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Fetsum: Direct appeal to Professor Araya Debessai

Back in the days during the struggle, a group of fighters broke up from ELF to form another front that ended up being EPLF at the end of the day. The splinters used to be

Back in the days during the struggle, a group of fighters broke up from ELF to form another front that ended up being EPLF at the end of the day. The splinters used to be called HIZBAWI HAILITAT until they integrate their forces to a single front called HIZBAWI GINBAR that finally liberated Eritrea after 30 years of scuffle with the Ethiopians. Our success was impossible without a united front of the HAILITAT exclusively focused on independence and the current struggle for justice is impossible without converging all pieces of the resistance to a single structure with clear political strategy focused on secular democracy that we are trying to eventually achieve in our country one way or another.
As you know, we grew worshipping EPLF with clear intention of doing whatever it took to make it successful. We gave everything including our lives and futures for this. Unfortunately, the regime refused to co-operate choosing to destroy us instead without any provocation. It chose to deny the people their peaceful survival in their country putting itself at the edge of the cliff isolated from them and the international community, as we witnessed since the last few years of experience. It chose death instead of life and God willing we shall deliver its wish with the same determination and passion for our independence.
In this historical confrontation with the Higdefites where they have become a minority group in the Diaspora, one can safely conclude that the fight for freedom and justice in our country is in a relatively better shape than ever in the past. The destructive elements of the society are breaking apart while the forces of freedom are mushrooming clearly predicting the inevitable death of the dictatorship sooner than we think; still depending on how we navigate the opportunity at hand. His shameful supporters are nowhere to be seen today compared to their arrogant and intimidating presence of the past. They are hiding from the people; cannot even confidently look us in the eyes for the tide has shifted against for good! Some of them are shrinking confused about what to do with their unconditional conformism while some others silently detaching from the humiliating dictator or slowly dissolving to the resistance a piece at a time. It is no more the dictator’s illusive popularity, divisive and deceptive foundation that keep him alive but our failure to patch the scattered pieces of the struggle under a common strategy to Asmara. Interest to change the situation and illusive unity are not enough to cut it without strategic unity because we saw it and have been suffering the consequence dearly.
Things have, however, changed at last. It might have taken a long time to discover said practical strategy to our democratic future but thank God we have it now and we should never hesitate to nurture it into a potent means of freedom for our society. Is this what is taking place?
Dear Professor Araya;
You know how valuable you have been to the Eritrean people since the era of struggle as a young man till this point in time as full professor in one of the best Universities of America. Your outstanding academic capacity and passion for democratic Eritrea were national assets that should have been utilized for the benefit of our society had not the crazy dictator rendered you and your likes irrelevant for his demonic curse on our society in terms of ignorance and modern slavery of the youth. You are tirelessly working hard to change our depressing situation and God bless you for the effort but please allow me to share my view on what we should do from now on to upgrade the struggle to the next level of consciousness based on my observation of our communal activities in different cities of the US.
There is no doubt that quite a few Eritrean organizations and individual activists are attracted to the Bottom-Up strategy as the best we have on the table and it will work but only if most of us understand what it is about. I feel like our people in Diaspora are ready for change but ideologically lost in the process despite the emergence of different groups in favor of the grassroots movement. I don’t think the relentless effort of our intellectuals and writers in transmitting the message through the Websites is working as well as we expected it to work mainly because of the uneducated youth programmed to stay still through deliberate ignorance and of course the vindictive, static and oversensitive older generation that lacks resilience to accommodate creative ideas outside its psychological fixation. The immobile mind is not free yet to fearlessly accept ideas needless saying that we don’t have the culture of reading to improve the situation for a better result.
In testifying my observation in different communities of the US (Baltimore, DC, Dallas, etc), many Eritreans appear interested in doing something about our destiny and I hear them saying that we have to do it together to succeed. There are weakly bonded committees everywhere separately trying to help out but with no clear picture about the strategy the intellectual class is talking about. They don’t seem to follow a concrete ideology beyond condemning the regime and wishing the people good luck. There is undeniable conceptual gap between the advocates of Bottom-Up strategy and the communities or between what we are trying to do and what they are doing reflecting the unpleasant reality in probably most community groups elsewhere as well. I hope I am wrong but I don’t think most of our communities clearly know what the grassroots/Bottom-Up strategy is about let alone understanding how to use it for our eventual success. The current information gap is bound to create problems to the grassroots movement unless modulated otherwise.
Lack of strategic unity has definitely forced our communities to work separately with minimal impact to the dictatorship. We must upgrade our means of communication repeatedly spelling out the details of the strategy to create strong bond between our communities. Everything we do from now on should focus on putting our communities in the same page of understanding the Bottom-Up concept of democratizing the country. We should focus on closing the conceptual gap between them in more efficient approach. We have to expedite the process of creating a situation where the strategy is well understood by the people through direct contact anywhere in the world in order to succeed achieving a network of Eritrean communities on conceptual level of the dynamics. OUR VOICE in Europe, their affiliates in Australia, here in the States and other regions of the world should then prioritize this mission by directly transmitting the philosophy to our respective communities. We need to recruit people that can accelerate the knowhow by directly contacting the people in their respective geographic locations. I believe this is the best way of directly transferring the knowledge to the communities and we should start it immediately by assigning dedicated individual activists in the major cities where Eritreans live in hundreds. Through this approach, I believe our communities can better learn the strategy with minimum cost and elect their committees accordingly. They can then expand the mission to comprise unity based on States or countries that would eventually converge to the global leadership responsible for inducing political change in Eritrea. I think this is within your capacity, Mr. Professor and I hope you will do it as soon as possible. It may be too much to ask but I also encourage Brother Amanuel Iyassu to enhance the effort through direct contact with the communities around the world and strongly remind our people to contribute money to this effect so that we can achieve something before the international court passes a verdict on our question of humanity against the dictator in the very near future. God bless the grassroots movement and thank you!

aseye.asena@gmail.com

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17 COMMENTS
  • k.tewolde March 29, 2016

    In order a certain drug to cure a person , you have to know the molecular structure of the drug ,it’s pharma kinetics,it’s efficacy in a particular clinical setting,how it is going to be delivered and how much of it, it’s side effects, at the same time know the patient who is afflicted inside out, the disease and it’s etiology and prognosis,then you will have a measurable outcome or cure.We are not there yet.The dr. doesn’t know the pt, and vice versa.There is generational warp.In order to rally people around you for a cause especially the young generation, you have to know them intimately,the tyrant does, because he molded them that is why he confidently mules,’DON’T WORRY THEY GOING ON A PICNIC,THEY WILL COME BACK’ and some of them do. A plea ain’t gonna cut it.Let’s really get to work,smartly!!!!!!

  • k.tewolde March 29, 2016

    Otherwise,let’s not waste our time or other people’s,let’s just keep trekking around the globe looking for a safe haven.And let’s watch and wait from a distance for the moribund regime in Asmara to crumble under it’s own wait naturally.

    • Musa Ali March 30, 2016

      U have not presented ur smarter idea. What is your better idea so that we can compare ur’s vs fistum’s.

      • k.tewolde March 30, 2016

        Brother Musa,a smart idea is just a smart idea, I can come up with smarter idea or less smart idea, we can compare and contrast those ideas all day long, it doesn’t mean nothing.With all due respect to Brother Fitsum and his literary contribution to the dire Eritrean cause at hand,this article above and it’s contents were written and rewritten several times over.Let’s move on to the implementation phase,let’s recognize and remove the hurdles that get in the way of the implementation,let’s harness and empower the talent and expertise among us,let’s talk to the youth by the language they can understand and mind set they can connect with…….Let’s really get to work smartly!!!!!!

        • Musa Ali March 30, 2016

          Talking to the young generation in the language they understand is important but may not be as important as starting the bottom up process itself. There is really huge number of young generation ready for action. This group does not need further explanation of the violations that is going on back home and the urgency of taking action to stop it before moral decay invades every sector and the society at large. So u are right when u said we need to start the implementation phase b/s that is the kindling point for the spontaneous chain of reaction that will follow. At the same time personalized messages need to be communicated to all. Need to ask every one how they would feel if they are collected from the street and kept behind bars. Especially if not told why. If are not given any chance to defend themselves in court. If are not allowed to see and be seen by family, relatives and friends. If they can not choose what they want to be or do or where they want to live. If they can not visit parents back home simply b/s they have different political view from iseyas-higdef. Etc., etc., etc.

          • k.tewolde March 31, 2016

            Fair enough brother Musa,when I left my warm and loving home to the field at a tender age of 14 and half, personally,I was comfortable with a potential to fulfill my dreams and the tools I need was there for me,but I chose to sacrifice all that for the betterment of my people,nobody yanked me out of my home,but somebody smart exploited the situation to get me out of that warm nest voluntarily.Now,can you imagine working with these youngsters who are the direct victims of this barbaric regime who robbed them of their youth,their dreams, and their future and left them barren with nothing to look forward to,the scenario can not be riper that this.It is a loaded up warhead ready to be deployed.All we have to do is reorient the warhead in the right direction.Exploit the situation positively,half of the work is done for us by the suicidal tyrant already, let’s get up and complete the job,smartly!!!!!!!

  • g michael March 29, 2016

    Fetsum,
    Fetsum,
    Brilliant!
    Is there enough time to go through the process of education in time to unite our communities on global basis for a united voice on an ICC verdict on the dictator? The grass root movement, it seems has a more fundamental cause than just being a united voice to bring the dictator to justice, although that should indeed be a goal. That of establishing a democracy for a process of change both as a means and an end to our suffering under this dictator. This it seems is the central tenet of this movement. To educate and energize a cross section of the Eritrean society in the diaspora for a political action is the real challenge. That Professor Araya’s call seen through his wisdom and experience becomes a catalyst is a huge asset and an inspiration for the movement. How this movement becomes a reality without a rift with established organs of the opposition is another challenge.

  • Musa Ali March 30, 2016

    That is the only way to have representatives of people rather than individual politicians who represent themselves only. These politicians are as isolated as the higdefites. Despite the deep public anger against the dictator and higdef they have been unable to capitalize on that opportunity to rally the huge diaspora around them. So I support your appeal completely.

  • A H March 30, 2016

    Thanks Bro,
    Yes, we need to come together to destroy Isia, the wrong messenger, but how? is the 6 Million question?
    I would love to see the youngsters to find the answer and us, the one foot on the grave, to lead them to the main stream, advice and become a bridge for them. And let all those acadamic come out from the closet to start the peoples revolution and that will start to hount the wrong messenger, Isia. I believe, the time is ripe, Mr Tesfay Temnewo the honourable veterand. God bless you Mr Tesfay Temnewo, please send me your book.

  • Natnael March 30, 2016

    This is a task that will need a well desciplined administration.
    1)Organization: a tree structure could help organizing our people (the mass):
    · the global leadership as a steering body/committee (controling the success, amoung others) as a root,
    · Managing representatives on the knodes and
    · the people/masss as a leaf

    2)Management: we Eritreans are lucky enough that we have many competent and qualified project managers that can manage the transforming project processoriented adjusting the known Project management methods

    The buttom-Up concept is not new for most of our people, especially the migrants in the democratic western countries as they have already a buttom-Up government systems opposed to the commando economic systems of the eastern world. For example in the Federal Republic of Germany the people vote their representatives in every governmental stage (from the community over the state stage upto the federal level analogously ) that is from the buttom upto the top directly or indireclty democraticaly. This means in the existing infrastructure the needed expense will not be so much.

    The most important phase of the transformation is THE START one!

    We don’t have to kill time

  • negash March 31, 2016

    Ato Fetsum I always appreciate ur interest in our cause. But, I want to remind you that during the struggle for independence we were not united: there were ELF supporters, unionists, some were indifferent. I don’t want to propose but feel it is better for the bottom-UP to move foreward people will only join the winning wagon.

  • negash March 31, 2016

    Ato Fetsum I always appreciate ur interest in our cause. But, I want to remind you that during the struggle for independence we were not united: there were ELF supporters, unionists, some were indifferent. I don’t want to propose but I feel it would be better for the bottom-UP to move fore ward people will only join the winning wagon.

    • k.tewolde March 31, 2016

      Please say something to negash, because at this stage of the game, I couldn’t put together words to describe and answer to the smartest wagon[post] of the year.

    • hp March 31, 2016

      ኩቡር negash.
      ናብ ኣተሓሳስባይ ዝዘምበየ ነጥቢ ኣልዒልካለይ።ሓው Futsum ዘቅረቦ appeal ተሞርኩስካ ዝሃብካዮ ርእይቶ ነጥበ-ኩርናዕ ንምዕዋት bottom-up proposal may be the wagon of winning as you said. However,we are still apart with out considering ELF as liberator. EPLF the splinter joined TPLF for the out-come we see today.that,prof-araya may valutate! We have to consider many options.

  • hanetse kahsay March 31, 2016

    ዝኸበርካ ፍጹም መልእኽትኻ

  • Freweini Ghebresadick April 1, 2016

    Thank you Fetsum for your sensible and much needed input to the grassroots movement.

    I agree with you; activists in different regions have to meet, discuss, and create some sort of framework. I have been following individuals and groups addressing the bottom-up approach or grassroots mobilization. Although there is readiness to work together and some initiatives have taken root, there have been noticeable discrepancies in content and approach among those who have communicated with the public, be it in the form of interviews, presentations, or sharing written guidelines. Therefore, it is important that activists get together and straighten things out.

    After the activists create an agreed upon framework, direct contact with people around there respective areas is the best way, in my view. Activists have to stay among their people doing the actual work and not engage and disengage as guest speakers. They have to reach out to their communities and create opportunities for people to spend as much time as possible working together. If people don’t feel the activists or their communities care about them, what is said, even repeated a thousand times, will come in one ear and go out the other. Genuine closeness and understanding as a community, as a people, comes from investing time with your people. Giving lectures and disappearing until next year does not work, in my view. Eritreans, one way or another, never stopped working for democratic change. However, no headways have been gained. People are called to listen to someone speak and to be told what to do and what to expect. This puts them in a waiting mode expecting for others to take care of business, because they do not have the feeling that they are stakeholders and equal partners. So staying amongst and being part of the community one is for and with is very important. It shows that you genuinely care about them and that you are one of them. The youth is also included in these communities.

    Exchanging ideas with frequent encounters builds more trust and openness than heavily deliberate sporadic lectures. It also keeps the momentum going, instead of – on and off – and provides a better chance for continuity and building on the work already done. In a way, this is nothing but focused effort; focus I think is required for the success of the grassroots movement as it is already challenging to bring together people who have, for the most part, been pulled in different directions and in some cases detached altogether.

    I think many commenters already made similar points in different ways. Thank you all!

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