comedian Wako Getacho What happened?

I told him that our whole family had forgiven the people who killed our father. Then we talked, we got emotional, and there was a lot of crying in the prison. Thus, we parted ways with them, said Comedian Waqo Getachew, who spoke of his feelings when his father was killed.
Comedian Waqo Getachew was born in Najjo and is the 2nd Person in his family. His father was a school director. He attended primary school there and continued through secondary and preparatory school.
In his growth he went to school and was a very weak student till 4th grade and then he became stronger and passed 12th grade and reached the University of Addis Abeba.
Then he finished his studies and left. God This Man who is now gritting our teeth with laughter is the man who forgave the Man who killed his father when his Father was Killed.
When Waqo Getachew talked about how he forgave the man who killed his father he said…I got such humanity to forgive the people who killed my father from my own murdered father.
He always made us go and apologize when we messed up in our house, when we got into a fight with the kids, even if we were beaten. “It’s not the character I brought in since my father died, it’s the one he already raised us with,” he said.
He added that God In fact, it hurts not to read about the man who in a Horrible Manner father and even thinking about him and I felt the same way.
I panic and I was disturbed in dreams but outside sometimes there is something that your flesh is not doing that is natural, something that God will help you with.
When my father was killed, I hated to live. If a family breaks up overnight, I would say to myself, ‘What is the point of living?’ ‘Why me?’ I wondered. He spent many days without sleep, but for self-pity, he concentrated on the art of comedy.
“I laugh during the day and it helped me to get along with people, but my insides were still hurting,” he said. I also started writing the book ‘The Right to Kill’ in grief. Six days after my father was killed, a 15-year-old girl called me from another part of Oromia.
“They killed my father, my mother is disabled, and I have a six-month-old sister,” she told me, telling me that she had no hope and would take to the streets to beg. I was sad and cried that day and decided to write that this sadness is in many Oromo houses.
It means that I have written the story of one soul out of thousands of such sacrifices in Oromo houses. If one person has the right to kill, another must die. God created the soul, and it is He who must receive it. Therefore, I wrote to tell you that the right to kill should not be allowed for anyone and let the reader understand that.
Comedian Waqo Getachew has since Recovered from the Grief and is now a Married Man and a filmmaker and comedian. He is also working with his friends on a comedy titled Dibaabee Hirkoo which is airing on Etv every Sunday evening.
