Yao people
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Yao people
The Yao nationality (Traditional Chinese: ??, Simplified Chinese: ??, Pinyin: Yáo zú; Vietnamese: ng??i Dao) is a government classification for various minorities in China. They form one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China, where they reside in the mountainous terrain of the southwest and south. They also form one of the 54 ethnic groups officially recognized by Vietnam. In the last census, they numbered 2,637,421 in China, and roughly 470,000 in Vietnam.
HistoryEarly historyOrigins of the Yao can be traced back 2000 years ago starting in Northern China. EmigrationFrom the 15th to 19th Century, the Yao migrated into Thailand, Vietnam and the highlands of Laos. The migration was agitated by the opium trade and as the result of revolts in Southern China during this period. Laotian Civil WarDuring the Laotian Civil War, Yao tribes of Laos had a good relationship with U.S. forces and were dubbed to be an ?efficient friendly force.?[1] This relationship caused the Laotian government to target Yao tribal groups for revenge once the war was over. This triggered further immigration into Thailand, where the tribes would be put into camps along the Thailand-Laos border. Immigration to the United StatesAfter obtaining refugee status from the Thai government and with the help of the United Nations, many Yao people were able to obtain sponsorship into the United States (although many remain in Thailand, mostly in impoverished upland settlements in Northern Thailand). Most Yao have immigrated to the United States have settled along the Western part of the U.S., mainly in Northern California such as Oakland, Oroville, Sacramento, but also in parts of Oregon and Washington State. See Mien American for those identified as Mien. Culture
Yao people of Yuanyang county in Yunnan, China The men and the women cover their heads with a black or red scarf. Some women substitute this scarf by a turban that can adopt different forms. The traditional suit of the women is of bright colors. They also decorate their shirts with decorations made out of silver. In Vietnam, Yao people celebrate many exciting and meaningful festival such as Nh?n chung l?nh (literally: Red rice, Green rice"), Nhiang ch?m ?ao (literally: Jumping Festival)... ReligionThe Yao have a religion based on medieval Chinese Taoism, although many have converted to Buddhism and some to Christianity. Though some people has converted onto other religions, many still remained practicing their traditions. MarriageMarriage is traditionally arranged by go-betweens who represent the boy's family to the girl's parents. If the union is acceptable, a bride-price is negotiated, typically ranging from three to ten silver bars, worth about US$100 each, a partial artifact from the opium trade. The wedding takes place in two installments, first at the bride's house, followed by a procession to the groom's house where a second ceremony occurs. Groups and languagesThere are several distinct groups within the Yao nationality, and they speak several different languages, from different language families:
In addition to China, populations of Yao also live in Northern Vietnam (where they are called Dao), Northern Laos, and Burma. There are around 60,000 Yao in Northern Thailand, where they are one of the six main hill tribes. The lowland-living Lanten of Laos, who speak Kim Mun, and the highland-living Iu Mien of Laos are two different Yao groups. There are also many Yao living in the United States, mainly refugees from the highlands of Laos who speak the Iu Mien language. The Iu Mien do not call themselves "Yao". Not all "Yao" are Iu Mien. A group of 61,000 people on the island of Hainan speak the Yao language Kim Mun, but see themselves as Miao (Hmong), and they are also officially categorized as Miao by the Chinese Government. 139,000 speakers of Kim Mun live in other parts of China (Yunnan and Guangxi), and 174,500 live in Laos and Vietnam.http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=mji The Bunu call themselves Nuox [no13], Buod nuox [po43 no13], Dungb nuox [tu?33 no13] or according to their official name Yaof zuf [?au21 su21]. Only 258,000 of the 439,000 people categorised as Bunu in the 1982 census speak Bunu; 100,000 speak Zhuang, and 181,000 speak Chinese and Bouyei. Written languagesAfter the Eleventh Plenary Session of the Eleventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, the Guangxi Nationality Institute and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences together created a new Yao writing system which was unified with the research results of the Yao-American scholar Yu?sè Hòu (Traditional Chinese: ??·?/Simplified Chinese: ??·?). The writing system was finalized at a one-day conference in 1984 in Ruyan County, Guangdong, which included Chinese professors Pan Chengqian (???/???), Deng Fanggui (???/???), Liu Baoyuan (???/???), Su Defu (???/???) and Yauz Mengh Borngh; Chinese government officials; Mien Americans Sengfo Chao (Zhao Fuming), Kao Chiem Chao (Zhao Youcai), and Chua Meng Chao; David T. LeeUnited States Linguist Herbert C. Purnell, who developed a curriculum and workshop presentations on language learning in East and Southeast Asia; and Yao Seng Deng from Thailand. The US delegation took the new writing system to the Iu Mien community in the United States where it was adopted with a vote of 78 to 7 by a conference of Mien American community leaders.http://iumien.com/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=1&page=2 This writing system based on the Latin alphabet was designed to be pan-dialectal; it distinguishes 30 syllable initials, 121 syllable finals and eight tones. For an example of how the unified alphabet is used to write Iu Mien, a common Yao language, see Iu Mien language. There is a separate written standard for Bunu, since it is from the Hmong/Miao side, rather than the Mien/Yao side, of the Miao-Yao languages family. Officially illiteracy and semi-literacy among the Yao in China still stands at 40.6%, as of 2002.http://www.hh.cn/whwx/yz/2002/2002-10/2002-10-31/1036034262_2 References and sources
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de:Yao es:Yao fr:Yao (ethnie) it:Yao (popolo) nl:Yao (volk) ja:??? nov:Yaum pl:Yao ru:?? (?????) sh:Yao (azijski narod) vi:Ng??i Dao zh:?? Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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