Oromo Women Celebrate International Women’s Day with Beauty and Strength at ABO Headquarters in Gullallee

A historic celebration unfolds as Oromo women gather in their cultural attire to honor International Women’s Day, marking a moment that will be recorded in the annals of the struggle.
GULLALLEE, OROMIA — In a powerful display of cultural pride and unwavering determination, Oromo women gathered at the ABO Main Headquarters in Gullallee to celebrate International Women’s Day, adorning themselves in traditional attire that spoke to both their heritage and their resilience.
The celebration was not merely a commemoration—it was a declaration. Dressed in the vibrant colors and intricate patterns of Oromo cultural clothing, the women who gathered represented the heart of the Oromo liberation struggle. Their beauty, both external and internal, reflected the dignity of a people who have refused to be erased.
Beauty as Resistance
In the context of Oromo history, the act of gathering in cultural dress carries profound meaning. For generations, Oromo identity was suppressed, their language marginalized, their traditions denigrated. To stand today, openly and proudly wearing the clothing of their ancestors, is itself an act of resistance.
The women who filled the ABO headquarters in Gullallee demonstrated that the struggle for Oromo liberation is not only fought in the forest or through political organizing—it is also fought through the preservation and celebration of culture. Every traditional garment worn, every Oromo song sung, every dance performed strengthens the cultural foundation upon which the political struggle rests.
A Celebration Rooted in Tradition
The International Women’s Day celebration at the ABO headquarters was distinctively Oromo. While the world marks March 8 as a day to recognize women’s achievements and advocate for gender equality, the women of Gullallee infused the global observance with their own cultural particularity.
They came carrying not only the aspirations of women everywhere but the specific hopes of Oromo women—hopes for a liberated Oromia where their children can grow up speaking Afaan Oromo without shame, where their daughters can wear traditional clothing without fear, where their voices will be heard in the councils of the nation they are building.
A Day Recorded in History
According to organizers, this celebration at the ABO Main Headquarters in Gullallee has been recorded as a unique chapter in the history of the struggle. It will be remembered not only as an International Women’s Day event but as a moment when Oromo women collectively demonstrated their centrality to the liberation movement.
The gathering sent a clear message: the struggle for Oromia’s freedom cannot succeed without the full participation of its women, and those women are ready, willing, and determined to play their part.
Women at the Heart of the Struggle
The celebration in Gullallee reflects a broader recognition within the Oromo liberation movement of women’s indispensable role. From the ancient Siinqee institution—a traditional women’s system of mutual protection and conflict resolution—to the Qarree movement of young women activists today, Oromo women have always been at the forefront of resistance.
Yet their contributions have too often been overlooked in historical accounts. Events like this International Women’s Day celebration serve as correctives—public acknowledgments that the struggle could not continue without the women who fight, organize, endure, and sacrifice alongside their male counterparts.
Looking Forward
As the women of Gullallee dispersed after their celebration, they carried with them more than memories of a pleasant gathering. They carried renewed commitment to the cause, strengthened bonds with one another, and the knowledge that their participation is not merely welcomed but essential.
The celebration at the ABO headquarters will indeed be recorded in history—not as an isolated event but as part of a continuum of Oromo women’s resistance that stretches back generations and will continue until Oromia is free.
The Oromo women who gathered at ABO Main Headquarters in Gullallee on International Women’s Day 2026 have added their names to the long roll of heroines who have sustained the Oromo struggle. Their beauty, their strength, and their determination will not be forgotten.
Posted on March 9, 2026, in Events, Finfinne, Information, News, Oromia, Press Release, Promotion. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.




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