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The Oromo National Movement
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                                                   development of written Afaan Oromoo. Among these, the works of Onesimos Nasib
                                                   and his Oromo language team came to constitute the basic literature of the Oromo
                                                                             144
                                                                                The scholarly team that worked with Onesimos
                                                   language until the present day.”
                                                   Nasib included Aster Ganno,Lidya Dimboo,and Feben (Hirphee) Abba Magaal.These
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                                                   scholars translated biblical scriptures into the Oromo language.
                                                      These scholars, under the guidance of Onesimos Nasib, laid the foundation of
                                                   modern education in western Oromia by producing religious and secular books, de-
                                                   veloping the Oromo language, and opening schools, despite the opposition and re-
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                                                   pression they faced from the Ethiopian government and church.
                                                                                                          Onesimos Nasib
                                                   and his team pioneered the development of Oromo literature in western Oromia.
                                                   Similarly, Sheik Bakri Sapalo initiated modern education in eastern Oromia, invented
                                                   an Oromo alphabet in 1956, and produced several works on Oromo history and cul-
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                                                   ture.
                                                         The brutality of Ethiopian colonialists did not allow such Oromo scholars to
                                                   develop literary culture in Oromo society. Onesimos Nasib was imprisoned and
                                                   banned from teaching Oromo children. Sheik Bakri Sapalo was put under house ar-
                                                   rest for ten years and later forced to flee to Somalia, where he died in a refugee camp
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                                                            According to Mohammed Hassen,“What the two examples of Onesimos
                                                   in 1980.
                                                   Nasib and Shaykh Bakri Sapalo clearly show is that educated Oromo both Christians
                                                   and Muslims emphasized the importance of education for their people and the pro-
                                                   duction of literary material in their language. Onesimos Nasib and Shaykh Bakri
                                                   Sapalo are clear proof of the existence of Oromo national consciousness and of their
                                                   concern with the Oromo language.” 149 The literary works of Onesimos Nasib and his
                                                   team and that of Bakri Sapalo indicate the existence of the first phase of nationalist
                                                   cultural activities in Oromo society:“In the first phase, learned and culturally-minded
                                                   individuals such as teachers, students . . . and writers turned their attention to their
                                                   people’s language, history and culture, though without arousing in society at large any
                                                   great excitement about things national for the time being.” 150
                                                      Ethiopians face three dilemmas related to how to deal with Oromos. The first
                                                   dilemma is a historical one. Habasha and Oromo societies fought each other over ter-
                                                   ritory, land, water, religion, and civilization for almost four centuries without one
                                                   dominating the other and establishing permanent colonialism, because both of them
                                                   were at similar technological stages.As discussed earlier,this problem was solved by the
                                                   alliance of European imperialism with Ethiopian colonialism in the second half of the
                                                   nineteenth century. 151  Of course, this could not eliminate the potential threat of the
                                                   Oromos to Habasha power.The second dilemma is the minority Habashas’ attempt to
                                                   assimilate the Oromo numerical majority without risking a political problem.
                                                   Margery Perham clearly articulates the need for assimilating the Oromo majority into
                                                   Ethiopian society, when she says “that they are estimated to outnumber the Amharas
                                                   and the Tigrayans, and that they quite literally embrace half of the empire” and “there
                                                   seems every possibility at this date that a development [of Oromo nationalism] that
                                                   would be so disastrous to Ethiopia may be avoided.” 152  She suggests that the spread of
                                                   the Amhara language and Habasha culture amongst Oromo society as soon as possible
                                                   would prevent the emergence of disastrous Oromo nationalism. 153  Perham failed to
                                                   understand that Oromo cultural assimilation without structural assimilation (i.e., ac-
                                                   cess to state power and cultural and economic resources) could not prevent the emer-
                                                   gence of Oromo nationalism. 154  Global historical evidence demonstrates that those
                                                   ethnonational groups who are denied cultural and economic development and access
                                                   to state power develop a collective national consciousness to challenge the dominant
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