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No one can deny the fact that Ethiopia is a mosaic of nations, nationalities and peoples. Above and beyond, all of them live in harmony irrespective of race, religion, age, sex, culture, social ...
Ethiopian new year: Celebration with its unique and vibrant style Enkutatash, the New Year in Ethiopia is celebrated on September 11 or 12 during leap years.
Enkutatash is the Ethiopian New Year, but unlike New Year's celebrations in many other parts of the world, it doesn't take place on December 31. When is Enkutatash?
They arrived by foot and taxi, Metro and minivan, tens of thousands of Ethio­pian Americans gathering beneath the Washington Monument, some waving their country’s flag, others dressed in the ...
Between August 15 up to the end of September some 6 public holidays will be marked in Ethiopia. They include Ed Al Adha , Buhe, Ashenda, Ethiopian New Year, Meskel and Erecha.
Unique calendar A choir member sings during the Ethiopian New Year's Eve celebration marking the beginning of the year 2015 on the Ethiopian calendar in Addis Ababa, on September 11, 2022.
As we celebrate Enkutatash, Ethiopia’s renaissance isn’t just happening on its own soil—it’s radiating outward. Our music, our art, our fashion—they’re not whispers anymore.
This New Year’s celebration, typically reserved for December by the rest of the world, left many non-Ethiopian netizens confused.
Some countries use calendars that begin the year on dates in entirely different seasons, and some countries celebrate both Jan. 1 and a traditional new year.
Ethiopians on Saturday marked the first day of the Ethiopian New Year, as the East African country welcomed the year 2014 with hope for national harmony and peaceful coexistence.