I woke up early Tuesday (August 27) morning and was checking
the latest news with my laptop when I saw a flashing headline in Wardheernews titled,
“Midgaans and the Ethiopians are fighting for the last Place in Somaliland.”
The article was written by Mark Hay and reprinted from Vice. My initial reaction was one of bewilderment. Is this a typo?
The word “Midgaan” is a pejorative in Somalia. It is a word used by clannists
and the ignorant to refer to a cluster of minority groups. The problem is more
acute in the Somaliland region than any other part of Somalia.
The reporter from Vice
himself mistakenly wrote that these minority people’s “actual name” is “Midgaan”
and that the groups encompass “the Timal (sic), Yibir, Gaboye and other groups.”
He also noted the name “double[s] as an insult.” He added that some “Midgaans” still “see it
as a connoting pseudo-slavery in Somali society, where they have traditionally
been restricted to ‘unclean’ work like barbering, blacksmithing, infibulation,
and leatherwork.”
I am disappointed that a major Somali website like WDN would
reprint such a vulgar and tasteless article that demeans an entire community in
the name of investigative journalism. It is one thing to cover the plight of a
minority group, but insulting them by using the very name that they were given
by their oppressors is abominable. A similar example would be writing about the
lack of employment opportunities for many African-Americans in inner cities and
then debasing them in an article that starts with the “N” word.
I believe that WDN should never have posted the article
because of its racist and demeaning title. The piece did not add to our
knowledge of what the minority groups face in terms of loss of job
opportunities. Last year, WDN posted a TV news clip from the Universal channel
that dealt with Daami, a neighborhood in Hargeisa that is inhabited by minority
groups. That show was informative and analytical and not a single pejorative word
was uttered. This kind of news coverage is what we need, not knee-jerk articles
that perpetuate racist labels and symbols.
Each of the minority groups the article mentioned has a real name.
The Tumal, the Yibir, and the Madhiban are proud of their names, but they feel
insulted when they are called “Midgaan” a pejorative label that connotes a
sense of superiority by its user. These minority groups have traditionally performed
skills that other Somali nomads could not or did not want to perform. What the
writer calls “unclean jobs” (barbering, blacksmithing and leatherwork) are what
has sustained Somalia’s economy for hundreds of years. It is ironic that these
so-called “menial jobs” are careers highly touted in many parts of the world.
What is wrong with barbering, leatherwork, and blacksmithing? It is perhaps
only the ignorant who do not appreciate such lines of work. As Abraham Lincoln
once said, “There are no menial jobs, only menial attitudes.”
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