Passion and Interest: The Faking of Tigrean
Nationalism
Messay
Kebede
I
have read with great interest Jawar�s well thought and skillfully
articulated piece on Tigrean nationalism. It has inspired me to present my
own view, not so much to contradict Jawar as to present an alternative
interpretation. I do not consider this article as a rebuttal because I
agree with Jawar�s analysis on several points so that my interpretation
can be considered as an invitation to broaden the approach. I no longer
believe in the unity and struggle of opposites whereby the one pole
triumphs by annihilating the other; instead, debates and differences of
ideas mean the search for accommodating alternatives that trigger choices
rather than the attempt to dominate.
One
undeniable fact is that nothing is more crucial for people engaged in the
fight to topple a regime than to know the true nature of the regime. In
this regard, Jawar defines Meles�s regime as a �business oligarchy,�
both to emphasize that the pursuit of individual interests rather than
ethnic commitment is its driving force and to unravel its preferential
treatment of one ethnic group as a politics designed to obtain support by
instilling fear and insecurity.
Though
I find Jawar�s definition clever and useful, I do not quite see why a
business oligarchy will engage in or continue to pursue identity politics
in a country like Ethiopia. Let me explain. If indeed Meles and his
Tigrean associates make up a business oligarchy with no Tigrean bias
except to deceitfully coerce Tigreans into supporting them, then Ethiopia
is a country that offers them a better alternative to achieve their goal.
Of course, I have in mind the undeniable existence of a civic nationalism,
which we can define as Ethiopian nationalism. In effect, why would Meles
and co. get involved in the muddle of ethnic politics when they could have
governed in the name of Ethiopian nationalism and with the help of a
de-ethnicized bureaucracy, as did the Derg, for instance?
Jawar�s
answer is that Meles and co. need ethnic politics to rally Tigreans: by
favoring them economically, they arouse the animosity of other ethnic
groups, thereby forcing Tigreans to seek their protection. This reasoning
makes sense only if one assumes that Meles and co. had no other option
than ethnic politics to get some popular support. And Jawar can think so
because for him Ethiopian nationalism has never existed. So that, no other
way exists for an oligarchy to rule the country than to appeal to ethnic
alignments even if business interests have diluted the ethnic commitment
it once had.
But
can anyone really believe that Meles and co. would have failed to find
some legitimacy if they had espoused Ethiopian nationalism? The latter is
still alive, as forcefully demonstrated by the 2005 electoral victory of
Kinijit that Meles had to suppress by violent means. Is any of Meles�s
decisions and frequent crackdowns intelligible without his resolution to
prevent at all cost the rise of a strong pro-Ethiopian political party?
Birtukan is in jail because she epitomizes the resurgence of Ethiopianism.
It is because Meles is convinced of the resilience of Ethiopian
nationalism that he is so persistently at war with whatever seems to
reinforce it. Doubtless, then, if Meles had defended Ethiopian nationalism
and made some regional concessions to ethnic concerns and expanded the
already existing pan-Ethiopian bureaucracy and military apparatus, he
would have acquired acceptance and created a solid base, which he would
have rewarded with economic advancements.
On
the other hand, Jawar reasons as though there is such a thing as
�Tigrean nationalism.� He is surprised that the TPLF betrayed that
nationalism by involving Tigreans in the untenable situation of new
conquerors and oppressors. Thus, he is baffled that the freedom fighter
that he once knew ransacked his village. Is not Jawar�s surprise easily
explained by the bogus nature of the so-called Tigrean nationalism? The
inspiring goal of the leaders of the TPLF has never been the alleged
Tigrean nationalism, which they knew not to exist. In light of centuries
of unity between Tigreans and Amhara, there is neither political nor
cultural justification for arguing in favor of a separate Tigrean national
identity. Incidentally, Jawar gives us the foundation of Ethiopian
nationalism, and hence of the non-existence of Tigrean nationalism, when
he interprets the appointment of a Tigrean as a patriarch of the Orthodox
Church as another TPLF�s
�intensified effort to make ethnicity more
important than religious solidarity.� Is not the necessity of an
intensified effort to break the old bonds tying Tigreans to the Amhara a
confirmation of the inexistence of Tigrean nationalism?
What
the TPLF baptized as �nationalism� is none other than the hatred
against the Amhara ruling elite and Ethiopian nationalism. As Aregawi
Berhe, one of the founders of the organization, openly admits in his new
book (A Political History of the
Tigray People�s Liberation Front), the inspiring motive of the
rebellious Tigrean elite was �resentment� at the sight of Tigray�s
economic and political marginalization by the Amhara ruling class. The
split of Tigrean students from the pan-Ethiopian orientation of the
Ethiopian student movement was the product of elite conflict for the
control of state power that the TPLF disguised as Tigrean nationalism.
Hostility, first against the Amhara ruling elite and then against the
Derg��as a proponent of Amhara hegemony��was systematically
disseminated to provide a popular support to the Tigrean educated elite in
its competition for the control of state power. Giving this hegemonic
goal, is it surprising if, once it seized power, the TPLF has proved to be
an instrument of oppression?
Our
surprise should decrease even more in light of ethnic discourse
authorizing oppressive behavior. The clear message of ethnonationalist
discourse in Ethiopia is that there is nothing common between Amhara,
Oromo, Tigreans, and other groups. They are all different nations that the
Amhara state held together by sheer force. Given this image of Ethiopia as
a �prison-house of nations,� what can we expect from TPLF fighters
when they land in Wollega, Gondar or Wolaita? Obviously, they come as
conquerors and occupiers since no bonds exist between them and the
indigenous people. In denying the existence of a country called Ethiopia,
the TPLF fighter is thereby invited to behave as a foreigner occupying an
alien land that he/she will ransack without the slightest hesitation. That
is why, unlike Jawar, I am not shocked when such fighters plunder
Ethiopian villages.
To
downgrade the ethnic equation, Jawar analyses Meles and co. as cold
calculators of their interests. He forgets the hatred they nourished for
decades toward Ethiopia, a hatred such that it clouds their judgment and
prevents them from seeing other options, for instance the alternative of
Ethiopian nationalism. Where there is ethnic politics there is also
emotional syndromes that are not accountable in terms of interests.
Despite serious efforts, scholars have failed to reduce ethnic politics to
rationality, that is, to the calculation of interests by elite groups.
More often than not, alongside material interests primitive sentiments
emerge, such as hatred, fear, mistrust, which elites use to mobilize
people and from which violent confrontations often spring.
It
seems to me that Meles and co. have become themselves victims of the
hatred they generated against Ethiopian nationalism in their quest for
power. I remember vividly one of Meles�s interviews to the Ethiopian
Television soon after the occupation of Addis Ababa: to
the concern that ethnic politics might destroy Ethiopia, he responded by
saying that the failure of ethnic federalism would simply mean that
Ethiopia was not meant to be. To be sure, the prediction of such ominous
end by the head of state of the country did not emanate from a loving
concern.
The
combination of interests with hatred induces Meles and co. to hurt
Ethiopia while exorbitantly taking advantage of its resources. This
ambivalent politics explains why they engage in actions that are
detrimental to Ethiopia, such as ceding lands to the Sudan or devising
increasingly lethal means of division. The animosity they feel toward
Ethiopia does not allow them to engage in a politics of sustained progress
toward unity, democracy, and equal prosperity; they have to periodically
antagonize and hurt so as to vent the enmity that is eating them from
inside. Ethiopians would want Meles and co. to be rational calculators of
interest, given that they would have easily perceived that their best
interest lies in promoting the equal prosperity of all ethnic groups.
Alas, deeply engrained emotional thirsts stand in the way of rational
politics.
In
this respect, nothing is more perilous than to treat Tigray and the
Tigrean elite preferentially as the policy does no more than enrage the
rest of Ethiopia, thereby turning the achieved prosperity into a
precarious acquisition. But this is to forget that enraging Ethiopian
nationalism is an integral part of the psychological makeup of Meles and
co.: they cannot commit to rational politics owing to the rancor with
which they have filled their mind since their student years. This is to
say that I do not follow Jawar in his view that the TPLF leadership has
but abandoned its ethnic references, which it uses only to scare Tigeans.
On the contrary, the references are alive in the deep-seated need to
damage Ethiopia. Of all people Ethiopians should never forget the
destructive power of resentment: they saw it at work with Mengistu Haile
Mariam whose stubborn narcissism brought about the demise of the Ethiopian
army and state because some people had called him �baria�
in his younger days.
Above
all, the resolution to control power indefinitely pushes Meles and co. to
continue the politics of divide and rule. Since the implementation of
liberal democracy cannot but lead to their demise, what else is left but
to force people to vote ethnically so that the resulting political
dispersal is used to sustain the hegemony of the TPLF? Meles hangs on to
ethnic politics for the simple reason that dispersion is the only way by
which a minority can retain power. More than the need to spread fear among
Tigreans through the instrumentality of envy caused by preferential
treatment, ethnic politics provides an institutional mechanism that allows
a minority to rule over the majority. As the workings of the EPRDF
illustrate, the mechanism results from the combination of ethnic
separation with centralization, which is otherwise known as democratic
centralism. By making lower bodies accountable to higher bodies, the
principle of democratic centralism counters the ethnic fragmentation by
creating a pyramidal power structure that transfers the full control of
the state to an ethnic minority elite, just as communist oligarchies ruled
the Soviet empire for decades by using the same mechanism of control.
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