Embracing New Beginnings: The Ethiopian Enkutatash in Australia

Known as Enkutatash, the Ethiopian New Year is celebrated in September yearly. Use our calculator to work out your Ethiopian age and feel younger.

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Children at Footscray Ethiopian Community Festival on Saturday, 07 September, 2017. Credit: SBS Amharic

On 11 September, the Ethiopian community joyfully celebrates Enkutatash, the new year for this community. With family, food, and the aroma of fresh coffee, the celebration creates a warm and inviting atmosphere that welcomes everyone.

With the Ethiopian community growing consistently, the celebrations have become more visible and busy, fostering a stronger sense of community and belonging and making everyone feel a part of this vibrant and growing cultural tapestry.

SBS Amharic, dedicated to cultural diversity, recently attended one of the largest Enkutatash celebrations in Australia.

It captured the spirit of the community and the cross-cultural bridges it helps build, keeping our audience informed and engaged.

Unique calendar, unique celebrations

Unlike the Gregorian New Year, celebrated globally on 1 January, the Ethiopian version is observed on 11 September (or 12 September in a leap year).

Dr Yirga Gelaw, an Ethiopian historian at Curtin University, explains the calendar’s uniqueness.

“The Ethiopian calendar, also known as the Ge’ez calendar, has a different start date. It is about seven or eight years behind the Gregorian calendar,” he tells SBS Amharic.

This unique aspect of the calendar, where the year 2023, according to the Gregorian calendar, is considered 2016 in the Ethiopian calendar, is a fascinating cultural difference that piques our audience's interest.

“This difference is due to variations in how historical events were calculated and recorded in the olden days,” he adds.

Enkutatash Down Under

The Ethiopian community in Australia celebrates the New Year with great enthusiasm every September, showcasing its rich heritage in multicultural Australia.

The community gathers for festivities and exchanges gifts, and churches have celebrations and feasts.

One such celebration is organised yearly in Melbourne’s Footscray, home to a large African population.

Central to these feasts are traditional Ethiopian dishes like injera (a sourdough flatbread made from a gluten-free millet called teff), (a spicy chicken stew) and kitfo (minced raw beef marinated with a chilli-based spice blend), and butter-infused with herbs and spices).
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Traditional Ethiopian delicacies are enjoyed on Enkutatash. Credit: Sifrash
For the adults at the party, there’s a traditional beer called tela and a honey-based wine called tej, which is for some heady pleasure.

To partake of their hospitality, the Ethiopian diaspora often invites their Australian guests, thereby bridging cultures and fostering the community spirit.

Community elder Eshetu Mulugeta and his Serbian wife, Jasmina Mulugeta, embody this communion.
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Eshetu Muluget's neighbours gather for the Ethiopian New Year's Day lunch in his backyard. Credit: Eshetu Mulugeta
They met in the former Yugoslavia and settled in Australia in 1992. They have two children, Gabrielle and Michael.

The day begins with visiting the local Ethiopian Orthodox Church for this family.

“We dress traditionally, and after Mass, our Australian neighbours join us for a feast and celebration,” he tells SBS Amharic.
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(L-R), Jasmina Mulugeta, Gabrielle Mulugeta, Eshetu Mulugeta and Michael Mulugeta at their Melbourne family home. Credit: Eshetu Mulugeta
“We prepare our traditional dishes and enjoy them together.”

“Other children who have grown up with ours did not miss the celebrations of the Ethiopian New Year except during the COVID-19 lockdown,” he adds, highlighting the community spirit of the festival.
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The Muluget family celebrates Enkutatas with a friend. Credit: Eshetu Mulugeta
Ethiopia Down Under

According to the 2021 Census data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the Ethiopian-Australian community has grown from just three people before 1951 to 14,092.

Of these, 68.2 per cent are Australian citizens.

The largest cohort lives in Greater Melbourne’s western suburbs.
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Credit: ABS
Mr Gelaw explains the calendar in further detail.

“The Ethiopian calendar follows a 13-month year system.

“Twelve of these months have 30 days each, and the final month, Pagumē, has five or six days, depending on whether it’s a leap year.

“Leap years in the Ethiopian calendar occur every four years, similar to the Gregorian calendar. However, in the Gregorian calendar, leap years are adjusted based on specific rules that make exceptions for years divisible by 100 but not 400,” he elaborates.

Mr Gelaw also describes how the Ethiopian community in Australia marks Enkutatash based on his lived experience with his wife, award-winning Australian author Rebecca Higgie.
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Yirga Gelaw with his wife Rebecca Higgie. Credit: Yirga Gelaw
“Celebrations can include cultural performances, music, dancing and cooking traditional Ethiopian dishes. Community organisations, cultural centres and Ethiopian restaurants may host special events to mark the occasion,” he says.

A week before 12 September, community members gather in Footscray, which also has many restaurants, cafés, and barber shops owned by community members.

Every year, the mayor of Maribyrnong City Council attends the festival, thereby culturally bridging the Ethiopian and the wider community.
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Members of the Ethiopian community attending the New Year cultural festival in Little Africa, Footscary. Credit: SBS Amharic
In the words of Australia’s political leaders

Over the years, many prime ministers and opposition leaders in the federal parliament have wished the Ethiopian community well on Enkutatash.

From Julia Gillard, who held office between 2010 and 2013, to Scott Morrison, prime minister from 2018 to 2022, the community has received recognition for its contribution to their adopted country, Australia, on this day.

In her keynote address to one such Enkutatash celebration, Ms Gillard famously said, “Our multicultural success is no accident. The New Year signifies diversity that strengthens us as a nation.”
The Ethiopian community are small in numbers but big at heart.
Julia Gillard, former prime minister
is small in number but big in"You share a deep love for our country and a real belief in its future.

“And I understand, because of that, you know the true meaning of being Australian. So, on behalf of the whole nation, I hope the year ahead brings happiness, good health and prosperity to you and your family,” Ms Gillard had said.

Tony Abbott also extended his good wishes to the community when he was prime minister from 2013 to 2015.

“Enkutatash is an opportunity to celebrate your ancient culture as well as your new life here in Australia,” he had said.
Together, we built a nation that is the envy of the world.
Tony Abbott, former Prime Minister of Australia
Mr Abbott also reminded the community of the importance of the diplomatic relations between the two countries, which have lasted for over half a century.


“This year marks the 50th anniversary of bilateral relations between Australia and Ethiopia. Ethiopia is an important regional leader as the second most populous country in Africa. Australia looks forward to building our warm relationship in the years ahead," he had then said.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who was also the Leader of the Opposition and the Labor Party until early 2022, also greeted the community on Enkutatash.

“Every one of those yellow adey abeba flowers now blooming across Ethiopia is a reminder of what we all hope for a brighter future," he had said.

During the pandemic, when the community couldn’t get together for this festival, Mr Albanese sent a message to congratulate them.
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Ethiopian man sells traditional adey abeba flower motif ornaments ahead of the Enkutatash in Addis Ababa. Credit: Anadolu Agency/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
“The New Year celebration will be different this time. The reality of the pandemic means the joyous gatherings of previous years just aren’t possible.

“But as we stay apart, we're joined together in the shared knowledge and wisdom of Ethiopians everywhere,” he had said.

Last year, Federal Leader of Opposition, Peter Dutton, wished the community in Amharic.

“Wherever you are in Australia, I hope you will welcome the New Year with agile traditions, prayers, meals with your family, celebrations with your friends, the lighting of Chibo, perhaps a drink of Arak.

“No doubt stories will be told about the legendary origins of Enkutatash, how after visiting King Solomon, the Queen of Sheba returned home with the gift of jewels. This is a queen enriched by her travel.

“Australia has been enriched by all those Ethiopians who settled in our great country as migrants or refugees,” he added.

Mr Dutton also recognised the role and contributions of the Ethiopian community to Australia.

“Regardless of reasons, Ethiopians who arrived on our soil worked hard, embraced the Australian way of life and united us as a nation.”

“I thank everyone for their commitment and contributions. The Ethiopian New Year is a time of renewal and hope. So, for the Australian-Ethiopian community, I wish you good fortune and health in the coming year.

He concluded by wishing the community in Amharic.

*** This article was published first on the SBS Amharic website on 11 September 2023.

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Published 12 September 2024 6:11pm
By Kassahun Seboqa Negewo
Source: SBS

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