• Africa,  African Great Lakes,  The Suri people

    The Suri people

    The Suri people, indigenous to southwestern Ethiopia and parts of South Sudan, are a distinct ethnic group renowned for their rich cultural traditions and complex history. They are a collective term for three subgroups: the Chai, Timaga, and Baale, who inhabit the Suri woreda in Ethiopia and extend into South Sudan. These groups speak different languages within the South East Surmic branch of the Nilo-Saharan language family, highlighting their linguistic diversity. The Suri are primarily agro-pastoralists, living in semi-arid environments characterized by plains, valleys, and foothills. Their traditional lifestyle is deeply rooted in agriculture and cattle herding, with stick fighting, known as saginé, serving as a crucial rite of passage…