The Tau Taa Wana (sometimes Tau Ta'a Wana or Tao Taa Wana) is a sub-group of the numerous people who speak variants of the Ta'a or Pamona language of Eastern Central Sulawesi, Indonesia.[1] The Tau Taa Wana people referred to themselves as Tao Taa, as in tao means "people" and taa means "not". But most outsiders refers them as To Wana which means "people in the forest" because of their social image as a community residing in forests.[2]
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Indonesia (Central Sulawesi) | |
Languages | |
Pamona language (Waa dialect), Indonesian language | |
Religion | |
Ancestral worship (predominantly), Christianity, Islam | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Pamona people |
The Tau Taa Wana people are an indigenous tribe who live in small villages or lipu's around the Bulang and Bongka River. Since the year 2000, the Wana have implemented rotational farming as a means of maintaining themselves. Before this they lived as a nomadic tribe.[3]
The Tau Taa Wana are currently under threat. This is mainly constituted over land trouble. Since 1994 incursions from the government of Indonesia's transmigration program have affected their traditional ways of life.[4] Yayasan Merah Putih is a non-profit, NGO in Palu that has been a supporter of Wana rights since 1999 and has also introduced sekolah lipu's or village schools in order to help the Tau Taa Wana community.[5]
References
edit- ^ http://www.forestpeoples.org/documents/asia_pacific/indonesia_wana_visit_mc_mar09_eng.pdf[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Ramadhanil Pitopang (2012). "Ethnoecological System of Tao Taa Wana Tribe In The Morowali Nature Reserve, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia". Proc. Soc. Indon. Biodiv. Inter. Con. academia.edu. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
- ^ Jane Monnig Atkinson, 1989, The Art and Politics of Wana Shamanship, University of California Press, Berkeley.
- ^ http://www.forestpeoples.org/documents/asia_pacific/indonesia_wana_visit_mc_mar09_eng.pdf[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Home". ymp.or.id.
Further reading
edit- Marcus Colchester (2009), A Visit To The Land Of The Wana: A Forest People Of Indonesia (PDF), Forest Peoples Programme
External links
edit- https://web.archive.org/web/20100529002842/http://www.ymp.or.id/english/ Official website in English