Sara people

Sara
A Sara woman
Total population
~6 million
Regions with significant populations
Chad, Central African Republic, and South Sudan
 Chad5,311,303 (30.5%)[1]
 Central African Republic423,281 (7.9%)[2]
Languages
Sara languages, French
Religion
Christianity, Sara animism (traditional African religion), Islam
Related ethnic groups
Bilala people and other Central Sudanic peoples

The Sara people, sometimes referred to as the Kaba or Sara-Kaba[citation needed], are a Central Sudanic ethnic group native to southern Chad, the northwestern areas of the Central African Republic, and the southern border of South Sudan.[3] They speak the Sara languages which are a part of the Central Sudanic language family.[4] They are also the largest ethnic group in Chad.[5][6]

Sara oral histories add further details about the people. In summary, the Sara are mostly animists (veneration of nature), with a social order made up of several patrilineal clans formerly united into a single polity with a national language, national identity, and national religion. Many Sara people have retained their ethnic religion, but some have converted to Christianity and Islam.[7]

  1. ^ "Chad". Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  2. ^ "Central African Republic". Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  3. ^ Sara people, Encyclopædia Britannica
  4. ^ Sara languages, Ethnologue
  5. ^ Chad: Society and People, CIA Factbook, US Government
  6. ^ Christine Zuchora-Walske (2009). Chad in Pictures. Twenty-First Century. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-57505-956-3.
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference Olson1996p510 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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