absolute readiness to be reeducated.
This is fantastic but we cannot complicate reality based on this relationship. To me, a Jeberti is a person religiously conditioned to perform one’s spiritual rituals in Mosques with Moslems from other ethnic backgrounds and does the rest of one’s activities including friendship with his/her Tigrigna speaking Kebessians by cultural, ethnic and lifestyle orientations. A Jeberti is more similar to the Kebessian Christians than to any other Eritreans from other Moslem dominated ethnic groups not by accident but by fundamental relationship tracing to the same roots.
The Jeberty question according to NahdaNahda Vs “Arabic culture”
At the end of the day; the Eritrean Nahda Party says that it wants; ”To Change the Dictator Regime in Eritrea and establishing a Democratic Government in Eritrea“ but also wants the society to exceptionally define the community called “Jeberty” as the 10th ethnic group in the country formally composed of nine ethnic groups. Al Nahda wants to create a distinguished ethnic group similar to the Tigrigna, Tigre, Saho and other ethnic groups in our country because of its “Arabic culture”.
The relationship between the Jeberties and said Arabic culture to my understanding ends up at the Holy Koran that is written in Arabic. But this does not and cannot rationally constitute said cultural relationship with the Arabs more than with their Tigrigna speaking Christians for this would also mean all Moslems in the world were culturally Arabic because of the common element, the Holy Koran. This conceptualization would then make the Jeberties culturally related to all Moslems in the world that ‘were culturally Arabic because of the Koran’. Before you know it, our brothers and sisters in this philosophical entrapment may as well claim the planet earth in terms of ethnicity because Moslems live all over the world. It is a very complicated philosophy to contemplate in my understanding that one should not mess with, without getting ready to deal with the consequence of all the unforgiving complications, inconsistencies and contradictions associated with.
Further, we can only approach this situation academically. What defines an ethnic group? “Ethnicity or ethnic group is a social group of people who identify with each other based on common ancestral, social, cultural, or national experience. Membership of an ethnic group tends to be associated with sharedcultural heritageancestryhistoryhomelandlanguage (dialect), or ideology, and with symbolic systems such as religionmythology and ritualcuisine,dressing style, physical appearance, etc.”
In reality, the Jeberties are Tigrigna speakers (by their admission) that share the same ancestral history, mother language (Tigrigna), ritual (Bun, Incense (itan burning)), music (Guaila and Kuda), dress (Gabi, Kuta) and cuisine (Enjera, Tsebhi, Shiro, Kolotitko, etc.)
I have no idea how a community can legimately define ethnicity only based on religion as it seems to be in this situation. Nahda believes that the Christian Tigrignya dominated Eritrean government is exceptionally biased against Moslems and fights back for the Eritrean people in general but with special emphasis on the Jeberty community. It claims to be for democracy, works as a member of the EDA which is great but once again, it wants to create a distinguished ethnic group away from its Tigrigna grassroots because of its “Arabic culture”.
The only connection between our Jeberties and the Arabs is, however, the religion and the Holy Kuran, the spiritual guide line of all Moslems in the world. This similarity alone cannot institute Arabic culture in my take by any logical approach. A Moslem from Afghanistan, Sirilanka, Chechnya, Ethiopia, Senegal, Iran, Pakistan, Indochina, Nigeria or Somalia is not culturally an Arab because of the religion and so cannot an Eritrean Jeberti or an Ethiopian Moslem rationally be. This artificial identification has caused a lot of confusion in Sudan for example, needless to say many Sudanese today reject their fallacious Arabic identification because it contradicts with their Africanism and blackness and they have had a hard time being accepted as Arabic by the racist Arab community overall.
Narrative: Experience tells otherwise, that the Jeberti community members are not treated better than the other Eritrean refugees in the Middle East and in fact they suffer the same problems (deportation, servitude, abuse, and racial discrimination) as the rest of the Eritrean society and all black Africans in similar situation.
Further; we have Arab-Eritreans in the country that our Jeberti people don’t have to look across the sea for the claimed cultural relationship. Should the claim really be significant, we would have seen a special effort of the Jeberti community establishing stronger ties with our Rashaida population. They should probably integrate into the Rashaida community as an Eritrean-Arab ethnic group of course if the later finds it acceptable. The claim reads too contradictory and very hard to intellectually justify and accommodate.
Question: Where is the beef? Why would an Eritrean Jeberti choose to identify Arabic just because of the religion trespassing the many elements that culturally trace one an Eritrean highlander (cuisine, dress, language, music, ritual, etc)? Why would one select being part of the culture (Arabic) that discriminates people on the basis of origin and skin complexion? If the Jeberties were Arabic in culture, how come they don’t have closer relationship with the Eritrean-Arabs (Rashaida) than with the Christian highlanders?
I don’t think this represents our Jeberti people very well, nor do I believe the group can empirically prove mandate from that portion of our society on the question of its Arabic verses Habesha culture. But I know quite a few Eritrean Jeberties that reject this question. I don’t see the group’s drive for a political party based on this theory as something legitimate. Note that Moslems have full right to practice their rituals in Eritrea as the Christians do. This traditional accommodation has been consistent during the Hailesellassie regime, the Mengistu regime and the Shabias.
Consistency test
Apart from my difficulty finding this party’s national program it is clear that we Eritreans have a group of people categorized as Amiches. These are Eritreans that were probably born and raised in Ethiopia within its diversified ethnic communities. They were terribly mistreated by the regime after their deportation from Ethiopia before the Badme War. They lost their possessions in Ethiopia, the regime refused to assist their settlement in the presence of vast free land in the country and most of them ended up dying prematurely because of disappointment driven emotional and physical problems or becoming international refugees at the end of the day: this is triple death in my judgment!
The ‘fact’ remains that Amiches are Eritreans with Ethiopian psychological orientation that were circumstantially conditioned to adopt Ethiopian cultural and linguistic values.
Let us now read the following carefully;
“Sources indicate that the Jeberti people are Muslims that live in the highlands of Eritrea as a Muslim minority within the highland population. Although the Jeberti are a Tigrigna-speaking group and their mother-tongue is Tigrigna, their cultural language is Arabic.
The Eritrean government does not recognize the Jeberti as an ethnic group but that it does consider the Jeberti to be a part of the Tigrigna ethnic group. Some members of the Jeberti have been seeking official government recognition as an ethnic group.”
If the above expression makes sense; should the Amiches then request for unique ethnic identification based on the partially modified version of the first paragraph; ‘the Amiche people are Eritreans that lived in Ethiopia as Ethiopian minority within the Ethiopian population. Although the Amiches are from Eritrean-languages speaking groups with different mother-tongues, their cultural languages are Ethiopian languages; mainly Amharic?’
How about; ‘The Diasporas are Eritreans that live abroad as African minority within the population. Although they are from Eritrean-languages speaking groups with different mother-tongues, their cultural languages are English, European, Arabic, Spanish, Italian, African, etc.’
Now it hits home: If religion or spirituality can be used to create a new ethnic group in society out of an existing ethnic group, should I also request for one as a Buddhist from the highland Eritrean roots with a hybrid far-Eastern spiritual culture (Tantric and Zen or Tibetan and Japanese Buddhism)?
My Verdict: The brothers and sisters in this trip should chill down and get for real concentrating on the big stake instead. The question of religious equality is a democratic question that cannot be used as a foundation for a political program driven “political party” status. Further, religion has been used in society to oppress women and deny them gender equality. The question of the Jeberties related to women in the Army is Chauvinistic by flavor and against gender equality (anti-woman) in principle by Universal Feministic outlook. Western women would not take them a second to reject this dangerous suggestion against their equality; why should Eritrean women accept this in our society? The question of Jebrety women cannot be separated from the question of women internationally and from that of the Eritrean women’s in particular.
I encourage the Jeberties to organize better in defense of their community against discrimination from the Christians through democratic rights that can only be achieved by a constitutional authority but they have no legitimate reason to organize themselves at political party value of the paradigm for religious issues are social issues related to freedom and civil rights that have nothing to do with the elements (vision, policy) that constitute a rational political party. To the alternative, out Jeberti family members should ingrate into the Rashaida ethnic group by permission from the Rashaidas and by statistically proving mandate from that portion of the society or probably hold dual ethnicity (Tigrigna and Rashaida) within the society on the two conditions in brief. They may resolve that Arabic nostalgia or sentiment within the society this way and close their case with the Eritrean society to ever live happier after. See you soon.

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
67 COMMENTS
  • Mahmud Saleh April 8, 2014

    rezen:
    “Let us be open and admit that the stumbling block to any progress against existing indigenous dictatorial regime is simply RELIGION. When religion ceases to be individual’s spiritual faith/beliefs and instead is used as a system for the civic governance of the entire population a serious problem would be percolating which, at the madness stage, is sure to be turned into GENOCIDE.”( rezen)
    What has this to do with the discussion at hand? Why would you conjure up this issue with that of Rwanda. Was Rwanda genocide religion based? We are not debating here about religious dominance nor religious discrimination. I urge folks to refrain from stretching this debate to undesired direction. I believe Fitsum understands what’s at stake and will come up with some needed corrections. When I post here my opinions, it’s not from fearing a Rwanda type scenario in my country, but from a strong believe that Eritrean society is capable of taking care of this type of straight talk, and unless you talk it over it will eat us up from inside out. So, rezen, I believe, the discussion so far has been within a limited set of issues none of them carries the weight of any factor you could think of which lead to the Rwandan massacre, and it is obvious, the discussion is not in that sort of spirit.

    • Genet-orginal April 9, 2014

      Mahmud Saleh
      Let us be honest, RELIGION is the center of the ENP’s motivation. Let us take the RELIGION FACTOR and see what ENP stand for.
      Genet-Original

      • Mahmud Saleh April 9, 2014

        Dear Genet-Original:
        Yes, to be honest I don’t know a lot about Nahda, My comments should be taken as a matter of principle applicable when civil rights/issues arise. And you could see my opposition is with the last quoted part. When it comes to women’s issues, I know you have debated me on many occasions, and you know I have absolutely a clear stand, and it is not by accidents most of my articles hold at least one woman character.

  • MightyEmbasoyra April 8, 2014

    ሰላም ዶኽብለኩም: የሕዋተይ ጀበርቲ
    ኣንቱም ሓቦኛታት: ናይ ሰውራ ጀመርቲ
    ዋልታ ሃገር ካብ ጥንቲ
    ስለዚ’ዩ ድማ: ትህደኑ ብጸላእቲ

    ቃልሲ ጀሚርኩሞ: ሰብ ብድቅሱ
    መራሕቲ ናይ ሰውራ: ዕርድታት ተፍርሱ
    ብሳላኹም’ዩ: ሕቶ ኤርትራ ተመሊሱ

    ስለምንታይ’ዩ ደኣ: ብሄር ዝንፈገኩም
    ክንዲ ሰውራ ዝመስረትኩም
    አዝዩ ዝገርም!

    ኣነስ ካልእ ሚስጥር አለዎ ምበልኩ
    ክንዲ ዝሓገዝኩ: ኢደይ ተሰበርኩ
    ብሄር ክዕደል ከሎ፡ መጀመርታ ን ጀበርቲ ምበልኩ
    ከመይ ዘይብል፡ ከመይ ድዩ ትነገር
    መንዩ ኸ ወሃቢ፡ መንዩ ዓዳሊ ብሄር
    መንዩ ካብ መን ክጽበ፡ መንዩ’ኸ ዓዳሊ
    ቀሺ አብራሃም ድዩ፡ ሸኽ ዓሊ
    ዋላ ጎቦ እምባሶይራ: ወይ ድማ ገጅጅጅጅጅጅፍ ቆጽሊ
    ዶዋላስ ወሓዚ መረብ
    ምስ መንደአየ ‘ሞ ክዛረብ

    ንዑ ደኣ! ይተሓሎ መሰለይ
    ‘ተዘይ ኮይኑ: ክወስዳየ ባዕለይ
    ብሓይለይ!

    ከመይ ደኣ ዘይወስድ፡ ኣነ ግዳ በዓል ጽቡቅ ታሪኽ
    ሓመድ ‘ተጋበርኩ: አብ ጎልጎል አብ በሪኽ
    ብሄር ‘ኳ ክውሕደኒ
    ከምቲ ግብረይስ: ካልእ ‘ኳ ምተገባአኒ
    ኢሂ ፋጥማ ኢሂ ወይኒ

    ሓቀይ ዶይ ኮንኩን
    ኣነ ዝኣክልስ ብሄር ክስእን
    ኤእ! ዓገብ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ
    ኣነ፡ እዚ ጀማሪ ሰውራ
    ኢሂታ! ማይቲ እምባሶይራ
    ንዓባ መስክር
    ኣነ ጀበርትስ፡ ክስእን ብሄር
    ወይ መስተንክር!

    ዋእ! አንቱም ብሄረ ጀበርቲ እንታይ በልኩም
    ብሄር ጥራይ! ቀዳማይ መዓርግ ‘ኳ ምበልኩኹም
    ብሄር ጥራይ ንጀበርቲ
    እሞ ድማ: መበል ዓስረይቲ
    ኣነስ ምበልኩ ‘ኳ ቀዳመይቲ
    ኣማን ብ ኣማን እብለኩም፡ ሓውኹም ማይቲ
    ቻው በሉ ሕጅስ፡ ‘ዛቡነይ ክስቲ

    • Genet-orginal April 9, 2014

      Mighty
      Well, good going, Let us then break the tiny freaking country, to more tiny pieces. Is ethnicity a candy or a token that can be given out as rewards? Isayas is laughing his heart out.

      • MightyEmbasoyra April 9, 2014

        Sister Genet-O.
        First, I would like to clarify that my comment has nothing to do with Nahda (I am ashamed to say but I was not even aware of this party) but Jeberti in general.
        Second, let’s keep this simple. Let me ask you a question: what do you lose if Jeberti has its own Bher? I really don’t see any difference to my Bher at all. However, if it makes Jeberti people happy, why not grant them. Who are we to say they deserve it or not by the way? Who gave you or me a Bher to begin with?
        Third, who is to say a Bher need to satisfy certain requirements to be called a Bher. Who made that rule/ I would say a person like you and me. Change it. Why not? Even if we have to break a rule, it worth it. I would see it as evolution -things change over time and this should be one of them.
        I am not advising to break the country here. On the contrary, this will make us strong.
        That could be I usually don’t follow rules if they don’t make any sense to me and this is one of them. As I said before, this could be the result of not being educated enough and please take it easy with me.

        • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

          Dear Mighty
          Let me say, I appreciate your input here at Assenna. Your clean humor is always appreciated. And you are talented in writhing.

          To answer your questions, I don’t have any issue with jeberti perse’ having their own ethnicity. Not at all. But It is 2014 or 21st century, the world is getting smaller and smaller, with the help of mighty information technology. Why do Jeberti wants to have their own ethnicity is the most important question? It is not about the rest of Eritreans. It is about ENP, if indeed they represent, the majority of Jeberit people. ENP is trying to make Jeberti Eritreans a drop of oil in the water. You said, “who are we to say they deserve it or not?” Why not share what ever we get as Eritreans rather than, be divided across culture or the language we use during our prayer? We need to see the bigger picture, as people of Eritrea. You also said, “if it makes Jeberti people happy, why not grant them” Forgive my ignorance, why are they unhappy just being highlander- Eritreans happened to be Muslim? Division across any thing don’t make any country stronger. Time and time again has been proven, divided society is a weak and vulnerable for disintegration. Look at African countries and Europeans. Compared them how their social fabric is to the African one. Skin color is every thing they need to unite and be one people. In our case, the time our people are fighting for their dear lives, we have the time discussing about creating Bher. What for? What is the point? For your q “who are we to say no”, well, one may say, who are they to ask for Bher? Jeberti have some explanation to do. Most of us don’t know where they are getting this idea.
          As far as I am concerned, Jeberti people are just like any other Eritreans. I don’t see any difference. I am going to wait for their explanations. Thanks
          Genet-Original

          • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

            please read it as “a drop of oil in the tiny bucket of water”. thanks

  • Meretse Asmelash April 9, 2014

    Dear writer as well all commentators,
    Allow me to join your discussion but with a reflectance. Since I read the above article I had been wrestling much against myself. And, if there is one reason for that it would be due to my long memory. This question( Jeberti as beher) was raised decades ago (at least during the ghedli days), and people had hotly discussion about it. For your information the discussion was as open as today. However, back then, due to any “BHER” criteria it failed to move an inch; because the only difference found between the Jeberti and Tigrgina speakers was nothing but RELIGION.
    Sometimes, I wonder, do people need to focus on any bit difference from one another in order to feel proud of themselves?
    As far as I remember–didn’t we live together during bad and good days and of course as caring brothers and sisters? What exactly are we missing here today? If the answer is not laid clear on the ground, people will have only one option, and that would be speculation; speculation which will definitely lead the matter to a further misunderstanding. Is this what Nahda leaders and followers need?
    You see, already I have started throwing many questions while expecting none of them will be answered rightly and shortly. No wonder I was reluctant before joining the dialogue. What I mean by that is: one can threw his/her honest words freely but those honest words might not sound smart enough on the other side specially in this type discussion.
    BTW bear in mind, I am not suggesting for everything to stay just as it is (even if it is terrible) but in order to be benefit each of us any question and move should be valid as well as sound. I guess here the question is: as clear as the day light. By many means there are no thousand ways to solve the this hito. If all the Beher Criteria are there then it should be answered accordingly, otherwise as before I’m left a clueless.
    Last but not least, so far I loved your civilized dialogue, and if there is rightly answer for this I would be the one for it.

  • Meretse Asmelash April 9, 2014

    Just forgot what was in my mind( some what part of my conclusion )
    By the way just because my name is meretse who said part of me is not Jeberti, Tigre, Saho, or….you name it. After all am not Habesha? If someone is denying himself/herself that he or she is not Habesha then the answer is clear.

  • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

    Brother Mereste,
    First, I am surprised why Ato Belay has not joined this very civilized discussion yet.
    Second, please let me know if I am nuts because I see this Jeberts’ request as very basic and fair request. Why do we make it as a big deal? Let’s try to understand from their point of view. This is a matter of being proud Eritrean or 2nd class citizen. If they are asking for their own Bher and we tell them to ” just shut up because you are a Christian Jr. “, how would anyone think that this is an insult but nothing else to them. Let’s try to see it from their point of view, again.
    I remember when I was very young (man, don’t I missed it), those Ethiopians couldn’t understand why our basic request to be independent, as Eritreans as well as Africans, but not as Ethiopians. This was very hard to swallow for them. I know this doesn’t have the same magnitude but close enough. If we add Bher Jeberti and doesn’t hurt any other Bhers and it makes our brothers and sisters of ethnic Jeberti make them proud and happy, I would say that and that only is enough to grant them.
    Isayas and his clueless club HGDF doesn’t want to grant them and it is bad but the democracy seeker deny Jeberti’s basic request is worse. Just for a moment, think if you were one one of them – I would ask for my rights and this is one of them.

    • Mahmud Saleh April 10, 2014

      MightyEmbasoyra, Mertse,GENET,REZEN:
      First MightyEmbasoyra, I can see your gentle side except when it comes to me….still the mask is on though!!!!! Well, Ato Belay is calibrating…watching.. you never know when he will jump in.
      To all: I think it’s also important that we should not speak of Nahda as representing the community, we just don’t know if their program has a popular appeal within the community. Now, if the majority of the community wants that, mightyembasoyra nailed it in the above comment, I am fine with it. Unity is so true when the parts (ethnic groups) feel at home, when they feel respected, listened to, when they determine their affairs. Oppressing or denying others apprehensions because of fear of fragmentation is a band aid, it does not create a sustainable unity, look at the history of Ethiopia, Ugoslavia, the USSR…ETC. Since the unity was artificial (imposed by brute force and/or certain world view or ideology), once the central government enforcing the artificial unity collapses, the artificial unity also collapses. But if it is a unity based on will, based on the parts needing each other to sustain the whole (common country), the it outlives governments. So we need to respect each other and try to feel the pain of our other part. Another important point would be that the 19th century European concepts of nations and nationalities….are archaic and in most cases difficult to see each of the nine existing ethnic groups in Eritrea measuring up against those criteria. We are lucky most of our ethnic groups are intertwined and the revolution did a great job in literally meshing us up. All of us agree that in an ideal climate these issues take care of themselves. The problem is when there is the perception that a central organ that certifies some and denies others.

      • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

        Ato Mahmud,
        I can’t wait to read your next article and the gentleness will also depend on that 🙂
        I can see those fine brothers and sisters are balancing my weakness and the lack of gentleness is one of them. My apology.

      • Meretse Asmelash April 10, 2014

        Dear Mahmud Saleh,
        Thank you for your fair and balanced thoughts. Now let my share my information with you and others( this time without a reluctance though). Dear Mahmud, at times we may have different ways of expressing ourselves which is perfectly OK with everyone. The problem comes when someone pretends to use such expressions for a cause of judgement rather than a reason for celebration. In order to avoid such problems, I believe we should all grow beyond our illusions about who we are. As brother Mighty, you, and others suggested one person’s (community, Bher, country) win should be expected to bring blessing to everyone.
        In other words, the key to real winning is to discover how we are the SAME rather than how we are different. In the same token when we shift our focus from how we are different to what we share, we can see the way to let go of fear and our way for success.
        Now, again, allow me to share with you the following short story. This story is about a friend of mine named Rle. Rle is his nickname and that is what I preferred to call him for today.
        I met Rle during the ghedli days. Rle was born to a Muslim father and a Cristian mother named Dehab. Sometime in 1978 Rle married to a Christian lover and together they had a daughter. Unfortunately their marriage did not last long so divorce kicked in. A year later his second girl friend (Christian) was pregnant by him. No one said anything about it for it was definitely his and his partners choice. Sometime in late 1982 I met him again in Khartoum married to another woman. Since he was excited to see me he invited me to have lunch with him at his house. Happily I accepted his invitation and here I’m at his house. As soon as I finished my greetings, he asked me do you know who this girl is? I said, NO. As far as I could remember I have never seen or met her before. Oh! come on! don’t be foolish! what I meant was: she is not a Christian she is a Muslim. I said, I did not get it. He then said, how many times do you expect marry a Christian girl? I said,I hope you are joking? Anyways, is she going to be your last one? he said, Allah YeAlem (only God knows). Now many of you might wonder why did I brought this story for you? Here is the reason why: my brother Rle is now living in the United Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and last time I heard from him is he is now a true to Islam ( which I really do not understand what he meant by that), and at same time he is one of the conservative advocators for Jeberti as Bher. Hence what exactly did it go wrong or right with in the last 20 years? Is 20 years enough to make us this much different? Isn’t this is a good reason for speculation, or someone to say something smells fishy?
        Once again, for the sake of our integrity, we should all be detached from our limited vision while honoring changes which emerge within and around us.

        • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

          Dear Meretse Asmelash
          Sorry, but I find your story to be somehow odd. Your friend is now, “true to Islam” I don’t know what that mean. I can guess that it means he is devoted to Islam and he lives according to the Holy Quran. I say, good for him. Also he is an advocate for Jeberti Bher. I wonder what the reasoning behind his decision, for advocating for Jeberti Bher?
          Thanks
          Genet-Original

          • Meretse Asmelash April 10, 2014

            Dear Genet,
            Sorry, but I find your story to be somehow odd. Your friend is now, “true to Islam” I don’t know what that mean. I can guess that it means he is devoted to Islam and he lives according to the Holy Qur’an

            Remember, remember the above statement was his sayings and absolutely not mine. My only weakness on that part of statement is leaving a quotation marks behind. Otherwise, as for me he is solely responsible for whatever the interpretation is. If you ask me is it OK to be a devoted Christian, Islam, Buddhism, Voodooism, Atheism or else, it is not my business to judge someones belief. Please try to digest the other parts of the story too.

      • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

        Dear Mahmud Saleh
        I admit, this issue is very new to me. I want Jeberti Eritreans to be as happy as any Eritrean. However, If they are asking for their own ethnicity because of Isayas and PFDJ, Some thing is not right. What kind of problem is making them feel the need for a new ethnicity? When a group of people are asking for the formation of Ethnicity, it is not only about them, it is also about the whole country. It is very complicated. What would be new ethnicity do for them, rule of law wouldn’t? I think, what we need is rule of law for all Eritreans. I politely ask, Mahmud Saleh and others to give us more info about the history Jeberti in Eritrea. Thanks
        Genet-Original

    • Meretse Asmelash April 10, 2014

      Brother Mighty,
      I understand your concern and honesty idea, but when it comes to a question of Bher it is a complicated issue. What I mean is it is not as easy it sounds. However, when it comes to equal rights of all communities we should all die for it. Everyone’s identity must be respected at all times and no past memories should shadow upon the beautiful day that we have. Regarding Ato Belay: You know Belay is. Ato belay loves to be unexpected. Just like brother Mahmud suggested, he probably is reading from his hidden corner. I missed him too anyways. By the way what do you think happened to the other sister. I have heard much from her after the argument with Belay?
      Lastly I did not know how a great poet you are till I read your recent poem, and thanks for that.

      • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

        Thank you for the compliment, Ato Mereste! Learning from the best at UofA (that is university of Assenna by the way)!

    • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

      Mighty
      You do feel strongly about this Bher issue of Jeberti. I assume, you may know more the inside story of Jeberit than most of us. What is the background of Jeberit in Eritrea? What is their relationship with the Christian highlanders? Why are they not happy, just being Eritreans? This is not a joke; This is very serious issue. Asking the ENP, why do you want to have your own ethnicity is a valued question. If Eritrean people are going to hand out ethnicity willy nilly, we will get in to slippery slope. I am willing to learn more.
      Genet-Original

      • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

        Sister Genet-O,
        My knowledge on “pending Bher” Jeberti is almost none except that I have few friends, just happened to be Jeberti. My questions were simply, how about if I were one of them. The way I understand many of our Jeberti’s request is that “why aren’t we owning full Bher like everyone else – unless you guys do not think we are not Eritreans”. What am I going to answer them. Yes, from global point of view, they shouldn’t ask that but how about one african came to you and ask you yous shouldn’t ask your independent and stayed with Ethiopia. For me that would be an insult. They can directly relate these two items. If that is the case, why don’t dismiss every Bher in Eritrea and call it just Afar? I am sure many people in Eritrea would be pissed off. Do you see my point? Besides, if Eritrea add one more Bher, our luck would change – 9 is not an even # – make it 10 🙂

        • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

          Mighty
          I see you are a very nice guy and you care about your Jeberti friends. And that is nice. The question I have for you is What is the most serious difference between you and your Jeberti friends? Let us take the RELIGION factor out. What differentiate your Jeberti friend from you? Thanks.
          Genet-Original

          • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

            Thanks Geneta!
            I also have many Saho and few Tigre friends but they both have their own Bhers. From my side, I see nothing to differentiate us. Actually, most people can’t tell what Bher we are. When we tell some friend that we are from 4 Bhers (including jeberti) and we tell them to guess, they usually guess wrong. Unless someone wears traditional cloth or talks different languages (beside Tigrigna), we all lookalike.
            I know for sure (I am sure Ato Belay will catch on this..) that Isayas never like Bher Jeberti. So, let’s be fair (this is relative term by the way) , nice, reasonable and let them have it. After they have it, maybe after a month or so, we will realize, nothing has lost.

  • Hidat April 10, 2014

    HANTI BIHIER KAB KALEE BHIERAT KITEFELE ENTE WEHADE NAY SELESTE SHHIH(3000)KALAT FUXUM AB KALEEOT BIHIERAT ZEYELE KITWENEN ALEWA.
    EMO GEBERTNA DEA AYNIE ABAYOM YEDEFEN TIGRENA ENDEYOM ZEZAREBU.

    • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

      Hidat,
      I politely reject that kind of statement. Why 3000 words? Why not 2999 or 3001? You see, to me, this is meaningless. Spend sometime to think about it and I am sure that will be meaningless to you too.

  • Hidat April 10, 2014

    MIGHTY
    GEGA XEHIFEYO KAB 3000 NELELI ILKA NEBEBO
    MISNAY YEKRETA

  • Meron April 10, 2014

    Regarding the article: It is great to hear what are the concern of Jeberti. But it should not only be about Jeberti, but also the issue of Minority in general. The kunama could have concern too, may be also some members of the Christian faith (PENTE).
    I DO NOT think it is time to brag about those issues at this time. But I also think, it is very wise to use those issues as a battlement to face PFDJ practically, to show a united front towards the work that needs to be done in bringing lasting change.

  • belay nega April 10, 2014

    “ሰላም ዶኽብለኩም: የሕዋተይ ጀበርቲ
    ኣንቱም ሓቦኛታት: ናይ ሰውራ ጀመርቲ
    ዋልታ ሃገር ካብ ጥንቲ
    ስለዚ’ዩ ድማ: ትህደኑ ብጸላእቲ”

    አማሓዳሪ ሽረ ዝነበረ አቶ አብርሃ በላቸው ከይሰምዓካ

    • MightyEmbasoyra April 10, 2014

      Ato Belay,
      Your calibration is up again. I guess Ato Mahmud and Ato Mereste were right. Very funny 🙂
      Since I don’t know “አማሓዳሪ ሽረ ዝነበረ አቶ አብርሃ በላቸው”, may I ask why?

      • belay nega April 10, 2014

        Dear Mighty,

        “Your calibration is up again. I guess Ato Mahmud and Ato Mereste were right. Very funny :)”

        እዞም አሕዋት ተመኩሮኦም ይገልጹ ከይህሉምበር: አነስ አብቲ ዘይርበጽ፣ከዐምርን ክትኩስን ሓደ፣ ዝኾነ ህግ ስለዝነበርኩስ………..

        “Since I don’t know “አማሓዳሪ ሽረ ዝነበረ አቶ አብርሃ በላቸው”, may I ask why?”

        አቶ አብርሃ በላቸው አብ ግዜ ደርግ: በዞም አሕዋትና ናይ ክብሪ ዕዱም ኮይኑ ምስመጼ: ነዛ ግጥምኻ ብግልባጣ ዘምበባ እዩ::

    • Meretse Asmelash April 10, 2014

      ኣቶ በላይ
      ኣብ ዝተዓደምካሉ ዳስ ናይ ግድን ኣይኮነን ዕድመ ከተውድቅ። እንድሕሪ ዘይብልካ መዓልቲ ኢካ ትጽበ። ናይ ግድን ክከይድ ኣሎኒ እንተ ኢልካ ከኣ በሊዕካ ሰቲካ እገለ ሓወይ/ እገሊት ሓፍተይ ሎሚ ቅነ ኢደይ ሓጺራትኒ ስለ ዝቀነይትስ ተረዳኣኒ/ተርድእኒ ኢልካ ምንሳሕ ዝነበረን ፡ ዘሎን ይመስለኒ።
      ብዝተረፈ ግን ዘይምጽሓፍ እንታይ የድሊ ኢልካ፡ ንእግረ መገድካ ዝኣረካዮ ቁራጽ ሓጺን ወይ ብጣሽ ወረቀት ጌርካ ዕድመ ከተጽሕፍ ምፍታን ጽያፍ ኮይኑ ይስመዓኒ። ዓዳማይ ከኣ ኩሉ ግዚ መክበሪ እዩ ዝብሃል ። ክብሪ ዘይመልስ ከኣ እታ ሓጥያት ናብኡ እያ።

      • belay nega April 10, 2014

        አቶ መረጸ

        “ንእግረ መገድካ ዝኣረካዮ ቁራጽ ሓጺን ወይ ብጣሽ ወረቀት ጌርካ ዕድመ ከተጽሕፍ ምፍታን ጽያፍ ኮይኑ ይስመዓኒ”

        ካብ አቱም ምብል: አታ ምባልኳ ዝቀልል እንተኾነ: አብ ሰሙን ዘይመልእ አታ ምባል ይትረፈኒ
        አብክንዲ ምዝላፍ :ክመይ? ኢልካ እንተትሓትት ግን ካብ ጌጋ ምዳሓንካ ኔርካ ::ካብኡ ሓሊፉ ግን: እቲ እንኮ ዓዳሚ: ናይ ኩልና ጾመ ልጓም ዝፈትሔ አሰና: ምስጋና ይብጽሓዮ::

        • Meretse Asmelash April 10, 2014

          ኣቶ በላይ
          ሓንሳብ ኣታ ሓንሳብ ኣቱም ክንብሃልስ ኣይሰኣነና።
          ኣነስ ዝሓገዝኹ መሲሉኒ ኔሩ። ብናይ ሎሚ ጌረናስ ናብ ናይ ቀደም ብወረ ዝሰማዕናዮ ከይናኣቱ’ሞ ከይንጋጌ ፈሪሐ እየ።
          ትዝክር እንተኮንካ ቅድሚ ሕጂ ሓንቲ ታሪክ ወስ ኣቢለልካ ኔረ፡ ወረን ቢሂልን ዘመነ-መሳፍንቲ–ንመጻሕፍቲ
          ዝኮነ ኮይኑ እታ ናይ መጨረሻ ምልእቲ ሓሳብ ግን “ፈትየያ” ሓለፋ ኣሎዋ፡-… ” ካብኡ ሓሊፉ ግን: እቲ እንኮ ዓዳሚ: ናይ ኩልና ጾመ ልጓም ዝፈትሔ አሰና: ምስጋና ይብጽሓዮ” ወለላ !!!

          ቅድሚ ዝኮነ መልሲ ናይ ጽሑፍ ምሃብካ ከኣ ሕቶ ኣቀድም ዝበልካያ’ውን- ኣብ ቦትኣ እያ። ስለዚ ይቅረታ!!!
          ስለ ” ኣቱም ” ግን እንተ ተረኪቡስ ንሱ ምሓሸና። ኣታ ዝብለናን ኣታ እንብሎን ብዙሑስ ክንደይዃ!

  • Mahmud Saleh April 10, 2014

    Mighty, Genet-Original,Meretse and the rest: I am back from a zoo visit with the kids and feel a bit tired (I love to take a short nap) but for the sake of this spirited discussion, I will spend a couple of minutes. Thanks all, I have chosen this quote from Meretse, I believe it’s from his last comment: “In other words, the key to real winning is to discover how we are the SAME rather than how we are different. In the same token when we shift our focus from how we are different to what we share, we can see the way to let go of fear and our way for success.” (Meretse) I LIKE IT.
    My initiative was to make Brother Fitsums superb analysis complete, and I am sure all of you are aware my position is that of enhancing the analysis and not rejecting it; thanks to bro. Fitsum, all of us are more or less on the same page.
    Genet-O, brought an important proposition: ENP should explain its position to us. If they are aware of this article and have remained silent, I don’t think it’s a smart choice. I don’t know if they are aware, but you would expect them to have noticed it, after all, they are a party organ. The next point I want to reiterate is that I have nothing to give you about ENP,I just don’t know them. Sorry. In my previous entry, I tried to underline one important point: we need to be careful not to assume ENP PROGRAM as having an overwhelming support of the community it claims representing. We don’t know that. That’s why I don’t want to venture afar, I want to limit my comments on the small portion I felt needed correction and thanks to the Author, the comment has been noted. Generally speaking, I have seen Eritreans overcoming different divisive traps,and I can rest assure myself and hopefully everyone,that there is no Rwanda scenario looming on the horizon. I am old enough to have witnessed Hailesellasie’s campaign which erased metaht villages from the map and attempted to pitch christians against muslims (We were being hunted like animals, they were open season years). I would not be here telling you this if it were not for the love of our christian Bilin and Tigrigna assistance. After that we overcame terrible civil war, then derg’s Ras-gez project. Just think: Islamic Jihad has been around officially since 1989; why do you think it has not taken off and liberated the muslims it claims representing? The reason is very simple to detect.It has not attracted followers and that’s because muslims refused its agenda. Even poorly treated youth in Sudan’s refugee camps would not be deceived. So as far as religion based parties are concerned, I am not one of their fans. Eritrea will remain secular; christians fell for it in muslim areas and muslims fell for it in christian areas. Our martyrs blood and bones are lying side by side in those narrow graves and their soul keeps us moving, reminding us not to nfalale. Let me just give you an example: In 1990,Just to the west of Tikul, around Dekamhare,battles were raging in close quarters. Usually, in trench battles, you will have rear areas of the units just behind the trenches. There, you could find areas of living, kitchen, first aid reception area….etc. Generally an area where you plan and stage operations.So on that day, starting at 0400,we were evacuating our wounded comrades to that area, the battle continued till around 0900. When the guns fell silent I went down to the rear area to see what was going on. There were many activities, but for the purpose of this comment, I will tell you this:I found out that 6 btsot were ready to be buried; a big ditch-like grave had already been prepared. And in fact, they were all buried in that ditch. They are still there. One brave woman is lying among them. One kunama, one Tigre,one Asaorta,and three from our Tigrigna people and religious wise two muslims and four christians. I have no doubt that those fine tegadelty were not fighting particularly for their own ethnicity or religion. They died a good death; thinking they were dying for Eritrea. Now, I have clarified myself enough, and all of you have a good stay on your forum, I will keep reading your posts, just to give Fitsum a needed respite.

    • Genet-orginal April 10, 2014

      Dear Mahmud Saleh
      Well said!
      I have a story to tell you, My grandmother told me, During the Hailesellase era, When Hailesellase was attacking Eritrean Muslim, Eritrean Muslim were forced to sale their goats for dirt cheap. So, my then teenage uncle, came home with a goat. My grandmother told him to go back and give it back or pay a full market price. So he went back and paid a full market price for the goat. Information is power. There are many Eritreans who grow up or born outside of Eritrea. We need to learn from each other. I want to know about Jeberti. Thanks.
      Genet-O

      • MightyEmbasoyra April 11, 2014

        Sister Genet-O,
        So, this smartness runs in the family. Your grand mother is a wise Eritrean.

        • Genet-orginal April 13, 2014

          Mighty
          Thanks.
          You know, our ancestors were more compassionate, thoughtful and brave than the current generation. It would make our lives much easier, if we are able to go back to our base. Go back to the base of our society, Way back, before the Isayas and the PFDJ network came to our civil society. We have to show the world, Isayas and PFDj’s network don’t define us in any way shape or form. I do believe, compassionate comes from knowing about something.

    • Meretse Asmelash April 11, 2014

      Dear Mahmud,
      Thank you for your broad understanding and kind compliments.

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