Lao people

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Lao

Khene player in Isan
Total population

28 million (est.)

Regions with significant populations
Thailand:
   19 million (Isan)

2 million (Lao)
Laos:
   4 million
USA:
   206,000
Vietnam:
   169,000
Cambodia:
   85,000
France:
   50,000
Myanmar:
   25,000
Canada:
   17,000
Australia:
   14,000
Argentina:
   2,000

Language(s)
Lao, Isan, Thai and English
Religion(s)
Predominantly Theravada Buddhist, with strong animist tradition
Related ethnic groups
Thais and other Tai ethnic groups

The Lao are an ethnic group of Southeast Asia. The vast majority of Lao people live in either Laos (approximately 4 million) or Thailand (approximately 19 million, 18.7 million Isan Lao and 0.4 million immigrant Lao). The Lao of Thailand are concentrated in the Isan region, although there are many migrant workers from Isan working in other parts of the country, especially in Bangkok. The Lao speak various closely related dialects of Lao and Isan, which are in turn often considered to be a single language. Many Lao speakers in Thailand prefer the term Isan to Lao, but there remain many close cultural bonds with the Lao people.

Contents

The history of the Lao is primarily the history of Laos and the history of Isan. These histories diverged in the 19th century, when the defeat of Vientiane's rebellion against Siam in 1827 led to large-scale population transfers from modern Laos to Isan and to some cities in Central Thailand including Bangkok, leaving Laos itself underpopulated. The breach was formalised by the Franco-Siamese treaties of 1893 and 1904, which made Isan and Laos the frontier between Siam and French Indochina.

Since then, both Thailand and Laos have carried out sustained campaigns to transform themselves into nation states centred on the Thai and Lao people respectively. In Isan this has meant the strengthening of the people's loyalties to Thailand, a process known as "Thaification". Many younger people in particular prefer to consider themselves Isan rather than Lao. "Isan", literally meaning "northeast" implies belonging to Thailand, while "Lao" connotes instead a loyalty to Laos. In Laos, by contrast, the same process has resulted in the promotion of the Lao language and culture as the national language and culture.

There are around 3.6 million Lao in Laos, constituting approximately 68% of the population (the remainder are largely hill tribe people). The ethnic Lao of Laos form the bulk of the Lao Loum ("Lowland Laotians"). The Lao make up around a third of the population of Thailand: the main concentrations are in Isan (about 15 million people) and in Bangkok (where there are thought to be at least one million migrant Lao from Isan). There are other populations of ethnic Lao throughout Central Thailand, but these have been increasingly incorporated into the general Thai population. Small Lao communities exist in Cambodia, residing primarily in the former Lao territory of Stung Treng (Xieng Teng in Lao), and Vietnam. There are also substantial, unknown numbers of Lao overseas perhaps as many as 500,000 people. Most of the latter were refugees from Laos who fled during the Second Indochina War from the Pathet Lao. Places of asylum for the Lao refugees are the United States, France, Japan, Australia, Germany, Canada, Singapore, and the United Kingdom; many also live in Argentina, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Switzerland and Myanmar.

It bears noting that the last official census conducted in Siam (later Thailand) in which "Lao" was a unique ethnic category showed almost half the population being "Lao" (though the category also included the Northern Thais). As part of Thaification, the "Lao" category was dropped and today it is unclear what percent of the population of Thailand is of Lao origin.[citation needed]

The 2000 United States census figure of 168,707 Laotians and the 2005 figure of 200,000 exclude Hmong, but include Mien, Thai Dam, Khmu and other groups in addition to the Lao, though these groups are very small and the Lao are the vast majority. The precise figure for the Lao ethnic group is therefore unknown.

The Lao speak Lao and Isan. Each of these exists in various dialects. The Vientiane dialect has been adopted as the standard in Laos; there is no standard dialect of Isan, but most of its dialects are mutually comprehensible with Vientiane Lao. Most of the differences between Lao and Isan are due either to the greater use of Thai loan words in Isan, and to the adoption of different neologisms for concepts introduced since the division of Laos and Isan in the late 19th century (e.g. "motorcycle" is lot motasai in Isan, but lot jak in Lao).

Isan and Laos are both poor economically. The most common lifestyle is that of subsistence farming, with few major urban centres.

Laos and Isan share the Theravada Buddhist religion. The indigenous cuisines of Laos and Isan are very similar, placing much emphasis on fish sauce, chilli and sticky rice. However, Lao cuisine has also absorbed some French and substantial Vietnamese elements, while the greater poverty of the rural areas of Laos has led to a more restricted diet than in most of Isan.

Laos and Isan share the mor lam style of folk music. Since the 1980s mor lam from Isan has been a major cultural influence on Laos, as has Thai television.

There is some debate as to whether the various subdivisions of the Lao people are to be considered separate ethnic groups from one another. The answer depends largely on the definition of ethnic group used to make the distinctions, as the subdivisions overlap greatly in language and culture. The following are a list of Lao people who are either considered by scholars, or who consider themselves, to be separate subdivisions of the greater Lao ethnic group:[1]

Also closely related to the Lao, but more clearly distinct are the Phu Thai[4][1] and the Nyaw.[1] These ethnic groups, along with the Lao, form the Lao-Phu Thai ethnic subclade of the nuclear Tai clade of the Tai peoples.

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