Friday, January 3
History of Ethiopian New Year: Whatis Enkutatash?
Meaning
Enkutatash is the name for the Ethiopian New
Year, and means “gift of jewels” in the Amharic
language. The story goes back almost 3,000
years to the Queen of Sheba of ancient
Ethiopia and Yemen who was returning from a
trip to visit King Solomon of Israel in Jerusalem,
as mentioned in the Bible in I Kings 10 and II
Chronicles 9. She had gifted Solomon with 120
talents of gold (4.5 tons) as well as a large
amount of unique spices and jewels. When the
Queen returned to Ethiopia her chiefs
welcomed her with enku or jewels to replenish
her treasury.
Celebration
The celebration is both religious and secular
with the day beginning with church services
followed by the family meal. Young children
will receive small gifts of money or bread after
the girls gather flowers and sing and boys
paint pictures of saints. Families visit friends
and adults drink Ethiopian beer.
Date
The Ethiopian
calendar is a
unique form of
the Coptic
calendar,
derived from
the earlier
Egyptian
calendar. On
September 12,
2007 Ethiopia
celebrated its
bi-millennial, or
2,000 years from the Annunciation of Christ.
Why is their calendar 7-8 years different from
the West’s Gregorian calendar? In the West,
the calendar was calculated around A.D. 525
by Dionysius Exeguus a Roman monk-
mathematician-astronomer who based his
calculations for the birth of Christ on an
erroneous date for the death of Herod the
Great. In the East, an Alexandrian monk
named Panodorus did his calculations
differently back around A.D. 400 for the
Egyptian calendar.
It could be recalled that Ethiopians celebrated their last New year on september 11, 2013.
Modern Day
The availability of modern social media
and Internet resources makes the promotion of
this ethnic and cultural holiday more visible for
this Diaspora of African and Caribbean peoples.
Kickstarted by the Ethiopian African Millennium
Group back in 2007 this effort to promote the
holiday was sponsored by Starbucks Coffee
Company and the African-American Civil War
Museum as 30,000 people came to the
Washington Monument. Other major American
cities like San Jose and Seattle also celebrate
Enkutatash.
Written by Ademola O. For Ademola O's Blog.
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