asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Timor-Leste nia bandiera)
asakiyume ([personal profile] asakiyume) wrote2014-05-26 02:07 am

Timor Oan Mos Bele/We Timorese Can Do It

Doing some research, I came across this moving song, "Timor Oan Mos Bele," ("We Timorese Can Do It"), sung in Tetun, Portuguese, and English. It's addressed to everyone in Timor-Leste and urges them not to lose faith in the possibility of a good future for the country.



hatudu ba ema katak Timor oan mos bele,
labele lakon esperansa tuba rai metin
no lao ba oin nafatin

We have to show people that we Timorese can do it
We can't lose hope; we must stand firm
And continue to walk forward


The little signs say things like "Fight Corruption," "Education Starts in the Household," "Stop Using Violence," and "Create Peace and Love."

There are lots of tensions in Timor-Leste; violence and corruption1 are problems, and I bet it's easy to get discouraged. But lots of people are doing such great work--I'm not talking about million-dollar initiatives; I'm thinking just of the ordinary people I met, who are running computer classes or transportation services, or investing in a washing machine and then offering laundry services, etc. And those are just the people I was aware of from my brief stay. But meanwhile there's a law in the works that may restrict journalistic freedom, and there've been some pretty dramatic police actions . . . so, I appreciate the spirit of this song, and I hope people hang on to this spirit.

Timor Oan Mos Bele Halo--Viva Timor!


(And I do love learning language through listening to songs. Phrases I learned today include fiar-an, "believe in yourself," and ida-idak, "everybody.")

1Like this worrying story about petty police corruption that came down the line this morning from the East Timor Action Network :-(


Song

[identity profile] glenn cheney (from livejournal.com) 2014-05-27 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Lovely sentiment, one I certainly share. I hope it catches on. Too bad, though, that it's an emulation of American culture.

Re: Song

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2014-05-27 12:13 pm (UTC)(link)
True…. there are other songs in Tetun on YouTube that are more in the model of what I think of as Japanese enka --like French chansons, I guess--which I suppose must be modeled on something Portuguese? And reggae and Cuban music seem to have been popular for decades. But you still get plenty of traditional dances and drumming (judging from what I heard in Ainaro, anyway).

Here's the resistance song "Eh Foho Ramelau" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAOZOHD2lT0) and here's Kolelei Mai (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_dM225sLUc), which was also sung as a resistance song.

Watching that second one… the live footage is from 2002. Makes me feel all choked up.

Edited 2014-05-27 12:17 (UTC)