by Alemayehu G. Mariam
The Silent World of Hippos on Planet Cheetah
In
my first weekly commentary of the new year, I “proclaimed” 2013 “Year
of Ethiopia’s Cheetah Generation” (young people). I also promised to
reach, teach and preach to Ethiopia’s youth this year and exhorted
members of the Ethiopian intellectual class (particularly the privileged
“professorati”) to do the same. I have also been pleading with (some
say badgering) the wider Ethiopian Hippo Generation (the lost
generation) to find itself, get in gear and help the youth.
The SOS I put out in June 2012 (Where have Ethiopia’s Intellectuals Gone?) and now (The Irresponsibility of the Privileged)
has been unwelcomed by tone deaf and deaf mute “Hippogenarians”. My
plea for standing up and with the victims of tyranny and human rights
abuses has been received with stony and deafening silence. I have
gathered anecdotally that some Hippos are offended by what they perceive
to be my self-righteous and holier-than-thou finger wagging and
audacious, “J’accuse!”. Some have claimed that I am sitting atop my
high horse crusading, pontificating, showboating, grandstanding and
self-promoting.
There seems to be palpable consternation and
anxiety among some (perhaps many) Hippos over the fact that I dared to
betray them in a public campaign of name and shame and called unwelcome
attention to their self-inflicted paralysis and faintheartedness. Some
have even suggested that by using the seductively oversimplified
metaphor of cheetahs and hippos, I have invented a new and dangerous
division in society between the young and old in a land already
fractured and fragmented by ethnic, religious and regional divisions.
“Methinks they doth protest too much”, to invoke Shakespeare.
My
concern and mission is to lift the veil that shrouds a pernicious
culture and conspiracy of silence in the face of evil. My sole objective
is to speak truth not only to power but also to those who have
calculatedly chosen to disempower themselves by self-imposed silence. I
unapologetically insist that silently tolerating wrong over right is
dead wrong. Silently conceding the triumph of evil over good is itself
evil. Silently watching atrocity is unmitigated moral depravity.
Complicity with the champions of hate is partnership with haters.
The
maxim of the law is “Silence gives consent” (qui tacet consentiret).
Silence is complicity. Silence for the sake of insincere and hollow
social harmony (yilugnta) is tantamount to dousing water on the quiet
riot that rages in the hearts and minds of the oppressed. Leonardo da
Vinci said, “Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence.” I say
nothing strengthens tyranny as much as silence — the silence of the
privileged, the silence of those who could speak up but choose to take a
vow of silence. One cannot speak to tyrants in the language of
silence; one must speak to tyrants in the language of defiant truth.
Silence must never be allowed to become the last refuge of the
hypocritical scoundrel.
There have been encouraging developments
over the past week in the crescendo of voices speaking truth to power.
Several enlightening contributions that shed light on the life and times
of tyranny in Ethiopia have been made in “Ethiopian cyber hager”, to
borrow Prof. Donald Levine’s metaphor. A couple of insightful analysis
readily come to mind. Muktar Omer offered a devastating critique of the bogus theory of “revolutionary democracy.” He
argued convincingly “that recent economic development in Ethiopia has
more to do with the injection of foreign aid into the economy and less
with revolutionary democracy sloganeering.” He demonstrated the core
ideological nexus between fascism, communism and revolutionary
democracy. Muktar concluded, “Intellectuals who are enamored with the
‘good intellect and intentions’ of Meles Zenawi and rationalize his
appalling human rights records are guilty of either willful ignorance or
disagree with Professor John Gray’s dauntingly erudite reminder:
‘radical evil can come from the pursuit of progress’”. My view is that
revolutionary democracy is to democracy as ethic federalism is to
federalism. Both are figments of a warped and twisted imagination.
An Amharic piece by Kinfu Asefa (managing editor of ethioforum.org)
entitled “Development Thieves” made a compelling case demonstrating the
futility and duplicity of the so-called “Renaissance Bond” calculated
to raise billions of dollars to dam the Blue Nile. Kinfu argued
persuasively that there could be no development dam when the people
themselves are damned by the damned dam developers.
I am told by
those much wiser than myself that I am pursuing a futile course trying
to coax Hippos to renounce their vows of silence and speak up. I am told
it would be easier for me to squeeze blood out of turnip than to expect
broad-gauged political activism and engaged advocacy from the members
of Ethiopia’s inert Hippo Generation. The wise ones tell me I should
write off (and not write about) the Hippos living on Planet Cheetah. I
should stop pestering them and leave them alone in their blissful world
where they see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil!
Should I?
Restoring Faith With the Cheetahs
We
have a problem! A big one. “We” are both Cheetahs and Hippos. Truth
must be told: Hippos have broken faith with Cheetahs. Cheetahs feel
betrayed by Hippos. Cheetahs feel marginalized and sidelined. Cheetahs
say their loyalty and dedication has been countered by the treachery and
underhandedness of Hippos. The respect and obedience Cheetahs have
shown Hippos have been greeted with disdain and effrontery. Cheetahs
say Hippos have misconstrued their humility as servility; their
flexibility and adaptability have been countered by rigidity and their
humanity abused by cruel indignity. Cheetahs feel double-crossed,
jilted, tricked, lied to, bamboozled, used and abused by Hippos.
Cheetahs say they have been demonized for questioning Hippos and for
demanding accountability. For expressing themselves freely, Cheetahs
have been sentenced to hard labor in silence. Cheetahs have been
silenced by silent Hippos! Cheetahs have lost faith in Hippos. Such is
the compendium of complaints I hear from many Ethiopian Cheetahs. Are
the Cheetahs right in their perceptions and feelings? Are they justified
in their accusations? Are Hippos behaving so badly?
A word or two
about the youths’ loss of faith in their elders before talking about
restoring faith with them. Ethiopia’s youth live in a world where they
are forced to hear every day the litany that their innate value is
determined not by the content of their character, individuality or
humanity but the random chance of their ethnicity. They have no
personality, nationality or humanity, only ethnicity. They are no more
than the expression of their ethnic identity.
To enforce this
wicked ideology, Apartheid-style homelands have been created in the name
of “ethnic federalism”. The youth have come to realize that their
station in life is determined not by the power of their intellect but by
the power of those who lack intellect. They are shown by example that
how high they rise in society depends upon how low they can bring
themselves on the yardstick of self-dignity and how deeply they can
wallow in the sewage of the politics of identity and ethnicity. They
live in a world where they are taught the things that make them
different from their compatriots are more than the things they have in
common with them. Against this inexorable message of dehumanization,
they hear only the sound of silence from those quietly professing
allegiance to freedom, democracy and human rights. To restore faith with
Ethiopia’s youth, we must trade silence with the joyful noise of
protest; we must unmute ourselves and stand resolute against tyranny. We
must cast off the silence of quiet desperation.
But before we
restore faith with the young people, we must restore faith with
ourselves. In other words, we must save ourselves before we save our
young people. To restore faith with ourselves, we must learn to forgive
ourselves for our sins of commission and omission. We must believe in
ourselves and the righteousness of our cause. Before we urge the youth
to be courageous, we must first shed our own timidity and fearfulness.
Before we teach young people to love each other as children of Mother
Ethiopia, we must unlearn to hate each other because we belong to
different ethnic groups or worship the same God with different names. To
restore faith with ourselves, we must be willing to step out of our
comfort zones, comfort groups, comfort communities and comfort
ethnicities and muster the courage to say and do things we know are
right. We should say and do things because they are right and true, and
not because we seek approval or fear disapproval from anyone or group.
George Orwell said, “In times of universal deceit, telling the truth
will be a revolutionary act.” We live in times of national deceit and
must become revolutionaries by speaking truth to abusers of power, to
the powerless, to the self-disempowered and to each other.
To be
fair to my fellow Hippos, they defend their silence on the grounds that
speaking up will not make a difference to tyrants. They say speaking
truth to tyranny is a waste of time, an exercise in futility. Some even
say that it is impossible to communicate with the tyrants in power with
reasoned words because these tyrants only understand the language of
crashing guns, rattling musketry and booming artillery.
I take
exception to this view. I believe at the heart of the struggle for
freedom, democracy and human rights in Ethiopia is an unending battle
for the hearts and minds of the people. In the battlefield of hearts and
minds, guns, tanks and warplanes are useless. History bears witness.
The US lost the war in Vietnam not because it lacked firepower,
airpower, nuclear power, financial power, scientific or technical power.
The U.S. lost the war because it lacked the power to win the hearts
and minds of the Vietnamese and American peoples.
Words are the
most potent weapon in the battle for hearts and minds. Words can
enlighten the benighted, open closed eyes, sealed mouths and plugged
ears. Words can awaken consciences. Words can inspire, inform, stimulate
and animate. Napoleon Bonaparte, one of the greatest military leaders
in history, feared words more than arms. That is why he said, “Four
hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets.”
That why I insist my fellow privileged intellectuals and all who claim
or aspire to be supporters of democracy, freedom, human rights and the
rule of law to speak up and speak out and not hide behind a shield of
silence. I say speak truth to tyranny. Preach faith in the divinity of
humanity and against the bigotry of the politics of identity and
ethnicity; champion loudly the causes of unity in diversity and practice
the virtues of civility, accountability, amity and cordiality. Never
stand silent in the face of atrocity, criminality, contrived ethnic
animosity and the immorality of those who abuse of power.
It is
necessary to restore faith with the Cheetahs. The gap between Cheetahs
and Hippos is not generational. There is a trust gap, not generational
gap. There is a credibility gap. There is an expectation gap, an
understanding gap and a compassion gap. Many bridges need to be built to
close the gaps that divide the Cheetah and Hippo Generations.
Rise of the Chee-Hippo Generation
There
is a need to “invent” a new generation, the Chee-Hippo Generation. A
Chee-Hippo is a hippo who thinks, behaves and acts like a Cheetah. A
Chee-Hippo is also a cheetah who understands the limitations of Hippos
yet is willing to work with them in common cause for a common purpose.
Chee-Hippos
are bridge builders. They build strong intergenerational bridges that
connect the young with the old. They build bridges to connect people
seeking democracy, freedom and human rights. They build bridges across
ethnic canyons and connect people stranded on islands of homelands. They
bridge the gulf of language, religion and region. They build bridges to
link up the rich with the poor. They build bridges of national unity to
harmonize diversity. They build bridges to connect the youth at home
with the youth in the Diaspora. Chee-Hippos build social and political
networks to empower youth.
Are You a Chee-Hippo or a Hippo?
You are a Chee-Hippo if you believe
young people are the future of the country and the older people are the country’s past.
the future is infinitely more important than the past.
a
person’s value is determined not by the collection of degrees listed
after his/her name but by the person’s commitment and stand on the
protection of the basic human rights of a fellow human being.
and
practice the virtues of tolerance, civility, civic duty, cooperation,
empathy, forgiveness, honesty, honor, idealism, inclusivity and
openness.
You are a Chee-Hippo if you are
open-minded, flexible, and humble.
open to new ideas and ways of communicating with people across age groups, ethnic, religious, gender and linguistic lines.
unafraid to step out of your comfort zone into the zone of hard moral choices.
Courageous
enough to mean what you say and say what you mean instead of wasting
your time babbling in ambiguity and double-talk.
prepared to act now instead of tomorrow (eshi nege or yes, tomorrow).
prepared to blame yourself first for your own deficits before blaming the youth or others for theirs.
eager to learn new things today and unlearn the bad lessons of the past.
committed to finding opportunity than complaining about the lack of one.
able to develop attitudes and beliefs that reflect what is possible and not wallow in self-pity about what is impossible.
fully
aware that the world is in constant and rapid change and by not
changing you have no one to blame for the consequences except yourself.
Any
Hippo can be reinvented into a Chee-Hippo. Ultimately, being a
Chee-Hippo is a state of mind. One need only think, behave and act like
Cheetahs. The credo of a true Chee-Hippo living on Planet Cheetah is,
“We must not give only what we have; we must give what we are.”
Damn proud to be a Chee-Hippo!
Professor
Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State
University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.
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