Aegis DDG
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- Feb 6, 2013
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Half Japanese and Half Eritrean. @Saho and @Belew_Kelew are full native Eritreans however.Thanks for the link !
interesting read...are you from Eritrea???
at least when it comes to religious tolerance you guys have worked things out there with a secular constitutionHalf Japanese and Half Eritrean. @Saho and @Belew_Kelew are full native Eritreans however.
Half Japanese and Half Eritrean. @Saho and @Belew_Kelew are full native Eritreans however.
What a mixture! I find it hard/challenging enough to have ancestral ties to the Arab world and Europe but your case is exceptional in comparison.
Tell me the story between the split of Ethiopia and Eritrea will you? Also I recently discovered that Arabic is a official language in Eritrea. Is this a remain of Arabic being the language of Islam, trade, and knowledge in the Islamic world? The proximity to Southern Arabia (Yemen) or the fact that there is a 200.000 big or so Arab population (Rashaida)?
How does Ethiopia and Eritrea differ from each other than Eritreans almost exclusively speaking Southern Semitic languages while Ethiopia still having a lot of Cushitic speaking peoples?
I also noticed that there is a sort of animosity between Ethiopians and Eritreans on the internet. How accurate is this in real life?
And where does Somalia come into the picture in all of this? I know that Ethiopia and Somalia have very bad ties and that they even have gone to war witch each other.
I would appreciate some answers here if you got the time. Thanks.
@Aegis DDG
Eritreans are more used to Arab culture than the Amharic speaking Ethiopia because of geography and trade. Also Eritreans main language (Triginia/Tigre) is closer to old Ge'ez than Amharic (lots of Cushitic loan worlds that N.Ethiopians and Eritreans lack) hence it close old South Arabic. This is because Tigrigna/Tigray is far older than Amharaic and is more Semitic in origin (most modern loan words are Arabic or Turkish). So it's easier to learn Arabic if your eritrean. When Eritrea broke away from Ethiopia, there was relative peace between the two nations, this is because Ethiopian Anti-Dreg/Communist resistance movement (the TPLF) and the Eritrean liberation/independence movement were allied against the communist dictator Mingistu and the Dictator in 1991 (during Berlin wall incident) fled to Zimbabwe and the TPLF came to power (filling the vaccum in Addis Ababa) and their allies in Eritrea became the ruling party in the new nation in 1993. The Eritrean port of Asseb was allowed for Ethiopian use (as the nation became landlocked after 1993) as long as they respected Eritrean's sovereignty and territory. But in 1998, the region of Badme became the focus of border dispute and Ethiopian troops move in to secure it but this resulted in an bloody Iran-Iraq style war (trenches, deserts, massive tank battles etc) in which the Ethiopian army suffered an massive tactical defeat (over 180,000 killed in matter on months) but Eritrea lost stagetically as the Algeirs convention stated that Badme is Ethiopia territory. This resulted in an mini cold war stance in which the ruling party in Eritrea uses to legitimize it's rule and Sawa (google it) conscription.The Asseb port stop importing things into ethiopia which created even more tension. Because the US supported the Ethiopians (due to historical policies and red sea geo-politics), Isias (the President) started to support Al-Shabab in Somalia secretly but got busted in 2009 which resulted in UN sanctions and diplomatic isolation. Because of the Badme issue, Eritrean leadership decided to stop the peaceful reforms the 90s to make the nation more militarized. This resulted in an massive conscription program in which even women aged 18-30 has to serve in the army. The unofficial number of Eritrean army personnel is actually estimated to be 600,000 rather the modest official statement of 250,000. Because of this, thousands of young Eritreans are fleeing to prevent being sent to the Sawa Camp and migrate to places like Europe but some get trafficked and have their organs harvested in the Sinai border crossings.
Thank you a lot brother for the very detailed post. I will have to study all of what you have mentioned. Sounds very interesting.
Can you tell me a bit about the situation of the Rashaida in Eritrea?
May I add that the user @ebray is from Ethiopia and a Amhara. A very friendly person that helped me learn about Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa.
@Belew_Kelew is from Eritrea as well and knowledgeable about the history of the Horn of Africa as well.
I was not aware of @Saho being from Eritrea.
Quite interesting to see so many Eritreans on a Pakistani forum albeit a big international forum today. I hope to see you guys being more active on this section in regards to your home countries.
I believe most Rashaida live in Port Sudan region (numbering 200,000) and only 100,000 live in Eritrea. They are an nomadic and endogamous people who move places all the time. BTW they have abnormally light hair compared Middle eastern Arabs (usually see dirty blonde or brown haired Rashaida) which is strange considering that they live in Africa .
Thanks for the correction in terms of numbers. That's interesting because there are hardly any truly nomadic peoples in the Arab world/ME anymore outside of minorities and small populations.
That's strange because from the googling that I have done they appear to be darker than other ME Arabs. Probably has something to do with them intermarrying with locals partially and living in proximity to the Beja peoples. Although I have seen some very interesting looks among them. Indeed also light/blonde hair but that is not extremely rare in the Arab world. Even quite a few Bedouins have that. Or at least when younger I have noticed.
Some photos of how varied they can look like;
Rashaida Tribe Kids In A Coranic School, Kassala, Sudan by Eric Lafforgue, on Flickr
Rashaida Tribe Kids In A Coranic School, Kassala, Sudan by Eric Lafforgue, on Flickr
Eritrea Rashaida woman in Danakil desert near Massawa by Eric Lafforgue, on Flickr
Those are Rashaida from Eritrea and Sudan.
Interesting bunch. I want to know more about them as well.
Anyway I have for a very long time wanted to visit the Horn of Africa. Ethiopia and Eritrea especially.
@Aegis DDG ,
@Aegis DDG ,
The title is misleading. Eritrea is independent but facing growing pain like every every country who recovered his sovereignty. Ethiopia is an anchor country for the US policies and the US will favor Mogadishu to Asmara. I think the best hope for Eritrea future development, as for most African countries lies with Asia.
Tell me the story between the split of Ethiopia and Eritrea will you? Also I recently discovered that Arabic is a official language in Eritrea. Is this a remain of Arabic being the language of Islam, trade, and knowledge in the Islamic world? The proximity to Southern Arabia (Yemen) or the fact that there is a 200.000 big or so Arab population (Rashaida)?
How does Ethiopia and Eritrea differ from each other than Eritreans almost exclusively speaking Southern Semitic languages while Ethiopia still having a lot of Cushitic speaking peoples?
I also noticed that there is a sort of animosity between Ethiopians and Eritreans on the internet. How accurate is this in real life?
And where does Somalia come into the picture in all of this? I know that Ethiopia and Somalia have very bad ties and that they even have gone to war witch each other.
@Aegis DDG ,
The title is misleading. Eritrea is independent but facing growing pain like every every country who recovered his sovereignty. Ethiopia is an anchor country for the US policies and the US will favor Mogadishu to Asmara. I think the best hope for Eritrea future development, as for most African countries lies with Asia.