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{{Short description|Caste group of Somali people}} | |||
{{for|the racehorse|Yibir (horse)}} | |||
{{Infobox ethnic group | |||
| group = '''Yibir''' '''Yebir''' | |||
| image = | |||
| popplace = {{flagcountry|Somalia}} {{flagcountry|Somaliland}} | |||
| langs = ], ] | |||
| rels = ] (Sunni) ] | |||
| related_groups = | |||
| related-c = ] | |||
}} | |||
The '''Yibir''', also referred to as the '''Yibbir''', the '''Yebir''', or the '''Yibro''', are a caste of ].<ref name="Lewis1999v">{{cite book|last1=Lewis|first1=I. M.|title=A Pastoral Democracy: A Study of Pastoralism and Politics Among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa|date=1999|publisher=James Currey Publishers|isbn=0852552807|pages=13–14|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eK6SBJIckIsC&pg=PA11|access-date=14 November 2016}}</ref><ref name="Levine2014p62">{{cite book|author=Donald N. Levine|title=Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NZHeBQAAQBAJ |year=2014|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-22967-6|pages=62, 195}}</ref> They have traditionally been endogamous. Their hereditary occupations have been ], leather work, the dispensing of traditional medicine and the making of ]s.<ref name="Reese2008p139">{{cite book|author=Scott Steven Reese|title=Renewers of the Age: Holy Men and Social Discourse in Colonial Benaadir|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fb4UYAPUhYoC&pg=PA139|year=2008|publisher=BRILL Academic|isbn=978-90-04-16729-2|pages=139–140}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Heather Marie Akou|title=The Politics of Dress in Somali Culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Eg-b6EQt-cC&pg=PA20|year=2011|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn= 978-0253223135|pages=20–23}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=David F. Horrobin|title=The Somali, in "A Guide to Kenya and Northern Tanzania"|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DnrwCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA30|year=2012|publisher=Springer |isbn=978-94-011-7129-8| pages=29–30}}; Е. de Larajasse (1972), Somali-English and Somali-English Dictionary, Trubner, page </ref> They belong to the ] and sometimes referred to as a minority clan, they perform menial tasks.{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}}<ref name="TaroneBigelow2013p74"/> | |||
The Somali tradition holds that the Yibir are descendants of Mohammad Hanif of ]. Mohammad Hanif acquired a reputation as a pagan magician, according to Somali folklore, he was defeated by ].<ref name="Mire Wagar">{{cite book|title=Wagar, Fertility and Phallic Stelae: Cushitic Sky-God Belief and the Site of Saint Aw-Barkhadle, Somaliland|last1=Mire|first1=Sada|date=22 March 2015}}</ref> According to this myth, the rest of the Somali society has ever since paid a small gift to a Yibir after childbirth, as a form of ].{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}} | |||
The Yibir have a language (a dialect of ]) they keep secret from the ruling ] clans.{{sfn|Kirk|1905|pp=184-85}}<ref name=akou22/> Although Muslims and ethnically similar to other Somalis,<ref>{{cite web|last1=Luling|first1=Virginia|title=The Social Structure of Southern Somali Tribes|url=http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1317929/1/302018.pdf|publisher=University of London|pages=13–15}}</ref> the Yibir caste has been traditionally denigrated, demeaned and discriminated against by higher social strata of the Somali society.<ref name="TaroneBigelow2013p74">{{cite book|author1=Elaine Tarone|author2=Martha Bigelow|author3=Kit Hansen|title=Oxford Applied Linguistics: Literacy and Second Language Oracy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SvSdBgAAQBAJ&pg=PT74|year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-442313-7|pages=55, 73–74 with footnote 5}}, Quote: "In addition to the Bantus, there are Somali clans considered to be of low caste and treated as outcasts. They are the Yibir, the Midgan and the Tumal. They face restrictions, prejudice, discrimination, harassment and attacks in East Africa as well as in the Diaspora."</ref><ref name=mohamedeno107>Mohamed A. Eno and Abdi M. Kusow (2014), ''Racial and Caste Prejudice in Somalia'', Journal of Somali Studies, Iowa State University Press, Volume 1, Issue 2, pages 91, 96, 107-108</ref> | |||
The '''Yibir''' (also called '''Ibro''') are a numerically small tribe of ]. Yibirs are said to be descendants of King Mohammed Bin Haniif of ], also known as Boqor Bur Ba'ayr. It is said that he was a ], ], and ] who predicted many natural disasters.{{fact|date=August 2009}} Some believe that the Yibir are descendants of ] who arrived in the area long before the arrival of Somali nomads, and that the word "Yibir" means "Hebrew".{{fact|date=August 2009}} | |||
The Yibir (also Ibro) are a numerically small tribe of Somalia. They have traditionally been kept on the lower rungs of Somali society. Some believe that the Yibir are descendants of Hebrews who arrived in the area long before the arrival of Somali nomads, and that the word "Yibir" means "Hebrew." Some view Yibirs with contempt yet fear their alleged supernatural powers and consider it unwise to provoke members of the tribe. Yibirs are said to be descendants of King Mohammed Bin Haniif of Hargeysa, also known as Boqor Bur Ba'ayr. It is said that he was a herbalist, priest, and astrologer who predicted many natural disasters. Folklore has it that newly wed women had to spend a week in his castle while he "ensured they were free from any sexual diseases", before they were released to their husbands. Nomad Somalis objected to this practice and overthrew the king. Legend has it that Bur Ba'ayr used witchcraft, a myth that many nomadic Somalis believe that he could pass through a mountain. A popular story is that Sheikh Yussuf-ul-Kownein, a Catholic Priest, also known as Colonel Joseph, It is believed by many historians that Somalis could not pronounce Colonel,and instead used Al-kawneen. Historians also know that Joseph Colonel was a white christian (Catholic) and not a Somali, (generally black people from Africa, not Arabia) who was trying to spread the christian faith in Horn of Africa. There is an ongoing practice in Somaliland the every year around March or April on a Friday, (Good Friday in Catholicism), nomadic Somalis pay a special visit to Colonel Joseph's grave, in which every member marks his/her forehead with a Christian symbol, the Cross to celebrate the day, unfortunately, the miseducation of the nomads still continues to thinking that joseph colonel was a Muslim and not a christian, and mohammed Bin Haniif was not a Muslim. Opponents of this idea criticize this as ignorance and question, if this is the case then why do people mark their foreheads with Cross-like symbol, celebrating Christianity, because Muslims will never do anything like that because they know what christian cross is all about. The truth remains that Somali Hebrews are subjected to all kinds of injustices in Somalia, especially in Somaliland because of their ethnicity( (Hebrews), nothing else.The un-Islamic practices of the Somaliland people who are filled with ethnocentrism and hate for Judiasm and Jews in general have put the yibir people in a dangerous and low status. The world has moved on and Nazism has died everywhere, except in a tiny little place called "Somaliland" that practices apparatheid, segregation, discrimination, and violation of the simple principle of human rights. The Yibirs can't take this oppression anymore and need help from the outside world to examine how Somaliland oppresses its minorities, especially the natives ( Yibros). The oppression of the yibros has been going on for a long time in Somaliland silently, It is time for the world to unite against such regimes who have no respect for the human life. Yibir children are labled inferiors from early on in life by the majority of Somalis, and they are confronted with Prejudice, hate, harrassment,discrimination by almost all the people in Somaliland who claim they are Muslims, when in fact their actions towards the Yibros is far from Muslim.( May Allah one day punish them all for what they have done to a generation of young people) The story that is told to many Somalilanders from early on in life is as follows: also known as Aw Barqadle) brought Fiqi Omar (also known as Omar al-Rida) to witness the event and as soon as the act started Fiqi Omar read verses of the Qur'an and Bur Ba'ayr was trapped in the mountain. Nomad Somalis agreed to settle the death of the king by giving money and other gifts to the Yibir tribe every time a male child was born. The custom of Yibirs visiting families with newborn children to be given money still continues in most of Somalia. Historians as well as other evidence obtained for the State Department shows that yibirs were the original inhabitant of Somliland, a that the yibir kingdom in Somaliland existed for many centuries. Unlike the nomad system, the yibir kingdom had a working system, a democratic system that collected taxes from everyone in somalia. The king Mohammed Bin Al Haniif and his followers ensured the collection of the taxes in order to maintain the society.After the death of the king, it was agreed upon that yibirs should continue the collection of the taxes from anyone who resides in Somalia, by giving every child who is born a "Birth Certificate" , in return people pay for the taxes they owe. Historians compare this type of taxation to the "Head Tax" that was imposed on foreign nationals who arrived in America in the early 19th century. The history of the yibir people in Somaliland is rich and many researchers continue to show interest in the original inhabitants people of Somaliland, and trying to understand their plight and their suffering under poor, undevelped nomadic regimes, yet regimes that are similar and capable of atrocities that Nazi Germany committed against jewish people. "Below is the typical miseducated Somalis views of the yibir and why yibirs collect taxes". Understand that this is a myth that every miseducated somali will say about the yibirs without knowing their historical backgrounds. | |||
==Yibir Muslim Somali Origin== | |||
This is a myth that many somalis do not challenge or will challenge due to lack of education or ignorance. | |||
===Foundation=== | |||
(It is still believed that if a pregnant woman does not pay the tax she will give birth to a stillborn or deformed baby. Yibirs are believed to know by witchcraft where there is a woman pregnant with a male child, and so go to seek the "compensation", he (always a male) is supposed to prove his identity by placing on his horizontally extended arm a forked staff which on its own begins to oscillate in convoluted movements along his arm. After he is given the money he gives a piece of knotted string as a "receipt" so if another Yibir visits the homes he knows he is too late for the baksheesh (though apparently his "witchcraft" cannot tell him that). Some modern Somalis believe that this is nonsense. | |||
The foundational for the Yibir involves one Shaykh ], also known as Aw Barkhadle (Blessed Father), associated as one of those who brought Islam to Somalia from Arabia.{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}} The story goes that when Barkhadle first arrived in the northern Somali region, he was confronted by pagan Mohamed Hanif (also pejoratively known as ''Bu'ur Ba'ayer''). The two leaders then decided to settle the issue of legitimacy between them via a test of mystical strength. Barkhadle challenged Hanif to traverse a small hill near Dogor,{{sfn|Lewis|1998|p=94}} an area situated some 20 miles north of the regional capital of Hargeisa.{{sfn|Lewis|1998|p=89}} Hanif twice successfully accomplished this task asked of him. However, during Hanif's third demonstration of his powers, Barkhadle "invoked the superior might of ] and imprisoned his rival for ever within the mountain."{{sfn|Lewis|1998|p=94}} Orthodox Islam thus prevailed over the old pagan cult.{{sfn|Abdullahi|2001|p=13}} An alternate version states that Barkhadle murdered the pagan Hanif.{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}} | |||
Yibirs may be pre-Somali inhabitants of Somalia. Most Yibirs today are Muslims though that does not prevent them from being despised and feared for their alleged witchcraft. The Yibir community live in Somaliland, parts of Puntland and a minority of them live among other Somali clans. Somalis do not intermarry with the Yibirs but the Yibirs have intermarried with other communities despised by Somalis of nomadic tradition, such as Mad-dibaans and Midgaans). | |||
Hanif's descendants, goes the legend, subsequently demanded ] or '']'' from Barkhadle for the death of their leader and in perpetuity.{{sfn|Abdullahi|2001|p=13}}{{sfn|Lewis|1998|p=94}} Barkhadle granted them their wish.{{sfn|Abdullahi|2001|p=13}} This myth underlies the Somali practice of offering gifts to Yibir who come to give amulets and bless ] children and ] couples. Ever since, Somali have adhered to the custom of ''samanyo'' or ''samayo'' ("birth gift"),{{sfn|Abdullahi|2001|p=68}} payment made to the Yibir by their Somali patrons.{{sfn|Bollig|2004|p=221}} | |||
One of the versions of the story is recorded in Yibir and translated into English by John William Carnegie Kirk.<ref>{{harvnb|Kirk|1905|pp=197–199}} For a less literal translation, see {{harvnb|Kirk|1904|pp=98–100}}.</ref> In 1921, Major H. Rayne, a district-commissioner in ], also recounts the story, using it as a preface to an anecdote about a Somali who had just become a father and asked him for money to pay a passing Yibir.{{sfn|Rayne|2008|pp=117–123}} | |||
⚫ | References | ||
Somalia's 'Hebrews' | |||
Schneider, R. "Deux inscriptions subaribiques du Tigre" Leiden, Netherlands: Bibliotecheca Orientalis, 30, 1973, 385-387 (quoted with explanation in Bernard Leeman "Queen of Sheba and Biblical Scholarship" Queensland Academic Press 2005, pages 95-97 ISBN 0-9758022-0-8) | |||
Kirk, John William Carnegie "A grammar of the Somali language with examples in prose and verse; and an account of the Yibir and Midgan dialects." Cambridge: University Press, 1905 | |||
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/Yibir" | |||
Categories: Ethnic groups in Somalia | Muslim communities | |||
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== |
===Jewish origin=== | ||
* | |||
* Schneider, R. "Deux inscriptions subaribiques du Tigre" Leiden, Netherlands: Bibliotecheca Orientalis, 30, 1973, 385-387 (quoted with explanation in Bernard Leeman "Queen of Sheba and Biblical Scholarship" Queensland Academic Press 2005, pages 95-97 ISBN 0-9758022-0-8) | |||
* Kirk, John William Carnegie "A grammar of the Somali language with examples in prose and verse; and an account of the Yibir and Midgan dialects." Cambridge: University Press, 1905 | |||
Yibir were an originally Jewish tribe who, in a strongly Muslim country, became the low castes among Somalis.{{Sfn|Fisher|2000}} Some Yibir state that they are descendants of ] who arrived in the area long before the arrival of ] nomads.{{Sfn|Fisher|2000}}{{sfn|Bader|2000|p=138}} | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
⚫ | ] | ||
Despite their Jewish origins, the overwhelming majority of the Yibir, like the Somali population in general, adhere to ] and not ]. Their Hebrew origins has been offered as an explanation for the Yibir occupying a subordinate position in Somali society.{{Sfn|Fisher|2000}}<ref name="Sioyasy"></ref> | |||
] | |||
==Social status== | |||
According to Teshale Tibebu – a professor of History specializing on Ethiopia and Horn of Africa, the Yibir along with ] and ] castes have traditionally been considered as ritually impure, and other caste members of the Somali society would never marry a member of the Tomal, Mijan and Yibir castes.<ref name="Tibebu1995p198">{{cite book|author=Teshale Tibebu|title=The Making of Modern Ethiopia: 1896-1974|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DeD4gruvuNEC&pg=PA198 |year=1995|publisher=The Red Sea Press|isbn=978-1-56902-001-2|page=198}}</ref> They were, for many years, denied basic rights and opportunities for education.{{Sfn|Fisher|2000}} | |||
==Occupation== | |||
The Yibir traditionally were itinerant magicians.{{sfn|Bollig|2004|p=202}} Their occupation in the Somalia have been similar to those of ''Dushan'' in southern Arabia, both being jesters in the employ of the chiefs.<ref name=akou22/> The Yibir also crafted ''hardas'' (amulets) containing verses from the ], prayer mats and leather goods such as saddles. These amulets have been in demand as protection from harm and illness during childbirth and other rites of passage.<ref name=akou22>{{cite book|author=Heather Marie Akou|title=The Politics of Dress in Somali Culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Eg-b6EQt-cC&pg=PA20|year=2011|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn= 978-0253223135|pages=22–23}}</ref> | |||
The Yibir are skilled workers who engage themselves in the various jobs that city dwellers do, unlike the Somali nomads, their livelihood depends on their skills which requires them to make crafts and other object the Somali communities need.{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}}{{sfn|Bollig|2004|pp=195–197}} Traditionally, Yibirs are known for their religious rituals. When a child is born in Somalia, a person from the Yibir caste is invited to bless the child by giving a Quranic verse-containing amulet for protection, and in return the Yibir receives a payment for conducting the ceremony, then an amulet is placed on the child's neck to protect the child from evil eyes and any malicious acts.{{sfn|Beachey|1990|p=5}} These amulets are traditionally worn by children everyday, in the superstitious belief of their protective powers, even when these children are allowed to run naked.<ref name=akou22/> | |||
==Contemporary situation== | |||
Yibir have a reputation for magic; one of their traditional functions is to bless the newborn and the newly married. In return for these blessings they receive gifts, a continual repayment for the killing of Mohammed Hanif.{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}} They subsist in two different ways—by being attached to noble Somali families, or by (cyclically) visiting different households.{{sfn|Bollig|2004|p=208}} The payments they receive, called ''samanyo'' (described by an English scholar as a "tax"),{{sfn|Kirk|1905|p=184}} also function to forestall the fear of a possible cursing of the (Somali) host by the Yibir soothsayer or magician; though the Yibir are the "smallest and most despised" clan of the ''sab'', they are thought to have the strongest magic.{{sfn|Bollig|2004|p=209}} Persistently refusing to give a gift on the occasion of a birth invites the curse of the Yibir, which is supposed to result in a violent death for the refusing party or a deformed new-born.{{sfn|Kirk|1904|p=95}} Another of the Yibir's believed supernatural characteristics is that when they die they vanish: no one, according to Somali tradition, "has ever seen the grave of a Yibir",{{sfn|Laurence|1988|p=51}} a quality possibly derived from the disappearance of their ancestor, Hanif.{{Sfn|Ahmed|Hart|1984|pp=156-157}} Hanfili the spouse of Hanif is stated to have her mausoleum in the city of ] which receives frequent visitors, talismans are made from the tree near the grave.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lewis |first1=I.M. |title=Peoples of the Horn of Africa (Somali, Afar and Saho) North Eastern Africa Part I |date=3 February 2017 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781315308173 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XMoNDgAAQBAJ&dq=hanif+wife+harar&pg=PT70}}</ref> | |||
There has been no census count and estimates about the Yibir community vary. In 2000, Ahmad Jama Hersi who is a Kenyan resident, guessed that 25,000 Yibir lived in Somalia and neighboring countries.{{Sfn|Fisher|2000}} | |||
==Language== | |||
The language of the Yibir (like that of the Madhiban) is described by early 20th century Western linguists as a ] of the ]. Yibir and Madhiban are similar and share a number of words.{{sfn|Kirk|1905|pp=200ff}} ] published some data on this ] community's language, called ''af Harlaad'', which resembled the ] spoken by the Yibir and ] low-caste groups.{{sfn|Uhlig|2003|p=1034}} | |||
J.W.C. Kirk, a ] infantry officer stationed in British Somaliland, published a grammar of Somali with an account of the Yibir and Midgan (i.e. Madhiban) dialects in 1905{{sfn|Kirk|1905|p=185}} and commented on the difference of the two dialects from the dominant Somali language. According to his sources, the difference is necessary to maintain a secrecy and keep the ruling class from total dominance of the subservient clans: {{blockquote|Each tribe has its own dialect, which has hitherto been kept as a solemn secret from the rest of the world. They still insist upon secrecy from Somalis, and made me promise not to divulge to their hereditary enemies what they were quite willing to explain to the white man.<p>I, therefore, rely upon any who may read this not to disclose to any Somali what I have been allowed to write down for the benefit of the ''Sirkal'',<ref>That is, "officers"; see {{harvnb|Kirk|1905|p=24}}</ref> but if any other officer of an enquiring disposition wishes to pursue the subject, he should be acquainted with the Somali language, which all the ''Sab'' know, and discuss these things with one of them.{{sfn|Kirk|1905|pp=184-85}}</p>}} | |||
Kirk stresses this desire for secrecy repeatedly: "Therefore I must ask any who may read this and who may sojourn in the country, ''not to repeat what I give here to any Somali, not of Yibir or Midgan birth''";<ref>{{harvnb|Kirk|1905|p=185}}; his italics.</ref> a similar note was sounded by the German linguist Adolf Walter Schleicher in his 1892 grammar of the Somali language.<ref>''Die Somali-sprache'' (T. Fröhlich, 1892); qtd. in {{harvnb|Kirk|1905|p=185}}.</ref> | |||
In more recent times, the linguist ], referencing Kirk, has similarly indicated that the Yibir and Madhiban dialects both "differ substantially in lexicon from standard Somali". However, he remarks that it remains unknown whether this linguistic divergence is due to some sort of difference in code or is instead indicative of distinct languages.{{sfn|Blench|2006|p=14}} | |||
==Cognate castes in Horn of Africa== | |||
The Yibir caste is not an exception limited to the Somali ethnic group, and equivalent cognate caste is found in numerous ethnic groups in ] and ]. According to ] – a professor of Sociology specializing in Ethiopian and Horn of Africa studies, similar caste groups in different languages and ethnic groups have been integral part of societies of this region.<ref>{{cite book|author=Donald N. Levine|title=Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NZHeBQAAQBAJ |date=10 December 2014|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-22967-6|pages=57, 169–171, 195–196}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Saïd Amir Arjomand|title=Social Theory and Regional Studies in the Global Age|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nzSlAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA229|year=2014|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=978-1-4384-5161-9|pages=229–237}}</ref> These strata have featured all the defining characteristics of caste, states Levine, characteristics such as "endogamy, hierarchy, status, concepts of pollution, restraints on commensality, a traditional occupation and membership by birth".<ref>{{cite book|author=Donald N. Levine|title=Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NZHeBQAAQBAJ |date=10 December 2014|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-22967-6|pages=57–58}}</ref> | |||
In east African ethnic groups, such as the ], cognates to Somali castes have been recorded in 16th century texts, states Cornelius Jaenen.<ref>Cornelius J. Jaenen (1956), ''The Galla or Oromo of East Africa'', Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, University of Chicago Press, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Summer, 1956), pages 171-190</ref> Among Cushitic-speaking ] and others in the Horn of Africa, a similar despise and isolation has been targeted against a caste of negroid-origin people for magic and ritual services such as blessing babies, circumcision, and burying the dead.<ref>{{cite journal | last=Lewis | first=Herbert S. | title=Historical Problems in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa | journal=Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | publisher=Wiley-Blackwell | volume=96 | issue=2 | year=2006 | pages=508–509 | doi=10.1111/j.1749-6632.1962.tb50145.x | s2cid=83677517 }}</ref> | |||
The "Watta" people who are hunter gatherers among the Oromo people are also despised and occupy lowest strata in society. | |||
⚫ | == References == | ||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
===Bibliography=== | |||
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*{{cite book |last1=Ahmed |first1=Akbar S. |first2=David M. |last2=Hart |title=Islam in Tribal Societies: From the Atlas to the Indus |publisher=Routledge |year=1984 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ra89AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA156 |isbn=978-0-7100-9320-2}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Bader |first=Christian |year=2000 |title=Les Yibro: Mages somali. Les juifs oubliés de la corne de l'Afrique |location=Paris}} | |||
*{{cite book | last = Beachey | first = R.W. | title = The Warrior Mullah: The Horn Aflame, 1892-1920 | publisher = Bellew | year = 1990 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=9LxyAAAAMAAJ&q=yibir | isbn = 978-0-947792-43-5}} | |||
*{{cite web | last = Blench | first = Roger | author-link = Roger Blench | title = The Afro-Asiatic Languages: Classification and Reference List | publisher = Rogerblench.info | date = 2006-11-14 | url = http://www.rogerblench.info/Language%20data/Afroasiatic/General/AALIST.pdf | access-date = 2009-09-04}} | |||
*{{cite book | last = Bollig | first = Michael | contribution = Hunters, Foragers, and Singing Smiths: The Metamorphoses of Peripatetic Peoples in Africa | editor1-first = Joseph C. | editor1-last = Berland | editor2-first = Aparna | editor2-last = Rao | title = Customary Strangers: New Perspectives on Peripatetic Peoples in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia | publisher = Greenwood | year = 2004 | pages = 195–234 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=8CAv53wlHfoC | isbn = 978-0-89789-771-6}} | |||
*{{cite journal | last = Cerulli | first = E. | title = Somali Songs and Little Texts | journal = ] | volume = 19 | pages = 135–40 | date = October 1919 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Q1Q8AAAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PA136 | issn = 0001-9909 | access-date = 2009-09-04}} | |||
*{{cite news |last=Fisher |first=Ian |title=Djibouti Journal; Somalia's 'Hebrews' See a Better Day |newspaper=] |date=August 15, 2000 |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2000/08/15/world/djibouti-journal-somalia-s-hebrews-see-a-better-day.html?scp=1&sq=somali%20hebrews&st=cse |access-date=2009-09-04}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Gaildon |first=Mahmood |title=The Yibir of Las Burgabo |publisher=Red Sea Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-56902-218-4 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=mmO7NQAACAAJ&q=yibir}} | |||
*{{cite journal | last = Kirk | first = John William Carnegie | title = The Yibirs and Midgans of Somaliland, Their Traditions and Dialects | journal = ] | volume = 24 | pages = 91–108 | year = 1904 | doi = 10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a093876 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gycbAAAAYAAJ | issn = 0001-9909 | access-date = 2009-09-04}} | |||
*{{cite book | last = Kirk | first = John William Carnegie | title = A Grammar of the Somali Language with Examples in Prose and Verse and an Account of the Yibir and Midgan Dialects | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 1905 | location = Cambridge | url = https://archive.org/details/agrammarsomalil00unkngoog }} | |||
*{{cite book | last = Laurence | first = Margaret | editor=Clara Thomas | title = The Prophet's Camel Bell | publisher = Random House | year = 1988 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=_FHE8xDiLWoC&pg=PA50 | isbn = 978-0-7710-4706-0}} | |||
*{{cite book | last = Lewis | first = I.M. | title = Saints and Somalis: Popular Islam in a Clan-based Society | publisher = The Red Sea Press | year = 1998 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=P5AZyEhMtbkC&pg=PA89 | isbn = 978-1-56902-103-3}} | |||
*{{cite book | last = Rayne | first = Major H. | title = Sun, Sand and Somals - Leaves from the Note-Book of a District Commissioner in British Somaliland (1921) | publisher = Read Books | year = 2008 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=9eS-niiCn1EC&pg=PA120 | isbn = 978-1-4437-2468-5}} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Uhlig|first1=Siegbert|title=Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: D-Ha|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X38lxaUjm1MC&pg=PA1034|year=2003|publisher=Isd|isbn=978-3-447-05238-2}} | |||
*{{cite web |last=Yusuf |first=Ahmed Ismail |title=Rev. of ''The Yibir of Las Burgabo'' |publisher=Sociala missionen |url= http://www.socialamissionen.a.se/pub/administrationkit/filebrowse/resources/yibir.pdf |access-date=2009-09-04}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 15:16, 10 August 2024
Caste group of Somali people For the racehorse, see Yibir (horse). Ethnic groupRegions with significant populations | |
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Somalia Somaliland | |
Languages | |
Somali, Arabic | |
Religion | |
Islam (Sunni) Judaism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Somali people |
The Yibir, also referred to as the Yibbir, the Yebir, or the Yibro, are a caste of Somali people. They have traditionally been endogamous. Their hereditary occupations have been magic making, leather work, the dispensing of traditional medicine and the making of amulets. They belong to the Sab clan and sometimes referred to as a minority clan, they perform menial tasks.
The Somali tradition holds that the Yibir are descendants of Mohammad Hanif of Hargeysa. Mohammad Hanif acquired a reputation as a pagan magician, according to Somali folklore, he was defeated by Yusuf bin Ahmad al-Kawneyn. According to this myth, the rest of the Somali society has ever since paid a small gift to a Yibir after childbirth, as a form of blood compensation.
The Yibir have a language (a dialect of Somali) they keep secret from the ruling Somali clans. Although Muslims and ethnically similar to other Somalis, the Yibir caste has been traditionally denigrated, demeaned and discriminated against by higher social strata of the Somali society.
Yibir Muslim Somali Origin
Foundation
The foundational for the Yibir involves one Shaykh Yusuf bin Ahmad al-Kawneyn, also known as Aw Barkhadle (Blessed Father), associated as one of those who brought Islam to Somalia from Arabia. The story goes that when Barkhadle first arrived in the northern Somali region, he was confronted by pagan Mohamed Hanif (also pejoratively known as Bu'ur Ba'ayer). The two leaders then decided to settle the issue of legitimacy between them via a test of mystical strength. Barkhadle challenged Hanif to traverse a small hill near Dogor, an area situated some 20 miles north of the regional capital of Hargeisa. Hanif twice successfully accomplished this task asked of him. However, during Hanif's third demonstration of his powers, Barkhadle "invoked the superior might of God and imprisoned his rival for ever within the mountain." Orthodox Islam thus prevailed over the old pagan cult. An alternate version states that Barkhadle murdered the pagan Hanif.
Hanif's descendants, goes the legend, subsequently demanded blood money or diyya from Barkhadle for the death of their leader and in perpetuity. Barkhadle granted them their wish. This myth underlies the Somali practice of offering gifts to Yibir who come to give amulets and bless newborn children and newlywed couples. Ever since, Somali have adhered to the custom of samanyo or samayo ("birth gift"), payment made to the Yibir by their Somali patrons.
One of the versions of the story is recorded in Yibir and translated into English by John William Carnegie Kirk. In 1921, Major H. Rayne, a district-commissioner in British Somaliland, also recounts the story, using it as a preface to an anecdote about a Somali who had just become a father and asked him for money to pay a passing Yibir.
Jewish origin
Yibir were an originally Jewish tribe who, in a strongly Muslim country, became the low castes among Somalis. Some Yibir state that they are descendants of Hebrews who arrived in the area long before the arrival of Somali nomads.
Despite their Jewish origins, the overwhelming majority of the Yibir, like the Somali population in general, adhere to Islam and not Judaism. Their Hebrew origins has been offered as an explanation for the Yibir occupying a subordinate position in Somali society.
Social status
According to Teshale Tibebu – a professor of History specializing on Ethiopia and Horn of Africa, the Yibir along with Mijan and Tomal castes have traditionally been considered as ritually impure, and other caste members of the Somali society would never marry a member of the Tomal, Mijan and Yibir castes. They were, for many years, denied basic rights and opportunities for education.
Occupation
The Yibir traditionally were itinerant magicians. Their occupation in the Somalia have been similar to those of Dushan in southern Arabia, both being jesters in the employ of the chiefs. The Yibir also crafted hardas (amulets) containing verses from the Quran, prayer mats and leather goods such as saddles. These amulets have been in demand as protection from harm and illness during childbirth and other rites of passage.
The Yibir are skilled workers who engage themselves in the various jobs that city dwellers do, unlike the Somali nomads, their livelihood depends on their skills which requires them to make crafts and other object the Somali communities need. Traditionally, Yibirs are known for their religious rituals. When a child is born in Somalia, a person from the Yibir caste is invited to bless the child by giving a Quranic verse-containing amulet for protection, and in return the Yibir receives a payment for conducting the ceremony, then an amulet is placed on the child's neck to protect the child from evil eyes and any malicious acts. These amulets are traditionally worn by children everyday, in the superstitious belief of their protective powers, even when these children are allowed to run naked.
Contemporary situation
Yibir have a reputation for magic; one of their traditional functions is to bless the newborn and the newly married. In return for these blessings they receive gifts, a continual repayment for the killing of Mohammed Hanif. They subsist in two different ways—by being attached to noble Somali families, or by (cyclically) visiting different households. The payments they receive, called samanyo (described by an English scholar as a "tax"), also function to forestall the fear of a possible cursing of the (Somali) host by the Yibir soothsayer or magician; though the Yibir are the "smallest and most despised" clan of the sab, they are thought to have the strongest magic. Persistently refusing to give a gift on the occasion of a birth invites the curse of the Yibir, which is supposed to result in a violent death for the refusing party or a deformed new-born. Another of the Yibir's believed supernatural characteristics is that when they die they vanish: no one, according to Somali tradition, "has ever seen the grave of a Yibir", a quality possibly derived from the disappearance of their ancestor, Hanif. Hanfili the spouse of Hanif is stated to have her mausoleum in the city of Harar which receives frequent visitors, talismans are made from the tree near the grave.
There has been no census count and estimates about the Yibir community vary. In 2000, Ahmad Jama Hersi who is a Kenyan resident, guessed that 25,000 Yibir lived in Somalia and neighboring countries.
Language
The language of the Yibir (like that of the Madhiban) is described by early 20th century Western linguists as a dialect of the Somali language. Yibir and Madhiban are similar and share a number of words. Enrico Cerulli published some data on this Harla community's language, called af Harlaad, which resembled the Somali languages spoken by the Yibir and Madhiban low-caste groups.
J.W.C. Kirk, a British infantry officer stationed in British Somaliland, published a grammar of Somali with an account of the Yibir and Midgan (i.e. Madhiban) dialects in 1905 and commented on the difference of the two dialects from the dominant Somali language. According to his sources, the difference is necessary to maintain a secrecy and keep the ruling class from total dominance of the subservient clans:
Each tribe has its own dialect, which has hitherto been kept as a solemn secret from the rest of the world. They still insist upon secrecy from Somalis, and made me promise not to divulge to their hereditary enemies what they were quite willing to explain to the white man.
I, therefore, rely upon any who may read this not to disclose to any Somali what I have been allowed to write down for the benefit of the Sirkal, but if any other officer of an enquiring disposition wishes to pursue the subject, he should be acquainted with the Somali language, which all the Sab know, and discuss these things with one of them.
Kirk stresses this desire for secrecy repeatedly: "Therefore I must ask any who may read this and who may sojourn in the country, not to repeat what I give here to any Somali, not of Yibir or Midgan birth"; a similar note was sounded by the German linguist Adolf Walter Schleicher in his 1892 grammar of the Somali language.
In more recent times, the linguist Roger Blench, referencing Kirk, has similarly indicated that the Yibir and Madhiban dialects both "differ substantially in lexicon from standard Somali". However, he remarks that it remains unknown whether this linguistic divergence is due to some sort of difference in code or is instead indicative of distinct languages.
Cognate castes in Horn of Africa
The Yibir caste is not an exception limited to the Somali ethnic group, and equivalent cognate caste is found in numerous ethnic groups in Horn of Africa and East Africa. According to Donald Levine – a professor of Sociology specializing in Ethiopian and Horn of Africa studies, similar caste groups in different languages and ethnic groups have been integral part of societies of this region. These strata have featured all the defining characteristics of caste, states Levine, characteristics such as "endogamy, hierarchy, status, concepts of pollution, restraints on commensality, a traditional occupation and membership by birth".
In east African ethnic groups, such as the Oromo people, cognates to Somali castes have been recorded in 16th century texts, states Cornelius Jaenen. Among Cushitic-speaking Bako people and others in the Horn of Africa, a similar despise and isolation has been targeted against a caste of negroid-origin people for magic and ritual services such as blessing babies, circumcision, and burying the dead.
The "Watta" people who are hunter gatherers among the Oromo people are also despised and occupy lowest strata in society.
References
- Lewis, I. M. (1999). A Pastoral Democracy: A Study of Pastoralism and Politics Among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa. James Currey Publishers. pp. 13–14. ISBN 0852552807. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
- Donald N. Levine (2014). Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society. University of Chicago Press. pp. 62, 195. ISBN 978-0-226-22967-6.
- Scott Steven Reese (2008). Renewers of the Age: Holy Men and Social Discourse in Colonial Benaadir. BRILL Academic. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-90-04-16729-2.
- Heather Marie Akou (2011). The Politics of Dress in Somali Culture. Indiana University Press. pp. 20–23. ISBN 978-0253223135.
- David F. Horrobin (2012). The Somali, in "A Guide to Kenya and Northern Tanzania". Springer. pp. 29–30. ISBN 978-94-011-7129-8.; Е. de Larajasse (1972), Somali-English and Somali-English Dictionary, Trubner, page 145
- ^ Ahmed & Hart 1984, pp. 156–157.
- ^ Elaine Tarone; Martha Bigelow; Kit Hansen (2013). Oxford Applied Linguistics: Literacy and Second Language Oracy. Oxford University Press. pp. 55, 73–74 with footnote 5. ISBN 978-0-19-442313-7., Quote: "In addition to the Bantus, there are Somali clans considered to be of low caste and treated as outcasts. They are the Yibir, the Midgan and the Tumal. They face restrictions, prejudice, discrimination, harassment and attacks in East Africa as well as in the Diaspora."
- Mire, Sada (22 March 2015). Wagar, Fertility and Phallic Stelae: Cushitic Sky-God Belief and the Site of Saint Aw-Barkhadle, Somaliland.
- ^ Kirk 1905, pp. 184–85.
- ^ Heather Marie Akou (2011). The Politics of Dress in Somali Culture. Indiana University Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-0253223135.
- Luling, Virginia. "The Social Structure of Southern Somali Tribes" (PDF). University of London. pp. 13–15.
- Mohamed A. Eno and Abdi M. Kusow (2014), Racial and Caste Prejudice in Somalia, Journal of Somali Studies, Iowa State University Press, Volume 1, Issue 2, pages 91, 96, 107-108
- ^ Lewis 1998, p. 94.
- Lewis 1998, p. 89.
- ^ Abdullahi 2001, p. 13.
- Abdullahi 2001, p. 68.
- Bollig 2004, p. 221.
- Kirk 1905, pp. 197–199 For a less literal translation, see Kirk 1904, pp. 98–100.
- Rayne 2008, pp. 117–123.
- ^ Fisher 2000.
- Bader 2000, p. 138.
- Somalia: Information on Yahhar also spelled Yibir
- Teshale Tibebu (1995). The Making of Modern Ethiopia: 1896-1974. The Red Sea Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-1-56902-001-2.
- Bollig 2004, p. 202.
- Bollig 2004, pp. 195–197.
- Beachey 1990, p. 5.
- Bollig 2004, p. 208.
- Kirk 1905, p. 184.
- Bollig 2004, p. 209.
- Kirk 1904, p. 95.
- Laurence 1988, p. 51.
- Lewis, I.M. (3 February 2017). Peoples of the Horn of Africa (Somali, Afar and Saho) North Eastern Africa Part I. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781315308173.
- Kirk 1905, pp. 200ff.
- Uhlig 2003, p. 1034.
- Kirk 1905, p. 185.
- That is, "officers"; see Kirk 1905, p. 24
- Kirk 1905, p. 185; his italics.
- Die Somali-sprache (T. Fröhlich, 1892); qtd. in Kirk 1905, p. 185.
- Blench 2006, p. 14.
- Donald N. Levine (10 December 2014). Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society. University of Chicago Press. pp. 57, 169–171, 195–196. ISBN 978-0-226-22967-6.
- Saïd Amir Arjomand (2014). Social Theory and Regional Studies in the Global Age. State University of New York Press. pp. 229–237. ISBN 978-1-4384-5161-9.
- Donald N. Levine (10 December 2014). Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society. University of Chicago Press. pp. 57–58. ISBN 978-0-226-22967-6.
- Cornelius J. Jaenen (1956), The Galla or Oromo of East Africa, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, University of Chicago Press, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Summer, 1956), pages 171-190
- Lewis, Herbert S. (2006). "Historical Problems in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 96 (2). Wiley-Blackwell: 508–509. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1962.tb50145.x. S2CID 83677517.
Bibliography
- Abdullahi, Mohamed Diriye (2001). Culture and customs of Somalia. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-31333-2.
- Ahmed, Akbar S.; Hart, David M. (1984). Islam in Tribal Societies: From the Atlas to the Indus. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7100-9320-2.
- Bader, Christian (2000). Les Yibro: Mages somali. Les juifs oubliés de la corne de l'Afrique. Paris.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Beachey, R.W. (1990). The Warrior Mullah: The Horn Aflame, 1892-1920. Bellew. ISBN 978-0-947792-43-5.
- Blench, Roger (2006-11-14). "The Afro-Asiatic Languages: Classification and Reference List" (PDF). Rogerblench.info. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
- Bollig, Michael (2004). "Hunters, Foragers, and Singing Smiths: The Metamorphoses of Peripatetic Peoples in Africa". In Berland, Joseph C.; Rao, Aparna (eds.). Customary Strangers: New Perspectives on Peripatetic Peoples in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Greenwood. pp. 195–234. ISBN 978-0-89789-771-6.
- Cerulli, E. (October 1919). "Somali Songs and Little Texts". Journal of the African Society. 19: 135–40. ISSN 0001-9909. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
- Fisher, Ian (August 15, 2000). "Djibouti Journal; Somalia's 'Hebrews' See a Better Day". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
- Gaildon, Mahmood (2004). The Yibir of Las Burgabo. Red Sea Press. ISBN 978-1-56902-218-4.
- Kirk, John William Carnegie (1904). "The Yibirs and Midgans of Somaliland, Their Traditions and Dialects". Journal of the African Society. 24: 91–108. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a093876. ISSN 0001-9909. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
- Kirk, John William Carnegie (1905). A Grammar of the Somali Language with Examples in Prose and Verse and an Account of the Yibir and Midgan Dialects. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Laurence, Margaret (1988). Clara Thomas (ed.). The Prophet's Camel Bell. Random House. ISBN 978-0-7710-4706-0.
- Lewis, I.M. (1998). Saints and Somalis: Popular Islam in a Clan-based Society. The Red Sea Press. ISBN 978-1-56902-103-3.
- Rayne, Major H. (2008). Sun, Sand and Somals - Leaves from the Note-Book of a District Commissioner in British Somaliland (1921). Read Books. ISBN 978-1-4437-2468-5.
- Uhlig, Siegbert (2003). Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: D-Ha. Isd. ISBN 978-3-447-05238-2.
- Yusuf, Ahmed Ismail. "Rev. of The Yibir of Las Burgabo" (PDF). Sociala missionen. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
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