Facts
About Oromo
Summary
Information
Overview
The
Oromo People
Population
Language
Culture
Oromo
Calendar
Religion
The
Land
The
Economy
Overview
The Oromo make up a significant
portion of the population occupying
the Horn of Africa. In the Ethiopian
Empire alone, Oromo constitute
about 30 million of the 55 million
inhabitants of the Ethiopian
Empire. In Facts, Oromo is one
of the most numerous nations
in Africa which enjoys a homogeneous
culture and shares a common
language, history and descent
and once shared common political,
religious and legal institutions.
During their long history, the
Oromo developed their own cultural,
social and political system
known as the Gadaa system. It
is a uniquely democratic political
and social institution that
governed the life of every individual
in the society from birth to
death.
Ecologically and agriculturally
Oromia (Oromo country) is the
richest region in the Horn of
Africa. Livestock products,
coffee, oil seeds, spices, mineral
resources and wild life are
all diverse and abundant. In
spite of all these advantages,
a century of colonisation by
Abyssinia (Ethiopia), a backward
nation itself, has meant that
the Oromo people have endured
a stagnant existence where ignorance
and famine have been coupled
with ruthless oppression, subjugation,
exploitation and above all,
extermination. Thus for the
last one hundred years under
the Ethiopian rule, the Oromo
have gained very little, if
anything, in the way of political,
social and economic progress.
The Oromo were colonised during
the last quarter of the nineteenth
century by a black African nation
- Abyssinia - with the help
of the European colonial powers
of the day. During the same
period, of course, the Somalis,
Kenyans, Sudanese and others
were colonised by European powers.
The Facts that the Oromo were
colonised by black African nation
makes their case quite special.
During the process of colonisation,
between 1870 and 1900, the Oromo
population was reduced from
ten to five millions. This period
coincides with the occupation
of Oromo land by the Abyssinian
emperors Yohannes and Menilek.
After colonisation, these emperors
and their successors continued
to treat Oromo with utmost cruelty.
Many were killed by the colonial
army and settlers, others died
of famine and epidemics of various
diseases or were sold off as
slaves. Those who remained on
the land were reduced to the
status of gabbar (a peasant
from whom labour and produce
is exacted and is a crude form
of serfdom).
Haile Selassie consolidated
Yohannes and Meniiek's gains
and with the use of violence,
obstructed the process of natural
and historical development of
the Oromo society - political,
economic and social. In all
spheres of life, discrimination,
subjugation, repression and
exploitation of all forms were
applied. Everything possible
was done to destroy Oromo identity
- culture, language, custom,
tradition, name and origin.
In short Haile Selassie maintained
the general policy of genocide
against the Oromo.
The 1974 revolution was brought
about by the relentless struggle
over several years by, among
others, the Oromo peasants.
The military junta, headed by
Mengistu Haile-Mariam, usurped
power and took over the revolution.
This regime has continued on
the path of emperors Yohannes,
Menilek and Haile Selassie in
the oppression, subjugation
and exploitation of Oromo, the
settlement of Abyssinians on
Oromo land and the policy of
genocide. read
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