Posts

በጀርመኗ ኮሎን ከተማ በተከፈተው ኣለም ኣቀፍ የፋይን ኣርት ኤግዚብዥን የሲዳማ ባህላዊ ''Barikko'' ባርኮ ለእይታ ቀረበ

Image
የኮሎን ከተማ ለኣለም የጥበብ ሪዕዬ ትይዕንት ሰሞኑን በሯን ክፍት ኣድርጋ ከተለያዩ የኣለም ክፍሎች የምጎርፉትን ጥንታዊ እና ባህላዊ የጥበብ ስራዎች በመቀበል ላይ ትገኛለች። በሪዕዬ ትይእንቱ ላይ ዘመን ጠገብ ቁሳቁሶች ለእይታ የቀረቡ ሲሆን፤ ከቀረቡ ቁሳቁሶች መካከል በ 19 ኛው እና በ 20 ኛው ክፍለ ዘመን የተፈበረኩ እና በህዝብ ዘንድ ተወዳጅነትን ያተረፉ መኪኖች እና የስዕል ስራዎች ይገኙበታል። ለኣብነት ያህል ከቀረቡት የስዕል ስራዎች መካከል በጀመናዊው የኤክፕሬሽን ሰዓል ኣርቲስት ማክስ ፔሄስታይን የተሳሉት ሁለት ስዕሎች በሽያጭ የቀረቡ ሲሆን ዋጋቸውም 1 ነጥብ 6 ሚሊዮን ዬሮ መሆኑ ታውቋል። የወራንቻ ኢንፎርሜሽን ኔትዎርክ ዘጋብ የዩሮ ኒውስን ጠቅሶ እንደዘገባው፤ በኣማካይ 100 የምሆኑ ጋሌሪዎች እና ደላሎች ከኣውሮፓ እና ከተቀረው ኣለም ሃሰባሰቧቸው ማስተርፒስ ስራዎች በተጨማሪ ከኢትዮጵያን እና ኬኒያ የተሰባሰቡ ባህላዊ ቁሳቁሶች ለእይታ የቀረቡ ሲሆን የሲዳማው ባርኮ ከእነዚሁ መካከል ኣንዱ ነው።

Sidama's rural women are about to change their traditional way of butter processing

Image
 The first test of  new butter churn, with a large opening, capable of churning cream as well as milk  took place in Arbagona District in the Sidama Zone Helping Ethiopia’s rural women with butter processing Women all over Ethiopia process milk into butter in rural households, perhaps with the exception of areas where consumption of milk in coffee or tea is common. The LIVES project’s baseline surveys results also indicate that most households sell small quantities in local markets and this constitutes one of the income sources for women. Butter processing is based on age old traditions with local churns made of pottery or other local materials. Women process soured milk which is accumulated over a 2 to 5 day period. Because most households produce only small quantities of milk each day, women in some locations form groups to collectively process the soured milk from the group members in one churn. This reduces the individual labour time spent on churning by each wom

Cervical cancer prevention program activities in Wonsho District of Sidama Zone

Image
Photo@ www.groundsforhealth.org The first cervical cancer prevention program activities in rural health centers of Ethiopia’s coffee-growing regions. The team led a two-day community health promoter training to begin the process of engagement and recruitment of women for screening. This was followed by a two-day classroom training with local doctors and nurses and a four-day clinical training through a screen and treat campaign. The passion and expertise of in-country coordinator Ashenafi Argata and community coordinator Abiy Semunigus, together with the support of Grounds for Health Clinical Consultant Susan Hollinger and Amy Borgman, physician assistant and clinical volunteer, were indispensible in making the trip a success. Read more@  http://www.groundsforhealth.org/2014/11/trip-report-ethiopia/

WHY MUST WE WORRY ABOUT GROWING INEQUALITY IN ETHIOPIA?

Image
By Solomon G/S In 2012, I wrote an essay titled “The Growing Inequality in Ethiopia” that was posted on a few Ethiopian Diaspora websites such as Abugida and Abay Media. In that essay, while trying to explain the manifestations of growing inequality,   I did not justify or even explain why we should worry about the injustice of growing inequality. I will try to do that here because it is important for a number of reasons. The 1960’s generation of Ethiopian youth was impressed and influenced by the egalitarian philosophy of Marxism. For the then Ethiopian society where class cleavages were apparent based on land holdings and other properties, the influence of an egalitarian philosophy could not be underestimated. Today’s generation has no overarching philosophy to anchor a belief in arresting the growing inequality in Ethiopia. While the time-tested religious influence plays an aspirational role for seeking equality, religion alone has been shown not to be sufficient. On to

HwU’s CASCAPE project holds a high profile delegation site visit

Image
Ambassadors, delegates from around 30 embassies, numerous staff from the Embassy of The Kingdom of the Netherlands in Addis Ababa, national and regional project coordinators of CASCAPE, heads of major stakeholders the likes of AGP and representatives from Regional Agriculture Bureau attended the field day and site visit event organized by HwU’s CASCAPE project at one of the five Project sites- MelgaWoreda (Guguma Kebele) of Sidama Zone. The event which was  held on 30 October 2014 was adorned by poster presentations on the activities of the HwU’s CASCAPE project by its coordinator Dr. Tesfaye Abebe, PhD, Vice President for Research & Technology Transfer and its assistant coordinator Dr. Tewodros Tefera. During the event, a welcome speech was addressed to the participants by the Worada Administrator.  The delegation visited the project sites for malt-barley pilot-scaling, faba bean pre-scaling, sheep breed improvement, and cattle feed improvement (desho grass) guided by th