The poetics and politics of Oromo resistance
Ebbisa Adunya, 2013. Wikicommons/Hirphaa Gafuree.Some rights reserved.On June 4, 2015, renowned Oromo artist Haacaaluu Hundeessaa released an
intoxicating single track, Maalan Jiraa. The song condenses within
itself the story of the Oromo people with impeccable acuity, waltzing between stories
of pain and pride, hope and despair. Full of anguish and self-doubt, Maalan Jira is a powerful probe into the
modern Oromo condition and illustrated the complex dilemma facing the Oromo
nation and its struggle for political emancipation.
The Oromo are the single
largest ethnic group in East Africa, comprising well over a third of Ethiopia’s 99 million people. For generations, Oromos have
been relegated to the periphery of Ethiopian politics, not in spite of their
numerical majority, but because of it. What makes the Oromo experience so incomprehensible
is the fact that they remained one of the last oppressed majority groups of the
world in a country in which identity is both the constitutive and regulative principle of political life.
Stripped of agency, voice,
and visibility, the Oromo use poetry, music, and storytelling both to articulate their experiences of marginalization and to
resist forms of knowledge and modes of interpretation used to legitimize their
oppression. Originating from a deep well of Oromo tradition, music has served
as the single most important expressive art form used – a site of
counter-memory and counter-culture. Among the downtrodden and reviled of the world, Oromos turned to music to resist
official narratives and hegemonic interpretations, undoing imposed silences,
and disrupting established frameworks of remembering and forgetting.
By undermining the very
coherence and unity of official interpretations, Oromo music has played a
central role in providing alternative spaces and enunciating ‘the Oromo
question’.
The Oromo question
The Oromo question has been articulated as a question of national
self-determination, understood as the right of the Oromo people to determine
their political, economic, and cultural status. Within this historically
specific articulation, national oppression is the origin of the question, Oromumma
(Oromo national identity) its engine, and liberation its end goal.
Oromos consider themselves victims of a systemic
and structural wrong, an injustice that
deprived them, like the Plebeians of antiquity, of the very conditions of
visibility and audibility. Though an integral part of the Ethiopian state, the
stigmatization of their identity and culture makes them what French philosopher
Jacques Rancière calls ‘the part of no part’. Oromos insist that to include them
in ways against their will, and on terms that do not reflect and acknowledge their
status as a people, is no less violent and oppressive than exclusion. They
remain threatened in the very space to which they belong.
Oromo resistance music
Oromos have always used freedom
songs and dances to symbolize and enact their experiences of dispossession and
marginalization. In the 1990s a distinctive genre of protest music begun to
function as the loudspeakers of the Oromo struggle for freedom. Oromo musical icons such as Ali Birra, Abitaw Kebede, Nuho Gobana,
Umar Suleyman, Ebbisa Adunya, Kadir Said with many others played an
indispensable role in creating a social space wherein the Oromo struggle for
equality and self-emancipation is articulated and debated.
It is here, in this reservoir of songs, in the unruly dances and
heart-breaking ballads, that one finds the story of the Oromo nation and its
struggle for self-determination, not in the official archives and historiographies
of the Ethiopian state.
In lyrics packed with angst and fervor, a generation of Oromo
singers turned to the cryptic but transformative power of music to give voice to their
aspirations. Singing against the current, they rejuvenated Oromo nationalism
and conserved the Oromo experience of marginalization and humiliation. They also engaged in forms of protest that laid bare the
essence of Oromo life within Ethiopia in all its traumatic complexity.
For example, Suleyman’s
poignant compositions and enthralling bass
voice moves people to action. His epic lyrics, recorded on
cassettes, have been listened to in awe and admiration throughout Oromia. In
the 1990s, Omar’s songs literally flew the flag of rebellion,
articulating the limits of non-violent resistance and the inseparability of the
cause of freedom and justice from violence.
It is in this most unpromising and unhistorical of places, in lyrics
full of emotions and nostalgia but expressive of the devastation of the social
fabric, that one finds the authentic experience of the Oromo.
The Addis Ababa master plan
Hundeessaa’s song comes at a
time of great uncertainty for Oromos living around the city of Addis Ababa. Historically an Oromo city located at the heart of Oromia,
the largest of the 9 states making up the Ethiopian federation, Addis Ababa
(Finfinne) is the seat of the Federal government. The Ethiopian constitution recognizes the special interest of
Oromia in Finfinne and directs parliament to enact laws specifying the terms
and conditions that respects and regulates this multifaceted relationship
between the city and Oromia.
Two decades on, however, no
such law is forthcoming, and to add insult to injury, the ruling party announced
what it calls the ‘Addis Ababa Integrated Master Plan’, allowing the unprecedented
expansion of the city into Oromia. Emboldened by a symbolic election victory in
which the ruling party won 100% of the 442 seats announced thus far, the
government is set to implement the Master Plan, threatening the wellbeing and
livelihood of Oromo farmers neighboring the city.
This is precisely what
Hundeessaa’s new song depicts. It weeps for Finfinne, a
city that for generations condemned the Oromo culture and identity to
precarious subterranean existence. The song’s engrossing sonic
texture is at once unsettling and captivating, unsettling because it excavates
and reopens past wounds, captivating because it has the poetic quality only a
work of art can achieve.
Two clear narratives emerge from the song: first, that of
pride and affirmation of Oromo identity and self-worth, and second, that of
mourning, discord, and humiliation born of the continued dispossession and
marginalization of the Oromo on their own land.
Full of fire and pride, Hundeessaa
protests this tyranny of the center, and situates ‘the Finfinne Question’ within
the broader Oromo history and experience of dispossession. His song is part
tribute and part mémoire, a tribute to Finfinne and a
memoire to the dozens of students gunned down by security
forces during Oromo students protest against the Master Plan.
This is a song that enables
the Oromo to imagine beyond the given-ness of present arrangements; a song that
shows that the present is not inevitable, and that things could be different
and better.