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Khmer Loeu

The Khmer Loeu (Khmer: ជនជាតិខ្មែរលើ [cunciət kʰmae ləː]; "upper Khmers") is the collective name given to the various indigenous ethnic groups residing in the highlands of Cambodia. The Khmer Loeu are found mainly in the northeastern provinces of Ratanakiri, Stung Treng, and Mondulkiri. Most of the highland groups are Mon-Khmer peoples and are distantly related, to one degree or another, to the Khmer. Two of the Khmer Loeu groups are Chamic peoples, a branch of the Austronesian peoples, and have a very different linguistic and cultural background. The Mon–Khmer-speaking tribes are the aboriginal inhabitants of mainland Southeast Asia, their ancestors having trickled into the area from the northwest during the prehistoric metal ages.[3] The Austronesian-speaking groups, Rade and Jarai, are descendants of the Malayo-Polynesian peoples who came to what is now coastal Vietnam; they established the Champa kingdoms, and after their decline migrated west over the Annamite Range, dispersing between the Mon–Khmer groups.[4][5]

Khmer Loeu
ជនជាតិខ្មែរលើ
Total population
179,193 (2008 census);[1] 142,700 (1996 est.)[2]

Significant groups:

Regions with significant populations
Cambodia
Languages
Khmer, other Austroasiatic languages
Religion
Theravada Buddhism, Animism
Ethnic map of Cambodia (1972).

The disparate groups that make up the Khmer Loeu are estimated to comprise 17-21 different ethnic groups speaking at least 17 different languages.[2] Unlike the Cham, Vietnamese and Chinese minorities of the lowlands, the Khmer Loeu groups haven't integrated into Khmer society or culture and remain politically unorganized and underrepresented in the Cambodian government. There have never been any treaties between a Khmer Loeu group and the government nor is Cambodia a signatory to the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention.[2] Cambodia's landmark 2001 land law guarantees indigenous peoples communal rights to their traditional lands,[2] but the government is accused of routinely violating those provisions, confiscating land for purposes ranging from commercial logging to foreign development.[6][7][8]

Terminology

Traditionally, the ruling Khmer majority has referred to all the highland groups as phnong, a name of one of the groups that has come to mean "savage" in Khmer, or samre, the name of another group that has developed the meaning "bumpkin" or "hick".[9] Both of these words are now considered pejorative. The colonial French administration designated the highland ethnicities of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam "Montagnards".

The term "Khmer Loeu" was crafted by the Sangkum Reastr Niyum government of Sihanouk's Cambodia in the 1950s. In order the stress the unity, or "Cambodian-ness", of the various ethnic groups that inhabited its borders and promote a nationalist cohesiveness, the government classified citizens as one of three groups of "Khmer", Khmer Kandal, Khmer Islam and Khmer Loeu.[10] Khmer Kandal ("Central Khmer") referred to the ethnic Khmer majority. Khmer Islam was the name given to the ethnic Cham inhabiting the central plains of Cambodia. Khmer Loeu was coined as a catch-all term to include all of the indigenous minority ethnic groups, most of which reside in the remote highlands of northeast Cambodia.[11] The current government has used the term Choncheate Daeum Pheak Tech (ជនជាតិដើមភាគតិច; "Original Ethnic Minority") in official documents while referring to ethnic Khmer as Choncheate Daeum Pheak Chraeun (ជនជាតិដើមភាគច្រើន; "Original Ethnic Majority"). However "Khmer Loeu" still remains the colloquial and most common designation for these groups.

In the Khmer language, an alternative, though unrelated, use of the term "Khmer Loeu" is in reference to the Northern Khmer people.[12] Ethnic Khmers sometimes use a tripartite division to differentiate Khmers native to Thailand, Cambodia or Vietnam. Those native to Thailand are sometimes referred to as "Khmer Loeu" due to their location on the southern Khorat plateau relative to those native to Cambodia, "Khmer Kandal", while Khmer native to the lower Mekong Delta region of Vietnam are called "Khmer Krom" ("lower Khmer" or "southern Khmer").

Geography and demographics

Khmer Loeu form the majority population in Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri provinces, and they also are present in substantial numbers in Kratié Province and Stung Treng Province. Their total population in 1969 was estimated at 90,000 people. In 1971 the number of Khmer Loeu was estimated variously between 40,000 and 100,000 people. Population figures were unavailable in 1987, but the total probably was nearly 100,000 people. According to the General Population Census conducted in 2008, their total population was 179,193.[1]

Population
Ethnic group 2008[1]
Total 179,193
Bunong 37,507
Tampuan 31,013
Kuy
Jarai 26,335
Krueng 19,988
Brao 9,025
Stieng 6,541
Kavet 6,218
Kraol 4,202
Pear 1,827
Ro Ong 1,831
Mel 1,697
Thmoon 865
Suoy 857
Khogn 743
Klueng 702
Kchruk 408
Sa'och 445
Lon 327
Mon 19
Rade 21
Kchak 10

Culture

Most Khmer Loeu live in scattered temporary villages that have only a few hundred inhabitants. These villages usually are governed by a council of local elders or by a village headman.

The Khmer Loeu cultivate a wide variety of plants, but the main crop is dry or upland rice grown by the slash-and-burn method. Hunting, fishing, and gathering supplement the cultivated vegetable foods in the Khmer Loeu diet. Houses vary from huge multifamily longhouses to small single-family structures. They may be built close to the ground or on stilts.[5]

History

During the period of the French Protectorate, the French did not interfere in the affairs of the Khmer Loeu. Reportedly, French army commanders considered the Khmer Loeu as an excellent source of personnel for army outposts, and they recruited large numbers to serve with the French forces. Many Khmer Loeu continued this tradition by enlisting in the Cambodian army.

In the 1960s, the Cambodian government carried out a broad civic action program—for which the army had responsibility—among the Khmer Loeu in Mondulkiri, Ratanakiri, Stung Treng, and Koh Kong provinces. The goals of this program were to educate the Khmer Loeu, to teach them Khmer, and eventually to assimilate them into the mainstream of Cambodian society. There was some effort at resettlement; in other cases, civil servants went out to live with individual Khmer Loeu groups to teach their members Khmer ways. Schools were provided for some Khmer Loeu communities, and in each large village a resident government representative disseminated information and encouraged the Khmer Loeu to learn the lowland Khmer way of life. Civil servants sent to work among the Khmer Loeu often viewed the assignment as a kind of punishment.

In the late 1960s, an estimated 5,000 Khmer Loeu in eastern Cambodia rose in rebellion against the government and demanded self-determination and independence. The government press reported that local leaders loyal to the government had been assassinated. Following the rebellion, the hill people's widespread resentment of ethnic Khmer settlers caused them to refuse to cooperate with the Cambodian army in its suppression of rural unrest. Both the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese communists took advantage of this disaffection, and they actively recruited Khmer Loeu into their ranks. In 1968, Pol Pot and other Khmer Rouge fled to Khmer Loeu lands, who were seen as hostile to lowland Khmer and to the government. In late 1970, the government forces withdrew from Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri provinces and abandoned the area to the rapidly growing Khmer Rouge communist insurgent force, the Revolutionary Army of Kampuchea, and to its Vietnamese mentors. There is some evidence that in the 1960s and in the 1970s the Front Uni pour la Libération des Races Opprimés (FULRO—United Front for the Liberation of Oppressed Races) united tribes in the mountainous areas of southern Vietnam and had members from Khmer Loeu groups as well as from the Cham in Cambodia.

In the early 1980s, Khmer Rouge propaganda teams infiltrated the northeastern provinces and encouraged rebellion against the central government. In 1981 the government structure included four Khmer Loeu province chiefs, all reportedly from the Brao group, in the northeastern provinces of Mondulkiri, Ratanakiri, Stung Treng, and Preah Vihear. According to a 1984 resolution of the PRK National Cadres Conference entitled "Policy Toward Ethnic Minorities," the minorities were considered an integral part of the Cambodian nation, and they were to be encouraged to participate in collectivization. Government policy aimed to transform minority groups into modern Cambodians. The same resolution called for the elimination of illiteracy, with the stipulations that minority languages be respected and that each tribe be allowed to write, speak, and teach in its own language.

Groups

The major Khmer Loeu groups in Cambodia are the Kuy, Pnong, Stieng, Brao, Tampuan, Pear, Jarai, and Rade. All but the last two speak Mon–Khmer languages.

Kuy

In the late 1980s, about 160,000 Kuy lived in the northern Cambodian provinces of Kampong Thom, Preah Vihear, and Stung Treng as well as in adjacent Thailand. (Approximately 70,000 Kuy had been reported in Cambodia itself in 1978.) Most of the Kuy have been assimilated into the predominant culture of the country in which they live. Many are Buddhists, and the majority practice wet-rice cultivation. They have the reputation of being skilled blacksmiths.

Brao, Kreung, Kavet

The Brao, Kreung, and Kavet inhabit the northeastern Cambodian province of Ratanakiri and adjacent Laos. All three speak different, though mutually intelligible, dialects of the same language. They share a very similar culture, with matrilineal descent. In 1962 the Brao population in Laos was estimated at about 9,000. In 1984 it was reported that the total Brao population was between 10,000 and 15,000. About 3,000 Brao reportedly moved into Cambodia from Laos in the 1920s. The Brao live in large villages centered on a communal house. They cultivate dry-rice and produce some pottery. They appear to have a bilateral kinship system.

Tampuan

The Tampuan number about 25,000, according to a 1998 census. They have a Mon–Khmer language, and practice a form of animism. They have matrilineal descent.

The Tampuan live in the northeastern province of Cambodia, Ratanakiri. Many Tampuan live in villages close to Ratanakiri's provincial capital, Ban Lung, around a volcanic crater lake, Yeak Laom. Some live in scattered communities around the small town of Voeun Sai.[13]

Bunong, Stieng

A total of 23,000 Bunong were thought to be living in Cambodia and in Vietnam in the early 1980s. In Cambodia the Bunong are found in Mondulkiri, Kratié, and Kampong Cham provinces in villages consisting of several longhouses each of which is divided into compartments that can house nuclear families. The Bunong practice dry-rice farming, and some also cultivate a wide variety of vegetables, fruits, and other useful plants as secondary crops. Some subgroups weave cloth. At least two of the Bunong subgroups have matrilineal descent. Monogamy is the predominant form of marriage, and residence is usually matrilocal. Wealth distinctions are measured by the number of buffalo that a notable person sacrifices on a funereal or ceremonial occasion as a mark of status and as a means of eliciting social approval. Slavery is known to have existed in the past, but the system allowed a slave to gain freedom.

The Stieng are closely related to the Bunong. Both groups straddle the Cambodian-Vietnamese border, and their languages belong to the same subfamily of Mon–Khmer. In 1978 the Cambodian Stieng numbered about 20,000 in all. The Stieng cultivate dry-field rice. Their society is apparently patriarchal, and residence after marriage is patrilocal if a bride-price was paid. The groups have a very loose political organization; each village has its own leaders and tribunals.

Pear, Chong, Saoch, Suoi (Pearic Group)

Several small groups, perhaps totalling no more than 10,000 people in Cambodia and eastern Thailand, make up the Pearic group. The main members are the Pear in Battambang, Pursat, and Kampong Thom provinces; the Chong in Thailand and Battambang Province; the Saoch in Kampot Province; the Samre in what was formerly Siem Reap Province; and the Suoi in Kampong Chhnang Province. Some believe that this group constitutes the remnant of the pre-Khmer population of Cambodia. Many members of the Pearic group grow dry-field rice, which they supplement by hunting and by gathering. They have totemic clans, each headed by a chief who inherited his office patrilineally. Marriage occurs at an early age; there is a small bride-price. Residence may be matrilocal until the birth of the first child, or it may be patrilocal as it is among the Saoch. The village headman is the highest political leader. The Saoch have a council of elders who judge infractions of traditional law. Two chief sorcerers, whose main function is to control the weather, play a major role in Pearic religion. Among the Saoch, a corpse is buried instead of being burned as among the Khmer.

Jarai

The Austronesian groups of Jarai and E De (also known as Rhade, or Rade) form two of the largest ethnic minorities in Vietnam. Both groups spill over into northeastern Cambodia, and they share many cultural similarities. The total Jarai population stands at about 200,000; the E De number about 120,000. According to 1978 population figures, there were 10,000 Jarai and 15,000 E De in Cambodia in the late 1970s. They live in longhouses containing several compartments occupied by matrilineally linked nuclear families. There may be twenty to sixty longhouses in one village. The Rade and Jarai cultivate dry-field rice and secondary crops such as maize. Both groups have exogamous matrilineal descent groups (consanguineous kin groups that acknowledge a traditional bond of common descent in the maternal line and within which they do not marry). Women initiate marriage negotiations and residence is matrilocal. Each village has its own political hierarchy and is governed by an oligarchy of the leading families. In the past, sorcerers known as the "kings of fire and water" exerted political power that extended beyond an individual village. The Rade and the Jarai have been involved intimately in the FULRO movement, and many of the leaders in the movement are from these two groups.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m National Institute of Statistics, Ministry of Planning, Cambodia (August 2009). General Population Census of Cambodia 2008 - Final Census Results. National Institute of Statistics.
  2. ^ a b c d Kleger, Heinz (2004). The Theory of Multiculturalism and Cultural Diversity in Cambodia – Final Draft. Germany: University of Potsdam.
  3. ^ Baker, Chris; Phongpaichit, Pasuk (2005). A History of Thailand. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-01647-6.
  4. ^ Graham Thurgood (1999). From ancient Cham to modern dialects: two thousand years of language contact and change : with an appendix of Chamic reconstructions and loanwords. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-2131-9. Retrieved 2015-07-23.
  5. ^ a b http://countrystudies.us/cambodia/44.htm retrieved July-21-2015
  6. ^ "Cambodia Land Cleared for Rubber Rights Bulldozed: The impact of rubber plantations by Socfin-KCD on indigenous communities in Bousra, Mondulkiri" (PDF). International Federation for Human Rights. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  7. ^ Mu, Sochua; Wilkstrom, Cecilia (18 July 2012). "Land Grabs in Cambodia". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  8. ^ "Submission to the UN's Universal Periodic Review, Cambodia" (PDF). Universal Periodic Review 2013. LICADHO. 2013. p. 1.
  9. ^ Headly, Robert K.; Chhor, Kylin; Lim, Lam Kheng; Kheang, Lim Hak; Chun, Chen. 1977. Cambodian-English Dictionary. Bureau of Special Research in Modern Languages. The Catholic University of America Press. Washington, D.C. ISBN 0-8132-0509-3
  10. ^ Engelbert, Thomas (1998). "The enemy needed: the Cochin China issue and Cambodian factional struggles, 1949–50". South East Asia Research. 6 (2): 131–163. doi:10.1177/0967828X9800600203. JSTOR 23746937.
  11. ^ Baird, Ian G. (2013). "'Indigenous Peoples' and land: Comparing communal land titling and its implications in Cambodia and Laos". Asia Pacific Viewpoint. 54 (3): 269–281. doi:10.1111/apv.12034.
  12. ^ Tarr, Chou Meng (1992). "Changing Notions of Time and Money in a Peasant Community in Northeastern Thailand". Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice (31).
  13. ^ http://www.peoplesoftheworld.org/text?people=Tampuan Retrieved July-21-2015

External links

  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Country Studies. Federal Research Division.

khmer, loeu, khmer, ជនជ, រល, cunciət, kʰmae, ləː, upper, khmers, collective, name, given, various, indigenous, ethnic, groups, residing, highlands, cambodia, found, mainly, northeastern, provinces, ratanakiri, stung, treng, mondulkiri, most, highland, groups, . The Khmer Loeu Khmer ជនជ ត ខ ម រល cunciet kʰmae leː upper Khmers is the collective name given to the various indigenous ethnic groups residing in the highlands of Cambodia The Khmer Loeu are found mainly in the northeastern provinces of Ratanakiri Stung Treng and Mondulkiri Most of the highland groups are Mon Khmer peoples and are distantly related to one degree or another to the Khmer Two of the Khmer Loeu groups are Chamic peoples a branch of the Austronesian peoples and have a very different linguistic and cultural background The Mon Khmer speaking tribes are the aboriginal inhabitants of mainland Southeast Asia their ancestors having trickled into the area from the northwest during the prehistoric metal ages 3 The Austronesian speaking groups Rade and Jarai are descendants of the Malayo Polynesian peoples who came to what is now coastal Vietnam they established the Champa kingdoms and after their decline migrated west over the Annamite Range dispersing between the Mon Khmer groups 4 5 Khmer Loeuជនជ ត ខ ម រល Total population179 193 2008 census 1 142 700 1996 est 2 Significant groups Bunong 37 507 2008 1 Tampuan 31 013 2008 1 Kuy 28 612 2008 1 Jarai 26 335 2008 1 Kreung 19 988 2008 1 Brao 9 025 2008 1 Stieng 6 541 2008 1 Kavet 6 218 2008 1 Kraol 4 202 2008 1 Pear 1 827 2008 1 Regions with significant populationsCambodiaLanguagesKhmer other Austroasiatic languagesReligionTheravada Buddhism AnimismThis article contains Khmer text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Khmer script Ethnic map of Cambodia 1972 The disparate groups that make up the Khmer Loeu are estimated to comprise 17 21 different ethnic groups speaking at least 17 different languages 2 Unlike the Cham Vietnamese and Chinese minorities of the lowlands the Khmer Loeu groups haven t integrated into Khmer society or culture and remain politically unorganized and underrepresented in the Cambodian government There have never been any treaties between a Khmer Loeu group and the government nor is Cambodia a signatory to the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention 2 Cambodia s landmark 2001 land law guarantees indigenous peoples communal rights to their traditional lands 2 but the government is accused of routinely violating those provisions confiscating land for purposes ranging from commercial logging to foreign development 6 7 8 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Geography and demographics 3 Culture 4 History 5 Groups 5 1 Kuy 5 2 Brao Kreung Kavet 5 3 Tampuan 5 4 Bunong Stieng 5 5 Pear Chong Saoch Suoi Pearic Group 5 6 Jarai 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksTerminology EditTraditionally the ruling Khmer majority has referred to all the highland groups as phnong a name of one of the groups that has come to mean savage in Khmer or samre the name of another group that has developed the meaning bumpkin or hick 9 Both of these words are now considered pejorative The colonial French administration designated the highland ethnicities of Cambodia Laos and Vietnam Montagnards The term Khmer Loeu was crafted by the Sangkum Reastr Niyum government of Sihanouk s Cambodia in the 1950s In order the stress the unity or Cambodian ness of the various ethnic groups that inhabited its borders and promote a nationalist cohesiveness the government classified citizens as one of three groups of Khmer Khmer Kandal Khmer Islam and Khmer Loeu 10 Khmer Kandal Central Khmer referred to the ethnic Khmer majority Khmer Islam was the name given to the ethnic Cham inhabiting the central plains of Cambodia Khmer Loeu was coined as a catch all term to include all of the indigenous minority ethnic groups most of which reside in the remote highlands of northeast Cambodia 11 The current government has used the term Choncheate Daeum Pheak Tech ជនជ ត ដ មភ គត ច Original Ethnic Minority in official documents while referring to ethnic Khmer as Choncheate Daeum Pheak Chraeun ជនជ ត ដ មភ គច រ ន Original Ethnic Majority However Khmer Loeu still remains the colloquial and most common designation for these groups In the Khmer language an alternative though unrelated use of the term Khmer Loeu is in reference to the Northern Khmer people 12 Ethnic Khmers sometimes use a tripartite division to differentiate Khmers native to Thailand Cambodia or Vietnam Those native to Thailand are sometimes referred to as Khmer Loeu due to their location on the southern Khorat plateau relative to those native to Cambodia Khmer Kandal while Khmer native to the lower Mekong Delta region of Vietnam are called Khmer Krom lower Khmer or southern Khmer Geography and demographics EditKhmer Loeu form the majority population in Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri provinces and they also are present in substantial numbers in Kratie Province and Stung Treng Province Their total population in 1969 was estimated at 90 000 people In 1971 the number of Khmer Loeu was estimated variously between 40 000 and 100 000 people Population figures were unavailable in 1987 but the total probably was nearly 100 000 people According to the General Population Census conducted in 2008 their total population was 179 193 1 Population Ethnic group 2008 1 Total 179 193Bunong 37 507Tampuan 31 013KuyJarai 26 335Krueng 19 988Brao 9 025Stieng 6 541Kavet 6 218Kraol 4 202Pear 1 827Ro Ong 1 831Mel 1 697Thmoon 865Suoy 857Khogn 743Klueng 702Kchruk 408Sa och 445Lon 327Mon 19Rade 21Kchak 10Culture EditMost Khmer Loeu live in scattered temporary villages that have only a few hundred inhabitants These villages usually are governed by a council of local elders or by a village headman The Khmer Loeu cultivate a wide variety of plants but the main crop is dry or upland rice grown by the slash and burn method Hunting fishing and gathering supplement the cultivated vegetable foods in the Khmer Loeu diet Houses vary from huge multifamily longhouses to small single family structures They may be built close to the ground or on stilts 5 History EditDuring the period of the French Protectorate the French did not interfere in the affairs of the Khmer Loeu Reportedly French army commanders considered the Khmer Loeu as an excellent source of personnel for army outposts and they recruited large numbers to serve with the French forces Many Khmer Loeu continued this tradition by enlisting in the Cambodian army In the 1960s the Cambodian government carried out a broad civic action program for which the army had responsibility among the Khmer Loeu in Mondulkiri Ratanakiri Stung Treng and Koh Kong provinces The goals of this program were to educate the Khmer Loeu to teach them Khmer and eventually to assimilate them into the mainstream of Cambodian society There was some effort at resettlement in other cases civil servants went out to live with individual Khmer Loeu groups to teach their members Khmer ways Schools were provided for some Khmer Loeu communities and in each large village a resident government representative disseminated information and encouraged the Khmer Loeu to learn the lowland Khmer way of life Civil servants sent to work among the Khmer Loeu often viewed the assignment as a kind of punishment In the late 1960s an estimated 5 000 Khmer Loeu in eastern Cambodia rose in rebellion against the government and demanded self determination and independence The government press reported that local leaders loyal to the government had been assassinated Following the rebellion the hill people s widespread resentment of ethnic Khmer settlers caused them to refuse to cooperate with the Cambodian army in its suppression of rural unrest Both the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese communists took advantage of this disaffection and they actively recruited Khmer Loeu into their ranks In 1968 Pol Pot and other Khmer Rouge fled to Khmer Loeu lands who were seen as hostile to lowland Khmer and to the government In late 1970 the government forces withdrew from Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri provinces and abandoned the area to the rapidly growing Khmer Rouge communist insurgent force the Revolutionary Army of Kampuchea and to its Vietnamese mentors There is some evidence that in the 1960s and in the 1970s the Front Uni pour la Liberation des Races Opprimes FULRO United Front for the Liberation of Oppressed Races united tribes in the mountainous areas of southern Vietnam and had members from Khmer Loeu groups as well as from the Cham in Cambodia In the early 1980s Khmer Rouge propaganda teams infiltrated the northeastern provinces and encouraged rebellion against the central government In 1981 the government structure included four Khmer Loeu province chiefs all reportedly from the Brao group in the northeastern provinces of Mondulkiri Ratanakiri Stung Treng and Preah Vihear According to a 1984 resolution of the PRK National Cadres Conference entitled Policy Toward Ethnic Minorities the minorities were considered an integral part of the Cambodian nation and they were to be encouraged to participate in collectivization Government policy aimed to transform minority groups into modern Cambodians The same resolution called for the elimination of illiteracy with the stipulations that minority languages be respected and that each tribe be allowed to write speak and teach in its own language Groups EditThe major Khmer Loeu groups in Cambodia are the Kuy Pnong Stieng Brao Tampuan Pear Jarai and Rade All but the last two speak Mon Khmer languages Kuy Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Kuy people In the late 1980s about 160 000 Kuy lived in the northern Cambodian provinces of Kampong Thom Preah Vihear and Stung Treng as well as in adjacent Thailand Approximately 70 000 Kuy had been reported in Cambodia itself in 1978 Most of the Kuy have been assimilated into the predominant culture of the country in which they live Many are Buddhists and the majority practice wet rice cultivation They have the reputation of being skilled blacksmiths Brao Kreung Kavet Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Brao Kreung and Kavet inhabit the northeastern Cambodian province of Ratanakiri and adjacent Laos All three speak different though mutually intelligible dialects of the same language They share a very similar culture with matrilineal descent In 1962 the Brao population in Laos was estimated at about 9 000 In 1984 it was reported that the total Brao population was between 10 000 and 15 000 About 3 000 Brao reportedly moved into Cambodia from Laos in the 1920s The Brao live in large villages centered on a communal house They cultivate dry rice and produce some pottery They appear to have a bilateral kinship system Kreung village near Ban Lung A meeting house A sacred grove of a banana spirit Cabins for unmarried youthTampuan Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Tampuan people The Tampuan number about 25 000 according to a 1998 census They have a Mon Khmer language and practice a form of animism They have matrilineal descent The Tampuan live in the northeastern province of Cambodia Ratanakiri Many Tampuan live in villages close to Ratanakiri s provincial capital Ban Lung around a volcanic crater lake Yeak Laom Some live in scattered communities around the small town of Voeun Sai 13 Bunong Stieng Edit A total of 23 000 Bunong were thought to be living in Cambodia and in Vietnam in the early 1980s In Cambodia the Bunong are found in Mondulkiri Kratie and Kampong Cham provinces in villages consisting of several longhouses each of which is divided into compartments that can house nuclear families The Bunong practice dry rice farming and some also cultivate a wide variety of vegetables fruits and other useful plants as secondary crops Some subgroups weave cloth At least two of the Bunong subgroups have matrilineal descent Monogamy is the predominant form of marriage and residence is usually matrilocal Wealth distinctions are measured by the number of buffalo that a notable person sacrifices on a funereal or ceremonial occasion as a mark of status and as a means of eliciting social approval Slavery is known to have existed in the past but the system allowed a slave to gain freedom The Stieng are closely related to the Bunong Both groups straddle the Cambodian Vietnamese border and their languages belong to the same subfamily of Mon Khmer In 1978 the Cambodian Stieng numbered about 20 000 in all The Stieng cultivate dry field rice Their society is apparently patriarchal and residence after marriage is patrilocal if a bride price was paid The groups have a very loose political organization each village has its own leaders and tribunals Pear Chong Saoch Suoi Pearic Group Edit Several small groups perhaps totalling no more than 10 000 people in Cambodia and eastern Thailand make up the Pearic group The main members are the Pear in Battambang Pursat and Kampong Thom provinces the Chong in Thailand and Battambang Province the Saoch in Kampot Province the Samre in what was formerly Siem Reap Province and the Suoi in Kampong Chhnang Province Some believe that this group constitutes the remnant of the pre Khmer population of Cambodia Many members of the Pearic group grow dry field rice which they supplement by hunting and by gathering They have totemic clans each headed by a chief who inherited his office patrilineally Marriage occurs at an early age there is a small bride price Residence may be matrilocal until the birth of the first child or it may be patrilocal as it is among the Saoch The village headman is the highest political leader The Saoch have a council of elders who judge infractions of traditional law Two chief sorcerers whose main function is to control the weather play a major role in Pearic religion Among the Saoch a corpse is buried instead of being burned as among the Khmer Jarai Edit The Austronesian groups of Jarai and E De also known as Rhade or Rade form two of the largest ethnic minorities in Vietnam Both groups spill over into northeastern Cambodia and they share many cultural similarities The total Jarai population stands at about 200 000 the E De number about 120 000 According to 1978 population figures there were 10 000 Jarai and 15 000 E De in Cambodia in the late 1970s They live in longhouses containing several compartments occupied by matrilineally linked nuclear families There may be twenty to sixty longhouses in one village The Rade and Jarai cultivate dry field rice and secondary crops such as maize Both groups have exogamous matrilineal descent groups consanguineous kin groups that acknowledge a traditional bond of common descent in the maternal line and within which they do not marry Women initiate marriage negotiations and residence is matrilocal Each village has its own political hierarchy and is governed by an oligarchy of the leading families In the past sorcerers known as the kings of fire and water exerted political power that extended beyond an individual village The Rade and the Jarai have been involved intimately in the FULRO movement and many of the leaders in the movement are from these two groups See also EditDemographics of Cambodia Ethnic groups in CambodiaReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m National Institute of Statistics Ministry of Planning Cambodia August 2009 General Population Census of Cambodia 2008 Final Census Results National Institute of Statistics a b c d Kleger Heinz 2004 The Theory of Multiculturalism and Cultural Diversity in Cambodia Final Draft Germany University of Potsdam Baker Chris Phongpaichit Pasuk 2005 A History of Thailand Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 01647 6 Graham Thurgood 1999 From ancient Cham to modern dialects two thousand years of language contact and change with an appendix of Chamic reconstructions and loanwords University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 2131 9 Retrieved 2015 07 23 a b http countrystudies us cambodia 44 htm retrieved July 21 2015 Cambodia Land Cleared for Rubber Rights Bulldozed The impact of rubber plantations by Socfin KCD on indigenous communities in Bousra Mondulkiri PDF International Federation for Human Rights Retrieved 24 July 2015 Mu Sochua Wilkstrom Cecilia 18 July 2012 Land Grabs in Cambodia The New York Times Retrieved 24 July 2015 Submission to the UN s Universal Periodic Review Cambodia PDF Universal Periodic Review 2013 LICADHO 2013 p 1 Headly Robert K Chhor Kylin Lim Lam Kheng Kheang Lim Hak Chun Chen 1977 Cambodian English Dictionary Bureau of Special Research in Modern Languages The Catholic University of America Press Washington D C ISBN 0 8132 0509 3 Engelbert Thomas 1998 The enemy needed the Cochin China issue and Cambodian factional struggles 1949 50 South East Asia Research 6 2 131 163 doi 10 1177 0967828X9800600203 JSTOR 23746937 Baird Ian G 2013 Indigenous Peoples and land Comparing communal land titling and its implications in Cambodia and Laos Asia Pacific Viewpoint 54 3 269 281 doi 10 1111 apv 12034 Tarr Chou Meng 1992 Changing Notions of Time and Money in a Peasant Community in Northeastern Thailand Social Analysis The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice 31 http www peoplesoftheworld org text people Tampuan Retrieved July 21 2015External links EditEMU International Organization creating a phonology and writing system for the Tampuan Jarai in Cambodia Site dedicated to linguistics among the Jarai people of Cambodia Article about Cambodia s Tombon Hill Tribe by Antonio Graceffo Ethnic diversity on the Saison River by Antonio Graceffo The Brao and The Elephant by Antonio Graceffo Big Stories Small Towns http bigstories com au town banlung Online documentary about Tampuan villages in Banlung Ratanakiri This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Studies Federal Research Division Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khmer Loeu amp oldid 1139244693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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