Ethiopian Socio-Cultural Rules Require Fundamental Change:
A Case from my Bag of Childhood Memories

By Maru Gubena | 22 March 2009

It is in fact not difficult to provide multiple examples of Ethiopian socio-cultural
rules that contain negative connotations, and which have been partly or fully
responsible for molding the unaccommodating and unproductive attitudes of the
members of Ethiopian society. These socio-cultural rules are also obviously
responsible for our dysfunctional behaviours, which continue to be a permanent
impediment to the process of democratization and to a free flow of ideas and
views among individuals. It is therefore my sincere hope that we, concerned
Ethiopians, will be willing to do everything that is in our capacity to selectively and
collectively fight against the bad side of our socio-cultural values and norms, to
realize the required structural transformation.

Here, for the purpose of clarity, I have chosen to address just a single aspect
among the many cultural patterns of Ethiopian’s socio-cultural norms: the negative
use of the adjective
“woregna.” I consider this to be an enemy for a great part of
Ethiopian society – an impediment to the development of free mindsets. With the
intention of producing a readable text, this true story drawn from the bag of my
childhood memories will be employed to illustrate the central, complex issues –
issues that have lacked the required attention. As is known, there are also
enormous differences in the meaning of the term of
“woregna.” The larger
Ethiopian society tends to employ this word to describe individuals in a negative
way: people who make trouble by stepping outside the social norms. The usage
within a family household is quite different. When parents use the term
woregna,” it is intended to protect children and other family members from the
judgments of outsiders by discouraging acting too talkative or curious; the usage
may feed into the social norms, but it is not at all negative. It can even be an
expression of joy and the love of a mother for her laughing, happy child who
constantly calls to her, asking so many exciting and even tiring questions. The
subsequent pages reflect real and affectionate mother-child relations.

    As can possibly be agreed
    the way a particular
    society interprets
    behaviours described by
    terms like “curiosity” and
    “fascination” – and
    whether these are seen as
    positive or negative
    attributes for individuals
    to possess – depends
    largely on the socio-
    cultural values, norms
    and attitudes that have
    been framed, molded,
    shaped and reshaped
    within the members of
    that particular society.
Being curious, or having a fervent desire to enthusiastically and creatively engage
in observation and discussion, in an attempt to uncover and understand the world
– and in this case the socio-cultural, and economic relations among people – is
seen as an extraordinary talent in modern societies, especially those that are
technologically developed; such societies may give people with this talent a special
socio-economic status. The same applies to the enormous curiosity and
enthusiasm shown by individuals who make vigorous efforts to clearly perceive
and understand the processes and course of events in a given society, the socio-
cultural influences on behaviors and interactions, the presence or absence of
talents and capacities among individuals, and the huge gaps due to inequalities
among the members of society.

Regrettably, Ethiopia is an example of a culture in which the most dynamic
individuals – those who make every possible effort, as energetically and tirelessly
as possible, and who employ every available tool in an effort to uncover are not
seen in a positive light, even today. Individuals who are open minded and able to
uncover, observe and understand the socio-economic relations, relative positions
and interactions among individuals in our society are not only perceived
negatively, but are actively discouraged from asking sensible, far-reaching
questions: they are characterized as, even accused of, being
“woregna,” as
presented in the subsequent pages, “The True Story of the Rich Lady and the
Mules of Fogera: Sharing my Childhood Memories.”

The True Story of the Rich Lady and the Mules of Fogera:
Sharing my Childhood Memories

Although not in the same sense as in today’s modern politics, even as child in
Fogera, where I was born, and since, I think, age six, I have always been
fascinated by politics, human interactions, human behaviours and socio-economic
inequalities among the people within Ethiopian society. In my recollection, even at
an early age I was sometimes invited by elderly people to tell them
“wores”
stories that are exciting, deep and meaningful. Other times, however, I was
described as being a good
“woregna,” a storyteller. Although my mother, Mazash
Bykedagn – the mother of four girls and three boys, who was always happy and
looking young and beautiful, with an elegant, sexy appearance and body structure
despite being the mother of seven children – never liked it when I was called
woregna by others, she herself used to say or even to shout at me “I have told
you time and again not to be so
woregna, and certainly not to talk everywhere and
to everyone, even with people we don’t know, who are not related to us.” My
father was hardly at home. He was always busy with his court cases and court
sessions, mostly in Addis Zemen. It was probably due to the beauty of my mother
that my paternal grandmother was never happy and comfortable whenever my
mother spoke of or got ready to go alone to Woreta, or even to the nearest
markets. In the early years of the 1960s, Woreta was a very small town where
my mother and other people in our region did their business, especially on
Saturday. My mother was not only beautiful, but she was also wise and most
conciliatory with both family members and friends. She therefore made every
possible effort to avoid anything that would hurt my grandmother, whose house
was almost attached to ours. So as a compromise with my grandmother, and also
because I was the last and favorite child of my parents, my mother almost always
took me with her wherever she went, which was mostly to Woreta.

During these many and most memorable journeys, much to the irritation of my
mother, I was always staring at the various people who were walking or riding on
mules along with us on the road to Woreta. I mostly watched their behaviour and
listened to their talk. In my recollection, the great majority of Fogeries – about 90
to 95 percent – made their journeys to Woreta on foot. Others traveled on mules
or donkeys – a good number of them carrying guns. My mother and I used to go
to Woreta on foot, with no sticks or guns. It was not unusual for me in the middle
of our journey to ask my mother as lovingly as possible to stop walking and listen
to me – to my questions. “My Tati, I want you to stop for me. I want to ask you
something!” As my relationship with my mother had always been very close and
affectionate, her responses to my sometimes sensible but often nonsensical,
childish and bothersome questions, was always carefully, wisely and lovingly
crafted. While looking closely at me and smiling affectionately, as always, she
would ask: “what is it Hode? What do you want to tell me, Hodeye? Okay, tell me.
I am listing to you, Yeni Fiker – my love.” “Why do some people travel on mules
or donkeys, and others on foot? And why are some men carrying guns?”
    My mother looked at me
    with surprise and
    irritation as well, and,
    holding my hand firmly,
    said: “is this the reason
    you asked me to stop my
    walk and listen to you,
    my woregna? Is this
    what you want to ask
    me, Hode?
What is interesting about this, and why is it your concern? I really don’t want to
hear any more of your nonsense questions” my mother would say, harshly,
decisively and in the most uncompromising terms, holding my left hand in her
right and dragging me forcefully to continue our journey.
During those memorable days and long, tiring journeys, there were even more
remarkable events to be observed – events that I used to find enormously
fascinating. Consequently, I quite often stood still, remaining far behind my
mother, while looking at those men and women who rode on mules – to the point
that my mother would get so mad at me that she would give me a smack, quite
often on my buttocks and sometimes even my face.
It was not just the men and women on the mules who were so fascinating to me,
but rather, the two, three or sometime four poor guys – I am not sure whether
they were a kind of
slave, or servants or permanently employed bodyguards – of
the individuals riding on mules. Each of them carried a gun and ran on foot to the
left or right of the mules and at the same speed. Since I had no one to ask –
asking my mother would certainly bring me another, even harsher smack – I was
most often left alone to wonder, asking myself “how on earth can those poor
guys go on foot, running for hours at the same speed as the mules, carrying guns
all the while, until they reach their final destination?” In particular there was one
lady, said to be a descendant of a warrior family in our region. She was extremely
rich, with extensive lands in many parts of Fogera. This rich lady was also said to
own an enormous number of cattle, five or more modern houses in Woreta, and
to have many servants and bodyguards. Everyone was able to see this lady riding
on her mule along our way to Woreta, guarded by her five servants or
bodyguards, all of them carrying guns; but I was, I think, the only one who stared
at her with particular interest and fascination. Since the entire body of the rich
lady, except her face and feet, was usually entirely covered by her Ethiopian
traditional clothes, no one could recognize her. Those who felt compelled by the
traditional social code of laws, norms and values of Fogera to salute the rich lady
could only have identified her by recognizing her mule and her five servants or
bodyguards.

I had seen the face of the rich lady more than twice before; she was in fact
beautiful, even though not as beautiful and elegant as my mother. Much to my
embarrassment, once she saw me staring at her and said, with a lovely smile,
something like “did you manage to discover what is interesting in me, my
Konjo
woregna
– my lovely curious boy?” Of course, as anyone can imagine, I was
embarrassed that she could see that I was constantly looking at her and that I
was, in her eyes too, a good
woregna.

One early afternoon, when my mother and I were in Woreta and my mother was
busy shopping or buying some Lamba, coffee, salt and so on, I immediately saw
the rich lady on her mule, just arriving in the market with her five servants or
bodyguards. Among her five poor guys I saw two lifting the rich lady from the
back of the mule down to the ground. I ran to her at high speed – to the rich lady.
The rich lady of Fogera looked at me and asked, “are you here again today, my
Konjo boy? “Yes, but why are those guys always carrying guns and running along
with your mule on foot while you are sitting very comfortably on the mule? Why
don’t they too have mules, like you?” I confronted the rich lady. And while the
rich lady was still staring at me and at her bodyguards, I went on to ask her
bodyguards as well. “Why do you guys run without stopping over such a long
distance, carrying guns and with the same speed as the mule?” The servants or
bodyguards, who did not know how to answer my questions, remained silent, just
looking at their boss – the rich lady.

While I was spellbound, awaiting the response of the rich lady to my questions,
but when the rich lady just began to open her mouth, saying something like
“well….”, my mother who had been searching everywhere for me, saw me
standing there, having a heated conversation with the rich lady and her
bodyguards. As usual, and as could have been expected, my mother became
furious with me. To make the situation worse, the rich lady told my mother that I
was asking some “silly” questions; she felt that I was accusing her of doing
something bad to her bodyguards. She also told my mother she had the feeling
that I was too
woregna. As one can imagine, due to my temporary disappearance
from my mother’s side as well as for having hurt the feelings of the rich lady, I
got two or three of the biggest smacks on my face that I had ever had from my
Tati – my mother. While I cried, my mother held my hand firmly and pulled me
closer and closer to her, as she apologized to the rich lady and asked for her
forgiveness.

The above account is an obvious illustration of some patterns of Ethiopian socio-
cultural values and norms that have, knowingly or unknowingly, been constructed
to constantly discourage children from asking sensible, far-reaching questions.
These repressive socio-cultural rules place excessive limits on our capacity for
communication as adults – our ability to freely express ourselves. Yes, we are
taught not to be open minded; instead we must be exceptionally quiet, calm and
secretive, to the point that most of us are unable to make the effort needed to
distinguish between what precisely should be regarded as a secret and what
should not. For example, we have been brought up not to disclose household or
family matters to outsiders or even to close and helpful friends and colleagues –
even the fact that a family member or a partner is traveling to London or Atlanta
to attend a social or political gathering is seen as a secret, although in most
Western cultures and circumstances this would be seen as something that could
be disclosed. Unfortunately, however, the majority of Ethiopians still believe such
matters should not be disclosed except to immediate family members, probably
due to fear of information getting to the wrong people or other unknown
consequences, or to avoid being accused of
“woregna.” It is clear that a
disproportionate portion of Ethiopian society prefers shyness, closeness and
secretiveness above openness and healthy, constructive communications. In
addition, it is undeniably true that, in accord with our socio-cultural values and
norms, talking or writing openly about vital issues related to our sexual behaviours
and interactions are strictly forbidden. Not only are many of Ethiopia’s socio-
cultural values and norms contrary to the modern socio-cultural and democratic
values and norms that we badly wish to see implemented in our country, but also
they harm us ourselves, the general population of Ethiopia, most of all. This
unfortunate influence will continue to shape the attitudes of future generations,
unless urgent actions and measures are undertaken by all concerned Ethiopians in
an effort to modify or transform the current situation and arrive at more
accommodative socio-cultural values and norms.

Maru Gubena

Readers who wish to contact the author can reach me at info@pada.nl

•        The above short text was written in mid summer 2007, when both the actual
climate in the western world and the political temperature within the Ethiopian
Diaspora community were too hot, either to engage in the much desired work or to
interact positively and freely with our politically active Diaspora compatriots.
Consequently, even though the issues discussed in this article are not just
educational (and remain current), but also most enjoyable to read and quite
fascinating, it was not widely published when it was originally written and did not
receive the attention the story deserves. Now, as more opportunities seem to have
been created, I feel fortunate to be able to once again present this text to my
readers.

Back to Perspective or Home
All rights reserved.
Ethio Quest News
Together We Can Make It!
You need Java to see this applet.
Previous Articles
By Maru Gubena
Ethiopian Perspective
Articles by Category
Ethiopian Diversity
Ethiopian Economy
Ethiopian Politics
Ethiopian Women
Ethiopian Socio-Cultural
Rules Require Fundamental
Change:
A Case from my Bag
of Chilhood Memories









By Maru Gubena
"It is clear that a
disproportionate portion of
Ethiopian society prefers
shyness, closeness and
secretiveness above openness
and healthy, constructive
communications...
More
Ethiopia's History of
National Resistance for
African Unity & Dignity