Afar people

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Afar
Total population

over 1,000,000

Regions with significant populations
Ethiopia, Djibouti, Eritrea
Language(s)
Afar
Religion(s)
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Oromo, Sidama, Somalis, Agaw and Beja

Afar (Afar alphabet Qafár, Ge'ez ዐፋር ʿāfār, Amh. translit. āfār, also spelled አፋር) are an ethnic group who reside principally in the Danakil Desert in the Afar Region of Ethiopia and in Eritrea and Djibouti. They are sometimes called Danakil, a name used specifically to refer to northern Afars, while southern Afars can be called "Adel" (also transliterated as Adal), similar to the former Adal Sultanate.

Contents

The Afar make up about a third of the population of Djibouti, and are one of the nine recognised ethnic divisions (kililoch) of Ethiopia. The Afar language (Cushitic) is spoken in the Afar Region of Ethiopia, eastern Eritrea, and Djibouti, but as the Afar are traditionally nomadic herders, they may be found further afield.

Although, as with most peoples, some Afar have migrated to cities and adopted "Western" or cosmopolitan ways of life, the majority have always been nomadic pastoralists, raising goats, sheep and cattle in the desert. During the dry season most move to, and camp on, the banks of the Awash River. Camels make up the most common means of transport as they move from watering hole to watering hole. Most move to higher ground with the arrival of the November rainy season to avoid flooding and mosquitos. An Afar tent house is known as an 'ari' and made of sticks covered with mats, beds of mats raised on sticks are used. The 'burra', or camp, consists of two or more ari, and is the responsibility of the women. The Afar supplement their diet of milk and meat by selling salt that they dig from the desert along with milk and animal hides at markets in Senbete and Bati.

Traditionally the society is ruled by sultanates made up of several villages, headed by a 'dardar'.

Afar are organised into clan families, and into classes -- asaimara ('reds') who are the dominant class politically, and the adoimara ('whites') who are a working class. It is a patrilineal society, with men inheriting strength of character from their fathers, but physical characteristics like height, and some spiritual characteristics, from the mother.[citation needed] Circumcision is practiced for both boys and, controversially, girls. A boy is judged for his bravery upon bearing the pain of circumcision, and is then allowed to marry the girl of his choice, though preferably someone from his own ethnic group, and ideally a cousin.

The Afar have a strong relationship with their environment and its wildlife, sharing land and resources with animals and doing them no harm. It is this tendency that is largely responsible for the preservation of the critically endangered African wild ass (Equus africanus), which has become extinct in more vulnerable environments.

The Afar culture includes unique items of clothing.

These include:

  • When married, women traditionally wear a black headscarf called a 'shash' or 'mushal'.
  • For men and women, the main article of clothing is the 'sanafil', a waistcloth. Women's are dyed brown (although today many women adopt multi-coloured sanafil) while men's are undyed.

The Afar began to convert to Islam in the 10th century after contact with Arabs. The brand of Islam they practice is heavily syncretic and includes many elements of their older, indigenous religion (focused on the Sky God).

The ancestors of the Afar settled farm land in the Ethiopian highlands some time before AD 1000 and primarily raised livestock. Some time after this they began a gradual transition to a more nomadic lifestyle and moved to the area they currently occupy. Since then they have been involved in many conflicts with bordering tribes and peoples.

The earliest surviving written mention of the Afar was in the 13th century by the Arab writer ibn Sa'id, who reported that they lived in the area from around the port of Suakin as far south as Mandeb, near Zeila.[1] They are mentioned intermitently in Ethiopian records, first as helping Emperor Amda Seyon in a campaign beyond the Awash River, then over a century later when they assisted Emperor Baeda Maryam when he campaigned against their neighbors the Dobea.[2] In the late 17th century, the Aussa Sultanate had emerged, which became the first amongst equals of the Afar rulers.

In 1975 the Afar Liberation Front (ALF) began in Ethiopia after an unsuccessful rebellion led by a former Afar sultan. The Derg established the Autonomous Region of Assab (now called Aseb and located in Eritrea), although low level insurrection continued until the early 1990. In Djibouti, a similar movement simmered throughout the 1980s, eventually culminating in the Afar Insurgency in 1991.

  1. ^ Richard Pankhurst, The Ethiopian Borderlands (Lawrenceville: Red Sea Press, 1997), p. 60
  2. ^ Pankhurst, Borderlands, pp. 61-67, 106f.

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