Visit the new AsenaTv Website

https://asenatv.com

Eritrea: Pursuit to regain the lost compassion

About six months ago I was invited to an Eritrean wedding reception. Nearly a thousand people showed up on the first day of the reception and about five hundred of them were present on the

About six months ago I was invited to an Eritrean wedding reception. Nearly a thousand people showed up on the first day of the reception and about five hundred of them were present on the second day. There were lots of dancing, laughing, drum beating, ululating and yes … more dancing. I am sure every outsider observing that event would conclude that Eritreans are full of love with an unbreakable bond. However, throughout the reception I couldn’t help but wonder if it is truly our love and our bond or something else that’s driving people to events like this in droves.

 

Soon after, a friend of mine asked me to accompany him to a funeral. Again there were lots of people there to say good bye to the departed. This time it seemed silly to me that many people could cry hysterically for a ninety year old man who passed away of old age and ignoring the fact that they are remotely related to whom they mourn for. May be I should have used a different example but anyway …

 

I have heard explanations such as “It is our culture. It is our tradition. We are religious. We gather and dance even if we are not invited, and we cry for someone even if we are not related.” Really?

 

If that is the case, I ask myself, then how is it that we are unable to gather when we really need to, and we are unable to break out in tears when we actually come across very sad moments? We claim that we are God fearing people, and yet he tells us “Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn. Live in harmony with one another. Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low position.”

 

By now, I hope you already know where I am heading. When we lost 367 young Eritreans on the coast of Lampedusa in just one day, I thought we would stay true to our rich tradition and religion but we did not. It’s been over a decade since the repression in Eritrea has gotten so bad that it became unbearable for hundreds of thousands of people, causing them to flee their country through dangerous routes. And yet, we don’t see enough Eritreans gathering to discuss and come up with a solution.        

 

I believe we are having a deep and encompassing moral deficit, a loss of compassion, and obliviousness for the common good. I remember someone saying “Ertrawyan nmeswaeti ember nmot aynferHn ena.” Roughly translated as “We Eritreans are not afraid of death, but martyrdom”. This statement sums up how much we are preoccupied by our own individual needs with no regard to the sufferings of our brethren. It also explains our failure to seek a comprehensive solution for our collective problem.

 

We are now at the beginning of a new year, a great opportunity to reevaluate our priorities and gain new experiences with which we can make a difference in our lives and in our society. 

 

As pro-justice Eritreans, we have been mainly focused on building our movements, demonstrations, meetings, infighting and projects; as these are very imperative and unavoidable steps for any successful movement. The good news is that while the youthful opposition is in its infant stage, the aging dictatorship in Eritrea is and will be unable to stop the clock from ticking towards the regime’s demise. The bad news? The lost opportunity has being costing us too many lives while repression, hardship, bigotry, hatred and negative social norms have been thriving.

 

 The question then becomes how do we regain this loss of compassion?

 

It is now a common knowledge that fundamental and comprehensive change in Eritrea is the only solution to our predicament. Even if we succeed in removing PFDJ, as a society we will still need to heal our internal moral deficit and regain our humanity which compassion is an integral part of. That’s why a new type of engagement with the silent majority is critically needed in the fuller and more important sense. Instead of just focusing on PFDJ, we will also need to win the hearts and minds of Eritreans who are completely disengaged from Eritrean realities. I believe it will take extensive campaigns and creative ways to engage with the disengaged majority. There needs to be a consensus that we are victims of our own creation and the only way to pull ourselves out of this affliction is by changing the political system in parallel with a social change. That is, removing PFDJ should go hand in hand with a shift in the collective consciousness of our society.

 

We must appeal to the conscience of our silent brothers and sisters and raise their desires for a truly humane involvement. We must let them know that counting PFDJ atrocities in every occasion and during every coffee ceremony is not enough. We must engage them in discussions about how our failure to act is contributing to the sufferings of our people. We must highlight that blaming others can’t be a solution at all. We must make it known that responsibility begins at home. We must find a way to break through the deeply entrenched fear, mistrust and hopelessness among people. We must regain Eritrean pride, dignity, self-esteem and hope through our steadfast commitment and service to one another and standing up in unity for justice.

 

The true nature of our heritage should define who we are as Eritreans. The new lighthearted and negative social norm (entay gedeseni) has brought down our nation to its knees and we can’t afford to not care any longer. As we practice our cultural and religious traditions, shouldn’t we pause to think that those traditions are nothing, but empty if we cannot follow them in their proper context to show our love and our bond with those who truly need it? 

 

Tomas Solomon  

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
21 COMMENTS
  • girmay desta January 7, 2015

    As a people we lost our dignity, integrity,and subsidiarity,we need to work hard to regain this basics things. To regain this we have to accommodate,a healthy atmosphere, to exchange our ideas.first we have to change our mindset to change people as a politician. Then the change Will come sooner rather than later.

  • MAHTA January 7, 2015

    WOW!!!!

  • Asghedom Woldeghiorghis January 8, 2015

    My brither that is whate we are. But tgere is one thing ti makes are equal ” HOY MARIAM HAGEZENA” and after we are always there . Your article is written well but it will not be accepted of the people of ” MARIAM HAGEZENI” THANKS FOR YOUR GOOD ARTICLE BUT YOU WILL NEVER GET ANY RISULT FROM THE PEOPLE OF ” Mariam Hagzena”

  • Harnet January 8, 2015

    Dear Tomas,

    Thank you for writing a thoughtful article.

    In my opinion, the current Eritrean population is filled with walking dead populous. A population that is afraid of another human being like him/herself but not the almighty. A population which is devoid of fear of GOD or compassion or care for its keens. A selfish and self centered generation. A generation that has brought its children to the slaughtered house mercilessly. A generation which will be despised by history. Everyone knows innocent Eritreans are held in horrendous conditions in underground prisons. Our children are murdered cold bloodily in the borders of Eritrea or in prisons of Eritrea everyday. But only few speak out? WHY? WHY? WHY?

    May God have mercy on all of us.
    Harnet

  • Tsegai January 8, 2015

    Lebam hizbi silezikone endealu!!! Kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk

  • kidane January 9, 2015

    Dear Tomss; You have identified the root cause of our agony. Thank you for a superb article. Stay tuned for a similar article in tigrigna. I will delete some of my example that you have already presented. Now that you presented us the cause and the solution; how do we implement your recommendation?

  • FM January 9, 2015

    Dear Tomas,
    Your assessment is on target. But if we look at Eritrean history for the last 125 years plus, the younger generation has been a canon fodder – Italy using Eritrean youth to fight in Adwa, Libya, 1935 invasion of Ethiopia, the war for independence fighting three fronts – as Ethiopian soldiers, as ELF and EPLF of course the fratricide (kunat HadHad), the border war with Ethiopia 1998-2000 (the worst of all) and the small conflicts with other neighbors. Therefore, each generation carries Post Traumatic Syndrome Disorder (PTSD) which has not been treated for 5 generations and keeps piling up. If there people are going on with some composed posture or weddings and funerals are used as outlet, is because we do have a deep cultural tradition of collective support; which means we are feeding on our fat reserve. Hopefully, your appeal to see compassion in the context of justice will find some receptiveness. God Bless.

  • Zion January 12, 2015

    There are a number of articles, written with numbing redundance and all addressing the same tired theme of “awakening the silent majority”. I don’t know if we are projecting our problems or truly believe that we, the “pro-democracy” bunch, are so beyond reproach that we have earned the right to point our fingers at the others. The fact of the matter is that Isayas is not sustained because the silent majority still stand by his side, he is sustained because our movements are infected with debilitating ills ranging from unnecessary competition, unwarranted dislike, incompetency, cliquish mentality, character assassination and yes even the toxic practice of regionalism. Let’s think of how we can clean up our acts instead of dabbling in self-righteousness.

POST A COMMENT