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There are almost as many languages
as there are peoples in Ethiopia, about 80 in all. The languages
come from a variety of families - Semitic, Hamitic, Nilotic and
Omotic. Amharic, spoken in the country's heartland, is Ethiopia's
official language, but Tigrinya, spoken in the north, and Orominya,
spoken in the south, have semi-official status. The Oromos are the
largest ethnic group in the country, and are made up of a muddle
of Christians, Muslims and traditional animists. Amharic and Tigrinya
use the Ge'ez script, with an understated 231 letters - keep an
eye out for fabulously complex Amharic typewriters. Kids are taught
English from junior high onward, and many people can speak a smattering
or more.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Church has
dominated religious life in the country since the fourth century,
when two brothers from Tyre began evangelizing with the blessing
of the king. Ethiopian Orthodoxy has a strong monastic tradition,
and until the Marxist revolution, there were Orthodox clergy in
almost every town in the country. Orthodoxy combines more standard
Christian beliefs in God, Catholic saints and Jesus (although there
is more emphasis on the Old Testament than in many western churches)
with traditional African beliefs about spirits and devils - church
services often include dancing, astrology and fortune telling. Believers
fast every Wednesday and Friday, avoiding meat, dairy and sometimes
fish.
Ethiopian literature is traditionally
Christian, with the earliest writings in Ge'ez being translations
of Greek Christian works. Ge'ez literary production really took
off in the 13th century, when a stack of Coptic, Syriac and Greek
religious works were translated from Arabic. About 200 years later,
Ge'ez writers branched out into original works, beginning with the
lives of saints and moving onto apocalyptic books such as the Elucidation
of Jesus and the Mystery of Heaven and Earth. Amharic took over
from Ge'ez around the 16th century, and again, writers concentrated
mainly on translations of religious works. It wasn't until the end
of WWII that Amharic writers really began writing about other issues
- Makonnen Endalkaches, Kebede Mikael and Tekle Tsodeq Makuria are
notable postwar writers who addressed moral and patriotic themes.

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