Baggara

The Baggara or Baqqarah are a nomadic Bedouin people inhabiting the Darfur region of western Sudan and Chad. They are cattle-herders, migrating seasonally between grazing lands in the wet season and river areas in the dry season. They are mostly Arabic speaking Muslims, thought to be the descendants of Arab tribes who settled the region during the Middle Ages. Their name is a term widely used in western Sudan for Arab pastoralists, meaning literally "cattle herder." The Baggaras' pastoral lifestyle has led to conflict with the sedentary African farmers of the region concerning access to water and grazing land. This has been the source of ethnic tensions for many years, culminating in the bloody Darfur conflict which began in 2003. The Baggara include several tribes, such as the Rizeigat, Taisha,Habbaniya in Darfur and Misseiria and the Humur and Hawazma in Kordofan. The Misseiria of Jebel Mun speak a Nilo-Saharan language, Tama (also called Miisiirii.)
   

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
robert thomson
1996
rob andrews
minuet in g for keyboard (mozart)
ipower dash
friends committee on national legislation
provenal literature
some girls wander by mistake
darren morgan
naquadah
kerry earnhardt
det centrale personregister
the lightning and the sun
nasser hussain
air safety
a slight case of overbombing
quantum phase transition
annexation party of british columbia
indianapolis raceway park
blood axis
earth laid upon a corpse
baseball digest
jamshetji tata
robert, king of france
horse fly
disassociate
near video on demand
homechoice
central bohemian region
dover international speedway
whale song
nashville superspeedway
pguilhan
xinxiang
victor (town), new york
quantum explosion dynamo
aiel
karen jean meech
kender
secure operating system
azithromycin
canada dry
pontiac fiero
united states automobile club