Only An Ethiopian Uprising can save the Ethiopian Economy

By Teodros Kiros

A careful study of world uprisings has convinced George Katsiaficas, the leading
expert on social movements, that uprisings empower people and unleash their
hitherto untapped passions and energies that fuel dormant economies and revive
them in extraordinary ways.

Uprisings create spaces of organized political actions during which time the
people develop some distinctly political qualities of leadership. The world has
recently witnessed these new qualities in the spectacularly new models of
people’s resistance to dictatorships of pharonic Egypt, a polity that was
oppressed for 5000 years of successive dominance under its own pharaohs, the
Greeks, the Romans, and the Mamluks.

Tahrir square gave us a new model of political action on the enterprising
streets of Cairo, Alexandria and many other Egyptian towns.

George Katsiaficas defended this thesis in African Ascent, hosted by Teodros
Kiros, and the interview can be viewed in YouTube by March 25th, 2011.

When people’s passions, imaginations and intelligences are freed from the snares
of dictatorship; when people discover their powers and abilities on the streets
of democracy; when the people learn that their liberation is tied to the
liberation of the nation, then they draw from the hidden fountain of their
intelligence to revive the economy.  The economy can be revived only if they
participate, only if they disalienate themselves and becoming the living engine
of the economy.

We recently learned from Egypt that new social movements of youth, women,
workers and other professionals created new spaces of action for themselves.

It is uprisings, which disclosed the protestors of Tunisia, Egypt and now Libya
as actional and erotic beings and not passive and alienated spectators.

So the dormant Ethiopian economy can be energized and revived by peaceful
uprisings, which will take power from dictators and their cohorts and give
power directly to the people themselves.

A new vibrant Ethiopian economy is the consequence of the people’s activities.
The current Ethiopian economic crises, which the Prime Minister refuses to see
from the invisible space of the palace, can be saved only by the people
themselves if they are freed from political darkness, civil boredom, ethnic
narrow-mindedness, skepticism and cultural decadence, and come out in millions
to Meskel square and demand regime change.

If and when this happens they will immediately embark on the long road of
national development organized by the empowering principle of Ethiopianity.  We
can for the first time witness what the people can do, when they are trusted and
coached to work for the nation-selflessly and intelligently.


Teodros Kiros
Professor of Philosophy and English (Liberal Arts)
Berklee College of Music

Posted by on March 17, 2011. Filed under News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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