July 11, 2013by Meron Ahadu*
I
got back yesterday to my hometown Los Angeles after spending an amazing
4 days and having a blast with thousands of my people at the 30th
anniversary of Ethiopian Sport Federation cultural Festival. This year’s theme was “Celebrating Ethiopian women” and what a celebration it was.
I
have to set the record straight right from the beginning. For almost
10 years I have been a very vocal critic of Ethiopian Sport Federation
(ESFNA). I was relentless in my attack of ESFNA. The reasons for my
criticisms were the organization’s lack of accountability and
transparency, the organization’s complete
disregard and insensitivity to the needs of the community that supports
it. Their dependence on millionaires to finance their yearly soccer
tournament etc. etc. the list goes on.
In 2010, I completely gave
up on ESFNA after a small minority within the organization overturned
the majority Board members vote to honor Judge Birtukan Mideksa at the
2010 July Festival. I decided the organization was corrupt to the core,
would never reform and the Ethiopian community in North America needed
an alternative that would be responsive to the community’s voice.
Initially, when I was approaching people with this concept of an
alternative competitor to ESFNA, it seemed very far and not achievable
to a lot of people.
Ten people bought the idea and Ethiopian Heritage
Society (EHSNA) was born. The principle behind EHSNA was simple it would
be everything that ESFNA was not, it would be accountable, transparent
and responsive to the community. The growth and viability of EHSNA is
another story and I will maybe address that at some future date.
Getting
back to ESFNA’s 30th anniversary, I can honestly say it was one of the
best few days I have had in a very long time. I have seen tremendous
improvement in almost everything I used to criticize about ESFNA. I can
sincerely say that ESFNA is on the path of positive organizational
transformation. The organizational culture of ESFNA of years past that
used to have an antagonistic relationship with the community it was
serving has turned around 360 degree in a positive way. It was very
apparent at the 30th year anniversary ESFNA had worked hard to change
its image and had walked miles to build bridges with the community.
The organization that I am a member
of, Center for Rights of Ethiopian Women (CREW) has been communicating
and collaborating with ESFNA the last 6 months. The courtesy and support
that all the Board members have given our organization has been and
continues to be overwhelming.
The positive cultural transformation
has not only been directed towards our organization but to the
community at large. ESFNA seems to have understood that the people will
support them if they are responsive to their needs and treat them with
respect and dignity. Thousands of people showed up day after day at Byrd
Stadium starting June 30 until July 6 the closing date. It was a time
of joy and happiness, the young and the elderly waving their homeland
green, yellow, red flag. Thousands of people being happy just being
together in one place. Thousands of people by their presence at the
Byrd Stadium affirming their solidarity with ESFNA. Thousands of people
with their presence at Byrd Stadium stating loudly and clearly… ”we
cannot be bought.” How proud I am of my people.
The community has
shown its commitment, in turn, ESFNA has also shown it is taking steps
towards positive organizational transformation. What is next? How can
ESFNA move to the next level and continue
on the positive path. Much needs to be done, as much as there was a lot
of positive things at the 30th anniversary there was also a lot of room
for improvement. One thing that ESFNA Board members have to understand
is that ESFNA has reached a level where professionals with strong
marketing and financial backgrounds need to be recruited to manage the
day to day affairs of ESFNA. The organization has to have a permanent
office. Another suggestion would be to create an Advisory Board
comprised of individuals from community based organizations; this will
allow the Federation to have a direct link with the community. Having
surveys and getting feedback is a good way to get an assessment of the
strengths and weaknesses and I would encourage ESFNA to utilize this
tool to make improvements in the coming years.
I congratulate the
leadership and Board members of ESFNA for prevailing and putting
together a memorable 30th anniversary festivity and truly bringing
Ethiopians together.
*Meron Ahadu is the daughter of the legendary Ethiopian journalist and diplomat, Ambassador Ahadu Sabure.
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