Tens of thousands of Oromos gathered Sunday at a lake near the Ethiopian capital for a once-banned celebration that today doubles as a sounding board for political and ethnic demands. Draped in traditional colors including the red, white and black of the Oromo flag, crowds descended on the shores of Lake Hora Arsadi, 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of Addis Ababa, for the annual Irreecha festival. Representing around a third of Ethiopia’s 120 million people, the Oromo are the largest of 80 distinct groups that make up the vast and ethnically-diverse nation in the Horn of Africa.
"The Oromo people come to the lake to give thanks to god for the change of the rainy season, of winter to spring,” said Sabkebar Gezu, a 35-year-old small business owner. To mark the passage of seasons, attendees old and young at Irreecha dip flowers into the lake and sprinkle themselves with the blessed water, amid traditional songs and dancing in colorful regalia.
The Oromo are almost equally divided between Christians and Muslims. Many refer to god as Waaqa, and some still practice local beliefs that revolve around this ancestral life-giving deity. In recent decades, there has been a revival of Oromo identity long suppressed under successive waves of Ethiopian rulers and traditions like Irreecha, which was long banned, have re-emerged.
‘Our strength’
Tola Micha, wearing a tie striped in Oromo colors, remembered when Irreecha resumed in the late 1990s after the fall of the military-Marxist Derg regime in 1991. In the beginning there were "a few hundred” in attendance: "Now we’re in numbers, and I am proud of it,” the 52-year-old said. "Ireecha is our fist. It represents our strength.”
Sabkebar said Irreecha was a "major” festival for his people but despite the celebrations, he did not forget there were "still many issues which remain unaddressed regarding the Oromo”. "The past generation has paid a sacrifice so that our generation can come here and celebrate it,” he said. Among the crowd, political chants peppered the lively singing and dancing. "We are marginalized!” rose one refrain, while others spoke of a desire for greater respect as a people, and concerns over Oromos in prison. Others cried for an end to the violent armed conflict raging in Oromia, a restive region and homeland of the Oromo.
Oromia is plagued by armed violence and anti-government insurgencies, and has witnessed ethnic massacres in recent years. In 2018, Abiy Ahmed became the first Oromo to lead Ethiopia, and many anticipated greater representation and respect for a long-marginalized people. But many Oromo have complained of continuing political and economic persecution even under the leadership of one of their own. Many celebrating at Irreecha were at pains to avoid discussing the thornier issue of politics, but echoed wider concerns about Oromo identity and their place in Ethiopia.
"We can’t say the question of the Oromo people is fully addressed, but it is better than before,” said Kiya Tadessa, a 24-year-old NGO worker. Ababa Korsa, a 30-year-old accountant, said the right to celebrate Irreecha "wasn’t given to us freely and many shed their blood and sacrifice was paid”. "Even today, we cannot say we are fully liberated and there are many issues unaddressed,” he said. "However, it’s partly better, to come here and celebrate our culture freely.”—AFP