Shinasha people

Summary

The Shinasha, also known as Bworo or Boro, are an ethnic group in northwestern Ethiopia.[citation needed] Their language belongs to the North Omotic family (see Omotic languages). They live north of the Blue Nile in the Metekel Zone of the Benishangul-Gumuz Region and number around 139,000 individuals. Their neighbors in the area include Gumuz, Amhara, Awi and Oromo peoples.

Shinasha women in traditional clothes and hairstyle

Oscar T. Crosby encountered a group of 600 Shinasha in 1901, living in "a few villages between the Durra and Wombera [rivers]." He described their houses and dress, and claimed that they made their living through "claiming great powers of necromancy, by menace of rain or drought, they force the Shankalis to yield up to them a part of their scanty store of grain, or meat, or honey."[1]

In 2017, Bahir Dar University conducted a study of the Shinasha people's unique usage of a number of indigenous tuberous plants as food and herbal medicine. In the study, the Shinasha's main livelihood is described as subsistence farming, by plowing the land and raising animals.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Crosby, Oscar T. (1901). "Notes on a Journey from Zeila to Khartum". The Geographical Journal. 18 (1): 46–61. Bibcode:1901GeogJ..18...46C. doi:10.2307/1775763. JSTOR 1775763.
  2. ^ Mosissa, Dereje (2018). "Tuberous Wild Plant of Shinasha People as Food and Medicine in Bullen District Northwest of Ethiopia". American Journal of Life Science Researches. 6 (1): 30–39.

External links edit

  • Christian influences on Shinasha oral traditions
  • Ethnologue report