Archive for June, 2008

Ethiopia Bans Exhibition of Nude Photography

Ethiopia bans nude pics (News24, South Africa)

June 27, 2008

Addis Ababa - Ethiopia has slapped a ban on what had been billed as the Horn of Africa nation’s first exhibition of nude photography, the photographer behind the show said on Wednesday.

Biniam Mengesha, 28, told AFP he had been planning to show 45 photos at the unprecedented exhibition - titled “Black Diamonds” - in the capital Addis Ababa from Friday through to July 4.

“Authorities from the ministry of culture asked me to submit my photos before the exhibition was inaugurated. Afterwards, they said: ‘This isn’t art, it’s pornography’,” Biniam said.

“The photographs are fine art and include partial nudity aided by digital photography. Had it not been censored, it would have been the first in our country.”

Biniam said he is arranging to show his images elsewhere in Africa in two months time. Culture ministry officials declined to comment.

Ethiopia is a largely conservative society, whose 81 million people are mostly Orthodox Christians and Muslims.

Ethiopia @ 2000 Photography Exhibition

Above: Photographer Joan Roth at the Adam Clayton Jr. State
Building (Harlem State Building). Wed. June 18th, 2008.
Photo/Tadias

By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, June 26, 2008

New York (Tadias) - The final event of the Ethiopian Millennium Celebration Series hosted by the Beta Israel of North America foundation will include a presentation of photography by Ethiopian and American photographers at the State Building in Harlem, NY, Friday night. The photographs presented in this exhibition were taken by five professional photographers, each devoted to documenting and representing Ethiopian culture in Ethiopia, Israel, and the United States. The photographs represent a wide spectrum of artistic styles and subjects.

Photographer Joan Roth spent several months in Ethiopia documenting rural Jewish life. Most of her photographs were taken prior to the last wave of migrations of Ethiopian Jews to Israel. The landscapes and texture of the country are represented by the works of Andargé Asfaw, and Ayda Girma contextualizes and compliment Roth’s work with strong and sweeping scenes of nature. Yeganyahu Avishai Mekonen’s photographs span the Ethiopian Jewish experience in Israel while the works of New York Times Staff Photographer Chester Higgins captures the spiritual legacy of Ethiopia.

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At the art gallery at The Adam Clayton Jr. State Building (Harlem State Building).
Wed. June 18th, 2008. Photo/Tadias

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At the art gallery at The Adam Clayton Jr. State Building (Harlem State Building).
Wed. June 18th, 2008. Photo/Tadias

Jill Vexler, who specializes in curating exhibitions about cultural identity and social history, prepared this exhibition series. Vexler has traveled to Ethiopia twice, where deep friendships and a love of the culture were forged through her work with children’s arts programs and through recently adopting a six year old girl, Tibarek.

Speaking about how she got involved in curating the Ethiopian Millennium Celebration Series, Vexler recounted her meeting with Beejhy Barhani, Executive Director of BINA foundation.

“The moment I met Beejhy at BINA, I knew I wanted to be involved with this organization” she says. “As an ‘honorary Ethiopian’ through my adopted Ethiopian daughter, Tibarek, I knew I needed to learn more, make new friends, open doors in our lives and create a huge world of connections and meaning for Tibarek. I wanted to learn more about Ethiopian Jewish customs, too, in order to incorporate them into the type of Jewish family Tibarek and I would create. And I just really liked Beejhy, her instant warmth and generosity.”

So, when Beejhy and Vexler began to talk about an exhibition as part of the Millennium events, Vexler offered to curate the exhibition. “Since I have worked as a curator for many years, I thought it would be just one way that I could contribute something to the organization and help its work and name become more widely known” Vexler said.

Vexler gives credit to Beejhy as co-curator “since it is she who knew so many more photographers than I” she adds. “Each one has a different perspective and together, in a clean and direct way, the exhibition shows vignettes of Ethiopia – landscape, people, architecture, adults, children, Jews, Christians and snippets of life.”

The exhibition catches the ancient spiritual traditions of Ethiopians, showing the colorful tapestry of faith in everyday life. “If in this type of exhibition, just one image catches your eye, draws you in to seeing something new, something different, something beautiful, then we have done our job” Vexler says. “It isn’t supposed to be an exhaustive ethnographic study of Ethiopia. That’s another show! Rather, it is an exhibition of now, today, Ethiopia at the Millennium, a place of energy, beauty, contrasts and endless fascination.”


Friday, June 27, 2008. Photo Exhibition (Ethiopia: A View at the Millennium). From 6:00PM- 9:00PM at the 2nd floor Art Gallery at The Adam Clayton Jr. State Building (Harlem State Building), 63 West 125th St (Harlem, New York). Admission is free. Learn more about the show at binaf.org

Alexandria Police Make Homicide Arrest

Above: Mesfin Hussin, 35, of 3001 Park Center Drive, was
charged with Murder.

Alexandria Police Make Homicide Arrest (ALEXANDRIA POLICE DEPARTMENT)

JUNE 23, 2008

Alexandria police have identified the victim of yesterday’s homicide as Hawlet Mohammed, a 27 year-old Alexandria woman. Police were called to the 3000 block of Park Center Drive around 11:55 p.m. for the report of a deceased female. The victim died at the scene.

The victim suffered trauma to the upper body. An autopsy performed today has determined the manner of death to be homicide.

Alexandria detectives arrested an Alexandria man for the murder of Hawlet Mohammed earlier today. Mesfin Hussin, 35, of 3001 Park Center Drive, was charged with Murder. Mr. Hussin is the husband of Ms. Mohammed.

This is the first homicide in Alexandria this year. There were eight homicides in Alexandria last year.

Report From the Schomburg

Above: Outside Harlem’s Schomburg Center for Research in
Black Culture on Sunday, June 22, 2008. (Photo/Tadias)

Report from the Schomburg

By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, June 23, 2008

New York (Tadias) - This past Sunday, at Harlem’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, a panel discussion entitled “Ethiopia: The Three Faiths” attracted a diverse and large audience. The event hosted by Beta Israel of North America foundation began with cultural dances from the Indian subcontinent and an Ethiopian dance troupe called Keremela.

The panel included Dr. Ephraim Isaac, Director of the Institute of Semitic Studies at Princeton University; Dr. Ayele Bekerie, Professor of Africana Studies at Cornell University, Dr. Said Samatar, Professor of African History at Rutgers University; and Dr. Yohannes Zeleke, an archaeologist, anthropologist, and historian as well as the former curator of the National Museum of Ethiopia.

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The event began with a cultural dance from the Indian subcontinent. (Photo/Tadias)

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Ethiopian dance troupe, Keremela, also performed at the show. (Photo by Jill Vexler)

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Photo by Jill Vexler

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From left: Dr. Ephraim Isaac, Director of the Institute of Semitic Studies at Princeton University;
Dr. Said Samatar, Professor of African History at Rutgers University; Dr. Yohannes Zeleke,
an archaeologist, anthropologist, and historian as well as the former curator of the National
Museum of Ethiopia, and Dr. Ayele Bekerie, Professor of Africana Studies at Cornell University.

Dr. Zeleke shared information regarding the recent archaeological findings in Axum including the unearthing of the Queen of Sheba’s palace and an alter for the Arc of the Covenant by the University of Hamburg.

“These findings were already made 26 years ago, but they are being verified now” he said. He also discussed the Jewish culture and heritage of the pre-Aksumite empire, until 330 A.D. when Christianity took over as the official state religion.

“The only place in the world, when the Temple of Jerusalem was destroyed, where Jewish rulers still reigned was in Ethiopia,” he told the audience. “Ethiopian Jews were not foreigners, they are part of the ancient culture of Ethiopia.”

Dr. Said Samatar described Ethiopia’s historic role in providing sanctuary for the earliest Muslims. He shared the story of King Armah (Negash) and his decision to grant refuge to the family of the Prophet Mohammad, who arrived at Aksum while fleeing from their pagan persecutors.

“Negash held court and asked both the Quraish tribal members and the family of Mohammad to state their case” he notes. Sharing the exchange of words between the Ethiopian Christian King and those in the court, Samatar described how a Christian King refused bribes and granted sanctuary to the fleeing Muslims in Aksum.

“Mohammad didn’t forget the generosity of the Negash,” he said, “and in the sayings (hadith) of the Prophet that have been recorded and passed on for generations, it is noted that ‘Abyssinia is a land of justice in which no one is oppressed.’”

“In effect,” Samatar said “that meant that no jihad could be waged against the Kingdom of Abyssinia.”

Samatar also pointed to the presence of Islam’s oldest mosque, located in Aksum. “Islam may well have come to Ethiopia before the new religion flourished in Mecca” he said. Samatar mentioned that Ethiopia’s King had read the Prophet’s letter himself, and turning to the Schomburg’s audience, he asked the question:

“Did the King read Arabic?”

New Findings About King Armah
Dr. Ayele Bekerie then expounded on the relations between King Armah and his Meccan counterparts, noting new findings that King Armah, who provided sanctuary to the Prophet Mohammed’s followers, had been born in Mecca after his father, Wosen Seged, one of the sons of Atse (Emperor) Gebre Mesqel, the son of Atse Caleb, had been taken to Arabia as a military commander and had been captured as a slave by Persians and sold in Mecca. Armah was born to a Meccan woman and he later bought his freedom, returned to Ethiopia, and replaced his brother as King of Aksum.

“So it is likely that he was familiar with the Prophet Mohammad as well as being able to speak Arabic” Bekerie points out.

As to the king’s forefathers, Bekerie says: “Emperor Gebre Mesqel (King Armah’s grandfather), like his father Emperor Caleb, conducted military campaign in defense of the Christians, but he returned to Ethiopia safe.”

Bekerie provided the audience with a summary of Christianity in Ethiopia and the Tewahedo Orthodox church in particular. He noted its separation from the Chalcedonian council in 5th century A.D. and the translation of the earliest bibles from Greek to Ge’ez as well as the establishment of monasteries by the nine saints of Syria who arrived in Abyssinia while fleeing from Byzantine persecution.

Noting the depths of religious convictions in Ethiopia Bekerie noted that leaders come and go but faith remains a constant in the lives of the Ethiopian people. One good way to celebrate the millennium therefore, would be to celebrate the depths of Ethiopia’s interfaith history and culture.

“Ethiopia is one of the few countries in the world guided by religious tolerance for more than a millennium” he said. “Ethiopia can serve as a model for interfaith space.”

Samatar and Zeleke equally stressed the need to recover the goodwill between the three faiths in their closing commentaries.

“In the fourth millennium we need to work towards the building of a federation that is worthy of the children of the Queen of Sheba”, Samatar concluded to an enthusiastic round of applause from the audience.

Ethiopia Defeated Mauritania in World Cup Qualifier

Above: Morocco’s Benjalloun Abdessalam (C) fights for the
ball with Ethiopia’s Grum Siyoum (R) during their 2010 World
Cup qualifying soccer match in Casablanca May 31, 2008.
REUTERS/Rafael Marchante(MOROCCO)

Ethiopia get off the mark (FIFA)

Saturday 14 June 2008

On matchday three of Africa’s second qualifying round for the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™, Ethiopia defeated Mauritania 1-0 yesterday in the battle of the bottom sides in Group 8.

The win gives the Walyas their first three points of the campaign, although they still have it all to do to catch joint leaders Morocco and Rwanda, who put their 100% record on the line when they go head-to-head on 14 June in Kigali.

The 40,000 crowd at the Olympic stadium in the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott witnessed a fiercely fought game between two sides desperate to get their first points on the board. In the end, however, a late lapse in concentration by the locals allowed Ethiopia to steal all three points with a Said Salahddine strike two minutes into added time.

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(AFP)

Despite moving into third place in the group, the Walyas still have a negative goal difference of -3. However, it is marginally better than that of the hapless Mauritanians (-7), who remain rooted to the foot of the table with three defeats from three games. Read More.

Related: FIFA Suspends Ethiopia With Immediate Effect
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Ethiopians form new opposition party

Above: Birtukan Midekssa is the new party’s chairwoman.

Ethiopian politicians form new opposition party to prepare for elections (International Herald Tribune)

The Associated Press

Published: June 20, 2008

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia: Opposition politicians are forming a party similar to the alliance that presented the most credible challenge to date to Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s 17-year hold on power, the party’s leader said on Friday.

The Unity for Democracy and Justice party will contest the 2010 general elections and is confident of winning, said Birtukan Midekssa, the party’s chairwoman.

Many of the people who made up the main opposition alliance that won the most seats that any opposition group has won in the Ethiopian lower house of Parliament in 17 years are now members of the Unity for Democracy and Justice party, Birtukan told journalists.

“If you talk about the minds and the hearts of the people, I don’t think the (ruling party) is bigger than us,” Birtukan said. “If you talk about the head count, maybe.”

Birtukan said they have applied to the National Electoral Board to be registered as a party. Read More.

Surgeon saved an Ethiopian boy who was born ‘inside-out’

Above: Zerihun Muche with his mother Turieh Berihun

Ethiopian boy who was born ‘inside-out’ was saved by late surgeon husband of actress Natascha McElhone (Daily Mail)

By Daily Mail Reporter
19th June 2008

An Ethiopian boy who was born ‘inside-out’ has become the living legacy of actress Natascha McElhone’s plastic surgeon husband, who died of a heart condition last month.

Zerihun Muche, five, was born with his bladder and several other internal organs on the outside of his body and was destined for life as an outcast.

But surgeon Martin Kelly’s intervention led to radical surgery and now Zerihun can look forward to a vastly improved life.

Mr Kelly, 42, met Zerihun while filming a documentary in Ethiopia in 2006 in his role as the founder of Facing The World, a charity dedicated to helping children with complex medical conditions.

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Above: The late Martin Kelly with
actress wife Natascha McElhone

Mr Kelly made sure the boy received help, referring him to experts at Great Ormond Street Hospital and the Portland Hospital.

Surgeons were so moved by Zerihun’s plight that they treated him for free and have now set up their own charity to help other children from developing countries who suffer from his condition. Read More.

“Ethiopia: The Three Faiths” Panel Discussion at the Schomburg

By Tadias Staff

Published: Thursday, June 19, 2008

New York (Tadias) - Continuing the celebration of the Ethiopian Millenium, BINA Foundation is hosting an interfaith panel discussion this Sunday in Harlem. Ethiopia has the unique position of being home to three of the world’s largest monotheistic traditions - Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

Traditional legends trace their Jewish heritage to the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon and the journey of the Arc of the Covenant from Israel to the highlands of Ethiopia. Surviving copies of the holy Book of Enoch and the Book of Jubilees were found and preserved in Ethiopia.

Ethiopia’s ancient practice of Eastern Orthodox Christianity and the translations of the Bible into Ge’ez occurred as far back as the 5th century A.D. with the advent of Syrian monks fleeing Byzantine persecution. And before the first Hijra to Medina, the prophet Mohammad sent his family to Ethiopia and they received refuge from a Christian emperor and one of the hadith or sayings of Mohammad urge that Muslims recognize the refuge that they received and that they abstain from war on Ethiopians.

Ethiopia’s distinction as an early sanctuary for the three Abrahamic religions will be discussed by panelists including: Dr. Ephraim Isaac, Director of the Institute of Semitic Studies at Princeton University; Dr. Ayele Bekerie, Professor of Africana Studies at Cornell University, Dr. Said Samatar, Professor of African History at Rutgers University; and Dr. Yohannes Zeleke, an archaeologist, anthropologist, and historian as well as the former curator of the National Museum of Ethiopia. The panel discussion entitled “Ethiopia: The Three Faiths” will be held on Sunday at 3pm at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.


Learn more about the panel discussion at www.binacf.org.

Hamlin Fistula Hospital Opens new Hospital in Harrar

Above: Steve Saunders, Board Member, Anne Ferguson,
FF Operations Director, Dr. Catherine Hamlin, Founder of AAFH,
Abaynesh Asrat, Board Member, Kassahun Kebede, Board Chair,
Kate Grant, Executive Director on Opening Day.
(Photo: fistulafoundation.org)

The Hospital was financed entirely by a grant from the Fistula Foundation and its Tesfa Ineste program lead by Ethiopian and Ethiopian-Americans

Published: Friday, June 13, 2008

Santa Clara, California – The Fistula Foundation announced that the new Fistula Hospital in Harrar, Ethiopia began accepting its first patients on June 1, 2008. The Hospital was financed entirely by a grant from the Fistula Foundation and by the Ethiopian-American community in the United States, through the Tesfa Ineste program.

The new fifty-bed Hospital will provide fistula repair and rehabilitation to women in the entire eastern part of Ethiopia, who previously had no access to such care. It will also provide emergency obstetric services and fistula awareness outreach services in an effort to prevent obstetric fistulas from occurring in the first place. The Harrar Hospital is the fourth of five new regional facilities built by the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital to serve women in remote parts of Ethiopia. A fifth hospital in the town of Metu is under construction.

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Opening day of Harrar Hospital. Photo: fistulafoundation.org

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Plaque on the front of the new Hospital, honoring the Fistula Foundation and Tesfa Ineste.
Photo: fistulafoundation.org

The Hospital was inaugurated in a ceremony in Harrar on Friday, May 9, 2008. Dr. Catherine Hamlin, Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital founder, her son Richard Hamlin, Kassahun Kebede, Chair of the Fistula Foundation Board, and Abaynesh Asrat, Fistula Foundation Board Member and Tesfa Ineste Chair made remarks at the ceremony. Representatives from the Fistula Foundation were honored to participate in the inauguration, along with Ethiopian officials.

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Learn more at fistulafoundation.org

D.C. Soccer Tournament to Offer Family Friendly Celebration

Above: The crowd at the 2007 tournament in Dallas.
Photo by Dagnu/ESFNA

By Tadias Staff

Published: Friday, June 13, 2008

Washington, DC (Tadias) – North America’s largest African soccer tournament, hosted by the Ethiopian Sport Federation of North America (ESFNA) is being held in the nation’s capital this year. The Washington D.C. Metropolitan area is home to the second largest Ethiopian population outside of Ethiopia, and tens of thousands of Ethiopian immigrants are expected to attend the D.C. event on July 4th weekend.

The tournament, which usually attracts youth and adults is adding special participatory events for children and families this year.

“In the past, we’ve done our best to accommodate children,” ESFNA PR Officer Fassil Abebe said, “This year, we’ve asked the local organizing committee to keep kids in mind and have some activities for them.” As for kids also being able to participate in sports including soccer, Abebe notes “we have it every year and this year is no exception. In fact there will be an all girls match.” In preparation for the tournament, ESFNA’s press release announced that soccer teams are conducting trial runs to select the 27 final teams that will compete at RFK Stadium between June 29 and July 5.

ESFNA’s annual soccer tournament goes beyond sports entertainment, allowing families and friends in North America’s Ethiopian immigrant population to come together in celebration of both sports and their cultural heritage. The tournament weekend is a popular time for networking, alumni gatherings, small business catering, music performances, and reunion parties. Local D.J. skills are displayed alongside traditional Ethiopian dances, which this year will also be part of a children’s talent show.

“Our entertainment line up is still being worked on as we speak” Abebe says, but it’s “safe to say that we will have famous cultural and contemporary artists accompanied by top notch musicians both at RFK on July 4th and the DC Armory on July 5th.”

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The crowd at the 2007 tournament in Dallas. Photo by Dagnu/ESFNA

The breadth of events and services provide an economic boon to local business, and being selected as a host city for the annual event is both a priviledge and a competitive endeavor. The general economic downturn, however, is one topic that the tournament’s organizers have also reflected on.

“We’ve talked about the economy affecting our turn out. But, we’ve confidence in Ethiopians and friends of Ethiopia residing in or near D.C. to still come out strong and participate in the tournament.” With a wisp of optimism Abebe adds, “The fact that our event has become a yearly pilgrimage, if you will, for lots of Ethiopian families will also help.”

ESFNA has also announced that this year’s tournament schedule will include a voter registration drive on July 4th as part of the strong Ethiopian-American grassroots campaigning for the November presidential elections. Battleground States such as Virginia, Colorado, Ohio, and Minnesota have large Ethiopian immigrant populations.

Abebe points to ESFNA’s collaboration with Democratic support group Ethiopians for Obama. “We’ve been communicating about logistics for some time now. we’ve also assigned a contact person from our side to facilitate whatever Ethiopians for Obama might need during our tournament such as booth space, tables and chairs.”

“In return,” Abebe says, “Ethiopians for Obama are working very hard to have the Senator make an appearance if at all possible. Keep your fingers crossed.”

The Washington D.C. metropolitan area is home to the nation’s largest African immigrant population and the tournament’s focus on both a children-friendly environment and voter registration drives is sure to add more positive experiences for loyal pilgrims.

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Related: Hot Shots: D.C. Soccer Tournament
Learn more about the D.C. Soccer Tournament at ESFNA.ORG

Law Firm Announces “Ethiopian Heritage College Scholarship Fund”

Above: (left to right): Claims Manager Rand Chatman, Partner
Joseph Cammarata, Partner Ira Sherman, Partner Allan Siegel,
Claims Manager Erik McConnell. (Photo: chaikinandsherman.com)

June 11th, 2008

Publisher’s Note: A personal injury law firm with offices in Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia, has created the Ethiopian Heritage College Scholarship Fund for high school graduating seniors. The deadline to apply is Friday, June 13th, 2008.

Here is the announcement from the Law Office of Chaikin, Sherman, Cammarata & Siegel:

In 2008, the Chaikin, Sherman, Cammarata & Siegel Ethiopian Heritage College Scholarship Fund was created in order to help members of the Ethiopian community pay for their college education. The purpose of the fund is to find and then help youngsters with few financial resources obtain a much-desired college degree so that they may then go serve the public. CSCS, P.C. strives to encourage the development of intellect, wisdom, and integrity in those they help, and the firm strongly believes this can be accomplished as can any other goal you long to achieve.

CSCS intends to award one scholarship per year to a resident of the Greater Metropolitan Area who is graduating from high school and has been admitted to, and will be attending, an accredited two or four year college or university on a full-time basis. The scholarship will be in the amount of $1,000 a year, paid in two equal payments on August 1 and February 1. The money must be used to help defer school expenses (i.e. tuition, room and board and books). The Greater Metropolitan Area of Washington D.C. is defined as including the Maryland counties of Montgomery, Prince George´s, Anne Arundel, and Howard and the Virginia counties of Arlington, Fairfax, Loudon, Prince Williams and the City of Alexandria.

The scholarship was publicized by contacting guidance counselors at area high schools to urge them to announce the availability of the scholarships to their students and encourage eligible students to apply. Student selection is made from applications submitted, which meet the criteria. No person related by blood or marriage to any member or former member of the selection committee is eligible for an award. Awardees are required to make reports each grading period concerning their grades and academic standing during the scholarship period. Payments will be withheld when a grantee is not performing satisfactorily.

Scholarship recipient will be chosen on the basis of financial need, high school grade point average, the essay submitted, demonstrated community service, and conclusions the selection panel might draw from a personal interview as to the individual´s motivation, character, ability, and potential.

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Learn More at chaikinandsherman.com

US to give Ethiopia $70m in food aid

US to give Ethiopia $70m in food aid (RTE News)

Wednesday, 11 June 2008

The US last night pledged $70m (€45m) in food aid for Ethiopia, where 4.5m people are in need of emergency food aid.

The US Agency for International Development said some 95,000 tonnes of food is expected in the Horn of Africa nation next month.

Ethiopia will receive an additional $10m in medical supplies, water services and other non-food aid.

Britain pledged an additional £10m (€12.6m) for Ethiopia on Monday, and UK officials were due in Ethiopia yesterday to assess the situation.

High food prices and the failure of rains have cast the country into a crisis reminiscent of its devastating 1984-1985 famine, which killed more than 1m.

The government says 75,000 children are severely malnourished in the country of more than 80m, but last week UNICEF gave a higher estimate of 126,000.

The UN World Food Programme has appealed for $147m to tackle the impact of the drought in Ethiopia, while UNICEF is looking for $50m. Read More

Here We Go Again: Hunger and desperation grow in Ethiopia

Desperation as Ethiopia’s hunger grows (BBC)

Gavin Hewitt’s report from south-west Ethiopia

By Gavin Hewitt
BBC News, Ethiopia

Monday, 9 June 2008

It is a strange and unsettling ride west from the Ethiopian town of Shashamene. The fields are vibrant green. There is water in the creeks. The soil is a deep rich burgundy.

However, the people here speak of a “green drought”.

It is the time when the land is full of new shoots but there is no food. It happens because the last rains failed and few crops were planted.

A crowd gathers quickly. Some hold up their children. They want us to see the distended stomachs which are one sign of hunger.

The parents hope that, by seeing, we will take their children to a treatment centre.

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In every village there were vulnerable
children. You can sense the desperation
when you arrive in a village.

This happened in the village of Odo. A local priest had visited last week and had taken the most severely malnourished children for emergency care.

But others had been left behind, including a 12-year-old with shrunken limbs who suffered from malaria. Read More.

Barack Speaks To HQ Staff & Volunteers

Barack Speaks To HQ Staff & Volunteers

Marcus Samuelsson vs. Chef Bobby Flay

Above: Marcus Samuelsson sat down for an interview with Tadias
on Monday, April 14, 2008 at Merkato 55. Photo by Jeffrey Phipps.

Iron Chef America: Flay vs. Samuelsson (Food Network)

Esteemed NYC Chef Marcus Samuelsson enters kitchen stadium for the first time to challenge Chef Bobby Flay. Will the judges favor Chef Samuelsson’s worldly cuisine, or will Chef Flay’s Southwestern flare win them over? Tune in to see whose cuisine reigns supreme. Read More.

Sheba Film Festival 2008

Above: A Walk to Beautiful, a recipient of the Audience Award
for Best Documentary at the San Francisco International Film
Festival in 2007, is one of the films featured at the 5th Annual
Sheba Film Festival.

By Tadias Staff

Published: Monday, June 9, 2008

New York (Tadias) - The NYC Ethiopian Millennium Celebration series will continue with the 5th Annual Sheba Film Festival on Saturday, June 15th, at the JCC in Manhattan (Amsterdam and 76th Street).

“The films represent a diverse cross-spectrum of Jewish and Ethiopian life. The festival will begin with Caravan 841, directed by Zion Rubin, about Moshe, an 11 year-old Ethiopian boy who lives in the ‘Atidim’ caravan site located in Western Galilee while he awaits the arrival of his mother from Ethiopia”, said Beejhy Barhany of BINA, the organization that plays host to the annual Sheba Film Festival.

Meanwhile, “A Walk to Beautiful, directed by Mary Olive Smith, tells the stories of five Ethiopian women who suffer from devastating childbirth injuries and embark on a journey to reclaim their lost dignity. The film was a recipient of the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 2007.”

The press release sent to Tadias also highlights the work of Director Radu Mihaileanu, who will showcase Live and Become, which celebrated its New York premier in February 2008. The film depicts an epic journey of an Ethiopian boy, Shlomo, who is airlifted from a Sudanese refugee camp to Israel in 1984 during Operation Moses. “Shlomo is plagued by two big secrets: he is neither a Jew nor an orphan. Q&A with survivors of similar journeys will follow the film,” the press release stated.

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BINA adds that “the films depict different aspects of Ethiopia: contemporary urban life, Ethiopian Jewry, and communities, which have been influenced by Ethiopia.”

Next on the list for the NYC Ethiopian Millennium Celebration series is a photography exibition at the State Building in Harlem and a panel discussion at the Schomburg. Stay tuned for more coverage.


Learn more about the 5th Annual Sheba Film Festival at www.binacf.org.

Israel’s Ethiopians Forced to Give Up Injera

Above: An undated photo shows teff grain being processed
near Adis Abeba (Addis Ababa), Ethiopia. Rising food prices
around the world combined with drought have caused Ethiopia
to clamp down on teff exports, forcing many expatriate Jews now
living in Israel to go without the injera bread that traditionally
accompanies their meals. Photograph by Michael S. Lewis/NGS

Israel’s Ethiopians Forced to Give Up Traditional Bread (National Geographic News)

Mati Milstein in Bat Yam, Israel
for National Geographic News

June 5, 2008

Part seven of a special series that explores the local faces of the world’s worst food crisis in decades.

The crisis that has sent food costs spiraling upward around the globe is causing Ethiopian Jews now living in Israel to give up something priceless: a piece of their culture.

Tens of thousands of the expatriates are being forced to abandon their traditional diets because of the skyrocketing cost of teff grain.

Teff, a nutritious and hardy cereal domesticated in Ethiopia thousands of years ago, is the primary ingredient in injera, a round flatbread that accompanies most Ethiopian meals.

A drastic shortage has caused the price of teff to jump by some 300 percent over the past year.

A 110-pound (50-kilogram) sack now runs at least 600 New Israeli shekels (about U.S. $179).

The price increases hit Israel’s Ethiopian community particularly hard, as it is a struggling group with about three-quarters living below the poverty line, according to official figures. Read More.

Hot Shots: NYC Ethiopian Millennium Concert

By Tadias Staff
Photos by Rodney Zagury

Published: Friday, June 6, 2008

New York (Tadias) - The NYC Ethiopian Millennium celebration kicked-off with a concert at Joe’s Pub on Saturday, May 31, 2008. Here are hot shots.

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Rising star Mimi (Asresash Meshesha) from Washington, D.C. perfroms at the
Millennium kick-off concert at Joe’s Pub on Saturday, May 31, 2008.
Photo by Rodney Zagury.

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Over 200 people attended the the NYC Ethiopian Millennium celebration kick-off
concert at Joe’s Pub on Saturday, May 31, 2008. Photo by Rodney Zagury.

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The Ethiopian Millennium celebration concert at Joe’s Pub featured Abebe Teka.
Saturday, May 31, 2008. Photo by Rodney Zagury.

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NYC Ethiopian Millennium celebration concert at Joe’s Pub. Saturday, May 31, 2008.
Photo by Rodney Zagury.

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New York’s own DJ Sirak (left) entertained the crowd with world music in between
performances at the NYC Ethiopian Millennium celebration concert at Joe’s Pub.
Saturday, May 31, 2008. Photo/Tadias.

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Beejhy Barhany (left), Director of BINA and the millennium events coordinator with
her husband at the Ethiopian Millennium celebration concert at Joe’s Pub.
Saturday, May 31, 2008. Photo/Tadias.

Backstage at Joe’s Pub
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Abebe Teke and Assefa Fanta. Joe’s Pub. Sat., May 31, 2008. Photo/Tadias.

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Abebe Teka, Meron Dagnew, and Assefa Fanta. Joe’s Pub. May 31, 2008. Photo/Tadias.

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Learn more about upcoming Millennium events at: www.binacf.org

Schoolgirl Stabbed to Death in London

Above: Agony in London - Tsehay Dawit on her way to see
her murdered daughter Arsema’s body today. On her right is
her surviving daughter Feruz, 12

‘How could they do this?’
Agony of stabbed schoolgirl’s mother as she sees her daughter’s body (Mail Online)

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 8:08 PM on 04th June 2008

Stricken with grief, the mother of stabbed schoolgirl Arsema Dawit leaves her London home today as she is taken to see her daughter’s body.

Weeping uncontrollably, Tsehay Dawit was supported by her surviving daughter Feruz, 12, as she made her way to the car taking her to the mortuary.

Before she left, she pointed at the floral tributes laid outside the door to the block of flats where they lived in Lambeth and repeated over and over again: “How could they do this? It was here they left my daughter.”

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Murdered: Arsema Dawit, 15, was stabbed
to death in a frenzied attack just yards from
her own door

Meanwhile a 21-year-old student, Thomas Nugusse, of Ilford, Essex has been charged with Arsema’s murder and will appear at Greenwich Magistrates Court on Thursday, Scotland Yard said tonight. Read More.

Ethiopian Americans React to Obama’s Victory

Above: Victory party by Obama supporters at La Carbonara
in Washington DC. June 3rd, 2008. Photo: Ethiopians for Obama.

By Tadias Staff

Published: Wednesday, June 4, 2008

New York (Tadias) - Ethiopian Americans across the country welcomed Barack Obama’s claim of the Democratic presidential nomination Tuesday night, most of them contacted by Tadias noting the historical significance of the first African American candidate to lead either major party for the White House.

“By his nomination, Obama made history. It is indeed great to be alive and witness such a revolutionary event. I listened to his powerful and eloquent speech last night at St. Paul and when he announced that he is the nominee for the president of the United States, I spontaneously jumped out of my seat and screamed, completely overtaken by the moment, the historic moment”, said Ayele Bekerie, Assistant Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies at the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University.

“Obama became the first African American to win a nomination for a presidential candidacy from a major party. Obama’s victory is a testimony to America’s greatness. His story and the stories of all those who reach remarkable heights from humble beginnings affirm the possibilities and opportunities of the United States.”

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Professor Ayele Bekerie. Ithaca,
New York.

“The Ethiopian Americans played, rightly and appropriately, active roles in the campaign and in the political process here in their new country. Many valuable lessons can be drawn from the process: peaceful political participation is a reality and political change can be brought by peaceful means. Furthermore, by participating in the political process here, the Ethiopian Americans will be in a better position to advocate and lobby for desirable change in Ethiopia”, Professor Bekerie added.

“I expect Obama, if elected president, to push for a progressive African agenda. An agenda that seeks transparency and accountability of African leaders. An agenda that empowers the people of Africa. An agenda that promotes genuine economic development. An agenda that emphasizes human rights.”

Bizu Hodge, 34, a Business Manager at Rossa Motors in Oakland, California, called Obama’s victory “happiest” moment.

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Business Manager Bizu Hodge, 34. Oakland,
California.

“It was one of the happiest days of my life to see Barak Obama clinching the nomination. I could never have imagined the joy of celebrating this historic moment with my fellow Ethiopians, friends and hard core Obama supporters. No simple thank you expresses my appreciation to the Everett and Jones restaurant for hosting a huge party and for being so generous. They provided free food and drink with all Obama supporters and volunteers. We were chanting and saying the usual slogans throughout the evening”, Bizu said.

“I also met new enthusiastic fellow Ethiopians who want to support in the general election. For the first time in my life, I felt that I am doing something worthwhile. I believe in the American dream and the opportunities and possibilities for a better world. Last night, Obama, proved to all of us how America is indeed a land of possibility for every person who wants to reach higher. His strength and will power made me believe in him more.”

Computer Programmer Mike Endale, 26, from Maryland said it was a dream come true.

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Computer Programmer Mike Endale, 26.
Maryland

“It was realization of a dream I had some 16 months ago when Obama first announced his candidacy. It was moving. It was inspiring. It was one of a night. Last night, for the first time in a long time, I learned to believe again. Senator Obama’s win for the nomination is a true testament for the maturity of this nation. It was one of the most inspiring and rewarding journeys I’ve ever been on. I am excited what tomorrow would bring”, he said.

“But what summed it up for me is what I read on one blog: ‘Tomorrow I will go to the African American cemetery outside of Chicago where my great-grandparents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, friends, neighbors, and my mother and father are buried. And I will tell them that they were right — that if we studied hard, worked hard, kept the faith, fought for justice, prayed, that this day would come. And it has.’”

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Stay tuned for more reactions.

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