The Luo (also spelled Lwo)are an ethnic linguistic group located in an area that stretches from Southern Sudan, in Ethiopia (Anuak) through northern Uganda and eastern Congo (DRC), into western Kenya, and ending in the upper tip of Tanzania. These people speak an Eastern Sudanic (Nilotic) language, a branch of the Nilo-Saharan language family. According to various classification schemes, they are sometimes referred to as River-Lake Nilotes or Western Nilotes, which also includes the Dinka-Nuer language group. People who speak Luo languages include the Shilluk, Anuak, Acholi, Lango, Palwo, Alur, Padhola, Joluo (Kenyan and Tanzanian Luo), Bor, and Kumam.
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Origins in Sudan
According to ethnologists, linguists and their oral history, the Luo are part of the Nilotic group of tribes who separated from the East Sudanic family of tribes about 3000 BCE.[citation needed] Bethwell Ogot places the area of origin of the Luo in Southern Sudan.[1]
More than eight centuries ago, the Luo peoples occupied the area that now lies in eastern Bahr el Ghazal in present day Southern Sudan. The reason for their dispersion from this area is not known for certain, though it is widely believed to have been the Arab Conquest. Internal contradictions or population explosion could have driven them from this region. The Luo moved to nearly all the countries neighbouring Sudan, resulting in many separate groups with variation in language and tradition as each group moved further away from their kin.
A branch of the Luo, the Shilluk (or Chollo) nation, comprising more than one hundred clans and sub-tribes, was founded by a chief named Nyikango sometime in the middle of the 15th century. They evolved a nation with a feudal-style system. Nyikango and his nation moved northward along the Nile (towards Kush and Rip) to re-conquer and settle the land their ancestors had lost to the Arabs and Europeans. The rest of the Luo groups rejected Nyikango's idea and kept a south and westwards migration.
Ethiopia
The Anuak are a Luo people whose villages are scattered along the banks and rivers of southwestern area of Ethiopia, with others living directly across the border in southern Sudan. The name of this people is also spelled Anyuak, Agnwak, and Anywaa.
The Anuak who live in the lowlands of Gambela are also distinguished by the color of their skin and considered to be black Africans as opposed to most other Ethiopians living in the highlands who are of lighter color.
There has been overt racial discrimination and marginalization by this government and by other ethnicities based on skin color. It has affected the Anuak’s access to education, health care and other basic services as well as limiting opportunities for development of the area.
The Anuak of Sudan live in a grassy region that is flat and virtually treeless. During the rainy season, this area floods, so that much of it becomes swampland with various channels of deep water running through it.
Uganda
Around 1500, a small group of Luo known as the Biito-Luo led by a Chief called Labongo whose full title became Isingoma Labongo Rukidi (sometimes named as Mpuga Rukidi), encountered Bantu-speaking peoples living in the area of Bunyoro. These Luo settled with the Bantu and established the Babiito dynasty, replacing the Bachwezi dynasty of the Empire of Kitara. Labongo, the first in the line of the Babiito kings of Bunyoro-Kitara, was according to Bunyoro legend the twin brother of Kato Kimera, the first king of Buganda. These Luo were assimilated by the Bantu, and they lost their language and culture.
Later in the 16th century, other Luo-speaking people moved to the area that encompasses present day Southern Sudan, Northern Uganda and North-Eastern Congo (DRC) – forming the Alur, Jonam and Acholi. Conflicts developed when they encountered the Lango who had been living in the area north of Lake Kyoga. Lango also speak a Luo language, but their origins are somewhat obscure. It is generally held that they are an Eastern Nilotic Ateker people who originated in Ethiopia around A.D. 1600, adopting the Luo language of their Acholi neighbours. Kumam, who live the same area, also speak a Luo language, but belong to the Ateker group along with the Teso and Karamojong.
Between the middle of the 16th century and the beginning of the 17th century, some Luo groups proceeded eastwards. One group called Padhola (or Jopadhola - people of Adhola), led by a chief called Adhola, settled in Budama in Eastern Uganda. They settled in a thickly forested area as a defence against attacks from Bantu neighbours who had already settled there. This self-imposed isolation helped them maintain their language and culture amidst Bantu and Ateker communities.
Kenya and Tanzania
Between about 1500 and 1800, other Luo groups crossed into present-day Kenya and eventually into present-day Tanzania. They inhabited the area on the banks of Lake Victoria. According to the Joluo, a warrior chief named Ramogi Ajwang led them into present-day Kenya about 500 years ago.
As in Uganda, some non-Luo people in Kenya have adopted Luo languages. A majority of the Bantu Suba people in Kenya speak Dholuo (albeit mostly as a second language).
The Luo in Kenya, who call themselves Joluo (aka Jaluo, "people of Luo"), are the third largest community in Kenya after the Kikuyu and Luhya. In 1994 their population was estimated to be 3,185,000 [1]. In Tanzania they numbered (in 2001) an estimated 280,000 [2]. The Luo in Kenya and Tanzania call their language Dholuo, which is mutually intelligible with the languages of the Lango, Kumam and Padhola of Uganda, Acholi of Uganda and Sudan and Alur of Uganda and Congo.
Luo sub-groups
This includes peoples who share Luo ancestry and/or speak a Luo language.
- Shilluk (Sudan)
- Pari (Sudan)
- Thur (Sudan)
- Alur (Uganda and DRC)
- Acholi (Sudan and Uganda)
- Lango (Uganda)
- Kumam (Uganda)
- Jopadhola (Uganda)
- JoLuo (Kenya and Tanzania)
- Jo-Luo or Jurchol (Sudan)
- Anuak (Ethiopia, Sudan)
- Maban (Suda)
- Funj (Sudan)
- Jumjum (Sudan)
- Blanda Boore (Sudan)
- Jonam (Uganda)
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This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Internationally notable Luo people
- Barack Obama, U.S. president (American)
- Barack Obama, Sr., father of U.S. President
- Raila Amolo Odinga - Prime Minister of Kenya, Leader of the Orange Democratic Movement Party (Kenyan).
- Milton Obote, Former Ugandan Prime Minister and President of Uganda (Ugandan)
- Tito Okello, Former President of Uganda and Army Commander-Deceased (Ugandan)
- Bazilio Olara-Okello, Former president of Uganda-Deceased (Ugandan)
- Janani Luwum, Former Archbishop of the Church of Uganda (Ugandan)
- Tom Mboya - Politician, assassinated in 1969 (Kenyan)
- George Ramogi - Musician (Kenyan)
- Joseph Kony, Leader of the Lord's Resistance Army. Notorious rebel group in Uganda(Ugandan)
- Okello Oculi, Novelist, Poet, and Chronicler (Ugandan)
- Jaramogi Oginga Odinga - First Vice President of Independent Kenya (Kenyan)
- Ramogi Achieng' Oneko, Freedom fighter Veteran (Kenyan)
- Olara Otunnu, Former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict (Ugandan)
- Robert Ouko - Kenyan Foreign Minister, murdered in 1990 (Kenyan)
- Okot p'Bitek, poet and author of the Song of Lawino (Ugandan)
- Ayub Ogada, Singer, Composer and Performer on the nyatiti, the Nilotic lyre of Kenya (Kenyan)
- Arch Bishop Luke Orombi The current Archbishop of the church of Uganda (Uganda)
Notes
- ^ "History of the Southern Luo: Volume 1 Migration and Settlement"
References
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This article's citation style may be unclear. The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation, footnoting, or external linking. (September 2009) |
- Re-introducing the "People Without History"
- Towards a Human Rights Approach to Citizenship and Nationallity Struggles in Africa
- The making of the Shilluk kingdom, A socio-political synopsis
- About Kenya
- The Luo
- Ogot, Bethwell A., History of the Southern Luo: Volume I, Migration and Settlement, 1500-1900, (Series: Peoples of East Africa), East African Publishing House, Nairobi, 1967
- Johnson D., History and Prophecy among the Nuer of Southern Sudan, PhD Thesis, UCLA, 1980
- Deng F.M. African of Two Worlds; the Dinka in Afro-Arab Sudan, Khartoum, 1978
- History of the Anuak to 1956, by Professor Emeritus - Robert O. Collins.
- The pride of a people: Barack Obama, the ‘LUO’, by Philip Ochieng, Nation Media Group, January, 2009.
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