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Harari people

The Harari people (Harari: ጌይ ኡሱኣች Gēy Usuach, "People of the City") are a Semitic-speaking ethnic group which inhabits the Horn of Africa. Members of this ethnic group traditionally reside in the walled city of Harar, simply called Gēy "the City" in Harari, situated in the Harari Region of eastern Ethiopia. They speak the Harari language, a member of the South Ethiopic grouping within the Semitic subfamily of the Afroasiatic languages.

Harari
ሀረሪ
Harari women wearing the traditional dress in Harar
Total population
estimated 200,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Ethiopia50,000-70,000 (Using 2021 Election Data and 2017 Census Projections)[2]
Languages
Harari
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
ArgobbaAmharaGurageTigrayansTigrinyaZay • others[3]

History

 
Harari woman in traditional attire.

The Harla people, an extinct Afroasiatic-speaking people native to Hararghe, are considered by most scholars to be the precursors to the Harari people.[4][5][6] The ancestors of the Hararis moved across the Bab-el-Mandeb, settling in the shores of Somaliland and later expanding into the interior producing a Semitic-speaking population among Cushitic and non-Afroasiatic-speaking peoples in what would become Harar.[7][8][9]

Sheikh Abadir, the legendary patriarch of the Harari, is said to have arrived in the Harar plateau in the early thirteenth century, where he was met by the Harla, Gaturi and Argobba people.[10] In the middle ages Hararis led by Abadir supposedly came into conflict with the Shirazi people who had occupied Somalia's coast.[11][12] By the thirteenth century, the Hararis were among the administrators of the Ifat Sultanate.[13] In the fourteenth century raids on the Harari town of Get (Gey) by Abyssinian Emperor Amda Seyon I, Hararis are referred to as Harlas.[14] Ifat state under Haqq ad-Din II relocated their base to the Harari plateau (Adal) in the fourteenth century.[15][16][17] An alliance kingdom ensued between Argobba and Harari people designated the Adal Sultanate which later included Afar and Somali people.[18][19][20] In the sixteenth century under Ahmed ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi, the Harari state stretched to large parts of the Horn of Africa.[21][22][23][24] During the Ethiopian–Adal war, some Harari militia (malassay) settled in Gurage territory, forming the Siltʼe people.[25] Hararis once represented the largest concentration of agriculturalists in East Africa.[26]

In the sixteenth century, walls built around the city of Harar during the reign of Emir Nur ibn Mujahid helped preserve Harari identity from being assimilated by the Oromo.[27] Harari colonies in the middle of the seaboard and Harar were also assimilated by Somalis putting the Sultanate of Harar under duress.[28] Hararis confined in the walled city became the last remnants of a once large ethnic group that inhabited the region.[29][30] According to Ulrich Braukämper, the Harla-Harari were most likely active in the region prior to the Adal Sultanate's Islamic invasion of Ethiopia.

The sixteenth century saw Oromos invading regions of the Somali peninsula from the northern areas of Hargeisa to its southern portions such as Lower Juba, incorporating the Harari people.[31] Hararis were furious when Muhammad Jasa decided to move the Adal Sultanate's capital from Harar to Aussa in 1577 in response to Oromo threats. In less than a year after its relocation Adal would collapse.[32] Harari imams continued to have a presence in the southern Afar Region in the Imamate of Aussa until they were overthrown in the eighteenth century by the Mudaito dynasty, who later established the Sultanate of Aussa.[33]

Among the assimilated peoples were Arab Muslims that arrived during the start of the Islamic period, as well as Argobba and other migrants that were drawn to Harar's well-developed culture.[34] Statistics prove that a Semitic-speaking people akin to the Harari may have inhabited a stretch of land between the Karkaar Mountains, the middle Awash and Jijiga. Oromo migrations have effectively split this putative ethnolinguistic block to the Lake Zway islands, Gurage territory, and Harar.[35] Following the decline of the Adal Sultanate's ascendancy in the area, a large number of the Harari were in turn reportedly absorbed into the Oromo community.[34] In the Emirate of Harar period, Hararis sent missionaries to convert Oromo to Islam.[36] The loss of the crucial Battle of Chelenqo marked the end of Harar's independence in 1887.[37] Hararis supported the designated but uncrowned Emperor of Ethiopia Lij Iyasu, and his presumed efforts to make Harar the capital of an African Islamic empire.[38] Iyasu was however overthrown in 1916, and many of his Harari followers were jailed.[39]

 
Harari children

Chafing under imperial Ethiopian rule, Hararis made several attempts to cut ties with Ethiopia and unify Hararghe with Somalia, among them launching the nationalist Kulub movement which was linked to the Somali Youth League. These events led to the Haile Selassie government's ethnic cleansing efforts on Hararis.[40] A Harar Oromo proverb alludes to this occasion: "On that day Hararis were eliminated from earth."[41] Former Mayor of Harar Bereket Selassie reported that both the Amhara and Oromo viewed Hararis with contempt.[42] Haile Selassie's overthrow by the Derg communist regime made minor differences for the Harari; they describe it as "little more than a transition from the frying pan into the fire".[43] The 1975 rural act disenfranchised Hararis from their farm land, forcing many to emigrate.[44] The surviving Harari relatives of Kulub movement members would join the Somali Armed Forces; and some, having been promoted as high-ranking military officers, fought in the Ogaden War to free Harari and Somali territory from Ethiopian rule.[45] Hararis were also involved in the WSLF.[46] After Ethiopians won the war in Ogaden, Derg soldiers began massacring civilians in Harari areas of Addis Ababa for collaborating with Somalis.[47] The aftermath of the Ogaden war resulted in 200,000 Hararis being held at southern Somalia's refuge camps in 1979.[48] Today Hararis are outnumbered in their own state by the Amhara and Oromo peoples. Under the Meles Zenawi administration, Hararis had been favored tremendously. They acquired control of their Harari Region again, and have been given special rights not offered to other groups in the region.[49] According to academic Sarah Vaughan, the Harari People's National Regional State was created to overturn the historically bad relationship between Harar and the Ethiopian government.[50]

Some Hararis as well as the Somali Sheekhal and Hadiya Halaba clans assert descent from Abadir Umar ar-Rida, also known as Fiqi Umar, who traced his lineage to the first caliph, Abu Bakr. According to the explorer Richard Francis Burton, "Fiqi Umar" crossed over from the Arabian Peninsula to the Horn of Africa ten generations prior to 1854, with his six sons: Umar the Greater, Umar the Lesser, the two Abdillahs, Ahmad and Siddiq.[51] According to Hararis, they also consist of seven Harla subclans: Abogn, Adish, Awari, Gidaya, Gaturi, Hargaya, and Wargar.[52] The Harari were previously known as "Adere", although this term is now considered derogatory.[53]

Arsi Oromo state an intermarriage took place between their ancestors and the previous inhabitants Adere (Harari) whom they call the Hadiya.[54][55] Hadiya clans claim their forefathers were Harari however they later became influenced by Sidama.[56][57] Moreover the Habar Habusheed, a major branch of the Somali Isaaq clan family consisting of the Habr Je'lo, Sanbur, Ibran and Tol Je'lo clans in Somaliland and Ethiopia, hold the tradition that they originate from an intermarriage between a Harari woman and their forefather Sheikh Ishaaq.[58]

Language

 
Harari pendant, held at the Museum of Natural History and Ethnography in Colmar.

The Harari people speak the Harari language, an Ethiosemitic language referred to as Gey Sinan or Gēy Ritma ("Language of the City"). It is closely related to the eastern Gurage languages and similar to Zay and Silt'e, all of whom are linked to the Semitisized Harla language.[59][60] Old Harari already had many Arabic loanwords, proven by the ancient texts.[61] Northern Somali dialects use Harari loanwords.[62] The Zeila songs of thirteenth century origin, popular in Somaliland are considered to be using Old Harari.[63] Historians states the language spoken by the Imams and Sultans of Adal would closely resemble contemporary Harari language.[64][65]

Modern Harari is influenced more by Oromo than Somali and the presence of Arabic is still there.[66] After the eighteenth century Egyptian conquest of Harar, numerous loanwords were additionally borrowed from Egyptian Arabic.

Gafat language, now extinct, was once spoken in the Blue Nile was related to a Harari dialect.[67] Harari language has some form of correlation with Swahili and Maghrebi Arabic.[68] Prior to Oromo encircling the Harar region, its postulated Harari speakers were in direct contact with Sidama, Afar and Somali.[69][70]

The Harari language was historically written using the Arabic script and in characters known as "Harari secret script" of unknown origin.[71] More recently in the 1990s, it has been transcribed with the Ge'ez script. Harari is also commonly written in Latin outside of Ethiopia.[72]

The 1994 Ethiopian census indicates that there were 21,757 Harari speakers. About 20,000 of these individuals were concentrated outside Harar, in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa.[73]

Most Harari people are bilingual in Amharic and Oromo, both of which are also Afro-Asiatic languages. According to the 1994 Ethiopian census, about 2,351 are monolingual, speaking only Harari.[73]

Religion

Virtually all Harari are Sunni Muslim. The earliest kabir or Islamic teacher in the community was Aw Sofi Yahya, a Harari scholar who was contemporary of the patron saint of Harar called Shaykh Abadir and it was from him that the first Qur'anic school was built around 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) to the south of the city center.[74] The predominant strand or self-identification adopted by Harari people is Sunni or non-denominational Islam.[75]

Diaspora

Hararis comprise under 10% within their own city, due to ethnic cleansing by the Haile Selassie regime. Thousands of Hararis were forced to leave Harar in the 1940s.[50][76][77][40][78][79] Harari people moved throughout Ethiopia, mainly to Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa, establishing families and businesses. There is a considerable Harari population in Djibouti, Saudi Arabia, Somaliland and Yemen.[80] The Harari people have also spread throughout North America, mainly to Washington D.C., Atlanta, Toronto, Dallas, Los Angeles, and Memphis. Furthermore, a minority of the Harari people live in Europe in countries such as Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Notable Hararis

See also

References

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harari, people, harari, ጌይ, ኡሱኣች, gēy, usuach, people, city, semitic, speaking, ethnic, group, which, inhabits, horn, africa, members, this, ethnic, group, traditionally, reside, walled, city, harar, simply, called, gēy, city, harari, situated, harari, region,. The Harari people Harari ጌይ ኡሱኣች Gey Usuach People of the City are a Semitic speaking ethnic group which inhabits the Horn of Africa Members of this ethnic group traditionally reside in the walled city of Harar simply called Gey the City in Harari situated in the Harari Region of eastern Ethiopia They speak the Harari language a member of the South Ethiopic grouping within the Semitic subfamily of the Afroasiatic languages HarariሀረሪHarari women wearing the traditional dress in HararTotal populationestimated 200 000 1 Regions with significant populations Ethiopia50 000 70 000 Using 2021 Election Data and 2017 Census Projections 2 LanguagesHarariReligionSunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsArgobba Amhara Gurage Tigrayans Tigrinya Zay others 3 Contents 1 History 2 Language 3 Religion 4 Diaspora 5 Notable Hararis 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory Edit Harari woman in traditional attire The Harla people an extinct Afroasiatic speaking people native to Hararghe are considered by most scholars to be the precursors to the Harari people 4 5 6 The ancestors of the Hararis moved across the Bab el Mandeb settling in the shores of Somaliland and later expanding into the interior producing a Semitic speaking population among Cushitic and non Afroasiatic speaking peoples in what would become Harar 7 8 9 Sheikh Abadir the legendary patriarch of the Harari is said to have arrived in the Harar plateau in the early thirteenth century where he was met by the Harla Gaturi and Argobba people 10 In the middle ages Hararis led by Abadir supposedly came into conflict with the Shirazi people who had occupied Somalia s coast 11 12 By the thirteenth century the Hararis were among the administrators of the Ifat Sultanate 13 In the fourteenth century raids on the Harari town of Get Gey by Abyssinian Emperor Amda Seyon I Hararis are referred to as Harlas 14 Ifat state under Haqq ad Din II relocated their base to the Harari plateau Adal in the fourteenth century 15 16 17 An alliance kingdom ensued between Argobba and Harari people designated the Adal Sultanate which later included Afar and Somali people 18 19 20 In the sixteenth century under Ahmed ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi the Harari state stretched to large parts of the Horn of Africa 21 22 23 24 During the Ethiopian Adal war some Harari militia malassay settled in Gurage territory forming the Siltʼe people 25 Hararis once represented the largest concentration of agriculturalists in East Africa 26 In the sixteenth century walls built around the city of Harar during the reign of Emir Nur ibn Mujahid helped preserve Harari identity from being assimilated by the Oromo 27 Harari colonies in the middle of the seaboard and Harar were also assimilated by Somalis putting the Sultanate of Harar under duress 28 Hararis confined in the walled city became the last remnants of a once large ethnic group that inhabited the region 29 30 According to Ulrich Braukamper the Harla Harari were most likely active in the region prior to the Adal Sultanate s Islamic invasion of Ethiopia The sixteenth century saw Oromos invading regions of the Somali peninsula from the northern areas of Hargeisa to its southern portions such as Lower Juba incorporating the Harari people 31 Hararis were furious when Muhammad Jasa decided to move the Adal Sultanate s capital from Harar to Aussa in 1577 in response to Oromo threats In less than a year after its relocation Adal would collapse 32 Harari imams continued to have a presence in the southern Afar Region in the Imamate of Aussa until they were overthrown in the eighteenth century by the Mudaito dynasty who later established the Sultanate of Aussa 33 Among the assimilated peoples were Arab Muslims that arrived during the start of the Islamic period as well as Argobba and other migrants that were drawn to Harar s well developed culture 34 Statistics prove that a Semitic speaking people akin to the Harari may have inhabited a stretch of land between the Karkaar Mountains the middle Awash and Jijiga Oromo migrations have effectively split this putative ethnolinguistic block to the Lake Zway islands Gurage territory and Harar 35 Following the decline of the Adal Sultanate s ascendancy in the area a large number of the Harari were in turn reportedly absorbed into the Oromo community 34 In the Emirate of Harar period Hararis sent missionaries to convert Oromo to Islam 36 The loss of the crucial Battle of Chelenqo marked the end of Harar s independence in 1887 37 Hararis supported the designated but uncrowned Emperor of Ethiopia Lij Iyasu and his presumed efforts to make Harar the capital of an African Islamic empire 38 Iyasu was however overthrown in 1916 and many of his Harari followers were jailed 39 Harari children Chafing under imperial Ethiopian rule Hararis made several attempts to cut ties with Ethiopia and unify Hararghe with Somalia among them launching the nationalist Kulub movement which was linked to the Somali Youth League These events led to the Haile Selassie government s ethnic cleansing efforts on Hararis 40 A Harar Oromo proverb alludes to this occasion On that day Hararis were eliminated from earth 41 Former Mayor of Harar Bereket Selassie reported that both the Amhara and Oromo viewed Hararis with contempt 42 Haile Selassie s overthrow by the Derg communist regime made minor differences for the Harari they describe it as little more than a transition from the frying pan into the fire 43 The 1975 rural act disenfranchised Hararis from their farm land forcing many to emigrate 44 The surviving Harari relatives of Kulub movement members would join the Somali Armed Forces and some having been promoted as high ranking military officers fought in the Ogaden War to free Harari and Somali territory from Ethiopian rule 45 Hararis were also involved in the WSLF 46 After Ethiopians won the war in Ogaden Derg soldiers began massacring civilians in Harari areas of Addis Ababa for collaborating with Somalis 47 The aftermath of the Ogaden war resulted in 200 000 Hararis being held at southern Somalia s refuge camps in 1979 48 Today Hararis are outnumbered in their own state by the Amhara and Oromo peoples Under the Meles Zenawi administration Hararis had been favored tremendously They acquired control of their Harari Region again and have been given special rights not offered to other groups in the region 49 According to academic Sarah Vaughan the Harari People s National Regional State was created to overturn the historically bad relationship between Harar and the Ethiopian government 50 Some Hararis as well as the Somali Sheekhal and Hadiya Halaba clans assert descent from Abadir Umar ar Rida also known as Fiqi Umar who traced his lineage to the first caliph Abu Bakr According to the explorer Richard Francis Burton Fiqi Umar crossed over from the Arabian Peninsula to the Horn of Africa ten generations prior to 1854 with his six sons Umar the Greater Umar the Lesser the two Abdillahs Ahmad and Siddiq 51 According to Hararis they also consist of seven Harla subclans Abogn Adish Awari Gidaya Gaturi Hargaya and Wargar 52 The Harari were previously known as Adere although this term is now considered derogatory 53 Arsi Oromo state an intermarriage took place between their ancestors and the previous inhabitants Adere Harari whom they call the Hadiya 54 55 Hadiya clans claim their forefathers were Harari however they later became influenced by Sidama 56 57 Moreover the Habar Habusheed a major branch of the Somali Isaaq clan family consisting of the Habr Je lo Sanbur Ibran and Tol Je lo clans in Somaliland and Ethiopia hold the tradition that they originate from an intermarriage between a Harari woman and their forefather Sheikh Ishaaq 58 Language Edit Harari pendant held at the Museum of Natural History and Ethnography in Colmar The Harari people speak the Harari language an Ethiosemitic language referred to as Gey Sinan or Gey Ritma Language of the City It is closely related to the eastern Gurage languages and similar to Zay and Silt e all of whom are linked to the Semitisized Harla language 59 60 Old Harari already had many Arabic loanwords proven by the ancient texts 61 Northern Somali dialects use Harari loanwords 62 The Zeila songs of thirteenth century origin popular in Somaliland are considered to be using Old Harari 63 Historians states the language spoken by the Imams and Sultans of Adal would closely resemble contemporary Harari language 64 65 Modern Harari is influenced more by Oromo than Somali and the presence of Arabic is still there 66 After the eighteenth century Egyptian conquest of Harar numerous loanwords were additionally borrowed from Egyptian Arabic Gafat language now extinct was once spoken in the Blue Nile was related to a Harari dialect 67 Harari language has some form of correlation with Swahili and Maghrebi Arabic 68 Prior to Oromo encircling the Harar region its postulated Harari speakers were in direct contact with Sidama Afar and Somali 69 70 The Harari language was historically written using the Arabic script and in characters known as Harari secret script of unknown origin 71 More recently in the 1990s it has been transcribed with the Ge ez script Harari is also commonly written in Latin outside of Ethiopia 72 The 1994 Ethiopian census indicates that there were 21 757 Harari speakers About 20 000 of these individuals were concentrated outside Harar in Ethiopia s capital Addis Ababa 73 Most Harari people are bilingual in Amharic and Oromo both of which are also Afro Asiatic languages According to the 1994 Ethiopian census about 2 351 are monolingual speaking only Harari 73 Religion EditVirtually all Harari are Sunni Muslim The earliest kabir or Islamic teacher in the community was Aw Sofi Yahya a Harari scholar who was contemporary of the patron saint of Harar called Shaykh Abadir and it was from him that the first Qur anic school was built around 10 kilometres 6 2 mi to the south of the city center 74 The predominant strand or self identification adopted by Harari people is Sunni or non denominational Islam 75 Diaspora EditHararis comprise under 10 within their own city due to ethnic cleansing by the Haile Selassie regime Thousands of Hararis were forced to leave Harar in the 1940s 50 76 77 40 78 79 Harari people moved throughout Ethiopia mainly to Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa establishing families and businesses There is a considerable Harari population in Djibouti Saudi Arabia Somaliland and Yemen 80 The Harari people have also spread throughout North America mainly to Washington D C Atlanta Toronto Dallas Los Angeles and Memphis Furthermore a minority of the Harari people live in Europe in countries such as Germany Switzerland Austria Sweden and the United Kingdom Notable Hararis EditAbdullah al Harari leader of the al Ahbash Sunni Sufi movement Abd Allah II ibn Ali Abd ash Shakur last Emir of Harar Ali ibn Da ud founder of the Emirate of Harar Mahfuz Imam and General of the Adal Sultanate Bati del Wambara Queen of the Adal Sultanate Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi Imam and General of the Adal Sultanate Nur ibn Mujahid founder of Sultanate of Harar Abdullahi Sadiq businessman and Governor of Ogaden Abun Adashe Emir of the Adal Sultanate Duri Mohammed former President of Addis Ababa University Kabir Khalil 19th century Muslim scholar in the Emirate of HararSee also EditGarad an old Harari title Malassay Harari corps Kabir title for scholar in the Emirate of Harar Aw title for father Harari Region Harar City Diaspora East Hararghe Zone List of Emirs of Harar List of ethnic groups in Ethiopia Sultanate of HararReferences Edit Lovise Alean 22 June 2011 The Politics of Ethnicity in Ethiopia BRILL p 154 ISBN 978 9004207295 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Harari RC Election Results Final sep 30th PDF Joireman Sandra F 1997 Institutional Change in the Horn of Africa The Allocation of Property Rights and Implications for Development Universal Publishers p 1 ISBN 1581120001 The Horn of Africa encompasses the countries of Ethiopia Eritrea Djibouti and Somalia These countries share similar peoples languages and geographical endowments Hassen Mohammed 2015 The Oromo and the Christian Kingdom of Ethiopia 1300 1700 Boydell amp Brewer p 145 footnote 32 ISBN 9781847011176 Joussaume Roger 1976 Fouille d un tumulus a Ganda Hassan Abdi dans les monts du Harar Annales d Ethiopie 10 25 39 doi 10 3406 ethio 1976 1157 Gebissa Ezekiel 2004 Leaf of Allah Ohio State University Press p 36 ISBN 9780852554807 Retrieved 11 April 2016 Mordechai Abir ETHIOPIA AND THE RED SEA PDF Hebrew University of Jerusalem p 9 Abraham Kinfe 2004 Ethiopia and the Arab world EIIPD Press p 53 ISBN 9782003120749 Mordechai Abir 2013 10 28 Ethiopia and the Red Sea The Rise and Decline of the Solomonic Dynasty and Muslim European Rivalry in the Region Routledge p xvii xviii ISBN 9781136280900 Braukhamper Ulrich 2002 Islamic History and Culture LIT Verlag Munster p 107 ISBN 9783825856717 Retrieved 12 April 2016 Encyclopaedia Aethiopica PDF Harrasowitz 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bureau p 141 Retrieved 26 November 2017 Weekes Richard 1984 12 21 Muslim Peoples A World Ethnographic Survey Greenwood Publishers p 318 ISBN 9780313233920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harari people amp oldid 1152699639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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