In the
middle of Ethiopia, a country with strict religious and cultural mores, a
village where women plough and men sew has become a model for development and
poverty reduction.
For decades Western governments and NGOs have been trying to find ways to break the aid dependency that has dominated much of post-colonial Africa. So when Awra Amba, a small village of just under 500 inhabitants in northern Ethiopia, found a way, on its own, to reduce poverty and increase development, they sat up and paid attention.
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Woman and children return from the fields in Awra Amba |
For decades Western governments and NGOs have been trying to find ways to break the aid dependency that has dominated much of post-colonial Africa. So when Awra Amba, a small village of just under 500 inhabitants in northern Ethiopia, found a way, on its own, to reduce poverty and increase development, they sat up and paid attention.
"I saw
a special on Awra Amba on the BBC and how different their tradition is,"
said Fikir Abraha, a 22-year-old research student who came from the US state of
Maryland to see this extraordinary place. Her parents are Ethiopian and she is
interested in how culture can help or hinder development.
"If
you have a culture that is willing to change and that is willing to adapt to
new things like the Awra Amba community is, I feel like that would bring about
better development," she said.
And indeed,
Awra Amba does things differently, which has been both a curse and a blessing.
In a very traditional country with strict religious and cultural mores, it goes
against the grain.
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Zumra Nuru is the founder and a co-chair of Awra Amba |
The elderly
and the young enjoy rights that aren't accorded outside the village. The
village is run by way of committees where 50-percent-plus-one vote majorities
decide all bylaws and decisions concerning the community.
Down a dirt
track from the paved road, about a nine-hour drive northwest of the capital,
Addis Ababa, lies Awra Amba - a clutch of wattle and daub houses and shared
buildings, including weaving and textile workshops, a grinding mill, a tourist
hostel, a school and a library. Most of the village's labor force works
communally, so money is ploughed back into the village and the profits are
split evenly.
This way of
doing things has helped lift the village out of poverty and now, some 40 years
after its founding, family income, literacy levels, life expectancy, gender
equality and economic growth are far exceeding the national average.
Consultants
from the Ethiopian government, the World Bank and development NGOs, such as
Oxfam, frequently visit the village in a bid to discover what Awra Amba is
doing right so as to replicate it elsewhere.
Attacks
from neighbors
But
"rethinking the wheel" has brought Awra Amba its fair share of
trouble. Since day one, the project has been met with hostility and attacks
from very conservative Christian and Muslim neighboring communities who have
considered Awra Amba pagan or heretical, according to 65-year-old Nuru.
"They
threw a grenade right into the center of the village once, but luckily, no one was
hurt," he said. "They have tried shooting members of our village.
They have sabotaged our harvest on occasion."
In 1989,
the neighboring villages denounced Awra Amba as insurgents to the communist
Derg regime in power, leading to the community's exile to the south of Ethiopia
for four years. When the Derg fell, the community returned in 1993 to find most
of their land confiscated by the neighboring communities. They now only have 18
hectares (44 acres), a disaster for an agricultural community.
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The village offers training to locals, such as this spinning workshop |
But the
crisis was also a door of opportunity. It forced community dwellers to pursue
other revenue-making activities and to diversify. So they got into weaving,
milling, trade, tourism, textiles - a diversification of labor that is now a
key to its development success.
"Their
life principle is to work and their work is the manifestation of their faith or
belief, so they don't have a church or mosque or anything," says Ashenafi
Alemu, a researcher in the sociology department at Ethiopia's University of
Gondar. "They always work and that helped them a lot to get out of
poverty, and now we observe that they are really improving."
Through
word of mouth and significant interest from the media, news of Awra Amba is
spreading fast. Perhaps too fast.
While Nuru
aims to export his idea beyond the village, Awra Amba does not have the
capacity to supervise such an expansion. New communities, inspired by the Awra
Amba model, have already sprouted up elsewhere in Ethiopia, but it is a
spontaneous, erratic growth - unmanaged by Nuru and his community.
"We
need to see these villages," he says, "but I can't go check them out
because we don't have a car and it is not feasible to travel there by
bus."
Inter-village
bridge-building
Still, the
village is at a crucial crossroad. Because it can't acquire more than the 18
hectares it currently has, the community must find ways to expand off-site and
manage that expansion. Also, it must continue and complete its process of
acceptance by the very conservative culture of the villages that surround it.
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Children from the area go to school together at this kindergarten |
On top of
that, every month, the University of Gondar brings together a growing number of
people from Awra Amba and the surrounding Christian and Muslim communities.
Around the same table, they talk it all out.
"Now
there is a sort of understanding and improvement regarding the image of the
Awra Amba community," said Ashenafi Alemu, the researcher.
With
government, NGOs and individuals borrowing from its model to create development
projects elsewhere, one could say that Awra Amba is already a success. However,
as an ideological project, the village risks losing control of the spread of
its core ideas. The question now is: will Awra Amba remain a fascinating yet
small exception to the norm, or can it manage to export its ideas and bring
about much-needed change to Ethiopia and beyond?
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