Sociology Mind

Volume 11, Issue 4 (October 2021)

ISSN Print: 2160-083X   ISSN Online: 2160-0848

Google-based Impact Factor: 1.13  Citations  

Review Essay: Are the Tulama and Wallo Oromo Habasha?

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DOI: 10.4236/sm.2021.114010    546 Downloads   4,819 Views  Citations
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ABSTRACT

In his book, Brian J. Yates (2020) overgeneralizes the experiences of a few Oromo collaborator individuals from the Tulama and Wallo Oromo to the affairs of these Oromo groups. It claims that the Tulama and Wallo Oromo participated in the construction of the modern Ethiopian state between 1855 and 1913 and, in the process, became Habasha by abandoning their Oromo culture and identity. If the colonization of peoples would transform the cultures and uniqueness of the conquered peoples, today, the entire world population would have become the English and the French by rejecting their respective cultures and identities. But colonialism only creates collaborative classes from the dominated population groups to use them as intermediaries to facilitate the exploitation and oppression of the subaltern groups. The Tulama and Wallo Oromo case is not different. The Oromo intermediaries from these Oromo groups were assimilated to the Amhara/Habasha culture and state to promote their interests and the interest of their colonial masters at the cost of the Oromo masses. By using the critical and political economy analytical approaches, this review essay debunks the claims that the author of the book makes by ignoring the history, culture, and identity of the Oromo people, which have been suffering under Habasha colonialism in general, and Amhara colonialism in particular, for more than a century.

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Jalata, A. (2021) Review Essay: Are the Tulama and Wallo Oromo Habasha?. Sociology Mind, 11, 125-146. doi: 10.4236/sm.2021.114010.

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