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More than 200,000 Ethiopians (Habesha) live in the Washington D.C. metro area. That’s not just a community. That’s influence. From U Street to Silver Spring… From small family restaurants to federal agencies… From taxi drivers and business owners to policy advisors and second-generation professionals — Ethiopians have built one of the most powerful African diaspora networks in the world. Some call it “Little Ethiopia.” Others call it quiet dominance. But how did a wave of refugees from the 1980s and 1990s grow into a community that shapes America’s capital? Is it economic power? Cultural resilience? Political networking? Or something deeper? In this episode of The Human Map, we explore: • How 200,000 Ethiopians concentrated in one city • Why Washington became their strategic hub • The businesses, institutions, and networks they built • The second generation now entering politics, law, and media • And whether diaspora communities are redefining American cities Because cities don’t just change through policy. They change through people. 🎥 Subscribe for cinematic global documentaries on migration, identity, and power. 💬 Comment below: Is this success story… or the future of how global cities evolve? #EthiopianDiaspora #WashingtonDC #LittleEthiopia #Migration #TheHumanMap #Habesha