Rade people

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Rhade
Degar
The young child people of Ede.jpg
Rade girls in folk costume
Total population
 Vietnam 398,671 (2019)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Vietnam, Cambodia
Languages
RadeVietnamese
Religion
ChristianityAnimism

The Rhade or Ede (Rade language: Ānāk Dāgār / Degar people) are an Austronesian ethnic group of southern Vietnam (population 398,671 in 2019).

Etymology[]

The Rhade is old French inscription of Dāgār in the Rade language what was fully spelling as Ānāk Dāgār (Degar people). Ānāk Dāgār came from the Ānāk Kudāyā-Nāgār what means "Kudayanagar ethnic groups" or the "descendants of bok Kauṇḍinya and bia Nagar". Inside, "Kauṇḍinya"[2] derived of Kampuchea's name and "Nagar" the is the biggest goddess of Cham people. So that, Rhade people even so Vietnamese Central Highlands's ethnic groups was between the culture of Champa and Cambodia. At the same, they was landlocked area. So sometimes the international term Degar is used for all of Vietnamese Central Highlands groups as well.

According to French scholars of Southeast Asian studies, the character Monk Kauṇḍinya symbolized the Indian cultural sphere affected of classical Southeast Asia through Po Nagar (Champa), Neang Neak (Kampuchea), Nang Khosop (Laos), Mae Khwan-khao (Thailand). This legend was popular with the Vietnamese Central Highlands's ethnic groups and within ethnic groups of Southeast Asia which are within the Indian cultural sphere.

Language[]

A Rade longhouse.

The Rade language is one of the Chamic languages, a subfamily of the Malayo-Polynesian branch of the Austronesian language family. Other Cham languages are spoken in central Vietnam and in Aceh, Sumatra; The Cham are more distantly related to the Malayic languages of Indonesia, Malaysia and Madagascar and to the Philippine languages.

The Cham developed a writing system developed on the basis of the Latin script in the 1920s.

A kind of bamboo bag, created by mythological character Y Rit and has a form of pơ lang flower's sepal.

Kinship and social structure[]

The Rade practice matrilineal descent. Descent is traced through the female line, and family property is in the hands of and inherited from women. The basic kinship unit is the matrilineage; these are grouped into higher-level matrilineal sibs (matrisibs). The Rade are further divided into two phratries.[3]

The women of a matrilineage and their spouses and children live together in a longhouse. The lineage holds corporate property such as paddy land, cattle, gongs, and jars; these are held by the senior female of the matrilineage. The lineage also engages in the farming of common lands and maintenance of the longhouse. The head of the longhouse itself is a man, with the position most commonly inherited by the spouse of the daughter or sister-in-law of the previous longhouse head.[4]

Matrilineages and matrisibs are exogamous, with both sexual intercourse and marriage prohibited. The phratries also impose some restrictions on marriage. Couples violating these restrictions must sacrifice a buffalo, though violating phratry restrictions is generally not seen as being as serious, and require only the sacrifice of a pig. Residence is matrilocal.[5]

Rade villages were traditionally autonomous and governed by an oligarchy of leading families. Some villages became locally dominant, but none formed any larger political structures.[6]

Literature[]

Epic[]

Epics (Rade language: klei khan), such as Klei khan Y Dam San, , , , etc. are told by epic tellers (Rade language: po khan) next to the fire, through the night.

Music[]

Ede music is very diverse and playing music is the way that Ede people communicate to both other people, and according to their beliefs, God (Ede language: yang).

Musical instruments[]

The Đinh vuốt, a vertical flute used by the Rade people
  • Gong: There are several sets of gongs used. The knah gong set is made up of six suspended gongs :knah, hlinang or knah hliang, mdu khơk or knah khơk, hluê khơk or mong, hluê hliang, hluê khơk điêt or k'khiêt, knah di, and the largest one is ching sar; as well as two bossed gongs: mđũ and ana (there is also h'gor drum). The others are: chinh k'ram. Rade gong culture has been recognized by UNESCO as one of the Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity.
  • Flute (Ede language: đing): đing năm, ky pah, đing tak ta (or đing buốt klé), đing buốt tút, đing buốt trok, đing rinh, đing téc, đinh tút.
  • String instrument: brố or brok zither,[7] goong.
  • Others: chinh đing aráp, gông kram, đing pah, đing ktuk, đing pâng, kni.

Style of music[]

  • Kư- ứt: a kind of telling the epic accompanied with đing buốt trok.
  • Ayray: a kind of love songs accompanied with đing năm.

Architecture[]

A typical house of Rade people is the longhouse made of bamboo and wood. The longhouse's length is measured by the number of collar beams (Rade language: de). Once a girl living in the house gets married, the house is lengthened by one compartment, as the matrilocal aspect of Rade marriage means that the husband will live in his wife's house. The orientation of buildings are North-South.

The longhouse's space is divided into two parts: Gah part's area makes up 1/3- 2/3 the total area is considered as the living room and the other part includes bedrooms. There are two doors: the front door is for men, the back door is for women and two stairs: male stair and female stair.

Longhouses can be 100 meters long and house from three to nine families. A traditional description of the size of the longhouse is: "The house is as long as the gong's echo".

Vietnam War[]

During the Vietnam War, American and South Vietnamese military advisers feared that the Viet Cong would convert Rhade tribesman in the Đắk Lắk Province to their support. They instituted a program by which American Special Forces sought to train the Rhade in "village self-defense programs."[8] These self-defense programs were highly controversial.

According to William Duiker, United States Foreign Officer and East-Asian professor, the training efforts, called "Civilian Irregular Defense Groups" (CIDG), were plagued with problems of arbitrary authority on the part of Vietnamese authorities and officers. During the summer of 1964, "...Vietnamese arrogance led immediately to problems, and in September a serious revolt broke out among the Rhadé [sic] tribesmen in Ban Me Thout. Only with the aid of U.S. advisers was the crisis defused."[9]

The Rade made up a portion of the United States' Montagnard allies, and after the war some fled to the United States, mainly residing in North Carolina.[10]

Notable Rade people[]

Gallery[]

Customary law[]

L. Sabatier has collected 236 articles. The highest number of articles is of marriage and family matter, followed by property ownership and relationship between the head of villages and villagers. The main principles are that communal nature and equality are under guarantee. Judges are called khoa phat kdi.

References[]

  1. ^ "Report on Results of the 2019 Census". General Statistics Office of Vietnam. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  2. ^ Bahnar language spelled as Bok Keidei what means of YHWH for South Vietnamese protestantist men.
  3. ^ Lebar p. 253
  4. ^ Lebar p. 253
  5. ^ Lebar, p. 253
  6. ^ Lebar, p. 254
  7. ^ Patrick Kersale. "Fretted zither".
  8. ^ Kelly 6-7
  9. ^ William Duiker (1981). The Communist Road to Power in Vietnam (2 ed.). Westview Press. p. 246.
  10. ^ "MONTAGNARDS - Their History and Culture". Cultural Orientation Resource Center. Retrieved 28 November 2010.

Works cited[]

External links[]

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