Ethiopian history is not three thousand years!
Dear Beloved Ethiopian Sister,
Thank you very much for your important question about the origin and extent of Ethiopian history.
Dear Beloved Ethiopian Sister,
Thank you very much for your important question about the origin and extent of Ethiopian history.
Thank you for inspiring me to write this response.
I am prompted to write the response to your question in a public
forum. I do so because many of your doubting friends to whom you refer
would also be able to see my answers.
You write, “Edeminot, I would like to ask you something if you have
[the] time. [Many] people … specially the young…have doubts about our
3000 years history … they ask [for] evidence... Some comment that[one
ethnic group] wrote the history like they want… [But] they doubt if our
history is even 100 years…. Can you suggest [to] me [a] good book… about
Ethiopia?Thank you, Sir”[M.B.]
I have always known young Ethiopians to be bright and inquisitive.
Over 600 years ago it was written in
Mashafa Berhan (please see my own
translation The Book of Light, EJ Brill,1973) from Emperor Zar’aYa’eqob
(1434-68) time: “all the peoples of Ethiopia are thirsty for knowledge”.
So, I am really not surprised to know that our young continue the
ancient tradition of our people to be thirsty for knowledge. I am
especially happy that they are inquisitive about our common history. May
the Almighty bless them and open the door for them to learn and teach.
Right at the outset, let me tell you that the young people are right
to say that we do not have a 3000-year history. We have a 10,000-year
common history! Going back to about 10,000 years, all the peoples who
inhabit Ethiopia-Eritrea-Horn of Africa today had one single common
ancestry.
As you probably know, I am a student of ancient Semitic and
Afroasiatic languages. So, my answer here to your question about a
common Ethiopian ancestry and heritage is based on a sound ground of the
study of Ethiopian languages and conclusions reached by the leading
international experts of historical linguistics-- scholars from Russia,
France, Germany, Israel, Australia, USA, et.al. My own Institute of
Semitic Studies publishes the major scholarly publication in this field:
Journal of Afroasiatic Languages.)
About 10,000 years ago, one single nation or community of a single
linguistic group existed in Ethiopia, Eritrea, and the Horn of Africa.
That nation had one culture and one language. For lack of better
terminology most scholars call that language Proto-Afroasiatic
(PA.)Most, if not all the languages of Ethiopia today, definitely Ge’ez,
Oromifa, Amharic, Tigrigna, Afar, Gurage, Hadiya, Kambaata,Somali,
Sidamo, and all the other languages known as Semitic and Cushitic as
well as Omotic that including Wolaytta,Hamar, Amuru, Boro,
Anfillo,Ari,et.al. are branches of oneancient language spoken by one
people.
This is not just my view. As I said above,it is the view of impartial
worldwide linguists. They are scholars who study ancient languages and
the origin of languages objectively and scientifically. They do deep
linguistic research objectively and might have not even visited
Ethiopia, like some of the subjective (tiraaznataq) social scientists
who think they know everything about our country after a year or two of a
visit and study, and whose writings often mislead not only our youth
but also our educators.
My sister: the study of languages is not social science speculation.
The relationship of most of the languages of Ethiopia today and the
other languages of the world is based on serious scientific research -- a
systematic and in-depth comparative analysis of languages and
historical linguistics.
As an example, it is easy to find words in Oromifa that are identical
to Hebrew or Ge’ez, two closely related Semitic languages. For
instance, Oromifa words like ana (I),ati (you), abba (father),lubbu
(soul, heart), kalē (kidney), dīmā (red),garā (abdomen, throat) baē
(come out, come), simbro (bird), rēti (goat), sa’a (cattle),jir ā
(dwell, live),gibē/goba (hill),‘ol (upward),‘akkam (how? like what?),
māl (what, why) etc. are interesting proto-Afroasiatic terms that have
cognates found also in Hebrew and other Semitic languages. Certainly
such specific words point to a strong relationship of one or two
languages. They are important, but not even definitive for our basic
conclusion.
What really determine the relationship of languages are not only
similarities in core vocabularies, but more importantly grammar. It is
not the relation of words but the formal analysis and identification of
thestructure (morphology) of the languages. In this regard, almost all
Ethiopian, Eritrean, and Horn of Africa languages of today originate
from one language, PA. We can conclude that the Ethiopian speakers of
these languages today descend from one primordial family.
Unfortunately, not on account of their own fault, our young people
are not up to date on the study of ancient languages and ancient world
history, particularly their own. On the contrary, some half-baked
foreign experts of Ethiopia and political philosophy condition them. I
elaborate these problems in the following three points: a) reading of
available social science writings that focus on our differences instead
of on our similarities and common heritage; b)the recent powerful
worldwide political philosophies that questioned the validity of our
past history and cultures and influenced the world view of the my
generation of Ethiopians; and c) the deficiency of our modern
educational system going back to the last century.
First the question the youth raise about the origin of our Ethiopian
history or the assumption they make about its chronological extent is
distorted unfortunately by reading the books of some modern half-baked
foreign academic “experts” of Ethiopia,anthropologists, sociologists,
and political scientists. Unquestioning or trusting Ethiopian students
and teachers have transmitted the writings and thoughts of these mostly
foreign scholars to our generation of Ethiopians. Many of these fellow
Ethiopians, close friends of mine included, are educators in our schools
and professors in our universities and leaders in our institutions.
Social scientists make legitimate contribution in their respective
fields. However, most of them do not study ancient languages and
literatures. So, they often rush into historical, anthropological, and
sociological judgments. Their conclusions are based on “field research”
or translated documents, conclusions “lost in translation”.
Worse still, anthropologists and social scientists, even some
historians, focus on what superficially differentiates Ethiopian
ethnic/linguistic groups, not on what fundamentally unites them, or what
they have in common.
1. There are two incidents I still remember vividly. In the mid-60s
when I was a student at Harvard, I was hired as an Amharic teacher for
the Peace Corps. The first night at the dinner for all the teachers, a
sociologist asked me where I was from. Of course “Ethiopia,” I said.
“No”, he said,“are you Amhara, Oromo, Gurage, or Tigre?” “I am an
Ethiopian,” I repeated. “So what language do you speak?” I responded, “I
speak Oromo, Amharic, and Tigrinya, Hebrew, know words in Gurage, and
know many other foreign languages.” He went on, “So, what is your
religion?” I replied, “I believe in One God”. Finally, he was frustrated
with me and walked away. Some might say that his motives were
malicious. I cannot judge. He could have just been naively inquisitive.
2. In 1967, when I was back home as Director General of the National
Literacy Campaign of Ethiopia, I was invited by the students of the then
Haile-Selassie I University to speak at the annual meeting of Union of
Ethiopian Students. After my talk I was invited to sit for dinner at the
table for the student leaders. Our conversation quickly turned to the
question of nationalities. One student asked me whether I had read
William Shack’s book, The Gurage. I happened not only to have read the
book but I even also knew the author personally, so I told him. He said,
“I am a Gurage, and I did not know that we Gurages are an industrial
people until I read this book”. It was a pity that he had a foreigner to
make him proud of his ancestry, as all Ethiopian should know and be
proud of their respective heritage or ancestry.
In those days, there was a story that foreign social scientists bait
Ethiopians asking what Ethiopian national group they originate from,
ascribing to the different nationalities political savvy, democratic
idealism, or intellectual ability and the like to each respective group.
They then prod them, saying that their particular ethnic group must be
the leaders who must govern Ethiopia. I could be wrong, but the whole
objective appears not for our welfare but to dominate us through “divide
and control”.
Of course, there exist many interesting and beautiful differences [I
like to think so] among our Ethiopian peoples. But there also exist many
amazingly interesting common cultural and historical features and
essentials. For instance, the Sidama, Hadiya, Kembata, etc. (of what is
known in general Highland East Cushitic group) beyond a thousand or even
less years have a common history.The history that we write today for
each of these languages/ people going back a thousand years also
concerns the other. Argobba and Amharic speakers share the same ancestor
that dates about 1200 years ago. The Argobba history beyond 1200 years
is also a history of Amharic speakers and vice-versa. If we go back
about 2500 years the history of the Argobba-Amharic group also is the
history of Harari, Silte, Wolane, and Zay. Then,if we go back about
10,000 years all the Cushitic, Semitic, and Omoticl anguages within our
present borders, and the other Afroasiatic languages, that are/ were
spoken beyond our current territory such as Berber, Chadic, Old
Egyptian, Hebrew, Arabic, will share the same history as they descended
from the same proto-language.
One absurd theory that has taken deep root in the thinking of most
foreign and even Ethiopian historians is that the Oromo came to Ethiopia
in or about the 16th century. During any civil war, as it happened in
Ethiopia after the 16th century, and indeed as it happens everywhere in
the world even today, there is always a large population movement. But
there is no proof that the large great Oromo population appeared in
Ethiopia about five hundred years ago. I did once attempt to answer this
simplistic question with its self-evident answer at a lecture I gave in
1972 at the then Haile Selassie I University when I was on leave from
Harvard. But, this is not the place to go into it now.
In short, however, our study of the Afroasiatic languages does not
support the untenable 16th century migration story. Oromifa is indeed
one of the original Proto-Afroasiatic dialects of Ethiopia and the Horn
of Africa. The Oromo, like most of the peoples of Ethiopia today, are
among the first speakers of Proto-Afroasiatic and contrary to the odd
theory, one of the earliest inhabitants of Ethiopia and the Horn of
Africa. Their first ancestors can be said to be the common ancestors of
most of the peoples who inhabit Ethiopia today from the North to the
South, from the east to the west.
We Ethiopians must all be proud of our present respective distinct
linguistic and cultural heritages -- as long as we do not preach our own
singular superiority. Indeed, we Ethiopians are a beautiful
multi-lingual and multi-cultural people who in a flower vase called
Ethiopia decorate the great continent of Africa.
Sadly, I have yet to see any serious social science book that focuses
on our common heritage. (I once published an essay called Social
Structure of the Ethiopian Church in the Ethiopia Observer, edited by
our distinguished Ethiopisant, Richard Pankhurst, in 1972. Some similar
ideas were repeated in Donald Levin’s more well-known “Greater Ethiopia”
but one published a couple years later in 1974.) However, we still
await more comprehensive anthropological and sociological studies that
would focus on the key common heritage of the peoples of Ethiopia rather
than always focusing on what separate us and distinguish us from each
other as some social scientists tend to do.
Secondly, the generation of the 60’s and 70’s were exposed to foreign
Marxist-Leninist thought. It is my generation and many of the actors
were personal friends. Some of the leaders were my successors as
Presidents of the Ethiopian Student Association in North America. Even
if I did not subscribe to their philosophy, I had a lot of respect for
them. They too were patriotic. They loved Ethiopia and wanted the best
for their country. They wanted to see a modernized Ethiopia: democracy,
justice, land to the tillers with which we all agreed.
Beyond such admirable aspirations, however, they were misguided and
blinded by a zeal for the then worldwide popular ideologies. I
respectfully conclude that they knew very little about Ethiopia and its
history and culture. In addition to being indoctrinated by the kind of
anthropological works I referred to above, they discovered Marx and
Engels, Lenin and Mao- studied with Marcuse—and became preoccupied with
these rightly great political thinkers whom they almost worshiped. With
the exception of a handful, the blind majority became even so negative
about the value and greatness of Ethiopian history and cultures. To be
fair, it was not all their fault as I indicate in the following.
Thirdly, the Ethiopian Ministry of Education never developed a
curriculum of rigorous study of Ethiopian languages, literature, and
history in our academic institutions during my generation. During my two
years at the then University College of Addis Abba (1954-56), I took
courses on medieval and modern European history, as well as on USA
history and geography. Today, we live in a global cosmopolitan world.
Therefore, of course, it is important for us Ethiopians to study
European, American, Indian, Chinese, Near Eastern histories, languages
and cultures and of all the peoples of the world. That is not the
problem. However, not a single course was offered on Ethiopian history
in our institutions as long I remember. The problem thus became
complicated not only by the dearth of the study of Ethiopia, but also by
what was being offered (on the contrary)- the study of western history
and philosophy without the centrality of the study of our own Ethiopia
in the context of its relations to these other world cultures.
It was after I came to the United States that I discovered Ethiopia. I
started finding books in the libraries of Harvard about Ethiopia and
its ancient history. My eyes got opened to the riches of Ethiopian
languages and cultures. I met Harvard professors who knew the Ge’ez
language and had read the Ethiopic Book of Enoch and Ethiopic Book of
Jubilees. The fact that distinguished Harvard scholars considered such
Ethiopic works of such great significance, of course, opened my eyes to
the seriousness of studying ancient Ethiopian languages and cultures.
As a person even in my younger days fascinated by the ancient world I
would have loved to take a course on ancient or“medieval” Ethiopian
history. But as I said above no such courses were being offered at the
University College. After many years in the US and when I became one of
the promoters of the National Literacy Campaign of Ethiopia, I had the
opportunity to confront directly the then Minster of Education “why were
course not offered on Ethiopian history, languages and cultures in our
university?” His only answer to me was that the college curricula was
developed by foreigners who did not know Ethiopian history and that we
did not have professors who could teach these subjects. That is why my
first exposure to the study of Ethiopian languages and history, as I
alluded to above, was only when I became a student at Harvard in the
60’s.
In short, an educated Ethiopian must study other cultures. But there
is no reason why we should know more about them and less about our own.
It is not good enough to read uncritically books about our own history
and culture written by foreign social scientists that focus on our
differences, instead of on our common heritage. If we read books written
by Machiavelli, Hobbes, Marx, Lenin and Mao, why not those attributed
to Kristos Samra, Iyasus Mo’a, Zar’a Ya’eqob, Ewestatewos, Onesimos
Nasib, and our other ancient writers?We do we not study Ge’ez poetry and
literature?Why do we not study and research the rich oral tradition of
the Oromo and other Ethiopian peoples about human wisdom and political
democratic philosophy? Why do we not listen to or learn from our own
ordinary village elders about mutual respect, humility of knowledge,
and, love of peace and wisdom.
In conclusion, my sister, it is true we have a one hundred year
history. It is true also that we have a 3000-year history, which can
easily be verifiable from various records: artifacts, inscriptions, etc.
It is also true that, leaving the further pre-historic period, we have
at least a linguistically proven history that we all share for 10,000
years!
(Someone might ask so why do we fight with each other then? Well,
have you not heard of brothers and sisters who are in continual combat?)
Beyond our common ancestry, it is a fact that there is a mixture of
people in our country through intermarriage, language shift, etc. If a
genuine scientific study is done, I am sure that the majority of our
people will be of this mixed heritage/ ancestor. At one occasion, I
remember that I respectfully joked to my late great friend, our Prime
Minister, Meles Zenawi (may the Almighty bless his soul): if an
Ethiopian says I am a pure Oromo, Amhara, Tigre etc. he/she shouldn’t
get a passport; he or she should prove to be mixed! Ethiopia is not a
country comprised of racially distinct peoples. The differences among
its people is only with languages that even shrink whenever we go back
in time until all become one (recall above)!
Even if we do not have this amazing blood-bonded 10,000-year common
history, we are together now. The earth under our feet is a single
united ground. It is a paradise that is hidden to us. Our country is a
sleeping giant -- as I heard recently from the former President of the
South African Bank.
Just focusing on the present linguistic differences does not help our
economic growth and strength. If we spend our energy looking at our
differences negatively instead of weaving a beautiful mosaic together we
go nowhere.
So should we not enjoy our beautiful multi-color linguistic and
cultural differences aesthetically and be proud of our separate
contributions and go forward?
Is it necessary to focus on our differences and become fragmented and
weak, fighting each other? Or, is it not better to try to accept our
mutual differences and then build together a strong united economic and
peaceful front that will benefit each and every Ethiopian whatever
his/her background?
In passing, let me also add that like our beautiful ethnic
differences, our political and religious differences should also be
respected. They should not stand in the way of our economic progress.
Our political and religious leaders, educators, businesspeople, and
civil servants deserve our respect and love. In turn they should show
love and respect to all our peoples. Let us not engage in energy-wasting
arguments about our differences, whatever they might be. Instead let us
patiently listen to each other and respect each other, as our ordinary
Ethiopian people actually do. The only way you and I benefit even as
individuals, whatsoever our differences, is when all benefit! There is a
Jewish saying, “every Jew leans on every other Jew.” That way we can
stand strong and do not fall. So, let us unite and show each other love
and respect. Let us focus our energy onto overcoming poverty, disease,
and illiteracy. That way, Mother Ethiopia can show all Africa too the
high way.
Ethiopia is a melting pot. There are now two countries I know that
are also melting pots, the US and Israel. Both countries are
economically at the forefront of world history. Yet their people are
ethnically and linguistically of more different origins than we
Ethiopians are. In spite of that, they focus on their common heritage
and work together to be socially and economically strong. And they are
strong!!! Can we learn from them?
My Sister: Please forgive me if my answer is a long letter. Indeed
the answer to your question is a book, not even a long letter. I hope
that our Universities will begin to focus on important linguistic,
historical, and cultural studies of our peoples to appreciate the
positive side of both our differences and similarities and to put them
to our economic strength and the prosperity of Ethiopia based on mutual
respect and love.
Ephraim Isaac, B.A., B.D., Ph.D., D.Litt, D.H.L.
eisaac@post.harvard.edu
Source: Reporter
Source: Reporter
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