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Wikipedia

Kadazan-Dusun

Kadazan-Dusun (also written as Kadazandusun or Mamasok Kadazan-Dusun) also less-known as "Mamasok Sabah" are two indigenous peoples of Sabah, Malaysia—the ethnic groups Kadazan and Dusun. The Kadazandusun is the largest native group of Bumiputra in Sabah.[2] They are also known as "Mamasok", which means "originals" or "indigenous people". Most of the Kadazan-Dusun tribes believed they are descendants of Nunuk Ragang people. Kadazan-Dusun has been recognised as an indigenous nation of Borneo with documented heritage by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) since 2004.[3] Kadazan-Dusun is also recognised as a bumiputera group in Sabah that has its own special rights from land rights, rivers, to maintaining customs.

Kadazan Dusun Ethnic
"Kadazan Dusun People"
"Mamasok"
Kadazandusun priests and priestesses attires during the opening ceremony of Kaamatan 2014 at Hongkod Koisaan, the unity hall of KDCA
Total population
555,647 (2010)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Malaysia
(Sabah, Federal Territory of Labuan, Peninsular Malaysia)

Languages
Dusun, Kadazan, English and Malaysian
Religion
Christianity (74.8%), Sunni Islam (22.6%), Momolianism
Related ethnic groups
Dusun, Rungus, Kadazan, Orang Sungai, Murut, Lun Bawang/Lun Dayeh

a Yearbook of Statistics: Sabah, 2002 & Sabah Statistics 2020 Data

Several organisations have been established to safeguard the privileges of Kadazan-Dusun in Malaysia and one of them is Pertubuhan Kadazan-Dusun Murut (KDM) Malaysia based in Donggongon, Penampang, Sabah, Malaysia.

Percentage population of Kadazan-Dusun by state constituencies in Sabah, according to 2020 census

Etymology

Richard Francis Tunggolou[4] of Kg. Maang, Penampang wrote an article The Origins and Meanings of the terms “Kadazan” and “Dusun" which carried out an extensive research and explored the many possible explanations and theories about the origins and meanings of the word ‘Kadazan’ and ‘Dusun’. The article may very well confirm that there is no such race as ‘Kadazandusun’ as being propagated by some. Therefore, the Kadazan and Dusun may be as identical to each other but are vastly different in so many ways.[clarification needed]

The "Kadazan" term is popular among the Tangara/Tangaa' tribe on the west coast of Sabah to refer all the native Sabahan tribes while non-Tangara tribes in the interior and eastern part of the state prefer the term "Dusun". Administratively, the Kadazans were called 'Orang Dusun' by the Sultanate (or more specifically the tax-collector), but in reality, the 'Orang Dusun' were Kadazans. An account of this fact was written by the first census made by the North Borneo Company in Sabah, 1881. Administratively, all Kadazans were categorised as Dusuns.[5][6]

Through the establishment of the KCA – Kadazan Cultural Association (KCA was later renamed to KDCA – Kadazan-Dusun Cultural Association) in 1960, this terminology was corrected and replaced by 'Kadazan', which was also used as the official assignation of the non-Muslim natives by the first Chief Minister of North Borneo, Tun Fuad Stephens @ Donald Stephens. When the Federation of Malaysia was formed in 1963, administratively all Dusuns were referred to as Kadazans which sparked opposition from both Kadazan and Dusun sides who wanted the ethnicity term to be officialised and administrate separately. Initially, there were no conflicts with regard to 'Kadazan' as the identity of the 'Orang Dusun' between 1963 and 1984. However, in 1985 through the KCA, the term Dusun was reintroduced after much pressure from various parties desiring a division between the Kadazan and the 'Orang Dusun' once again. This action only worsened the conflict by developing the "Kadazan or Dusun identity crisis" into "Kadazan versus Dusun feud". It was also a largely successful and a precursor to the fall of the ruling political state party Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS).[5]

In November 1989, through the KCA, PBS coined the new term 'Kadazandusun' to represent both the 'Orang Dusun' and 'Kadazan'. This unified term "Kadazandusun" was unanimously passed as a resolution during the 5th Kadazan Cultural Association's Delegates Conference. During the conference, it was decided that this was the best alternative approach to resolve the "Kadazan versus Dusun" conflicts that had impeded the growth and development of the Kadazan-Dusun since "Kadazan versus Dusun" sentiments were politicised in the early 1960s. It was the best alternative generic identity as well as the most appropriate approach in resolving the "Kadazan versus Dusun" conflicts. Although this action is seen as the best alternative to resolving the ongoing "Kadazan versus Dusun" conflicts since the 1960s, its positive effect is only seen by the year 2000 to the present day when the new generation is no longer in the "Kadazan versus Dusun" feudalism mentality. The unification has since strengthened the ties and brought the Kadazandusun community together as an ethnic group towards more positive and prosperous growth in terms of urbanisation, socio-cultural, economic and political development.[5]

The Orang Sungai or Paitanic group welcomed this resolution, however, the Rungus tribe refused to be called neither as Kadazan, Dusun or any combination of the two. They prefer to be called "Momogun," which means "indigenous people" in Kadazan, Dusun, and Rungus because the three groups belong to the same language family that is Dusunic. Meanwhile, the Muruts and Lundayeh also refused the term, but remain their warm relationship with KDCA and responded positively in ways to unite the two largest Sabahan native groups. Nowadays, the umbrella term "KDMR" (an acronym for Kadazan, Dusun, Murut, and Rungus) is very popular among the younger generations of the three native groups in Sabah to differ themselves from the Malay or Muslim Bumiputra in the state. Another modification of this term is "Momogun KDMR" in Kadazan-Dusun and Rungus or "Mamagun KDMR" in Murut.

Origins of the term 'Kadazan'

There is no proper historical record that exists pertaining to the origins of the term or its originator. Between the late 1950s and early 1960s, the term "Kadazan" has always been theorised by local folks as derivatives from the word "kakadazan" which means towns, or "kadai" which means shops, the term itself is of a Tangaa' dialect. The derived term was speculated as a reference to townies, or communities living near shops. This has also been explained in an article by Richard Francis Tunggolou. However, there is evidence that the term has been used long before the 1950s. According to Owen Rutter (The Pagans of North Borneo, 1929, p31), "The Dusun usually describes himself generically as a tulun Tindal (landsman), or on the West Coast, particularly at Papar, as a Kadazan".[7] Rutter started working in Sabah from 1910, and left Sabah in 1914. During this time interval, both Penampang and Papar district was yet to be developed as towns, therefore rejects the derivation theory altogether. To seek better information of the true meaning of the term "Kadazan", two high priestesses of Borneo or locally referred to as Bobohizan (Kadazan) or Bobolian (Dusun) was interviewed. When the Bobolian of Dusun Lotud descent was asked on the meaning and definition of "Kadazan", her answer was, "people of the land". This definition was endorsed when Bobohizan Dousia Moujing of Kadazan Penampang descent confirmed that the Kadazan has always been used to describe the real people of the land. That substantiated Rutter's remark on Kadazan people in his book.[5][6]

Origins of the term 'Dusun'

One interesting fact about the Dusuns is that they do not have the word 'Dusun' in their vocabulary, and the term Dusun is an exonym. Unlike the term "Kadazan," which means "people of the land", "Dusun" means "farm/orchard" in the Malay language. It has been suggested that the term 'Orang Dusun' was a term used by the Sultan of Brunei, who was a Malay to refer to the ethnic groups of inland farmers in present-day Sabah.[8] Since most of the west coast of North Borneo was under the influence of the Sultan of Brunei, taxes called 'Duis' (also referred to as the 'River Tax' on the area of southeast of North Borneo) were collected by the sultanate from the 'Orang Dusun', or 'Dusun people'. Hence, since 1881, after the establishment of the British North Borneo Company, the British administration categorised the linguistically-similar, 12 main and 33 sub-tribes collectively as 'Dusun' though among themselves they are simply known in their own dialect as just "human" or in their Bobolian term "kadayan" or "kadazan" (in Tangaa version). The Tambanuo and Bagahak, who had converted to Islam for religious reasons, had preferred to be called "Sungei" and "Idaan" respectively although they come from the same sub-tribes. It was also suggested that "Orang Dusun" or "Dusun People" also being used as a term to refer to the forest-dwellers, and farming primitive tribes in the interior of northern Borneo. The usage of this term was then continued by the North Borneo Chartered Company and British colonial governments

Genetic relatedness

According to a Genome-wide SNP genotypic data studies by human genetics research team from University Malaysia Sabah (2018),[9] the Northern Borneon Dusun (Sonsogon, Rungus, Lingkabau and Murut) are closely related to Taiwan natives (Ami, Atayal) and non–Austro-Melanesian Filipinos (Visayan, Tagalog, Ilocano, Minanubu), rather than populations from other parts of Borneo Island.

Origins of the Kadazandusun people

Since the 90s, it has been said that the Kadazandusun people are descendants from China. Most recently, rumour has it that Kadazandusun is closely related, or might be a descendant of the Bunun tribe in Taiwan. Such speculations were made from observed similarities of physical features, and cultures between the Kadazandusun and the Bunun people. However, these rumours were proven irrelevant through both mtDNA and Y-DNA studies.

mtDNA studies

 
mtDNA haplogroup M
 
mtDNA haplogroup M1

Maternal or Matrilineal Studies Using mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), is a test used to explore genetic ancestry from the mother using mtDNA that is obtained from outside of a nucleus cell that isn't contaminated by the presence of Y-chromosome. According to a study published in 2014, by Kee Boon Pin on 150 volunteers from the Kadazandusun people all over the Sabah region, the Kadazandusun people belongs to 9 mtDNA Haplogroups (subjected to the numbers and types of samples involved in the study), with Haplogroup M being the highest frequency, where it represents (60/150 40%) of all maternal lineages. Followed by Haplogroup R (26/150 17.33%), Haplogroup E (22/150 14.67%), Haplogroup B (20/150 13.33%), Haplogroup D (9/150 6%), Haplogroup JT (6/150 4%), Haplogroup N (4/150 2.67%), Haplogroup F (2/150 1.33) and Haplogroup HV (1/150 0.67%). These mtDNA Haplogroups have multiple subgroup distribution into several subclades due to genome mutations for thousands of years. The Haplogroup M subclades founded were: M7b1'2'4'5'6'7'8 (22%), M7c3c (12.67%), M31a2 (0.67%), and M80 (3.33%). The Haplogroup E subclades founded were: E1a1a (8%), E1b+16261 (4.67%), and E2 (2%). The Haplogroup B subclades founded were: B4a1a (3.33%), B4b1 (1.33%), B4b1a+207 (3.33%), B4c2 (0.67%), B4j (0.67%), B5a (2%), and B5a1d (1.33%). The Haplogroup D subclades founded were: D4s (1.33%), and D5b1c1 (4.67%). For Haplogroup F, H, JT, R and N, there were only 1 subclade founded for each haplogroup: F1a4a1 (1.33%), HV2 (0.67%), JT (4%), R9c1a (17.33%), N5 (2.67%).[10] Kee Boon Pin studies confirmed the mtDNA studies conducted by S. G. Tan, on his claim of genetic relation between Kadazandusun to another Taiwan aboriginal, the Paiwan people through the sharing of Haplogroup N as the fundamental DNA.[11] However, in his studies published in 1979, S.G. Tan did not emphasise the significant of this finding to the Out Of Taiwan theory due to the very small percentage of Haplogroup N found in the Kadazandusun test subjects that is insufficient to represent the whole Kadazandusun ethnicity. S.G. Tan did state that the Kadazandusun ethnic have close genome relation to the other ethnics currently present in Borneo, Peninsular Malaysia and the Philippines, including the Ibans, Visayan, Ifugao, Jakun Aboriginal Malays, Dayak Kalimantan, and Tagalog.[11][10]

According to Ken-ichi Shinoda in his study published in November 2014, the Bunun ethnic have the mtDNA of haplogroup B (41.5%), followed by F (30.3%), E (23.6%), M (3.4%) and N (1.1%).[12] Although the Kadazandusun ethnic group shared some of maternal mtDNA haplogroups with the Bunun and Paiwan ethnic groups of Taiwan, the high frequency results of haplogroup M and low frequencies of haplogroups B, E, F and N (insignificant to represent the entire said nation) in the genetics of Kadazandusun ethnicity is enough to refute the theory of Kadazandusun ethnic origin from Taiwan. Kee Boon Pin studies also mentioned that the mtDNA of the Kadazandusun ethnic are more diverse with plenty of variability that is missing which might have depleted (through mutations) in the mtDNA of the Bunun ethnic. Genetic depletion indicates newer mutation from the maternal DNA group. Professor Hirofumi Matsumura, who studies in Genetics and Anthropology, stated that mtDNA sub-haplogroup M7b1'2'4'5'6'7'8 founded in majority of Kadazandusun DNA is one of the oldest mutations from M7 series from haplogroup M that was founded in ancient graveyards in the jungles of Borneo, with estimated age around 12,700 years. It is even older than most discovered ancient M7 series, and spread throughout the Southeast Asia continent creating more M7 mutation series. The mutation series products from M7b1'2'4'5'6'7'8 are present today in several ethnics including Jakun the aboriginal of peninsular Malaysia, Dusun in Brunei, Tagalog and Visayas in the Philippines, and Dayak in Kalimantan and Riau Islands of Indonesia.[13]

Y-DNA studies

Y chromosome DNA test (Y-DNA test) is a genealogical DNA test that is used to explore a man's patrilineal or direct father's-line ancestry. According to a study by Prof. Dr. Zafarina Zainuddin from Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kadazandusun ethnic belongs to Y-DNA haplogroup of O2-P31 (O-268), which she believes plays an important role in the modern Malay genome sequence.[14][15] O2-P31 is a mutation product of M214 as a maternal haplogroup with the following mutation sequences: M214> M175> P31> O2. This study was also validated by a genetic study group from National Geographic that revealed STR test results through samples taken from Kadazandusun residents of Belud City in 2011. The STR results were: DYS393: 15 DYS439: 12 DYS388: 12 DYS385a: 16 DYS19: 15 DYS389-1: 13 DYS390: 25 DYS385b: 20 DYS391: 11 DYS389-2: NaN DYS426: 11 DYS392: 13, which explains the specific composition of the Y chromosome according to the Y-DNA haplogroup of O2-P31 (O-M268). Mutation sequences for O2-P31 are shown in the Phylogenetic tree below.

 

According to the Y-DNA study by Jean A Trejaut, Estella S Poloni, and Ju-Chen Yen, the Bunun ethnic in Taiwan belongs to Y-DNA haplogroups of O1a2-M50 and O2a1a-M88. Both of these Y-DNA haplogroups are also the result of mutations of M214 as their maternal Y-DNA haplogroups with the following mutation sequences: M214> M175> MSY2.2> M119> M50> O1a2, and M214> M175> P31> M95> M88> M111 / M88> PK4> O2a1a.[16] Mutation sequences for O1a2-M50 and O2a1a-M88 shown in the Phylogenetic tree below.

 

The age of Y-DNA haplogroup O2-P31 (O-M268) is estimated to be at around 34,100 years through conducted DNA ageing tests on the ancient human bones discovered in Niah Cave, Sarawak.[17][15] The mean ages of Y-DNA haplogroups of O1a2-M50 and O2a1a-M88 are 33,103 and 28,500, respectively. From the study's result, the claims related to Kadazandusun being ancient migrants from Taiwan are completely irrelevant. This is because the age of the Y-DNA haplogroup O2-P31 belong to the Kadazandusun ethnic group is older compared to the Bunun Y-DNA haplogroups in Taiwan.

Conclusion

Initially, the purpose of starting the genetic haplogroup lineage was to determine the origin of the human lineage. However, the objective is yet to be verified to this day due to a lack of pure evidences that is free from contamination. The results obtained from genetic studies so far can only prove the human global travelling activities, but not as evidence to determine the place of origin of migrating humans.[13] For example, the discovery of the Tianyuan man that has no conclusive answer to his place of origin.[18] Based on the mtDNA and Y-DNA studies, as well as philosophies from genetic and anthropology experts, it is plausible to conclude that Kadazandusun people are indeed the aboriginals of Sabah, and Borneo, as well as one of the leading genetic contributors to Southeast Asian societies.

Cultural and society

Religion

Religions of Kadazandusuns[19]
Religion Percent
Christianity
74.80%
Islam
22.68%
Folk religion / Other religions
0.09%
No religion / Unknown
1.83%

The majority of the Kadazandusuns are Christians, mainly Roman Catholics[20] and some Protestants.[21] Islam is also practised by a growing minority.[22][23][24]

The influence of the English-speaking missionaries in British North Borneo during the late 19th century, particularly the Catholic Mill Hill mission,[25] resulted in Christianity, in its Roman Catholic form, rising to prominence amongst Kadazans.[26] A minority are from other Christian denominations, such as Anglicanism and Borneo Evangelical Church (SIB).

Before the missionaries came, animism[citation needed] was widely practiced. The religion is Momolianism i.e. the two-way communication between the unseen spirit world and the seen material world facilitated by the services of a category of Kadazan-Dusun people called Bobohizans/Bobolians. The Kadazan belief system centers around the spirit or entity called Bambarayon. It revolved around the belief that spirits ruled over the planting and harvesting of rice, a profession that had been practised for generations. Special rituals would be performed before and after each harvest by a tribal priestess known as a Bobohizan.

Harvest Festival

Harvest Festival or Pesta Kaamatan is an annual celebration by the people of Kadazandusun in Sabah. It is a one-month celebration starting from 1 to 31 May. In modern-day of Kaamatan Festival celebration, 30 and 31 May are the climax dates for the state-level celebration that happens at the place of the yearly Kaamatan Festival host. Today's Kaamatan celebration is very synonymous with beauty pageant competition known as Unduk Ngadau, a singing competition known as Sugandoi, Tamu, non-halal food and beverages stalls, and handicraft arts and cultural performances in traditional houses.[27]

During the old days, Kaamatan was celebrated to give thanks to ancient God and rice spirits for the bountiful harvesting to ensure continuous paddy yield for the next paddy plantation season. Nowadays, the majority of the Kadazan-dusun people have embraced Christianity and Islam. Although the Kaamatan is still celebrated as an annual tradition, it is no longer celebrated for the purpose to meet the demands of the ancestral spiritual traditions and customs, but rather in honouring the customs and traditions of the ancestors. Today, Kaamatan is more symbolic as a reunion time with family and loved ones. Domestically, modern Kaamatan is celebrated as per individual personal aspiration with the option of whether or not to serve the Kadazandusun traditional food and drinks which are mostly non-halal.[28]

Traditional foods and drinks

A few of the most well known traditional food of the Kadazandusun people are hinava, noonsom, pinaasakan, bosou, tuhau, kinoring pork soup and rice wine chicken soup. Some of the well known traditional drinks of Kadazandusun are tapai, tumpung, lihing and bahar.[29]

Traditional costumes

The traditional costume of the Kadazandusun is generally called the "Koubasanan costume", made out of black velvet fabric with various decorations using beads, flowers, coloured buttons, golden laces, linen, and unique embroidery designs.[30] The traditional costume that is commonly commercialised as the cultural icon of the Kadazandusun people is the Koubasanan costume from the Penampang district. The koubasanan costume from the Penampang district consists of 'Sinuangga' worn by women and 'Gaung' for men. 'Sinuangga' comes with a waistband called 'Himpogot' (made out of connected silver coins, also known as the money belt), 'Tangkong' (made out of copper loops or rings fastened by strings or threads), 'Gaung' (decorated with gold lace and silver buttons) and a hat that is called 'Siga' (made out of weaved dastar fabric). The decorations and designs of the koubasanan costume are usually varied by region.[30] For example, the koubasanan dress design for Kadazandusun women of Penampang usually comes in a set of sleeveless blouse combined with long skirts and no hats, while the koubasanan dress design for Kadazandusun women of Papar comes in a set of long sleeves blouse combined with knee-length skirts and wore with a siung hat. There are over 40 different designs of the Koubasanan costume across Sabah that belongs to different tribes of the Kadazandusun community.[29]

Traditional dance

Sumazau dance is the traditional dance of Kadazandusun. Usually, the sumazau dance is performed by a pair of men and women dancers wearing traditional costumes. Sumazau dance is usually accompanied by the beats and rhythms of seven to eight gongs. The opening movement for sumazau dance is the parallel swing of the arms back and forth at the sides of the body, while the feet springs and move the body from left to right. Once the opening dance moves are integrated with the gong beats and rhythms, the male dancer will chant "heeeeee!" indicating that it is time to change the dance moves. Upon hearing this chant, dancers will raise their hands to the sides of their body and in line with their chest, and move their wrists and arms up and down resembling the movement of a flying bird. There is plenty of choreography of sumazau dance, but the signature dance move of the sumazau will always be the flying bird arms movement, parallel arms swinging back and forth at the sides of the body, and the springing feet.[29][31]

Traditional music

The Kadazandusun traditional music is usually orchestrated in the form of a band consist of musicians using traditional musical instruments, such as the bamboo flute, sompoton, togunggak, gong, and kulintangan. Musical instruments in Sabah are classified into Cordophones (tongkungon, gambus, sundatang or gagayan), Erophon (suling, turali or tuahi, bungkau, sompoton), and Idofon (togunggak, gong, kulintangan) and membranophones (kompang, gendang or tontog). The most common musical instruments in Kadazandusun ceremonies are gong, and kulintangan. The gong beats usually varies by regions and districts, and the gong beats that is often played at the official Kaamatan celebration in KDCA is the gong beats from the Penampang district.[29][31]

Traditional handicrafts

Kadazandusun people use natural materials as resources in producing handicrafts, including the bamboo, rattan, lias, calabash, and woods. Few of the many handicrafts that are synonym to the Kadazandusun people are wakid, barait, sompoton, pinakol, siung hat, parang and gayang.

Before the mentioned handicrafts were promoted and commercialised to represent the Kadazandusun cultures, they were once tools that were used in daily lives. In fact, some of these handicrafts are still used for its original purpose to this day. Wakid and barait are used to carry harvested crops from farms. Sompoton is a musical instrument. Pinakol is an accessory used in ceremonials and rituals. Parang/machetes and gayang/swords are used as farming and hunting tools, as well as weapons in series of civil wars of the past, which indirectly made the Kadazandusun known as headhunters in the past.[29]

Headhunting practice

The practice of headhunting is one of the ancient traditions practised by the Kadazandusun community during the times of the civil wars. The Kadazandusun people refer to the beheaders as pengait or tonggorib. The heads of the beheaded enemies were collected not only as triumph trophies but also for spiritual and traditional medicinal practices. The beheading tradition was not intended for the purpose of war alone, but rather to meet the society's cultural demands and expectations, and to fulfill the sacrificial requirements of the ancient rituals. In the olden times, a Kadazandusun man's pride and power were measured by his courage and physical strength in combat, as well as the number of heads of fallen enemies that were brought home. The "rule of thumb" for headhunting practice was that the defeated enemy had to be alive during the time of the beheading, as it would be meaningless to behead the deceased. This is due to the traditional Kadazandusun belief that man's intelligence, spirit and courage are in his head (called tandahau), while the heart functions as the life source to the body. In other words, a dead heart means dead (useless) head. Shall any beheader go against this rule, the beheader will be condemned by a curse that will bring unfortunate fate upon him. The three main ethnic groups in Sabah that are known for headhunting practices history are the Kadazan-Dusun, Rungus and the Murut.[32][33]

There are five objectives for the headhunting practices.

  • In a great war
    • To prove the strength of the heroes and clans over the fallen enemies
    • As war victory evidence
    • The head will be kept in the house of the skull (bangkawan) of the victorious clan
  • For small scale civil war or family feud
    • To cease the existence of the enemies and their families
    • The head of the enemy will be kept in the victorious family home for the purpose to enslave the enemy's spirit as a housekeeping talisman/amulet
  • Empowering manhood
    • Beheading is a practice that proves courage and bravery
    • A man with no courage and bravery will be out of place in the society and end up spouseless
  • Self-promotion as the village head
    • A man must obtain at least 10 heads of the enemy clan in order to gain honour and approvals from his own clan
    • These 10 heads are also important in convincing his clan that he is worthy as a war leader
  • Promoting the bravery of a hero
    • The ancient Kadazandusun believed that the strength and spirit of the beheaded enemy would be gained by the beheader
    • Enemies beheading is also a way in proving the clan that a hero is worthy as a mighty warrior

The beheaded heads will be kept and maintained using ancient practices and rituals. One of the uses of the beheaded heads is as a housekeeper amulet or talisman. The ancient Kadazandusun people believed that every house should have its guardians. Thus, they will use the "tandahau" spirit from the beheaded head for the purpose of protecting the house and its inhabitants from the attacks of enemies and wild animals. It is also important to place beheaded heads under the newly constructed bridge. The ancient people of Kadazandusun believed that every river had a spirit of water that is called "tambaig". The beheaded heads will be placed or hung below the bridge as a peace offering for the tambaig so that the tambaig will not demolish the bridge. Beheaded heads are also used by bobohizan or bobolian for medical purposes, as well as the worship of the ancestors' spirits. The most common weapons used by the ancient headhunters of the Kadazandusun are Ilang sakuit/mandau machetes, gayang swords, tandus/adus spears, and a taming wood as a shield. This gruesome practice has been banned and no longer practice today. However, there is a rumour saying that primitive Kadazandusun clans living in isolation in the deep jungles are still actively practising the headhunting culture today. Yet, there has been no evidence to support this claim.[32][33]

Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah

 
The 2014 Kaamatan celebration in Penampang, Sabah with the Kadazan Dusun Cultural Association (KDCA) being represented by their Deputy President, Clarance Bongkos Malakun on the far left.

The Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah (KDCA), previously known as Kadazan Cultural Association (KCA), is a non-political association of 40 indigenous ethnic communities of Sabah, registered under the Malaysian Societies Act 1966, on 29 April 1966 by the then Deputy Registrar of Societies Malaysia, J. P. Rutherford. It is headed by Huguan Siou Honorable Tan Sri Datuk Seri Panglima Joseph Pairin Kitingan.

The title "Huguan Siou" Office is an institutionalised Paramount Leadership of the Koisaan. The power and responsibility to bestow the Kadazandusun Paramount Leadership Title "Huguan Siou" rests with the KDCA, which, upon the vacancy of the Huguan Siou's Office, may hold an Extraordinary Delegate's Conference to specifically resolve the installation of their Huguan Siou.

However, if no leader is considered worthy of the Huguan Siou's title, the office would rather be left vacant (out of respect for the highly dignified and nearly sacred office of the Kadazandusun's Huguan Siou), until such time as a deserving Kadazandusun leader is undoubtedly established.

The birth of the Society of Kadazan Penampang in 1953 paved the way for the formation of the Kadazan Cultural Association Sabah (KCA) in 1963, which in turn was transformed into the present KDCA on 25 September 1991.

From its inception in the early 1950s, the KDCA has focused much of its efforts on the preservation, development, enrichment, and promotion of the Kadazandusun multi-ethnic cultures. The KDCA's Triennial Delegates Conference provides a forum where the various Kadazandusun multi-ethnic representatives discuss major issues affecting them and their future and take up both individual and collective stands and actions to resolve common challenges.

The KDCA is involved in various activities related to research and documentation, preservation, development, and promotions of the Kadazandusun culture: language and literary works; Bobolians & Rinaits; traditional medicine, traditional food, and beverages; music, songs, dances, and dramas; traditional arts, crafts, and designs; traditional sports; traditional wears and costumes. Lately, along with the growing international co-operation of the world's indigenous peoples, indigenous knowledge, intellectual property, and traditional resource rights conservation, enhancement and protection have also become new areas of the KDCA's concern and responsibility. The KDCA fosters unity, friendship, and co-operation among the multi-racial population of Sabah through its participatory cultural programs and celebrations such as the Village, District and State levels Annual "Kaamatan Festival". It has sent Cultural Performance Troupes on goodwill tours to the other Malaysian States, to neighbouring Asian Countries, to Europe, America, Canada and New Zealand.

KDCA has a youth and students' wing, Kadazandusun Youth Development Movement (KDYDM). The movement's main aims are to encourage more participation of the young generation in the activities of the association and be empowered in various fields so that they would be able to help develop the Kadazandusun community in general.

Kadazandusun sub-ethnic groups

 
Traditional rice wine been served by using bamboo as a drink cup in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. This is part of the Kadazandusun cuisine.

Kadazandusun is the unification term and collective name for more than 40 sub tribes who speaks Dusunic languages and some non-Dusunic speaking tribes who called themselves as Dusun or Kadazan. However, all of them belong to the Sabahan-stock of Austronesian people.

Classification of Kadazan-Dusuns tribes according to language groups :

Central Dusun speaking group

  • Liwan (Today they are the largest Dusun group in numbers and geographic distribution. Maybe this tribe originated from Liwan River in Ranau-Tambunan River and expanded by absorbing other Dusun tribes in Ranau and Tambunan. In 60's some of them moved to Keningau and other areas. Nowadays consist of many varieties such as Karanaan, Bira, Togudon, Randagong, Magatang, Monsok)
  • Inobong (unique in Inobong area of Penampang, their dialects a sub-dialect of Liwan. They are the descendants of Liwans from Ranau or Tambunan who travelled to trade in Penampang lowland and then settled there)
  • Bundu (concentrated in Tuaran district and consist of many varieties, significantly the Pahu and Tenghilan dialects. Historically allies of Liwan and many moved and assimilated with them in Tambunan. Like the Liwan some of them also migrated but to eastern Sabah of Telupid and Tongod)
  • Tindal (concentrated in Kota Belud and consist of many varieties, significant dialects are Tempasuk Dusun or lowland Tindal, Bangkahak, and Bundu Tuhan Dusun. Tindal and Bundu dialect are closely related)
  • Sinulihan (Sinulihan dialect is a Bundu's sub-dialect with Tagahas and Tindal influences)
  • Tagahas (once a large warring Dusun group, today concentrated in Tibabar and Toboh of Tambunan, Ulu Papar of Penampang, Kaiduan of Papar, and in interior of Kota Kinabalu-Tuaran districts highland border)
  • Talantang (originated in Ulu Sugut, nowadays also reside in Ranau and Kota Marudu)
  • Tinagas (brother-tribe of Talantang)
  • Tuhawon (also a brother-tribe of Talantang and Tinagas with the same origin, migrated to Tambunan but absorbed into Liwan group, now only reside in Kg. Tikolod Tambunan and Kg. Tiku in Tambunan-Penampang border where the Salt Trail located)

Kwijau-Bisaya-Lotud speaking group

  • Kwijau, also known as Kuriyou or Kuizau (once a large group, nowadays only reside in Bingkor, Keningau. Kwijau in Papar assimilated with the Kadazan, while Kwijau in Membakut is one of many tribes under "Bakud" term)
  • Lotud (this group maybe originated from either Kwijau or Bisaya and migrated to Tuaran and assimilated with the Dusun)
  • Tatana (Tatana was a splinter group of Bisaya and remained animist during the Brunei Sultanate's Islamisation, then inter-married with Chinese immigrants)
  • Papar (this group is a Tatana sub-tribe)
  • Bakud (this group is a unification term of many Kadazan and Dusun tribes in Membakut)

Northern Dusun speaking group

  • Kimaragang
  • Garo or Tagaro (sub-dialect of Kimaragang)
  • Sonsogon (also sub-dialect of Kimaragang)
  • Tobilung
  • Gobukon (sub-dialect of Tobilung)
  • Sandayoh

Kadazan/Tangara/Tangaa' speaking group

  • Penampang Kadazan
  • Papar Kadazan (Papar Kadazan was result of Penampang Kadazan and Kwijau assimilation)
  • Membakut Kadazan (maybe this group is Kadazanised Bisaya-speaking in Membakut
  • Klias River Kadazan (this group is Bisaya-speaking people who choose to remain animist during the Brunei Sultanate's Islamisation and influenced by their Membakut Kadazan brothers)

Momogun Rungus speaking roup

  • Rungus (consist of Kirangavan, Pilapazan, Nuluw, Gandahon, and Tupak sub-tribed)
  • Gonsomon (dialect of Rungus)

Eastern Dusun speaking group (also known as Labuk-Kinabatangan Kadazandusun)

  • Kunatong
  • Tindakon
  • Tompulung
  • Tanggal
  • Tilan-Ilan
  • Sangau
  • Tandaa'
  • Kirulu
  • Turavid
  • Lolobuon
  • Kisayap
  • Kivulu
  • Kisoko
  • Kiruli
  • Malapi
  • Minokok Tompizes
  • Pingas
  • Dusun Lamag
  • Mangkaak
  • Sukang
  • Dumpas

Paitanic-speaking Dusuns (Orang Sungai or Lobu)

  • Tombonuo
  • Lingkabau
  • Tampias Lobu
  • Lanas Lobu
  • Rumanau
  • Sinabu
  • Kolobuan
  • Sinarupa
  • Makiang

Ida'an Dusuns

  • Begak
  • Buludupi
  • Sagamo or Subpan

Murutic-speaking Dusun

  • Dusun Gana

Other non-Dusunic speaking Dusuns

  • Dusun Bonggi (reside uniqely in Banggi Islands, actually a branch of Molbog languages group)
  • Bajau Bukit (a group of Bajau people assimilated with Dusun)

Kadazan-Dusun languages

Most of the Kadazan and Dusun languages belong to Dusunic languages family. Dusun Lotud, Dusun Tatana and Bruneian Dusun Tutung came from the Bisayic-branch of the language group. Bonggi and Idaanic tribes speak non-Dusunic languages families, which is Northeast Sabahan language and Idaanic language respectively. The Paitanic Dusuns speak Paitanic languages and the combination of this language family with the Dusunic form the Greater Dusunic languages group. Dusun Gana speaks a Dusunised Murutic language. All Dusunic languages now are mutually-intelligible but they can't intelligibly converse with Paitanic, Bonggi, Idaanic, and vice versa. While all the three latter language families are not intelligible to each other. The Dusunic language branches are Central Dusun, Ulu Sugut Dusun (Talantang-Tinagas), Northern Dusun (Rungus-Kimaragang-Tobilung) Coastal Kadazan, and Eastern Dusun. Bisayic and Kwijau are the Dusunic languages sub-family. The largest number and widely distributed speakers of any Kadazan-Dusun languages is the Liwanic dialect.

Under the efforts of the Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah, the standardised Kadazan-Dusun language is of the central Bundu-Liwan dialect spoken in Bundu and Liwan (now parts of the present-day districts of Ranau, Tambunan, and Keningau). Dusun Bundu-liwan's selection was based on it being the most mutually intelligible when conversing with other Dusun or Kadazan dialect.

English Kadazan Dusun
What is your name? Isai ngaan nu? Isai ngaran nu?
My name is John Ngaan ku nopo nga i John. Ngaran ku nopo nga i John.
How are you? Onu abal nu? Nunu kabar nu?
I am fine. Noikot vinasi. Osonong kopio.
Where is Mary? Nombo zi Mary? Nonggo i Mary?
Thank you Kotohuadan Pounsikou
How much is this? Pio hoogo diti? Piro gatang diti?
I don't understand Au zou kalati Au oku karati.
I miss you Hangadon zou diau Langadon oku dika
Do you speak English? Koiho ko moboos do Onggilis? Koilo ko mimboros do Inggilis?
Where are you from? Nombo o nontodonon nu? Honggo tadon nu?
River Bavang Bawang

Notable Kadazan-Dusun people

  • Arthur Joseph Kurup, current Deputy Minister of Science Technology and Innovation, president for United Sabah People's Party (PBRS) and current member of parliament for Pensiangan.
  • Betty Boo, singer
  • Bernard Giluk Dompok, current Malaysian ambassador to the Vatican, former chief minister of Sabah and former federal minister.
  • Clarence E. Mansul, former deputy minister of Malaysia and former member of parliament for Penampang.[34]
  • Darell Leiking, Former Malaysia Minister and state assemblyman for Moyog.
  • Ewon Benedick, Minister of Malaysia.
  • Ewon Ebin, former federal minister of Malaysia.
  • Fuad Stephens, former frist and third chief minister of Sabah and former third TYT Sabah.
  • Mohd Hamdan Abdullah ,, former TYT Sabah 4th,,
  • Mohamad Adnan Robert,, former TYT Sabah 6th,,
  • Jeffrey Kitingan, deputy chief minister of Sabah, current member of Malaysian Parliament for Keningau and state assemblyman for Bingkor.
  • Isnaraissah Munirah Majilis, a current member of the Malaysian Parliament for Kota Belud (half Bajau maternal ancestry).
  • Jonathan Yasin, deputy minister of home affairs and current member of parliament for Ranau.
  • Joseph Kurup, former federal minister of Malaysia.
  • Joseph Pairin Kitingan, former chief minister of Sabah.
  • Kasitah Gaddam, former federal Cabinet minister and senator.
  • Maximus Ongkili, former minister in the prime minister's Department for Sabah and Sarawak Affairs.
  • Peter Anthony, former Sabah Ministers.
  • Richard Malanjum, 9th chief justice of Malaysia and the 4th chief judge of the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak.
  • Ronald Kiandee, minister of agriculture and food industries, former deputy speaker for the Dewan Rakyat and current member of parliament for Beluran.
  • Wilfred Madius Tangau, former federal minister of Sabah and former deputy chief minister of Sabah.
  • Stacy, Malaysian singer.
  • Marsha Milan, Malaysian singer and actress.
  • Adira, Malaysian singer.

See also

References

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  2. ^ "People & History". Official Website of the Sabah State Government. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  3. ^ "Language: Kadazandusun, Malaysia". Discovery Channel. 2004 – via UNESCO Multimedia Video & Sound Collections.
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  5. ^ a b c d Luping, Herman (7 August 2016). "A History of the Term Kadazandusun". Daily Express. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
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  7. ^ Rutter, Owen (1929). The Pagans of North Borneo. London: Hutchinson and Co.
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  9. ^ Yew, Chee Wei; Hoque, Mohd Zahirul; Pugh‐Kitingan, Jacqueline; et al. (2018). "Genetic Relatedness of Indigenous Ethnic Groups in Northern Borneo to Neighboring Populations from Southeast Asia, as Inferred from Genome‐Wide SNP Data". Annals of Human Genetics. 82 (4): 216–226. doi:10.1111/ahg.12246. PMID 29521412. S2CID 3780230.
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  11. ^ a b Tan, S. G. (1979). "Genetic Relationship between Kadazans and Fifteen other Southeast Asian Races" (PDF). Pertanika. 2 (1): 28–33.
  12. ^ Shinoda, Ken-ichi; Kakuda, Tsuneo; Kanzawa-Kiriyama, Hideaki; et al. (2014). "Mitochondrial Genetic Diversity of Pingpu Tribes in Taiwan" (PDF). Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science, Series D. 40: 1–12.
  13. ^ a b Matsumura, Hirofumi; Shinoda, Ken-ichi; Shimanjuntak, Truman; et al. (2018). Yao, Yong-Gang (ed.). "Cranio-Morphometric and aDNA Corroboration of the Austronesian Dispersal Model in Ancient Island Southeast Asia: Support from Gua Harimau, Indonesia". PLOS ONE. 13 (6). Article e0198689. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1398689M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0198689. PMC 6014653. PMID 29933384.
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  15. ^ a b Karafet, Tatiana M.; Mendez, Fernando L.; Sudoyo, Herawati; et al. (2015). "Improved Phylogenetic Resolution and Rapid Diversification of Y-Chromosome Haplogroup K-M526 in Southeast Asia". European Journal of Human Genetics. 23 (3): 369–373. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2014.106. PMC 4326703. PMID 24896152.
  16. ^ Trejaut, Jean A.; Poloni, Estella S.; Yen, Ju-Chen; et al. (2014). "Taiwan Y-Chromosomal DNA Variation and Its Relationship with Island Southeast Asia". BMC Genetics. 15. Article 77. doi:10.1186/1471-2156-15-77. PMC 4083334. PMID 24965575.
  17. ^ Curnoe, Darren; Datan, Ipoi; Taçon, Paul S. C.; et al. (2016). "Deep Skull from Niah Cave and the Pleistocene Peopling of Southeast Asia". Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 4. Article 75. doi:10.3389/fevo.2016.00075.
  18. ^ Fu, Qiaomei; Meyer, Matthias; Gao, Xing; et al. (2013). "DNA Analysis of an Early Modern Human from Tianyuan Cave, China". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 110 (6): 2223–2227. Bibcode:2013PNAS..110.2223F. doi:10.1073/pnas.1221359110. PMC 3568306. PMID 23341637.
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  28. ^ Petronas (29 May 2017). "11 Things About Kaamatan and Gawai You Should Know Before Going to Sabah or Sarawak". Says. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
  29. ^ a b c d e Crystal. "Kadazandusun Food & Art". Padlet. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
  30. ^ a b "Traditional Costume of the Penampang Kadazan". Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah (KDCA). Retrieved 27 December 2019.
  31. ^ a b . KadazanHomeland.com. Archived from the original on 30 December 2019. Retrieved 27 December 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  32. ^ a b Bedford, Sam (25 March 2018). "The History of Borneo's Headhunters". Culturetrip. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
  33. ^ a b . KadazanHomeland.com. Archived from the original on 30 December 2019. Retrieved 27 December 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  34. ^ John Anthony (15 July 2018). "Huguan Siou Legacy of the Kadazandusuns". The Borneo Post. Retrieved 15 July 2018 – via PressReader.
  • Tangit, Trixie M. (2005). Planning Kadazandusun (Sabah, Malaysia): Labels, Identity, and Language (MA thesis). University of Hawaii at Manoa. hdl:10125/11691.

External links

kadazan, dusun, this, article, about, kadazandusun, ethnic, society, difference, between, kadazan, dusun, kadazan, people, dusun, people, also, written, kadazandusun, mamasok, also, less, known, mamasok, sabah, indigenous, peoples, sabah, malaysia, ethnic, gro. This article is about Kadazandusun ethnic and society For difference between Kadazan and Dusun see Kadazan people and Dusun people Kadazan Dusun also written as Kadazandusun or Mamasok Kadazan Dusun also less known as Mamasok Sabah are two indigenous peoples of Sabah Malaysia the ethnic groups Kadazan and Dusun The Kadazandusun is the largest native group of Bumiputra in Sabah 2 They are also known as Mamasok which means originals or indigenous people Most of the Kadazan Dusun tribes believed they are descendants of Nunuk Ragang people Kadazan Dusun has been recognised as an indigenous nation of Borneo with documented heritage by the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO since 2004 3 Kadazan Dusun is also recognised as a bumiputera group in Sabah that has its own special rights from land rights rivers to maintaining customs Kadazan Dusun Ethnic Kadazan Dusun People Mamasok Kadazandusun priests and priestesses attires during the opening ceremony of Kaamatan 2014 at Hongkod Koisaan the unity hall of KDCATotal population555 647 2010 1 Regions with significant populations Malaysia Sabah Federal Territory of Labuan Peninsular Malaysia LanguagesDusun Kadazan English and MalaysianReligionChristianity 74 8 Sunni Islam 22 6 MomolianismRelated ethnic groupsDusun Rungus Kadazan Orang Sungai Murut Lun Bawang Lun Dayeha Yearbook of Statistics Sabah 2002 amp Sabah Statistics 2020 DataSeveral organisations have been established to safeguard the privileges of Kadazan Dusun in Malaysia and one of them is Pertubuhan Kadazan Dusun Murut KDM Malaysia based in Donggongon Penampang Sabah Malaysia Percentage population of Kadazan Dusun by state constituencies in Sabah according to 2020 census Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins of the term Kadazan 3 Origins of the term Dusun 4 Genetic relatedness 5 Origins of the Kadazandusun people 5 1 mtDNA studies 5 2 Y DNA studies 5 3 Conclusion 6 Cultural and society 6 1 Religion 6 2 Harvest Festival 6 3 Traditional foods and drinks 6 4 Traditional costumes 6 5 Traditional dance 6 6 Traditional music 6 7 Traditional handicrafts 7 Headhunting practice 8 Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah 9 Kadazandusun sub ethnic groups 9 1 Central Dusun speaking group 9 2 Kwijau Bisaya Lotud speaking group 9 3 Northern Dusun speaking group 9 4 Kadazan Tangara Tangaa speaking group 9 5 Momogun Rungus speaking roup 9 6 Eastern Dusun speaking group also known as Labuk Kinabatangan Kadazandusun 9 7 Paitanic speaking Dusuns Orang Sungai or Lobu 9 8 Ida an Dusuns 9 9 Murutic speaking Dusun 9 10 Other non Dusunic speaking Dusuns 10 Kadazan Dusun languages 11 Notable Kadazan Dusun people 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksEtymology EditRichard Francis Tunggolou 4 of Kg Maang Penampang wrote an article The Origins and Meanings of the terms Kadazan and Dusun which carried out an extensive research and explored the many possible explanations and theories about the origins and meanings of the word Kadazan and Dusun The article may very well confirm that there is no such race as Kadazandusun as being propagated by some Therefore the Kadazan and Dusun may be as identical to each other but are vastly different in so many ways clarification needed The Kadazan term is popular among the Tangara Tangaa tribe on the west coast of Sabah to refer all the native Sabahan tribes while non Tangara tribes in the interior and eastern part of the state prefer the term Dusun Administratively the Kadazans were called Orang Dusun by the Sultanate or more specifically the tax collector but in reality the Orang Dusun were Kadazans An account of this fact was written by the first census made by the North Borneo Company in Sabah 1881 Administratively all Kadazans were categorised as Dusuns 5 6 Through the establishment of the KCA Kadazan Cultural Association KCA was later renamed to KDCA Kadazan Dusun Cultural Association in 1960 this terminology was corrected and replaced by Kadazan which was also used as the official assignation of the non Muslim natives by the first Chief Minister of North Borneo Tun Fuad Stephens Donald Stephens When the Federation of Malaysia was formed in 1963 administratively all Dusuns were referred to as Kadazans which sparked opposition from both Kadazan and Dusun sides who wanted the ethnicity term to be officialised and administrate separately Initially there were no conflicts with regard to Kadazan as the identity of the Orang Dusun between 1963 and 1984 However in 1985 through the KCA the term Dusun was reintroduced after much pressure from various parties desiring a division between the Kadazan and the Orang Dusun once again This action only worsened the conflict by developing the Kadazan or Dusun identity crisis into Kadazan versus Dusun feud It was also a largely successful and a precursor to the fall of the ruling political state party Parti Bersatu Sabah PBS 5 In November 1989 through the KCA PBS coined the new term Kadazandusun to represent both the Orang Dusun and Kadazan This unified term Kadazandusun was unanimously passed as a resolution during the 5th Kadazan Cultural Association s Delegates Conference During the conference it was decided that this was the best alternative approach to resolve the Kadazan versus Dusun conflicts that had impeded the growth and development of the Kadazan Dusun since Kadazan versus Dusun sentiments were politicised in the early 1960s It was the best alternative generic identity as well as the most appropriate approach in resolving the Kadazan versus Dusun conflicts Although this action is seen as the best alternative to resolving the ongoing Kadazan versus Dusun conflicts since the 1960s its positive effect is only seen by the year 2000 to the present day when the new generation is no longer in the Kadazan versus Dusun feudalism mentality The unification has since strengthened the ties and brought the Kadazandusun community together as an ethnic group towards more positive and prosperous growth in terms of urbanisation socio cultural economic and political development 5 The Orang Sungai or Paitanic group welcomed this resolution however the Rungus tribe refused to be called neither as Kadazan Dusun or any combination of the two They prefer to be called Momogun which means indigenous people in Kadazan Dusun and Rungus because the three groups belong to the same language family that is Dusunic Meanwhile the Muruts and Lundayeh also refused the term but remain their warm relationship with KDCA and responded positively in ways to unite the two largest Sabahan native groups Nowadays the umbrella term KDMR an acronym for Kadazan Dusun Murut and Rungus is very popular among the younger generations of the three native groups in Sabah to differ themselves from the Malay or Muslim Bumiputra in the state Another modification of this term is Momogun KDMR in Kadazan Dusun and Rungus or Mamagun KDMR in Murut Origins of the term Kadazan EditThere is no proper historical record that exists pertaining to the origins of the term or its originator Between the late 1950s and early 1960s the term Kadazan has always been theorised by local folks as derivatives from the word kakadazan which means towns or kadai which means shops the term itself is of a Tangaa dialect The derived term was speculated as a reference to townies or communities living near shops This has also been explained in an article by Richard Francis Tunggolou However there is evidence that the term has been used long before the 1950s According to Owen Rutter The Pagans of North Borneo 1929 p31 The Dusun usually describes himself generically as a tulun Tindal landsman or on the West Coast particularly at Papar as a Kadazan 7 Rutter started working in Sabah from 1910 and left Sabah in 1914 During this time interval both Penampang and Papar district was yet to be developed as towns therefore rejects the derivation theory altogether To seek better information of the true meaning of the term Kadazan two high priestesses of Borneo or locally referred to as Bobohizan Kadazan or Bobolian Dusun was interviewed When the Bobolian of Dusun Lotud descent was asked on the meaning and definition of Kadazan her answer was people of the land This definition was endorsed when Bobohizan Dousia Moujing of Kadazan Penampang descent confirmed that the Kadazan has always been used to describe the real people of the land That substantiated Rutter s remark on Kadazan people in his book 5 6 Origins of the term Dusun EditOne interesting fact about the Dusuns is that they do not have the word Dusun in their vocabulary and the term Dusun is an exonym Unlike the term Kadazan which means people of the land Dusun means farm orchard in the Malay language It has been suggested that the term Orang Dusun was a term used by the Sultan of Brunei who was a Malay to refer to the ethnic groups of inland farmers in present day Sabah 8 Since most of the west coast of North Borneo was under the influence of the Sultan of Brunei taxes called Duis also referred to as the River Tax on the area of southeast of North Borneo were collected by the sultanate from the Orang Dusun or Dusun people Hence since 1881 after the establishment of the British North Borneo Company the British administration categorised the linguistically similar 12 main and 33 sub tribes collectively as Dusun though among themselves they are simply known in their own dialect as just human or in their Bobolian term kadayan or kadazan in Tangaa version The Tambanuo and Bagahak who had converted to Islam for religious reasons had preferred to be called Sungei and Idaan respectively although they come from the same sub tribes It was also suggested that Orang Dusun or Dusun People also being used as a term to refer to the forest dwellers and farming primitive tribes in the interior of northern Borneo The usage of this term was then continued by the North Borneo Chartered Company and British colonial governmentsGenetic relatedness EditAccording to a Genome wide SNP genotypic data studies by human genetics research team from University Malaysia Sabah 2018 9 the Northern Borneon Dusun Sonsogon Rungus Lingkabau and Murut are closely related to Taiwan natives Ami Atayal and non Austro Melanesian Filipinos Visayan Tagalog Ilocano Minanubu rather than populations from other parts of Borneo Island Origins of the Kadazandusun people EditSince the 90s it has been said that the Kadazandusun people are descendants from China Most recently rumour has it that Kadazandusun is closely related or might be a descendant of the Bunun tribe in Taiwan Such speculations were made from observed similarities of physical features and cultures between the Kadazandusun and the Bunun people However these rumours were proven irrelevant through both mtDNA and Y DNA studies mtDNA studies Edit mtDNA haplogroup M mtDNA haplogroup M1 Maternal or Matrilineal Studies Using mitochondrial DNA mtDNA is a test used to explore genetic ancestry from the mother using mtDNA that is obtained from outside of a nucleus cell that isn t contaminated by the presence of Y chromosome According to a study published in 2014 by Kee Boon Pin on 150 volunteers from the Kadazandusun people all over the Sabah region the Kadazandusun people belongs to 9 mtDNA Haplogroups subjected to the numbers and types of samples involved in the study with Haplogroup M being the highest frequency where it represents 60 150 40 of all maternal lineages Followed by Haplogroup R 26 150 17 33 Haplogroup E 22 150 14 67 Haplogroup B 20 150 13 33 Haplogroup D 9 150 6 Haplogroup JT 6 150 4 Haplogroup N 4 150 2 67 Haplogroup F 2 150 1 33 and Haplogroup HV 1 150 0 67 These mtDNA Haplogroups have multiple subgroup distribution into several subclades due to genome mutations for thousands of years The Haplogroup M subclades founded were M7b1 2 4 5 6 7 8 22 M7c3c 12 67 M31a2 0 67 and M80 3 33 The Haplogroup E subclades founded were E1a1a 8 E1b 16261 4 67 and E2 2 The Haplogroup B subclades founded were B4a1a 3 33 B4b1 1 33 B4b1a 207 3 33 B4c2 0 67 B4j 0 67 B5a 2 and B5a1d 1 33 The Haplogroup D subclades founded were D4s 1 33 and D5b1c1 4 67 For Haplogroup F H JT R and N there were only 1 subclade founded for each haplogroup F1a4a1 1 33 HV2 0 67 JT 4 R9c1a 17 33 N5 2 67 10 Kee Boon Pin studies confirmed the mtDNA studies conducted by S G Tan on his claim of genetic relation between Kadazandusun to another Taiwan aboriginal the Paiwan people through the sharing of Haplogroup N as the fundamental DNA 11 However in his studies published in 1979 S G Tan did not emphasise the significant of this finding to the Out Of Taiwan theory due to the very small percentage of Haplogroup N found in the Kadazandusun test subjects that is insufficient to represent the whole Kadazandusun ethnicity S G Tan did state that the Kadazandusun ethnic have close genome relation to the other ethnics currently present in Borneo Peninsular Malaysia and the Philippines including the Ibans Visayan Ifugao Jakun Aboriginal Malays Dayak Kalimantan and Tagalog 11 10 According to Ken ichi Shinoda in his study published in November 2014 the Bunun ethnic have the mtDNA of haplogroup B 41 5 followed by F 30 3 E 23 6 M 3 4 and N 1 1 12 Although the Kadazandusun ethnic group shared some of maternal mtDNA haplogroups with the Bunun and Paiwan ethnic groups of Taiwan the high frequency results of haplogroup M and low frequencies of haplogroups B E F and N insignificant to represent the entire said nation in the genetics of Kadazandusun ethnicity is enough to refute the theory of Kadazandusun ethnic origin from Taiwan Kee Boon Pin studies also mentioned that the mtDNA of the Kadazandusun ethnic are more diverse with plenty of variability that is missing which might have depleted through mutations in the mtDNA of the Bunun ethnic Genetic depletion indicates newer mutation from the maternal DNA group Professor Hirofumi Matsumura who studies in Genetics and Anthropology stated that mtDNA sub haplogroup M7b1 2 4 5 6 7 8 founded in majority of Kadazandusun DNA is one of the oldest mutations from M7 series from haplogroup M that was founded in ancient graveyards in the jungles of Borneo with estimated age around 12 700 years It is even older than most discovered ancient M7 series and spread throughout the Southeast Asia continent creating more M7 mutation series The mutation series products from M7b1 2 4 5 6 7 8 are present today in several ethnics including Jakun the aboriginal of peninsular Malaysia Dusun in Brunei Tagalog and Visayas in the Philippines and Dayak in Kalimantan and Riau Islands of Indonesia 13 Y DNA studies Edit Y chromosome DNA test Y DNA test is a genealogical DNA test that is used to explore a man s patrilineal or direct father s line ancestry According to a study by Prof Dr Zafarina Zainuddin from Universiti Sains Malaysia Kadazandusun ethnic belongs to Y DNA haplogroup of O2 P31 O 268 which she believes plays an important role in the modern Malay genome sequence 14 15 O2 P31 is a mutation product of M214 as a maternal haplogroup with the following mutation sequences M214 gt M175 gt P31 gt O2 This study was also validated by a genetic study group from National Geographic that revealed STR test results through samples taken from Kadazandusun residents of Belud City in 2011 The STR results were DYS393 15 DYS439 12 DYS388 12 DYS385a 16 DYS19 15 DYS389 1 13 DYS390 25 DYS385b 20 DYS391 11 DYS389 2 NaN DYS426 11 DYS392 13 which explains the specific composition of the Y chromosome according to the Y DNA haplogroup of O2 P31 O M268 Mutation sequences for O2 P31 are shown in the Phylogenetic tree below According to the Y DNA study by Jean A Trejaut Estella S Poloni and Ju Chen Yen the Bunun ethnic in Taiwan belongs to Y DNA haplogroups of O1a2 M50 and O2a1a M88 Both of these Y DNA haplogroups are also the result of mutations of M214 as their maternal Y DNA haplogroups with the following mutation sequences M214 gt M175 gt MSY2 2 gt M119 gt M50 gt O1a2 and M214 gt M175 gt P31 gt M95 gt M88 gt M111 M88 gt PK4 gt O2a1a 16 Mutation sequences for O1a2 M50 and O2a1a M88 shown in the Phylogenetic tree below The age of Y DNA haplogroup O2 P31 O M268 is estimated to be at around 34 100 years through conducted DNA ageing tests on the ancient human bones discovered in Niah Cave Sarawak 17 15 The mean ages of Y DNA haplogroups of O1a2 M50 and O2a1a M88 are 33 103 and 28 500 respectively From the study s result the claims related to Kadazandusun being ancient migrants from Taiwan are completely irrelevant This is because the age of the Y DNA haplogroup O2 P31 belong to the Kadazandusun ethnic group is older compared to the Bunun Y DNA haplogroups in Taiwan Conclusion Edit Initially the purpose of starting the genetic haplogroup lineage was to determine the origin of the human lineage However the objective is yet to be verified to this day due to a lack of pure evidences that is free from contamination The results obtained from genetic studies so far can only prove the human global travelling activities but not as evidence to determine the place of origin of migrating humans 13 For example the discovery of the Tianyuan man that has no conclusive answer to his place of origin 18 Based on the mtDNA and Y DNA studies as well as philosophies from genetic and anthropology experts it is plausible to conclude that Kadazandusun people are indeed the aboriginals of Sabah and Borneo as well as one of the leading genetic contributors to Southeast Asian societies Cultural and society EditReligion Edit Religions of Kadazandusuns 19 Religion PercentChristianity 74 80 Islam 22 68 Folk religion Other religions 0 09 No religion Unknown 1 83 The majority of the Kadazandusuns are Christians mainly Roman Catholics 20 and some Protestants 21 Islam is also practised by a growing minority 22 23 24 The influence of the English speaking missionaries in British North Borneo during the late 19th century particularly the Catholic Mill Hill mission 25 resulted in Christianity in its Roman Catholic form rising to prominence amongst Kadazans 26 A minority are from other Christian denominations such as Anglicanism and Borneo Evangelical Church SIB Before the missionaries came animism citation needed was widely practiced The religion is Momolianism i e the two way communication between the unseen spirit world and the seen material world facilitated by the services of a category of Kadazan Dusun people called Bobohizans Bobolians The Kadazan belief system centers around the spirit or entity called Bambarayon It revolved around the belief that spirits ruled over the planting and harvesting of rice a profession that had been practised for generations Special rituals would be performed before and after each harvest by a tribal priestess known as a Bobohizan Harvest Festival Edit Main article Kaamatan Harvest Festival or Pesta Kaamatan is an annual celebration by the people of Kadazandusun in Sabah It is a one month celebration starting from 1 to 31 May In modern day of Kaamatan Festival celebration 30 and 31 May are the climax dates for the state level celebration that happens at the place of the yearly Kaamatan Festival host Today s Kaamatan celebration is very synonymous with beauty pageant competition known as Unduk Ngadau a singing competition known as Sugandoi Tamu non halal food and beverages stalls and handicraft arts and cultural performances in traditional houses 27 During the old days Kaamatan was celebrated to give thanks to ancient God and rice spirits for the bountiful harvesting to ensure continuous paddy yield for the next paddy plantation season Nowadays the majority of the Kadazan dusun people have embraced Christianity and Islam Although the Kaamatan is still celebrated as an annual tradition it is no longer celebrated for the purpose to meet the demands of the ancestral spiritual traditions and customs but rather in honouring the customs and traditions of the ancestors Today Kaamatan is more symbolic as a reunion time with family and loved ones Domestically modern Kaamatan is celebrated as per individual personal aspiration with the option of whether or not to serve the Kadazandusun traditional food and drinks which are mostly non halal 28 Traditional foods and drinks Edit A few of the most well known traditional food of the Kadazandusun people are hinava noonsom pinaasakan bosou tuhau kinoring pork soup and rice wine chicken soup Some of the well known traditional drinks of Kadazandusun are tapai tumpung lihing and bahar 29 Traditional costumes Edit The traditional costume of the Kadazandusun is generally called the Koubasanan costume made out of black velvet fabric with various decorations using beads flowers coloured buttons golden laces linen and unique embroidery designs 30 The traditional costume that is commonly commercialised as the cultural icon of the Kadazandusun people is the Koubasanan costume from the Penampang district The koubasanan costume from the Penampang district consists of Sinuangga worn by women and Gaung for men Sinuangga comes with a waistband called Himpogot made out of connected silver coins also known as the money belt Tangkong made out of copper loops or rings fastened by strings or threads Gaung decorated with gold lace and silver buttons and a hat that is called Siga made out of weaved dastar fabric The decorations and designs of the koubasanan costume are usually varied by region 30 For example the koubasanan dress design for Kadazandusun women of Penampang usually comes in a set of sleeveless blouse combined with long skirts and no hats while the koubasanan dress design for Kadazandusun women of Papar comes in a set of long sleeves blouse combined with knee length skirts and wore with a siung hat There are over 40 different designs of the Koubasanan costume across Sabah that belongs to different tribes of the Kadazandusun community 29 Traditional dance Edit Sumazau dance is the traditional dance of Kadazandusun Usually the sumazau dance is performed by a pair of men and women dancers wearing traditional costumes Sumazau dance is usually accompanied by the beats and rhythms of seven to eight gongs The opening movement for sumazau dance is the parallel swing of the arms back and forth at the sides of the body while the feet springs and move the body from left to right Once the opening dance moves are integrated with the gong beats and rhythms the male dancer will chant heeeeee indicating that it is time to change the dance moves Upon hearing this chant dancers will raise their hands to the sides of their body and in line with their chest and move their wrists and arms up and down resembling the movement of a flying bird There is plenty of choreography of sumazau dance but the signature dance move of the sumazau will always be the flying bird arms movement parallel arms swinging back and forth at the sides of the body and the springing feet 29 31 Traditional music Edit The Kadazandusun traditional music is usually orchestrated in the form of a band consist of musicians using traditional musical instruments such as the bamboo flute sompoton togunggak gong and kulintangan Musical instruments in Sabah are classified into Cordophones tongkungon gambus sundatang or gagayan Erophon suling turali or tuahi bungkau sompoton and Idofon togunggak gong kulintangan and membranophones kompang gendang or tontog The most common musical instruments in Kadazandusun ceremonies are gong and kulintangan The gong beats usually varies by regions and districts and the gong beats that is often played at the official Kaamatan celebration in KDCA is the gong beats from the Penampang district 29 31 Traditional handicrafts Edit Kadazandusun people use natural materials as resources in producing handicrafts including the bamboo rattan lias calabash and woods Few of the many handicrafts that are synonym to the Kadazandusun people are wakid barait sompoton pinakol siung hat parang and gayang Before the mentioned handicrafts were promoted and commercialised to represent the Kadazandusun cultures they were once tools that were used in daily lives In fact some of these handicrafts are still used for its original purpose to this day Wakid and barait are used to carry harvested crops from farms Sompoton is a musical instrument Pinakol is an accessory used in ceremonials and rituals Parang machetes and gayang swords are used as farming and hunting tools as well as weapons in series of civil wars of the past which indirectly made the Kadazandusun known as headhunters in the past 29 Headhunting practice EditThe practice of headhunting is one of the ancient traditions practised by the Kadazandusun community during the times of the civil wars The Kadazandusun people refer to the beheaders as pengait or tonggorib The heads of the beheaded enemies were collected not only as triumph trophies but also for spiritual and traditional medicinal practices The beheading tradition was not intended for the purpose of war alone but rather to meet the society s cultural demands and expectations and to fulfill the sacrificial requirements of the ancient rituals In the olden times a Kadazandusun man s pride and power were measured by his courage and physical strength in combat as well as the number of heads of fallen enemies that were brought home The rule of thumb for headhunting practice was that the defeated enemy had to be alive during the time of the beheading as it would be meaningless to behead the deceased This is due to the traditional Kadazandusun belief that man s intelligence spirit and courage are in his head called tandahau while the heart functions as the life source to the body In other words a dead heart means dead useless head Shall any beheader go against this rule the beheader will be condemned by a curse that will bring unfortunate fate upon him The three main ethnic groups in Sabah that are known for headhunting practices history are the Kadazan Dusun Rungus and the Murut 32 33 There are five objectives for the headhunting practices In a great war To prove the strength of the heroes and clans over the fallen enemies As war victory evidence The head will be kept in the house of the skull bangkawan of the victorious clan For small scale civil war or family feud To cease the existence of the enemies and their families The head of the enemy will be kept in the victorious family home for the purpose to enslave the enemy s spirit as a housekeeping talisman amulet Empowering manhood Beheading is a practice that proves courage and bravery A man with no courage and bravery will be out of place in the society and end up spouseless Self promotion as the village head A man must obtain at least 10 heads of the enemy clan in order to gain honour and approvals from his own clan These 10 heads are also important in convincing his clan that he is worthy as a war leader Promoting the bravery of a hero The ancient Kadazandusun believed that the strength and spirit of the beheaded enemy would be gained by the beheader Enemies beheading is also a way in proving the clan that a hero is worthy as a mighty warriorThe beheaded heads will be kept and maintained using ancient practices and rituals One of the uses of the beheaded heads is as a housekeeper amulet or talisman The ancient Kadazandusun people believed that every house should have its guardians Thus they will use the tandahau spirit from the beheaded head for the purpose of protecting the house and its inhabitants from the attacks of enemies and wild animals It is also important to place beheaded heads under the newly constructed bridge The ancient people of Kadazandusun believed that every river had a spirit of water that is called tambaig The beheaded heads will be placed or hung below the bridge as a peace offering for the tambaig so that the tambaig will not demolish the bridge Beheaded heads are also used by bobohizan or bobolian for medical purposes as well as the worship of the ancestors spirits The most common weapons used by the ancient headhunters of the Kadazandusun are Ilang sakuit mandau machetes gayang swords tandus adus spears and a taming wood as a shield This gruesome practice has been banned and no longer practice today However there is a rumour saying that primitive Kadazandusun clans living in isolation in the deep jungles are still actively practising the headhunting culture today Yet there has been no evidence to support this claim 32 33 Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah Edit The 2014 Kaamatan celebration in Penampang Sabah with the Kadazan Dusun Cultural Association KDCA being represented by their Deputy President Clarance Bongkos Malakun on the far left The Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah KDCA previously known as Kadazan Cultural Association KCA is a non political association of 40 indigenous ethnic communities of Sabah registered under the Malaysian Societies Act 1966 on 29 April 1966 by the then Deputy Registrar of Societies Malaysia J P Rutherford It is headed by Huguan Siou Honorable Tan Sri Datuk Seri Panglima Joseph Pairin Kitingan The title Huguan Siou Office is an institutionalised Paramount Leadership of the Koisaan The power and responsibility to bestow the Kadazandusun Paramount Leadership Title Huguan Siou rests with the KDCA which upon the vacancy of the Huguan Siou s Office may hold an Extraordinary Delegate s Conference to specifically resolve the installation of their Huguan Siou However if no leader is considered worthy of the Huguan Siou s title the office would rather be left vacant out of respect for the highly dignified and nearly sacred office of the Kadazandusun s Huguan Siou until such time as a deserving Kadazandusun leader is undoubtedly established The birth of the Society of Kadazan Penampang in 1953 paved the way for the formation of the Kadazan Cultural Association Sabah KCA in 1963 which in turn was transformed into the present KDCA on 25 September 1991 From its inception in the early 1950s the KDCA has focused much of its efforts on the preservation development enrichment and promotion of the Kadazandusun multi ethnic cultures The KDCA s Triennial Delegates Conference provides a forum where the various Kadazandusun multi ethnic representatives discuss major issues affecting them and their future and take up both individual and collective stands and actions to resolve common challenges The KDCA is involved in various activities related to research and documentation preservation development and promotions of the Kadazandusun culture language and literary works Bobolians amp Rinaits traditional medicine traditional food and beverages music songs dances and dramas traditional arts crafts and designs traditional sports traditional wears and costumes Lately along with the growing international co operation of the world s indigenous peoples indigenous knowledge intellectual property and traditional resource rights conservation enhancement and protection have also become new areas of the KDCA s concern and responsibility The KDCA fosters unity friendship and co operation among the multi racial population of Sabah through its participatory cultural programs and celebrations such as the Village District and State levels Annual Kaamatan Festival It has sent Cultural Performance Troupes on goodwill tours to the other Malaysian States to neighbouring Asian Countries to Europe America Canada and New Zealand KDCA has a youth and students wing Kadazandusun Youth Development Movement KDYDM The movement s main aims are to encourage more participation of the young generation in the activities of the association and be empowered in various fields so that they would be able to help develop the Kadazandusun community in general Kadazandusun sub ethnic groups Edit Traditional rice wine been served by using bamboo as a drink cup in Kota Kinabalu Sabah Malaysia This is part of the Kadazandusun cuisine Kadazandusun is the unification term and collective name for more than 40 sub tribes who speaks Dusunic languages and some non Dusunic speaking tribes who called themselves as Dusun or Kadazan However all of them belong to the Sabahan stock of Austronesian people Classification of Kadazan Dusuns tribes according to language groups Central Dusun speaking group Edit Liwan Today they are the largest Dusun group in numbers and geographic distribution Maybe this tribe originated from Liwan River in Ranau Tambunan River and expanded by absorbing other Dusun tribes in Ranau and Tambunan In 60 s some of them moved to Keningau and other areas Nowadays consist of many varieties such as Karanaan Bira Togudon Randagong Magatang Monsok Inobong unique in Inobong area of Penampang their dialects a sub dialect of Liwan They are the descendants of Liwans from Ranau or Tambunan who travelled to trade in Penampang lowland and then settled there Bundu concentrated in Tuaran district and consist of many varieties significantly the Pahu and Tenghilan dialects Historically allies of Liwan and many moved and assimilated with them in Tambunan Like the Liwan some of them also migrated but to eastern Sabah of Telupid and Tongod Tindal concentrated in Kota Belud and consist of many varieties significant dialects are Tempasuk Dusun or lowland Tindal Bangkahak and Bundu Tuhan Dusun Tindal and Bundu dialect are closely related Sinulihan Sinulihan dialect is a Bundu s sub dialect with Tagahas and Tindal influences Tagahas once a large warring Dusun group today concentrated in Tibabar and Toboh of Tambunan Ulu Papar of Penampang Kaiduan of Papar and in interior of Kota Kinabalu Tuaran districts highland border Talantang originated in Ulu Sugut nowadays also reside in Ranau and Kota Marudu Tinagas brother tribe of Talantang Tuhawon also a brother tribe of Talantang and Tinagas with the same origin migrated to Tambunan but absorbed into Liwan group now only reside in Kg Tikolod Tambunan and Kg Tiku in Tambunan Penampang border where the Salt Trail located Kwijau Bisaya Lotud speaking group Edit Kwijau also known as Kuriyou or Kuizau once a large group nowadays only reside in Bingkor Keningau Kwijau in Papar assimilated with the Kadazan while Kwijau in Membakut is one of many tribes under Bakud term Lotud this group maybe originated from either Kwijau or Bisaya and migrated to Tuaran and assimilated with the Dusun Tatana Tatana was a splinter group of Bisaya and remained animist during the Brunei Sultanate s Islamisation then inter married with Chinese immigrants Papar this group is a Tatana sub tribe Bakud this group is a unification term of many Kadazan and Dusun tribes in Membakut Northern Dusun speaking group Edit Kimaragang Garo or Tagaro sub dialect of Kimaragang Sonsogon also sub dialect of Kimaragang Tobilung Gobukon sub dialect of Tobilung SandayohKadazan Tangara Tangaa speaking group Edit Penampang Kadazan Papar Kadazan Papar Kadazan was result of Penampang Kadazan and Kwijau assimilation Membakut Kadazan maybe this group is Kadazanised Bisaya speaking in Membakut Klias River Kadazan this group is Bisaya speaking people who choose to remain animist during the Brunei Sultanate s Islamisation and influenced by their Membakut Kadazan brothers Momogun Rungus speaking roup Edit Rungus consist of Kirangavan Pilapazan Nuluw Gandahon and Tupak sub tribed Gonsomon dialect of Rungus Eastern Dusun speaking group also known as Labuk Kinabatangan Kadazandusun Edit Kunatong Tindakon Tompulung Tanggal Tilan Ilan Sangau Tandaa Kirulu Turavid Lolobuon Kisayap Kivulu Kisoko Kiruli Malapi Minokok Tompizes Pingas Dusun Lamag Mangkaak Sukang DumpasPaitanic speaking Dusuns Orang Sungai or Lobu Edit Tombonuo Lingkabau Tampias Lobu Lanas Lobu Rumanau Sinabu Kolobuan Sinarupa MakiangIda an Dusuns Edit Begak Buludupi Sagamo or SubpanMurutic speaking Dusun Edit Dusun GanaOther non Dusunic speaking Dusuns Edit Dusun Bonggi reside uniqely in Banggi Islands actually a branch of Molbog languages group Bajau Bukit a group of Bajau people assimilated with Dusun Kadazan Dusun languages EditMost of the Kadazan and Dusun languages belong to Dusunic languages family Dusun Lotud Dusun Tatana and Bruneian Dusun Tutung came from the Bisayic branch of the language group Bonggi and Idaanic tribes speak non Dusunic languages families which is Northeast Sabahan language and Idaanic language respectively The Paitanic Dusuns speak Paitanic languages and the combination of this language family with the Dusunic form the Greater Dusunic languages group Dusun Gana speaks a Dusunised Murutic language All Dusunic languages now are mutually intelligible but they can t intelligibly converse with Paitanic Bonggi Idaanic and vice versa While all the three latter language families are not intelligible to each other The Dusunic language branches are Central Dusun Ulu Sugut Dusun Talantang Tinagas Northern Dusun Rungus Kimaragang Tobilung Coastal Kadazan and Eastern Dusun Bisayic and Kwijau are the Dusunic languages sub family The largest number and widely distributed speakers of any Kadazan Dusun languages is the Liwanic dialect Under the efforts of the Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah the standardised Kadazan Dusun language is of the central Bundu Liwan dialect spoken in Bundu and Liwan now parts of the present day districts of Ranau Tambunan and Keningau Dusun Bundu liwan s selection was based on it being the most mutually intelligible when conversing with other Dusun or Kadazan dialect English Kadazan DusunWhat is your name Isai ngaan nu Isai ngaran nu My name is John Ngaan ku nopo nga i John Ngaran ku nopo nga i John How are you Onu abal nu Nunu kabar nu I am fine Noikot vinasi Osonong kopio Where is Mary Nombo zi Mary Nonggo i Mary Thank you Kotohuadan PounsikouHow much is this Pio hoogo diti Piro gatang diti I don t understand Au zou kalati Au oku karati I miss you Hangadon zou diau Langadon oku dikaDo you speak English Koiho ko moboos do Onggilis Koilo ko mimboros do Inggilis Where are you from Nombo o nontodonon nu Honggo tadon nu River Bavang BawangNotable Kadazan Dusun people EditArthur Joseph Kurup current Deputy Minister of Science Technology and Innovation president for United Sabah People s Party PBRS and current member of parliament for Pensiangan Betty Boo singer Bernard Giluk Dompok current Malaysian ambassador to the Vatican former chief minister of Sabah and former federal minister Clarence E Mansul former deputy minister of Malaysia and former member of parliament for Penampang 34 Darell Leiking Former Malaysia Minister and state assemblyman for Moyog Ewon Benedick Minister of Malaysia Ewon Ebin former federal minister of Malaysia Fuad Stephens former frist and third chief minister of Sabah and former third TYT Sabah Mohd Hamdan Abdullah former TYT Sabah 4th Mohamad Adnan Robert former TYT Sabah 6th Jeffrey Kitingan deputy chief minister of Sabah current member of Malaysian Parliament for Keningau and state assemblyman for Bingkor Isnaraissah Munirah Majilis a current member of the Malaysian Parliament for Kota Belud half Bajau maternal ancestry Jonathan Yasin deputy minister of home affairs and current member of parliament for Ranau Joseph Kurup former federal minister of Malaysia Joseph Pairin Kitingan former chief minister of Sabah Kasitah Gaddam former federal Cabinet minister and senator Maximus Ongkili former minister in the prime minister s Department for Sabah and Sarawak Affairs Peter Anthony former Sabah Ministers Richard Malanjum 9th chief justice of Malaysia and the 4th chief judge of the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak Ronald Kiandee minister of agriculture and food industries former deputy speaker for the Dewan Rakyat and current member of parliament for Beluran Wilfred Madius Tangau former federal minister of Sabah and former deputy chief minister of Sabah Stacy Malaysian singer Marsha Milan Malaysian singer and actress Adira Malaysian singer See also EditAustronesian peoples Bumiputera Demographics of Malaysia Kaamatan Unduk Ngadau Sumazau Coastal Kadazan dialect Dusun languageReferences Edit Taburan Penduduk dan Ciri ciri asas demografi Population Distribution and Basic demographic characteristics 2010 PDF Department of Statistics Malaysia Archived from the original PDF on 22 May 2014 Retrieved 11 December 2015 p 13 26 156 People amp History Official Website of the Sabah State Government Retrieved 15 March 2022 Language Kadazandusun Malaysia Discovery Channel 2004 via UNESCO Multimedia Video amp Sound Collections Richard F Tunggolou 31 October 2004 The Origins and Meanings of the Terms Kadazan and Dusun Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah KDCA Retrieved 15 March 2022 a b c d Luping Herman 7 August 2016 A History of the Term Kadazandusun Daily Express Retrieved 28 November 2019 a b Origins of the Kadazan People English Literature Essay UKEssays com Retrieved 30 November 2019 Rutter Owen 1929 The Pagans of North Borneo London Hutchinson and Co Staal J 1923 The Dusuns of North Borneo Their Social Life Anthropos 18 19 4 6 958 977 JSTOR 40444627 Yew Chee Wei Hoque Mohd Zahirul Pugh Kitingan Jacqueline et al 2018 Genetic Relatedness of Indigenous Ethnic Groups in Northern Borneo to Neighboring Populations from Southeast Asia as Inferred from Genome Wide SNP Data Annals of Human Genetics 82 4 216 226 doi 10 1111 ahg 12246 PMID 29521412 S2CID 3780230 a b Kee Boon Pin 2014 Assessment and Analysis of Genomic Diversity and Biomarkers in Sabahan Indigenous Populations PDF PhD thesis University of Malaya a b Tan S G 1979 Genetic Relationship between Kadazans and Fifteen other Southeast Asian Races PDF Pertanika 2 1 28 33 Shinoda Ken ichi Kakuda Tsuneo Kanzawa Kiriyama Hideaki et al 2014 Mitochondrial Genetic Diversity of Pingpu Tribes in Taiwan PDF Bulletin of the National Museum of Nature and Science Series D 40 1 12 a b Matsumura Hirofumi Shinoda Ken ichi Shimanjuntak Truman et al 2018 Yao Yong Gang ed Cranio Morphometric and aDNA Corroboration of the Austronesian Dispersal Model in Ancient Island Southeast Asia Support from Gua Harimau Indonesia PLOS ONE 13 6 Article e0198689 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1398689M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0198689 PMC 6014653 PMID 29933384 Kaum Dusun Sabah Bukan Berasal dari China Tibet Maupun Taiwan BorneoMail in Malay 25 October 2017 Retrieved 15 March 2022 a b Karafet Tatiana M Mendez Fernando L Sudoyo Herawati et al 2015 Improved Phylogenetic Resolution and Rapid Diversification of Y Chromosome Haplogroup K M526 in Southeast Asia European Journal of Human Genetics 23 3 369 373 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2014 106 PMC 4326703 PMID 24896152 Trejaut Jean A Poloni Estella S Yen Ju Chen et al 2014 Taiwan Y Chromosomal DNA Variation and Its Relationship with Island Southeast Asia BMC Genetics 15 Article 77 doi 10 1186 1471 2156 15 77 PMC 4083334 PMID 24965575 Curnoe Darren Datan Ipoi Tacon Paul S C et al 2016 Deep Skull from Niah Cave and the Pleistocene Peopling of Southeast Asia Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 4 Article 75 doi 10 3389 fevo 2016 00075 Fu Qiaomei Meyer Matthias Gao Xing et al 2013 DNA Analysis of an Early Modern Human from Tianyuan Cave China Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110 6 2223 2227 Bibcode 2013PNAS 110 2223F doi 10 1073 pnas 1221359110 PMC 3568306 PMID 23341637 2010 Population and Housing Census of Malaysia PDF in Malay and English Department of Statistics Malaysia p 107 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2012 Assessment for Kadazans in Malaysia MAR Archived from the original on 22 June 2012 Koepping Elizabeth 2004 Paper on Mission to Kadazan of Sabah Malaysia IAMS 2004 Conference Abstract Archived from the original on 21 November 2008 Voices of the Earth Our Planet More Foreigners In Brunei Embrace Islam BruneiDirect com Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Malay Ultras Diluted Borneo Autonomy GeoCities Archived from the original on 25 October 2009 Lindsay Jennifer Tan Ying Ying eds 2003 Babel or Behemoth Language Trends in Asia Singapore Asia Research Institute National University of Singapore p 15 ISBN 981 04 9075 5 Prefectures Apostolic of Borneo New Advent Retrieved 15 March 2022 Estelle 29 May 2017 Kaamatan Tale of Harvest AmazingBorneo Retrieved 27 December 2019 Petronas 29 May 2017 11 Things About Kaamatan and Gawai You Should Know Before Going to Sabah or Sarawak Says Retrieved 27 December 2019 a b c d e Crystal Kadazandusun Food amp Art Padlet Retrieved 27 December 2019 a b Traditional Costume of the Penampang Kadazan Kadazandusun Cultural Association Sabah KDCA Retrieved 27 December 2019 a b Kadazan Traditional Music and Dances KadazanHomeland com Archived from the original on 30 December 2019 Retrieved 27 December 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Bedford Sam 25 March 2018 The History of Borneo s Headhunters Culturetrip Retrieved 27 December 2019 a b The Headhunters of Borneo KadazanHomeland com Archived from the original on 30 December 2019 Retrieved 27 December 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link John Anthony 15 July 2018 Huguan Siou Legacy of the Kadazandusuns The Borneo Post Retrieved 15 July 2018 via PressReader Tangit Trixie M 2005 Planning Kadazandusun Sabah Malaysia Labels Identity and Language MA thesis University of Hawaii at Manoa hdl 10125 11691 External links EditKDCA Official Website Kadazandusun Forum Kadazandusun Murut Vocabulary Words nouns collections Robert Blust s audio recordings of Tindal Dusun are archived with Kaipuleohone Portals Malaysia Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kadazan Dusun amp oldid 1137063635, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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