Tuesday , May 14 2024

Ethiopian regional conflict dims celebration of Orthodox epiphany

25-01-2024

ADDIS ABABA: Festivities for the Orthodox Christian celebration of epiphany have been muted this year in Gondar, in the northwest Ethiopian region of Amhara where conflict has raged for months.

“How can you celebrate when many people are dying?” said an auto rickshaw driver, who wished to remain anonymous.

Up to 250,000 people have participated in previous celebrations of Timkat, as epiphany is known in the Amhara language.

Throughout Ethiopia, where about 35 percent of the population of more than 120 million is Orthodox Christianity, the celebration of Jesus Christ’s baptism by John the Baptist is a major event.

The Ethiopian Orthodox Church is one of the oldest churches in the world.

In Gondar, the festivities culminate with a collective dip in the baths at the castle of Emperor Fasilides, who founded the city that became the imperial capital in the 17th century.

The celebrations attract locals and tourists but on Friday, the festival was low-key in comparison to previous years.

Barely 1,000 worshippers took part in the procession of the city’s 44 churches that sees eight sacred arches carried to the Fasilides Baths.

“This year, because of the political tension, it wasn’t colourful,” lamented Dereje Mengesha, 27, a lecturer at Gondar University.

Those tensions have seen the federal government in Amhara clash with the local “Fano”, a nationalist militia that claims to be fighting for their regional rights.

The Fano feels betrayed by the federal government over a peace deal signed in November 2022 with dissidents in the neighboring region of Tigray.

The militia had spent two years fighting alongside federal forces against their Tigray enemies but an attempt last April by the federal government to disarm the Fano and other Amhara forces led to violence.

Just last week, the Fano launched an incursion into the city of 500,000 situated about 650km (400 miles) from the capital, Addis Ababa.

“People are dying every day. People in Gondar are grieving,” said the auto rickshaw driver.

And while colorfully dressed procession participants sang joyfully, there was visibly less emotion on the faces of those watching.

A handful of foreign tourists had ignored Western warnings to avoid the conflict-blighted region to attend Timkat. (Int’l News Desk)

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