Thursday, 30 January 2014
MEET THE OLDEST MAN EVER WHO ACTS AS A LIBRARY FOR UPCOMING GENERATIONS
At an estimated 160 years of age, Dhaqabo Ebba, a
retired farmer and well-known community elder
from the Oromia region in Ethiopia, could be the
oldest living person ever.
In an interview conducted by the state-run TV
Oromiya and published online on Aug. 12, 2013,
Ebba — who has no birth certificate to prove his
exact age — says he has lived through and
witnessed a transfer of power among all of the five
Gadaa Oromo political parties in four rotations.
As per the Gadaa system of government, a
democratic socio-political institution of the Oromo
people, one Gadaa leader serves for a period of
eight years.
There are five Gadaa parties within this system
among which leadership rotates.
If Ebba had indeed lived through four such
rotations, that makes him at least 160 years old.
The average life expectancy in Ethiopia is 60 years,
according to the CIA’s World Factbook.
It would be impossible to establish Ebba’s age as
birth takes place at home in rural Ethiopia and the
majority of Ethiopians still do not own birth
certificates.
“When Italy [first] invaded Ethiopia [in 1895], I had
two wives and my son was old enough to herd
cattle,” Ebba tells the reporter in Afan Oromo, the
Oromo language, at his house near Dodola town.
There are no living witnesses to corroborate his
story. “Not even one of my peers is alive today,”
says Ebba.
However, Ebba who claims to have the largest
extended family in the area has seen his great-
grandchildren grow up.
And he is by far the oldest known person in the
area. Ebba lives in a one-room house constructed
by tightly woven bamboo poles which are
intricately fastened together.
Its corrugated metal roof, clinched together with
nails, covers a cleanly swept dirt floor where Ebba
and neighbors were huddled together for the
interview.
According to Guinness World Records, Jeanne
Calment of France, who died in 1997 at 122 years
and 164 days, is the oldest person with a verified
age. Earlier this month, the Associated Press
reported, Bolivia’s Carmelo Flores could be the
world’s oldest manat 123 years.
Ebba’s Story
If true, Ebba’s story may change that.
Born sometime in the 1850s, had there been
better communications, Ebba would remember the
Berlin Conference of 1884 that set the stage for
European colonization of Africa.
Within the context of Ethiopian history, he was born
before the conquest of Oromo country by
Abyssinian invaders.
In his own account, Ebba has lived under the reigns
of at least seven Ethiopian rulers starting from
Emperor Yohannes IV to the current regime, the
EPRDF.
The Oromo are Ethiopia’s single largest ethnic
group, estimated at 40 percent of the total
population.
Largely marginalized, they fought against all seven
rulers that Eba has outlived during Ethiopia’s
imperial expansion to the south from its northern
highlands.
During the 30-minute interview, Ebba recalls life
under previous Ethiopian rulers — and notes a
relative improvement for his community under
EPRDF, particularly in areas of road transportation
and telecommunication.
He says in his generation it took eight days on
horseback to visit Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital,
some 240 kms away from his village. Today, it only
takes a couple of hours.
Ebba speaks with a firm, articulate voice while
recounting his life story. He may no longer be able
to see but his memories of historical facts seem
sharp.
As the local journalist noted at the end the
interview, given that the Oromo like many African
cultures are an oral society, “each time an elder
dies, a library is lost.” Ebba’s is one such library
from which much can still be preserved.
Hamid dhaqaboIt is indeed remarkable that Ebba’s
eldest son Hamid Dhaqabo could not chew Qorso —
a local snack made by roasting barley seeds — while
Ebba, who has his full teeth intact, had no problem
doing just that.
“I can eat sugarcane [by chewing] all I want without
any problem,” Ebba proudly tells the reporter with
a firm voice.
Locals, who acknowledge mistaking father and son,
tease Hamid for aging faster than his father given
his white hair and lack of teeth.
A point he begrudgingly concedes with a forced,
toothless grin adding: “God took them all away.”
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