Friday, January 11, 2013
Monday, January 7, 2013
Christmas and sheep in Ethiopia!
Today, it is Christmas in Ethiopia. While western Christmas
is mostly related with Santa Clause, Christmas tree and gifts, I can say Ethiopian
Christmas is more related with sheep. People start to get ready to buy sheep a week before
Christmas. Almost in every house hold, there will be bleats of sheep. ‘Baaaaa’
will be heard more than jingle bell or any other Christmas songs. Markets will
be flooded with sheep. Streets start to smell like sheep feces; no one hates the
smell, for that is odor of a holiday. Some organizations even give sheep to
their employees as a holiday bonus.
Early Christmas morning, people slaughter sheep in every household,
to prepare the Christmas dishes. People, who can’t afford sheep, get chicken. Slaughtering
these animals in people’s house is part of the culture. What strike me most is
seeing the reaction of these animals before and during slaughter. It scares me
to see how chickens fight for their life; they fly here and there crazy after being
slaughtered. They fight till their last breath. Sheep do the opposite.
Have you ever noticed
that sheep are so stubborn, when you try to move them, it could be like pushing
a brick wall. However, try to move a sheep to a place where it will
be slaughtered, it moves so obediently. It seems like they don’t differentiate
the knives from the grass. They just walk so passively to be slaughtered. No
reaction, no fighting for their life, so foolish!
I believe sheep are
the most foolish animals ever. The only smart sheep I ever saw is in the movie,
‘Shaun the sheep.’ Even if sheep are not smart, I wish they would just make it
up by being attractive, but they are not. They are ugly and dirty.
If you ever see a sheep to be slaughtered, or even just a
sheep herded by their shepherd, I guess you already knew what I am talking about. It is
interesting though how this is a perfect metaphor to Christmas. God of the
universe choose to come like a lamp to save humans. Our Lord was born in a manger
and died like a sheep. “Yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb
to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is silent, so he did not
open his mouth.” Isaiah 53:7 Jesus was born to be slaughtered for our sins like
our holiday sheep.
Why do we need a ‘slaughtered sheep’?
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