Sunday, June 10, 2012


Message to the peoples of Israel, Egypt and Libya

There is a saying in my mother language that reveals the seriousness of curse, “If a curse of someone doesn’t kill you, it can definitely get you troubles in your life.” If troubled people come and ask us for help, please don’t let them shrivel and die by refusing to give what they want. Because, they will be cursing us if they get what they feared most in their lives – due to our unwillingness to help them. The norms of hospitality and sharing, in times of need, have prevailed throughout the history of humans. As they, indeed, are the prime acts of humanity. I have once read a touching story in the bible - the widow of Zarephath who welcomed Prophet Elijah into her home when she had only one meal to offer; and later on God filled her pantry as fast as it was emptied and Elijah remained with her for many days.  This kind of act, however, is not always what we see. There are people, who oppress and embarrass other humans like them, in their terrible exodus journeys. We must not forget that in the history of humanity, there could be a possibility that we might once be refugees, leaving our place that we may have presumed to be our life long destinations. That is why, God reminded the Israelites not to forget their bad times - as written in the following verse from the bible. 

Exodus 22:21 "You must not mistreat or oppress foreigners in any way. Remember, you yourselves were once foreigners in the land of Egypt.”

I have been following the news, recently, that has been emanating from Israel, and I am not convinced about the stand of Netanyahu’s government, about the case of Eritrean refugees in the country. I believe they have forgotten what they were told few thousands years back, as stated in the above verse. It will definitely have some negative result for their people, if they fail to shelter our people at this critical moment of our history. All the genuinely democratic countries have been treating Eritreans as political, and not as economic immigrants. Hence, these fellows deserve to be given their papers right away and be relieved from their long nights of nightmares - after having seen them come through the unimaginable hell on this earth. The Bedouins have been smuggling and selling them by asking unbearable amounts of money; and some greedy residents of Libya and Egypt who have been exploiting the helpless moments of these Eritreans – by terrorizing them and seizing whatever money they have got. Those who have been suffering there, did curse them time and time again, while crying for help from God. It has been said that history, in one way or another, repeats itself, and we have been witnessing the Arab uprising – the prevailing painful revolution and political turmoil in North Africa and Middle East countries. 

This revolution will definitely have a longstanding effect for their future - just like what has been our fate – due to the border conflict with Ethiopia and the choice of dictatorship by Isaias, thereafter. Hence, the Libyans and Egyptians have inevitably started fleeing their countries and will continue to flee seeking asylum in other countries. There is no question about the history of migration about the Israelites, as we have all seen them settled in every country we are in at the moment - just because of their terrible history. In everything, therefore, there is a general norm of reciprocity to treat others the same way you want them to treat you. Thus, the peoples and governments of Israel, Libya and Egypt should act soon to curb the heartless activities of these human traffickers and robbers, in the first place. And, more importantly, they should act like responsible governments, who value humanity ahead of their narrowly minded national interests. But, if they fail to do so, they will definitely be ashamed of this black history later – suffering of helpless fellow Eritreans - being manifested in their territories. 

TESFAMICHAEL W. TEWELDE
Antwerp, Belgium
10/06/2012

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Gossip mongering: From downtown cafés to cybercafés


“Time heals everything” – is what I have been saying to myself, time and time again lately, as we are about to witness the healing of our country. Seeing the evident role of Eritreans from inside and the Diaspora, and watching the dictator’s recent clueless interviews, I feel like our long awaited dream is not far from becoming true. We have to ask ourselves, though - what have we done so far and what needs to be done, for the betterment of our people. From what I have been observing, I think it is time that we stop wasting our time in gossip-mongering the regime, as we have had enough of it, since our times in the unforgettable cafes of downtown Asmara, and now using the different forms of the cyber-world. Thus, we must start acting the way we are supposed to, at this very demanding time of our history. We have to start thinking about what Eritrea should look like after the dictator, as it looks eminent that he will be out of office soon.

Being part of our youth movements, I am pleased and honored to see our visible threats to the regime. Although I believe we haven’t done enough yet, I am overwhelmed with our recent demonstrations, from all over the world – keep it up! You truly honest Eritreans in action, is my timely message. I believe the solution to our country’s problem is definitely unique – and can’t be copied from cases of other countries. The next step to achieving our true freedom is to be united and act sooner rather than later. There are some Eritreans who say, peaceful dialogue with the dictatorial regime, as the only way to our solution. Which, I believe is the most unlikely, outdated and too late option. Because, I do not expect the dictator to be ready to apologize for what he did so far. And there are others who say armed struggle as the only way to overthrow the regime. This too, from my personal opinion, is not a preferable move. Because, the conscripted soldiers are parts of our whole being and we can’t fight with us. Hence, in one way or another, it is important to analyze on how to get rid of our main bottlenecks.

Well, there are few Eritreans who support the regime for different reasons, and honestly I don’t hate those who are blindfolded, and innocently supporting the regime, just because they care about our country’s image in the world. But, I can’t have words for those who are deliberately supporting the regime, knowing beforehand, the road that the dictator has been walking, obviously will end up in hell. For these fellows, I would like to call them to admit their mistakes and join our movements in no time, and I believe most of us will be more than willing to forgive them and forget their past. Because, there is only one way to progress as a nation in our contemporary world – to let the bygones be bygones for a better and bright future. But, if they don’t ask forgiveness, I think we are now at the right time to give them some sort of warning - that they will have to regret after realizing our true democracy. Indeed, I want us to be reunited regardless of our minor differences. Because, finding the best solution to our immense problem, and achieving our possible dream of developed Eritrea, will surely bring back the long lost smiles to our charming faces. Thus, to cure the problem and have a lasting solution, I would like to conclude with a remark that I made in my recently published book, entitled “Exodus of the Betrayed Pearl”.

I have mentioned there, about the importance of collective discussions. Hence, I would like to remind all concerned Eritreans, living in the country and Diaspora, that this is the right time for us to start living our lives of maturity and not hover around and complain about our problems like silly, immature and irresponsible ones – magnifying our differences and staying in our separate corners with no discussion at all. I wonder why most of us have been reluctant to discuss with all stakeholders of our country’s interests. Let us wake up and start having dialogue – even with those who are blindfoldly supporting the regime – to collectively derive and find our lasting solution. Let us take a worthy step and contribute something towards the collapse of dictatorship in our country - rather than bemoaning about the problem. Let us, then, stay up and doing the right job at the very demanding time, with one heart, still believing in what the Chinese people say - “Better to light a candle than to curse the darkness”.

TESFAMICHAEL W. TEWELDE
Antwerp, Belgium
28/05/2012

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Mao’s ‘Hundred Flowers Policy’ in its ‘Isaias is dead’ version after 55 years


In 1956-1957, Mao Zedong desired to root out opposition from his country.  He officially began a policy, named, ‘Hundred Flowers Policy’- to encourage all those who had opposing ideas to his brand of socialism.  His proclamation began, "Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend."  Millions of intellectuals and educators started writing and publishing their protests against his heavy-handed governing policies. These Chinese leftists actually thought they could trust Mao, so they took him up on his proposal and began to offer him their criticisms and ideas on how to run China better   (Dr. Sanders, 2009). This version of terrible history has been carbon copied this last week by the ever applicant of Mao’s policies, Dictator Isaias Afwerki. He just managed to spread rumours, in consultation with his puppet Ali Abdu, that he was dead and then insanely appeared on his TV to tell the world that he is not dead, after a week of drama, trying to manifest that he is the most important person out of the 5 million Eritreans, despite the fact that he is worthless at the moment. I definitely fear the worst might happen to our fellows, who have shown the moves inside the country, thinking that the drama was true, and came out with their opinion on how Eritrea should move towards our relentless dream of having democratic Eritrea.


The conspiracy that Mao had, was simply to know who among the intellectuals were dangerous to his regime, in order to take harsh measures on them. Within a year, in 1957, Mao arrested over 500,000 people who had dared to criticise him in his policy (Dr. Jeff Sanders, 2009, blog post – ‘Mao and the Hundred Flowers Campaign’).  It had all been a ruse to root out opposition.  This is a favourite trick of all tyrants.  Hitler and Stalin did the same sort of thing to root out "competitors" within their own political movements--with deadly results for anyone who thought differently from the "dear Leader." And Dictator Isaias had used traitors in arresting ex-ministers and other concerned Eritreans, and this time he used the above mentioned policy of his devilish mentor Mao after 55 years to see who the most dangerous Eritreans, from inside and the Diaspora, to his very existence are, in this defining moment of our history.


The dictator is lucky, as he said in his TV, that he is still in power after all the rumours, but we truly concerned Eritreans have not been lucky to have had him for the last couple of decades. I am in no doubt that he is in the darkest hour of his tyrant regime, and the sun is about to shine in no time. My message to those ‘will be victims’ of this week’s outdated Mao’s policy, is that their suffering is worth paying to getting our long lost freedom.

TESFAMICHAEL W. TEWELDE
Antwerp, Belgium
28/04/2012

Sunday, February 26, 2012

ይኣክል ናብራ ማህጸን!!!!!!!!!ይኣክል!!!!!

ይኣክል ናብራ ማህጸን!!!!!!!!!ይኣክል!!!!!
© Tesfamichael W. Tewelde

ሓደ ሰብ ናብዛ ንነብራላ ዓላም ዝመጽእ፡ ዝኾነ ምርጫ ስለ ዝውሃቦ ኣይኮነን። ሓደ ካብ መስተንክራውያን መስርሓት ተፈጥሮ ስለ ዝኾነ'ዩ ንህላውኡ አብ ገጽ ምድሪ ዝቕበል። ካብ ምእምአር (Conception) ጀሚርካ ክሳብ ሕርሲ (Delivery) ድማ ንዓቕሊ ዝፈታተኑ በዳህቲ ወርሓት ክሓልፍ ጽኑሕ ግዴታ ተፈጥሮ እዩ። ነዚ ስነፍልጠታዊ ዛዕባ ምስ ታሪኽ ኤርትርአውያን ከትኣስአስሮ ካብ ዝቐሰቡኒ ገለ ውሑዳትን ቀንድን ምኽንያታት ክዕዘብ ስለ ዝጸናሕኩ እየ። ንሱ ድም ናጽላታት ቆልዑ ካብ መሪር ናብራ ማህጸ፡ ንሕና ኤርትራውያን ክኣ ካብ መወዳእታ ኣልቦ ሰንሰለታዊ ናብራ ባርነትን መግዛእትን ንምውጻእ ክንሓልፎ ዝጸናሕና ቓንዛ ተመሳሳልነት ስለ ዘለዎ እየ። ልክዕ ከም ተኽእሎ ሞት ናጽላ ኣብ ግዜ ሕርሲ (Infant mortality)፡ አብ ምዕራባውን ደቡባውን ዶባት ኤርትራ፡ አብ አሰቀቕቲ አብያተ ማእሰርትታት ስርዓት ህግደፍ፡ አብ ምድረበዳታት ስሃራን ሲናይን፡ አብ ባሕሪ መዲተራንያንን አብ ዝኣተዉወን ሃብታማት ዓድታትን ክሞቱ ዝጸንሑን ዘለዉን ምንእስእያትና'ውን ካብቲ ካልእ ዘመሳስሎም ፍጻሜ እዩ።

መብዛሕትአን ሃአገራት አፍሪቃ፡ ንኤርትራ ሓዊስካ፡ አብ ምሕንጸጽ ዶባተን ዝተጻወትኦ ዝኾነ ተራ አይነበረን። አብ በርሊን (ጀርመን) ብዝተኻየደ ዋዕላ ምጉዝዛይ አፍሪቃ (Scramble of Africa - Berlin Conference of 1884-85) እየን ተኸሲተን። ሃገረ ኤርትራ ድማ ካብ ድሕሪ'ዚ እዋን ጀሚራ አብ ማህጸን ኢጣልያዊት አደ በዚ ሒዛቶ ዘላ ቕርጺ ክትቀውም ክኢላ። ድሒሩ ድማ ምስኪን ናጽላ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ፡ ናብ ማህጸን እንግሊዛዊትን ኢትዮጵያዊትን አደ እዩ ንምረት ተሰጋጊሩ። ድሕሪ ናይ 90 ዓመታት መስርሕ ጥንሲ ግን፡ ዝተተስፈዎ መስርሕ ሕርሲ ከይሰመረሉ፡ ናብ ዘዳህለለቶ ህግደፋዊት ማህጸን እዩ ከይተረድኦ ናብ ምውጽኡ አሸጊሩዎ ዘሎ ታኸላ ማህጸን ተሸሚሙ።

ከም ሳዕቤኑ ድማ ነዚ ዝሓለፈ ልዕሊ 20 ዓመታት፡ አብ ማህጸንን መስርሕ ምውጻእ ካብ ማህጸንን፡ ህይወት ብዙሓት የሕዋትና ክሃልቕ ጸኒሑን ይቕጽል ኣሎን። ኩልና ድማ ሕፍረት ክስምዓና ይግብኦ። አብ'ዚ ዝርአ ዘሎ ዘሕፍር ታሪኻዊ ፍጻሜ፡ ቀዳማይን ቀንድን ተሓታቲ፡ እቲ ዓሻ ደንቆሮን አርሒቑ ክጥምት ዘይተዓደለን ውልቀ መላኺ ክኸውን ከሎ፡ እቶም ደቀ-መዛሙርቱ'ውን ካብኡ ብዝእይሰንፍ ዋጋ ክሕተቱ እዮም። ድሒርና ንሕተት ድማ፡ ንውልቃዊ ረብሓታትናን ጽበት ኣትሓሳስባናን ክነሰንፍ ብዘይምኽኣልና፡ ነዚ ደስኪሉ ዘሎ ስርዓት ብጥርናፈ ክንብድህ ዘይክኣልና ዘለና ግዱሳት ኤርትራውያን ኢና። እታ ንምነያ ሃገር ንምውናንን ብታሪኽ ንዘይምሕታትናን ድማ ምስ'ቲ ውሽጣዊ ሰብና ንዘራረብ እሞ፡ ሃቐናና አጽፊፍና ክነበርክቶ ንኽእል ንሕስብ። ብሕብረት ኮይንና ይኣክል ናብራ ማህጸን ንበል። ጽሑፈይ አዝየ ብዝፈትዋ ሓረግ "ምዓር ገዲፉ ምዓር ዘናዲ የልቦን" ትብል አብ'ታ ብካቶሊካዊን ቤተክርስትያን "እግዚኣብሄር ነዛ ሃገር የፍቅራ እዩ" ኣብ ትብል መጽሓፍ ብዝእንበብኩዋ ጽሕፍቲ ክዛዝም። ምኽንያቱ ዓዲ ሰላም፡ ዓዲ ፍትሒ፡ ዓዲ ስራሕ፡ ዓዲ ዝመስለካ ትዛረበላን ዝደለኻዮ እምነት ትኽተለላን እንተሃልያትና ፡ ናብ ሃገር ዝምለስ እምበር ንዲሞክራሲ አብ ካልእ ቦታ ኮይኑ ዘናዲ ዜጋ አይክህልወናን እዩ።

ይኣክል ናብራ ማህጸን!!!!!!!!!ይኣክል!!!!!
© Tesfamichael W. Tewelde

Friday, November 18, 2011

Exodus of The Betrayed Pearl



FOREWORD

“………. As you know, separation and departure for a series of different chapters of life has set its feet already. However, realizing that we are living in a globalized world, I hope that our sense of cooperation and solidarity will sail smoothly…….”  
Sometimes, we carefully say something that we really mean to say, and sometimes we make “a slip of tongue” and become guilty of unintentional utterance, and sometimes we don’t pay much attention to what we have said - be it intentional or accidental - until we see its result at some point of time in the future. The above quoted message is part of what I would like to call “a prophetic speech” that I gave on the occasion of a farewell party - with fellow university graduating class of the department of Business Management - some nine years back. I still remember that special day, as we were all excited, very much relieved and happily united to say bingo to the couple of hectic, yet fascinating years that we spent together at the sole University in the country - University of Asmara. It was taking place just few weeks before our assignments to the different ministries and other government organizations, to do our one year internship program. When I said separation and departure, in that short speech, I really had no idea if it would turn out to be an unintentional prediction of our painful inevitable fate - fleeing the country. Because, I have now learned that more than half of us - 16 out of 26 - who partied on that special day, have already left the country, looking for our personal freedom elsewhere. I brought this typical example of our exodus, in order to give readers a real picture of what has been the truth about Eritrea – a historical irony for more than a decade. A sad part of our history in the making that must be documented in one way or another. Loads of questions can be raised about the causes to our exodus in mass. Indeed, the obvious mistreatment by the ruling dictatorial regime has been the pivotal reason behind the exodus.    
Starting the last month of the year 2000, right after the two-years-long border conflict with Ethiopia ended with a ceasefire, so many vigilant Eritreans raised important questions regarding the need for implementing the already ratified constitution - regardless of its shortcomings - which has been subdued by the government for years. It was meant to be the rulebook of our country. However, the dictator, President Isaias Afwerki, didn’t want to implement it. What a shame and insane act to be betrayed by one of our revolutionary leaders. Nobody has expected to see only one president for more than two decades in an independent Eritrea; and hearing like the following response from him, simply strengthens my argument that our history has never been set free from betrayal, even after independence.
“We will see what the elections in the United States will bring about and we will wait 30 to 40 years ...... maybe more ...... to have democratic elections in Eritrea”  
This was President Isaias response to Aljazeera’s Riz Khan program question “When are elections going to be held in Eritrea?” – it really gave him a terrible heartache in an in-depth interview, which took place on May 22, 2008.
Indeed, after successive Italian and British colonisations, Eritrea as a nation did witness an act of betrayal by the western countries, some six decades back, when they unjustifiably decided to bury our desire for independence. We have a well documented history of betrayal, when the UN passed the resolution 390-A(V) to federate Eritrea with Ethiopia in 1952. Typical example of betrayal that manifested the interest of western countries in Eritrea, because of its strategic location, linking Africa and the Middle East, and to enhance their relationship with the then very diplomatic Emperor Haileselassie of Ethiopia. It was passed against the unshakable desire, long awaited dream and expressed will of our people for independence; and most notably despite the fact that most African countries were given their independence at that time.

Hence, after being betrayed by the world, we had to go through decades of war for independence. And we achieved our long awaited independence, after 30 years of bloody war with Ethiopia, in May 1991.  We have never been lucky in history though, as our independence has also brought us another two and still continuing decades of betrayal - by our own leaders. As a result of our martyrdom for independence, we were rewarded with dictatorial leadership, stubborn leaders and no signs of willingness for rule of law - just like the times of the colonial period. All concerned Eritreans did realize the regime’s primary intention of prolonging its stay in power by using the border conflict with Ethiopia as an excuse. Questions were raised right after the war ended in 2000 and those who challenged the regime in different occasions were targeted for imprisonment. As a result, many fellow Eritreans started leaving the country to avoid torture, suffering and repression. Ever since that year, therefore, it has been history of exodus in the making for Eritreans.     
Kofi Annan, former Secretary General of the United Nations, has once said “To live is to choose.” And to make the best choice in life, he gave us the precious advice “You must know who you are, what you stand for, where you want to go and why you want to get there.”  This is a very powerful advice that I believe can help us make the right decisions to fulfil our dreams. Indeed, we have to accept the reality that we can’t always be offered with desirable choices in this paradoxically unfair world. Hence, Annan’s saying needs to be complemented with a famous proverb in my mother language, Tigrigna, which says “Choose from what the market has to offer you and not what your mother has sent you to get her.” (loose translation). Although, we humans are responsible for whatever decisions we make in our lives, these decisions can definitely be affected by external factors. As citizens of the contemporary world, we Eritreans have been making our history in various facets of life. One of them is the prevailing exodus from our beloved country – after having been pushed by the regime and not on our own choices. We have been taking our journeys, mostly through the tightly controlled borders with Sudan and Ethiopia. In most cases without planned final destinations and unlike the Israelites, there hasn’t been a guide like the Prophet Moses - to collectively lead us all the way to our preferred destinations.

It is written in the Bible that Moses was chosen to lead the Israelites out of Egypt, through the wilderness of Sinai desert, where God revealed himself and offered them a covenant that they were to keep his law, and in return He would be their God and give them the land filled with many good things, Canaan, where they would be free from the troubles that they experienced for centuries. And, God ordered Moses to lead them, as stated in the following verses from the bible:

Exodus 3:9-10 “I have heard the cries of the Israelites, and I have seen the way the Egyptians have made life hard for them. So now I am sending you to Pharaoh. Go! Lead my people, the Israelites, out of Egypt.”   
         
Their tortures, as written in the above verses of the Bible, have also been mentioned in Quran’s Sura 14:6, which says, “When Moses said to his people: Remember Allah’s favour to you, when He delivered you from the people of Pharaoh, who imposed upon you a dreadful torment, slaughtered your sons and spared your women.” Thus, whether it is in the Bible, Quran or historical books, all we have come to know is that the suffering of Israelites under the Pharaoh did pave the way to their famous history of exodus from Egypt - after living in the country for about 430 years.  

The term “exodus literally means going out; a departure or emigration, usually of a large number of people. The Bibles book of exodus, as we know, is all about the mass journey of Israelites from Egypt all the way to Canaan. The title of this book is, therefore, given to show the strong fact of historical similarities that exist between the exodus of Israelites to Canaan and exodus of Eritreans for the last decade to multiple destinations. Both exoduses have got the main motive of avoiding tortures and looking freedom.  Because, there is no question that freedom is as important as oxygen, for every human creature - as we need it badly in our lives’ fulfilment.
Freedom, as defined in so many occasions, refers in a very general sense to the state of being unrestricted, unconfined or unfettered. History tells us that, people who are deprived of their freedom turn out to be aggressive in trying to get it back. This has always been true, whether it is national freedom or personal freedom - like freedom of speech, movement, press, religion, choice and other basic human rights. That is why it took us 30 years of aggressive war with Ethiopian regimes - Emperor Haileselassie and Colonel Mengistu Hailemariam - to achieve our independence. The same amount of sacrifice is demanded to realize individual freedom, because, both freedoms are interlinked and have always complementary relationship.
It is just because, we humans are not willing to let our freedom be compromised, even if we are being asked to surrender it by the one who gave it to us - the almighty God.  Being a believer in God, like all creationists, I believe that God gives the ultimate freedom for us to choose what is good in our lives. Unluckily, though, the dictatorial regime in Eritrea has taken every imaginable kind of freedom we received from God at birth. Despite the strong fact that the regime doesn’t have any legitimate power to take it. Hence, we needed our lost freedom badly. Internal oppositions would have been effective to pressurize the regime to get our lost freedom back - but the security network of the regime in our small country has been very tight. Neighbors are spied by their neighbors, military commanders are spied by soldiers, teachers are spied by their students, government and non-government workers are spied by their colleagues and vice versa. Everyone living in the country is under the total control of the government. Hence, the exodus, in my opinion has been one of the ways of opposing the dictatorial regime through non-violence. There is undeniable fact that those of us fleeing the country have given our lives in defending the country during its times of emergency. We could have fought to overthrow the government, but that is going to be fighting with our family members. We all have someone in the military who have been forcefully conscripted. Thus, we preferred to leave the country and see what the future holds for us and our country. There is no doubt that the main problems of the country have been the dictator, his military commanders and few other beneficiaries under the regime. As long as this regime remains in power, the suffering of our people will continue – and so will our exodus. This exodus, together with other carefully organized internal and external oppositions, will definitely pressurize the regime in the future, paving the way to a dramatic political change in the country. That will inevitably be followed by gradual political reform and mass return of us Eritreans from the Diaspora. Our dream of having economically, socially and politically stable country should by then be realized, and thus we will be able to enjoy full freedom in all aspects of life in our own country. 


Tesfamichael W. Tewelde