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  2. Hamar people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamar_people

    The boy must run back and forth twice across the backs of a row of bulls or castrated steers, and is ridiculed if he fails. [ 3 ] The men of the tribe will often style their hair with clay, creating a sculpture of sorts that is styled with various pigments, mostly red and white, and in smoothing the clay they create very small protruding tube ...

  3. Daasanach people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daasanach_people

    Daasanach boys. The Daasanach are a primarily agropastoral people; they grow sorghum, maize, pumpkins and beans when the Omo river and its delta floods. Otherwise the Daasanach rely on their goats and cattle which give them milk, and are slaughtered in the dry season for meat and hides. Sorghum is cooked with water into a porridge eaten with a ...

  4. Gurage people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gurage_people

    The Gurage (/ ɡ ʊəˈr ɑː ɡ eɪ /, [5] Gurage: ጉራጌ, ቤተ-ጉራጌ) are a Semitic-speaking ethnic group inhabiting Ethiopia. [2] They inhabit the Gurage Zone and East Gurage Zone, a fertile, semi-mountainous region in Central Ethiopia Regional State, about 125 kilometers southwest of Addis Ababa, bordering the Awash River in the north, the Gibe River, a tributary of the Omo River ...

  5. Mursi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mursi_people

    Young women in Mago NP Mouthpiece plate of Morsi tribe. Like many agro-pastoralists in East Africa, the Mursi believe that they experience a force greater than themselves, which they call Tumwi. [1] [13] This is usually located in the Sky, although sometimes Tumwi manifests itself as a thing of the sky (ahi a tumwin), such as a rainbow or a ...

  6. Circumcision in Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumcision_in_Africa

    Circumcision in Africa, and the rites of initiation in Africa, as well as "the frequent resemblance between details of ceremonial procedure in areas thousands of kilometres apart, indicate that the circumcision ritual has an old tradition behind it and in its present form is the result of a long process of development."

  7. Irob people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irob_people

    Irob boys in Alitena.. The capital (traditional center) of Irob is Alitena.Irobs trace their lineage to one man, Summe, son of Neguse Worede-Mehret, who according to the Irob oral history, migrated to the Irobland from Tsira'e in Kilite Awla'elo, a part of Tigray, about 700 years ago.

  8. Kambaata people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kambaata_people

    According to Ethiopian statistics, the population of the Kambaata people was 5, 627,565, [3] of which 90.89% live in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region. Almost one in five – 18.5% – live in urban areas. [4] The Kambaata people speak the Kambaata language, a Cushitic language.

  9. Sidama people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidama_people

    The Sidama people number 3.81 million (4.01% of the national population), of whom 149,480 are urban inhabitants, the fifth most populous ethnic group in Ethiopia. [8] Their language is called Sidaamu-Afoo, which according to the 1994 national census was the mother language of 99.5% of them. [9]