Mursi people
Mursi people | |
---|---|
Tuma |
Mursi ( bee Mun kamani bɛ ni booni bɛ maŋ sham)[1][2] nyɛla ban yina Surmic zuliya ban be tiŋyuli booni Ethiopia ni na. Tuuli bɛ daa nyɛla ban be Debub Omo Zone din be Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region, ban bɛhigu shee nyɛ din miri South Sudan. Yuuni 2007 ban maani salo kalinli laasabu nim wuhiya ni bɛ daadam biɛlim kalinli daa nyɛla din paagi Tuhi-pini yini ni kɔbisinu Mursi, ka bɛ ninvuɣu kɔbisinii ni pihinahi ni anii nyɛ ban be fandi ni ban vaabu yiɣisi 92.25% kɔbigi puuni n be Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region (SNNPR).[3]
Bɛ nyɛla zɔya ni gili shabi niŋ sunsuuni ni mɔɣili din nyɛ Omo River mini di Mago, Mursi ŋɔ yinsi n nyɛ din kuli waligi di ko n ʒin ʒia bɛ tingbanni maani. Bɛ yabaɣilinsi nim n nyɛ Aari, ni Banna, ni Mekan, ni Karo, ni Kwegu, ni Nyangatom n ti pahi Suri. Bɛ nyɛla Ethopia gomdanti ni pu shɛbi ka bɛ nyɛ Me'en mini Kwegu .[4]
Bɛ bala
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Mursi nim nyɛla ban yari Mursi language balli ka di nyɛ bɛ mother tongue.[5][6] Di nyɛla din pahi Surmic language family puuni. Mursi nyɛla ban mini zuliya nim kamani Me'en, Suri, Kwegu, ni bali shabi be South Sudan kamani Murle, Didinga, Tennet n ti pahi Boyanim ŋmani taba. Yuuni 1994 puuni, ban maani daadama nim kalinli laasabu nyɛla ban daa yɛli ni ninvuɣu tusaata ni kɔbigi ni pihiyɔbu ni ata nyɛla bɛ ni daa nyɛ shabi ka bɛ nyɛ Mursi n be SNNPR la nyɛla ban daa yari Mursi balli ka di nyɛ bɛ tuuli balli, amaa, ninvuɣu pihita ni yini nyɛ ban daa yarili ka di nyɛla bɛ bɔhinli mi.[7].[8][9]
Religion and culture
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Life cycles
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Bɛ daadiini mini bɛ Kaya
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]

Omo National Park
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Gibe III Dam
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Kundivihira
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- ↑ Turton, David (1973). The Social Organisation of the Mursi: A Pastoral Tribe of the Lower Omo Valley, South West Ethiopia. London School of Economics: PhD Thesis.
- ↑ Introducing the Mursi. University of Oxford.
- ↑ 2007 Ethiopian census, first draft, Ethiopian Central Statistical Agency (accessed 6 May 2009)
- ↑ Neighbours. Department of International Development, University of Oxford.
- ↑ Bende, M. Lionel (1976). The Non-Semitic Languages of Ethiopia. pp. 533–61.
- ↑ Yigezu, Moges (2005). "Latin Based Mursi Orthography". ELRC Working Papers, Ethiopian Languages Research Center, Addis Ababa University 1 (2): 242–57.
- ↑ 1994 Population and Housing Census of Ethiopia: Results for Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples' Region, Vol. 1, part 1 Archived 2008-11-19 at the Wayback Machine, Tables 2.11, 2.14, 2.17
- ↑ "Mursi (tugo)", Mursi Online website (accessed 15 November 2009)
- ↑ Worku, Firew Girma (2021). A Grammar of Mursi: A Nilo-Saharan Language of Ethiopia. Brill: Leiden. doi:10.1163/9789004449916.
Karimbu nim yaha
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- ( yuuni 2000) Pancorbo, Luis: "Los labios del río Omo" en "Tiempo de África", pp. 176–190. Laertes. Barcelona. ISBN 84-7584-438-3
- ( yuuni 2007) Silvester, Hans: Les Habits de la Nature Editions de la Martinière ISBN 978-2732458205
External links
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]![]() |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mursi people. |
- Mursi Online
- People of Africa
- The Mursi Language
- National Geographic Photo Gallery
- Mursi in danger of denial of access or displacement
- An anthropologist's comments on the Mursi and the Omo Park situation (also available as a Word file)
- African Parks Foundation
- Mursi Online page on the Mursi 'Surmic' language (tugo)
- Full-text documents and journal articles about the Mursi (Forced Migration Online, Digital Library)
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9PUSPE_7ek8&t=4s Walking With The Mursi is an adventure/travel documentary spanning four continents as David Willing hikes 500 km across Ethiopia's remote Omo Valley with Mursi tribes.