Category Archives: Featured

U.S. Air Force selects U team for competition (Ethiopian-American Professor Demoz Gebre-Egziabher is the faculty adviser )

Above: Standing far right – Professor Demoz Gebre-Egziabher’s
area of research is in navigation, guidance and control of aero-
space vehicles. A particular focus of his research is the applica-
tion of estimation theory to the development of algorithms and
design methodologies to optimally fuse the information from
multiple sensors and systems. One of the challenges encountered
when dealing with such problems for aerospace applications (where
safety of life is an issue) is being able to precisely quantify (in stat-
istical terms) the level of reliability of the algorithms and systems.
Example of engineering application of his work are in the development
of attitude determination systems for satellites, high accuracy
navigation of aircraft and evaluating operations of small autonomous
aerial vehicles in the national airspace system. (Photo: umn.edu)

MN Daily
BY Tiffany Smith
PUBLISHED: 02/11/2009

The University of Minnesota’s entry into January’s final University Nanosatellite Program competition won’t be launched into space.

However, the U.S. Air Force has selected the University team to participate again. Team members are already recruiting new students, while some are still working on satellite components to use for the next two-year competition cycle, Nanosat-6.

The program has two aims: training students to build satellites and provide the Air Force with useful research, aerospace engineering and mechanics associate professor Demoz Gebre-Egziabher said.


Professor Demoz Gebre-Egziabher

As the faculty adviser, he’s responsible for pitching an idea for the satellite’s science mission. Read More.

Ethiopian-American Goes from Presidential Speech Writer to Successful Singer (VOA)

Above: Wayna’s “Lovin You (Music)” was nominated for a
Grammy for best urban/alternative performance. She did not
win. But for the African artist just being nominated for a
Grammy was a big achievement.
(Photo: baltimoresun.com)

VOA
By Henok Semaegzer Fente
Washington, D.C.
12 February 2009

At the 51st Grammy music award last Sunday, the best of the industry were recognized for their achievements. The highlight of the televised event featured, nine months pregnant rapper M.I.A, who took center stage to perform her hit song “swagga like us”.

This song brought together what entertainer Queen Latifa called “a rap pack” — featuring Kanye West, T.I., Jay-Z, and Lil Wayne.

But this night was not only about the big shot artists. It also gave recognition to young and emerging talents.She did not win. But for African artist Wayna Wondossen, just being nominated for a Grammy was a big achievement. She was in South Africa when she found out that her song “Lovin’ U” had been nominated.

“I knew I wouldn’t be able to see the actual announcements because we were in a remote area of Cape Town [South Africa] and we probably wouldn’t get the broadcast there. So early in the morning the next day, I got up early and ran downstairs to the hotel business center. I went straight to the Grammy pages to search for my name and it popped-up and I just screamed,” she said.

The winner of the category in the category Best Urban/Alternative Performance was “be ok” by Chrisette Michele, featuring will.i.am. But for Wayna, it has been a good year anyway, and the nomination alone was an honor. Read more.

Related: Three Acts Win Big at the Grammys
NYT
By BEN SISARIO
Published: February 8, 2009

LOS ANGELES — At the 51st annual Grammy Awards ceremony, at Staples Center here on Sunday night, three disparate acts were in a close race, with hard-core rap, rock and an album of lush Americana vying for the top award.

But it was Robert Plant and Alison Krauss who won album of the year — for a total of five awards — for “Raising Sand” (Rounder), their album of luxuriant renditions of old rockabilly and country songs as well as original material. Lil Wayne, the bawdy and gifted New Orleans rapper, had a total of three, including one for a four-way collaboration. The British rock band Coldplay also had three awards. Read More.

Tadias: Wayna: A Soulful Diva in the Making

By Tseday Alehegn
Tadias Staff Writer

New York (Tadias) – Friends and family may know Woyneab Miraf Wondwossen (Wayna) as the young University of Maryland alumna who double majored in English and Speech Communications, and went on to serve as one of the first Ethiopian American researchers at the White House under Former President Bill Clinton.

Recently, however, Wayna has waded into new waters and is beginning to make a name for herself among America’s favorite musicians. She’s nominated for a Grammy.

Wayna’s sophomore album Higher Ground, which propelled her to the prestigious nomination, was released in 2008. The new album, just like her debut CD Moments of Clarity, is an infectious blend of original songs that fuses soul, world, and hip hop sounds accompanied by lyrics on love, loss, faith and courage.

“I’ve poured some of the hardest lessons I’ve had to learn into these songs,” Wayna divulges. Music has always been one of Wayna’s deep-seated passions, and her most recent tunes echo her personal struggles, hopes and victories through her own unique and passionate voice. Asked how she views herself and her work, she replies, “I would define myself as an artist who is constantly growing and searching for new ways to express myself vocally, lyrically, and musically. I search for the feeling of losing myself in a song, to create timeless music that speaks to people’s hearts and conveys important messages.”

Born in Ethiopia, Wayna immigrated with her family to the United States when she was just a toddler. As a young girl, she chased after her love of music by starring in popular musical theater productions like Annie, The Boyfriend, and Damn Yankees, as well as by touring with the children’s musical revue company Songs, Inc. Her college years continued to be a time of musical experimentation as she taught herself to play piano on the old Steinway in her dormitory. After being crowned Miss Black Unity of the University of Maryland and earning a one-year tuition scholarship, she went on to start a gospel quartet. The successful and talented quartet performed at the world renowned Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York, where they placed as finalist in the Amateur Night competition.

Wayna soon received several opportunities to travel as a soloist with the gospel choir all the while unearthing her talent in singing. But it was after being invited to perform at her university’s annual tradition, A Tribute to African Women, that Wayna ended up writing the ballad that became her first original piece performed for an audience.

“On that day,” she recalls, “music became more than a form of entertainment or a source of comfort to me. I began to see it as a tool to heal and inspire people, including myself.”

Asked to identify her role models in the music world, Wayna chooses the colorful sounds of Chaka Khan, Donnie Hathaway, Billy Holiday, Stevie Wonder and the ’70s soul singer Minnie Riperton. She also enjoys listening to contemporary artists ranging from the soulful voices of D’Angelo and Jill Scott to emerging spoken word performer W. Ellington Felton.

For her personal role models, Wayna selects her mom Tidenkialesh Emagnu and her late aunt Yeshi Immebet Imagnu.

“It wasn’t always easy growing up as an Ethiopian-American, especially at the time I was coming of age,” she confesses. “Because there were far fewer of us here — far different from the experience Ethiopian teenagers have today.”

Remembering the strength and encouragement her family gave her, Wayna recounts lessons she learned at a young age:

“My aunt Yeshie Imagnu made it a point to teach me elements of our history and culture that weren’t obvious just by living in an Ethiopian home. And my mom, though she has resided in the U.S. for 25 years, is one of the truest representations of our culture that I’ve ever encountered,” she says with pride.

Now that she is older, she says she wears her Ethiopian-ness like a badge of honor.

“In fact, I’ve promised myself I will not go on stage unless I’m wearing at least one article of Ethiopian clothing or jewelry,” she adds. “It’s a symbol of who I am.”

In the end, what Wayna teaches us all is far deeper than her lifelong love of song; she teaches us to excel in every aspect of our lives.

“I would encourage Tadias readers to explore all their interests and talents — not just the ones that are validated by our community,” she says.

“What do you wake up thinking about in the middle of the night? What did you love doing for hours on end as a child? Those things are our passions, and we owe it to ourselves and our creator to develop and share them with the world.”

In short, she says, “There’s absolutely nothing we can’t do.”

Tadias Magazine congratulates Wayna on her nomination.

VIDEO: Watch Wayna’s debut video, “My Love”:

You can purchase her new CD at Amazon.com

Art Talk at Columbia University: Ethiopia’s Artistic Tradition

Above: Zerihun Yetmgeta working in his studio in Addis Ababa,
1992. Photo by Raymond Silverman (Source: MSU)

Published: Wednesday, February 11, 2009

New York (Tadias) – On Thursday, February 12th, 2009, Columbia University will host a lecture by Dr. Abebe Zegeye, Professor of Sociology at the University of South Africa and scholar at Yale University. His lecture entitled “The Magical Universe of Art: Ethiopian artist Zerihun Yetmgeta’s works” will focus on Ethiopia’s centuries old artistic tradition.

One of this fascinating African country’s most prominent artists, Zerihun Yetmgeta, has decided to exhibit his works in his home town, the city of Addis Ababa. Yetmgeta’s exhibition The Magical Universe of Art, is a collection of works that spans the artist’s 40 years of work. It follows the maturation of Yetmgeta’s artistic passion over the years, right up to the present. His art, always exceptional, has grown more fulsome, his talent for transposing traditional motifs of Ethiopian Christianity ­ its legends, magical practices, belief in spirits and demons and evil eyes – into contemporary art. Over time, his work has become more prodigious, more intricate and more laden with hidden meaning. This talk will provide further insight and explore Yetmgeta’s extraordinary talent.


Left: Portrait of Zerihun Yetmgeta (photo by Raymond Silverman). Right:
Wax and Gold, 1991. Mixed media on animal skin and wood. MSU Kresge Art
Collection, 94.24.


Dr. Abebe Zegeye will give the lecture on Thursday, February
12th, 2009 at Columbia University.

If you go:
Date: Feb 12th,2009
Time: 2:30-4:30pm
Location: Columbia University
Room 1512 International Affairs Building, 435 118th St.

Source: Columbia University

Ethiopian-American Artist Prepares For Grammy Awards

Tadias Magazine

By Tseday Alehegn

Updated: Sunday, February 8, 2009

New York (TADIAS) – Friends and family may know Woyneab Miraf Wondwossen (Wayna) as the young University of Maryland alumna who double majored in English and Speech Communications, and went on to serve as one of the first Ethiopian American researchers at the White House under Former President Bill Clinton.

Recently, however, Wayna has waded into new waters and is beginning to make a name for herself among America’s favorite musicians. She’s nominated for a Grammy.

Wayna’s sophomore album Higher Ground, which propelled her to the prestigious nomination, was released in 2008. The new album, just like her debut CD Moments of Clarity, is an infectious blend of original songs that fuses soul, world, and hip hop sounds accompanied by lyrics on love, loss, faith and courage.

“I’ve poured some of the hardest lessons I’ve had to learn into these songs,” Wayna divulges. Music has always been one of Wayna’s deep-seated passions, and her most recent tunes echo her personal struggles, hopes and victories through her own unique and passionate voice. Asked how she views herself and her work, she replies, “I would define myself as an artist who is constantly growing and searching for new ways to express myself vocally, lyrically, and musically. I search for the feeling of losing myself in a song, to create timeless music that speaks to people’s hearts and conveys important messages.”

Born in Ethiopia, Wayna immigrated with her family to the United States when she was just a toddler. As a young girl, she chased after her love of music by starring in popular musical theater productions like Annie, The Boyfriend, and Damn Yankees, as well as by touring with the children’s musical revue company Songs, Inc. Her college years continued to be a time of musical experimentation as she taught herself to play piano on the old Steinway in her dormitory. After being crowned Miss Black Unity of the University of Maryland and earning a one-year tuition scholarship, she went on to start a gospel quartet. The successful and talented quartet performed at the world renowned Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York, where they placed as finalist in the Amateur Night competition.

Wayna soon received several opportunities to travel as a soloist with the gospel choir all the while unearthing her talent in singing. But it was after being invited to perform at her university’s annual tradition, A Tribute to African Women, that Wayna ended up writing the ballad that became her first original piece performed for an audience.

“On that day,” she recalls, “music became more than a form of entertainment or a source of comfort to me. I began to see it as a tool to heal and inspire people, including myself.”

Asked to identify her role models in the music world, Wayna chooses the colorful sounds of Chaka Khan, Donnie Hathaway, Billy Holiday, Stevie Wonder and the ’70s soul singer Minnie Riperton. She also enjoys listening to contemporary artists ranging from the soulful voices of D’Angelo and Jill Scott to emerging spoken word performer W. Ellington Felton.

For her personal role models, Wayna selects her mom Tidenkialesh Emagnu and her late aunt Yeshi Immebet Imagnu.

“It wasn’t always easy growing up as an Ethiopian-American, especially at the time I was coming of age,” she confesses. “Because there were far fewer of us here — far different from the experience Ethiopian teenagers have today.”

Remembering the strength and encouragement her family gave her, Wayna recounts lessons she learned at a young age:

“My aunt Yeshie Imagnu made it a point to teach me elements of our history and culture that weren’t obvious just by living in an Ethiopian home. And my mom, though she has resided in the U.S. for 25 years, is one of the truest representations of our culture that I’ve ever encountered,” she says with pride.

Now that she is older, she says she wears her Ethiopian-ness like a badge of honor.

“In fact, I’ve promised myself I will not go on stage unless I’m wearing at least one article of Ethiopian clothing or jewelry,” she adds. “It’s a symbol of who I am.”


Wayna. (Courtesy photo)

In the end, what Wayna teaches us all is far deeper than her lifelong love of song; she teaches us to excel in every aspect of our lives.

“I would encourage Tadias readers to explore all their interests and talents — not just the ones that are validated by our community,” she says.

“What do you wake up thinking about in the middle of the night? What did you love doing for hours on end as a child? Those things are our passions, and we owe it to ourselves and our creator to develop and share them with the world.”

In short, she says, “There’s absolutely nothing we can’t do.”

Tadias Magazine congratulates Wayna on her nomination.

VIDEO: Watch Wayna’s debut video, “My Love”:


You can purchase her new CD at Amazon.com

Join the conversation on Twitter and Facebook.

The ‘peculiar’ city of Addis Ababa , the Capital of Ethiopia

Above: Tourists view the a replica of hominid “Lucy” at a
Museum in Addis Ababa recently.

The Daily Nation, Kenya
By HENRY OWUOR in Addis Ababa
Tuesday, February 3 2009

Why Ethiopian capital is unique

Addis Ababa or Addis Abeba or “new flower’’ in Amharic is what one can rightly call, in some well known parlance, a “peculiar’’ city.

There are many factors that make this city very unique. One of these is the fact that the city was never planned by Europeans since Ethiopia was never colonised.

Given its unique history, in Addis, street names hardly exist and the few that exist have their local names that are not the ones that are displayed.

In Addis, if you tell a taxi driver to take you to Ethio-China Street, he will have no idea what you are talking about. But, if you say the street is known as Wollo Sefer, he will have no problem getting there. Or if you say, take me to Nigeria Street, no response, but if you say Posta Bet, you will soon be there.

In this city, hardly any violent crime exists and carjackings are very rare.

Addis is a place where shops just leave used soda bottles on the verandah and no one steals the crates or the bottles.

Says Mr Jason McLure, the Ethiopia Correspondent for Bloomberg news agency: “Addis Ababa is the safest city in Africa. If someone tries to pick your pocket, you just shove them away, they won’t pull a gun or a knife on on you.’’

But, Addis is actually a very cold place, especially at this time of the year and as such malaria is not a problem here.

As a city that was created by a king, Addis is very hierarchical and residents hardly question any government policy.

Since Ethiopia was among the first places on earth to be christened, it has its own alphabet, its own church and its own calendar which currently says the year is “2001” and last year, they celebrated the millennium.

In the Ethiopian calendar, there are 13 months in a year hence the delay of their millennium. Tourism brochures talk of ”13 months of sunshine.”

In Ethiopia, the word “Queen of Sheba’’ is very common. This originates from the fact that one of the Israeli kings, Solomon had an Ethiopian wife known as Sheba and the city Addis was created by one of the direct descendants of Solomon, Emperor Menelik who was taking orders from his wife who insisted that he must move his palace to Addis Abeba, the new flower.

Another peculiar fact about Ethiopia is that unlike most of Africa, here, people dance with their shoulders, not the hips but this applies mostly among the northerners.

And in Ethiopia, if you order a drink, the drink can never be opened if you are away because there are beliefs about magic being applied on the drink.

There is also what is called Injera which is the Ethiopian standard food. Here, only the very poor eat maize and as such the price of maize meal is much lower than ‘’injera,’’ even under famine conditions, Ethiopians stick to injera.

Raw beef

What will also strike foreigners as very strange is that Ethiopians eat raw beef right in the heart of the capital city. This is a meal that is served to the most respected guests.

In terms of holidays, the most important festival is not Christmas. The most important holiday in Ethiopia is “Timkat’’ which marks the baptism of Jesus Christ by John the Baptist, marked on January 19.

The second most important holiday in Ethiopia after “Timkat” is Meskel which celebrates the finding of the “true cross’’ that Jesus was crucified on. Legend has it that an Ethiopian found it and brought it here but ask, where is the cross? No one seems to have an idea.

The third most important holiday in Ethiopia is Christmas which comes nine days after the Christian Christmas under the Orthodox calendar.

And, there is another unique event in Ethiopia. This involves large groups of worshippers outside any Orthodox church in Addis Ababa on any Sunday.

The reason here is that under church rules, anyone who has had sex in the last 48 hours or any woman who is on her periods should not enter church.

This rule extends to holy islands on Ethiopia’s Lake Tana where monks live and where no woman is allowed, the monks are not supposed to interact with any woman or even set eyes on any woman.

More from Daily Nation

Obama Election Stokes Debate Over What is Biracial

Above: Roommates Heather Curry, left, and Erica Stewart
chat between college classes at Starbucks in Market
Square. (Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette)

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By L.A. Johnson
Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Heather Curry believes President Barack Obama is denying his white heritage by identifying himself as African-American.

“It’s great that he’s biracial,” says Ms. Curry, 19, a Point Park University advertising major who identifies herself as biracial. “I wish he would accept it a little bit more.”

The election of Mr. Obama — the son of a white woman from Kansas and a man from Kenya — has jump-started a national dialogue on race and racial identity as America’s view of multiracial people changes.

Mr. Obama always has acknowledged his biracial background but identifies himself as African-American. With Mr. Obama, people see who and what they want to see, says Joy M. Zarembka, the Washington, D.C.-based author of “The Pigment of Your Imagination: Mixed Race in a Global Society.” “And most everyone can relate to him — whether [they’re] white, black, rich, poor, foreign, American, etc.”

People often look at multiracial people and highlight whatever aspect of their background makes them feel most comfortable. Read More.

Ethiopia – Muammar el-Qaddafi Named Chairman of the African Union

Above: President Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya, right, during
a meeting of the African Union on Monday in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia. (Antony Njuguna/Reuters)

NYT
By LYDIA POLGREEN
Published: February 2, 2009

DAKAR, Senegal — President Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya was named chairman of the African Union on Monday, wresting control of a body he helped found and has long wanted to remake in his pan-African image.

His installation as the new head of the 53-member body resembled more of a coronation than a democratic transfer of power. Colonel Qaddafi was dressed in flowing gold robes and surrounded by traditional African leaders who hailed him as the “king of kings.”

The choice of Colonel Qaddafi was not a surprise — he was the leading candidate — but the prospect of his election to lead the African Union caused some unease among some of the group’s member nations, who were meeting in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, as well as among diplomats and analysts. Colonel Qaddafi, who has ruled Libya with an iron hand for decades, is a stark change from the succession of recent leaders from democratic countries like Tanzania, Ghana and Nigeria. Read more.

Bati: New Ethiopian Restaurant in Brooklyn Now Open for Business

Bati Yummy, Now Open for Lunch
VillageVoice.com
Posted by Hailey Eber

New York – Bati (747 Fulton Street, Brooklyn), the new Ethiopian restaurant in Fort Greene, is now open for lunch after a soft opening the weekend before last.

A friend and I tried Bati last weekend and had some of the best Ethiopian food either of us had had in recent memory. The restaurant is still waiting on its liquor license, so it’s BYOB for now, which does always help my culinary memory. We were more in a beer mood, so I grabbed a six pack at Fresh Gardens (729 Fulton Street, Brooklyn), an organic bodega just down the block that has a far better (and less pricey) beer selection than the Provisions market right next door to the restaurant. I assembled a mix-and-match six pack of craft IPAs, including my current favorite, Lagunitas, to complement the spicy food. If you prefer to grab wine, there’s the Greene Grape (765 Fulton Street) wine store one block over.

Once having procured proper libation to bring with, it was time to eat.

My dining companion is vegetarian, so we had a meatless meal, which isn’t a problem, since Bati, like most Ethiopian places, is quite veggie friendly. We started with Ye Timatim Fitfit ($5), a mix of tomato salad and torn up bits of injera–Ethiopian flat bread. The tomatoes tasted deliciously fresh on yet another dreary winter night and the bits of injera were brushed with just enough kibe–clarified butter with herbs–to impart a buttery goodness without heart-attack thoughts.

For our main course, we split a vegetarian combination platter ($14), which, with the appetizer, was more than enough for the two of us. Of the four dishes on the platter, the clear winner was the Buticha–ground chick peas blended with spices, onion, and pepper. It reminded me of a drier, fluffier Ethiopian take on hummus and provided a fresh, cool counterpoint to the warmer, saucier elements on the platter.

Owner Hibist Legesse has described the food as “traditional Ethiopian with a focus on nutrition and health” and the food tastes healthy in the ways one wants it to–the vegetables are fresher and the flavors cleaner than many other things we’ve scooped up with injera, and the injera itself is spongy and flavorful without being too heavy (very important when consuming with IPAs aplenty)–while still retaining the tasty unhealthy elements–butter!

The space itself is lovely. The panes of the large windows facing the street have been painted a shade of vermilion that perfectly complements the dark wood, and the artwork is minimal and soothing. Its dimensions are more East Village than Brooklyn, though, and the place can get a bit too cozy when full. Service is warm and friendly but still working out some kinks, as to be expected in the early weeks. It took a while to get our food and there seemed to be a napkin shortage, rather comical when you’re eating with your hands. All are minor inconveniences, however, easily washed down with another IPA. In a neighborhood has some great eating options from Africa—from South African fare at Madiba (195 DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn) to Senegalese food at Abistro (154 Carlton Avenue, Brooklyn)–this Ethiopian addition is a very welcome one.

More from VillageVoice.com

Ethiopia: What a Difference Water Makes

globalvoicesonline.org
By Juliana Rincón Parra
Friday, January 30th, 2009

At the end of last year, five families decided that visiting Ethiopia with their daughters would be the best way for them to see what their donations to provide fresh, clean and safe water sources were doing to change the lives of families and complete villages. Through their blog and videos, they have been able to share the importance of charity:water in making this possible, and hopefully raise more donations and engage more people to help.

“In the Fall of 2008 a major donor to charity: water mentioned that he wanted to take his nine year-old daughter on a trip to Africa. I offered to join them along with my nine-year old daughter, Julia. As so often happens with Scott Harrison, the founder of charity: water, the plan got bigger. Within a few weeks we were looking at a trip with five girls and their five fathers. Unfortunately, the original donor had to drop out of the trip and I added my older daughter, Katie. So now five girls, four dads and Scott are heading off to Ethiopia next week. We’ve armed the girls with four Flip cameras so they can tell us about themselves, can share their journey and can share the stories of the people they meet.”

Five for Water is the name of the blog that these families have created as a way to raise awareness of the lives of children in Ethiopia:how clean water may very well be the greatest change they’ve seen in their lives, and why more people (and schools) should join in the effort.

In the video, which can be found on this post, young Campbell discovers that children in Ethiopia might have more in common with her than she previously thought: they are seeing the same math that she is.

However, there are some small but significant differences, as another one of the girls, Chloe, wrote:

“Later when I was taking pictures of the children at the well, Gebre was telling me that the people did not really understand what camera’s and photographs were. When I showed the children the photo I took of them on the camera display screen, they looked very confused. Gebre told me a story that he took a picture of 3 boys, and showed one of the boys and asked him who was in the picture. The boy said well they are my two friends, but I don’t know who he is (pointing at himself). Of course he would not know what he looks like, as they do not have mirrors, to me I could not understand this, because of course I look in the mirror before I leave the house, to check I do not have toothpaste or breakfast down me. But here that probably would not worry them, but not knowing how you look! Its just so different here its like a separate world.”

Or this that Carley wrote:
“We visited a school. It was so poor… It was very sad… It made me think how fortunate I am. Most classrooms didn’t have desks, They sat on rocks instead. There was a chalkboard with holes in it…

I went to the library there was about 20 books. Some were story books, but lots of them were about HIV-AIDS.”

And Campbell records young girls carrying big jerrycans filled with water, and states that:

“Without water, girls often have to walk long distances carrying heavy water. It takes away from homework. Here I met a girl carrying a lot of water yesterday evening.The number one reason that girls drop out of school is because they don’t have clean water or bathrooms.” Read more.

Obama Signals New Tone in Relations With Islamic World (VIDEO)

NYT
By ALAN COWELL
Published: January 27, 2009

PARIS — In an interview with one of the Middle East’s major broadcasters, President Barack Obama struck a conciliatory tone toward the Islamic world, saying he wanted to persuade Muslims that “the Americans are not your enemy.” He also said “the moment is ripe” for negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. Read More.

Watch the Interview

Part One

Part Two

Have You Seen Ethiopia AD in the New York Times Lately?

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Sunday, January 25, 2009

New York (TADIAS) – How often do we find a 15-page illustrated advertisement on Ethiopia in the New York Times? Look again at the Sunday, December 1, 1963 copy and you will find your answer.

The ad insert in section 12 of the paper shows a full page view of the newly built ECA building in the capital, Addis Ababa. It’s title reads, “Ethiopia – Nation of Vast Potential and Great Opportunities.”

This deliberate effort by Emperor Haile Selassie to portray Ethiopia as a strategic and stable place for business development is stunning and exceptionally beautiful. Glancing through the illustrations one can get a glimpse of Ethiopia’s cultural and environmental diversity as well as see rare photos as the one of the Emperor participating in New York’s ticker tape parade (1954) and being greeted by President John F. Kennedy & First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy during his famous visit to the U.S. in the early 60’s.

Contents of the advertisement include the meeting of African leaders in the capital, Ethiopia’s granary and hydro-electric potential, her 3,000 year history and travel opportunities, as well as a five-year plan to spur the economy.

The advertisement makes for a good reading leaving one a little more proud in having shown the outside world a fraction of our treasures.

Here are some of the rare photos featured in the AD.


Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia, Walking in the Ticker Tape Parade in New York City
– June 1, 1954.


President John F. Kennedy & First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy greet Emperor Haile
Selassie during his visit to the U.S. in 1962.


The AD cover


Join the conversation on Twitter and Facebook.

Historic Duke Ellington Boulevard Boasts of a Jazzy Past

Above: Jazz great Duke Ellington toasts with Emperor Haile
Selassie after receiving Ethiopia’s Medal of Honor in 1973.
(Photo: Ethiopiancrown.org)

Columbia Spectator.
Historic Boulevard Boasts of a Jazzy Past
By Rosie DuPont
Published January 23, 2009

To the average Morningside Heights resident, 106th Street may seem pretty ordinary.

Maybe you’ve had a consultation with Joshua the Psychic on 106th Street and Columbus Avenue, or perhaps you’ve wandered past Innovation Bike Shop on 106th Street after eating delicious Ethiopian food at Awash. If you search “106th Street NYC” on Google, you’ll find a link to “The Bedbug Registry: Bed Bug Report 61 West 106th Street” and “Gypsy-Cab Driver Slain on E. 106th Street.”
Just an average New York City block, right? Think again.

One-hundred-and-sixth Street was once home to the renowned jazz musician Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington. Ellington lived in a townhouse on 333 Riverside Dr. and 106th Street for a number of years, and owned two other houses on the block where his sister Ruth Ellington Boatwright and his son, Mercer, lived.

In honor of Ellington’s memory, 106th Street was officially renamed Duke Ellington Boulevard in 1977, three years after his death. Read more at Columbia Spectator.

Hot Blog: Miss Ethiopia 2009 hails from Gambella

Above: Winner of the title of Miss Ethiopia 2009 Chuna Okaka
(C) poses with the first runner-up Meron Getachew (L) and the
second runner-up Samrawit (R) during the Miss Ethiopia 2009
Beauty Pageant in Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia, Jan. 18, 2009.
(Xinhua Photo)

Ethiopian News Agency

A 22-year-old university student from Gambella won the title of Miss Ethiopia beauty competition held here on Saturday.

The winner, Chuna Okok, a sophomore at the faculty of business and economics, Addis Ababa University, outranks all of her 20 competitors.

She won Miss Ethiopia 2009 contest and received an award of diamond ring worth 60,000 Birr, according to competition organizer Ethiopian Village Adventure Playground.

The 1963 Miss Ethiopia winner Ejigayehu Beyene has put the crown for this year’s Miss Ethiopia winner, Chuna Okok.


Winner of the title of Miss Ethiopia 2009 Chuna
Okaka (R) wears the cordon during the Miss Ethiopia
2009 Beauty Pageant in Addis Ababa, capital of
Ethiopia, Jan. 18, 2009.(Xinhua Photo)

After being named Miss Ethiopia of 2009, Chuna said that she was excited to win the title as it would leave a message that Ethiopia is a home for beautiful people in its all regions.


Girls attend the finals of the Miss Ethiopia 2009 Beauty Pageant in Addis
Ababa, capital of Ethiopia, Jan. 18, 2009. Chuna Okaka won the title of Miss
Ethiopia 2009. (Xinhua Photo)

Chuna is to take part in Miss World Cultural Heritage of 2009 due to be held in Namibia this year, according to the organizer.

She would have great contribution in promoting her homeland Ethiopia, the organizer said.

In extended first family, a nation of many faces

Above: Barack Obama greets an unidentified relative as he
arrives at Capitol Hill for his swearing in as the 44th President
at the 56th Presidential Inauguration ceremony in Washington,
D.C., Tuesday, Jan. 20. (Shawn Thew / EPA)

NYT
Tues., Jan. 20, 2009

WASHINGTON – The president’s elderly stepgrandmother brought him an oxtail fly whisk, a mark of power at home in Kenya. Cousins journeyed from the South Carolina town where the first lady’s great-great-grandfather was born into slavery, while the rabbi in the family came from the synagogue where he had been commemorating Martin Luther King’s Birthday. The president and first lady’s siblings were there, too, of course: his Indonesian-American half-sister, who brought her Chinese-Canadian husband, and her brother, a black man with a white wife.

When President Barack Obama was sworn in on Tuesday, he was surrounded by an extended clan that would have shocked past generations of Americans and instantly redrew the image of a first family for future ones.

As they convened to take their family’s final step in its journey from Africa and into the White House, the group seemed as if it had stepped out of the pages of Mr. Obama’s memoir — no longer the disparate kin of a young man wondering how he fit in, but the embodiment of a new president’s promise of change. Read more.
———————–
Obama Takes Oath, and Nation in Crisis Embraces the Moment

Barack Obama is sworn in as the 44th president of the United States during
a ceremony at the Capitol by Chief Justice John Roberts. (Doug Mills/NYT)

NYT
By PETER BAKER
Published: January 20, 2009

“We will not apologize for our way of life, nor will we waver in its defense.”

WASHINGTON — Barack Hussein Obama was sworn in as the 44th president of the United States on Tuesday and promised to “begin again the work of remaking America” on a day of celebration that climaxed a once-inconceivable journey for the man and his country.

Mr. Obama, the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas, inherited a White House built partly by slaves and a nation in crisis at home and abroad. The moment captured the imagination of much of the world as more than a million flag-waving people bore witness while Mr. Obama recited the oath with his hand on the same Bible that Abraham Lincoln used at his inauguration 148 years ago.

Beyond the politics of the occasion, the sight of a black man climbing the highest peak electrified people across racial, generational and partisan lines. Mr. Obama largely left it to others to mark the history explicitly, making only passing reference to his own barrier-breaking role in his 18-minute Inaugural Address, noting how improbable it might seem that “a man whose father less than 60 years ago might not have been served at a local restaurant can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath.” Read more.

Ethiopia Reacts to Obama Inauguration

Above: Barack Obama is sworn in as the 44th president of the
United States during a ceremony at the Capitol by Chief Justice
John Roberts. (Doug Mills/NYT

CBNNews.com

January 20, 2009

Cheers of support for the new U.S. President Barack Obama echoed around the globe.

CBN’s Chuck Holton was in Ethiopia during the moments of Obama’s inauguration ceremonies. He commented on the response there.

“Everywhere you go you see people with Obama t-shirts. Everyone you pass asks you first if you’re an American. If you say yes, they say Obama!” he said.

This reaction comes unexpectedly as Ethiopia is a conservative country.

Ethiopians openly declare their support for Obama based on his race, but possibly only in that area.

“The few times I’ve had the chance to talk about Obama’s stand on various social issues, especially abortion, the two men that I’ve talked to have immediately changed their mind and said well if he’s pro-abortion then I don’t like him anymore,” Holton said.

Click here to hear the interview.

Hot Shots from Obama Inauguration

PHOTOS FROM THE INAUGURATION

Barack Hussein Obama became the 44th president of the United States Tuesday, and called on Americans to join him in confronting what he described as an economic crisis caused by greed but also “our collective failure to make hard choices.” Read more.


The swearing-in of President Barack Obama


“Choose hope over fear”


George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush greet Obama and his wife Michelle
on the North Portico of the White House


Obama and his wife Michelle bid farewell to Reverend Luis Leon outside St. John’s
Episcopal Church (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)


Crowds fill the National Mall


Magic Johnson, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, California Arnold Schwarzenegger,
and Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson stand on the inaugural stage


Director Steven Spielberg sits with wife Kate Capshaw


Elie Wiesel arrives


Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY) and other members of congress arrive on the inaugural
stage

President Obama’s Inaugural Address

President Obama Vows Era of Responsibility

“We have duties to ourselves, our nation and the world,
duties that we do not grudgingly accept but rather seize gladly.”


Barack Obama, center, with Joe Biden and Bill Clinton at his inauguration as the
44th president on Tuesday. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)

My fellow citizens:

I stand here today humbled by the task before us, grateful for the trust you have bestowed, mindful of the sacrifices borne by our ancestors. I thank President Bush for his service to our nation, as well as the generosity and cooperation he has shown throughout this transition.

Forty-four Americans have now taken the presidential oath. The words have been spoken during rising tides of prosperity and the still waters of peace. Yet, every so often the oath is taken amidst gathering clouds and raging storms. At these moments, America has carried on not simply because of the skill or vision of those in high office, but because We the People have remained faithful to the ideals of our forbearers, and true to our founding documents.

So it has been. So it must be with this generation of Americans.

That we are in the midst of crisis is now well understood. Our nation is at war, against a far-reaching network of violence and hatred. Our economy is badly weakened, a consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some, but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age. Homes have been lost; jobs shed; businesses shuttered. Our health care is too costly; our schools fail too many; and each day brings further evidence that the ways we use energy strengthen our adversaries and threaten our planet.

These are the indicators of crisis, subject to data and statistics. Less measurable but no less profound is a sapping of confidence across our land – a nagging fear that America’s decline is inevitable, and that the next generation must lower its sights.

Today I say to you that the challenges we face are real. They are serious and they are many. They will not be met easily or in a short span of time. But know this, America – they will be met.

On this day, we gather because we have chosen hope over fear, unity of purpose over conflict and discord.

On this day, we come to proclaim an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn out dogmas, that for far too long have strangled our politics.

We remain a young nation, but in the words of Scripture, the time has come to set aside childish things. The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history; to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea, passed on from generation to generation: the God-given promise that all are equal, all are free, and all deserve a chance to pursue their full measure of happiness.

In reaffirming the greatness of our nation, we understand that greatness is never a given. It must be earned. Our journey has never been one of short-cuts or settling for less. It has not been the path for the faint-hearted – for those who prefer leisure over work, or seek only the pleasures of riches and fame. Rather, it has been the risk-takers, the doers, the makers of things – some celebrated but more often men and women obscure in their labor, who have carried us up the long, rugged path towards prosperity and freedom.

For us, they packed up their few worldly possessions and traveled across oceans in search of a new life.

For us, they toiled in sweatshops and settled the West; endured the lash of the whip and plowed the hard earth.

For us, they fought and died, in places like Concord and Gettysburg; Normandy and Khe Sahn.

Time and again these men and women struggled and sacrificed and worked till their hands were raw so that we might live a better life. They saw America as bigger than the sum of our individual ambitions; greater than all the differences of birth or wealth or faction.

This is the journey we continue today. We remain the most prosperous, powerful nation on Earth. Our workers are no less productive than when this crisis began. Our minds are no less inventive, our goods and services no less needed than they were last week or last month or last year. Our capacity remains undiminished. But our time of standing pat, of protecting narrow interests and putting off unpleasant decisions – that time has surely passed. Starting today, we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and begin again the work of remaking America.

For everywhere we look, there is work to be done. The state of the economy calls for action, bold and swift, and we will act – not only to create new jobs, but to lay a new foundation for growth. We will build the roads and bridges, the electric grids and digital lines that feed our commerce and bind us together. We will restore science to its rightful place, and wield technology’s wonders to raise health care’s quality and lower its cost. We will harness the sun and the winds and the soil to fuel our cars and run our factories. And we will transform our schools and colleges and universities to meet the demands of a new age. All this we can do. And all this we will do.

Now, there are some who question the scale of our ambitions – who suggest that our system cannot tolerate too many big plans. Their memories are short. For they have forgotten what this country has already done; what free men and women can achieve when imagination is joined to common purpose, and necessity to courage.

What the cynics fail to understand is that the ground has shifted beneath them – that the stale political arguments that have consumed us for so long no longer apply. The question we ask today is not whether our government is too big or too small, but whether it works – whether it helps families find jobs at a decent wage, care they can afford, a retirement that is dignified. Where the answer is yes, we intend to move forward. Where the answer is no, programs will end. And those of us who manage the public’s dollars will be held to account – to spend wisely, reform bad habits, and do our business in the light of day – because only then can we restore the vital trust between a people and their government.

Nor is the question before us whether the market is a force for good or ill. Its power to generate wealth and expand freedom is unmatched, but this crisis has reminded us that without a watchful eye, the market can spin out of control – and that a nation cannot prosper long when it favors only the prosperous. The success of our economy has always depended not just on the size of our Gross Domestic Product, but on the reach of our prosperity; on our ability to extend opportunity to every willing heart – not out of charity, but because it is the surest route to our common good.

As for our common defense, we reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals. Our Founding Fathers, faced with perils we can scarcely imagine, drafted a charter to assure the rule of law and the rights of man, a charter expanded by the blood of generations. Those ideals still light the world, and we will not give them up for expedience’s sake. And so to all other peoples and governments who are watching today, from the grandest capitals to the small village where my father was born: know that America is a friend of each nation and every man, woman, and child who seeks a future of peace and dignity, and that we are ready to lead once more.

Recall that earlier generations faced down fascism and communism not just with missiles and tanks, but with sturdy alliances and enduring convictions. They understood that our power alone cannot protect us, nor does it entitle us to do as we please. Instead, they knew that our power grows through its prudent use; our security emanates from the justness of our cause, the force of our example, the tempering qualities of humility and restraint.

We are the keepers of this legacy. Guided by these principles once more, we can meet those new threats that demand even greater effort – even greater cooperation and understanding between nations. We will begin to responsibly leave Iraq to its people, and forge a hard-earned peace in Afghanistan. With old friends and former foes, we will work tirelessly to lessen the nuclear threat, and roll back the specter of a warming planet. We will not apologize for our way of life, nor will we waver in its defense, and for those who seek to advance their aims by inducing terror and slaughtering innocents, we say to you now that our spirit is stronger and cannot be broken; you cannot outlast us, and we will defeat you.

For we know that our patchwork heritage is a strength, not a weakness. We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus – and non-believers. We are shaped by every language and culture, drawn from every end of this Earth; and because we have tasted the bitter swill of civil war and segregation, and emerged from that dark chapter stronger and more united, we cannot help but believe that the old hatreds shall someday pass; that the lines of tribe shall soon dissolve; that as the world grows smaller, our common humanity shall reveal itself; and that America must play its role in ushering in a new era of peace.

To the Muslim world, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect. To those leaders around the globe who seek to sow conflict, or blame their society’s ills on the West – know that your people will judge you on what you can build, not what you destroy. To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history; but that we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.

To the people of poor nations, we pledge to work alongside you to make your farms flourish and let clean waters flow; to nourish starved bodies and feed hungry minds. And to those nations like ours that enjoy relative plenty, we say we can no longer afford indifference to suffering outside our borders; nor can we consume the world’s resources without regard to effect. For the world has changed, and we must change with it.

As we consider the road that unfolds before us, we remember with humble gratitude those brave Americans who, at this very hour, patrol far-off deserts and distant mountains. They have something to tell us today, just as the fallen heroes who lie in Arlington whisper through the ages. We honor them not only because they are guardians of our liberty, but because they embody the spirit of service; a willingness to find meaning in something greater than themselves. And yet, at this moment – a moment that will define a generation – it is precisely this spirit that must inhabit us all.

For as much as government can do and must do, it is ultimately the faith and determination of the American people upon which this nation relies. It is the kindness to take in a stranger when the levees break, the selflessness of workers who would rather cut their hours than see a friend lose their job which sees us through our darkest hours. It is the firefighter’s courage to storm a stairway filled with smoke, but also a parent’s willingness to nurture a child, that finally decides our fate.

Our challenges may be new. The instruments with which we meet them may be new. But those values upon which our success depends – hard work and honesty, courage and fair play, tolerance and curiosity, loyalty and patriotism – these things are old. These things are true. They have been the quiet force of progress throughout our history. What is demanded then is a return to these truths. What is required of us now is a new era of responsibility – a recognition, on the part of every American, that we have duties to ourselves, our nation, and the world, duties that we do not grudgingly accept but rather seize gladly, firm in the knowledge that there is nothing so satisfying to the spirit, so defining of our character, than giving our all to a difficult task.

This is the price and the promise of citizenship.

This is the source of our confidence – the knowledge that God calls on us to shape an uncertain destiny.

This is the meaning of our liberty and our creed – why men and women and children of every race and every faith can join in celebration across this magnificent mall, and why a man whose father less than sixty years ago might not have been served at a local restaurant can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath.

So let us mark this day with remembrance, of who we are and how far we have traveled. In the year of America’s birth, in the coldest of months, a small band of patriots huddled by dying campfires on the shores of an icy river. The capital was abandoned. The enemy was advancing. The snow was stained with blood. At a moment when the outcome of our revolution was most in doubt, the father of our nation ordered these words be read to the people:

“Let it be told to the future world…that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope and virtue could survive…that the city and the country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet [it].”

America. In the face of our common dangers, in this winter of our hardship, let us remember these timeless words. With hope and virtue, let us brave once more the icy currents, and endure what storms may come. Let it be said by our children’s children that when we were tested we refused to let this journey end, that we did not turn back nor did we falter; and with eyes fixed on the horizon and God’s grace upon us, we carried forth that great gift of freedom and delivered it safely to future generations.

Obama Is Sworn In as the 44th President (VIDEO)

Above: The inaugural ceremony at the the Capitol in Washington
on Tuesday. (Pool photo by Scott Andrews)

President Obama

First black leader stands on precipice of history at crucial time for nation

NYT
By CARL HULSE
Published: January 20, 2009

Barack Hussein Obama became the 44th president of the United States Tuesday, and called on Americans to join him in confronting what he described as an economic crisis caused by greed but also “our collective failure to make hard choices.” Read more at NYT.


In an inaugural tradition, the Bushes welcomed the Obamas to the White House
for tea. Michelle Obama’s outfit was designed by Isabel Toledo.
(Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Associated Press)

American milestone: Obama inauguration is a moment of celebration, reflection

Above: We are one’: The crowd swelled to an estimated 400,000 at the Lincoln
Memorial in Washington Sunday. People bundled up to hear top performers
and speakers at a pre-inaugural concert. (Sarah Beth Glicksteen/The Christian
Science Monitor)

Washington

At noon today, history will be made on the steps of the US Capitol. Barack Hussein Obama will take the oath of office, placing his left hand on the Bible that Abraham Lincoln used when he took the same oath in 1861.

Back then, the nation was descending into civil war over slavery. Today, the new president faces economic challenges unmatched in generations, two wars abroad, and the continuing threat of terrorism at home. The difficult business of governing at a time of crisis will begin nearly from the moment President-elect Obama utters the words “so help me God.” His inauguration speech, delivered right after the oath, will reportedly focus on two themes: responsibility and restoring public confidence.


Got groove: Guests at the Obama Victory Gala danced the “Electric Slide” at the
community activity center in Springhill, La., last week. Organizer Linda Clayton lost
money on the event, but she has no regrets. “My pocket is broke, but my spirit is
full,” she says. (Mario Villafuerte/Special to the Christian Science Monitor)

But the special significance of Obama’s inauguration, as America’s first black president, will also be a moment for reflection and celebration. On a long weekend already commemorating the 80th birthday of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., Americans of all colors have converged on the nation’s capital in unprecedented numbers to bear witness to this latest step in the struggle toward racial equality. Read more.

Inaugural Bash: Words and Photos to Get You in Festive mood
Photos by Scout Tufankjian

New Yorker Scout Tufankjian, 29, knows something about foresight.

Last month, photos she started taking two years ago featuring a political long shot named Barack Obama hit bookstores in a sweeping, intimate portrait (“Yes We Can,” PowerHouse, $29.95) of the President-elect’s historic campaign. (Read more about the photographer at NY Daily News)


‘This country remains the greatest on Earth, not because of the size of our military
or the size of our economy, but because every child can actually achieve as much
they can dream.’ – ‘Meet the Press,’ July 25, 2004.
Credits: Miami, Florida, October 21, 2008 © Scout Tufankjian


‘I’ve always been clear that I’m rooted in the African-American community but not
limited to it.’ – The Washington Post, July 27, 2004.
Credits: En route to Hamilton, Indiana, August 31, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘Do we participate in a politics of cynicism or do we participate in a politics of hope?
Hope – hope in the face of difficulty. hope in the face of uncertainty The audacity of
hope!’ – From the 2004 Democratic national Convention speech in July 2004 in Boston.
Credits: Greensboro, North Carolina, May 5, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘My little girls can break my heart. They can make me cry just looking at them
eating their string beans.’ – Houston Chronicle, Oct. 29, 2006.
Credits: Chicago, Illinois, November 4, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘If we aren’t willing to pay a price for our values, then we should ask ourselves
whether we truly believe in them at all.’ – From his autobiography, ‘The Audacity of Hope.’
Credits: Denver, Colorado, October 26, 2008 © copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘At their core Americans are decent people. And there is a sense of hope that
people can change this country together.’ – Times of London, Dec. 11, 2006.
Credits: Unity, New Hampshire, June 27, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘There is not a liberal America and a conservative America – there is the United
States of America. There is not a black America and a white America and Latino
America nd Asian America – there’s the United States of America.’ – From his
keynote speech to the Democratic National Convention, July 2004.
Credits: St. Paul, Minnesota, June 3, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘I was never the likeliest candidate for this office.’ – Victory speech, Nov. 4, 2008.
Credits: Chicago, Illinois, November, 4, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘America, we are better than these last eight years. We are a better country
than this.’ – From Democratic National Convention, August 28, 2008, Denver, Colorado.
Credits: Des Moines, Iowa, January 2, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


The Democratic National Convention.
Credits: Denver, Colorado, August 28, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian

More photos at NYDailyNews.com

Inaugural Bash: Words and Photos to Get You in Festive mood

Photos by Scout Tufankjian

New Yorker Scout Tufankjian, 29, knows something about foresight.

Last month, photos she started taking two years ago featuring a political long shot named Barack Obama hit bookstores in a sweeping, intimate portrait (“Yes We Can,” PowerHouse, $29.95) of the President-elect’s historic campaign. (Read more about the photographer at NY Daily News)


‘This country remains the greatest on Earth, not because of the size of our military
or the size of our economy, but because every child can actually achieve as much
they can dream.’ – ‘Meet the Press,’ July 25, 2004.
Credits: Miami, Florida, October 21, 2008 © Scout Tufankjian


‘I’ve always been clear that I’m rooted in the African-American community but not
limited to it.’ – The Washington Post, July 27, 2004.
Credits: En route to Hamilton, Indiana, August 31, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘Do we participate in a politics of cynicism or do we participate in a politics of hope?
Hope – hope in the face of difficulty. hope in the face of uncertainty The audacity of
hope!’ – From the 2004 Democratic national Convention speech in July 2004 in Boston.
Credits: Greensboro, North Carolina, May 5, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘My little girls can break my heart. They can make me cry just looking at them
eating their string beans.’ – Houston Chronicle, Oct. 29, 2006.
Credits: Chicago, Illinois, November 4, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘If we aren’t willing to pay a price for our values, then we should ask ourselves
whether we truly believe in them at all.’ – From his autobiography, ‘The Audacity of Hope.’
Credits: Denver, Colorado, October 26, 2008 © copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘At their core Americans are decent people. And there is a sense of hope that
people can change this country together.’ – Times of London, Dec. 11, 2006.
Credits: Unity, New Hampshire, June 27, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘There is not a liberal America and a conservative America – there is the United
States of America. There is not a black America and a white America and Latino
America nd Asian America – there’s the United States of America.’ – From his
keynote speech to the Democratic National Convention, July 2004.
Credits: St. Paul, Minnesota, June 3, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘I was never the likeliest candidate for this office.’ – Victory speech, Nov. 4, 2008.
Credits: Chicago, Illinois, November, 4, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


‘America, we are better than these last eight years. We are a better country
than this.’ – From Democratic National Convention, August 28, 2008, Denver, Colorado.
Credits: Des Moines, Iowa, January 2, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian


The Democratic National Convention.
Credits: Denver, Colorado, August 28, 2008 © Copyright Scout Tufankjian

More photos at NYDailyNews.com

Ethiopian Airlines jet ditching in 1996 yielded survival lessons for NYC crash

Above: An Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 is seen just before
it crashes into the sea off the Comoro Islands in 1996.

Ethiopian Airlines jet ditching in 1996 yielded survival lessons for NYC crash
CNN

Lessons learned from previous successful airliner ditchings helped pilot C.B. “Sully” Sullenberger save 155 lives when he put his US Airways A320 jetliner down in the Hudson River, a fellow pilot told CNN.

Twenty-three people died when an Overseas National Airways DC-9 ditched off the Caribbean island of St. Croix in 1970, and 123 were killed in the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 off the Comoro Islands near Africa in 1996.

But Emilio Corsetti, an Airbus 320 pilot and aviation author, said those ditchings were actually successful “because people were able to get out” — 40 in the 1970 crash and 52 in the 1996 incident. Read more at CNN.

Memo to Obama Team: Wine and Dine in Little Ethiopia

By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, January 15, 2009

New York (Tadias) – The Washingtonian Magazine, D.C.’s top source of information for dining, shopping and entertainment has tips for the new Obama team on how they may ease their transition to the nation’s capital, which incidentally is home to one of the largest and most vibrant Ethiopian communities in the country.

The magazine lists the usual hot spots like Ben’s Chili Bowl. But that’s just the icing on the cake. The newbies are forewarned that they’re not real insiders until they have ventured to Little Ethiopia, the nickname for the neighborhood on U Street NW, in the Shaw section of Washington known for its cluster of Ethiopian restaurants and shops. The Washingtonian recommends the delicious chili-laced tibs and wet at Etete restaurant.


The chili-laced tibs and stews at Etete are good
examples of one of the city’s most enduring ethnic
cuisines. Photograph by Matthew Worden.

And if you’re in town for Inauguration, here is an expanded list of Washington D.C.’s Ethiopian restaurants courtesy of Ethiopianrestaurant.com:

Abiti’s
1909 9th St NW
Washington, DC 20001

Addis Ababa
2106 18th St NW
Washington, DC 2000

Awash
2218 18th St NW
Washington, DC 2000

Axum
1934 9th St NW
Washington, DC 20001

Continental
1433 P St NW
Washington, DC 20005

Dynasty Ethiopian
2210 14th St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Habesha Market
1919 9th Street NW
Washington DC 20001

Dukem
1114-1118 U St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Etete
1942 9th St NW
Washington DC 20001

Fasika’s
2447 18th St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Lalibela
1415 14th St NW
Washington, DC 20005

Madjet
1102 U St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Meskerem
2434 18th St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Habesha
1119 V St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Roha
1212 U St NW
Washington, DC 20009

Nile
7815 Georgia Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20012

Queen Makeda
1917 9th St
Washington DC 20001

Salome
900 U St. NW
Washington, DC 20001

Sodere
1930 9th St NW
Washington DC 20001

U Turn
1942 U St NW
Washington, DC 20001

Zed’s
1201 28th St NW
Washington, DC 20007

Obama’s African Grandmother to Attend Inauguration

Above: President-elect Barack Obama, then Senator, meets
his grandmother Sarah Hussein Obama at his father’s house in
Nyongoma Kogelo village, western Kenya, Saturday, Aug. 26,
2006. (AP Photo)

By Tadias Staff

Published: Wednesday, January 14, 2009

New York (Tadias) – Barack Obama’s Kenyan grandmother will soon arrive in America for her grandson’s inauguration next week, according to press reports.

The AFP says Sara Obama will bring with her some gifts for the new president, including a three-legged stool and a traditional Luo oxtail fly whisk.

She had also hoped to bring a traditional spear and shield from her Luo tribe:

“But I have been told that due to security reasons I will not be allowed to board a plane with it,” she was quoted as saying in the Standard newspaper.

“The day I was waiting for has finally come… I cannot hide my joy,” she said. “I am going to be Kenya’s ambassador during the occasion and I will live up to the expectations.”

According to AP, Sarah will attend an unofficial inauguration ball with representatives from the Kenyan government.

Sara Obama is the stepmother of President-elect Obama’s Kenyan father.


Barack Obama with his grandmother, Sarah Hussein Obama, in Africa.
(Courtesy of the Obama Family)


Obama’s African Family: (bottom row, from left) half-sister
Auma, her mother Kezia Obama, Obama’s step-grandmother Sarah
Hussein Onyango Obama and unknown; (top row, from left) unknown,
Barack Obama, half-brother Abongo (Roy) Obama, and three unknowns.
(Courtesy)


Barack Obama Sr. poses with his son in the Honolulu airport during
his only visit to see his son while he was growing up in Hawaii.
Young Barack was in the 5th grade when the photo was taken.
(Courtesy of the Obama Family)


Obama Sr. traveled to the United States on a scholarship to
pursue his education at the University of Hawaii, where he met the
President-elect’s mother. Obama’s father eventually went to Harvard,
where he received his Ph.D. and later returned to Kenya, where he
worked as a government economist until he died in a car crash in 1982.

Ethiopian-born Grammy Nominee Wayna ‘off to a great start’

Eurweb.com

January 12, 2009

NYC – A stunning 2nd album – “Higher Ground” has all the ingredients and all the musicality to be considered a contender for Best New Album.

Ethiopian born and D.C based artist Wayna is off to a great start. Her first single off the album ‘My Love’ has received over 2500 downloads on #1 Soul Music website Soultracks.

‘My Love’ has debuted at #18 on the hot singles sales chart on Billboard and also #2 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip Hop chart. This is a huge accomplishment for an independent Soul Artist and now she’s nominated for a Grammy.


Wayna

This single means a lot to Wayna, who says:

“Two years ago, I came across a startling article in Essence Magazine about a suburb of my hometown Washington, DC. Prince George’s county, it said, is the wealthiest black county in the country, but yet it has a higher rate of domestic violence than any other jurisdiction in Maryland. How tragic, I thought. Beyond their beautiful homes and high-powered jobs, these women were victims, hiding behind a mountain of lies that have to be re-told day after day. I wrote this song in honor of them and, in observance of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. One time might be all it takes.”

Wayna has just wrapped up an FYE Retail tour performing and signing CD’s. She also just traveled to South Africa and performed at a huge Ethiopian Music Festival.

VIDEO: Watch Wayna’s debut video, “My Love”:

Cover image: Wayna – Mama’s Sacrifice – review by Marvina S. at: www.neosoulville.com
—————————

Related: Wayna Gets A Grammy Nod

DCist.com
December 23, 2008

First off, DCist was happy when Grammy nominations were announced earlier this month and D.C.-area artists and producers were involved in six projects that will be up for recognition at the Recording Academy’s February 8, 2009 ceremony. But when we heard that one of our May Three Stars artists, Wayna, was among those acknowledged in the “Best Urban/Alternative Performance” category for her performance on “Loving You (Music),” which also features D.C. native Kokayi, we were ecstatic.

Just think of it as the “DCist Bump.”

Since the last time we spoke to her, Wayna has been touring constantly to promote her album, Higher Ground, which includes the nominated song. The nominee took a few moments to answer some questions about her new found recognition and talk about what the future might hold for her. Read more.

Check out Wayna at MySpace (http://www.myspace.com/waynamusic).

Baby Rute Returns to Ethiopia After Heart Surgery

Above: Baby Rute, the one-year old girl from Ethiopia, who
came to the U.S. during the summer with severe congenital
heart condition is flying home to her parents after recovering
from heart surgery.

First Coast News

JACKSONVILLE, FL — Baby Rute babbles, crawls and coos like any other baby girl who is months away from her second birthday.

“She just charms you and makes you love her in two seconds.”

For the past five months she’s been a bundle of baby-ness in the home of Dr. Jose Ettedgui and his wife, Hilda, founders of Patrons of the Heart, a foundation that helps underprivileged children with heart problems in developing countries.

Saturday afternoon, Baby Rute is flying home to her biological parents who couldn’t make the trip to the United States. She returns home with a stronger heart, the result of two surgeries in Jacksonville. Hilda and Jose Ettedgui are going with her.

“She’s become part of our family and we really would like to meet her parents and to be able to stay in touch so that’s why we would like to take her,” said Hilda Ettedgui as Baby Rute climbed and crawled around her on the couch of their Southside home.

Because of the bond the three have forged here, Mrs. Ettedgui admits the handoff is going to be extremely difficult.

“It’s very hard for all of us,” said Hilda Ettedgui, who’s from Venezuela. “She’s my baby right now.”

Her first word at the Ettedgui home: “Dada.” The man Baby Rute affectionately calls “Dada” is a pediatric cardiologist and she’s his joy, too.

“She hears the keys at the door and just sprints to the door,” added Hilda Ettedgui.

The couple plans to stay in Baby Rute’s village for a few days to get to know her family and help other children in need.
————————

Ethiopian ‘Baby Rute’ To Undergo Life Saving Heart Treatment At Wolfson

First Coast News

By: Kyle Meenan

Friday, August 8, 2008

JACKSONVILLE, FL – Doctors at Wolfson Children’s Hospital are working to save the life of an infant girl from Ethiopia.

Baby ‘Rute’ arrived in Jacksonville Thursday night after a 17-hour flight from Africa into New York, followed by the flight to the First Coast.

She was accompanied by Hilda Ettedgui, the wife of Pediatric Cardiac Surgeon Jose Ettedgui, and co-founder of the children’s foundation, “Patrons of the Hearts.”

Baby Rute has a heart condition that would likely take her life in the coming months or years. Despite her 15-month age, the child weighs just 15-pounds. Read More.

Cuban-raised Ethiopian Man Found Slain In Miami Apartment

Above: Police tape still covers the door of the apartment
where 39-year old Samuel Abate Balcha was found dead on
New Years Day.

Friend Asks For Tips In Jan. 1 Killing

JustNews.com

MIAMI — Miami police are asking for the public’s help in solving a killing that happened on the first day of 2009.

Samuel Abate Balcha, 39, was born in Ethiopia, raised in Cuba and moved to Miami about four years ago.

Although Balcha was educated to be a civil engineer, he made ends meet by driving a delivery truck.

On Jan. 1, a neighbor discovered Balcha’s body inside his efficiency apartment in the 4500 block of Northwest Sixth Street.

Although detectives will not say how Balcha died, they said he was obviously killed.

“It’s pretty weird. We don’t really have a motive. It looks like it could have been a robbery,” said Miami Detective Fernando Bosch.

Bosch said the efficiency was ransacked. He said the victim was not known to carry large sums of cash and he did not have any jewelry to speak of.

On Wednesday morning, Balcha’s friend, Lazaro Diaz, asked for anyone with information to step forward. Read more.
—————-
Police Think This May Have Been A Robbery But Are Still
Not Sure. Miami-Dade Crimestoppers (305) 471-TIPS


Lazaro Diaz

MIAMI (CBS4) ― By all accounts 39-year old Samuel Abate Balcha had no enemies. He was well loved by his friends & neighbors and was a hard worker. But on January 1st, 2009 his body was found inside his efficiency apartment. His killer has yet to be found.

Now close friend Lazaro Diaz is making a plea to the community for help in bringing Balcha’s killer to justice.

“He didn’t deserve this, for someone to take his life,” said Balcha.

Miami police detective Fernando Bosch told CBS4’s Liv Davalos they are baffled by Balcha’s murder and don’t really have a motive.

“It’s a mystery why anyone would take his life, he was pretty much loved by everybody,” said Bosch.

Detectives say Balcha was killed possibly on December 30th, his body found days later by a concerned neighbor, his apartment ransacked. Police say Balcha, who was born in Ethiopia and had lived in Miami for four years, was a civil engineer but was working as a truck driver for a delivery company while going to school at Miami-Dade College to learn English.

“Everybody we spoke to said he was a gentleman, a friend, a brother, there are a lot of people that are concerned,” said Bosch.

Anyone who can help police find Balcha’s killer is asked to call Miami-Dade Crimestoppers at (305) 471-TIPS.

For an Ethiopian Painter in Paris, new levels of public recognition

Tadias Magazine
By Donald N. Levine

Published: Thursday, January 8, 2009

New York (Tadias) – Featured in exhibitions in two prestigious French galleries in Autumn 2008, Galerie Alternance in the north and Galerie Cabotse in Paris, the work of Fikru Gebre Mariam has reached new levels of both aesthetic power and public recognition. The moment is ripe for looking back at Fikru’s oeuvre and taking a fresh look at his artistic development.

Inspired to pursue an artistic career after winning an award at age 13 at the International Children’s Painting Exhibition in Beijing, Fikru began formal study at the Addis Ababa School of Fine Arts, founded a half-century ago by the distinguished artist Ale Felege Selam, who introduced modern methods of teaching drawing and painting, which he had studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s. There he became a protégé of instructor Tadesse Mesfin, who not only taught him painterly skills but gave him a graphic theme which he would embrace, struggle with, and grow through, ever since. The motif was a variant of a genre of contemporary Ethiopian painting sometimes glossed as “2 women,” a phrase used to represent women doing everyday tasks like spinning and making pottery, as shown in one of his paintings. Although some Ethiopian artists often dismiss their works in this genre as mere touristic products, not expressive of their true selves, others have turned it into a serious genre. In Fikru’s hands, it became a vehicle for one epiphany after another. He has gone from depictions of groups of women standing, to more abstract representations, often with masks, to purely abstract creations.

At each phase similar qualities strike the viewer. They convey a blend of rich hues, emotional intensity, immediacy of impact, and a touch of austerity. If asked to compare them to European artists, I would say that Fikru’s compositions offer a blend of Modigliani figures in a Giacomettian “Still Ladies” stance presented with Braquean geometric abstraction. In a conversation with the artist, Fikru let me know that Braque was indeed his favorite artist. Even so, there is no mistaking the deeply Ethiopian flavor of these paintings. They display hints of Ethiopian miniatures and church paintings. They are imbued with African earth tones. They use the colored garments of Harari women. They capture the somber mood of much Ethiopian life.

rsz_1rsz_cover.jpg
The Dream – 120×120 cm – Oil on canvas – 2004. Upcoming
shows – 2007: solo exhibition National Museum, Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia. 2007: May 1-30: solo exhibition, Galerie François 1er,
Aubigny sur Nère (18700), France. Opening on May 5th at 5pm.
2008: summer: Galerie Alternance Guy Lignier, Hardelot, France.

rsz_painting-1.jpg
Blue dream 100×81 cm Oil on canvas 2004. Painting by Fikru
G/Mariam (Addis Ababa & Paris).

The world of Ethiopian painters is, like much else about contemporary Ethiopian life, divided between those who have remained at home and attempted to be true to Ethiopian realities, and those who have emigrated and whose offspring evince a passion to emulate Western styles to a high degree. With studios in Paris and Addis Ababa, where he spends half a year each, Fikru savors all he can of both worlds. He insists that it is essential for his art that he remains close to his Ethiopian roots–and indeed has continued to live in his father’s gibbi until now. At the same time, Fikru finds it no less essential to spend half of each year abroad. As he wrote me, “I believe the freedom of being out of Ethiopia has amazing value in my life and work. Both in Europe and the U.S., especially in Paris . . .visiting museums and art galleries bring dramatic important changes in my work. It is like seeing yourself in the big mirror, even if you think you know yourself.”

Seriousness but not somberness is immediately evident when one meets the artist–a rugged, good-looking, almost athletic Ethiopian male in his mid-thirties. He could be, and really is, an assiduous businessman. He works without stop, producing a seemingly endless flow of polished products. His studios in both cities are packed with canvasses like rush-hour traffic. This enables him to live fairly inexpensively and yet maintain a wealth of paintings for sale, in contrast to Ethiopian artists in the Diaspora who often find it difficult to make ends meet.

Even so, it is not mainly a commercial motive that drives his prolific output. His social conscience remains alive and well; his many awards include posters against AIDS and for Family Planning. Beyond that, Fikru’s being patently manifests his relation to art as a vocation in the deeper sense. It offers him a constant challenge to let his spirit grow. This is one reason why I believe his work has such an impact on viewers. It certainly had on me.

That said, the exceptional value of the art of Fikru Gebre Mariam may lie in its capacity to mediate Ethiopian and Western worlds, yet at a level that marks him as one of Ethiopia’s most acclaimed international painters.

Learn more about Fikru Gebre Mariam at www.fikru.fr.

About the Author:

Donald N. Levine is the Peter B. Ritzma Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Chicago. “He is the author of many books, chapters and articles on Ethiopia and has had direct involvement in Ethiopian affairs since the 1960s. His works on Ethiopia include: Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopian Culture (1965), now reprinted by Tsehai Publishers and Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society (1974), a second edition of which, with a new preface was published, in 2001. Other publications include Visions of the Sociological Tradition (1995) and, most recently, Powers of the Mind: The Reinvention of Liberal Learning.” (The Ethiopian American.). Professor Levine’s research and teaching interests focus on classical social theory, modernization theory, Ethiopian studies, conflict theory and aikido, and philosophies of liberal education.

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt to adopt another Ethiopian child

China Daily

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are reportedly set to adopt another Ethiopian child.

The couple – who already have three biological children Shiloh, two, six-month-old twins Knox and Vivienne, and three adopted children, Cambodian Maddox, seven, Pax, five, from Vietnam and four-year-old Ethiopian girl Zahara – are planning to jet to Africa before the end of January to complete paperwork on the new addition to their family.

A source revealed: “Brad and Angelina have seen pictures of a two-year-old girl they’d love to adopt. If everything goes to plan, Angelina will file papers in person in the capital city of Addis Ababa in the New Year and they will pick up their new daughter two days later.”


Actress Angelina Jolie is interviewed as she arrives as a guest at the
world premiere of director Clint Eastwood’s new film “Gran Torino” at the
Warner Bros. studio lot in Burbank, California December 9, 2008.

Officials in Ethiopia have confirmed they are expecting the family this month as Brad, 45, and 33-year-old Angelina are planning to visit the AIDS/HIV clinic they founded after adopting Zahara.

A clinic source told Britain’s Grazia magazine: “I can’t say anything about when they are coming, but yes, when they come to Ethiopia we will expect a visit from them.”

Brad and Angelina are said to be keen on extending their brood while their other children are still young.

An insider explained: “Angelina gets a kick from saving kids and giving them this amazing life they would have never had otherwise.

“Yes they might be adding to their family fast but they want all their kids to be roughly the same age so they do the nanny stage and get it over and done with.

“Another kid in the house will make no difference to the noise and chaos they already have.”

Ethiopian American Researcher hopes to put fuel cells on the fast track

Above: Left: Fuel cell pioneer Sossina Haile. Right: A stack
of fuel cells created in Haile’s lab. (Photo courtesy
Superprotonic, Inc.)

NASA

Written by Joshua Rodriguez/Global Climate Change

The slow evolution of clean-energy solutions is about to kick into high gear, if Sossina M. Haile has anything to say about it. As a fuel cell researcher at the California Institute of Technology and a founding member of the company Superprotonic Inc., she hopes to make this “technology of the future” practical for today’s applications.

Current fuel cell technology is hamstrung by impracticality. The most efficient and powerful fuel cells need large amounts of heat and space, whereas those suitable for smaller scale operation require lots of precious, expensive platinum. “If we converted every car in the U.S. to fuel cells, we’d need more platinum than there is in the proven reserves,” Haile says.

Haile’s research, which initially began several years ago with fuel cell researchers at JPL, has led to breakthroughs in more “consumer-ready” fuel cell technology. She’s developed fuel cell systems that strike a balance between power and manageability –- perfect, she says, for standalone residential generators. Her team has worked hard to reduce the amount of platinum needed for each system.

Haile’s team has also taken on one of the biggest roadblocks to widespread fuel cell use — their reliance on hydrogen as a primary fuel. Hydrogen requires lots of energy to extract and it’s difficult to store and distribute.


Size comparison of a dime and a single fuel cell – the device pictured at
the top of the page is a stack of these individual cells.

In fact, Haile thinks that the verdict is still out on whether hydrogen “makes sense” as the fuel of the future. “When most people hear ‘fuel cells,’ they think hydrogen,” says Haile. “That’s a common misperception — fuel cells aren’t necessarily restricted to hydrogen.”

Haile’s team has focused on developing fuel cells that can run on more traditional fuels, like ethanol or biomass, while also solving many of the problems of conventional hydrogen fuel cells.


Zongping Shao, who is now a professor at
Nanjing College of Chemistry in China,
listens to an MP3 player being powered
by two fuel cells.

Fuel cells that use carbon-based fuels still produce carbon emissions, but at a much lower rate than their internal-combustion counterparts. Because fuel cells extract energy from electrochemical reactions instead of burning their fuel, they are much more efficient and environmentally friendly. “It’s a unique middle ground,” explains Haile — one she believes will speed the integration of these new technologies into the current energy infrastructure.

For Haile, the incentive to design practical, unconventional fuel cells is simple: “Science should be in the service of society.” She thinks that fuel cells that can use renewable energy resources like biomass will help end what she calls she calls “drawing from the bank” — using fossil fuels as a source of energy.

“There’s scientific proof that CO2 concentrations have been rising for decades to levels not felt on the Earth in millenia,” Haile says. “We need to have a diverse approach to solving the problem before it’s too late.”

Images from Ethiopia

Above: Andrew Geiger stands in his studio at Eastside Brick
surrounded by images from Ethiopia for his
upcoming show. – Lido Vizzutti/Flathead Beacon


Flathead Beacon

By Keriann Lynch , 01-03-09

Photographer Andrew Geiger is afraid the subjects of his favorite work are going extinct.

The self-sustaining tribes scattered across the remote regions of Ethiopia. An elderly woman in Burma whose ethnic group had been all but wiped out. Centuries-old architecture and traditional rituals, dress and cultural norms.

“I go back to some of these places and everyone is wearing Nike-swoosh T-shirts,” Geiger, of Kalispell, said. “It disgusts me because I don’t think my kids will get to see these places and people. And I want to capture the rawness of what the reality is now in my pictures.”

In addition to a busy commercial photography schedule, Geiger has made it an ongoing personal project to document countries where he feels capitalistic or Western ideas are changing the culture at a rapid rate. After becoming interested in that type of work, Geiger began in earnest after being successfully treated for cancer about eight years ago.

“It was kind of an epiphany,” he said. “It made me think if I was going to do this I needed to get going, and really amped up my efforts.”

Since then, the project has taken Geiger to Burma, Mali and, most recently, Ethiopia.

On Jan. 22, Geiger will bring his work much closer to home, marking the opening of his new Kalispell gallery with a free event and a series of images from Ethiopia. Geiger’s gallery is in the lower level of the Eastside Brick apartments, the site of the old Kalispell hospital on Fifth Avenue East.

Geiger’s photos from Ethiopia feature tribes where life has remained largely unchanged for thousands of years. With detail shots and portraits, Geiger’s photos pay particular homage to the beautiful array of body art by scarring, piercing and painting used by the Mursi tribe.

One of the most famous of all the indigenous Ethiopian tribes, the Mursi are located in the Southern Omo Valley. Geiger’s trip there began with a stop at a military headquarters where he and his traveling companions were assigned two armed guards. From there, Geiger’s interpreter, a pre-teen boy, helped him communicate with the native residents.

“It’s surreal,” he said. “In some of these places, if you don’t have a local, you don’t get in.”

But as evidenced by his work, Geiger’s planning, patience and interpreter gained him extensive access. There are close-up shots of Mursi women who split their lower lip and insert a round clay plate at a young age, stretching the bottom of their faces into a broad oval. Men and women alike cut their skin in elaborate patterns, rubbing ash in the wounds to infect them and create a raised look.

Geiger even photographed a cow-jumping ceremony, a traditional event marking a Mursi boy’s transition to manhood. As part of the day-long ceremony, Mursi women taunt and encourage the tribe’s men to hit them with wooden switches.

“It’s bloody and intense and unlike anything we think is OK or normal,” he said. “But when you’re there, it’s different. You’re an observer, but also kind of an invader.”

Geiger spent most of his childhood in Glendive, before moving to Kalispell where he graduated from Flathead High School. He accepted a scholarship to study engineering at the University of Montana but, already an avid photographer, left school about a year later to start shooting full time.

Geiger freelanced across the western states and Australia before moving to New York to establish a larger and more diverse client base. But the more connections and work he found in New York, the more he ended up returning to Montana.


Andrew Geiger in his studio – Lido Vizzutti/Flathead Beacon

“People kept sending me on assignments out here,” he said. “They figured that because I was from Montana I could shoot it better. Finally, I decided enough of this, I’m moving back.”

For the past 12 years Geiger and his family, wife Dena and daughters Hannah, 5, and Madison, 1, have lived in Kalispell. Geiger satiates his love for travel with photo assignments around the country and abroad – and, of course, with his private project.

He has traveled to more than 25 countries – a number he describes as “not that many, not enough” – and his client list includes names like Cabela’s, Audobon, Field and Stream, Forbes, Newsweek, People, Timberland and Discover, among others.

“A lot of photographers like to stick to one kind of work, say commercial or portraits or landscape,” Geiger said. “I can’t do that; I’d get bored. And being able to do a lot of different things has sort of become my niche.”

If You Go:
Gallery Opening, Images from Ethiopia
Andrew Geiger’s Gallery, 723 5th Avenue East Loft #44B, Kalispell
Jan. 22 at 5:30 p.m.

Khat – is it more coffee or cocaine?

“Flower of Paradise”: photo by Nasteex Faarax / AP

Los Angeles Times

The narcotic leaf is a time-honored tradition in Africa but illegal in
the U.S., where demand is growing.

By Cynthia Dizikes
January 3, 2009

Reporting from Washington — In the heart of the Ethiopian community here, a group of friends gathered after work in an office to chew on dried khat leaves before going home to their wives and children. Sweet tea and sodas stood on a circular wooden table between green mounds of the plant, a mild narcotic grown in the Horn of Africa.

As the sky grew darker the conversation became increasingly heated, flipping from religion to jobs to local politics. Suddenly, one of the men paused and turned in his chair. “See, it is the green leaf,” he said, explaining the unusually animated discussion as he pinched a few more leaves together and tossed them into his mouth.

For centuries the “flower of paradise” has been used legally in East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula as a stimulant and social tonic.

But in the United States khat is illegal, and an increased demand for the plant in cities such as Washington and San Diego is leading to stepped up law enforcement efforts and escalating clashes between narcotics officers and immigrants who defend their use of khat as a time-honored tradition.

In the last few years, San Diego, which has a large Somali population, has seen an almost eight-fold increase in khat seizures. Nationally, the amount of khat seized annually at the country’s ports of entry has grown from 14 metric tons to 55 in about the last decade.

Most recently, California joined 27 other states and the federal government in banning the most potent substance in khat, and the District of Columbia is proposing to do the same.

“It is a very touchy subject. Some people see it like a drug; some people see it like coffee,” said Abdulaziz Kamus, president of the African Resource Center in Washington, D.C. “You have to understand our background and understand the significance of it in our community.”

Increased immigration from countries such as Ethiopia, Yemen and Somalia has fueled the demand in this country and led to a cultural conflict.

“We grew up this way, you can’t just cut it off,” said a 35-year-old Ethiopian medical technician between mouthfuls of khat as he sat with his friends in the office.

In the Horn of Africa and parts of the Middle East, khat is a regular part of life, often consumed at social gatherings or in the morning before work and by students studying for exams. Users chew the plant like tobacco or brew it as a tea. It produces feelings of euphoria and alertness that can verge on mania and hyperactivity depending on the variety and freshness of the plant.

But some experts are not convinced that its health and social effects are so benign. A World Health Organization report found that consumption can lead to increased blood pressure, insomnia, anorexia, constipation and general malaise. The report also said that khat can be addictive and lead to psychological and social problems.

“It is not coffee. It is definitely not like coffee,” said Garrison Courtney, spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration. “It is the same drug used by young kids who go out and shoot people in Africa, Iraq and Afghanistan. It is something that gives you a heightened sense of invincibility, and when you look at those effects, you could take out the word ‘khat’ and put in ‘heroin’ or ‘cocaine’.”

Khat comes from the leaves and stems of a shrub and must be shipped in overnight containers to preserve its potency. It contains the alkaloid cathinone, similar in chemical structure to amphetamine but about half as potent, according to Nasir Warfa, a researcher in cross cultural studies at Queen Mary University of London.

The United Kingdom determined last year that evidence does not warrant restriction of khat. In the United States, the substance has been illegal under federal law since 1993.

But the world supply of khat is exploding. Countries such as Ethiopia and Kenya now rely on it as a major cash crop to bolster their economies. Khat is Ethiopia’s second largest export behind coffee.

Khat usage has grown so much in San Diego that Assemblyman Joel Anderson (R-San Diego) wrote a 2008 bill that added cathinone and its derivative cathine to California’s list of Schedule II drugs along with raw opium, morphine and coca leaves.

As of Thursday, Anderson’s bill made possession of khat a misdemeanor in California, punishable by up to one year in county jail and a $1,000 fine. Possession of the leaf with intent to sell is a felony that carries a three-year maximum sentence in state prison.

In some cases, khat seizures have resulted in warnings and probation. In other instances, like New York City’s “Operation Somali Express” bust in 2006, which led to the seizure of 25 tons of khat worth an estimated $10 million, the perpetrators were sent to jail for up to 10 years.

“In my mind, [such arrests are] wrong,” said an Ethiopian-born cabdriver who was arrested in November in a Washington, D.C., khat bust and spoke on condition of anonymity. “They act like they know more about khat than I know.”

Khat leaves are sold attached to thick stalks or dried like tea leaves. A bundle of 40 leafed twigs costs about $28 to $50.

The plant’s cost has been linked to family problems, including domestic abuse, said Starlin Mohamud, a Somali immigrant who is completing a dissertation on khat at San Diego State University.

In fact, within the East African community in the U.S., there are many who welcome the khat restrictions.

“I have seen what it does,” Mohamud said. “Families who are trying to make ends meet on a daily basis cannot afford it. It just creates so many problems between a husband and wife to the point where a broken family is going to be the result.”

Not all lawmakers, however, support the increased efforts to prosecute khat sellers and users. California state Sen. Gloria Negrete McLeod (D-Chino) called khat use “a minor problem that may be nonexistent and little understood” and voted against Anderson’s bill.

“The Legislature cannot continue to add on penalties and punishments filling up critically overcrowded prison system without weighing the consequences on how this will affect California,” she said.

Even though khat smuggling continues to grow in the United States, the level is nowhere near that of drugs like marijuana, cocaine, heroine and methamphetamine. Still, law enforcement officials worry that in a refined, stronger and more portable form, khat could spread outside the immigrant communities.

In Israel, a pill known as hagigat (essentially Hebrew for “party khat”), has emerged on the club scene.

“I don’t think we are going to see American teenagers chewing the plant,” said Phil Garn, a U.S. postal inspector in San Diego. “But based on what I saw with meth and how it spread across the country, I can absolutely see how khat in a refined form could be a major problem.”

cynthia.dizikes@latimes.com

Inauguration Feels Special to Many in Washington

Above: “Voters are not looking for categories. They’re looking
for results,” said Adrian M. Fenty, the mayor of Washington, a
predominantly black city. Mr. Fenty, like President-elect Barack
Obama, won an election as a more liberal bi-racial candidate who
relied on a populist message. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)

NYT
By IAN URBINA
Published: January 2, 2009

WASHINGTON — Presidents come and go from this city. Hosting inaugurations is nothing new. But for residents here, over 92 percent of whom voted for President-elect Barack Obama, his inauguration this month is special.

The day ushers in hopes and expectations for a president who speaks to local residents and brings with it the excitement of a predominantly black city welcoming the nation’s first black president.

With the inauguration scheduled for the day after the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend, the timing also strikes a chord for a city that was racked by riots after Dr. King’s assassination.

“For D.C., this inauguration is less like hosting a visiting official and more like throwing a homecoming party for a family member,” said Ronald Walters, professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland.

He added that normally, the inauguration is an exclusive black-tie affair. “This time,” he said, “it feels like the city has taken ownership of what is becoming a people’s party.”

At Ben’s Chili Bowl, one of the city’s oldest and most famous restaurants, the inauguration offers a certain historical reconciliation.

“It took about 40 years,” said Kamal Ali, the owner and son of the restaurant’s founder, Ben Ali. “But in terms of race relations, the celebration that day will bring this neighborhood, this city, full circle.”

In April 1968, four days of race riots after the King assassination left 12 people dead here. Huge swaths of what was then called Black Broadway for its concentration of black-owned clubs and theaters were destroyed. Ben’s Chili Bowl was one of the only restaurants along U Street that was not burned or ransacked. Read More.

In St. Louis, an Ethiopian Pursues American Dream Via a Taxi Cab

Special to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
By Repps Hudson
01/02/2009

Driving a cab is almost a stereotypical way for immigrants and refugees wanting to get started in their new country to earn a living and put down roots.

One who has done so successfully is Ezezew Biru, who left Ethiopia as a teenager and now runs a small taxicab company that is struggling against the system to get larger.

Despite his frustrations, Biru is a happy man with a growing family — he just adopted three relatives from Ethiopia.


Ezezew Biru

Position: Co-owner and operations manager, Metropolitan Taxicab Corp.

Age: 45

Career: After leaving his native Ethiopia at 19 in 1982, he worked as a laborer in Khartoum, Sudan, until immigrating to the United States in 1987; hotel worker in Washington, 1987-1988; factory worker and cab driver in St. Louis, 1988-1995; founded Riverfront Cab Co., 1997; joined with fellow Ethiopians to create Midwest Cab Co., 2001; which became Metropolitan Taxicab Corp., 2004

Education: Studied computer science at St. Louis Community College at Forest Park
Personal: Lives with his wife, Meselu Shumye, and three boys and three girls in St. Peters

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch spoke with Mr. Biru in his small office at 4427 Geraldine Avenue in the city.





NYC revelers usher in ’09 with cheer, optimism

By CRISTIAN SALAZAR –

NEW YORK (AP) — Despite months of economic gloom, revelers throughout the country welcomed the new year with merrymaking and even optimism, though some festivities fell to hard times and others were subdued.

“The worst part of last year was probably trying to get through financially,” said Liza Mazzotte, a composer who had come from California to join the hundreds of thousands of celebrants in frigid Times Square to see the Waterford crystal ball drop. “I’m not worried about what I lost. I’m going to be looking to the future.”

As the clock struck midnight Wednesday, a ton of confetti fluttered down on the revelers bundled up in fur hats, coats and sleeping bags. Fireworks burst atop the tower where the ball was lowered. Noisemakers screeched, partygoers kissed and cheers echoed through the corridors of midtown Manhattan.

Former President Bill Clinton and Sen. Hillary Clinton, expected to be secretary of state in President-elect Barack Obama’s administration, joined Mayor Michael Bloomberg to lower the ball atop 1 Times Square for the 60-second countdown to midnight.

The National Weather Service said the midnight temperature at Central Park, just blocks from Times Square, was 18 degrees and the 16 mph wind blowing through the urban canyons made the wind chill just 3 degrees.

The temperature had fallen a couple of degrees when city sanitation crews started sweeping up the confetti and other party trash Thursday morning. Last year, crews removed more than 40 tons of garbage. Read more.





Top 10 Events of 2008 Covered by Tadias

Year in Review by The Tadias Team

Published: Thursday, December 25, 2008

New York: (Tadias) – The following are our top ten favorite Ethiopian-American related events that we attended and/or featured in 2008. We wish all our readers “Happy Holidays!” We look forward to the New Year, and to continue highlighting events and personalities that make ours one of the most vibrant immigrant communities in the country. Happy New Year from all of us at Tadias.com!

Counting down: Top 10 Events of 2008 Covered by Tadias

10). The seventh annual anniversary of Little Ethiopia in L.A.

The seventh annual anniversary of Little Ethiopia took place in Los Angeles on September 14, 2008. The celebration was organized by the Little Ethiopia Business Association, which is chaired by Woizero Negest Legesse. Among the most active organizers of the event were: Mesob Restaurant, Rosalind Restaurant, Rahel Vegan Cuisine, Nyala Restaurant, Ferede Child Care Center, Selam Travel, and the Ethiopian Airlines. The office of the Mayor of Los Angeles and City Councils also provided assistance for the event. Read more about this event.

9). The Annual Ethiopian Soccer Tournament (D.C. 2008).

North America’s largest African soccer tournament, hosted by the Ethiopian Sport Federation of North America (ESFNA), was held in the nation’s capital this year. The Washington D.C. Metropolitan area is home to one of the largest Ethiopian population in the country, and tens of thousands of Ethiopian immigrants attended the event this year on July 4th weekend. Read More.

8). Historic Ethiopian out of doors Concert in New York

On the evening of Wednesday, August 20, 2008, Damrosch’s Park in New York was packed with Ethiopians and curious New Yorkers who were treated to an astonishing concert of fusion rock, jazz and Ethiopian music. The historic event at the Lincoln Center’s out of doors concert series, one of the longest-running free summer festivals in the U.S., featured Mahmoud Ahmed and Alemayehu Eshete accompanied by the Either Orchestra, and the legendary saxophonist Getatchew Mekurya in collaboration with Dutch band the Ex. The trio performed for the first time at Damrosch’s Park. Read more and see hot shots from the event.

7). Ethiopia 2000 @ the Schomburg Center

The final event of the Ethiopian Millennium Celebration Series hosted by the BINA foundation included a panel discussion entitled “Ethiopia: The Three Faiths” at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, which attracted a diverse and large audience on Saturday, June 21, 2008. Read more about this event.

6). Sojourner Truth Awards Celebration

Abaynesh Asrat: Distinguished Women Awardee
Ethiopian-born Abaynesh Asrat, Founder & CEO of Nation to Nation Networking (NNN), was recognized with “The Sojourner Truth Award,” which is given each year by the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. Abaynesh is a member of Harlem’s legendary Abyssinian Baptist Church delegation to Ethiopia in 2007, which took place as part of the church’s bicentennial celebration and in honor of the Ethiopian Millennium. Other awardees, that were honored at the 80th Annual Founder’s Day of the New York Club of Women’s Clubs, include: Robert T. Johnson (The District Attorney of Bronx County since January 1, 1989), Debra Wallace (Ebony Magazine), Kim M. Williamson (Director of Prime Time Programing for Food Networks in New York City), Joyce Johnson (CEO of the Black Equity Alliance), among others. The event took place on Sunday, April 27, 2008, at the Eastwood Manor in Bronx, NY. Read more about Abaynesh’s work at NNN.

5). Obama & McCain at Columbia University Forum

Presidential nominees Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain participated in a discussion regarding the importance of engaging in service and civic responsibilities on the seventh anniversary of 9/11 in New York at Columbia University. The Presidential Forum was part of a two-day summit which included speeches by Al Gore, Governor Patterson, Columbia President Bollinger and Barnard Provost Elizabeth Boylan. The forum was moderated by Judy Woodruff of PBS’ “NewsHour” and Richard Stengel, managing editor of Time magazine. Read more and view photos of this event.

4). Ted Alemayuhu’s Keynote at Columbia University

The third Annual Health Disparities Conference at Columbia University was held on Friday, March 7th and Saturday, March 8th, 2008. Ethiopian-born Ted Alemayuhu, Founder & Chairman of U.S. Doctors for Africa, was one of the featured keynote speakers. View photos from this event.

3). Sheba Highlight at Choice Eats 2008

The Queen of Sheba Ethiopian restaurant in New York was featured at the first Annual Choice Eats tasting event organized by The Village Voice, the nation’s first and largest alternative newsweekly. The event took place on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at the historic Puck Building in Manhattan. Queen of Sheba Ethiopian restaurant was one of thirty-three favorite restaurants of Voice food critic Robert Sietsema, author of Secret New York. Sietsema has reviewed more than 2,000 restaurants in the last 14 years and this year’s Choice Eats covered samples from all corners of the world. Read more about this event.

2). CNN Hero in New York

Yohannes Gebregeorgis, 59, was recognized by CNN for his remarkable efforts to bring free public libraries and literacy programs to thousands of children in Ethiopia, including the country’s first Donkey Mobile Library. One of the Top Ten CNN Heroes of 2008, spoke at Cafe Addis in Harlem, New York on Saturday, December 13, 2008. Tadias TV was there to record the event.

1). The day Barack Obama was elected President

Nothing this year tops the spontaneous celebrations that broke out around the world on November 4th 2008, the day Barack Obama was elected the 44th President of the United States. Memorable photos from this historic day was captured in Harlem by Tadias Magazine’s contributing photographer Jeffrey Phipps. View photos from election night 2008.

Ethiopia’s double Olympic champion Dibaba to run indoors in Birmingham

The Daily Mail Online
By Sportsmail Reporter
23rd December 2008

Double Olympic champion Tirunesh Dibaba will bid to regain her 3,000 metres indoor title at the Aviva Grand Prix in Birmingham on February 21.

Dibaba, 23, won the 5,000m and 10,000m in Beijing and now intends to embark on a
serious indoor career.

In a magnificent career, Dibaba won the 5,000 metres title at the 2003 World Championship in Paris, and claimed the 5,000m and 10,000m double at the World Championship two years later in Helsinki.

She then successfuly defended her world 10,000 title in Osaka last year.

Meanwhile UK Athletics have appointed Australian Kevin Tyler as strategic head of coaching and development. Read More.

Christmas in Ethiopia for Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt

PhotoJolie with daughter Zahara, NYC, 2007 (Purseblog.com)

Showbizspy.com

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are set to spend Christmas in Ethiopia, according to a news report.

The Hollywood super-couple will fly out to the country’s capital, Addis Ababa – which is the birthplace of their adoptive daughter Zahara, reports Britain’s Sunday Mirror.

As well as Zahara, Pitt and Jolie have five other children – Maddox, Pax and Shiloh as well as twins Knox Leon and Vivienne Marcheline.

Meanwhile, Brad and Angelina have been forced to deny recent reports they have hammered out a $200 million prenuptial agreement.

It was claimed Pitt wanted something in place that spells out everything – the couple’s finances, their property and who will raise their children in case something happens.

But Tomb Raider star Jolie’s rep said, “There is no truth to any of these claims.”

Interview: Teodross “Teo” Avery

Above: Ethiopian-American musician Teodross “Teo” Avery is
creating his own niche in the American hip-hop jazz scene.

Tadias Magazine
By Adey Tsega

Published: Friday, December 19, 2008

New York (Tadias) – What does Teodross “Teo” Avery have in common with jazz giants Dizzy Gillespie, Tito Puente, and Arturo Sandoval? They all have graced the stage of The Blue Note, one of New York’s legendary jazz clubs in the heart of Greenwich Village.

Avery, a talented Ethiopian-American musician is carving his own niche in hip-hop jazz, and all eyes were on him as he played his tenor saxophone with confidence and ease, seamlessly transitioning between his original work and pieces from Earth Wind & Fire, John Coltrane and Mos Def.

Avery has recorded and collaborated with other powerhouse musicians including: Aretha Franklin, Lauryn Hill, Shakira, Wu Tang Clan, and Amy Winehouse. Films such as Love Jones, Brown Sugar and Beauty Shop also carry songs he has either written or produced.

His own lyrics entitled New Day New Groove and My Generation capture the proactive, idealistic and determined energy of his generation.

Avery’s strong interest in music developed at an early age. He was born and raised in the Bay Area, California, from an Ethiopian mother and African American father. His parents encouraged his interest in music by exposing him to a wide variety of music. His mother fondly recalls the comments of a Bay Area piano store owner as perhaps the earliest testament of Avery’s destiny as a musician. Intervening on behalf of the then 4 year old, crying hysterically at his mother’s stern words not to touch any of the pianos at the store, the owner gave little Teo permission to play on any of the pianos for as long as he liked, telling his mother to encourage her son’s interest in music and that he may become a great musician some day.

Avery credits his father as the earliest and most significant supporter of his artistic aspirations. His father bought him his first guitar at the age of 5 and enrolled him in classical guitar lessons. After years of guitar lessons, Avery developed a strong interest in jazz and later settled on the saxophone as his instrument of choice. His father recalls that in his early teens, Avery often took his horn to Bay Area jazz concerts and joined the likes of Nat Adderley, Jimmy Smith and Art Blakey on stage.

Avery went on to win a full scholarship to the prestigious Berklee College of Music at the age of 17 and later earned his Masters degree in Music from NYU’s Steinhardt School of Education. His talent and versatility is demonstrated by the diversity of artists he has worked with including: Matchbox Twenty, Leela James, Talib Kweli, Ethiopian artists Abegaz Shiota and Henok Temesgen, Dee Dee Bridgewater and the late great Betty Carter, among many others.

I had a chance to chat with Teo about his music and his upcoming show in Washington D.C. at the Blues Alley.


Teodross “Teo” Avery

How would you describe your musical style?

My style of hip-hop jazz is instrumental… hip-hop beats with jazzy horns on top. I also mix jazz with house music, funk and Brazilian music. Sometimes I feature rappers, but most times I feature the instruments.

Tell us about your latest album. Why is it titled “Bridging the Gap”?

Bridging The Gap is a concept that I came up with after witnessing the huge gap between jazz and hip-hop. There’s a group of people that like jazz but often are ignored. They are the same jazz listeners that listen to Tribe Called Quest, Mos Def, Common, and Pete Rock & CL Smooth. Bridging The Gap represents that link.

You give a tribute to John Coltrane at your shows. How has he influenced your music?

Well, John Coltrane single-handedly influenced me to become a jazz musician. His music is full of love and emotion, and it’s always challenging. When I listen to John Coltrane, I hear a love for God and Coltrane’s desire to become a better person. I’ve always been a person that likes challenges and I’ve always wanted to go beneath the surface.

What is the most rewarding aspect of your life as an artist?

The most rewarding time is when I see people connect to a song that I wrote. See, people don’t know the struggle that artists have to overcome before they’re inspired to write songs. They hear the final product. Any artist that has struggled in life to be here today and to tell their story through their instrument is lying if they say that they don’t appreciate fans that love their art. The fans make it all worth it!


Teo, photo from teodrossavery.com

Any plans to work with Ethiopian artists?

I have already worked with Ethiopian artists. I played with Abegaz Shiota and Henok Temesgen. They’re good friends of mine. We attended The Berklee College of Music together. Mulatu Astatke has expressed some interest in working together. I also played a concert in Oakland with Mahmoud Ahmed. Wow! He gave a great show.

————-
Teo will perform at the Blues Alley in Washington, D.C., on February 3rd, 2009.

Download the “Bridging the Gap” mix tape at www.teodrossavery.com. For more information on Teodross Avery’s upcoming show in D.C., please visit www.bluesalley.com.

About the Author:
Adey Tsega is an Epidemiologist based in New York City.

Aida Muluneh: Reshaping our global image through photography

By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, December 18, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Desta, the Amharic word for happiness, is the name of a popular candy brand in Ethiopia. It’s also the acronym of choice for Photographer Aida Muluneh’s ambitious new project to reform the African continent’s long history with negative imagery.

Through photography, Muluneh has found a medium of transformation. Incorporating natural light from a crisp, dawn Ethiopian morning, or that of a sentimental sunny afternoon, Muluneh projects inspiration captured in moments of daily life – portraits of cab riders, priests, and street children in bustling Ethiopian cities and towns.

Her new organization, appropriately named DESTA for Africa, is a local NGO based in Addis Ababa. Muluneh (pictured above) hopes to encourage a new generation of African Photographers who are able to compete in the global media industry while reshaping the image of Africa reflecting their personal experiences.

“I have spent most of my artistic career promoting alternative images of Africa. DESTA For Africa was born out of my belief that we have to be accountable for how the world perceives us. Even though Africa is ever growing and rapidly changing, the images that we see in the mass media are not reflective of that, ” Muluneh says in a recent interview with Tadias Magazine.

“I feel that African artists have a responsibility to manage how the continent’s image is portrayed, and we can do that by actually providing the necessary education and resources to those who are interested in documenting their own realities.”


School is over for the day. These boys enjoy their time-off playing in their
neighborhood streets in Addis. (Photo by Aida Muluneh. Image featured on BBC)


BBC: A dignified Ethiopia – Aida Muluneh living in New York sent these images
depicting life in Ethiopia. She hopes these photos will show her country in a
different perspective.


Timkat (Epiphany) is the most colourful event in Ethiopia when churches parade
their Tabots (Replica of the. Ark of the Covenant) to a nearby body of water. Here
priests and deacons begin the religious procession from their individual churches and
walk, carrying flags, to Meskel Square where they all assemble.
(Photo by Aida Muluneh. This image was also featured on BBC).

The organization’s first batch of trainees is from Addis Ababa University, which lacks a permanent department of photography. ” We offer our workshop to undergraduates and graduates of the Addis Ababa School of Fine Arts and Design, with the aim to provide them with viable and self-sustainable opportunities in the photography industry,” Muluneh explains.

Yet the giving is reciprocal. Muluneh is learning from her students as they receive training. “My students are an example of what can happen when countries invest in cultural production, and support efforts to reshape Africa’s image. And they also give me strength and inspiration to continue on this mission,” she says.

Muluneh’s biggest stumbling block is lack of basic teaching resources. “You won’t believe how much of a difference it makes to have one photography book or art book,” she says. “I have been teaching with three cameras shared among 13 students, yet the students have been with me since February 2008 with the same enthusiasm and passion as on their first day.”

And what can the Diaspora do to help?

“We are continuously looking for photography books, cameras, film…the list goes on, but the first thing I would like to stress to the Ethiopian American community is the importance of cultural preservation, and managing cultural production, she says. “Culture determines not only how we experience daily life, but how we transmit vital information about our history, health, and general economic and political development.”

For those who are interested, Muluneh will be hosting a fundraiser and introduction of DFA at Almaz Restaurant tonight in Washington D.C. (The event took place on Thursday, December 18th, 2008). “We will be showcasing the works of the students and also selling prints to help continue our work in Ethiopia, and beyond,” she says. “For those who are not able to attend, it is possible to make donations through our website at www.destaforafrica.org.”

Here are few recent images from Muluneh’s students in Ethiopia.

Anyone interested in a partnership, or has information about corporate
sponsorships, should get in touch with DESTA Production
Manager, Selam Mulugeta (smulugeta@destaforafrica.org).



Interview with a CNN Hero

By Tadias Staff
Above photo by Jeffrey Phipps for Tadias Magazine

Published: Tuesday, December 9, 2008

New York (Tadias) – We recently spoke with Yohannes Gebregeorgis, one of the Top Ten CNN Heroes of 2008. He was recognized for his remarkable efforts to bring free public libraries and literacy programs to thousands of children in Ethiopia, including the country’s first Donkey Mobile Library. Mr. Gebregeorgis, 59, was born in Ethiopia and came to the United States as a political refugee in 1981. He eventually put himself through college, earning a graduate degree in library science and worked as a librarian in San Francisco for nearly two decades before embarking on his current project.

Here is our interview with Yohannes Gebregeorgis:


Yohannes Gebregeorgis

Tadias: Yohannes, congratulations for being selected as one of CNN’s Top 10 Heroes of 2008!

Yohannes Gebregeorgis: Thank you. I appreciate Tadias Magazine for consistently covering Ethiopia Reads and making it possible for a lot of Ethiopians and other people to know our work. It’s very helpful when media like Tadias give coverage to such works. Thank you again.

Tadias: CNN’s Anderson Cooper said: “Our Top 10 CNN Heroes are proof that you don’t need superpowers — or millions of dollar, — to change the world and even save lives.” Please tell us about your organization, Ethiopia Reads, and your efforts that led to this recognition.

YG: It’s very true that one doesn’t have to be a superpower or a millionaire to change the world. Even though Ethiopia is not a super power, we know that there are millionaires in Ethiopia. However, they are not using their wealth to make an effective change or to save lives. I think the recognition that Ethiopia Reads has received is primarily for the recognition of the importance of literacy to the development of a country’s future; for it’s power to change individuals and society. What we’ve accomplished in the last six years is a drop in the ocean compared to the need. It’s a good beginning that needs to be kept alive and going until we cover all regions of Ethiopia. We’ve established two free public libraries for children and youth; one in Addis and one in Awassa. We’ve established one donkey mobile library and adding three more by January 2009. We’ve established 16 school libraries and adding another 18 in the next 6 months to one year. We’ve published 8 children’s books and distributed over 30,000 books freely to children with another 75,000 to be distributed freely in the next six months to a year.


Children reading in Awassa, Ethiopia.

We have over 100,000 children that make a visit to all our libraries; We’ve instituted an annual Ethiopian Children’s Book Week, a children’s book award – the Golden Kuraz Award, we’ve provided basic library and literacy training to about 120 teachers and assistant librarians, we’ve taken thousands of children on a march to parliament, and in our annual Book-A-Thon, we’ve made it into the local news media many times advocating reading and literacy. We’ve been widely featured in international media. We’ve created a solid foundation from where we can launch massive campaigns to cover all of Ethiopia given that we have the resources.

Tadias: Among your projects that has received the most press attention is Ethiopia’s first Donkey Mobile Library. What inspired you to come up with this creative concept?

YG: The Donkey Mobile Library was conceived because of the need to reach out to children in rural communities.. The idea of portable and mobile libraries existed in other countries. For example, there is a boat library in Colombia, south America, a camel library in Northern Kenya, a bicycle library and other forms of book delivery methods. The donkey mobile library is similar to a book mobile, a bus that carries books to different communities in developed countries. I’ve seen a donkey pulled satellite station in Zimbabwe several years ago and that has given me the idea of the donkey mobile library. I designed the whole donkey mobile cart with the shelves and storage areas. A very experienced Ethiopian metal engineer built the units from sketches and guidance I gave him. An artist made the necessary logos and designs on the cart and it turned out to be the best.


Donkey pulls mobile library.


Yohannes with the donkey mobile library.

Tadias: Can you share with us an anecdote describing some of the experiences children had when they first visited one of your libraries? How did it change his or her life?

YG: When we first opened our first library in Addis Ababa and the Donkey Mobile Library in Awassa, we noticed several children who were holding books upside down. This children had never held a book before. One of these children, who was nine years old at the time is now a Star Reader, one of many children who are chosen annually for their reading skills and for reading out loud to other children. We select 12 Star Readers from thousands of children who come to our library annually. Robel has visited the library everyday since he first came six years ago. He’s participated in every program that we offer at the library such as English lessons, theater, art and crafts and the sanitation program. Robel is also doing very well in his school as his grades have improved significantly.There are others like Robel who are part of the library family as we’ve known them for as long as the library’s existence.

Tadias: Eighteen years ago, you gave Mammo Qilo (the popular Ethiopian children’s story) its American debut. You are the author of “Silly Mammo”, which was the first bilingual Amharic-English children’s book. Why Mammo Qilo?

YG: I’m so glad that Kilu Mammo has become famous in America! When I first thought about producing a book for Ethiopian children, Kilu Mammo was the only story that came to mind which appealed to me. Many Ethiopians remember the story from their childhood as I did. It’s a very simple but nice story. Children like silly stories to begin with and Mamo Kilu amuses not only children but also adults.

Tadias: We understand that you hold a graduate degree in library science and you served as Children’s Librarian at the San Francisco Children’s Library. How big, would you say, is the pool of trained librarians in Ethiopia that can assist with new library projects?

YG: There aren’t many Ethiopians who have a library training. There is no institution that has a training program as the Addis Ababa University folded its library science program some five or so years ago.I don’t think Ethiopian education authorities think of libraries as something very essential. Besides, there are no library policies in the educational policy of the country that I know of, therefore it makes it hard to have training programs where no one would hire the people that are trained. We have difficulty finding trained librarians. We’ve been hiring librarians ever since we started our program in Ethiopia. We’provide basic library training program for the school libraries that we establish.

Tadias: What are your long term plans to expand your program across the country? And what kind of help do you need?

YG: Our plan is to expand our projects and programs to all regions of Ethiopia by expanding to at least one region every two years. We now have projects in place that can easily be duplicated. In order to accomplish this ambitious goals we need, first and foremost financial support, then other material support such as books, computers, etc., and then any other kind of support such as volunteers.

Tadias: How can your U.S.-based fans help to further your organizational goals?

YG: There are so many ways that our fans in the US can help. For example, we’re about to embark on a membership drive that is geared towards Ethiopians. We’ve seen how enthusiastic Ethiopians have become when they discovered the work we do in Ethiopia. We see a very positive attitude and desire to help by a large number of Ethiopians. We’d like Ethiopians to support our work by becoming members and donating ten, twenty or whatever amount of money they could. Every book week has a theme around which we can raealy afford on a monthly instalment. We’d like to get a few thousand Ethiopians signing up for this monthly donation. Those who can afford can sponsor a library in memory of someone they love, sponsor a Donkey Mobile Library, sponsor publishing of a book, etc. There are so many ways our fans could be involved. People can find more information on our web site ethiopiareads.org.

Tadias: Is there anything else you would like to share with our readers?

Since 2003, Ethiopia Reads has organized an annual Ethiopian Children’s Book Week, an annual celebration of books, reading and libraries. During our first book week, we took more than a thousand children on a march to the Ethiopian Parliament with a petition asking the government to provide libraries and boks for children. We’ve special programs everyday of the week such as Read-A-thon, Book-A-Thon, Bread and Books Day, International Children’s Book Day, Book Launch, Golden Kuraz Award, the Star Reader Award, Art Day and many other activities take place during the one week. Every book week has a special theme as a focus. Readers are Leaders, Libraries for Rural Development, Bread and Books for Children, Those who read Bloom, Ethiopia Stretches her Hands, are the book week themes of the last six years. Special posters that reflect these themes are made and distributed. The next book week is the Sixth Ethiopian Children’s Book Week to be held April 1-7, as it always is, with a theme “Ethiopia Reads” (Ethiopia Tanebalech). What we want to share with Tadias readers is to celebrate book week with us by reading to children, by making books available to your family, support Ethiopia Reads and other organizations that work in Ethiopia.

Tadias: Thank you so much for your time, Yohannes, and good luck with your work.

YG: Thank you Tadias for your interest in the work of Ethiopia Reads and for supporting us by writing about our work.


Yohannes will speak in Harlem (New York)
Saturday, December 13 at 2:00 PM at Cafe Addis (435 West 125 Street, NY, 10027). Phone: 212-663-0553 (Mekonen or Negus).

Yohannes in Maplewood, New Jersey
Yohannes will appear at the Maplewood Public Library in Maplewood, NJ on Thursday, December 11 at 7 pm

Yohannes in Silver Spring, Maryland
Wednesday December 17 – 7:00pm Abol Restaurant, 8628 Colesville Road (across the street from the AFI Silver Theater) Silver Spring, MD 20910 (RSVP: Matt Andrea 202-232-9085, Maureen Evans 301-386-5610).



Wisconsin Concert to raise funds for health care clinics in Ethiopia

Natty Nation will perform at the Clinic at a Time benefit
concert Dec. 13. (State Journal archives)

Wisconsin State Journal

MICHAEL JONES
For the State Journal
FRI., DEC 5, 2008

Mulusew Yayehyirad is figuring out new ways to give brighter futures to those halfway around the world.

The Ethiopian native and registered nurse at St. Mary’s Hospital looked at the damage of her home country due to poverty and disease and felt she needed to do something about it. So she started Clinic At A Time, a non-profit charity whose mission is to combat her homeland’s ills with better supplies, facilities and education.

On Saturday, Dec. 13, CAAT will host a benefit concert, starring the acclaimed reggae-funk-rock group Natty Nation, at the East Madison Community Center with the goal of sending Yayehyirad and a group of volunteers to her hometown of Bichina to help the local clinic next year. Already, the group has raised enough to help construct a new waiting facility in the clinic, a common problem in impoverished areas where diseases can be transmitted between people as they are waiting extremely long hours for care from health care workers who are ill-equipped and sometimes undereducated.

“The volunteers can help out by giving immunizations and sharing their educational and professional experiences with the health care workers,” said Yayehyirad.

According to the Earth Institute at Columbia University, Ethiopia’s health care system is considered one of the most underdeveloped in Africa, leading to a current life-expectancy rate of 54 years with the prospect of it free-falling to 46 years due to high rates of HIV/AIDS. The institute estimates up to 80 percent of the country’s health problems stem from preventable, communicable and nutritional diseases. Yayehyirad believes these problems can be combated with a combination of education, better facilities and better access to supplies.

“In all of these clinics there is no running water, gloves are high commodities, syringes are hard to get. There is no equipment to do minor stitches or if there is, they are not sanitized properly which puts the public in much higher risk for disease transmission,” said Yayehyirad. “We need to build more rooms in these clinics so that the woman who is having a baby is not in the same room with a tuberculosis patient, which is a reality.

“It is important educating the health care workers and the public about HIV/AIDS and other diseases coupled by providing the material which could be educational and equipments for the clinics. You can’t teach them the importance of sanitization or proper use of equipments if they don’t have one to use,” she said.

Yayehyirad has been able to bring this all together in addition to raising four children with her husband and holding down a nursing job with the help of her family, friends, CAAT’s board and her faith.

“I manage my busy schedule with the help of my husband, my mother and my kids, most of all with the grace of God. Everyone in my house understands and values one another. When you have that kind of support … you can accomplish a lot,” she said. “My board members are also helpful and supportive of what we do as an organization, which takes some of the responsibilities off of my shoulder.”

In addition to Natty Nation’s musical stylings, there will be a video presentation with further information about CAAT’s mission and accomplishments. Also, people will have a chance to try some Ethiopian dishes such as ingera, a flat bread made from three different flours with beef stew or a vegetarian option. Whether you come down for the music, the food or the mission, every penny will go toward the people that need it the most — something very important to Yayehyirad.

“I think it is important for my contributors and donors to know that their contribution is directly going to the people who need the help,” she said.

If you go

What: Benefit Concert for Clinic At A Time

When: Saturday, Dec. 13, 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Where: East Madison Community Center, 8 Straubel Court, Madison 53704

Audience: All ages

Cost: $20, kids under 5 are free

Details: www.clinicatatime.org

More than two-thirds of African journalists detained without charge

Above: CPJ International press freedom awardee Andrew
Mwenda of Uganda while in police custody. (CPJ/2008)

Online journalists now jailed more than those in any other
medium

December 4, 2008

New York (CPJ) — A total of 23 journalists remained jailed in connection with their work in Sub-Saharan Africa, two-thirds held without charge, according to an annual report released today by the Committee to Protect Journalists. Thirteen journalists were held in Eritrea, which was the fourth jailer of journalists worldwide behind China, Cuba and Burma. The survey found more Internet journalists jailed worldwide today than journalists working in any other medium.

CPJ’s survey found 125 journalists in all behind bars on December 1, a decrease of two from the 2007 tally. (Read detailed accounts of each imprisoned journalist.) China continued to be world’s worst jailer of journalists, a dishonor it has held for 10 consecutive years. Cuba, Burma, Eritrea, and Uzbekistan round out the top five jailers from among the 29 nations that imprison journalists. Each of the top five nations has persistently placed among the world’s worst in detaining journalists.

Eritrea’s secret prisons held but four of at least 17 journalists worldwide held in secret locations. Eritrean authorities have refused to disclose the whereabouts, legal status, or health of any of the journalists they have been detaining for several years. Unconfirmed reports have suggested the deaths of at least three of these journalists while in custody, but the government has refused to even say whether the detainees are alive or dead.


What’s become of the people in this photo?
Taken in 2000, near the end of a two-year border war with
neighboring Ethiopia and during the hey day of a burgeoning
private press movement in Africa’s youngest nation, the photo
shows the staff of Setit newspaper.

Two other Eritrean journalists were being held in secret in neighboring Ethiopia, while the government of The Gambia has declined to provide information on the July 2006 arrest of journalist “Chief” Ebrima Manneh. Many international observers, from the U.S. Senate to the West African human rights court, have called on authorities to free Manneh, who was jailed for trying to publish a report critical of Gambian President Yahya Jammeh.

About 13 percent of jailed journalists worldwide, including those imprisoned in Eritrea, Ethiopia and The Gambia, face no formal charge at all. Countries as diverse as Israel, Iran, the United States, and Uzbekistan also used this tactic of open-ended detention without due process. In Sub-Saharan Africa, 16 out of 23 journalists were behind bars without charge.

Antistate allegations such as subversion, divulging state secrets, and acting against national interests are the most common charge used to imprison journalists worldwide, CPJ found. About 59 percent of journalists in the census are jailed under these charges, many of them by the Chinese and Cuban governments, but also by countries like Senegal, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Ivory Coast.

The survey found that 45 percent of all media workers jailed worldwide are bloggers, Web-based reporters, or online editors. Online journalists represent the largest professional category for the first time in CPJ’s prison census. At least 56 online journalists are jailed worldwide, according to CPJ’s census, a tally that surpasses the number of print journalists for the first time.

This trend applied in Sub-Saharan Africa where at least one online journalist remained imprisoned as of December 1, 2008.

“Online journalism has started to change the media landscape in Sub-Saharan Africa and eased access to communication,” said CPJ’s Program Coordinator Tom Rhodes. “But some governments have reacted adversely to this trend and a growing pattern of harassment of online journalists has developed.”

The number of imprisoned online journalists has steadily increased since CPJ recorded the first jailed Internet writer in its 1997 census. Print reporters, editors, and photographers make up the next largest professional category, with 53 cases in 2008. Television and radio journalists and documentary filmmakers constitute the rest.

“Online journalism has changed the media landscape and the way we communicate with each other,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “But the power and influence of this new generation of online journalists has captured the attention of repressive governments around the world, and they have accelerated their counterattack.”

In October, CPJ joined with Internet companies, investors, and human rights groups to combat government repression of online expression. After two years of negotiations, this diverse group announced the creation of the Global Network Initiative, which establishes guidelines enabling Internet and telecommunications companies to protect free expression and privacy online. Yahoo, Google, and Microsoft have joined the initiative.

Illustrating the evolving media landscape, the increase in online-related jailings has been accompanied by a rise in imprisonments of freelance journalists. Forty-five of the journalists on CPJ’s census are freelancers; most of them work online. These freelancers are not employees of media companies and often do not have the legal resources or political connections that might help them gain their freedom. The number of imprisoned freelancers has risen more than 40 percent in the last two years, according to CPJ research.

“The image of the solitary blogger working at home in pajamas may be appealing, but when the knock comes on the door they are alone and vulnerable,” said CPJ’s Simon. “All of us must stand up for their rights—from Internet companies to journalists and press freedom groups. The future of journalism is online and we are now in a battle with the enemies of press freedom who are using imprisonment to define the limits of public discourse.”

Nowhere is the ascendance of Internet journalism more evident than in China, where 24 of 28 jailed journalists worked online. China’s prison list includes Hu Jia, a prominent human rights activist and blogger, who is serving a prison term of three and a half years for online commentaries and media interviews in which he criticized the Communist Party. He was convicted of “incitement to subvert state power,” a charge commonly used by authorities in China to jail critical writers. At least 22 journalists are jailed in China on this and other vague antistate charges.

Cuba, the world’s second worst jailer, released two imprisoned journalists during the year after negotiations with Spain. Madrid, which resumed some cooperative programs with Cuba in February, has sought the release of imprisoned writers and dissidents in talks with Havana. But Cuba continued to hold 21 writers and editors in prison as of December 1, all but one of them swept up in Fidel Castro’s massive 2003 crackdown on the independent press. In November, CPJ honored Héctor Maseda Gutiérrez, who at 65 is the oldest of those jailed in Cuba, with an International Press Freedom Award.

Burma, the third worst jailer, is holding 14 journalists. Five were arrested while trying to spread news and images from areas devastated by Cyclone Nargis. The blogger and comedian Maung Thura, who uses the professional name Zarganar, was sentenced to a total of 59 years in prison during closed proceedings in November. Authorities accused Maung Thura of illegally disseminating video footage of relief efforts in hard-hit areas, communicating with exiled dissidents, and causing public alarm in comments to foreign media.

Uzbekistan, with six journalists detained, is the fifth worst jailer. Those in custody include Dzhamshid Karimov, nephew of the country’s president. A reporter for independent news Web sites, Karimov has been forcibly held in a psychiatric hospital since 2006.

Here are other trends and details that emerged in CPJ’s analysis:

1. In about 11 percent of cases, governments have used a variety of charges unrelated to journalism to retaliate against critical writers, editors, and photojournalists. Such charges range from regulatory violations to drug possession. In the cases included in this census, CPJ has determined that the charges were most likely lodged in reprisal for the journalist’s work.

2. Violations of censorship rules, the next most common charge, are applied in about 10 percent of cases. Criminal defamation charges are filed in about 7 percent of cases, while charges of ethnic or religious insult are lodged in another 4 percent. Two journalists are jailed for filing what authorities consider to be “false” news, including Senegalese journalist El Malick Seck. (More than one type of charge may apply in individual cases.)

3. Print and Internet journalists make up the bulk of the census. Television journalists compose the next largest professional category, accounting for 6 percent of cases. Radio journalists account for 4 percent, and documentary filmmakers 3 percent.

4. The 2008 tally reflects the second consecutive decline in the total number of jailed journalists. That said, the 2008 figure is roughly consistent with census results in each year since 2000. CPJ research shows that imprisonments rose significantly in 2001, after governments imposed sweeping national security laws in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States. Imprisonments stood at 81 in 2000 but have since averaged 128 in CPJ’s annual surveys.

5. The United States, which is holding photographer Ibrahim Jassam without charge in Iraq, has made CPJ’s list of countries jailing journalists for the fifth consecutive year. During this period, U.S. military authorities have jailed dozens of journalists in Iraq—some for days, others for months at a time—without charge or due process. No charges have ever been substantiated in these cases.

CPJ does not apply a rigid definition of online journalism, but it carefully evaluates the work of bloggers and online writers to determine whether the content is journalistic in nature. In general, CPJ looks to see whether the content is reportorial or fact-based commentary. In a repressive society where the traditional media is restricted, CPJ takes an inclusive view of work produced online.

The organization believes that journalists should not be imprisoned for doing their jobs. CPJ has sent letters expressing its serious concerns to each country that has imprisoned a journalist.

CPJ’s list is a snapshot of those incarcerated at midnight on December 1, 2008. It does not include the many journalists imprisoned and released throughout the year; accounts of those cases can be found at www.cpj.org. Journalists remain on CPJ’s list until the organization determines with reasonable certainty that they have been released or have died in custody.

Journalists who either disappear or are abducted by nonstate entities, including criminal gangs, rebels, or militant groups, are not included on the imprisoned list. Their cases are classified as “missing” or “abducted.”
——-

Source: CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit www.cpj.org.

Oakland: A hub for Ethiopians in the Bay

Above: Genet Asrat, owner of Albo African Gift shop in Oakland,
California.

A fragrant shop helps Ethiopians far from home

By ISABEL ESTERMAN
(Oaklandnorth.net)

Posted on 26 November 2008

Inside Oakland’s Albo African Gift shop, at the corner of Alcatraz and Telegraph, a deep herbal aroma wafts from a row of colorful bottles labeled ‘frankincense.’ Ethiopian Singer Hamelmal Abate’s mournful vibrato pours out of the stereo, crooning over an incongruously lively beat, while the store’s owner, Genet Asrat, sits behind the counter, her black sweater brightened by a bold patterned scarf with a yellow border. The phone rings nearly continuously, and Asrat switches back and forth between English and Amharic as she fields calls, raising her precisely-arched eyebrows and flashing a big, quick smile as she taps away at her keyboard.

The store is filled with baskets, scarves, jewelry and clothing in brilliant shades of orange, red, pink and purple. The walls are lined with African-themed carvings and paintings. Customers come in to browse racks of T-shirts and books with African themes. And while T-shirts are the store’s big sellers, the repeat customers, like the young man who stands shyly by the door until Asrat beckons him forward, are immigrants who come to the store to wire money back to their families in Ethiopia, a service Asrat offers at less than half the price Western Union charges.

Businesses like Asrat’s may provide a touch of the exotic to the neighborhood, but for Ethiopian immigrants, they create a familiar space, and serve as a valuable link to their native country. Some of the phone calls, Asrat explains, are from customers looking for help booking flights home. Asrat doesn’t just a keep a shop or send remittances. “I’m also a travel agent,” she says. Many immigrants, she says, “don’t have the know-how” to look for discounted tickets online and are uncomfortable working with an English-speaking agent. “It’s easier for them, and it’s convenient for them to call and buy them from me.”

Meanwhile, Asrat’s old friend Fetlework Tefferi — whose businesses, Café Colucci and Brundo grocery store, are located to either side of Asrat’s shop – works to source spices from businesses in Africa that use organic ingredients and employ women. “I want to help women preserve their culinary heritage,” says Tefferi, an energetic woman who runs between Colucci and Brundo donning and removing a pair of rubber gloves while supervising the cafe’s redecoration, signing forms, and tasting new batches of spices.

Businesses like these make North Oakland a hub for the Bay Area Ethiopian community, even though neither census data nor anecdotal evidence indicates there is a particularly high concentration of Ethiopian immigrants living in the neighborhood. “They live everywhere,” says Tefferi. “They just have their businesses on Telegraph.”


Inside Oakland’s Albo African Gift shop

According to the 2000 census, there are 1,444 foreign-born Ethiopians in Alameda County, and 228 living in north Oakland, although Rebecca Lakew, program director at the Ethiopian Community Center in Oakland, says that number is much too low. Some of the discrepancy may come from how people answer census takers or fill out government forms, Lakew says. “A lot of Ethiopian people, the people who are here as immigrants or refugees, they don’t say they are from there,” she says. “They mark ‘other’ or just ‘black.’”

Along with Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Seattle, Atlanta and Houston, the Bay Area has one of the largest Ethiopian populations in the United States. Lakew estimates the number of Ethiopians in the Bay Area to be at least 20,000, and says the largest community event, the annual Ethiopian New Year festival, can draw as many as 40,000 people from Oakland, San Francisco and San Jose. “Every year it grows,” she says.

Large waves of Ethiopians began migrating to the United States in the 1980s and 1990s, as the political and economic situation in Ethiopia deteriorated. Marxist dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam overthrew Emperor Haile Selassie in 1974, and was immediately faced with a series of counter-coups, uprisings and border skirmishes. In 1977 – 1978, Mengistu attempted to crush opposition with a massacre known as the “Red Terror,” during which human rights groups estimate as many as 500,000 people were killed, tortured or disappeared by government-sponsored militias.

Mengistu continued to spend heavily on the military, especially to counter rebellions in the country’s north. When a devastating series of droughts and famine hit the country in the 1980s, the government was ill-prepared for the crisis, and nearly 1 million Ethiopians starved to death in 1984 and 1985.

Mengistu was forced to flee the country in 1991, and the first multi-party elections were held in 1993, but problems in Ethiopia continue to push people to emigrate. “There is a lot of corruption, there are no jobs, the standard of education is low,” says Lakew. Many look for opportunities abroad, she says, for the same reasons as emigrants from anywhere in the world. “They have to eat,” she says. “They have to work, they have to support their families.”

The congressionally mandated Diversity Immigrant Visa Program — which provides 55,000 Visas each year to people from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States — has opened up greater possibilities for Ethiopians wishing to immigrate. Nationally, Ethiopians have consistently been among the top groups receiving these visas, topping the list with 3,427 visas in 2005.

Lakew refers to the Diversity Visa program as “fortunate, but unfortunate.” Applicants are required to have either a high school diploma or at least two years experience in a skilled occupation, but many face still face high barriers when they arrive. “It’s the language, the lack of experience, even the cultural difference. They have a culture shock,” says Lakew. “The moment you arrive in the states, you expect everyone to be there for you. And they’re not.”

Newcomers are forced to rely on friends and relatives, and on community agencies like the Ethiopian Community Center, which provides job, housing and heath-care referrals, and works with Laney and Peralta college to get immigrants into English classes and career training.

This disorientation helps to explain why Ethiopian immigrants, no matter where in the Bay Area they live, congregate along Telegraph Avenue. “It’s creating a community in a way,” says Tefferi. “I think immigrants do that as a matter of course. We want to be all in the same neighborhood, so in case something happens, we can all be together, help each other.”

When Sheba Ethiopian restaurant opened on Telegraph in the 1980s, Tefferi says, local Ethiopians started going there to eat, and liked the area. The university, in particular, was a “natural draw,” Tefferi says. “Ethiopians congregate around schools. It’s like prestige, education.”

The diversity of the neighborhood was attractive as well, says Asrat. “It was very open, very international, it was very easy to mix.” So Asrat opened her shop in June 1991, and Tefferi followed, opening Café Colucci about two months later. “It just happened,” both Asrat and Tefferi say. “We congregate,” says Tefferi. “And the competition is not even spoken of as such.”

Tefferi, who lives in San Francisco, says she loves coming to work on Telegraph. “It’s like traveling to Ethiopia–I come here and it’s like I’m home,” she says. “I feel very complete when I’m here. I’m surrounded with the music, the spices, the food. I have the best of both worlds, and I’m always thankful for that.”
—-

Related from Tadias Magazine:
Addis Ethiopian Restaurant: The Best Zilzil Tibs in the Bay

Assegid Gessesse’s mixed media prints

Above: Assegid Gessesse at Green Desk in Brooklyn’s
DUMBO neighborhood, Tuesday, November 18, 2008
(Tadias)

By Tadias Staff

Published: Friday, November 21, 2008

New York (Tadias) – The Green Desk Wall Space, in Brooklyn’s DUMBO neighborhood recently exhibited Assegid Gessesse’s spirited mixed media prints. “Working in a style that is both abstracted and photographic, Assegid, creates works of atmospheric beauty and emotional poignancy,” writes Gabriel Abraham, Production Designer and Art Director, in his short review of the artist’s work. “His work uses graphics, drawings, photographs and news clippings to create layers of images that evoke history, mythology, mystery and beauty along with conflict of dislocation and alienation.”

“I am a memory tourist,” Gessesse says referring to our favorite print entitled ‘Addis Abeba’ – a vivid collage reflecting architecture, the urban/rural dichotomy, and use of space.


Addis Abeba by Assegid Gessesse

“All the iconic images, including the Volkswagen, that are incorporated in that work are what I remember as a child. The woman represents the city. ‘Addis Abeba’ for me is a women. And the spelling is intentional, that’s the way I think Addis Abeba should be spelled. ”

Born in 1964 in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia, and trained in Canada as an Artist and Designer, Gessesse draws from both African and Western influences – a blend of classical, secessionist, and contemporary. He has exhibited his work extensively in North America and Africa, and was recently commissioned by the Open Society Institute’s East Africa branch to create a series of images under the theme “Freedom Now.” Gessesse currently resides in New York City.

Reviewing Gessesse’s current exhibit, Abraham notes: “By definition, ephemeral, the quality of Assegid’s prints recalls the fleeting nature of life, and most importantly, memory. His prints eloquently capture the transience of diaspora, recollections of the past, preserving only hints of a moment in time, while allowing all but the scene’s essence to fade into abstraction. Assegid gives a particularly touching commentary on the passing of time and life.”

If you missed the Brooklyn show, you have another chance to view or purchase the art work at Settepanni’s in Harlem (196 Lenox Ave at 120th street, 917.492.4806). The show will be on display for one more week.



Miriam Makeba will always be “Mama Afrika”

Editorial by Mmegi Newspaper, Botswana

Though she was an African, she was a citizen of the world.

In Africa, particularly, the sorrow was too much to bear. Makeba was not fondly known as Mama Afrika for nothing. She had come to be an embodiment of the African cultural heritage. Her music transcended the artificial borders that divide the African continent.

From the backstreets of West Africa and East Africa to the hallowed halls of the African Union in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, Mama Afrika’s music has always been at home.

She was true to her African roots in that she successfully managed to share her African music with the world. She was indeed, one of the pioneers of what has come to be known as world music, but with a distinctively African feel.

Makeba’s career path should serve as a guidance and an inspiration to the current crop of African musicians and future generations. The lesson she has left behind is that African music can borrow from other genres, without losing its identity.

Another important aspect is the message in her song. In the true spirit of African heritage, Mama Afrika’s music entertained and caught the attention of listeners without the use of vulgar language. Nowadays production of good music has been supplemented with vulgarism. Obscene language is erroneously described as ‘artistic’. What a shame.

The last lesson Makeba has bestowed on the future African musical generations is that an artist can have a purpose in life. Makeba was part of the liberation struggle that was being waged in her homeland against the diabolical apartheid regime. Instead of using the gun, she used the best and effective weapon at her disposal – her voice and music.

May her soul rest in peace.

Today’s Thought: “Death is not the greatest loss in life. The greatest loss is what dies inside us while we live.” – Norman Cousins



Books and donkeys: Kids have questions for a CNN Hero

Above: Children have questions for Yohannes
Gebregeorgis, who spoke Wednesday at
Arrowwood Elementary School in Highlands
Ranch. Gebregeorgis is creating libraries in
Ethiopia – 17 so far – including one pulled
by a donkey to remote villages.
(George Kochaniec Jr / The Rocky)

Rocky Mountain News

By James B. Meadow
Published November 13, 2008 at 12:05 a.m.

Two hundred and twenty-five small bodies parade into a small gym to learn a big lesson from the Slayer of the Dragon of Illiteracy.

They listen raptly – a strangely attentive a group of 5-, 6- and 7-year-olds – to the words of the soft-spoken black man who grew up across the ocean, a million miles away from the comforts they take for granted. A man who had risked much to flee his turbulent land and then, 21 years later, sacrificed even more to return, to bring a precious gift for the “beautiful children” who lived in the Land of 1,000 Despairs.

The man is Yohannes Gebregeorgis. He is 60 years old. He is Ethiopian. He is on a crusade to spread literacy across a nation where 67 percent of the people can’t read. He is doing it with books, thousands and thousands of books. He is doing it by creating libraries, 17 to date – one pulled by a donkey to remote villages – each one bringing magic to young minds. He is doing it through Ethiopia Reads, the Denver-based nonprofit he founded 10 years ago.


Yohannes Gebregeorgis speaks to children Wednesday
at Arrowwood Elementary School in Highlands Ranch.
(Photo by George Kochaniec Jr / The Rocky)

He is also “a wonderful man. I love him. Ohmigosh, what he has done is amazing – bringing books to all those children. Going back to his native land. Nobody does that. Nobody goes back to that kind of poverty. But he did!”

The person speaking is Mary Beth Henze. She is a teacher at Arrowwood Elementary School in Highlands Ranch, a modern facility unlike anything in Ethiopia.

A penny, a nickel at a time

Henze is the one who galvanized the students into raising $2,300 for Ethiopia Reads, a penny, a nickel, a quarter at a time. She is the one “completely excited” that Gebregeorgis has come to her school on a bright Wednesday to speak.

But she isn’t alone.

“I believe in him! To bring books to so many children is phenomenal,” says Janet Lee, a librarian at Regis University.

Lee believed in Gebregeorgis so much she nominated him to be a CNN Hero, the cable news network’s competition to honor those who make outstanding contributions to the world. Out of 4,000 nominees, Gebregeorgis made the final 10, after online voting. Later this month, he will find out if he is the top vote-getter, the one who wins $100,000, the one who is 2008’s ultimate hero.

But he says, “The real heroes are the children who collect pennies, the people who help us bring books to Ethiopia.” His words are strung closely together, his voice strong but gentle, a waterfall washing over smooth stones. “Yes, it was my idea, my dream,” he says, “but the people who help us, they are the dream realizers.”

But it started with the dreamer.

Novel changed his life

He was born in the small town of Negelle Borena, the son of an illiterate cattle merchant who insisted his only child be educated. Gebregeorgis traveled 375 miles to the nearest high school. But it wasn’t textbooks that detonated his imagination.

When he was 19, a friend loaned him a copy of a romance novel called Love Kitten. It was the first book he ever read for “pleasure,” and it changed his life forever.

Now he began to read voraciously, any literature he could find, and “books became my friends.” Books “gave me strength, a purpose for living.” Gradually, he came to realize “literacy has the power to make people better.”

But before he could make others better, he had to save his own life. In 1981, a coup toppled the government. Gebregeorgis’ political stance didn’t fit in, and he fled Ethiopia. He made it to Sudan then to the U.S. Along the way to becoming a citizen in 1989, he earned a bachelor’s and two master’s degrees in library science.

Land of 1,000 Despairs

In 1995, he got a job at the San Francisco Library’s main branch, in the children’s library. He loved the job but was saddened to realize that while the library had children’s books in 75 languages, none were in Amharic, the official tongue of Ethiopia.

That changed in 2001 with Silly Mammo, Gebregeorgis’ retelling of an Ethiopian folk tale, the first Amharic-English book in the U.S. But by then, he was looking beyond San Francisco.

The rise of a less hostile government had allowed him to revisit Ethiopia. He saw a land “devastated” by years of war and decades of poverty. He saw “beautiful children” in tattered clothing, hungry, without hope, without toys. Without books.

He came back to the U.S. and founded Ethiopia Reads. Slowly, on a shoestring, he began collecting books and donations, finding backers. He found enough in Denver to base his headquarters here. But all along, he was preparing for his big move.

In 2002, with his two young sons and 15,000 books, he left behind the comforts of his adopted land moved back to his homeland. “People said, ‘Are you crazy?’ But this was my missionary calling.”

People were right to ask. Ethiopia was a world of wrenching poverty and famine. AIDS was rampant; the average life span was 41 years. Gebregeorgis called it “The Land of 1,000 Despairs.”

He rented a house in Addis Ababa, lived upstairs and turned the downstairs into the Shola Children’s Library, naming it for the fig tree, a traditional gathering place for Ethiopians. The first year alone, he brought books into the lives of 12,000 children.

Book Man of Africa

Over the years that number would grow to 100,000. He would create libraries in schools that never had them. He would take a donkey cart laden with books into the hinterlands, inspiring and dazzling children with the power of literacy. He became known by different names – Donkey Librarian, Book Man of Africa and Slayer of the Dragon of Illiteracy.

He smiles when he says that – and he doesn’t smile often. How can he? There is so much to do, the “need is huge, so vast,” his work is “only a drop in the ocean.”

In the next six months, he plans to stock a dozen more school libraries, create three more “donkey libraries.” He hopes to do this because “Only through literacy can we overcome poverty.” Because “We have seen so many kids transformed.”

Because “When people are literate they can understand humanity.”

meadowj@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-2606

If you go

* What: Yohannes Gebregeorgis speaks about Ethiopia Reads.

* When: 4:30 p.m. today

* Where: Boulder Public Library, 1000 Canyon Blvd.

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt planning a trip to Ethiopia

PhotoJolie with daughter Zahara, NYC, 2007 (Purseblog.com)

Contactmusic.com

ANGELINA JOLIE and BRAD PITT are planning to take their young family on a trip to Ethiopia – to show them how to help people in the Third World.

Jolie and Pitt adopted their three-year-old daughter Zahara from the country in 2005. They have two other adopted children – Maddox, seven, from Cambodia and Pax, four, from Vietnam – as well as three biological children – Shiloh, two, and baby twins Knox and Vivienne.

The couple has already taken the kids to visit Maddox’s home country of Cambodia and now they plan to take the whole family to see the work being done in Ethiopia by their charity, the Jolie-Pitt Foundation, which is funding an AIDS centre there.

Jolie says, “They’ll (the children) be in Ethiopia in a few weeks and they won’t have everything they have here, so we show them different worlds.”

The actress hopes the experience will teach the youngsters to follow in their parents’ philanthropical footsteps.

She adds, “They help buy candy and shoes and water, then take it to the local people, hang out and talk to the kids. They see that the world isn’t balanced. Instead of preaching to them, we’re showing them and hope that sinks in – and they’ll find in themselves a desire to help strike a balance.”

Leading ladies in ‘gracious’ meeting: Michelle Obama & Laura Bush

Above: U.S. first lady Laura Bush (L) and Michelle Obama,
wife of President-elect Barack Obama, sit in the private
residence of the White House after the president-elect
and Mrs. Obama arrived for a visit in Washington,
November 10, 2008.
White House photo by Joyce N. Boghosian/Handout
(UNITED STATES).

NYT
By BRIAN KNOWLTON
Published: November 10, 2008

WASHINGTON — President-elect Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, received a warm welcome at the White House shortly before 2 p.m. Eastern time by the current occupant, President George W. Bush, a man with whom he expressed a sea of differences during the just-ended election campaign. When the president and Mrs. Bush greeted the Obamas at the driveway on the South Lawn, the women hugged and their husbands shook hands, with Mr. Obama using the two-handed greeting common among senators, with his left hand on Mr. Bush’s right arm during the handshake. The two men were dressed almost identically in dark blue suits, white shirts and blue ties. Ms. Bush wore a brown suit, and Ms. Obama a burnt-orange dress.

A few minutes after the couples entered the White House together, Mr. Bush and Mr. Obama reemerged and strolled along the colonnade past the Rose Garden to the outer entrance to the Oval Office. Mr. Obama walked just at Mr. Bush’s shoulder and appeared to be speaking animatedly, gesturing with both hands. Each of the men waved several times to reporters and others off camera.

While Ms. Bush showed Ms. Obama the White House, their husbands met for just over an hour in the Oval Office, discussing the transfer of power from Mr. Bush’s conservative Republican administration to a presumably much more liberal Democratic leadership. Read More.

Tadias Photos: Election Night in Harlem

By Tadias Staff
Photos by Jeffrey Phipps for Tadias Magazine

Updated: Tuesday, November 11, 2008

New York (Tadias) The day Barack Obama was elected President, a roar of joyful celebration broke out in the New York neighborhood of Harlem, which is historically known as the center for African American culture. The following are memorable photos from this historic day captured by Tadias Magazine’s contributing photographer Jeffrey Phipps.


Jubilant youth in Obama painted car on Harlem’s 125th street hold up photos of the
new President-Elect


A djembe drummer celebrates the evening clad in jacket adorned with the colors of
Ethiopian flag


A face-painted, flag waving African American flashes a victory sign


Traffic was brought to a standstill as youth dance waving the American flag


Americans, black and white, celebrated Barack Obama’s election on 125th Street


Mother and daughter filled with hope


Crowds danced in the streets


Kids for Obama


Vendors selling Obama T-shirts on 125th Street


The crowd burst into screams and cheers as election results are broadcast

Others dance clad in African traditional clothing


Congressman Anthony D. Weiner


Comedian DI Hughley



History: OBAMA IS NEXT PRESIDENT (VIDEO)

Photo: Barack Obama, a rookie senator from Illinois cloaked in a
mantle of hope and change, was elected America’s 44th President
Tuesday night, trouncing John McCain decisively to bring down the
curtain on eight years of Republican rule. (NY Daily News)

The New York Times: Obama Elected President as Racial Barrier Falls

Senator Barack Obama with his wife, Michelle, and Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. with his wife,
Jill, in Chicago on Tuesday night. (Damon Winter/The New York Times)

VIDEO – Memorable Laughs of 2008

By Tadias Staff

Saturday, November 1, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Time to laugh…before election day that is!

Saturday Night Live (SNL), the weekly late-night sketch comedy show based in New York City, which debuted on October 11, 1975, gave us some badly needed breaks and memorable laughs during this year’s rather intense election season. Here is a look back courtesy of MSNBC Video. Enjoy!

Video: What is the impact of Obama candidacy?

Obama’s story resonates with Bronx students
At Validus Prep, African-American and Hispanic teens are
excited, nervous

Msnbc.com asks readers to share their thoughts on what
it means to them or the country that an African-American is a
serious candidate for the presidency?

By Bill Dedman
Investigative reporter
msnbc.com
updated 11:04 a.m. ET, Fri., Oct. 31, 2008

SOUTH BRONX, N.Y. – At Validus Preparatory Academy, a new public high school in the poorest congressional district in America, students have kept journals since the early primaries, created election art, studied opinion polls in math classes, designed brochures on the issues, read memoirs by the candidates and even delivered speeches in their stead. And after the principal dashed around to plumbing supply stores for enough PVC pipe to build a voting booth, they got a chance to punch their own electronic ballots in a national mock election for students. Read more or watch the video here.

Harlem excited about Obama, but apprehensive about his chances.

Photo: Hong/AP (If elected, Sen. Barack Obama would be
America’s first black president).

BY MICHAEL SAUL
DAILY NEWS POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT

Thursday, October 30th 2008, 10:36 AM

Kevin Williams hopes Barack Obama will win on Election Day, but he isn’t convinced enough white Americans will cast a ballot to elect the nation’s first black President.

“I’m definitely skeptical – you still can’t quite trust it,” said Williams, a 40-year-old teacher, as he left the Golden Krust bakery in Harlem. “I’ll believe it when I see it. I’m still waiting for the other shoe to drop.”

Williams, who worked for a pollster in college, said he knows survey participants “are not necessarily being honest or truthful.”

Many echo his sentiment.

Dozens of black voters along Harlem’s 125th St. – Manhattan’s African-American nerve center – were enthusiastic about Obama, but apprehensive about his chances.

Obama wields a 6-point average national lead, RealClearPolitics says, and polls show he’s ahead or tied in eight key battleground states. Read More.

Ethiopians and Egyptians feud over Christianity’s Holiest Shrine in Jerusalem

Above photo: Ethiopian monks on the roof of Christianity’s
holiest shrine in Jerusalem
(Creative Commons Attribution).

More photos at Tadias Magazine
History of Ethiopian Church Presence in Jerusalem

By MATTI FRIEDMAN, Associated Press Writer

Saturday, October 25, 2008

JERUSALEM – Two rival monks are posted at all times in a rooftop courtyard at the site of Jesus’ crucifixion: a bearded Copt in a black robe and an Ethiopian sunning himself on a wooden chair, studiously ignoring each other as they fight over the same sliver of sacred space.

For decades, Coptic and Ethiopian Christians have been fighting over the Deir el-Sultan monastery, which sits atop a chapel at the ancient Church of the Holy Sepulcher. The monastery is little more than a cluster of dilapidated rooms and a passageway divided into two incense-filled chapels, an architectural afterthought alongside the Holy Sepulcher’s better-known features.

And yet Deir el-Sultan has become the subject of a feud that has gone far beyond the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City. The Ethiopians control the site, but the Egypt-based Copts say they own it and see the Ethiopians as illegal squatters.

The quarrel has erupted into brawls — in 2002, when the Coptic monk moved his chair into the shade and too close to the Ethiopians, a dozen people were hurt in the ensuing melee. And today, the Ethiopians claim the fight could result in the monastery’s collapse and even in damage to other parts of the church, one of the holiest sites in Christendom.

Since the 1970s, the Israeli government has refused to allow renovations or significant repairs at the disputed monastery until the Ethiopians and the Copts come to terms. That hasn’t happened, and the Ethiopian Church says the years of neglect have put the structure in danger. The Copts suggest the Ethiopians are merely trying to further cement their hold. Read More.

Related story from Tadias Magazine
History of Ethiopian Church Presence in Jerusalem

Wedding Bells Toll for Ethiopian Track Stars

AFP

ADDIS ABABA (AFP) — Ethiopian athletics superstars, Tirunesh Dibaba and Sileshi Sihine on Thursday announced that they will tie the knot in a gala ceremony here later this month.

The ceremony which has been dubbed as “The wedding of the Millennium” by the organisers, will be held on October 26.

“I am very happy for both of us. It’s great to have finally succeeded in the plans,” Dibaba, the double Olympic gold medallist told a news conference where she also launched her official website (www.tiruneshdibaba.net).

The pair have been seeing each other for the last few years. Read More.

Jailed Singer Teddy Afro Starts Defense

Above: Teddy Afro performing at the Rosewater Hall in San
Jose, California on January 20th, 2007. (Photos by D.J. Fitsum)
Click here to see hot shots.

Capital Ethiopia

By Muluken Yewondwossen

Tewodros Kassahun, a.k.a Teddy Afro has started his defense in the Federal High Court 8th Criminal Bench against a hit and run charge on Thursday, October 9, 2008.

His lawyer Million Assefa presented 14 witnesses and 10 documents in evidence to explain Teddy’s innocence of the charge.

On Thursday’s session 8 witnesses appeared with seven giving testimony. The 14th witness, who came from Minilik II Hospital, did not testify after the objection of the prosecutor over the translator’s accuracy, as the witness is Cuban. The Court ruled to bring aother translator for the next trial. The 14th witness was also presented as the prosecutor’s witness.

Three witnesses, his friends, explained that Teddy was with them at the time he was accused of killing a young man near the National Palace at around 1 AM in November 2006. Read more at Capital Ethiopia.

Ethiopia ‘Olympic Village’ named museum

The Age – Melbourne,Victoria,Australia

October 14, 2008 – 6:21AM

Ethiopia’s tiny village of Bekoji, which has produced some of the country’s greatest athletes, is to be inaugurated a museum in their honour, state media said on Monday.

In its first step, Ethiopian government officials, along with double Olympic gold medallist Kenenisa Bekele and the 1992 Olympic 10,000m gold medallist Derartu Tulu laid a cornerstone on a 12 hectare plot of land over the weekend, the Ethiopian News Agency (ENA) said.

“Bekoji’s athletes have been the pride of the entire country. Their achievements therefore deserve to be honoured forever,” regional president Abadula Gemeda said in a speech delivered during the ceremony on Saturday.

The town of Bekoji, 250 kilometres south of Addis Ababa, has been the main source of top-class athletes for Ethiopia since it first took part in its first Olympics in Melbourne in 1956.

Both Kenenisa and fellow double Olympic gold medallist Tirunesh Dibaba hail from the town, and, along with others, have so far brought seven Olympic gold medals and 13 world championships title.

Ethiopia, one of the world’s poorest countries, finished 18th in the medals table at the Beijing Olympics with four gold, one silver and two bronze. Read More.

Marathon Men: The Dynamic Dozen | LATimes

LATimes

By Philip Hersh
October 10, 2008

It was relatively easy to pick the top 10 women’s marathoners of all time.

After all, elite women’s marathoning is barely three decades old, a period when the women’s race was added to the program in all major global and regional championships, and top-flight invitational marathons took root in places such as New York, Chicago, London, Osaka and more.

That means you essentially are judging apples against apples.

Men’s marathoning has been around for more than a century, with several distinct eras. Before World War II, there really were only four marathons of lasting consequence: the Olympics, the European Championships, the Commonwealth Games and Boston.

And the great African runners did not begin to have a massive impact on marathoning until the mid-1980s, even if a few had become champions before then. That makes it much harder to compare. But I will use a rule I think applies to all sports comparisons: dominance of an era is a measuring stick for greatness.

And, as I wrote while ranking the women, victories in major championships, not invitationals, weigh more heavily. So here goes, with the dozen most renowned men’s marathoners:

1. Abebe Bikila, Ethiopia. The only no-brainer choice. By winning at Rome in 1960 and Tokyo in 1964, he began the African era in distance running. He set world records in both victories -– the only man since 1920 to set a world marathon record in an Olympics. Bikila won 14 of 15 marathons.

2. Frank Shorter, United States. Won Olympic gold and silver medals. His gold in 1972, when an imposter preceded him onto the track for the finish, attracted such attention it helped spur the jogging boom in the United States. Four-time winner of the prestigious Fukuoka Marathon.

3. Samuel Wanjiru, Kenya. History will tell if I have overrated Wanjiru, but he won the 2008 Olympics in a race may have redefined men’s championship marathoning tactically. Despite temperatures between 75 and 80 degrees for the final three-fourths of the race, the pace was fast from start to finish, and Wanjiru’s winning time of 2:06:32 took nearly three minutes off the 24-year-old Olympic record. It was the first time under 2:08 in any championship marathon. At 21, he is the youngest marathon gold medalist ever. Also won Fukuoka in record time for the 61-year-old race.

4. Mamo Wolde, Ethiopia. Wolde won the 1968 Olympic marathon and, at age 40, won a bronze medal four years later. He also won the first marathon at the All-Africa Games in 1973.

Read More.

How to Buy Real Estate in Ethiopia: Interview with CEO of GojoSuites

Tadias Magazine
By Tadias Staff

Published: Wednesday, October 8, 2008

New York (TADIAS) – We recently spoke with Valerie Steele, CEO of GojoSuites – a brokerage firm that sells property in Ethiopia – about the current real estate market in that country.

Prior to her current position, Steele served as the Director of International Development for the Organization of Rehabilitation and Development in Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.

Here is our interview with Valerie Steele:


Valerie Steele: CEO of GojoSuites

TADIAS: Please tell us about GojoSuites.

Steele: GojoSuites is a subsidiary of African First Real Estate Finance LLC (AFREF) and was developed to serve the Ethiopian diaspora who want to buy homes in their homeland. AFREF is currently developing additional companies that will serve diaspora from other African countries. GojoSuites has an exclusive contract with Ayat Share Company, Ethiopia’s real estate pioneer.

TADIAS: We understand that you recently relocated to Washington D.C. from Bahir Dar to become the CEO for GojoSuites. What attracted you to get involved in the real estate business in Ethiopia?

Steele: The Ethiopian real estate market, as the diaspora knows, is booming and it’s an exciting opportunity for Ethiopians around the world. When I lived in Ethiopia, I saw firsthand the development of new homes and neighborhoods with amenities only previously available in western countries. I know that the diaspora has a desire to be reconnected and I see the lack of connection between the developers and the home seekers and feel I could make a difference in bridging the gap.

TADIAS: You’ve mentioned that you have an “exclusive contract with Ayat share Company” in Ethiopia. Why only Ayat?

Steele: We chose to partner with Ayat because they are so well established and have gone through the learning curve to figure out what works and what doesn’t. With 12 years of experience and the fact that they have built and delivered more than 4,000 houses, they are truly the experts.

I spent a month with Ayat to understand the way they operate and to build the relationship with them so that we can effectively represent them in the US.

TADIAS: Why should people purchase a home in Ethiopia?

Steele: That’s a very personal decision. For some people, it is about providing a beautiful home for family members who live in Ethiopia. For others, it’s about making sure there is a place for them to return to live when they retire. And others recognize what an incredible investment it is since the Ethiopian real estate market has been hot for several years and is expected to continue to be in the foreseeable future.


Photo: Villa – single family house – in Ethiopia (courtesy of GojoSuites)


Single family villa in Ethiopia (photo courtesy of GojoSuites).

TADIAS: Who is legally eligible to buy property in Ethiopia from overseas?

Steele: Anyone who meets one of the following criteria:
1. Has Ethiopian citizenship and lives abroad
2. Foreign nationals of Ethiopian origin
3. Has Ethiopian parents

TADIAS: How affordable is a new home or apartment? What is the average price in your market?

Steele: Ayat is working hard to make housing affordable for those who have been unable to buy in the past. They are offering mortgage financing (50% financing for villas and 40% or 67% financing for apartments). And they are offering a unique plan where the buyer can lock in a price today and delay delivery of the home for up to five years. This gives the buyer more time to save money so that they can finance less of the cost of the house and save interest.

Ayat apartments start at $42,951 for a two bedroom 62m2 home. Villas (single family houses) start at $144,941 for a two bedroom, 72m2 home. These prices include the 15% VAT and land lease. Also, Ayat is offering 5% discount off the base price (not including VAT) of a new apartment home in Ayat Mender until October 31. The prices for all Ayat homes will increase November 9 so, for people who are ready to buy, now is a good time.


Apartment building illustration (Apartments are currently under construction).

Some people tell us the prices are high but those are individuals who have not been to Ethiopia for many years and do not realize how prices have changed since they were last there. In fact, the customers who buy Ayat homes are quite satisfied with the prices and, to our knowledge, Ayat homes are actually priced below market rates.

TADIAS: Are there are any U.S. taxes, fees or penalties that potential customers would need to pay Uncle Sam for owning land in Ethiopia? Also are there any hidden fees from the Ethiopian government that we need to know about?

Steele: We are not aware of any taxes, fees or penalties that would be owed to the US government for owning property in Ethiopia but we always advise people to check with their tax person or accountant on matters such as these.

As far as fees from the Ethiopian government, there is value added tax (VAT) which is 15%. VAT is included in the published price of all Ayat homes. There is also the title deed transferring fee of 6%, which is not included in the published price.

TADIAS How does financing work for U.S. residents?

Steele: Prospective buyers have several options. They can pay cash as a lump sum or on an installment basis as their home is built. The final payment is made at the time the home is turned over to the buyer.

Or, as I mentioned above, they can select from Ayat’s financing options. Ayat lets the customer choose the length of the mortgage for up to 30 years. We are not aware of anyone else offering a financing option this long.

5% will lock in the price of any villa or apartment for up to 90 days after the expiration of that price. 10% is needed to get a contract on a specific property.

TADIAS One of the biggest complaints we hear from Diaspora homeowners and investors is that new houses are never completed within the time frame that clients are promised. Is that a problem that people should expect?

Steele: Ayat and other builders experienced delays in the past due to limited availability of raw materials, such as cement, steel and other imported construction items, lack of access to construction financing and outdated construction techniques. GojoSuites and Ayat are aware of this issue and are creating solutions to overcome it. For example, GojoSuites is partnering with Ayat to identify new approaches to construction that can speed up the process. And Ayat is researching the potential for building their own cement factory so they will be less reliant on external vendors. Initiatives such as these are giving Ayat the confidence to guarantee us there will be no delays.

TADIAS: What advice would you give to someone who is considering acquiring a primary or second home in Ethiopia?

Steele: We are not in a position to give advice to prospective buyers but we can reiterate what we know from those who have chosen to buy a home. It’s a wonderful way to connect with your homeland and help or be near to the people you love. Having lived in Ethiopia, I have a deep appreciation for the closeness of families and the beauty of many local traditions, so I understand why people who grew up in Ethiopia want to reconnect. And it’s a great investment opportunity.

TADIAS: What is the most challenging issue you face as a Real Estate Professional for property in Ethiopia?

Steele: Helping customers overcome the negative stigma that was associated with home real estate development in the past. Real problems occurred and, though Ethiopia has not reached the level of speed and predictability that exists with home construction in the US, it’s come a long ways and we expect that improvements will continue over time.

TADIAS: Tell us one of your client success stories or an interesting moment in your profession.

Steele: A woman who recently visited our office has been helping out an older woman and a young orphaned girl who live in Addis Ababa, both of whom have no families. Her dream is to buy a home for them where they can live together and become a family for each other. Another couple has children that are nearly grown and they want to buy a home in Addis so their sons can visit and become more connected with their Ethiopian heritage. These are examples of the fun part of my job of making people’s dreams come true.

TADIAS: How do you expect the housing market in Ethiopia will be affected by the global meltdown in real estate?

Steele: So far so good! The Ethiopian real estate market continues to grow at an astounding rate, despite all of the unprecedented and shocking situation in home real estate in the US. In fact, we wonder if it will make buying a home in Ethiopia even more attractive because people feel safer investing there than they do in the US right now.

TADIAS: How do you advertise and how can potential buyers learn about your company and the services you offer?

Steele: We are advertising in Ethiopian media in major US cities where Ethiopians live. In October, we are having free seminars every Sunday afternoon in our DC headquarters to provide detailed information about the opportunities available. In 2009, we will go on tour to the major US cities where Ethiopians live.

For more information, call us at 202-234-gojo [4656] or visit our website at: www.gojosuites.com.

TADIAS: Is there anything else you would like to share with our readers?

Steele There are many Ethiopians from the diaspora moving back to Ethiopia for several reasons. These include medical doctors, IT experts, engineers and entrepreneurs. They don’t want to deal with the hassle of buying houses from Addis Ababa brokers (“delalas”) so they come to us for a hassle free experience.

We are very excited about the opportunity to meet you and get to know you so that we can help make your dream of owning a home in Ethiopia come true!


Publisher’s note: GojoSuites advertises on Tadias Magazine.

Tadias Magazine Featured on VOA

From the Editor’s Desk:
Tseday Alehegn

Updated: Tuesday, October 7, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Tadias Magazine, the leading lifestyle and business publication devoted exclusively to the Ethiopian-American community, was featured on Washington D.C. based Voice of America’s weekly Amharic radio program on Sunday, October 5, 2008.

VOA’s Amharic journalist and international broadcaster Alula Kebede interviewed Tadias Founder & Publisher, Liben Eabisa. The program focused on the challenges and milestones of the magazine since its inception in San Jose, California five years ago. Tadias joined Google’s exclusive news index network last August.

You may listen to the audio of the interview at VOA.com. Select the “Evening Program” for Sunday (Audio available until October 12, 2008). The Tadias interview comes after a brief world news and coversation with filmmaker Haile Gerima. Click here and enjoy!

San Francisco Sunday Oct 5: Free Ethiopian Cultural Show–Circus– & Aikido

Source: Awassa Children’s Project and Aiki Extensions, Inc.

Updated: Saturday, October 4, 2008

San Francisco – On Sunday, October 5, come see Tesfaye Tekelu, dance and aikido instructor, and Meshu Tamrat, theater director and gymnastic trainer, as they present a variety of colorful performances never before seen in the United States.

Their five-week nationwide tour promotes the Awassa Youth Campus. This unique center offers a range of learning opportunities for young at-risk students, through dance, theater, music, art, academic tutoring, and the discipline and nonviolence education of aikido. Its OneLove Theater carries out HIV/AIDS awareness campaigns through free public performances all over Ethiopia.

With your help and our collective hope we can sustain and nourish this mission– assisting children orphaned by HIV/AIDS, educating the region about HIV/AIDS prevention, and offering alternatives to violence in the solution of social problems.

Event Detail: Sunday, October 5, 2008, 7:00pm–PERFORMANCE at THEATER ARTAUD
450 Florida Street, San Francisco, CA 94110, 9:00pm–RECEPTION at the CIRCOLO LOUNGE
500 Florida Street.

For more info, contact Adoria – 415-516-2231 or Kris (krislefan@gmail.com) 323-387-2770.

Video | Atlanta Doctors to Help Build Children’s Hospital in Ethiopia

MyFOX Atlanta

ATLANTA — A group of Atlanta doctors are teaming up to make a difference in the lives of children a world away. The Gemini Healthcare Group will be heading to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to help build a children’s hospital.

Click here to watch the video at MyFOX Atlanta.

Related Tadias Stories:
GHCG Fundraiser in Atlanta to Benefit the Building of Children’s Hospital in Ethiopia
Ethiopian Health Care Forum in D.C.

Ethiopia: Skilled Diaspora Medics Arrive to Provide Medical Training

International Office of Migration (IOM)
Photo from Tadias file: A Doctor’s Memoir:
Ethiopia’s Troubled Health Care System

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — A group 105 doctors and nurses, many of them members of the Ethiopian diaspora in North America, are this week travelling to Ethiopia to provide vital medical care in four hospitals in the capital, Addis Ababa. They will also share their knowledge with local health care professionals.

A group of 38 health care professionals, members of Operation Heart Beat, composed of Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) specialists and including members of the Friends of Ethiopia group, have already arrived in the country with state of the art medical equipment.

A second group of 67 medics, members of the Ethiopian North American Health Professionals Association (ENAHPA), will be travelling to Ethiopia later this week.

“These doctors, nurses and other medical professionals are participating in IOM’s Migration for Development in Ethiopia or MIDEth programme, a capacity building initiative aimed at strengthening the government’s institutional capacities to address some of this country’s acute human resources constraints,” explains Charles Kwenin, IOM’s Chief of Mission in Addis Ababa.

The medics will deliver specialized health services, including cardiac surgery, pacemaker implants, oral and maxillofacial and reconstructive surgery, neurosurgery, ENT surgery and tele-opthamology.

The mission will not only reach hundreds of Ethiopians with state-of-the-art medical services, but will also assist the country’s health sector professionals with hands-on training that will improve the standard of health care in major Ethiopian hospitals.

IOM’s MidEth programme also extends beyond the health sector. Later this month two professors will travel to Ethiopia to teach at Addis Ababa University. One, a business professor, will remain in the country for three months. The other, an information technology specialist, will lead a one-month seminar for PhD students.

IT specialist Dr. Nega Gebreyesus, a senior manager at a US Government agency, says that he always wanted to take part in a knowledge transfer scheme between the Ethiopian diaspora and his country of origin. “The flexible and short-term nature of this programme works well with my work and family responsibilities. These short-term trips can be complemented by remote technology-based engagements,” he says.

IOM is working with the Government of Ethiopia (the Expatriates Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Capacity Building and Ministry of Finance and Economic Development), with financial support from the UN Development Programme (UNDP), to provide travel and other assistance to the experts, who are all based in the USA and Canada.

Ethiopian Airlines is also supporting the initiative, providing discounted airfares and bigger baggage allowances to transport some of the medical equipment.

Source: IOM

Shooting of Ethiopian Restaurant Manager in DC Mystifies Friends | Video

Updated: 6:36 pm (WATCH VIDEO BELOW)
WJLA/ABC 7 News

Mon September 29, 2008

WASHINGTON – A popular restaurant manager shot by a longtime friend Sunday night says he has no idea what provoked the attack, according to another of the victim’s friends.

According to witnesses, the gunman entered Meskerem Ethiopian restaurant as usual and greeted the manager, Mahaba Mohamed, with a hug. Everything seemed normal between the longtime friends, according to people who knew them.

“I know both of them, they grow up together, they’re like one family,” said Rezene Sium, a friend of Mohamed’s.

Sium said he was outside at the time of the shooting, but witnesses told him there was no provocation. At some point, the gunman drew the pistol and fired one shot in Mohamed’s neck. After shooting Mohamed, the man fired two shots in the air and then shot himself in the head, police and witnesses said.

D.C. police say they have no plans to close the restaurant or suspend its liquor license because it has no history of violence.

Read the story at WJLA

Watch the video here.

Another Dynamo: Ethiopia’s Seboka Breaks Women’s Course Record in Toronto Waterfront Marathon

The Canadian Press

September 29th, 2008

TORONTO — Ethiopia’s Mulu Seboka broke a course record in the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon over the weekend.

She completed the 42.195-kilometre race in two hours 29 minutes five seconds Sunday to break the women’s course record by more than four minutes. Olena Shurkhno of Ukraine was second in 2:30:12 while previous record-holder Asha Gigi of Ethiopia was third in 2:33:24.


Photo credit: runnersweb.com

The top Canadian female was Suzanne Evans of New Westminster, B.C., who was ninth among the women at 2:44:22.

Kenneth Mungara finished two seconds ahead of fellow Kenyan Peter Kiprotich to win the men’s race in 2:11.

Photo credit: runnersweb.com

Read More.

Cover photo: 8 months ago: Ethiopia’s Mulu Seboka smiles after winning the Mumbai Marathon 2008 in Mumbai, India, Sunday, Jan 20, 2008 (AP)

Related: Chief Superintendent Dibaba

Tirunesh Dibaba at a ceremony in Addis Ababa (Kassahun Yilma)

IAAF

Friday, 26 September 2008

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia- The list of honours Ethiopian runner Tirunesh Dibaba has earned in her short, but illustrious career already has many of her rivals running for minor positions when they line up against the double Olympic 5000m/10,000m champion: double World 5000m and 10000m champion; world indoor and outdoor 5000m record holder; and three-time World Cross Country long course champion.

The latest addition to Dibaba’s incredible CV came yesterday evening when her club, the Prisons Police, bestowed the rank of Chief Superintendent for her services to club and country.

Aged just 23, Dibaba, who will this year marry long-time fiancée and fellow club mate Sileshi Sihine, has not only amassed major titles and World records, but has also quickly risen up prisons police ranks.

She may be nicknamed the Baby Faced Destroyer, but there was nothing “baby faced” about the manner in which Dibaba received her latest honour.

Dibaba marched all the way from her seat to the podium at a ceremony held on Thursday evening saluted Maeregu Habtemariam, State Minister for Federal Affairs, who bestowed the new rank on her shoulders. She then saluted Habtemariam and marched back to her seat to the amusement of guests and the media.

Read More.

105 Years of U.S. – Ethiopia Relations: 1903-2008

Tadias Editorial
Above photo: President Kennedy and Haile Selassie during
a parade honoring the Emperor. Washington, D.C.
(Date Photographed: October 1, 1963)

New York (Tadias) – 2008 marks the 105th year since the commencement of official diplomatic relations between the governments of the United States of America and Ethiopia. The forging of these relations was all the more historic in that viewing Africa as within the European sphere of influence, the US had virtually no relations with the continent at the time, and would not until well after World War II. With the exception of Liberia, founded in 1847 by freed American slaves, and white-ruled South Africa, no other black African country was on the U.S. diplomatic radar at the time. In this sense, then, Ethiopia really was the first black African country that the United States ever befriended.

For over a century now following the signing of a commercial treaty between President Theodore Roosevelt and Emperor Menelik II on December 27th, 1903, close relations between the two countries have endured nearly uninterrupted. During the long reign of Emperor Haile Selassie I in Ethiopia, the country accounted for about half of all the military and development assistance lent by the United States to Black Africa and often hosted the largest detachment of Peace Corps volunteers on the continent.


Eleanor Roosevelt and Haile Selassie at Hyde Park, New York, 05/30/1954
(National Archives and Records Administration)

Even during the seventeen-year reign of the now-deposed Mengistu Haile Mariam, Ethiopia was the beneficiary of the largest disbursement of food aid extended by the U.S. to Africa. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989, the United States brokered Ethiopia’s transition to the post-Cold War world order and has remained its closest and most influential western ally since.

While the geo-strategic significance of the Horn of Africa has always constituted an important consideration in the launching and maintenance of these relations, some of the country’s unique attributes, like its primeval Judaeo-Christian and Moslem roots and nearly all-encompassing socio-cultural heritages have also endeared the country to Americans inducing strong people to people bonds that go well beyond formal state to state relations. Today, Ethiopians in the U.S. make up one of the largest groups of African immigrants.

Equally important and of particular historical note are the past and continuing bonds between Ethiopia and the African American Community. Relations between the African-American diaspora and Ethiopia predate 1903. The nation’s triumph over Italian colonial aspirants at the battle of Adwa in the nineteenth century inspired black nationalist leaders and advocates of freedom throughout the continent and the new world. While some founding pan-Africanists and pioneering black scholars raised slogans like “back to Ethiopia”, and the only independent black country in the western hemisphere at the time, Haiti, established contact with the Empire early on, at every challenging turn during the nation’s troubled entry and ongoing transition to modernity in the 20th. and 21st centuries, African Americans have stood by them, whether it be to fight fascism or to combat famine and AIDS.

A series of articles to commemorate 105th anniversary of U.S. – Ethiopia relations will be published on Tadias Magazine between now and January 2009. The papers are primarily designed as a review and rerecording of the remarkable historical ties between the two countries and a dialogue to pin point areas where continuing cooperation can yield beneficial results. It will include reflections by former Ambassadors/Diplomats from both countries and discussions by several scholars from across the country. If you feel you can contribute an article to fit the editorial calendar, please contact us at info@tadias.com.

Gebrselassie Breaks Marathon Record | CNN Video

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Photo: Wolfgang Kumm/European Pressphoto Agency
Published: September 28, 2008
Filed at 6:17 a.m. ET

BERLIN (AP) — Haile Gebrselassie broke his own marathon world record on Sunday, becoming the first runner to finish under 2 hours, 4 minutes.

The Ethiopian clocked 2:03:59 to win his third straight Berlin Marathon, beating the mark of 2:04:26 he set last year over the same flat course. He also became the first runner to win the race three times.

”Today, I’m so, so, so happy. Everything was perfect today,” Gebrselassie said.

Running under clear, sunny skies in mild temperature, Gebrselassie paced himself well and controlled the race from the start.

The 35-year-old Gebrselassie was way out front as passed through the Brandenburg Gate and ran to the finish line to applause from the crowd lining the route.

Gebrselassie said his training in the buildup to the race was hindered by an injury.

”I had a small calf muscle problem and I stopped for a week, and then I started again a week ago,” he said. ”Then today I had, you know, some doubts … but it was really very good.”

Read more at NYT

New Scramble in Africa: Foreigners Farm for Themselves

Los Angeles Times
By Edmund Sanders, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Photo: Ahmed Mohamed Abdalla, 80, farmer in Wad Rawah,
Sudan. (Edmund Sanders / Los Angeles Times)

September 27, 2008

WAD RAWAH, SUDAN — Africa’s abundant natural resources have long invited foreign exploitation.

Over generations, foreign empires and companies stripped the continent of its gold and diamonds, then its oil. Rubber and ivory were plundered from Congo. Even Africa’s people were exploited: captured and sold into slavery abroad.

Now foreigners are enjoined in a new scramble in Africa. The latest craze? Food. Amid a global crisis that for a time this year doubled prices for wheat, corn, rice and other staples, some of the world’s richest nations are coming to Africa to farm, hoping to turn the global epicenter of malnutrition into a breadbasket for themselves.

Read the full story here.

Ethiopia, for example, is marketing its farmland to Saudi Arabia, yet the Horn of Africa nation has a history of famine and is currently combating serious drought. Under such circumstance, foreign growers planning to export food could face potential protests, even riots, from hungry locals, experts said. And even as it tries to lure the foreign investment, the government recently slapped a ban on all food exports in response to domestic shortages.

“It would be unimaginable for a foreign investor in Ethiopia now to simply ship out large amounts of grain,” Von Braun said.

But he stressed that the foreign partnerships should benefit everyone by increasing worldwide food production. “We should not look at this trend with alarm. The more capital that finds its way into agriculture, the [bigger] the total pie.”

Read More.

Who Won The Debate? Have Your Say

Photo: Watching the debate at the Apollo Theater in Harlem.
(NYT)

By Tadias Staff

New York (Tadias) – The New York Times editorial board writes: “The first presidential debate could not have come at a better time. We were afraid that the serious question of picking a new president in a time of peril, at home and abroad, was going to disappear in a fog of sophomoric attack ads, substance-free shouting about change and patriotism, and unrelenting political posturing.”

The paper also points out that Obama won the debate on the economy and that McCain projected an image of a man from a different time in history:

“Mr. McCain fumbled his way through the economic portion of the debate, while Mr. Obama seemed clear and confident. Mr. McCain was more fluent on foreign affairs, and scored points by repeatedly calling Mr. Obama naïve and inexperienced,” the NYT editorial said.

“But Mr. McCain’s talk of experience too often made him sound like a tinny echo of the 20th century. At one point, he talked about how Ronald Reagan’s “S.D.I.” helped end the cold war. We suspect that few people under the age of 50 caught the reference. If he was reaching for Reagan’s affable style, he missed by a mile, clenching his teeth and sounding crotchety where Reagan was sunny and avuncular.”

As to the stage performance of the two candidates: “Mr. Obama has improved as a debater but needs to work on his counterpunch. Still, when Mr. McCain suggested that Mr. Obama was imprudent for talking publicly about attacking Al Qaeda sites in Pakistan, Mr. Obama deftly parried by reminding voters that his rival once jokingly sang a song about bombing Iran. ”

Did you watch the debate? What did you think?

Street & Hospital Named After Tirunesh Dibaba & Kenenisa Bekele

Ethiopia names a hospital, street after Beijing double
gold medal winners

Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) – Ethiopia on Wednesday named a hospital and a street after Tirunesh Dibaba and Kenenisa Bekele respectively who brought two gold medals each in the 5,000m and 10,000m games in the Beijing Olympics.

Kenenisa Street is located around the same street named after Haile Gebresilassie, another hero in athletics for over 15 years.

The Hospital named after Dibaba is located around the outskirt of Addis Ababa in Kality.

The Tirunesh-Beijing Hospital is under construction under a Chinese and Ethiopian government joint investment.

The Addis Ababa city administration also awarded various prizes to the athletes who won medals for Ethiopia. Dibaba and Bekele received $10,000 each.

Source: African Press Agency

Obama Bounce, Part II

First Read: The day in politics by NBC News for NBC News
Photo: Family affair – Barack and Michelle with their daughters
Malia and Sasha (Daily Mail)

September 24th, 2008

The latest Washington Post/ABC poll has Obama with a clear nine-point lead nationally over McCain, 52%-43% — fueled by the current concerns about the economy. “More voters trust Obama to deal with the economy, and he currently has a big edge as the candidate who is more in tune with the economic problems Americans now face. He also has a double-digit advantage on handling the current problems on Wall Street, and as a result, there has been a rise in his overall support.” In addition, a new Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg survey has Obama leading McCain 47%-35% among registered voters on the question of who would do a better job handling the economic troubles. Heads up: The latest NBC/Wall Street Journal comes out tonight at 6:30 pm ET. Will it match these numbers or show something else? By the way, what moves numbers more in the polls — voters changing their minds or the number of Democrats vs. Republicans that are included in the sample? You know the answer. Read More.

Enkutatash in Boston: A diverse Ethiopan Gathering

The Boston Globe
By Jennifer Schwartz
Photo: Patricia McDonnell for the Globe

September 21, 2008

American parents with adopted Ethiopian children who attended last Saturday’s Ethiopian New Year celebration in Cambridge’s Central Square forgot to adjust to “African time.”

Though the printed program slated the welcome ceremony to begin at 6 p.m., the Ethiopians knew it wouldn’t get underway until “at least 8,” said Binyam Tamene, the event organizer and director of the Ethiopian Community Mutual Assistance Alliance.

“You could clearly see the huge change in our community because half the crowd showed up according to the schedule, which Africans never do,” Tamene joked in his office last week.

The “Enkutatash” celebration – which drew more than 500 people for traditional food, dance, music, and ceremonies in celebration of the Julian calendar year 2001, which is used in Ethiopia – showcased a mixed crowd, signaling that the Ethiopian community in New England is expanding from a tight-knit core of refugees who fled war and political persecution in the 1980s to a more diverse and younger demographic, including adopted children.

“Adoption today is different,” said Tamene, explaining the growth. “Parents think it’s important to involve the kids in their homeland culture, and the parents want to learn, too. On the other side, Ethiopians want to feel like they fit in this new society. Hopefully, we can give each other a mutual sense of belonging.” Read More.

Conversations with an Ethiopian-American Obama Organizing Fellow

By Tadias Staff

Published: Tuesday, September 16, 2008

New York (Tadias) – We recently spoke with Washington, D.C. resident Kedist Geremaw, a health care administrator and one of the 3,600 individuals who were selected and trained as an Obama Organizing Fellow this summer.

According to the Obama-Biden campaign website, the Fellows are “trained on the basics of organizing & campaign fundamentals and then placed in a community to carry out grassroots activities.” Their purpose? To encourage “a new generation of leadership that believes, like Senator Obama, that real change comes from the ground up.” Individuals who pass the highly selective process end up working a minimum of 30 hours per week alongside other grassroots leaders and the Obama campaign staff.

Kedist Geremaw (whose daughter Naomi Senbet, a 2004 Kids-Week Jeopardy contestant, also featured on Tadias along with Naomi’s father Professor Lemma W. Senbet) says she was sold on the idea of becoming a Fellow after reading Obama’s memoir, Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance.

Geremaw hopes Obama will become the next President of the United States. She recounts her initial introduction to the man. “Some time ago, someone suggested a book called Dreams From my Father, and after I was done reading, I went out and purchased Obama’s second book: The Audacity of Hope. I was hooked!! When he declared his intention to run for the presidency, I jumped on the bandwagon and joined the D.C. for Obama group,” she says. She took a road trip to Denver to hear Senator Obama’s historic acceptance speech on August 28th at Invesco Field.

“It was a historical and unbelievable experience,” she recounts with excitement. “There wasn’t a dry eye in the stadium; there was hugging, high fiving, flag waving, cheering. There were people of all backgrounds, colors, ages. It was unlike the other campaign.” “In Denver,” she concludes, “people were unified under one cause and a future President.”


Kedist Geremaw at Senator Obama’s historic acceptance speech on August 28
at the Invesco Field at Mile High in Denver, CO.

Geremaw had worked for Ethiopian Television prior to immigrating to the United States. “As a Washington, DC resident I have been troubled by the lack of representation in both Houses – the Congress and the US Senate. This started my journey to greater political involvement. I have been part of a community of grassroots organizers for many years” she says.

“‘No man is an island entire of himself’,” she adds quoting John Donne, “so I come to this campaign with the spirit of enthusiasm of a grassroots organizer hoping to make a contribution to my community, my country and my world.” As a health care worker, Geremew sees health disparities every day. “And as an informed citizen,” she says, ” I see an unnecessary war which has alienated our country from the rest of the world.”

Asked about the possibility of Ethiopian Americans swinging the vote in states like Virginia, where the election is expected to be close, Geremaw’s answer is an emphatic ‘yes.’

“If we go back and look at what happened in 2000 the gap between the two candidates was so minimal, with the high number of Ethiopians living in Virginia, the swing vote is a reality within our reach. The answer is yes, yes, and yes,” she says confidently.

Does she have time to collaborate with the swelling Ethiopians for Obama movement?

“I am very much familiar with the effort of Ethiopians for Obama,” she replies. “I would like to take this opportunity to thank them for choosing me as person of the week for my involvement in the campaign. They are working tirelessly doing voter registration by going to where our Ethiopian community congregates including churches and restaurants.”

She also mentions the annual pilgrimage to the Ethiopian soccer tournament which took place in early July.

“There was a lot of work done at the Ethiopian soccer tournament early this summer. These young energetic Ethiopian Americans are working hard, day in and day out” she adds.

And about the recent McCain-Palin surge in the polls?

“You know what? I am the most optimistic person. I have this belief in what is at hand. It is like a wave and nothing will stop it. But the reality is between now and November things can happen which may change the course. Our obligation is to stay focused in our work and commitment,” she says.

Geremew then quotes Eleanor Roosevelt: “‘The future belongs to those who believe in beauty of their dreams’. To make the dream a reality we as citizens need to register and VOTE.” “It is our civic duty,” she emphasizes, ” that is the only way to bring profound change.”

Geremaw, who tells us that she has incorporated the American culture of volunteerism into her lifestyle, believes that getting involved is the only way to make a difference. “A lot of my close friends complain at times about the little time I spend with them. Every time I am away from my professional duties my time is spent on volunteerism. I love it and it is rewarding. Your horizon, your network, your knowledge is enhanced by these experiences,” she concludes.

“When the founding fathers wrote the masterpiece that is our constitution, they did not foresee the great influx of new citizens, like you and I, that have arrived from every corner of the globe, and that now make up the beautiful fabric of this nation. As we assimilate and enjoy its many benefits we must also assume our share of the responsibilities of civic duty and volunteerism.”

There is much for Geremew to accomplish as an Obama Organizing Fellow, and the creativity, dedication, and optimism that she and her colleagues are displaying is inspiring, commendable, and contagious.

Angelina And Brad Establish Ethiopian Clinic Named For Zahara

People | September 14, 2008 10:12 AM
Photo – Jolie with daughter Zahara, NYC, 2007 (Purseblog.com)

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s Jolie-Pitt Foundation has made a $2 million donation to the Global Health Committee to establish a center to aid children affected by tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia.

The center will be modeled after the Cambodian Health Committee’s Maddox Chivan Children’s Center in Cambodia, where children receive medical, education and social services.

“Our goal is to transfer the success we have had in Cambodia to Ethiopia where people are needlessly dying of tuberculosis, a curable disease, and HIV/AIDS, a treatable disease,” Jolie said in a statement.

As in Cambodia, where the couple named the center after their eldest child, the Ethiopian branch will be named for Zahara, 3, who was adopted from Ethiopia.

Read the whole story here.

Haile Gerima’s ‘Teza’ Wins Best Screenplay & Special Jury Prize at Venice Filmfest

Above: Actors (from left) Evelyn Arthur Johnson, Veronika
Avraham, Aaron Arefe and Abeye Tedla (
From official Venezia 65 Awards)

By Tadias Staff

Sunday, September 7, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Director Haile Gerima’s new film,Teza, has won OSELLA for Best Screenplay and Special Jury Prize at the 65th Venice Film Festival, which concluded on Saturday, September 6th at an awards ceremony hosted by Ksenia Rappoport. The Golden Lion for Best Film went to The Wrestler by Darren Aronofsky.

From official Venezia 65 Awards

The Venezia 65 Jury, chaired by Wim Wenders and comprised of Juriy Arabov, Valeria Golino, Douglas Gordon, Lucrecia Martel, John Landis, and Johnnie To, having viewed all twenty-one films in competition, has decided as follows:

GOLDEN LION for Best Film:
The Wrestler by Darren Aronofsky (USA)

SILVER LION for Best Director to:
Aleksey German Jr. for Bumažnyj Soldat (Paper Soldier) (Russia)

SPECIAL JURY PRIZE to:
Teza by Haile Gerima (Ethiopia, Germany, France)

COPPA VOLPI for Best Actor:
Silvio Orlando for Il papà di Giovanna by Pupi Avati (Italy)

COPPA VOLPI for Best Actress:
Dominique Blanc for L’autre by Patrick Mario Bernard and Pierre Trividic (France)

MARCELLO MASTROIANNI AWARD for Best Young Actor or Actress:
Jennifer Lawrence for The Burning Plain by Guillermo Arriaga (USA)

OSELLA for Best Cinematography to:
Alisher Khamidhodjaev and Maxim Drozdov for Bumažnyj Soldat (Paper Soldier) by Aleksey German Jr. (Russia)

OSELLA for Best Screenplay to:
Haile Gerima for Teza by Haile Gerima (Ethiopia, Germany, France)

Haile Gerima’s “Teza’ Revisits Ethiopia Under Mengistu at Venice Filmfest (AFP)

September 2nd, 2008

VENICE, Italy (AFP) — Mengistu’s blood-drenched Ethiopia was the backdrop in Venice on Tuesday for filmmaker Haile Gerima’s “Teza,” his attempt to reconcile an idyllic childhood with modern realities.

“I dream my past, but the present is so powerful that it continues to hijack my sentimental journey to my childhood,” Gerima told a news conference.

In the film, Aron Arefe plays Anberber, an idealistic Ethiopian intellectual who studies medicine in Germany, then returns to his home village under Haile Mariam Mengistu’s brutal 1970s-80s regime.

Unable to put his expertise to good use, Anberber also faces an identity crisis arising from his “displacement between the village and the modern world,” said Gerima, who won a lifetime achievement award at the Washington Independent Film Festival in 2003.

“Contemporary reality continues to interfere, with silent violence as well as obvious violence,” he added.

A central challenge was harnessing the wealth inherited from generations of oral tradition, Gerima said, calling handed-down stories “our monuments.”

“My grandmother told stories around the fire. My father was a playwright. How do you reconcile that tradition with filmmaking? How is the form culminating my personal identity?” he asked.

“Teza” is one of two African films in the selection of 21 vying for the coveted Golden Lion here, along with “Gabbla” by Algeria’s Tariq Teguia, set in the north African country as it emerged from its civil war of the 1990s. Read More.

Interview: A Green Photographer With His Lens on Ethiopia

By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, September 1, 2008

New York (Tadias) – When Andarge Asfaw returned to his childhood home, Ethiopia, he had not been there for 27 years. What he experienced and photographed upon his initial return pushed him to get more involved in environmental work, and to use photography as his tool of choice.

Asfaw attended Cornell University and he is a graduate of Hallmark Institute of Photography. His work has been highlighted by Newsweek, Vanity Fair, Esquire and The Washington Post. And recently, his environmentally conscious work was featured by The Valley Advocate. Asfaw works as a professional photographer and currently lectures at the Washington School of Photography, the Art League School and the Metropolitan Center for the Visual Arts.

He spoke with Tadias about his photography career, his trip to Ethiopia and his new book, Ethiopia From The Heart (Cover image above).


Andarge Asfaw

Tadias: Let’s start with your career as a Photographer. How did you start?

A. Asfaw: My father was a serious amateur photographer. He gave me my first camera at the age of 12. I adored it. I always knew that I would become a photographer. When I left Ethiopia, I went to England, then the US, where I began my college studies. I continued on to complete my photography education at The Hallmark Institute of Photography. After graduating, I went to New York City and worked in a catalog house. This was an invaluable experience because I learned how to work efficiently since production deadlines were tight. From there, I relocated to Washington, DC and began working in a fast-paced design firm. Eventually, I started my own commercial photography studio in the 80’s, F/STOP STUDIO.

Tadias: What were your early experiences?

A. Asfaw: My father used to show slides of his own images on a large screen. His work showed landscapes and people. They were transporting and powerful. It was something I always looked forward to. Looking at snapshots in daylight cannot compare to a slideshow in the dark. The mood is more dramatic.


Running Through The Fields. © Andarge Asfaw


Awash National Park. © Andarge Asfaw

Tadias: The source of the passion?

A. Asfaw: I’ve always been a visual person. I don’t say it in words, I show it. Each time I photograph a subject, I’m looking to preserve it. Later after I see the work, I decide which of these photographs asks to be shared. This urge to photograph, calls me back again and again. This is my creative process.

Tadias: What prompted you to return to Ethiopia? Was there an alternate photography project that you had envisioned before returning?

A. Asfaw: I returned to Ethiopia in 1993. The purpose of my first trip back was to rediscover by myself and to photograph the land and the people as I remembered them from my childhood. I had not been there for 27 years. I have to say, the emotional impact was overwhelming. The country had been ravaged. A lot of the beauty and the magnificence that I remembered had vanished.

Ethiopian culture is rich in tradition. I am thankful that my parents were part of a generation that was strong and dignified. The opportunities and bounty that life offered me then, aren’t available to the youth of today. Even though Ethiopians are humble and respectful of each other, change has affected the whole culture.

Tadias: Please describe your travels in Ethiopia and highlight both the high points and lows of your journey and photographing experience.

A. Asfaw: I can’t say that it wasn’t rough working through all of my feelings of loss for places that were so much a part of my history. However, I returned to Ethiopia several times, not all for personal reasons. I was commissioned in some cases. Certain trips that I made were to help organizations that were fundraising. When you’ve been hired by a client, you approach photography openly. You don’t have the same raw feeling that you get when you’re creating personal work. I was productive during that time for those that I was serving. This was good for me. I grew in strength with each visit back and eventually clarified my goals and was healed. I set out to reveal the beauty of Ethiopia to the world.


Hamer Siblings. © Andarge Asfaw


Genet Mariam Church. © Andarge Asfaw

Tadias: You mention that your current book Ethiopia from the Heart reveals the environmental issues that are not usually covered in other photography projects on the region. How will your work bring more needed attention to these concerns?

A. Asfaw: Well, with interviews like these, this is a great start!

Through exhibiting and lecturing about “Ethiopia from the Heart”, I hope to build a community that will support my future efforts to facilitate environmental stewardship in Ethiopia and in everyone’s own backyard. The more recognition the book gets, the stronger the message becomes. Book sales fund tree-planting in Ethiopia through Greener Ethiopia and Trees for the Future.

Tadias: There are no words or descriptions to accompany the photographs in your book? Why did you opt for such a layout?

A. Asfaw: There seems to be a lot of energy around this topic. The title of each image can be found at the back of book. In this information age, we always want to know more – faster. Flipping to the back of the book is slower. What’s the rush? Fine-art is meant to be enjoyed. A lot of photography icons of the past did much of the same. The page layout for “Ethiopia from the Heart” was created by my photo editor and dear friend, Donna T. Jones. Her final decision to have the images unencumbered by text encouraged the fluidity of page movement and kept the design elegant. I loved the final product.

Tadias: You will be exhibiting your current work at the Hallmark Museum of Contemporary Photography in mid-September. Can you tell us a bit more about it?

A. Asfaw: The Hallmark Museum of Contemporary Photography in Turner Falls, Massachusetts, graciously invited me to exhibit my work from “Ethiopia from the Heart”, which explores the richness of Ethiopian landscape, culture and wildlife. There will be a book signing and illustrated artist talk on Saturday, September 13, 2008, beginning at 6:45PM. Book sales fund tree-planting projects in Ethiopia. The Non-Ethiopian community is receiving my work with open arms. I would love to see support from the Ethiopian Community up North at this opening.


Morning Rays in Tigray Village. © Andarge Asfaw

Tadias: What is the message that you want most to convey to the Ethiopian diaspora? Your photography fans? Environmentalists?

A. Asfaw: I refuse to believe that “we can’t fix what’s been broken”. It will take time and patience, but rejuvenation and change can and will happen in Ethiopia. On the cover of Ethiopia from the Heart, I chose a photograph of a straw flower. In Amharic, Ayderki, which means “everlasting”. That is my true message.

As for my photography followers, many thanks for your praise and encouragement. I especially thank my students for their enthusiasm. “Ethiopia from the Heart” conveys a message that photographers not only document history, they make it. Artists continue to expose the issues and get attention. And for our brothers and sisters in the environmental movement, partner with others to create a stronger network. You all are amazing.

Tadias: What is your next project?

A. Asfaw: Tough question for the diverse amount of subjects calling out to be photographed. But one thing is for sure, I’m not done with Ethiopia, yet. There is another book on the horizon.


Digital prints from Ethiopia From the Heart are on display through Sept. 21 at Gallery 85, Hallmark Museum of Contemporary Photography, 85 Ave. A, Turners Falls, Massachusetts, (413) 863-0009. Copies of the book are available at the museum as well as at www.ethiopiafromtheheart.com.



Effortless Ethiopian Tops the Bill at British Grand Prix

The Independent

Photo: Nazret.com

By Simon Turnbull
Sunday, 31 August 2008

Approaching 9.35pm in the Letzigrund Stadion on Friday night, Kenenisa Bekele picked up the pace at the front of the field with four laps remaining in the men’s 5,000m at the Weltklasse meeting. He pulled clear with seemingly effortless ease, much to the delight of the crowd jammed into the compact Swiss arena.

By the time the bell sounded, they had whipped themselves into a state of frenzy, shouting, screaming and banging their palms on the metal advertising hoardings skirting the track. In Mexican Wave fashion, they followed the Ethiopian’s progress around the last lap by raising both arms and bowing like 26,000 unworthy Wayne Campbells paying homage to an awesome Alice Cooper.

They know a class act when they see one in Zurich, and no one in the opening show on the post-Olympic European track-and-field circuit got the locals going quite like the breathtaking Bekele. Not even the headlining Usain Bolt, who performed all of his gallery-playing moves either side of coasting to victory in the men’s 100m in 9.83sec. Or the 18-year-old Kenyan phenomenon Pamela Jelimo, who crossed the line in the women’s 800m in 1min 54.01sec, a time that has been bettered only by the great Czech hulk of a woman Jarmila Kratochvilova (1:53.28) and the Russian Nadezhda Olizarenko (1:53.43).

No, Bekele was the show- stealer in the penultimate meeting of the season’s Golden League programme. And with good reason. Just six days previously he had been on the track in the Bird’s Nest in Beijing, running away from the field in the men’s 5,000m final.

In doing so, he became only the fifth man to complete an Olympic 5,000m and 10,000m double, following in the spike marks of Hannes Kolehmainen, Emil Zatopek, Vladimir Kuts and his fellow countryman Miruts Yifter – or “Yifter the Shifter,” as David Coleman rechristened the balding Ethiopian when he took his leave of Steve Ovett on the final scorching lap of the 5,000m at the Gateshead Games in 1977. Read More.

Two Ethiopian Photographers at Berlin’s IFA Exhibition

By Tadias Staff
Above photo: By Aida Muluneh

Updated: Sunday, August 31, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Berlin’s Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations (IFA) , will host a photo exhibition which includes the works of two promising Ethiopian photographers – Aida Muluneh and Michael Tsegaye. The exhibit entitled ‘Bamako 2007’ touches on several themes including the landscape of the African continent, colonial heritage, HIV/AIDS, self-portraits, and wall paintings.

The exhibit will be open from October, 24th, 2008 to November 1st, 2009. Here is the bio of Aida Muluneh and Michael Tsegaye courtesy of IFA.

AIDA MULUNEH
ayda_inside.jpg

In her photos Aida Muluneh captures Ethiopian lifestyles to oppose Western mainstream ideas. Our image of Ethiopia is still characterised by children starving during the famine of the ‘80s. On the contrary, she shows us a sober, stylish and elegant world, without ever approaching any sort of stereotyped images. Because of her own immigrant background, she is interested in issues concerning cultural origins and changes, in that feeling of rootlessness caused by immigrant life. In her truthful and respectful pictures, Aida Muluneh presents us the Ethiopian people in all their dignity.

muluneh_aida_08.jpg
“Spirit of Sisterhood” from
the series “Ethiopian Light”,
2000 (Aida Muluneh)

Aida Muluneh was born in 1974 in Ethiopia. She left her home country at a young age and spent her childhood between Yemen and England. After several years in a boarding school in Cyprus, she settled in Canada in 1985. She received a BA in Film, Radio and Television from Howard University, Washington DC in 2001. Since then, she has been working as freelance photographer. She has also founded an organisation whose aim is to increase the opportunities for African artists in the diaspora. Her photos have been on display in many important international exhibitions. Today Aida Muluneh is working at “The Unhealing Wound”, a documentary about the Ethiopian war orphans who moved out to Cuba in 1979.

MICHAEL TSEGAYE
michael_tsegaye_inside.jpg

In the photo series “Ankober” the Ethiopian photographer Michael Tsegaye has captured an Ethiopia which still preserves its culture and traditions. The place in the fog looks mysterious and secretive. People dressed in a traditional way appear in the landscape. The photographer achieves a quiet harmony through the balance of light and shades of grey. Uncertain outlines and haziness create a distance which makes Michael Tsegaye’s photos appear melancholic.

tsegaye_michael_01.jpg
Mystic from the series “Ankober”, 2006
(Michael Tsegaye)

Michael Tsegaye was born in 1975 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where today he lives and works. He graduated in Painting from the Addis Ababa University School of Fine Arts and Design in 2002. Later, because of an allergy to oil paint, he had to gave up painting and started with photography. He has participated in several group as well as solo exhibitions.

Related: Hot Blog: The Untold Story of Ethiopians in Cuba (Tadias)
An interview with photographer Aida Muluneh, who is filming a
documentary about Ethiopians in Cuba.

cuba1.jpg

40 Million Viewers Tune in for Obama’s Historic Speech

MSNBC
Photo: Leisa Thompson | The Ann Arbor News

By AP

Fri., Aug. 29, 2008

NEW YORK – Barack Obama’s audience for his acceptance speech likely topped 40 million people, and the Democratic gathering that nominated him was a more popular television event than any other political convention in history.

More people watched Obama speak from a packed stadium in Denver on Thursday than watched the Olympics opening ceremony in Beijing, the final “American Idol” or the Academy Awards this year, Nielsen Media Research said Friday. (Four playoff football games, including the Super Bowl between the Giants and Patriots, were seen by more than 40 million people.)

His TV audience nearly doubled the amount of people who watched John Kerry accept the Democratic nomination to run against President Bush four years ago. Kerry’s speech was seen by a little more than 20 million people; Bush’s acceptance speech to GOP delegates had 27.6 million viewers. Read More.

History: Obama Accepts Democratic Nomination | Video

Photo: Ron Edmonds / AP

Watch Obama’s Historic Acceptance Speech

CNN

Thursday, August 28, 2008

DENVER, Colorado (CNN) — Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama laid out his credentials to take on and beat Republican candidate John McCain in the fall election.

“If John McCain wants to have a debate about who has the temperament, and judgment, to serve as the next Commander-in-Chief, that’s a debate I’m ready to have,” he said.

He said he was able to lead the country into an era of change after what he called eight years of failed policies.

“America, we are better than these last eight years,” he told supporters at the Democratic National Convention Thursday night in Denver Colorado. “This moment, this election, is our chance to keep, in the 21st century, the American promise alive.”

Obama was greeted by tens of thousands of cheering supporters chanting “yes we can.”

pf_obama-waves_cover.jpg
Photo: NY Daily News

He emphasized his humble roots and the example of his grandparents’ service to the nation and their family.

“I don’t know what kind of lives John McCain thinks that celebrities lead, but this has been mine,” he said. “These are my heroes. Theirs are the stories that shaped me. And it is on their behalf that I intend to win this election and keep our promise alive as president of the United States.”

He brushed aside critiques from his Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain, accusing him of being out of touch.

“It’s not because John McCain doesn’t care. it’s because John McCain doesn’t get it,” he said of economic problems facing the country.

Point by point, he addressed McCain’s policies on the Iraq war, the economy, offshore drilling and health care, accusing him of pursuing the same policies as the Bush administration.

He also said his judgment was better on foreign affairs, accusing McCain of turning his sights to Iraq days after the September 11 attacks when resources and attention should have been on Afghanistan.

“John McCain likes to say that he’ll follow bin Laden to the Gates of Hell — but he won’t even go to the cave where he lives,” he said to cheers.

Obama, who is the first African-American to lead a major party ticket, is accepting his party’s nomination on the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I have a dream” speech.

Earlier in the evening, other Democrats attacked McCain’s policies. iReport.com: Watch and share your thoughts on the speeches

Former Vice President Al Gore urged Americans to “seize the opportunity” to change course by voting for Barack Obama as president.

He reminded the audience at the Democratic National Convention of his failed bid to become president in 2000 when, he said, some believed there was so little difference between Republicans and Democrats that it did not matter who won the White House.

“Today, we face essentially the same choice we faced in 2000, though it may be even more obvious now because John McCain, a man who has earned our respect on many levels, is now openly endorsing the policies of the Bush-Cheney White House and promising to actually continue them,” Gore said.

“Hey, I believe in recycling, but that’s ridiculous,” he joked.

Gore suggested the election was close because people feared the change the Obama represents, and compared him and his promise to fellow Illinoisan Abraham Lincoln. Read more about the Democratic National Convention at CNN.COM

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History in the Making: Obama’s Epic Night In Denver

MSNBC
Photo: NY Daily News

By Chuck Todd
Political Director
NBC News
Thurs., Aug. 28, 2008

DENVER – “One for the history books” is a phrase that’s thrown around all too easily these days.

But Wednesday night and Thursday night will certainly be one for those aforementioned books.

The question is: Will these nights simply be a page in the history of America or the start of a completely new chapter?

Barack Obama’s official nomination as the Democratic Party’s standardbearer was a very poignant moment for millions of Americans.

As the first non-white major party nominee, Obama is carrying a big load on his shoulders. He’s holding the hopes and dreams of a lot of folks who thought the presidency was only reserved for white men.

So it’s worth taking a step back and realizing the historical significance of Wednesday night.

As my late boss, Tim Russert, pondered back when Obama secured presumptive nominee status in June — imagine what it will be like to teach American government or history in inner-city high schools this fall.

Already, Obama has secured himself a page in the history book of America. But he has a long way to go if he wants his own chapter. Read More.

Historic Night: Democrats Unite Around Obama
denver-cover1.jpg
USA TODAY

Photo: Jaladah Aslam, center, and Mitchell Artis, right, both
of Ohio, hear Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton call for Democrats to
nominate Barack Obama. By Pat Shannahan for USA TODAY

By Martha T. Moore

August 27th, 2008

DENVER — It was a scripted scenario, the outcome never in doubt. But when history arrived on the floor of the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday afternoon, it came with the full force of emotion.

After an especially long primary season, after private wrangling and public battle, the Democratic Party became the first major party to select an African-American nominee for president in the nation’s history.

With a roar of approval and a sparkle of flashing cameras, the convention’s delegates nominated by acclamation Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, who just four years ago electrified the Democratic convention with a speech where he first called for “a politics of hope.” That message carried him in this election season to the top of his party’s ticket.

“I never thought I’d live this long to see this,” said Albert Lewis, a Hawaii delegate, where Obama grew up. “I’m very proud to be an American today.”

Obama’s nomination was the climax of a campaign that intertwined two groups that have spent much of the past 50 years struggling for their place at the table of American politics: blacks and women. And it came at the hands of the woman who had tried so hard to wrest it from him. When the roll call came to New York, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton joined her state’s delegation on the floor and asked the convention to stop the roll call and nominate Obama.

“In the spirit of unity, with the goal of victory,” Clinton said, “let’s declare together in one voice, right here right now, that Barack Obama is our candidate.”

George Bixon, a retired electrician and the only black delegate among 57 from Iowa, said tears streamed down his cheeks as Obama was nominated.

“It was a moment I thought would never happen in my lifetime,” Bixon said. “He was nominated not as a black man but as a man who is qualified to do the job, and that made me proud.” Read More.

Obama Wins Nomination; Biden and Bill Clinton Rally Party (The New York Times)
biden_obama.jpg
Senator Barack Obama joined Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. on stage on Wednesday. Brendan
Smialowski for The New York Times

By ADAM NAGOURNEY
Published: August 28, 2008

DENVER — Barack Hussein Obama, a freshman senator who defeated the first family of Democratic Party politics with a call for a fundamentally new course in politics, was nominated by his party on Wednesday to be the 44th president of the United States.

The unanimous vote made Mr. Obama the first African-American to become a major party nominee for president. It brought to an end an often-bitter two-year political struggle for the nomination with Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, who, standing on a packed convention floor electric with anticipation, moved to halt the roll call in progress so that the convention could nominate Mr. Obama by acclamation. That it did with a succession of loud roars, followed by a swirl of dancing, embracing, high-fiving and chants of “Yes, we can.” Read More.

Obama officially nominated; Bill Clinton delivers hearty endorsement
(NY Daily News)

alg_clinton.jpg
Bill Clinton gave a forceful endorsement of Barack Obama on Wednesday
night, hours after the Illinois senator was officially nominated for President by
the Democratic Party. Wilson/Getty

BY DAVID SALTONSTALL
DAILY NEWS SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

Thursday, August 28th 2008, 12:46 AM

DENVER – Former President Bill Clinton buried the past Wednesday night and exhorted Democrats to imagine a bold new future – with Barack Obama as President of the United States.

As Obama made history by becoming the first African-American nominee of a major party, Clinton put aside his lingering primary-season grievances with a rousing endorsement that brought the crowd to its feet over and over – interrupting him 40 times with applause.

The night ended with a surprise appearance by the Illinois senator, who took to the convention’s stage to applaud the Clintons and his vice presidential nominee, Joe Biden.

For many in the arena, it was exactly what the Democrats needed – a clear, cathartic show of unity by the party’s once and future leaders.

“If I am not mistaken, Hillary Clinton rocked the house last night,” Obama said, moments after he sent delegates into a thundering round of applause by popping onto the stage to clasp hands with Biden. Read More.

Watch Bill Clinton endorse Obama

All Ayes on Obama as He Prepares to Make History
resized_image.jpg
NBC, MSNBC and news services
Photo: Senator Barack Obama arriving at the Denver
International Airport. Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times

August 27th, 2008

DENVER – Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois was poised to become the first African-American ever nominated for president by a major political party Wednesday after delegates to the Democratic National Convention heard nominating speeches that were expected to conclude with his chief rival, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, asking her supporters to join in accepting Obama by acclamation.

Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America, placed Clinton’s name in nomination at 5:20 p.m. ET. Michael Wilson, an Air Force medic who served in Iraq, placed Obama’s name in nomination at 5:32 p.m.

Clinton was in the New York delegation as the traditional roll call of the states got under way. NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell reported that Clinton would join State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver in casting the state’s votes.

Clinton, who made a ringing, unqualified endorsement of her former rival in a prime-time speech Tuesday night at the Democratic National Convention, met with her delegates in the afternoon and said she had signed her ballot for Obama, drawing some cheers and some moans of dismay.

The groans then turned into cheers when she acknowledged that “many other people who sign their ballots will make a different choice.”

“We got here by different paths,” Clinton said. “And you are to be given the respect and recognition you have earned as delegates for the Democratic Party.” Read More.

Historic Night: Democrats Unite Around Obama

USA TODAY

Photo: Jaladah Aslam, center, and Mitchell Artis, right, both
of Ohio, hear Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton call for Democrats to
nominate Barack Obama. By Pat Shannahan for USA TODAY

By Martha T. Moore

August 27th, 2008

DENVER — It was a scripted scenario, the outcome never in doubt. But when history arrived on the floor of the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday afternoon, it came with the full force of emotion.

After an especially long primary season, after private wrangling and public battle, the Democratic Party became the first major party to select an African-American nominee for president in the nation’s history.

With a roar of approval and a sparkle of flashing cameras, the convention’s delegates nominated by acclamation Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, who just four years ago electrified the Democratic convention with a speech where he first called for “a politics of hope.” That message carried him in this election season to the top of his party’s ticket.

“I never thought I’d live this long to see this,” said Albert Lewis, a Hawaii delegate, where Obama grew up. “I’m very proud to be an American today.”

Obama’s nomination was the climax of a campaign that intertwined two groups that have spent much of the past 50 years struggling for their place at the table of American politics: blacks and women. And it came at the hands of the woman who had tried so hard to wrest it from him. When the roll call came to New York, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton joined her state’s delegation on the floor and asked the convention to stop the roll call and nominate Obama.

“In the spirit of unity, with the goal of victory,” Clinton said, “let’s declare together in one voice, right here right now, that Barack Obama is our candidate.”

George Bixon, a retired electrician and the only black delegate among 57 from Iowa, said tears streamed down his cheeks as Obama was nominated.

“It was a moment I thought would never happen in my lifetime,” Bixon said. “He was nominated not as a black man but as a man who is qualified to do the job, and that made me proud.” Read More.

Obama Wins Nomination; Biden and Bill Clinton Rally Party (The New York Times)
biden_obama.jpg
Senator Barack Obama joined Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. on stage on Wednesday. Brendan
Smialowski for The New York Times

By ADAM NAGOURNEY
Published: August 28, 2008

DENVER — Barack Hussein Obama, a freshman senator who defeated the first family of Democratic Party politics with a call for a fundamentally new course in politics, was nominated by his party on Wednesday to be the 44th president of the United States.

The unanimous vote made Mr. Obama the first African-American to become a major party nominee for president. It brought to an end an often-bitter two-year political struggle for the nomination with Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, who, standing on a packed convention floor electric with anticipation, moved to halt the roll call in progress so that the convention could nominate Mr. Obama by acclamation. That it did with a succession of loud roars, followed by a swirl of dancing, embracing, high-fiving and chants of “Yes, we can.” Read More.

Obama officially nominated; Bill Clinton delivers hearty endorsement
(NY Daily News)

alg_clinton.jpg
Bill Clinton gave a forceful endorsement of Barack Obama on Wednesday
night, hours after the Illinois senator was officially nominated for President by
the Democratic Party. Wilson/Getty

BY DAVID SALTONSTALL
DAILY NEWS SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

Thursday, August 28th 2008, 12:46 AM

DENVER – Former President Bill Clinton buried the past Wednesday night and exhorted Democrats to imagine a bold new future – with Barack Obama as President of the United States.

As Obama made history by becoming the first African-American nominee of a major party, Clinton put aside his lingering primary-season grievances with a rousing endorsement that brought the crowd to its feet over and over – interrupting him 40 times with applause.

The night ended with a surprise appearance by the Illinois senator, who took to the convention’s stage to applaud the Clintons and his vice presidential nominee, Joe Biden.

For many in the arena, it was exactly what the Democrats needed – a clear, cathartic show of unity by the party’s once and future leaders.

“If I am not mistaken, Hillary Clinton rocked the house last night,” Obama said, moments after he sent delegates into a thundering round of applause by popping onto the stage to clasp hands with Biden. Read More.

Watch Bill Clinton endorse Obama

All Ayes on Obama as He Prepares to Make History
resized_image.jpg
NBC, MSNBC and news services
Photo: Senator Barack Obama arriving at the Denver
International Airport. Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times

August 27th, 2008

DENVER – Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois was poised to become the first African-American ever nominated for president by a major political party Wednesday after delegates to the Democratic National Convention heard nominating speeches that were expected to conclude with his chief rival, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, asking her supporters to join in accepting Obama by acclamation.

Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America, placed Clinton’s name in nomination at 5:20 p.m. ET. Michael Wilson, an Air Force medic who served in Iraq, placed Obama’s name in nomination at 5:32 p.m.

Clinton was in the New York delegation as the traditional roll call of the states got under way. NBC News’ Andrea Mitchell reported that Clinton would join State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver in casting the state’s votes.

Clinton, who made a ringing, unqualified endorsement of her former rival in a prime-time speech Tuesday night at the Democratic National Convention, met with her delegates in the afternoon and said she had signed her ballot for Obama, drawing some cheers and some moans of dismay.

The groans then turned into cheers when she acknowledged that “many other people who sign their ballots will make a different choice.”

“We got here by different paths,” Clinton said. “And you are to be given the respect and recognition you have earned as delegates for the Democratic Party.” Read More.

Berlin’s IFA Exhibition to Include Two Ethiopian Photographers

By Tadias Staff
Above photo: By Aida Muluneh

Published: Tuesday, August 26, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Berlin’s Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations (IFA) , will host a photo exhibition which includes the works of two promising Ethiopian photographers – Aida Muluneh and Michael Tsegaye. The exhibit entitled ‘Bamako 2007’ touches on several themes including the landscape of the African continent, colonial heritage, HIV/AIDS, self-portraits, and wall paintings.

The exhibit will be open from October, 24th, 2008 to November 1st, 2009. Here is the bio of Aida Muluneh and Michael Tsegaye courtesy of IFA.

AIDA MULUNEH
ayda_inside.jpg

In her photos Aida Muluneh captures Ethiopian lifestyles to oppose Western mainstream ideas. Our image of Ethiopia is still characterised by children starving during the famine of the ‘80s. On the contrary, she shows us a sober, stylish and elegant world, without ever approaching any sort of stereotyped images. Because of her own immigrant background, she is interested in issues concerning cultural origins and changes, in that feeling of rootlessness caused by immigrant life. In her truthful and respectful pictures, Aida Muluneh presents us the Ethiopian people in all their dignity.

muluneh_aida_08.jpg
“Spirit of Sisterhood” from
the series “Ethiopian Light”,
2000 (Aida Muluneh)

Aida Muluneh was born in 1974 in Ethiopia. She left her home country at a young age and spent her childhood between Yemen and England. After several years in a boarding school in Cyprus, she settled in Canada in 1985. She received a BA in Film, Radio and Television from Howard University, Washington DC in 2001. Since then, she has been working as freelance photographer. She has also founded an organisation whose aim is to increase the opportunities for African artists in the diaspora. Her photos have been on display in many important international exhibitions. Today Aida Muluneh is working at “The Unhealing Wound”, a documentary about the Ethiopian war orphans who moved out to Cuba in 1979.

MICHAEL TSEGAYE
michael_tsegaye_inside.jpg

In the photo series “Ankober” the Ethiopian photographer Michael Tsegaye has captured an Ethiopia which still preserves its culture and traditions. The place in the fog looks mysterious and secretive. People dressed in a traditional way appear in the landscape. The photographer achieves a quiet harmony through the balance of light and shades of grey. Uncertain outlines and haziness create a distance which makes Michael Tsegaye’s photos appear melancholic.

tsegaye_michael_01.jpg
Mystic from the series “Ankober”, 2006
(Michael Tsegaye)

Michael Tsegaye was born in 1975 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where today he lives and works. He graduated in Painting from the Addis Ababa University School of Fine Arts and Design in 2002. Later, because of an allergy to oil paint, he had to gave up painting and started with photography. He has participated in several group as well as solo exhibitions.

Related: Hot Blog: The Untold Story of Ethiopians in Cuba (Tadias)
An interview with photographer Aida Muluneh, who is filming a
documentary about Ethiopians in Cuba.

cuba1.jpg

Do you Couchsurf? Note From Canada via Ethiopia

Above: Maskarm k Haile in Sosussvlei, Naimibia. Sand dunes
of Sossusvlei are known to be the highest dunes in the world.

Tadias Magazine
By Maskarm K. Haile
maski_author_image.jpg

Published: Monday, August 25, 2008

Addis Ababa (Tadias) – I live in Canada and I am writing this from Ethiopia on my way to Sudan. Couchsurfing all along.

How many of us crash on our friend’s friend or friend’s cousin’s couch when traveling? We may even put a little extra effort into researching and getting connected to “someone who knows somebody” at the destination we intend to arrive at.

These days budget travelers are using the internet to build a network of individuals who are willing to let them crash on their couch – creating a better world, one couch at a time. It is called “Couchsurfing”.

Couchsurfing is not about getting a free accommodation only, it’s about creating more meaningful relationships that go beyond race, culture and other barriers, across borders, countries and continents.

I have always been a travel junky. I love meeting people and experiencing new cultures. I constantly look for ways to travel safely and cheaply. So finding couchsurfing was a coming home of sorts. Not only for the free accommodation, but also getting to meet people from all walks of life made it much more appealing to me. The organization has 630,976 members in 231 countries representing 44,359 cities. Its mission: “CouchSurfing seeks to internationally network people and places, create educational exchanges, raise collective consciousness, spread tolerance, and facilitate cultural understanding.”

Since I have become a member officially I have successfully surfed 15 couches in 12 countries including Canada, England, Singapore, Australia, South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya and made 110 real life friendships and contacts along with 4 virtual ones. I also serve as a Nomadic Ambassador organizing events and meeting couchsurfers along my Trans-Africa travels. The couchsurfing site is fully run by volunteers from around the world and it restores faith in humankind and the world we live in. It’s even more mesmerizing how quickly we learn to trust one another, when the host who has just picked you up from the airport, for example, drops you home and gives you their house keys because they need to be somewhere else that night.

maski_travel1.jpg
Moment with a polar Bear, Northern Ontario, Canada

maski_travel3.jpg
Southern Ethiopia – in Turmi village, Humer Region

maski_travel2.jpg
Lake Malawi

maski_travel4.jpg
Namibia

maski_travel5.jpg
At the extreme southwestern tip of the African continent

There is always excitement about meeting new couchsurfers. Whether you meet for a visit at a local museum, a cup of coffee, or a gourmet meal at a fancy restaurant one thing is guaranteed, there is a conversation flow that goes on, be it on travel, politics, culture, relationship, environment, family – every topic is discussed with understanding and interest. The amount of knowledge and wisdom shared with fellow couchsurfers never ceases to amaze me, as well as their continued effort to make this world a better place.


About the Author:
Maskarm Kebede Haile resides in Montreal, Canada. Her first travel journal, My Humanitarian Journey to Africa, appeared in Tadias in 2003.

You can learn more about Couchsurfing at couchsurfing.com

Colorful and Joyous End to Beijing’s Olympic

NBC

By Alan Abrahamson, NBCOlympics.com
Sunday, August 24, 2008

BEIJING – To the roar of pyrotechnics over the Bird’s Nest, the symbol of a new China, and a simultaneously timed circle of yet more fireworks over Tianmen Square in central Beijing, the 2008 Summer Games drew Sunday night to a close, an Olympics that in virtually every regard made history.

The Games came to the end of their 17-day run after a ceremony — a party, really — featuring bouncing and flying men, drum carts, rotating poles, light wheels precisely 2.008 meters in diameter and 1,148 silver bell-wearing dancers in yellow dresses, all of it a lead-up to the entry of the athletes of the world, who by tradition on the night of closing ceremony mingled together, without regard to nationality, in the center of the stadium.

The palette of colors on the field, the rousing lights around and above – all of that in turn served as mere prelude to the moment when the Olympic cauldron was extinguished, the stadium suddenly so hushed the hiss of the gas feeding the huge flame above the Bird’s Nest rim clearly audible.

And then it was gone. Read More.

Ethiopians Are Proud of their Champions

China Central Television

Editor:Wang Shuqin

Friday saw a big victory for Ethiopia’s Olympic athletes. Tirunesh Dibaba has won one more gold medal in the women’s 5,000 meters. Her compatriot and defending champion Meseret Defar took the bronze. Thousands of Ethiopians gathered to watch the race in the capital of Addis Ababa.

An hour before the 5,000 meter race began, Ethiopians gathered in their capital city’s main square to watch their country’s athletes compete. When the three Ethiopian athletes appeared in the Bird’s Nest, people cheered and wished them good luck. When Dibaba and Defar began to lead the race, the excitement in the crowd grew.

Ethiopian athletes performed well in track and field events at the Beijing Games. They have won the women’s 10,000 meter gold medal, and gold and bronze in the men’s 10-K race. Ethiopian athletes are also top contenders in the men’s 5,000 meter and marathon race. Their great success in Beijing has Ethiopian people all over the world feeling proud of their country.

Kenenisa Bekele Hands Ethiopia Another Olympic Glory
bkele1_cover.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games
Above photo: Getty Images

August 23

(BEIJING) — Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele has taken the gold medal in the final of the Men’s 5000m in a new Olympic record time of 12:57.82 at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. He also won the Men’s 10000m in these Games.

The win comes after fellow Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba won gold in both the Women’s 5000m and 10000m.

Athens 2004 silver medalist Bekele now becomes the third Ethiopian, behind Miruts Yifter (Moscow 1980) and Dibaba (Beijing 2008), to take gold in the distance double.

Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge took silver in a time of 13:02.80, being renowned for performing on the big stage, something he proved by winning gold at the 2003 world championships and silver at the same event in 2007.

Rounding out the podium was Kenyan Edwin Cheruiyot Soi, who ran a season best of 13:06.22 to take bronze.

Moses Ndiema Kipsiro of Uganda took fourth place in a time of 13:10.56, having won bronze at the World Championships in 2007 and becoming the African champion over 10000m in 2006.

Bekele’s younger brother, reigning World Indoor Champion Tariku, took sixth place, with a time of 13:19.06.

Reigning world champion Bernard Lagat of the Unites States redeemed himself in the heats after a sub-standard performance in the 1500m, but faltered in the final, coming ninth in 13:26:89.

kenenisa.jpg
Kenenisa Bekele (R1) of Ethiopia competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Distance Queen Dibaba Surprises Herself
dibaba_12.jpg

Guardian

By Nick Mulvenney

Friday August 22 2008

BEIJING, Aug 22 (Reuters) – Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba surprised herself by winning the Olympic long distance double she sealed with a stunning final-lap sprint in the 5,000 metres on Friday.
The three-times world champion had already won the 10,000m on the opening night of competition at the Bird’s Nest and became the first woman to win both in the relatively short history of women’s long distance running at the Olympics.

“It’s a big achievement for me,” said the 23-year-old.

“When I came from my country I didn’t think I’d win both. I just thought I’d be a good competitor in both events. Now that I have it I’m quite satisfied.” Read More.

Tirunesh Dibaba: The First Woman to Sweep the 5000 and 10000 Olympic Titles
dibaba_cover1.jpg

From The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba won her second gold medal at the Beijing Olympics as she took the Women’s 5,000 Meters gold medal at the Beijing Olympic Games here on Friday.

Turkey’s Elvan Abeylegesse took the silver in 15:42.74 and another Ethiopian Meseret Defar, the defending champion, won the bronze in 15:44.12.

Ethiopia’s Dibaba Outkicks Rival to Complete a Distance Double (NYT)

Photo Highlight From Our Golden Girl’s victory
dibaba_1.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba (Front,L) competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_3.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Ethiopia’s Golden Girl: Dibaba Wins Women’s 10000m
diabba_cover111.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

(BEIJING, August 15) — Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia has won gold and set a new Olympic record in the Women’s 10000m at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games on August 15.

Dibaba’s time of 29:54.66 was enough to break the old record of 30:17.49 set by fellow Ethiopian Derartu Tulu and hold off silver medalist Elvan Abeylegess of Turkey (also born in Ethiopia) who ran a time of 29:56.34. Bronze went to Shalane Flanagan of the United States in a time of 30:22:22.

The world record of 29:31.78 seconds in this event is held by China’s Wang Junxia China, set in 1993. Read More.

The Golden Girl
diabba2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates after crossing the line.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

dibaba-2.jpg
Elvan Abeylegesse of Turkey (born in Ethiopia) and Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

img214547321.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Dibaba planning long-distance double
Reuters

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday, August 14, 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – World 10,000-metre champion Tirunesh Dibaba says she expects to run both the 10,000 and 5,000m events in Beijing, hoping to become the first woman to scoop the Olympic distance double.

In 2005 Dibaba became the first woman to win both races at a world championships when she led an Ethiopian podium sweep in both events in Helsinki.

She retained the 10,000 title in Osaka last year after suffering from abdominal pain mid-race but skipped the 5,000 days later.

“My expectation is that I will run both,” she told Reuters after arriving in Beijing. “It’s being said that it’s a little hot here, so the final decision will be made after the 10,000.” Read more at Guardian.

Ethiopian Athletes Receive an Emotional Welcome Home

A Photojournalist’s Odyssey in East Africa Turns into Nightmare

The Age
Photo from Nigel Brennan’s Facebook page and (inset) Amanda
Lindhout.

Sunanda Creagh and Glenda Kwek
August 25, 2008

A QUEENSLAND photojournalist suspected of being abducted by Islamic insurgents in Somalia on Saturday is a level-headed, street-smart man who was on a worldwide odyssey as a freelancer, say friends and family.

Bloomberg news service reported that Nigel Brennan and a Canadian journalist, Amanda Lindhout, were kidnapped on Saturday while on a visit to a refugee camp at Elasha, near the Somalian capital of Mogadishu. A Somali translator and two drivers were also seized by the gunmen.

The Somali translator was Abdifatah Mohammed Elmi, according to his brother-in-law Mustafa Haji Abdinur, who is a Mogadishu-based Agence France Press correspondent.

Mr Abdinur said he had been due to work with “Nigel” and Ms Lindhout, but that he was too busy and his brother-in-law took the job instead.

A Muslim rebel group called al-Shabaab has been fighting Somali government forces since early last year, in a conflict marked by mortar attacks and roadside bombings.

Mr Brennan’s mother, Heather, said her son had emailed her from Kenya on Friday.

“He emailed on Friday night and said he took some fantastic photos,” she said.

She was unable to contact him by phone, as he had told her that “communication in Kenya was hit and miss”, but that he was going to buy a mobile SIM card.

Mrs Brennan said her son had travelled with Ms Lindhout through Ethiopia a few years ago. Read More.

No Gold for Ethiopia in Marathon, Kenya Takes the Prize

NYT

By LYNN ZINSER
Published: August 23, 2008

BEIJING — As the heat intensified during the men’s Olympic marathon Sunday morning, the field hung on the hope that Sammy Wanjiru of Kenya could not possibly keep up the blistering pace he helped set from the race’s very first steps.

But one by one, those hopes melted in the heat, something Wanjiru never did. He pulled away from his final challenger with six kilometers to go and charged into the Olympic stadium alone, not just winning Kenya’s first gold medal in the marathon but shattering the Olympic record in 2 hours 6 minutes 32 seconds.

Tsegay Kebede of Ethiopia overtook his countryman Deriba Merga on the final lap inside the stadium to win the bronze medal in 2:10.00. Martin Lel of Kenya finished fifth. Read More.

Kenenisa Bekele Hands Ethiopia Another Olympic Glory
bkele1_cover.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games
Above photo: Getty Images

August 23

(BEIJING) — Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele has taken the gold medal in the final of the Men’s 5000m in a new Olympic record time of 12:57.82 at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. He also won the Men’s 10000m in these Games.

The win comes after fellow Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba won gold in both the Women’s 5000m and 10000m.

Athens 2004 silver medalist Bekele now becomes the third Ethiopian, behind Miruts Yifter (Moscow 1980) and Dibaba (Beijing 2008), to take gold in the distance double.

Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge took silver in a time of 13:02.80, being renowned for performing on the big stage, something he proved by winning gold at the 2003 world championships and silver at the same event in 2007.

Rounding out the podium was Kenyan Edwin Cheruiyot Soi, who ran a season best of 13:06.22 to take bronze.

Moses Ndiema Kipsiro of Uganda took fourth place in a time of 13:10.56, having won bronze at the World Championships in 2007 and becoming the African champion over 10000m in 2006.

Bekele’s younger brother, reigning World Indoor Champion Tariku, took sixth place, with a time of 13:19.06.

Reigning world champion Bernard Lagat of the Unites States redeemed himself in the heats after a sub-standard performance in the 1500m, but faltered in the final, coming ninth in 13:26:89.

kenenisa.jpg
Kenenisa Bekele (R1) of Ethiopia competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Distance Queen Dibaba Surprises Herself
dibaba_12.jpg

Guardian

By Nick Mulvenney

Friday August 22 2008

BEIJING, Aug 22 (Reuters) – Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba surprised herself by winning the Olympic long distance double she sealed with a stunning final-lap sprint in the 5,000 metres on Friday.
The three-times world champion had already won the 10,000m on the opening night of competition at the Bird’s Nest and became the first woman to win both in the relatively short history of women’s long distance running at the Olympics.

“It’s a big achievement for me,” said the 23-year-old.

“When I came from my country I didn’t think I’d win both. I just thought I’d be a good competitor in both events. Now that I have it I’m quite satisfied.” Read More.

Tirunesh Dibaba: The First Woman to Sweep the 5000 and 10000 Olympic Titles
dibaba_cover1.jpg

From The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba won her second gold medal at the Beijing Olympics as she took the Women’s 5,000 Meters gold medal at the Beijing Olympic Games here on Friday.

Turkey’s Elvan Abeylegesse took the silver in 15:42.74 and another Ethiopian Meseret Defar, the defending champion, won the bronze in 15:44.12.

Ethiopia’s Dibaba Outkicks Rival to Complete a Distance Double (NYT)

Photo Highlight From Our Golden Girl’s victory
dibaba_1.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba (Front,L) competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_3.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Ethiopia’s Golden Girl: Dibaba Wins Women’s 10000m
diabba_cover111.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

(BEIJING, August 15) — Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia has won gold and set a new Olympic record in the Women’s 10000m at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games on August 15.

Dibaba’s time of 29:54.66 was enough to break the old record of 30:17.49 set by fellow Ethiopian Derartu Tulu and hold off silver medalist Elvan Abeylegess of Turkey (also born in Ethiopia) who ran a time of 29:56.34. Bronze went to Shalane Flanagan of the United States in a time of 30:22:22.

The world record of 29:31.78 seconds in this event is held by China’s Wang Junxia China, set in 1993. Read More.

The Golden Girl
diabba2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates after crossing the line.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

dibaba-2.jpg
Elvan Abeylegesse of Turkey (born in Ethiopia) and Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

img214547321.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Dibaba planning long-distance double
Reuters

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday, August 14, 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – World 10,000-metre champion Tirunesh Dibaba says she expects to run both the 10,000 and 5,000m events in Beijing, hoping to become the first woman to scoop the Olympic distance double.

In 2005 Dibaba became the first woman to win both races at a world championships when she led an Ethiopian podium sweep in both events in Helsinki.

She retained the 10,000 title in Osaka last year after suffering from abdominal pain mid-race but skipped the 5,000 days later.

“My expectation is that I will run both,” she told Reuters after arriving in Beijing. “It’s being said that it’s a little hot here, so the final decision will be made after the 10,000.” Read more at Guardian.

Kenenisa Bekele Hands Ethiopia Another Olympic Glory

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games
Above photo: Getty Images

August 23

(BEIJING) — Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele has taken the gold medal in the final of the Men’s 5000m in a new Olympic record time of 12:57.82 at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. He also won the Men’s 10000m in these Games.

The win comes after fellow Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba won gold in both the Women’s 5000m and 10000m.

Athens 2004 silver medalist Bekele now becomes the third Ethiopian, behind Miruts Yifter (Moscow 1980) and Dibaba (Beijing 2008), to take gold in the distance double.

Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge took silver in a time of 13:02.80, being renowned for performing on the big stage, something he proved by winning gold at the 2003 world championships and silver at the same event in 2007.

Rounding out the podium was Kenyan Edwin Cheruiyot Soi, who ran a season best of 13:06.22 to take bronze.

Moses Ndiema Kipsiro of Uganda took fourth place in a time of 13:10.56, having won bronze at the World Championships in 2007 and becoming the African champion over 10000m in 2006.

Bekele’s younger brother, reigning World Indoor Champion Tariku, took sixth place, with a time of 13:19.06.

Reigning world champion Bernard Lagat of the Unites States redeemed himself in the heats after a sub-standard performance in the 1500m, but faltered in the final, coming ninth in 13:26:89.

kenenisa.jpg
Kenenisa Bekele (R1) of Ethiopia competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Distance Queen Dibaba Surprises Herself

Guardian

By Nick Mulvenney

Friday August 22 2008

BEIJING, Aug 22 (Reuters) – Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba surprised herself by winning the Olympic long distance double she sealed with a stunning final-lap sprint in the 5,000 metres on Friday.
The three-times world champion had already won the 10,000m on the opening night of competition at the Bird’s Nest and became the first woman to win both in the relatively short history of women’s long distance running at the Olympics.

“It’s a big achievement for me,” said the 23-year-old.

“When I came from my country I didn’t think I’d win both. I just thought I’d be a good competitor in both events. Now that I have it I’m quite satisfied.” Read More.

Tirunesh Dibaba: The First Woman to Sweep the 5000 and 10000 Olympic Titles
dibaba_cover1.jpg

From The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba won her second gold medal at the Beijing Olympics as she took the Women’s 5,000 Meters gold medal at the Beijing Olympic Games here on Friday.

Turkey’s Elvan Abeylegesse took the silver in 15:42.74 and another Ethiopian Meseret Defar, the defending champion, won the bronze in 15:44.12.

Ethiopia’s Dibaba Outkicks Rival to Complete a Distance Double (NYT)

Photo Highlight From Our Golden Girl’s victory
dibaba_1.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba (Front,L) competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_3.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Ethiopia’s Golden Girl: Dibaba Wins Women’s 10000m
diabba_cover111.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

(BEIJING, August 15) — Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia has won gold and set a new Olympic record in the Women’s 10000m at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games on August 15.

Dibaba’s time of 29:54.66 was enough to break the old record of 30:17.49 set by fellow Ethiopian Derartu Tulu and hold off silver medalist Elvan Abeylegess of Turkey (also born in Ethiopia) who ran a time of 29:56.34. Bronze went to Shalane Flanagan of the United States in a time of 30:22:22.

The world record of 29:31.78 seconds in this event is held by China’s Wang Junxia China, set in 1993. Read More.

The Golden Girl
diabba2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates after crossing the line.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

dibaba-2.jpg
Elvan Abeylegesse of Turkey (born in Ethiopia) and Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

img214547321.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Dibaba planning long-distance double
Reuters

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday, August 14, 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – World 10,000-metre champion Tirunesh Dibaba says she expects to run both the 10,000 and 5,000m events in Beijing, hoping to become the first woman to scoop the Olympic distance double.

In 2005 Dibaba became the first woman to win both races at a world championships when she led an Ethiopian podium sweep in both events in Helsinki.

She retained the 10,000 title in Osaka last year after suffering from abdominal pain mid-race but skipped the 5,000 days later.

“My expectation is that I will run both,” she told Reuters after arriving in Beijing. “It’s being said that it’s a little hot here, so the final decision will be made after the 10,000.” Read more at Guardian.

Tirunesh Dibaba: The First Woman to Sweep the 5000 and 10000 Olympic Titles

From The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

Ethiopia’s Tirunesh Dibaba won her second gold medal at the Beijing Olympics as she took the Women’s 5,000 Meters gold medal at the Beijing Olympic Games here on Friday.

Turkey’s Elvan Abeylegesse took the silver in 15:42.74 and another Ethiopian Meseret Defar, the defending champion, won the bronze in 15:44.12.

Ethiopia’s Dibaba Outkicks Rival to Complete a Distance Double (NYT)

Photo Highlight From Our Golden Girl’s victory
dibaba_1.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba (Front,L) competes. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

dibaba_3.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba celebrates. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Ethiopia’s Golden Girl: Dibaba Wins Women’s 10000m
diabba_cover111.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

(BEIJING, August 15) — Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia has won gold and set a new Olympic record in the Women’s 10000m at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games on August 15.

Dibaba’s time of 29:54.66 was enough to break the old record of 30:17.49 set by fellow Ethiopian Derartu Tulu and hold off silver medalist Elvan Abeylegess of Turkey (also born in Ethiopia) who ran a time of 29:56.34. Bronze went to Shalane Flanagan of the United States in a time of 30:22:22.

The world record of 29:31.78 seconds in this event is held by China’s Wang Junxia China, set in 1993. Read More.

The Golden Girl
diabba2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates after crossing the line.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

dibaba-2.jpg
Elvan Abeylegesse of Turkey (born in Ethiopia) and Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

img214547321.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Dibaba planning long-distance double
Reuters

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday, August 14, 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – World 10,000-metre champion Tirunesh Dibaba says she expects to run both the 10,000 and 5,000m events in Beijing, hoping to become the first woman to scoop the Olympic distance double.

In 2005 Dibaba became the first woman to win both races at a world championships when she led an Ethiopian podium sweep in both events in Helsinki.

She retained the 10,000 title in Osaka last year after suffering from abdominal pain mid-race but skipped the 5,000 days later.

“My expectation is that I will run both,” she told Reuters after arriving in Beijing. “It’s being said that it’s a little hot here, so the final decision will be made after the 10,000.” Read more at Guardian.

Photos: Historic Ethiopian Concert in New York

Tadias Magazine
Events News
Photos by Trent Wolbe and Tadias

Published: Thursday, August 21, 2008

New York (Tadias) – Wow, what an event that was! On Wednesday evening, Damrosch’s Park was packed with Ethiopiques enthusiasts and curious New Yorkers who were treated to an astonishing concert of fusion rock, jazz and Ethiopian music. The historic event at the Lincoln Center’s out of doors concert, one of the longest-running free summer festivals in the U.S, featured Mahmoud Ahmed and Alemayehu Eshete accompanied by the Either Orchestra, and the legendary saxophonist Getatchew Mekurya in collaboration with Dutch band the Ex. The trio performed for the first time at Damrosch’s Park. Below is a slideshow of hot shots from the event:

Slideshow: Hot Shots From Historic Ethiopian Concert in New York

Ethiopia Targets Women’s 5,000m Sweep of the Medals

The Guardian

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday August 21 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – Defending champion Meseret Defar, 10,000 metres winner Tirunesh Dibaba and African champion Meselech Melkamu are bidding for an Ethiopian sweep of the medals in the Olympic women’s 5000 final on Friday.

“We’ve done good preparation and we came to win,” Melkamu told Reuters.

The trio were part of Ethiopia’s sweep of the first four places at the 2005 world championships in Helsinki, where Dibaba, her elder sister Ejegayehu and Defar earned medals, and Melkamu fell just short.

World 10,000 champion Dibaba won the Olympic 10,000 on Friday in 29:54.66, the second-fastest time ever. Read More.

Ethiopia’s Golden Girl: Dibaba Wins Women’s 10000m
diabba2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates after crossing the line.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

(BEIJING, August 15) — Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia has won gold and set a new Olympic record in the Women’s 10000m at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games on August 15.

Dibaba’s time of 29:54.66 was enough to break the old record of 30:17.49 set by fellow Ethiopian Derartu Tulu and hold off silver medalist Elvan Abeylegess of Turkey (also born in Ethiopia) who ran a time of 29:56.34. Bronze went to Shalane Flanagan of the United States in a time of 30:22:22.

The world record of 29:31.78 seconds in this event is held by China’s Wang Junxia China, set in 1993. Read More.

dibaba-2.jpg
Elvan Abeylegesse of Turkey (born in Ethiopia) and Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

img214547321.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Dibaba planning long-distance double
Reuters

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday, August 14, 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – World 10,000-metre champion Tirunesh Dibaba says she expects to run both the 10,000 and 5,000m events in Beijing, hoping to become the first woman to scoop the Olympic distance double.

In 2005 Dibaba became the first woman to win both races at a world championships when she led an Ethiopian podium sweep in both events in Helsinki.

She retained the 10,000 title in Osaka last year after suffering from abdominal pain mid-race but skipped the 5,000 days later.

“My expectation is that I will run both,” she told Reuters after arriving in Beijing. “It’s being said that it’s a little hot here, so the final decision will be made after the 10,000.” Read more at Guardian.

The Ex Finds a Soulmate in an Ethiopian Sax Legend

Time Out New York
Issue 672 / Aug 13–19, 2008

By Mike Wolf
Photograph: Emma Fischer

This decade has been a boom time for reissued recordings, with new discoveries from the past welcomed with a fervor usually reserved for new artists. One of the most rewarding series of such music has been the Paris label Buda’s Ethiopiques, a run of CDs now comprising 23 volumes, each investigating an artist or style from Ethiopia’s rich history. The consistent quality and artwork have made Ethiopiques albums both highly recognizable and coveted by adventurous fans.

Besides the wildly diverse and alluring sounds, one interesting thing about the series is that it’s not entirely cut off from the present; many of the artists heard on the discs were recorded during the ’60s and ’70s, prior to the overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie by a censorship-happy military junta, and some are still alive and playing. If Ethiopiques’ curator, Francis Falceto, could track them down, it was only a matter of time before equally intrepid souls checked into them as well.

You won’t find a more eagerly inquisitive group of musicians than long-running Dutch quartet the Ex. Formed in Amsterdam’s squatter-punk scene in 1979, the band has spent at least the past two decades of its career seeking out improbably fertile settings for its increasingly unclassifiable music, including collaborations with the late cellist Tom Cora and dozens of other diverse artists from around the world.

It was this sense of adventure that led the Ex to undertake a tour of Ethiopia, an apparent first for a European rock band, in 2002, a year before saxophonist and future collaborator Gétatchèw Mèkurya would become the subject of Ethiopiques Vol. 14. Members of the Ex already knew about him, though. “We found a cassette of his in Addis Ababa in 2001, and I fell in love with it immediately,” says guitarist Andy Moor. “It sounded so familiar, even though I’d never heard anything like it before.” His response is understandable: On his Ethiopiques CD, a reissue of a 1972 album, Mèkurya leads a small group through a seductive, swinging sort of jazz. A bear of a man, the saxist claimed singular status in his homeland in the early ’50s—almost a decade before free jazz emerged in the U.S.—when he began transposing Ethiopian war cries, a vocal form called shellèla, to his instrument; it’s his wild, unfettered style that makes the music so impossibly alluring. “He’s so unique,” says the Ex’s guitarist Terrie (who’s gone by just his first name since the band started). “A saxophone player you can recognize in one note.”

As it happened, Mèkurya wasn’t hard to find—he had a regular gig at the Sunset Bar in the Sheraton Addis Ababa. For the 2002 tour, the Ex played a song of his in its sets; on a return trip in 2004, the band had him onstage as a guest. “So we thought we’d invite him to our 25th-anniversary party [later that year],” Terrie says. Mèkurya was about 70, and playing for the first time in Europe. This wouldn’t be just some nice encore in the twilight of his career, though. Showing a bold streak on par with the band’s, he elevated the collaboration by suggesting they record an album, the release of which has since led to dozens more concerts, including an invitation from Lincoln Center and WFMU to play this week. “We didn’t know what to expect at all,” Terrie says about the album sessions, seemingly still bewildered. “He [recorded and] sent us ten ideas on sax, and we built our own arrangements around them. When he arrived for the recording, he was into what we’d done—but also very critical. We had to play in Ethio scales, otherwise it’s no good for him. On the other hand,” he continues with growing excitement, “we could do as much as we wanted with the music. We could play it noisy or improvised or crazy, and he appreciated all that as well.” Read More.

Related: Ethio Jazz to Rock New York with Free Outdoor Concert (Tadias)
2006getatchew-2_over1.jpg

Ethio Jazz to Rock New York with Free Outdoor Concert

By Tadias Staff

New York (Tadias) — Among some of the most exciting out-door music events scheduled in New York this summer, is a concert on August 20th, featuring Ethiopia’s most noted musical artists: Mahmoud Ahmed, Alemayehu Eshete and the legendary saxophonist Getatchew Mekurya.

The artists burst forth into the Ethiopian music scence in the 1960s, during a time of prolific music recording in Addis Ababa, where the nightlife and club scene was buzzing with live Afro-pop, Swing and Blues riviling those in Paris and New York.

But the fun was short lived. In the mid 1970’s the rise to power of Lieutenant-Colonel Mengistu Haile-Mariam ushered in a dark age, which halted Addis Ababa’s flourishing music scene and severly curtailed the record music industry.

“Mengistu was well-versed in the Ethiopian tradition of song lyrics that are double entendres speaking to romantic and political themes, so he set about silencing the Ethiopian Swing”, penned writer Michael A. Edwards in an article entiltled Nubian Sunrise in Jazz Times Magazine, the world’s leading Jazz publication. “Curfew brought the Capital to a viritual stand still…jailed, discredited and otherwise harrased, many of the musicians went into exile and the sun set on swinging Addis.”

police_ethiopiques_inside.jpg
The Swinging Sixties: The Police Band strut their stuff in 1965/6. (Time.com)

The sun has risen again for Ethiopian music and it has re-emerged in the international scene under a new name: Ethiopiques, which refres to a stunning CD series containing a treasure trove of Ethipian sounds from the 1960’s and ’70s.

And on August 20th, beginning at 6 p.m, at the 38th season of the Lincoln Center’s out of
doors concert, one of the longest-running free summer festivals in the U.S, New Yorkers will
be treated to the groove of “Nubian Sunrise”.


You can learn more about the event at Lincolncenter.org

Related: Legendary Punks The Ex Find New Inspiration in Ethiopia (Chicago Tribune)

Olympic Games: Ethiopia Ahead of the Pack

Jamaica Gleaner

Published: Monday | August 18, 2008

AS JAMAICA dominated the sprints over the weekend, Ethiopia completed a similar sweep in the 10,000, with Kenenisa Bekele adding the men’s title on top of Tirunesh Dibaba’s win to show they are the world’s greatest long-distance runners.

Bekele won his second straight Olympic title in a 1-2 Ethiopian triumph, ahead of eternal runner-up Sileshi Sihine.

All-time great Haile Gebrselassie finished only sixth in his last 10,000, well behind bronze medalist Micah Kogo of Kenya.

“My bullet is finished,” Gebrselassie said of his faded kick.

Now Bekele will go for a long-distance double in the 5,000. Read More.

Kenenisa Bekele Reigns Supreme, Wins Gold
bekele_new_cover.jpg

The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

August 18

(BEIJING) — World record holder Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia confirmed his supremacy in distance running by successfully defending his Olympic gold medal in the Men’s 10000m at the National Stadium on Sunday, August 17.

Bekele sliced almost four seconds off the Olympic record he set at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, finishing in 27:01.17. The silver medalist was perennial minor medalist Sileshi Sihine of Ethiopia, who clocked 27:02.77, while Micah Kogo of Kenya won bronze in 27:04.11.

The caliber of the race was so high that the first four finishers all beat the old Olympic record of 27:05.10.

Kidane Tadesse of Eritrea controlled the pace for most of the early stages of the race, with Bekele content to sit in third position.

The pace picked up when former world record holder and two-time Olympic champion Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia took control at the 6000m mark. With seven laps to go, Athens bronze medalist Zersenay Tadese of Eritrea regained the lead before Koso went to the front after 8000m.

Seven runners were in the front pack with two laps remaining, but at the final lap bell Bekele pulled away from Sihine, eventually winning by 20m.

Bekele is the sixth man to have won back-to-back Olympic titles in the Men’s 10000m.

The Imperious Kenenisa Bekele
bekele.jpg
Kenenisa Bekele celebrates winning the gold. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

bekele1.jpg
Athletes compete in Men’s 10000m final. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Continental Solidarity Behind Dibaba
BBC
BY Adnan Nawaz
adnan_nawaz.jpg

16 Aug 08

Africa had to wait until day seven of competition to win its first gold medal of the 2008 Olympics.

The entire continent celebrated as Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia won the women’s 10,000m in the Bird’s Nest Stadium, and then, on day eight, there was more glory for Africa to enjoy as Zimbabwe’s Kirsty Coventry took gold while setting a new world record in the women’s 200m backstroke.

It had been a long wait for Africa, but when triumph was finally achieved there was great evidence of continental solidarity among the African media here in Beijing. Read More.

Ethiopia’s Golden Girl: Dibaba Wins Women’s 10000m
diabba_cover11.jpg

From the Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

(BEIJING, August 15) — Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia has won gold and set a new Olympic record in the Women’s 10000m at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games on August 15.

Dibaba’s time of 29:54.66 was enough to break the old record of 30:17.49 set by fellow Ethiopian Derartu Tulu and hold off silver medalist Elvan Abeylegess of Turkey (also born in Ethiopia) who ran a time of 29:56.34. Bronze went to Shalane Flanagan of the United States in a time of 30:22:22.

The world record of 29:31.78 seconds in this event is held by China’s Wang Junxia China, set in 1993. Read More.

The Golden Girl
diabba2.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates after crossing the line.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

dibaba-2.jpg
Elvan Abeylegesse of Turkey (born in Ethiopia) and Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene.
(Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

img214547321.jpg
Tirunesh Dibaba Kenene celebrates. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Dibaba planning long-distance double
Reuters

By Sabrina Yohannes

Thursday, August 14, 2008

BEIJING (Reuters) – World 10,000-metre champion Tirunesh Dibaba says she expects to run both the 10,000 and 5,000m events in Beijing, hoping to become the first woman to scoop the Olympic distance double.

In 2005 Dibaba became the first woman to win both races at a world championships when she led an Ethiopian podium sweep in both events in Helsinki.

She retained the 10,000 title in Osaka last year after suffering from abdominal pain mid-race but skipped the 5,000 days later.

“My expectation is that I will run both,” she told Reuters after arriving in Beijing. “It’s being said that it’s a little hot here, so the final decision will be made after the 10,000.” Read more at Guardian.

Kenenisa Bekele Reigns Supreme, Wins Gold

The Official Website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

August 18

(BEIJING) — World record holder Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia confirmed his supremacy in distance running by successfully defending his Olympic gold medal in the Men’s 10000m at the National Stadium on Sunday, August 17.

Bekele sliced almost four seconds off the Olympic record he set at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, finishing in 27:01.17. The silver medalist was perennial minor medalist Sileshi Sihine of Ethiopia, who clocked 27:02.77, while Micah Kogo of Kenya won bronze in 27:04.11.

The caliber of the race was so high that the first four finishers all beat the old Olympic record of 27:05.10.

Kidane Tadesse of Eritrea controlled the pace for most of the early stages of the race, with Bekele content to sit in third position.

The pace picked up when former world record holder and two-time Olympic champion Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia took control at the 6000m mark. With seven laps to go, Athens bronze medalist Zersenay Tadese of Eritrea regained the lead before Koso went to the front after 8000m.

Seven runners were in the front pack with two laps remaining, but at the final lap bell Bekele pulled away from Sihine, eventually winning by 20m.

Bekele is the sixth man to have won back-to-back Olympic titles in the Men’s 10000m.

The Imperious Kenenisa Bekele
bekele.jpg
Kenenisa Bekele celebrates winning the gold. (Photo credit: Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

bekele1.jpg
Athletes compete in Men’s 10000m final. (Photo credit: Xinhua)

The Imperious Kenenisa Bekele

Reuters
Photo: Kenenisa Bekele celebrates winning the men’s 10,000m final.
(Reuters: Gary Hershorn)

August 17th, 2008

World record holder Kenenisa Bekele has secured what he hopes will be the first leg of the long-distance double, retaining his Olympic 10,000 metres title with a devastating last lap.

After tracking the lead for most of the race, Bekele let rip over the last 400m to finish well clear of team-mate Sileshi Sihine, who also got silver behind him in Athens.

Micah Kogo snatched bronze for Kenya. Read More.

Ethiopia’s Best in New York, Aug 20th

By Tadias Staff

Updated: August 17th, 2008

New York (Tadias) — Among some of the most exciting out-door music events scheduled in New York this summer, is a concert on August 20th, featuring Ethiopia’s most noted musical artists: Mahmoud Ahmed, Alemayehu Eshete and the legendary saxophonist Getatchew Mekurya.

The artists burst forth into the Ethiopian music scence in the 1960s, during a time of prolific music recording in Addis Ababa, where the nightlife and club scene was buzzing with live Afro-pop, Swing and Blues riviling those in Paris and New York.

But the fun was short lived. In the mid 1970’s the rise to power of Lieutenant-Colonel Mengistu Haile-Mariam ushered in a dark age, which halted Addis Ababa’s flourishing music scene and severly curtailed the record music industry.

“Mengistu was well-versed in the Ethiopian tradition of song lyrics that are double entendres speaking to romantic and political themes, so he set about silencing the Ethiopian Swing”, penned writer Michael A. Edwards in an article entiltled Nubian Sunrise in Jazz Times Magazine, the world’s leading Jazz publication. “Curfew brought the Capital to a viritual stand still…jailed, discredited and otherwise harrased, many of the musicians went into exile and the sun set on swinging Addis.”

police_ethiopiques_inside.jpg
The Swinging Sixties: The Police Band strut their stuff in 1965/6. (Time.com)

The sun has risen again for Ethiopian music and it has re-emerged in the international scene under a new name: Ethiopiques, which refres to a stunning CD series containing a treasure trove of Ethipian sounds from the 1960’s and ’70s.

And on August 20th, beginning at 6 p.m, at the 38th season of the Lincoln Center’s out of
doors concert, one of the longest-running free summer festivals in the U.S, New Yorkers will
be treated to the groove of “Nubian Sunrise”.


You can learn more about the event at Lincolncenter.org

Related: Legendary Punks The Ex Find New Inspiration in Ethiopia (Chicago Tribune)