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Birmadummaa Ummata Oromoof!!

Welcome to Oromian National Academy (O.N.A)

Kawoo Gadaa      Presenting Gadaa      The Oromo in Diaspora

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Letter to Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. From Human Rights Watch.

About Oromo and Oromos from world media.

A better community
In recent years, Minnesota has become a home for many immigrants from around the world and a big portion of these are Africans. As the number of immigrants pouring into the state grows rapidly, the need to fulfill physical, educational and spiritual necessities has also grown. Consequently, an expansion of many ethnic churches has been perceptible in the last few decades. Also, immigrant children, mostly first generation, seem to be attending secondary education more than ever before. This is mostly due to rapid expansion of ethnic communities. A primary example of a rapidly growing community in Minnesota is the Oromo community.

The Oromo ethnic groups are mostly people from the Oromia region of Ethiopia, who left the country to escape persecution by the government. According to the Oromo Community Center of Minnesota, there are an estimated 12,000 to 15,000 Oromos currently relocated in the Twin Cities alone, arguably making this state the second home after Oromia. In fact, the University itself has a large number of full- and part-time undergraduate and graduate Oromo students. According to the Oromia Student Union, their membership increased by 155 percent since the organization was established in 1996. This should suggest something about the rate at which this community is growing.

As an Oromo individual, I take pride in my Oromoness, but at the same time, I have a hard time explaining to people who Oromos are and where Oromia is. This is partially due to the fact that most people are not aware of their environs, thus it requires me to kill my precious 15 minutes between classes or from studying for my weekly back-to-back midterms.

I have a suggestion to make. I think in our University community, we all ought to know something about people whom we are surrounded by every day. These people are sometimes our study buddies or lab partners. This is especially true for Oromo students, because we have so many of them. I think to strengthen this community of ours we should try to know a little something about those people who make up the community. We have nothing to lose, but to gain everlasting knowledge.

If you are interested learning about the Oromos, contact the Oromia Student Union at osu@umn.edu, or log on to www.oromia.org

Midhasso Foge
University student

sourse: http://www.mndaily.com/articles/2005/10/21/65719/

 

 
 
 

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Copyright 2004

 

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ONA News

Oromo: UN Sounds Alarm over Pre-Famine Conditions in Southern Ethiopia

A United Nations aid coordination agency said Monday the drought gripping the Horn of Africa had reached a critical stage in eastern and south-eastern Ethiopia and was likely to deteriorate over the coming month....... more


Ethiopia Denies Holding Thousands of Oromo Students

02 February 2006

Ethiopia has denied a report that it has detained thousands of students from the Oromo ethnic group in a crackdown on anti-government protests.

In an interview with VOA... more


Oromo: Amnesty International Concerned About Detainees

Amnesty International expressed its serious concern on Monday about the conditions of 11 university students from Oromia region who were being held incommunicado.

In a press release dated January 30, 2006, Amnesty... more

 

 

Oromo: Popular Uprising Reaches a Critical Stage
Below is a Press Release from the External Information Division, Foreign Relations Department, Oromo Liberation Front

15 February 2006 - The popular uprising that has been raging throughout Oromia since Nov. 9, 2005 is unprecedented in the history of the Oromo people and is marking a new chapter in the struggle for freedom and democracy.

The basic demands remain the same: respect.... more


 

 

 

 

 

 

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