Ethiopians moved to Adams Morgan in the 1980s.[3] Adams Morgan served as a center of business of the Ethiopian community.[4] In the mid-1990s many Ethiopians began moving to the U Street area.[3] Many moved out of Adams Morgan to other areas after rent became increasingly expensive.[5]
The campaign to officially designate the U Street area as Little Ethiopia started around 2004. Elizabeth Chacko, the author of "Translocality in Washington, D.C. and Addis Ababa," stated that the Ethiopian community wanted the Little Ethiopia in Washington, D.C. because the city is the capital of the United States.[6] This campaign was not successful.[2] The author added that at that time, the Ethiopian area in Alexandria, Virginia had a higher concentration of Ethiopians compared to the one in Washington, D.C.[6]
According to the 2010 U.S. census, there were 30,000 Ethiopian immigrants in the Washington, D.C. area, making up 20% of the total number of Ethiopian immigrants throughout the country. The Ethiopian American Constituency Foundation and the Ethiopian Community Development Council stated that the figure is wrong and, as paraphrased by Derek Kravitz of The Washington Post, "the local figure has a history of being underreported and probably tops 100,000".[2] Yeshimebeth T. "Mama Tutu" Belay, an area businessperson, estimated that the population in the metropolitan area was about 250,000 as of 2010. Misty Showalter of CNN stated "other estimates are much lower."[5]Washington 101: An Introduction to the Nation's Capital states that "One common estimate is that 200,000 Ethiopians reside in the D.C. metropolitan area."[8]
According to the 2000 U.S. census there were 15,000 in the Washington, D.C. area., but the Ethiopian embassy stated that the actual number is closer to 200,000, and Brian Westley of The Washington Post stated "those who study African immigration" told him the same thing that the Ethiopian embassy told him.[1]
Silver Spring, Maryland also has a large Ethiopian and Ethiopian American population, restaurants, and businesses.[9]
Little Ethiopia, a Business and Cultural Community in and sub-division of the Shaw neighborhood of Washington, D.C., located around 9th and U StreetNorthwest. It is known for its concentration of Ethiopian businesses and residents.[10][11][12]
Since the 1980s, Ethiopian-born business owners have been purchasing property in the neighborhood of Shaw, specifically Thirteenth and Ninth Streets.[13] The area has since gained distinctive popularity in Washington even outside of the Ethiopian community. According to restaurant owner Tefera Zwedie: "I remember it was if I'm not mistaken somewhere between 2000, 2001 it was something big for us to see one non-Ethiopian coming to the restaurant. Now 95 percent of them are non-Ethiopian." The food has become a main attraction and reason for locals and tourists to commute to Shaw and experience the many local Ethiopian restaurants. This influx of Ethiopians has revitalized the area, prompting members of the Ethiopian American community to lobby the city government to officially designate the block as "Little Ethiopia". Although no legislation was proposed, Shaw residents have expressed opposition to the idea, concerned that such a designation would isolate that area from the historically African-American Shaw.[14]
The Ethiopian Community Center, Inc. (ECC, Amharic: የኢትዮጵያ ሕብረተሰብ ማዕከል[18]), headquartered in Washington, D.C., was established in 1980. The Ethiopian Community Development Council (ECDC), headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, promotes increased socioeconomic standing, culture, and education in the community and resettles refugees.[19] The ECDC provided loans to 700 persons wishing to own businesses in a nine-year period ending in 2011; these loans totalled almost $4.5 million.[3] The ECDC was established in 1983.[19]
The Ethiopian American Constituency Foundation (EACF), which promotes political involvement of the Ethiopian community, was established in 2003. It campaigned for the formal recognition of the Little Ethiopia in Shaw. Ethiocorps, an organization which recruits area Ethiopian Americans to volunteer in Ethiopia, was established in 2004.[7]
In 2011 the Ethiopian Community Development Council stated that in Washington, D.C., Northern Virginia, and Maryland there were at least 1,200 businesses owned by ethnic Ethiopians.[3]
In addition as of 2013 there are about 25 doctors of Ethiopian and Eritrean background in the Baltimore-Washington area, as well as Ethiopian-owned travel agencies, taxi companies, and parking garages.[20] As of 2010 many Ethiopians work as taxi drivers and parking attendants.[2]
The Ethiopian Yellow Pages (Amharic: የኢትዮጵያ የሎው ፔጅስ[23]) is published in Alexandria, Virginia,[20] and the headquarters of the publication is in Shaw, Washington, D.C. It has over 1,000 pages of content. As of 2011 Yeshimebeth T. "Mama Tutu" Belay is the publisher and her husband Yehunie Belay assists her. "Mama Tutu" Belay began the publication around 1994 by compiling lists of area businesses.[3]
In 2007 there were plans to create an Ethiopian television network in Alexandria.[24]
Religion
Due to the large Ethiopian and Jewish populations in Washington, D.C. and Silver Spring,[25] the Greater Washington metropolitan area is home to sizeable communities of Beta Israel (Ethiopian Jews) and Ethiopian Muslims. The majority of Ethiopians in the region are Christian, most being Orthodox Christians.
Recreation
The Ethiopian Expo is held in Washington, D.C. every year. It is organized by "Mama Tutu" Belay.[3]
Chacko, Elizabeth. "Africans in Washington, DC: Ethiopian Ethnic Institutions and Immigrant Adjustment." In: Frazier, John W., Joe T. Darden, and Norah F. Henry (editors). The African Diaspora in the United States and Canada at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Global Academic Publishing, September 1, 2010. ISBN143843684X, 9781438436845. Start page: p. 243.
Chacko, Elizabeth. "Translocality in Washington, D.C. and Addis Ababa: Spaces and Linkages of the Ethiopian Diaspora in Two Capital Cities" (Chapter 10). In: Datta, Ayona and Katherine Brickell (editors). Translocal Geographies: Spaces, Places, Connections. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., November 28, 2012. ISBN1409490009, 9781409490005. Start page p. 163.
^ abcdeKravitz, Derek. "Young parking lot czar is the face of Ethiopian success in the D.C. area." The Washington Post. Monday August 16, 2010. p. 1. Retrieved on September 3, 2014.
^Getahun, Solomon A. "Africans and African Americans from East Africa, 1940-Present." In: Barkan, Elliott Robert (editor). Immigrants in American History: Arrival, Adaptation, and Integration. ABC-CLIO, 2013. ISBN1598842196, 9781598842197. Start p.: 687. Cited: p. 693.
^Green, Matthew N., Julie Yarwood, Laura Daughtery, and Maria Mazzenga. Washington 101: An Introduction to the Nation's Capital. Palgrave Macmillan, June 18, 2014. ISBN1137426241, 9781137426246. p. 219.
^ abcFrancis, E. Aracelis. "Social Work Practice with African-Descent Immigrants" (Chapter 4). In: Balgopal, Pallassana R. Social Work Practice with Immigrants and Refugees (Foundations of Social Work Knowledge Series). Columbia University Press, August 13, 2013. ISBN0231504187, 9780231504188. Start page: 127. CITED: p. 136.
^"Ethiopian Airlines Customer Commitment" (Archived 2014-09-22 at the Wayback Machine). Ethiopian Airlines. Retrieved on September 3, 2014. "[...] Ethiopian Airlines, customer refund service, 277 S Washington st., suite 120, Alexandria VA 22 314 for refund cases in USA[...]"
^Brulliard, Karin. "A Sharp Eye On Ethiopia." The Washington Post. Tuesday February 6, 2007. p. 3. Retrieved on September 3, 2014.
Friedman, Samantha, Audrey Singer, Marie Price, and Ivan Cheung. "Race, Immigrants, and Residence: A New Racial Geography of Washington, D.C." The Geographical Review 95:2 (2005), 211.