As the Somali people everywhere reflect on the 56th
anniversary of 26th June and 1st July, the days of
independence and unification, I watched Somaliland opposition leader Faisal Ali
Waraabe branding 26th June as a worthless day and calling Somalilanders
to mark 1st July, as a day of grief. Both these days were and still
are the most significant days in the history of the Somali nation. They
symbolized the epitome of the struggle of our fathers and forefathers for
independence and their dreams and vision for a unified and proud Somali nation.
Faisal’s repugnant statement is therefore an insult not
only to the history of the Somali people and to the memory of those who
sacrificed everything precious they had including their blood for the independence
of their country but also to the dreams of the Somali youth who drive their
pride of the Somali people from the legacy of the independence days after
everything else was destroyed.
Contrary to the morbid image
that Faisal’s portrays about our national days, I would like to share the
Somali youth with a piece I wrote in 1982 which highlights the celebratory spirit
in which the Somali people as a whole used to mark the independence anniversary’s,
particularly how I remember the festivities of 26th June during my
childhood and how it lost its historical significance during the military
regime. See below:
Independence Day Reminisced
Independence Day Reminisced
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