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{{Short description|Ethnic group in southwest China and Southeast Asia}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2021}}
{{Infobox ethnic group {{Infobox ethnic group
|group = Hmong people | group = Hmong people
| native_name = {{script|Hmng|𖬌𖬣𖬵}}
|image = ]
| native_name_lang = hmn
|caption = Flower Hmong in traditional dress at the market in ], ]
| image = ]
|population = 4 to 5 million<ref name=Lemoine2005>{{Cite journal
| caption = Flower Hmong women in traditional dress at the market in ], ]
| last = Lemoine | first = Jacques
| population = 4–5 million<ref name=Lemoine2005>{{Cite journal
| year = 2005
|last= Lemoine
| title = What is the actual number of (H)mong in the world?
|first= Jacques
| journal = Hmong Studies Journal
|year= 2005
| volume = 6
|title= What is the actual number of (H)mong in the world?
| url = http://www.hmongstudies.org/LemoineHSJ6.pdf
|journal= Hmong Studies Journal
|volume= 6
|url= http://www.hmongstudies.org/LemoineHSJ6.pdf
|access-date= 1 March 2009
|archive-date= 21 July 2011
|url-status= usurped
|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110721021307/http://hmongstudies.org/LemoineHSJ6.pdf
}}</ref> }}</ref>
|region1 = {{flag|China}} | region1 = {{flag|China}}
| pop1 = 2,777,039 (2000, estimate){{noteTag|1=There is no official ] of the Hmong people in China, as they are classified as a subgroup of the ] there.}}
|pop1 = 3 million
|ref1 = | ref1 = <ref name=Lemoine2005 />
|region2 = {{flag|Vietnam}} | region2 = {{flag|Vietnam}}
|pop2 = 1,068,189 (2009) | pop2 = 1,393,547 (2019)
| ref2 = <ref name="Census2019">{{cite web |url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1YK6iY-j0AfZTuip28Py2Gmz5P8zw04Rn/view?usp=sharing |title=Report on Results of the 2019 Census |publisher=General Statistics Office of Vietnam |access-date=1 May 2020}}</ref>
|ref2 = <ref>{{cite web|title=The 2009 Vietnam Population and Housing Census: Completed Results|url=http://www.gso.gov.vn/Modules/Doc_Download.aspx?DocID=12724 |publisher=General Statistics Office of Vietnam: Central Population and Housing Census Steering Committee|date=June 2010 |accessdate=26 November 2013|page=134}}</ref>
|region3 = {{flag|Laos}} | region3 = {{flag|Laos}}
|pop3 = 460,000 (2005) | pop3 = 595,028 (2015)
| ref3 = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://lao.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/pub-pdf/PHC-ENG-FNAL-WEB_0.pdf |title=Results of Population and Housing Census 2015 |publisher=Lao Statistics Bureau |access-date=1 May 2020}}</ref>
|ref3 =
|region4 = {{flag|United States}} | region4 = {{flag|United States}}
| pop4 = 368,609 (2021)
|pop4 = 260,073 (2010)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://factfinder2.census.gov/ |title=American FactFinder |publisher=Factfinder2.census.gov |date= |accessdate=2012-06-07}}</ref>
| ref4 = <ref>{{Cite web|title=B02018 Asian Alone Or in Any Combination by Selected Groups – 2021: 1-year estimates Detailed Tables – United States|url=https://data.census.gov/table?q=B02018&tid=ACSDT1Y2021.B02018|website=]}}</ref>
|ref4 =
|region5 = {{flag|Thailand}} | region5 = {{flag|Thailand}}
|pop5 = 151,080 (2002) | pop5 = 250,070 (2015)
|ref5 = | ref5 =
|region6 = {{flag|France}} | region6 = {{flag|Myanmar}}
|pop6 = 15,000 | pop6 = 2,000–3,000 (2007)
| ref6 = <ref>{{cite web |last1=Lee |first1=G.Y. |title=Diaspora and the Predicament of Origins: Interrogating Hmong Postcolonial History and Identity |url=https://www.hmongstudiesjournal.org/uploads/4/5/8/7/4587788/gyleehsj8.pdf |access-date=10 December 2024}}</ref>
|ref6 =
|region7 = {{flag|Australia}} | region7 = {{flag|Argentina}}
| ref7 = <ref name="Lemoine" />
|pop7 = 2,190<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/ABSNavigation/download?format=xls&collection=Census&period=2006&productlabel=Ancestry%20(full%20classification%20list)%20by%20Sex&producttype=Census%20Tables&method=Place%20of%20Usual%20Residence&areacode=0 |title=ABS Census – ethnicity |date= |accessdate=2012-06-07}}</ref>
| pop7 = 600 (1999)
|ref7
|region8 = {{flag|French Guiana}} | region8 = {{flag|Australia}}
| pop8 = 3,438 (2011)
|pop8 = 2,000<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3498056.stm |title=Hmong's new lives in Caribbean |date= 2004-03-10 |accessdate=2014-03-11}}</ref>
| ref8 = <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/ABSNavigation/download?format=xls&collection=Census&period=2006&productlabel=Ancestry%20(full%20classification%20list)%20by%20Sex&producttype=Census%20Tables&method=Place%20of%20Usual%20Residence&areacode=0 |title=ABS Census – ethnicity |access-date=7 June 2012 |archive-date=18 May 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200518183126/https://www.abs.gov.au/websitedbs/censushome.nsf/home/cowsredirect |url-status=dead }}</ref>
|ref8
|region9 = {{flag|Canada}} | region9 = {{flag|France}} (])
|pop9 = 600 | pop9 = 2,000 (2001)
| ref9 = <ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3498056.stm |title=Hmong's new lives in Caribbean |date= 10 March 2004 |access-date=11 March 2014}}</ref>
|ref9
|region10 = {{flag|Argentina}} | region10 = {{flag|France}}
|pop10 = 600 | pop10 = 15,000
| ref10 = <ref name="Lemoine" />
|ref10
|region11 = {{flag|Germany}} | region11 = {{flag|Canada}}
|pop11 = 500 | pop11 = 600 (1999)
| ref11 = <ref name="Lemoine">{{cite news|author1=Jacques Lemoine|publisher=Hmong Studies Journal|url=http://www.hmongstudies.org/LemoineHSJ6.pdf|title=What is the actual number of the (H)mong in the world|year=2005|access-date=1 March 2009|archive-date=21 July 2011|url-status=usurped|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721021307/http://hmongstudies.org/LemoineHSJ6.pdf}}</ref>
|ref11
| languages = Native: ] <br />
j
Regional: ], ], ], ], ], ], ]
|religions = ] (Hmong ]), ], ]
| religions = ] • ] • ]
|related =
| related_groups =
}}
{{ SpecialChars
| compact =
| special = Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong Unicode characters
| fix = Help:Multilingual_support#Nyiakeng_Puachue_Hmong
| characters = Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong
}}
{{Contains special characters
| special = Pahawh Hmong ] characters
| fix = Help:Multilingual support
| error = ]
| characters = the Pahawh Hmong characters
| image = PAHAWH HMONG VOWEL KEEB.svg
| link = Specials (Unicode block)#Replacement character
| alt =
| compact =
}} }}
The '''Hmong''' (]: ''Hmoob/Moob'', {{IPA-hmn|m̥ɔ̃ŋ}}) are an asian putas ethnic group from the mountainous regions of ], ], ], and ]. Hmong are also one of the sub-groups of the ] (苗族) in ]. Hmong groups began a gradual southward migration in the 18th century due to political unrest and to find more arable land. Hmong people are known to be fiercely independent and rich in their culture, art, religion, family life and martial history, and are distinguished by costume/dress (fabric patterns represent fruit, vegetables, farming, chickens, eggs, etc.)<ref>Hmong Outreach Footprint Feature | Washington NRCS</ref>


The '''Hmong people''' (]: {{tlit|hmn|Hmoob}}, ]: ''Hmôngz'', ]: {{lang|hmn-Hmnp|𞄀𞄩𞄰}}, ]: {{lang|hmn-Hmng|𖬌𖬣𖬵}}, {{IPA|hmn|m̥ɔ̃́|IPA}}, {{lang-zh|c=苗族蒙人}}) are an indigenous group in East Asia and Southeast Asia. In China, the Hmong people are classified as a sub-group of the ]. The modern Hmong reside mainly in ] and ]n countries such as ], ], ], and ]. There are also diaspora communities in the ], ], and ].
During the first and second ], ] and the ] governments recruited thousands of Hmong people in Laos to fight against invading military forces from North ] and ] ] insurgents, known as the Secret War, during the ] and the ]. Hmong people were singled out for retribution by the ] Pathet Lao and ] when they took over the Laotian government in 1975, with the support of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (SRV), and the ] officials in Hanoi as well as the ] governments of the ], ], ] and ]. Hundreds of thousands of Hmong refugees fled to Thailand seeking political asylum. Thousands of these refugees have resettled in Western countries since the late 1970s, mostly the ], but also in ], ], ], ], and ]. Others have returned to Laos under ]-sponsored ] programs.


==Nomenclature== ==Etymology==
{{see also|Miao people#Nomenclature: Miao or Hmong}}
Hmong people have their own terms for their subcultural divisions, ''Hmong Derr'' (spelled Hmoob Dawb meaning "White Hmong") and ''Hmong Leng'' (spelled Hmoob ntsuab meaning "Hmong Green") being the terms for two of the largest groups in America and Southeast Asia. In the ], developed in the 1950s in Laos, these terms are written ''Hmoob Dawb/Moob Dlawb'' (White Hmong) and ''Moob Leeg/Hmoob Ntsuab'' (Mong Leng). The doubled vowels indicate nasalization, and the final consonants indicate with which of the eight ] the word is pronounced. White Hmong and Mong Leng people speak mutually intelligible dialects of the ] with some differences in pronunciation and vocabulary. One of the most obvious differences is the use of the aspirated /m/ in White Hmong by the sound of "H", which is used when it is written in ]. In Mong Leng dialect the sound of "H" is not used. Hmong groups are often named after the dominant colors, patterns of their traditional clothing, head-dress, and the provinces they came from. The Hmong groups in Laos, from the 18th century to the present day, are known as Black Hmong (''Hmoog Dub''/''Moob Dlub''), Striped Hmong (''Hmoob Txaij''/''Moob Txaij''), White Hmong (''Hmoob Dawb''/''Moob Dlawb''), and Green Hmong (''Hmoob Ntsuab''/''Moob Leej''). In other places in Asia groups are also known as Black Hmong (''Hmoob Dub''/''Moob Dlub'' or ''Hmong Den''), Striped Hmong (''Hmoob Txaij'' or ''Hmoob Quas Npab''), Hmong Shi, Hmong Pe, Hmong Pua, and Hmong Xau, Hmong Xanh (Green Hmong), Hmong Do (Red Hmong), Na Mieo and various other subgroups.<ref>Tapp, Nicholas "Cultural Accommodations in Southwest China: the "Han Miao" and Problems in the Ethnography of the Hmong." Asian Folklore Studies, Vol. 61, 2002: 78.</ref> These include the Flower Hmong or the Variegated Hmong (''Hmong Lenh'' or ''Hmong Hoa''), so named because of the bright colorful embroidery (called ''pa ndau'', literally "flower cloth").<ref name="X1">{{cite web|url=http://www.tenthousandvillages.ca/cgi-bin/category.cgi?type=store&item=pageZAAAD72&template=fullpage-en&category=fairtrade|title=Flower Hmong: Preserving Traditional Culture in Vietnam|author=|year=2010|work=|publisher=|accessdate=January 21, 2011}}</ref> Vietnamese Hmong women continuing to wear 'traditional' clothing tend to source much of their clothing as 'ready to wear' cotton (as against traditional hemp) from markets, though some add embroidery as a personal touch. In SaPa, now with a 'standardised' clothing look, Black Hmong sub-groups have differentiated themselves by adopting different headwear; those with a large comb embedded in their long hair (but without a hat) call themselves Tao, those with a pillbox hat name themselves Giay, and those with a checked headscarf are Yao. For many, such as Flower Hmong, the heavily beaded skirts and jackets are manufactured in China.


The term ''Hmong'' is the English pronunciation of the Hmong's native name. It is a singular and plural noun (e.g., Japanese, French, etc.). Very little is known about the native Hmong name as it is not mentioned in Chinese historical records, since the Han identified the Hmong as Miao. The meaning of it is debatable and no one is sure of its origin, although it can be traced back to several provinces in China. However, Hmong Americans and Hmong Laotians often associate it with "Free" and/or "Hmoov" (Fate); it serves as a reminder to them of their history of fighting oppression.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Hmong means free: life in Laos and America |date=1994 |publisher=Temple University Press |editor=Sucheng Chan |isbn=978-1-4399-0139-7 |location=Philadelphia |oclc=318215953}}</ref><ref>{{cite AV media |title=Being Hmong Means Being Free |publisher=PBS |url=https://www.pbs.org/video/wpt-documentaries-being-hmong-means-being-free/ |language=en |access-date=2023-01-28}}</ref>
Since 1949, ] has been an official term for one of the ] recognized by the government of the ]. The Miao live mainly in southern China, in the provinces of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and elsewhere in China. According to the 2000 censuses, the number of 'Miao' in China was estimated to be about 9.6&nbsp;million. The Miao nationality includes Hmong people as well as other culturally and linguistically related ethnic groups who do not call themselves Hmong. These include the Hmu, Kho (Qho) Xiong, and A Hmao. The White Miao (Bai Miao) and Green Miao (Qing Miao) are Hmong groups.


Before the 1970s, the term ''Miao or Meo'' (i.e. barbarians, wild, seedlings, and even "Sons of the Soil") was used in reference to the Hmong.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Constructing an Ethnicity: Miao in the Chinese Narratives during the Qing Era |url=https://irishjournalofasianstudies.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/ijas-6-she-38-54.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Motti |first=Jean |title=History of the Hmong |publisher=Odeon Store |year=1980 |location=Bangkok Thailand |pages=3 |language=English}}</ref> In the 1970s, Dr. Yang Dao, a Hmong American scholar, who at the time was the head of the Human Resource Department of the Ministry of Planning in the Royal Lao Government of Laos, advocated for the term "Hmong" with the support of clan leaders and ].<ref name=":2" /><ref>Lee 1996</ref><ref>Yang 2009</ref> Yang Dao had insisted that the terms "Meo" and "Miao" were both unacceptable as his people had always called themselves by the name "Hmong," which he defined as "free men".<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |title=Dr. Yang Dao (Yaj Daus) |url=http://hmonglessons.com/the-hmong/hmong-leaders/dr-yang-dao-yaj-daus/ |access-date=2022-12-10 |language=en-US}}</ref> Surrounding countries began to use the term "Hmong" after the ] used it during Immigration screening in Thailand's ].<ref>{{Citation |title="Hmong not Meo" | date=18 August 2016 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0KwLK5p3-cA |language=en |access-date=2023-01-27}}</ref> In 1994, ] registered the term "Hmong" with the ], making it the proper term to identify the Hmong people internationally.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2005-09-22 |title=2005 Senate Joint Resolution 37 |url=http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2005/related/proposals/sjr37.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170226231548/http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2005/related/proposals/sjr37.pdf |archive-date=2017-02-26 |access-date=2023-04-20 |website=docs.legis.wisconsin.gov}}</ref>
Usage of the term "Miao" in Chinese documents dates back to the '']'' (1st century BC) and the '']'' (late ]). During this time, it was generally applied to people of the southern regions thought to be descendants of the San Miao kingdom (dated to around the 3rd millennium BC.) The term does not appear again until the ] (1368–1644), by which time it had taken on the connotation of "barbarian." Interchangeable with "man" and "yi," it was used to refer to the indigenous people of the south-western frontier who refused to submit to imperial rule. During this time, references to Raw (''Sheng'') and Cooked (''Shu'') Miao appear, referring to level of assimilation and political cooperation of the two groups. Not until the ] (1644–1911) do more finely grained distinctions appear in writing. Even then, discerning which ethnic groups are included in various classifications can be problematic.<ref name = "Diamond">Diamond, Norma "Defining the Miao: Ming, Qing, and Contemporary Views" in Cultural Encounters on China's Ethnic Frontiers, ed. Stevan Harrell. Univ. of Washington Press, Seattle, 1995 (99–101).</ref> This inconsistent usage of "Miao" makes it difficult to say for sure if Hmong and Mong people are always included in these historical writings. Linguistic evidence, however, places Hmong and Mong people in the same regions of southern China that they inhabit today for at least the past 2,000 years.<ref>Ratliff, Martha. "Vocabulary of environment and subsistence in the Hmong–Mien Proto-Language." in Hmong/Miao in Asia. p: 160.</ref> By the mid-18th century, classifications become specific enough that it is easier to identify references to Hmong and Mong people.


Soon after, there was a political push from Hmong American politicians and activists to replace the term Miao with the term Hmong in China with little to no success. To date, China is the only country that does not recognize the term Hmong. Rather, they are still categorized under the umbrella term Miáo ({{lang|zh|苗}}) along with three other indigenous groups of people. Historically, the term Miao carried strong pejorative connotations in both China and Southeast Asia. In modern times, however, it has lost such negative connotations in China and has since been officially recognized as an ethnicity, which includes the Hmong. The Hmong in China are often happy or proud to be known as Miao while most Hmong outside China find it offensive.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lee, Tapp |first=Gary Yia, Nicolas |title=Culture and Customs of the Hmong |publisher=Greenwood |year=2010 |page=4 |language=English}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Who are the Hmong? – Hmong American Center |date=4 October 2018 |url=https://www.hmongamericancenter.org/ufaqs/who-are-the-hmong/ |access-date=2023-02-05 |language=en-US}}</ref>
In Southeast Asia, Hmong people are referred to by other names, including: {{lang-vi|Mèo or H'Mông}}; ]: ແມ້ວ (Maew) or ມົ້ງ (Mong); ]: แม้ว (Maew) or ม้ง (Mong); {{lang-my|''mun lu-myo }} (မံုလူမ်ိဳး)''. "]", or variants thereof, is considered highly derogatory by many Hmong people and is infrequently used today outside of Southeast Asia.<ref>For example: Dao Yang, Hmong At the Turning Point (Minneapolis: WorldBridge Associates, Ltd., 1993), footnote 1, p. xvi.</ref>


Little is known about the origin of the Miao term and the people it referenced historically, since the ] used it loosely to identify non-Han in Southern China until the ] when evidence of its association with the Hmong became more apparent.<ref name=":1" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Tapp |first=Nicholas |title=Cultural Accommodations in Southwest China: The "Han Miao" and Problems in the Ethnography of the Hmong |publisher=Nanzan University |year=2002 |pages=77–104}}</ref> Its origin can be dated before the Qin dynasty (221&nbsp;BCE). Thereafter it was perceived as barbaric, and resurfaced more often in Chinese historical records during the Miao's rebellions against the Ming and Qing dynasties between the 1300s and early 1900s that are still chanted by guides in most Hmong funerals today when guiding the spirits of the deceased individuals to their origins so they can reincarnate.<ref>{{Citation |title=The security poem - Qeej Ntaus Rog |date=18 May 2023 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84ttupvg-IY |access-date=2024-01-15 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=qeej ntaus rog. ep1 |date=6 April 2023 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wKLUEsd43k |access-date=2024-01-15 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Miao Ethnic Minority |date=13 April 2015 |url=https://www.asiaculturaltravel.co.uk/miao-ethnic-minority/}}</ref> The term Miao was more of a stereotype such as uncivilized, uncooperative, uncultivated, harmful, and inhumane than a name of an ethnic group and was used in daily conversations as an expression for ugliness and primitivity.<ref name=":1" />
Because the Hmong lived mainly in the highland areas of Southeast Asia and China, the French occupiers of Southeast Asia gave them the name ''Montagnards'' or "mountain people", but this should not be confused with the ] of Vietnam, who were also referred to as ''Montagnards.''
]]]
] house building technique of flower Hmong in Vietnam]]


In Southeast Asia, Hmong people are referred to by other names, including: ] {{lang|vi|Mèo}}, {{lang|vi|Mông}} or {{lang|vi|H'Mông}}; ] {{Transliteration|lo|Maew}} ({{Lang|lo|ແມ້ວ}}) or {{Transliteration|lo|Mong}} ({{Lang|lo|ມົ້ງ}}); ] {{Transliteration|th|Maew}} ({{Lang|th|แม้ว}}) or {{Transliteration|th|Mong}} ({{Lang|th|ม้ง}}); and ] {{Transliteration|my|mun lu-myo}} ({{lang|my|မုံလူမျိုး}}). With a slight change in accent, the word "Meo" in Lao and Thai can be pronounced to mean
===Controversy over nomenclature===
"cat".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hmongstudiesjournal.org/uploads/4/5/8/7/4587788/gyleehsj8.pdf |title=The origins of the Hmong |date= |access-date=2022-03-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite CiteSeerX |citeseerx=10.1.1.513.2976|title=The Mong American Families}}</ref> The term Maew and Meo derived from the term Miao.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lee |first=G. Y. |title=Culture and customs of the Hmong |date=2010 |publisher=Greenwood |others=Nicholas Tapp |isbn=978-0-313-34527-2 |location=Santa Barbara, Calif. |oclc=693776855}}</ref>


====Hmong==== ==Origins==
When Western authors came in contact with Hmong people, beginning in the 18th century, they referred to them in writing by ethnonyms assigned by the Chinese (i.e., Miao, or variants).{{Citation needed|reason=reliable source needed for the whole sentence--perhaps cite actual authors who made contact with Hmong in the 18th century|date=September 2010}} This practice continued into the 20th century.<ref name="SongsStories">{{Cite book | last = ] | first = David Crockett | title = Songs and Stories of the Ch'uan Miao | publisher = Smithsonian Institution | series = Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections | volume = 123,1 | location = Washington, D.C. | year = 1954 }}</ref> Even ]s studying the Hmong people in Southeast Asia often referred to them as Meo, a corruption of Miao applied by Thai and Lao people to the Hmong. Although "Meo" was an official term, it was often used as an insult against Hmong people and it is considered to be highly derogatory.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Thousand-Year Myth: Construction and Characterization of Hmong|journal=Hmong Studies Journal|year=1998|first=Mai Na|last=Lee|coauthors=|volume=2|issue=2|pages=|id= |url=http://members.aol.com/hmongstudiesjrnl/HSJ-v2n1_Lee.html#Fn5txt|format=|accessdate=2008-09-10 }}{{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref> In the middle of the 20th century, a concerted effort was made to refer to Hmong by their own ethnonyms in scholarly literature.{{Citation needed|reason=reliable source needed for the whole sentence--who made the "concerted effort"?|date=September 2010}} By the 1970s, it became standard to refer to the entire ethnic group as "Hmong."{{Citation needed|reason=reliable source needed for the whole sentence--"standard" according to who?|date=September 2010}} This was reinforced during the influx of Hmong immigrants to the United States after 1975. Research proliferated, much of it being directed toward the American Hmong Der community.{{Citation needed|reason=reliable source needed for the whole sentence--"directed toward the American Hmong Der community" is also misleading|date=September 2010}} Several states with Hmong populations issued official translations only in the Hmong Der dialect. At the same time, some Mong Leng people voiced concerns that the supposed inclusive term "Hmong" only served to exclude them from the national discourse.


===Genetic origins===
The issue came to a head during the passage of California State Assembly Bill (AB) 78, in the 2003–2004 season.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2012}} by Kao-Ly Yang</ref> Introduced by Doua Vu and Assembly Member Sarah Reyes, District 31 (Fresno), the bill encouraged changes in secondary education curriculum to include information about the ] and the role of Hmong people in the war. Furthermore, the bill called for the use of oral histories and first hand accounts from Hmong people who had participated in the war and who were caught up in the aftermath. Originally, the language of the bill mentioned only "Hmong" people, intending to include the entire community. A number of Mong Leng activists, led by Dr. Paoze Thao (Professor of Linguistics and Education at ]), drew attention to the problems associated with omitting "Mong" from the language of the bill. They noted that despite nearly equal numbers of Hmong Der and Mong Leng in the United States, resources are disproportionately directed toward the Hmong Der community. This includes not only scholarly research, but also the translation of materials, potentially including curriculum proposed by the bill.<ref>Romney, Lee. "{{dead link|date=June 2012}}." L.A. Times, May 24, 2003.</ref> Despite these arguments, "Mong" was not added to the bill. In the version that passed the assembly, "Hmong" was replaced by "Southeast Asians", a more broadly inclusive term.
]
A DNA study in 2005 in Thailand found that Hmong paternal lineage is quite different from lu Mien and other Southeast Asian tribes. The Hmong–Mien and Sino-Tibetan speaking people are known as hill tribes in Thailand; they were the subject of the first studies to show an impact of patrilocality vs. matrilocality on patterns of mitochondrial (mt) DNA vs. the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) variation.
According to linguist ], there is linguistic evidence to suggest that they have occupied some of the same areas of southern China for over 8,000&nbsp;years.<ref name="auto">Ratliff, Martha. "Vocabulary of Environment and Subsistence in Proto-language," p. 160.</ref> Evidence from ] in ]–speaking populations supports the existence of southern origins of maternal lineages even further back in time, although it has been shown that Hmong-speaking populations had comparatively more contact with northern East Asians than had the Mien.<ref name="auto1">{{cite journal |last1=Wen |first1=Bo |last2=Li |first2=Hui |last3=Gao |first3=Song |last4=Mao |first4=Xianyun |last5=Gao |first5=Yang |last6=Li |first6=Feng |last7=Zhang |first7=Feng |last8=He |first8=Yungang |last9=Dong |first9=Yongli |last10=Zhang |first10=Youjun |last11=Huang |first11=Wenju |last12=Jin |first12=Jianzhong |last13=Xiao |first13=Chunjie |last14=Lu |first14=Daru |last15=Chakraborty |first15=Ranajit |last16=Su |first16=Bing |last17=Deka |first17=Ranjan |last18=Jin |first18=Li |title=Genetic Structure of Hmong-Mien Speaking Populations in East Asia as Revealed by mtDNA Lineages |journal=Molecular Biology and Evolution |date=March 2005 |volume=22 |issue=3 |pages=725–734 |doi=10.1093/molbev/msi055 }}</ref> Overall, Hmong–Mien cluster with Tai-Kadai and Sino-Tibetan speakers compared to other Chinese populations.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gao |first1=Yang |last2=Zhang |first2=Xiaoxi |last3=Chen |first3=Hao |last4=Lu |first4=Yan |last5=Ma |first5=Sen |last6=Yang |first6=Yajun |last7=Zhang |first7=Menghan |last8=Xu |first8=Shuhua |title=Reconstructing the ancestral gene pool to uncover the origins and genetic links of Hmong–Mien speakers |journal=BMC Biology |date=13 March 2024 |volume=22 |issue=1 |doi=10.1186/s12915-024-01838-9 |doi-access=free |pmid=38475771 }}</ref>


=== Homeland ===
Dr. Paoze Thao and some others feel strongly that "Hmong" can refer to only Hmong Der people and does not include Mong Leng people. He feels that the usage of "Hmong" in reference to both groups perpetuates the marginalization of Mong Leng language and culture. Thus, he advocates the usage of both "Hmong" and "Mong" when referring to the entire ethnic group.<ref>Thao, Paoze and Chimeng Yang. "{{dead link|date=June 2012}}". Mong Journal, vol. 1 (June 2004).</ref> Other scholars, including anthropologist Dr. ] (a Hmong Der person), suggest that "Hmong" has been used for the past 30 years to refer to the entire community and that the inclusion of Mong Leng people is understood.<ref>Lee, Gary and Nicholas Tapp. "".</ref> Some argue that such distinctions create unnecessary divisions within the global community and will only confuse non-Hmong and Mong people trying to learn more about Hmong and Mong history and culture.<ref>Duffy, John, Roger Harmon, Donald A. Ranard, Bo Thao, and Kou Yang. "". In The Hmong: An Introduction to their history and culture. The Center for Applied Linguistics, Culture Profile No. 18 (June 2004): 3.</ref>
The most likely ] of the Hmong–Mien languages is in ] between the ] and ] rivers.<ref>]. 2004. Paper for the Symposium "Human migrations in continental East Asia and Taiwan: genetic, linguistic and archaeological evidence". Geneva June 10–13, 2004. Université de Genève.</ref>


Migration of people speaking these languages from South China to ] took place ca. 1600–1700&nbsp;CE. Ancient ] evidence suggests that the ancestors of the speakers of the Hmong–Mien languages were a population genetically distinct from that of the Tai–Kadai and Austronesian language populations at a location on the ].<ref name="PMID 17657509">{{Cite journal |last1=Li |first1=Hui |last2=Huang |first2=Ying |last3=Mustavich |first3=Laura F. |last4=Zhang |first4=Fan |last5=Tan |first5=Jing-Ze |last6=Wang |first6=Ling-E |last7=Qian |first7=Ji |last8=Gao |first8=Meng-He |last9=Jin |first9=Li |title=Y chromosomes of prehistoric people along the Yangtze River |journal=Human Genetics |volume=122 |issue=3–4 |pages=383–8 |year=2007 |pmid=17657509 |doi=10.1007/s00439-007-0407-2 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Recent Y-DNA phylogeny evidence supports the theory that people who speak the Hmong–Mien languages are descended from a population that is distantly related to those who now speak the Mon-Khmer languages.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cai |first1=X |last2=Qin |first2=Z |last3=Wen |first3=B |last4=Xu |first4=S |last5=Wang |first5=Y |last6=Lu |first6=Y |last7=Wei |first7=L |last8=Wang |first8=C |last9=Li |first9=S |last10=Huang |first10=X |last11=Jin |first11=L |last12=Li |first12=H |last13=Genographic |first13=Consortium |year=2011 |title=Human Migration through Bottlenecks from Southeast Asia into East Asia during Last Glacial Maximum Revealed by Y Chromosomes |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=6 |issue=8 |page=e24282 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0024282 |pmid=21904623 |pmc=3164178|bibcode=2011PLoSO...624282C |doi-access=free }}</ref>
As a compromise alternative, the ethnologist Jacques Lemoine has begun to use the term (H)mong when referring to the entirety of the Hmong and Mong community.<ref name="Lemoine2005"/>


The time of ] has been estimated to be about 2500&nbsp;BP (500&nbsp;BCE) by Sagart, Blench, and Sanchez-Mazas using traditional methods employing many lines of evidence, and about 4243&nbsp;BP by the Automated Similarity Judgment Program (ASJP), an experimental algorithm for automatic generation of phonologically based phylogenies.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://wwwstaff.eva.mpg.de/~wichmann/AutomatedDatingFinal.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2013-12-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131127082301/http://wwwstaff.eva.mpg.de/~wichmann/AutomatedDatingFinal.pdf |archive-date=2013-11-27 }}</ref>
====Hmong, Mong and Miao====
Some non-Chinese Hmong advocate that the term Hmong be used not only for designating their dialect group, but also for the other Miao groups living in China. They generally claim that the word "Miao" or "Meo" is a derogatory term, with connotations of barbarism, that probably should not be used at all. The term was later adapted by Tai-speaking groups in Southeast Asia where it took on especially insulting associations for Hmong people despite its official status.<ref>Tapp. Nicholas. "Cultural Accommodations in Southwest China: the "Han Miao" and Problems in the Ethnography of the Hmong." Asian Folklore Studies, Vol. 61, 2002: 97.</ref> In modern China, the term "Miao" does not carry these negative associations and people of the various sub-groups that constitute this officially recognized nationality freely identify themselves as Miao or Chinese, typically reserving more specific ethnonyms for intra-ethnic communication. During the struggle for political recognition after 1949, it was actually members of these ethnic minorities who campaigned for identification under the umbrella term "Miao"—taking advantage of its familiarity and associations of historical political oppression.<ref>Cheung Siu-Woo "Miao Identity in Western Guizhou: Indigenism and the politics of appropriation in the southwest china during the republican period" in Hmong or Miao in Asia. 237–240.</ref>


==History==
Contemporary transnational interactions between Hmong in the West and Miao groups in China, following the 1975 Hmong diaspora, have led to the development of a global Hmong identity that includes linguistically and culturally related minorities in China that previously had no ethnic affiliation.<ref>Schien, Louisa. "Hmong/Miao Transnationality: Identity Beyond Culture." in Hmong or Miao in Asia. 274–5.</ref> Scholarly and commercial exchanges, increasingly communicated via the Internet, have also resulted in an exchange of terminology, including Hmu and A Hmao people identifying as Hmong and, to a lesser extent, Hmong people accepting the designation "Miao," within the context of China. Such realignments of identity, while largely the concern of economically elite community leaders, reflect a trend towards the interchangeability of the terms "Hmong" and "Miao."<ref>Lee, Gary Y.
===China===
]
Hmong traditions and legends indicate that they originated near the ] region of northern ], but this is not substantiated by any scientific evidence.<ref>Bomar, Julie. "Hmong History and Culture." Kinship networks among Hmong-American refugees. New York: LFB Scholarly Pub., 2004. 33–39. Print.</ref> According to linguist ], there is linguistic evidence to suggest that they have occupied some of the same areas of southern China for over 8,000&nbsp;years.<ref name="auto"/> Evidence from ] in ]–speaking populations supports the southern origins of maternal lineages even farther back in time, although it has been shown that Hmong-speaking populations had comparatively more contact with northern East Asians than the Mien.<ref name="auto1"/><ref name=":3" /><ref>{{cite journal |last1=He |first1=Guanglin |last2=Wang |first2=Peixin |last3=Chen |first3=Jing |last4=Liu |first4=Yan |last5=Sun |first5=Yuntao |last6=Hu |first6=Rong |last7=Duan |first7=Shuhan |last8=Sun |first8=Qiuxia |last9=Tang |first9=Renkuan |last10=Yang |first10=Junbao |last11=Wang |first11=Zhiyong |last12=Yun |first12=Libing |last13=Hu |first13=Liping |last14=Yan |first14=Jiangwei |last15=Nie |first15=Shengjie |last16=Wei |first16=Lanhai |last17=Liu |first17=Chao |last18=Wang |first18=Mengge |title=Differentiated genomic footprints suggest isolation and long-distance migration of Hmong-Mien populations |journal=BMC Biology |date=25 January 2024 |volume=22 |issue=1 |page=18 |doi=10.1186/s12915-024-01828-x |doi-access=free |pmid=38273256 |pmc=10809681 }}</ref> A rare haplogroup, O3d, was found at the ] in the middle reaches of the ], indicating that the Daxi people might be the ancestors of modern Hmong–Mien populations, which show only small traces of O3d today.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Li |first1=Hui |last2=Huang |first2=Ying |last3=Mustavich |first3=Laura F. |last4=Zhang |first4=Fan |last5=Tan |first5=Jing-Ze |last6=Wang |first6=Ling-E |last7=Qian |first7=Ji |last8=Gao |first8=Meng-He |last9=Jin |first9=Li |title=Y chromosomes of prehistoric people along the Yangtze River |journal=Human Genetics |date=November 2007 |volume=122 |issue=3–4 |pages=383–388 |doi=10.1007/s00439-007-0407-2 |pmid=17657509 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


In 2011, Hmong DNA was sampled and found to contain 7.84% ] and 6%N(Tat) DNA.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cai |first1=Xiaoyun |last2=Qin |first2=Zhendong |last3=Wen |first3=Bo |last4=Xu |first4=Shuhua |last5=Wang |first5=Yi |last6=Lu |first6=Yan |last7=Wei |first7=Lanhai |last8=Wang |first8=Chuanchao |last9=Li |first9=Shilin |last10=Huang |first10=Xingqiu |last11=Jin |first11=Li |last12=Li |first12=Hui |last13=Consortium |first13=the Genographic |date=31 August 2011 |title=Human Migration through Bottlenecks from Southeast Asia into East Asia during Last Glacial Maximum Revealed by Y Chromosomes |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=6 |issue=8 |pages=e24282 |bibcode=2011PLoSO...624282C |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0024282 |pmc=3164178 |pmid=21904623 |doi-access=free}}</ref> The research found a common ancestry between Hmong–Mien peoples and ] groups dating to the ], approximately 15,000 to 18,000&nbsp;years ago.
. Hmong Studies Journal, 7:1–33.</ref>


In 2021, researchers found that a 500 year old 'GaoHuaHua' population in Guangxi contributed to the ancestries of modern Hmong-Mien groups in Guangxi. The 'GaoHuaHua' population was modeled as having 66% Dushan-related ancestry and 34% Bushan-related ancestry. They also received Northeast Asian-related Shandong ancestry, which emerged 9,500–7,700 years ago.<ref name=":3">{{cite journal |last1=Wang |first1=Tianyi |last2=Wang |first2=Wei |last3=Xie |first3=Guangmao |last4=Li |first4=Zhen |last5=Fan |first5=Xuechun |last6=Yang |first6=Qingping |last7=Wu |first7=Xichao |last8=Cao |first8=Peng |last9=Liu |first9=Yichen |last10=Yang |first10=Ruowei |last11=Liu |first11=Feng |last12=Dai |first12=Qingyan |last13=Feng |first13=Xiaotian |last14=Wu |first14=Xiaohong |last15=Qin |first15=Ling |last16=Li |first16=Fajun |last17=Ping |first17=Wanjing |last18=Zhang |first18=Lizhao |last19=Zhang |first19=Ming |last20=Liu |first20=Yalin |last21=Chen |first21=Xiaoshan |last22=Zhang |first22=Dongju |last23=Zhou |first23=Zhenyu |last24=Wu |first24=Yun |last25=Shafiey |first25=Hassan |last26=Gao |first26=Xing |last27=Curnoe |first27=Darren |last28=Mao |first28=Xiaowei |last29=Bennett |first29=E. Andrew |last30=Ji |first30=Xueping |last31=Yang |first31=Melinda A. |last32=Fu |first32=Qiaomei |title=Human population history at the crossroads of East and Southeast Asia since 11,000 years ago |journal=Cell |date=July 2021 |volume=184 |issue=14 |pages=3829–3841.e21 |doi=10.1016/j.cell.2021.05.018 |pmid=34171307 }}</ref>
==History==


The author of ], written in the 4th to 5th century, considered Chi You's Jiu Li tribe to be related to the ancient ancestors of the Hmong, the San-Miao people.<ref name="國語•楚語下">{{cite web|url=https://ctext.org/guo-yu/chu-yu-xia|title=國語•楚語下|access-date=23 April 2018}}</ref> ] is the Hmong ancestral God of War. Today, a statue of Chi You has been erected in the town named ].<ref name="indig">De la Cadena, Marisol. Starn, Orin. Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. (2007). Indigenous experience today. Berg Publishers, 2007. {{ISBN|978-1-84520-519-5}}. p. 239.</ref>
]


]'s campaign against the Hmong people at Lancaoping in 1795]]
The early history of the Hmong has proven difficult to trace. The origin of the Hmong is in the high hills and mountains of Yellow River and Yangtze River regions in China.<ref>Bomar, Julie. "Hmong History and Culture." Kinship networks among Hmong-American refugees. New York: LFB Scholarly Pub., 2004. 33-39. Print.</ref> According to Ratliff, there is linguistic evidence to suggest that they have occupied the same areas of southern China for at least the past 2,000 years.<ref>Ratliff, Martha. "Vocabulary of Environment and Subsistence in Proto-language," p. 160.</ref> Evidence from mitochondrial DNA in ]–speaking populations supports the southern origins of maternal lineages even further back in time, although Hmong-speaking populations show more contact with Han than Mien populations.<ref>Bo Wen, et al. "." Molecular Biology and Evolution 2005 22(3):725–734.</ref> Historical Chinese documents describe that area being inhabited by 'Miao' people, a group with whom Hmong people are often identified.
]


Conflict between the Hmong of southern China and newly arrived Han settlers increased during the 18th century under repressive economic and cultural reforms imposed by the ]. This led to ] and large-scale migrations well into the late 19th century, the period during which many Hmong people emigrated to Southeast Asia. However, the migration process had begun as early as the late 17th century, before the time of major social unrest, when small groups went in search of better agricultural opportunities.<ref>Culas and Michaud, 68–74.</ref>
The ancient ], is considered to be a legendary birthplace of the Miao and has a statue of Chi You claiming him to be the ancestor of the Hmong.<ref name="indig">De la Cadena, Marisol. Starn, Orin. Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. (2007). Indigenous experience today. Berg Publishers, 2007. ISBN 978-1-84520-519-5. pg 239.</ref> The ], considers Chi You’s Li tribe to be related to the ancient ]<ref name="國語•楚語下">(國語•楚語下)</ref><ref name="國語•楚語下"/>


The Hmong people were subjected to persecution and genocide by the ] government. Arthur A. Hansen wrote: "In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, while the Hmong lived in south-western China, their ] overlords had labeled them ']' and targeted them for ]."<ref> p. 225.</ref>{{better source needed|date=July 2024}}<!--The author is an expert in Japanese Americans during WW2, not an issue very closely related to the treatment of the Hmong by the Qing Dynasty.-->
In 2011 White Hmong DNA was sampled and found to contain 7.84% D-M15 and 6%N(Tat) DNA.<ref>http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0024282</ref> The researchers posited a genetic relationship between Hmong-Mien peoples and ] people groups dating to the ] approximately 15-18,000 years before present. According to this study, the results suggest a prehistoric migration route from Southeast Asia into East Asia.


Since 1949, the ] ({{lang-zh|c=苗族|p=miáo zú}}) has been an official term for one of the ] recognized by the government of the ]. The Miao live mainly in southern China, in the provinces of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. According to the 2000 census, the number of 'Miao' in China was estimated to be about 9.6&nbsp;million. The Miao nationality includes Hmong people as well as other culturally and linguistically related ethnic groups who do not call themselves Hmong. These include the ], Kho (Qho) Xiong, and ]. The settling region of the Hmong in China is further western than that of the other groups, mainly in Guizhou, Yunnan, Sichuan, Chongqing, and Guangxi.
Yet, the history of the Hmong cannot be equated with the history of the 'Miao'. Although the term 'Miao' is used today by the Chinese government to denote a group of linguistically and culturally related people (including the Hmong, Hmu, Kho Xiong, and A Hmao), it has been used inconsistently in the past. Throughout the written ], it was applied to a variety of peoples considered to be marginal to Han society, including many who are unrelated to contemporary Hmong and Mong people. Christian Culas and Jean Michaud note: "In all these early accounts, then, until roughly the middle of the 19th century, there is perpetual confusion about the exact identity of the population groups designated by the term Miao. We should therefore be cautious with respect to the historical value of any early associations."<ref>Culas, Christian and Jean Michaud. "A Contribution to the Study of Hmong (Miao)." In: Hmong/Miao in Asia. Ed. Nicholas Tapp, et al. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 2004: 64.</ref>


{{wide image|1 xijiang panorama.jpg|600px|Xijiang, a Hmong-majority township in Guizhou, China}}
Conflict between Miao groups and newly arrived settlers increased during the 18th century under repressive economic and cultural reforms imposed by the ]. This led to ] and large-scale migrations continuing into the late 19th century, the period during which most Hmong people emigrated to Southeast Asia. The process began as early as the late-17th century, before the time of major social unrest, when small groups went in search of better agricultural opportunities.<ref>Culas and Michaud, 68–74.</ref>


===Vietnam===
From July 1919 to March 1921 the Hmong of ] revolted against the ] authorities in what the French called the ] (''La Guerre du Fou'') and what the Hmongs call Rog Paj Cai (named after the leader Paj Cai, but literally means The War of the flowering of the Law).
The Hmong or Miao began to migrate to Tonkin (Northern Vietnam) in 19th century, where they struggled to establish their community on the high mountains. They recognized the Tai-speaking overlords of valleys, who were vassals of the Vietnamese court in Hue. The Hue court of ] at the time was facing crisis after crisis, unable to retake control of Tonkin and the border regions. The ] and other Chinese rebels spilled over into Vietnam and had caused anarchy; the Hmong communities thrived on either sides of the Red River, harmonizing with other ethnic groups, and were largely ignored by all factions.<ref>{{cite book|last=Lee|first=Mai Na M.|author-link=Mai Na Lee|year=2015|title=Dreams of the Hmong Kingdom: The Quest for Legitimation in French Indochina, 1850–1960|publisher=University of Wisconsin Press|isbn=978-0-299-29884-5|pages=78–79}}</ref>


During the colonization of ']' (]) between 1883 and 1954, a number of Hmong decided to join the ] and ], while many ] Hmong sided with the French. After the ] victory, numerous pro-French Hmong had to fall back to Laos and ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Michaud |first1=J. |title=The Montagnards and the State in Northern Vietnam from 1802 to 1975: A Historical Overview |journal=Ethnohistory |date=1 April 2000 |volume=47 |issue=2 |pages=333–68 |id={{ProQuest|209752840}} |doi=10.1215/00141801-47-2-333 }}</ref>
The Hmong fought against the Communist ] in Laos. They were allied to the ] forces and the United States, both fighting ]. After the Communist victory in 1975, the Pathet Lao responded by a campaign of near genocide, annihilating an estimating 100,000 of 400,000 Hmong in Laos.


] in Vietnam]]
==Culture==
{{main|Hmong customs and culture}}
The Hmong culture usually consists of a dominant hierarchy within the family. Males hold dominance over females and thus, a father is considered the head in each household.


===Laos===
Various Hmong spiritual practices run on the traditional basis of ].
After decades of distant relations with the Lao kingdoms, closer relations between the French military and some Hmong on the Xieng Khouang plateau arose after ]. There, a rivalry between members of the Lo and Ly clans developed into open enmity, also affecting those connected with them by kinship. Clan leaders took opposite sides; as a consequence, several thousand Hmong participated in the fighting against the ], while almost as many were enrolled in the communist ]. In Laos, numerous Hmong genuinely tried to avoid getting involved in the conflict in spite of the extremely difficult material conditions under which they lived during wartime.<ref>Michaud, J. et al. 2016 The Historical Dictionary of the Peoples of the Southeast Asian Massif. Rowman & Littlefield, pp. 177–80.</ref>


====The U.S. and the Laotian Civil War====
See ]'s ethnography '']'' for more info.
{{Main|Laotian Civil War}}


In the early 1960s, partially as a result of the ], the U.S. ] (CIA) ] began to recruit, train and lead the indigenous Hmong people in Laos to fight against ] divisions that were invading Laos during the ]. This "Secret Army" was organized into various mobile regiments and divisions, including Special Guerrilla Units, all of whom were led by General ]. An estimated sixty-percent (60%) of Hmong men in Laos joined up.<ref>Grant Evans "Laos is getting a bad rap from the world's media" The Bangkok Post 8 July 2003</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Being Hmong Means Being Free |url=https://www.pbs.org/video/wpt-documentaries-being-hmong-means-being-free/ |website=PBS Wisconsin Documentaries }}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2016}}
==Geography==
Roughly 95% of the Hmong live in Asia. Linguistic data show that the Hmong of the Peninsula stem from the Miao of southern China as one among a set of ethnic groups belonging to the ] language family.<ref>Ratliff and Niederer, in Tapp, Michaud, Culas and Lee, Hmong/Miao in Asia, Silkworm Press, 2004</ref> Linguistically and culturally speaking, the Hmong and the other sub-groups of the Miao have little in common.<ref>Tapp, N. 2001, Hmong in China. Brill</ref>


While there were Hmong soldiers who fought with the communist Pathet Lao and the North Vietnamese, others were recognized for serving in combat against the NVA and the ], helping block Hanoi's ] inside Laos and rescuing downed American pilots. Though their role was generally kept secret in the early stages of the conflict, they made great sacrifices to help the U.S.<ref>Warner, Roger, '']'', (1996), p. 366.</ref>
In China the majority of the Hmong today live in Guizhou, Sichuan and Yunnan. The Hmong population is estimated at 3 million. No precise census data exist on the Hmong in China since China does not officially recognise the ethnonym Hmong and instead, clusters that group within the wider Miao group (8,940,116 in 2000). A few centuries ago, the lowland Chinese started moving into the mountain ranges of China's southwest. This migration, combined with major social unrest in southern China in the 18th and 19th century, served to cause some minorities of Guizhou, Sichuan and Yunnan to migrate south. A number of Hmong thus settled in the ranges of the Indochina Peninsula to practise subsistence agriculture.


Thousands of ] and ]s have resettled in ] in two separate waves. The first wave resettled in the late 1970s, mostly in the ] after the ] and ] takeovers of the pro-U.S. governments ] and ] respectively.<ref name="HND2013">{{cite web |url=http://www.hndinc.org/cmsAdmin/uploads/dlc/HND-Census-Report-2013.pdf |archive-url=https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20131002043008/http://hndinc.org/cmsAdmin/uploads/dlc/HND-Census-Report-2013.pdf |archive-date=2 October 2013 |author=Hmong National Development, Inc. |title=The State of the Hmong American Community 2013 |access-date=7 July 2016 }}</ref> The ], and Lao Veterans of America Institute, helped to assist in the resettlement of many Laotian and Hmong refugees and asylum seekers in the United States, especially former Hmong veterans and their family members who served in the "U.S. Secret Army" in Laos during the Vietnam War.<ref name="auto2">{{Cite web|url=https://www.laoveteransofamerica.org/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161227015927/http://www.laoveteransofamerica.org/|title=www.laoveteransofamerica.org|archive-date=27 December 2016|website=www.laoveteransofamerica.org}}</ref>{{failed verification|date=January 2016}}
Vietnam, where their presence is attested from the late 18th century onwards, is likely to be the first Indochinese country into which the Hmong migrated.<ref>Culas and Michaud, 2004, in Tapp, Michaud, Culas and Lee, Hmong/Miao in Asia. SIlkworm.</ref> During the colonization of 'Tonkin' (north Vietnam) between 1883 and 1954, a number of Hmong decided to join the Vietnamese Nationalists and Communists, while many Christianized Hmong sided with the French. After the Viet Minh victory, numerous pro-French Hmong had to fall back to Laos and South Vietnam.<ref>Michaud J. 2000 The Montagnards and the State in Northern Vietnam from 1802 to 1975: A Historical Overview. Ethnohistory 47(2): 333-68</ref>
]
At the 2009 national census, there were 1,068,189 Hmong living in Vietnam, the vast majority of them in the north of the country. The traditional trade in coffin wood with China and the cultivation of the opium poppy – both prohibited only in 1993 in Vietnam – long guaranteed a regular cash income. Today, converting to cash cropping is the main economic activity. As in China and Laos, there is a certain degree of participation of Hmong in the local and regional administration.<ref>Bonnin, Christine 2011, Markets in the Mountains: Exploring Geographies of Market Exchange, Trade Practices and Trader Livelihoods in Upland Northern Vietnam. PhD dissertation, McGill University.</ref> In the late 1990s, several thousands of Hmong have started moving to the Central Highlands and some have crossed the border into Cambodia, constituting the first attested presence of Hmong settlers in that country.


====Hmong Lao resistance====
In 2005, the Hmong in Laos numbered 460,000. Hmong settlement there is nearly as ancient as in Vietnam. After decades of distant relations with the Lao kingdoms, closer relations between the French military and some Hmong on the Xieng Khouang plateau were set up after World War II. There, a particular rivalry between members of the Lo and Ly clans developed into open enmity, also affecting those connected with them by kinship. Clan leaders took opposite sides and as a consequence, several thousand Hmong participated in the fighting against the Pathet Lao Communists, while perhaps as many were enrolled in the People's Liberation Army. As in Vietnam, numerous Hmong in Laos also genuinely tried to avoid getting involved in the conflict in spite of the extremely difficult material conditions under which they lived during wartime.<ref>Michaud, J. 2009 The A to Z of the Peoples of the Southeast Asian Massif. Scarecrow Press.</ref>
<!--'ChaoFa' redirects here-->
{{Main|Conflict in Laos involving the Hmong|United League for Democracy in Laos}}
].]]


For many years, the Neo Hom political movement played a key role in resistance to the ] in Laos following the U.S. withdrawal in 1975; ] played a significant role in this movement. Additionally, a spiritual leader, ], as well as other Hmong leaders, including ] or Pa Khao Her, rallied some of their followers in a factionalized guerrilla resistance movement called '''ChaoFa'''<!--sic (no space); boldface per WP:R#PLA --> (]: Cob Fab, ]: {{script|Hmng|𖬒𖬯 𖬖𖬜𖬵}} ]).<ref>Smalley, William Allen, Chia Koua Vang (''Txiaj Kuam Vaj'' ]), and Gnia Yee Yang (''Nyiaj Yig Yaj'' ]). ''Mother of Writing: The Origin and Development of a Hmong Messianic Script''. ], 23 March 1990. 10. Retrieved from ] on 23 March 2012 {{ISBN|978-0-226-76286-9}}.</ref><ref>Not to be confused with the Thai royal title ].</ref> These events led to the ] controversy when the ] accused the ] of supplying and using chemical weapons in this conflict.<ref name=Tucker>{{Cite journal| author = Jonathan Tucker| title = The Yellow Rain Controversy: Lessons for Arms Control Compliance| journal = The Nonproliferation Review| date =Spring 2001| url = http://cns.miis.edu/npr/pdfs/81tucker.pdf}}</ref>
After the 1975 Communist victory, thousands of Hmong from Laos had to seek refuge abroad (see Laos below). Approximately 30 percent of the Hmong left, although the only concrete figure we have is that of 116,000 Hmong from Laos and Vietnam together seeking refuge in Thailand up to 1990.<ref>Culas and Michaud 2004</ref>


Small groups of Hmong people, many second or third generation descendants of former CIA soldiers, remain internally displaced in remote parts of Laos, in fear of government reprisals. Faced with continuing military operations against them by the government and a scarcity of food, some groups have begun coming out of hiding, while others have sought asylum in Thailand and other countries.<ref>{{Cite news|first=David |last=Kinchen |title=438 former 'Cob Fab' removed by helicopter after they came out of hiding |date=17 November 2006 |url=http://www.hmongtoday.com/displaynews.asp?ID=2384 |work=Hmong Today |access-date=22 March 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070222133658/http://www.hmongtoday.com/displaynews.asp?ID=2384 |archive-date=22 February 2007 }}</ref> Hmong in Laos, in particular, developed a stronger and deeper ] than their Vietnamese Hmong cousins, due to historic persecution perpetrated by the Vietnamese against them.
In 2002 the Hmong in Thailand numbered 151,080. The presence of Hmong settlements there is documented from the end of the 19th century. Initially, the Siamese paid little attention to them. But in the early 1950s, the state suddenly took a number of initiatives aimed at establishing links. Decolonization and nationalism were gaining momentum in the Peninsula and wars of independence were raging. Armed opposition to the state in northern Thailand, triggered by outside influence, started in 1967 while here again, many Hmong refused to take sides in the conflict. Communist guerrilla warfare stopped by 1982 as a result of an international concurrence of events that rendered it pointless. Priority is since given by the Thai state to sedentarizing the mountain population, introducing commercially viable agricultural techniques and national education, with the aim of integrating these non-Tai animists within the national identity.<ref>Tapp, Nicholas, 1989 ''Sovereignty and Rebellion''. Oxford.</ref><ref>Cooper, Robert G. 1984 ''Resource scarcity and the Hmong response''. Singapore University Press, Singapore.</ref>


====Controversy over repatriation====
Burma most likely includes a modest number of Hmong (perhaps around 2,500) but no reliable census has been conducted there recently.<ref>Michaud 2009 The A to Z.</ref>
{{Main|Human rights in Laos#Hmong refugees and forced repatriation}}
{{Globalize|section|date=February 2018}}


In June 1991, after talks with the ] and the Thai government, Laos agreed to the repatriation of over 60,000 Lao refugees living in Thailand, including tens of thousands of Hmong people. Very few of the Lao refugees, however, were willing to return voluntarily.<ref>{{cite news|title=Laos agrees to voluntary repatriation of refugees in Thailand|agency=U.P.I.|date=5 June 1991}}</ref> Pressure to resettle the refugees grew as the Thai government worked to close its remaining refugee camps. While some Hmong people returned to Laos voluntarily, with development assistance from UNHCR, coercive measures and forced repatriation was used to send thousands of Hmong back to the places they had fled.<ref>{{cite news|title=Lao Refugees Return Home Under European Union Repatriation Program|agency=Associated Press Worldstream|date=22 Nov 1994}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Karen J.|title=House Panel Hears Concerns About Hmong|agency=]|date= 26 April 1994}}</ref> Of the Hmong who did return to Laos, some quickly escaped back to Thailand, describing discrimination and brutal treatment at the hands of Lao authorities.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hamilton-Merritt|first=Jane|title=Tragic Mountains|pages=xix–xxi}}</ref>
As result of refugee movements in the wake of the Indochina Wars (1946–1975), in particular in Laos, the largest Hmong community to settle outside Asia went to the United States where approximately 100,000 individuals had already arrived by 1990. California became home to half this group, while the remainder went to Minnesota, Wisconsin, Washington, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina. By the same date, 10,000 Hmong had migrated to France, including 1,400 in French Guyana. Canada admitted 900 individuals, while another 360 went to Australia, 260 to China, and 250 to Argentina. Over the following years and until the definitive closure of the last refugee camps in Thailand in 1998, additional numbers of Hmong have left Asia, but the definitive figures are still to be produced.<ref>Culas and Michaud 2004.</ref>


In the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, ], a non-governmental public policy research organization, and its executive director, Philip Smith, played a key role in raising awareness in the U.S. Congress and policy-making circles in Washington, D.C. about the plight of the Hmong and Laotian refugees in Thailand and Laos. The CPPA, backed by a bipartisan coalition of members of the ] and human rights organizations, conducted numerous research missions to the Hmong and Laotian refugee camps along the ] in Thailand, as well as the Buddhist temple of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.centerforpublicpolicyanalysis.org/|title=centerforpublicpolicyanalysis.org|date=6 April 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080406154059/http://www.centerforpublicpolicyanalysis.org/|archive-date=6 April 2008}}</ref>
Outside of Asia, where about 5% of the world Hmong population now lives, the United States is home to the largest Hmong population. The 2008 Census counted 171,316 persons of Hmong Alone Population,and 221,948 persons of Hmong Alone Population or in Any Combination.<ref>2008 Southeast Asian American Data from the American Community Survey (Released Fall 2009)</ref> Other countries with significant populations include:<ref>Lemoine. "What is the number of the (H)mong in the world."</ref>
*]: 15,000
*]: 2,000
*]: 1,500
*] and ]: 600


], the ], Inc., the ], Inc., ], Inc. (led by Dr. Pobzeb Vang ], and later Vaughn Vang) and other non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and human rights organizations joined the opposition to forced repatriation.<ref name="auto2"/>
Within the United States, the Hmong population is centred in the ] (], ]) and ].<ref>Pfeifer, Mark (compiler). University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire {{Wayback |date=20080725181757 |url=http://www.uwec.edu/Econ/Research/Hmong/HPopulation.htm |title=Hmong Population Research Project - Population }} archived July 25, 2008 from {{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref>


Although some accusations of forced repatriation were denied,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://content.cdlib.org/xtf/view?docId=hb909nb5j8&brand=calisphere&doc.view=entire_text |title=Reports on results of investigations of allegations concerning the welfare of Hmong refugees and asylum seekers in Thailand and Laos|agency=Refugee and Migration Affairs Unit|publisher=United States Embassy (Thailand)|date=1992|access-date=27 July 2007}}</ref> thousands of Hmong people refused to return to Laos. In 1996, as the deadline for the closure of Thai refugee camps approached, under mounting political pressure, the U.S. agreed to resettle Hmong refugees who passed a new screening process.<ref>{{cite news|first=Steve |last=Gunderson|title=State Department Outlines Resettlement Guidelines for Hmong Refugees|publisher= Congressional Press Releases|date=18 May 1996}}</ref> Around 5,000 Hmong people who were not resettled at the time of the camp closures sought asylum at ], a ] in central Thailand where more than 10,000 Hmong refugees were already living. The Thai government attempted to repatriate these refugees, but the Wat Tham Krabok Hmong refused to leave and the Lao government refused to accept them, claiming they were involved in the ] and were of non-Lao origin.<ref>{{cite news|title=Laos refuses to take back Thai-based Hmong refugees|work=Deutsche Presse-Agentur|date=20 August 1998}}</ref>
===Laos===


In 2003, following threats of forcible removal by the Thai government, the U.S., in a significant victory for the Hmong, agreed to accept 15,000 of the refugees.<ref>{{cbignore|bot=medic}} Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, 16 January 2004, archived 17 January 2009 from </ref> Several thousand Hmong people, fearing forced repatriation to Laos if they were not accepted for resettlement in the U.S., fled the camp to live elsewhere within Thailand where a sizable Hmong population has been present since the 19th century.<ref>{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081021133910/http://www.centralcallegal.org/hrtf/history/index.html |date=21 October 2008 |title=History of the Hmong Resettlement Task Force }} Hmong Resettlement Task Force, archived 21 October 2008 from </ref> In 2004 and 2005, thousands of Hmong fled from the jungles of Laos to a temporary refugee camp in the Thai province of ].<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4724199.stm | work=BBC News | title=Hmong refugees pleading to stay | date=28 July 2005 | access-date=4 May 2010}}</ref>
====Laotian Civil War====
{{Main|Laotian Civil War}}


The ],<ref name="EU@UN"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100312015347/http://www.europa-eu-un.org/articles/en/article_6732_en.htm |date=12 March 2010 }} EU@UN, 1 February 2007</ref> ], and international groups have since spoken out about the forced repatriation.<ref name="EU@UN"/><ref>{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013140444/http://web.amnesty.org/wire/March2007/Hmong |date=13 October 2007 |title=Hmong refugees facing removal from Thailand }} The Wire – Amnesty International's monthly magazine, March 2007, archived 13 October 2007 from </ref><ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120224030721/http://www.gfbv.de/pressemit.php?id=812 |date=24 February 2012 }} Gesellschaft für bedrohte Völker, 30 January 2007</ref><ref> Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, 5 February 2007</ref>
In the early 1960s, the U.S. ]'s (CIA) ] began to recruit, train and lead the indigenous Hmong people in Laos to fight against ] intruders into Laos during the ]. It became a Special Guerrilla Unit led by General ]. About 60% of the Hmong men in Laos were assisted by the CIA to join fighting for the ] in Laos.<ref>Grant Evans "Laos is getting a bad rap from the world's media" The Bangkok Post 08 July 2003</ref><ref>"Being Hmong Means Being Free" Wisconsin Public Television</ref> The CIA used the Special Guerrilla Unit as the counterattack unit to block the ], the main military supply route from the north to the south.


====Alleged plot to overthrow the government of Laos====
Hmong soldiers served in combat against the NVA and the ], helping block the Hanoi's ] inside Laos and rescuing downed American pilots. As inhabitants of the more mountainous regions of Laos, the Hmong people earned a special place in the hearts of American combat soldiers because of their strong support for the United States in its fight against the North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao communist forces.{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} Though their role was generally kept secret in the early stages of the conflict, they made monumental sacrifices to help the U.S.<ref>Warner, Roger, '']'', (1996), pp366.</ref> Laos was subjected to the most heavy bombing in the area, resulting in the death of approximately 19,000 Hmong soldiers and 50,000 Hmong civilians and virtually annihilating all village agricultural life.<ref>Warner, R. (1995). Back fire: The CIA’s secret war in Laos and its link to the war in Vietnam. New York: Simon & Schus- ter.</ref>
{{Main|2007 Laotian coup d'état conspiracy allegation}}
General Vang Pao led the Region II (MR2) defense against ] (NVA) incursion from his headquarters in ], also known as Lima Site 20 Alternate (LS 20A).<ref>{{Cite book| last = Hamilton-Merritt | first = Jane | title = Tragic Mountains | publisher = Indiana University Press | location = Bloomington | year = 1993 | pages = 130–139 | isbn = 0-253-32731-8 }}</ref> At the height of its activity, Long Cheng became the second largest city in Laos. Long Cheng was a micro-nation operational site with its own bank, airport, school system, officials, and many other facilities and services in addition to its military units. Before the end of the Secret War, Long Cheng would fall in and out of General Vang Pao's control.
On 4 June 2007, as part of an investigation labeled ], U.S. federal courts ordered warrants issued for the arrest of ] and nine others for plotting to overthrow the government of Laos in violation of federal ] and for multiple weapons charges.<ref>Walsh, Denny. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080427063714/http://www.sacbee.com/292/story/206120.html |date=27 April 2008 |title=Ten accused of conspiring to oust government of Laos }} The '']'', 5 June 2007, archived 27 April 2008 from </ref> The federal charges alleged that members of the group inspected weapons, including ]s, ]s, and ]s, in order to buy and smuggle into Thailand in June 2007, where they were intended to be used by Hmong resistance forces in Laos. Out of the 9 arrested, one was an American, Harrison Jack, a 1968 ] graduate and retired Army infantry officer who allegedly attempted to recruit ] veterans to act as ].


To obtain the weapons, Jack allegedly met unknowingly with undercover U.S. federal agents posing as weapons dealers, prompting the warrants, part of a long-running investigation into the activities of the U.S.-based Hmong leadership and its supporters.
The Secret War began at about the time the United States became actively involved in the Vietnam War. Two years after the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam, the Kingdom of Laos was overthrown by communist troops supported by the North Vietnamese Army. The Hmong people became targets of retaliation and persecution. While some Hmong returned to their villages and attempted to resume life under the new regime, thousands more trekked across the ] into Thailand, often under attack. This marked the beginning of a mass exodus of Hmong from Laos. Those who reached Thailand were kept in squalid ] refugee camps until they could be resettled. Nearly 20 years later, in the 1990s, a major international debate ensued over whether Hmong refugees remaining in Thailand should be forcibly repatriated to Laos, where they were still subject to persecution, or should be allowed to emigrate to the United States and other Western nations.


On 15 June, the defendants were indicted by a ]; a ] was also issued for the arrest of an 11th man allegedly involved in the plot. Simultaneous raids of the defendants' homes and work locations, involving over 200 federal, state and local law enforcement officials, were conducted in approximately 15 U.S. cities in ] and ].
In the United States and Southeast Asia, the ] helped to assist in the resettlement of many Laotian and Hmong refugees and asylum seekers in the United States, especially former Hmong veterans and their family members who served in the "U.S. Secret Army" in Laos during the Vietnam War.<ref>Lao Veterans of America, Inc., (LVA) Washington, D.C., http://www.laoveteransofamerica.org</ref>


Multiple protest rallies in support of the suspects, designed to raise awareness of the treatment of Hmong peoples in the jungles of Laos, took place in ], ], ], ]. Several of ]'s high-level supporters in the U.S. criticized the California court that issued the arrest warrants, arguing that Vang was a historically important American ally and a valued leader of U.S. and foreign-based Hmong. Calls to Californian ] governor ] and President ] to pardon the defendants went unanswered pending a conclusion to the large, ongoing federal investigation.<ref>Magagnini, Stephen and Walsh, Denny. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071213074347/http://www.sacbee.com/291/story/229794.html |date=13 December 2007 |title=Hmong Rally for 'The General' }} The Sacramento Bee, 19 June 2007, archived 13 December 2007 from </ref>
====Hmong Lao resistance====
{{Main|Conflict in Laos involving the Hmong}}
].]]
Of those Hmong who did not flee Laos, or could not flee, thousands were sent to re-education camps where ] served terms of 3–5 years, or much longer sentences. Many Hmong died in these camps, after being subjected to hard physical labor, harsh conditions, ] and ]s or ] by ] officials or ] and ] soldiers and guards.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cal.org/co/hmong/hhist.html |title=The Hmong: An Introduction to their History and Culture |publisher=Cal.org |date= |accessdate=2012-06-07}}</ref> Thousands more Hmong people, mainly former soldiers and their families, escaped to remote mountain regions—particularly ], the highest (and thus least accessible) mountain peak in Laos. Initially, some Hmong groups staged attacks against Pathet Lao and Vietnamese troops while others remained in hiding to avoid military retaliation and persecution. For many years, the Neo Hom resistance and political movement played a key role in resistance to the ] in Laos following the U.S. withdrawal in 1975. ] played a significant role in this movement. Additionally, spiritual leader ], as well as other Hmong leaders, rallied their followers in a guerrilla resistance movement called ] (]: Cob Fab, ]: ]<ref>Smalley, William Allen, Chia Koua Vang (''Txiaj Kuam Vaj'' ]), and Gnia Yee Yang (''Nyiaj Yig Yaj'' ]). ''Mother of Writing: The Origin and Development of a Hmong Messianic Script''. ], March 23, 1990. 10. Retrieved from ] on March 23, 2012. ISBN 0-226-76286-6, ISBN 978-0-226-76286-9.</ref>). Initial military successes by these small bands led to military counter-attacks by government forces, including aerial bombing and heavy artillery, as well as the use of defoliants and possibly chemical weapons.<ref> Published in Stuart-Fox, M. ed. Contemporary Laos: Studies in the Politics and Society of the Lao People's Democratic Republic, pp. 199–219, St. Lucia: Queensland University Press, 1982</ref> These events led to the ] controversy, when the ] accused the ] of supplying and using chemical weapons in this conflict.<ref name=Tucker>{{Cite journal
|author=Jonathan Tucker
|title=The Yellow Rain Controversy: Lessons for Arms Control Compliance
|journal=The Nonproliferation Review
|date=Spring 2001
|url=http://cns.miis.edu/npr/pdfs/81tucker.pdf
|doi=
}}</ref>


On 18 September 2009, the U.S. federal government dropped all charges against Vang Pao, announcing that the federal government was permitted to consider "the probable sentence or other consequences if the person is convicted".<ref> ''The New York Times'', 18 September 2009</ref> On 10 January 2011, after Vang Pao's death, the federal government dropped all charges against the remaining defendants saying, "Based on the totality of the circumstances in the case, the government believes, as a discretionary matter, that continued prosecution of defendants is no longer warranted."<ref>{{cite news | title=Charges dropped against 12 Hmong men accused in plot to overthrow Laotian government | url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/01/charges-dropped-against-12-hmong-men-accused-in-plot-to-overthrow-laotian-government.html | newspaper=Los Angeles Times | date=10 January 2011 | access-date=15 January 2011 }}</ref>
Small groups of Hmong people, many of them second or third generation descendants of former CIA soldiers, remain internally displaced in remote parts of Laos, in fear of government reprisals. Faced with continuing military operations against them by the government and a scarcity of food, some groups have begun coming out of hiding, while others have sought asylum in Thailand and other countries.<ref>{{Cite news| first=David | last=Kinchen | coauthors= | title=438 former "Cob Fab" removed by helicopter after they came out of hiding | date=2006-11-17 | publisher= | url =http://www.hmongtoday.com/displaynews.asp?ID=2384 | work =Hmong Today | pages = | accessdate = 2007-03-22 | language = |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070222133658/http://www.hmongtoday.com/displaynews.asp?ID=2384 <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2007-02-22}}</ref>


===Thailand===
Throughout the Vietnam War, and for two decades following it, the U.S. government stated that there was no "Secret War" in Laos and that the U.S. was not engaged in air or ground combat operations in Laos. In the late 1990s, however, several U.S. conservatives, alleging that the Clinton administration was using the denial of this covert war to justify a ] of Thailand-based Hmong war veterans to Laos, urged the U.S. government to acknowledge the existence of the Secret War and to honor the Hmong and U.S. veterans from the war. On 15 May 1997, in a reversal of U.S. policy, the U.S. government acknowledged that it had supported a prolonged air and ground campaign against the NVA, ], and VietCong. It simultaneously dedicated the ] on the grounds of ] in honor of the Hmong and other combat veterans from the Secret War.
The presence of Hmong settlements in Thailand is documented from the end of the 19th century on. Initially, the ] paid little attention to them. But in the early 1950s, the state suddenly took a number of initiatives aimed at establishing links. Decolonization and nationalism were gaining momentum in the peninsula and wars of independence were raging. Armed opposition to the state in northern Thailand, triggered by outside influence, started in 1967 while again many Hmong refused to take sides in the conflict. Communist ] stopped by 1982 as a result of an international concurrence of events that rendered it pointless. Priority has since been given by the Thai state to sedentarizing the mountain population, introducing commercially viable agricultural techniques and national education, with the aim of integrating these non-Tai animists within the national identity.<ref>Tapp, Nicholas, 1989 ''Sovereignty and Rebellion''. Oxford.{{page needed|date=January 2016}}</ref><ref>Cooper, Robert G. 1984 ''Resource scarcity and the Hmong response''. Singapore University Press, Singapore.{{page needed|date=January 2016}}</ref>


====Controversy over repatriation==== ===In the United States===
{{Main|Hmong American}}{{see also|List of Hmong Americans|History of the Hmong in Merced, California|Hmong archives|Lao Veterans of America|Laos Memorial|The Center for Public Policy Analysis}}
In 1989, the ] (UNHCR), with the support of the United States government, instituted the ], a program to stem the tide of ] from Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia. Under the plan, the status of the refugees was to be evaluated through a screening process. Recognized asylum seekers were to be given resettlement opportunities, while the remaining refugees were to be repatriated under guarantee of safety.
Many Hmong refugees resettled in the United States after the ]. Beginning in December 1975, the first Hmong refugees arrived in the U.S., mainly from refugee camps in Thailand; however, only 3,466 were granted asylum at that time under the ]. In May 1976, another 11,000 were allowed to enter the United States, and by 1978 some 30,000 Hmong people had emigrated. This first wave was made up predominantly of men directly associated with General ]'s secret army. It was not until the passage of the ] that families were able to enter the U.S., becoming the second wave of Hmong immigrants. Hmong families were scattered across all 50 states but most found their way to each other, building large communities in California, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Washington State and Oregon. Smaller, but still sizeable communities also formed in Massachusetts (]), Michigan (]), Montana (]) and Alaska (]).


==Culture==
After talks with the UNHCR and the Thai government, Laos agreed to repatriate the 60,000 Lao refugees living in Thailand, including several thousand Hmong people. Very few of the Lao refugees, however, were willing to return voluntarily.<ref>"Laos agrees to voluntary repatriation of refugees in Thailand," U.P.I., June 5, 1991.</ref> Pressure to resettle the refugees grew as the Thai government worked to close its remaining refugee camps. While some Hmong people returned to Laos voluntarily, with development assistance from UNHCR, allegations of forced repatriation surfaced.<ref>"Lao Refugees Return Home Under European Union Repatriation Program," Associated Press Worldstream, 22 11, 1994. Karen J, "HOUSE PANEL HEARS CONCERNS ABOUT HMONG," States News Service, April 26, 1994.</ref> Of those Hmong who did return to Laos, some quickly escaped back to Thailand, describing discrimination and brutal treatment at the hands of Lao authorities.<ref>Hamilton-Merritt, Jane. Tragic Mountains. p. xix–xxi.</ref>
]Hmong people have their own terms for their cultural divisions. '']'' (Hmoob Dawb), and ''Hmong Leng'' (Hmoob Leeg) are the terms for two of the largest groups in the ] and Southeast Asia. These subgroups are also known as the White Hmong, and Blue or Green Hmong, respectively. These names originate from the color and designs of women's dresses in each respective group, with the White Hmong distinguished by the white dresses women wear on special occasions, and the Blue/Green Hmong by the blue ]ed dresses.<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Commercialized Crafts of Thailand |last=Cohen |first=Eric |publisher=University of Hawai'i Press |year=2000 |isbn=0-8248-2297-8 |page=54}}</ref> The name and pronunciation "Hmong" is exclusively used by the White Hmong to refer to themselves, and many dictionaries use only the White Hmong dialect.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.travisgore.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Hmong-Language-by-Xee-Vang.pdf |title=The Hmong Language |last=Vang |first=Xee |access-date=30 November 2019 |archive-date=25 February 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210225131312/http://www.travisgore.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Hmong-Language-by-Xee-Vang.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref>


In the ], developed in the 1950s in Laos, these terms are written ''Hmoob Dawb'' (White Hmong) and ''Hmoob Leeg'' (Green Hmong). The final consonants indicate with which of the eight ] the word is pronounced.<ref name="Tapp 2002 p78">{{Cite journal |last=Tapp |first=Nicholas |date=2002 |title=Cultural Accommodations in Southwest China: The "Han Miao" and Problems in the Ethnography of the Hmong |url=https://asianethnology.org/downloads/ae/pdf/a1413.pdf |journal=Asian Folklore Studies |volume=61 |issue=1 |page=78 |doi=10.2307/1178678 |jstor=1178678}}</ref>
In 1993, Vue Mai, a former Hmong soldier who had been recruited by the U.S. Embassy in ] to return to Laos as proof of the repatriation program's success, disappeared in ]. According to the U.S. Committee for Refugees, he was arrested by Lao security forces and was never seen again.


White Hmong and Green Hmong speak mutually intelligible dialects of the ], with some differences in pronunciation and vocabulary. One of the most characteristic differences is the use of the ] in White Hmong, indicated by a preceding "H" in ]. Voiceless nasals are not found in the Green Hmong dialect. Hmong groups are often named after the dominant colors or patterns of their traditional clothing, style of ], or the provinces from which they come.<ref name="Tapp 2002 p78" />
Following the Vue Mai incident, debate over the Hmong's planned repatriation to Laos intensified greatly, especially in the U.S., where it drew strong opposition from many ] and some ] advocates. In an article published on 23 October 23, 1995 in the '']'', ], the former ] foreign policy expert and ] ] aide, labeled the Hmong's repatriation a ] "betrayal," describing the Hmong as a people "who have spilled their blood in defense of American geopolitical interests."<ref name="johns1995">{{cite web|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_n20_v47/ai_17443642 |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070705214752/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_n20_v47/ai_17443642 |archivedate=2007-07-05 |title=Acts of Betrayal: Persecution of Hmong|first=Michael|last=Johns|publisher=National Review|date=October 23, 1995 |accessdate=2012-06-07}}</ref> Debate on the issue escalated quickly. In an effort to halt the planned repatriation, the Republican-led ] and ] both appropriated funds for the remaining Thailand-based Hmong to be immediately resettled in the U.S.; Clinton, however, responded by promising a veto of the legislation.
]
In their opposition of the repatriation plans, Democrats and Republicans also challenged the Clinton administration's position that the Laotian government was not systematically violating Hmong human rights. U.S. Representative ] (R-WI), for instance, told a Hmong gathering: "I do not enjoy standing up and saying to my government that you are not telling the truth, but if that is necessary to defend truth and justice, I will do that."<ref name="johns1995"/> Democrats and Republicans also called several Congressional hearings on alleged persecution of the Hmong in Laos in an apparent attempt to generate further support for their opposition to the Hmong's repatriation to Laos. In bipartisan fashion, key Democratic and Republican Members of Congress opposed forced repatriation and human rights violations in ] Laos and Thailand directed against the Hmong and Laotian people including U.S. Congressman ], Senator ], Congressman ] and others.


===Vietnam and Laos===
In the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s, ], a non-governmental public policy research organization, and its Executive Director, Philip Smith, played a key role in raising awareness in the U.S. Congress and policy making circles in Washington, D.C. about the plight of the Hmong and Laotian refugees in Thailand and Laos. The CPPA, backed by a bipartisan coalition of Members of the U.S. Congress as well as human rights organizations, conducted numerous research missions to the Hmong and Laotian refugee camps along the ] in Thailand, as well as the Buddhist temple of ], to gather first hand information about human rights violations in ] Laos and the forced repatriation of Hmong refugees from Thailand back to the ] regime in Laos that they fled.<ref>Centre for Public Policy Analysis, CPPA, Washington, D.C. http://www.centerforpublicpolicyanalysis.org</ref>
The Hmong groups in Vietnam and Laos, from the 18th century to the present day, are known as Black Hmong (''Hmoob Dub''), Striped Hmong (''Hmoob Txaij''), White Hmong (''Hmoob Dawb''), Hmong Leng (''Hmoob Leeg'') and Green Hmong (''Hmoob Ntsuab''). In other places in Asia, groups are also known as Black Hmong (''Hmoob Dub'' or ''Hmong Dou''), Striped Hmong (''Hmoob Txaij'' or ''Hmoob Quas Npab''), Hmong Shi, Hmong Pe, Hmong Pua, and Hmong Xau, Hmong Xanh (Green Hmong), Hmong Do (Red Hmong), Na Mieo and various other subgroups.<ref name="Tapp 2002 p78" /> These include the Flower Hmong or the Variegated Hmong (''Hmong Lenh'' or ''Hmong Hoa''), so named because of their bright, colorful embroidery work (called ''pa ndau'' or ''paj ntaub'', literally "flower cloth").<ref name="X1">{{cite web|url=http://www.tenthousandvillages.ca/cgi-bin/category.cgi?type=store&item=pageZAAAD72&template=fullpage-en&category=fairtrade|title=Flower Hmong: Preserving Traditional Culture in Vietnam|year=2010|publisher=Ten Thousand Villages|access-date=21 January 2011|archive-date=21 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721154504/http://www.tenthousandvillages.ca/cgi-bin/category.cgi?type=store&item=pageZAAAD72&template=fullpage-en&category=fairtrade}}</ref>


{{main|Miao people}}
In addition to the CPPA and Members of the U.S. Congress in Washington, D.C., ], the ], Inc., the Lao Human Rights Council (led by Dr. Pobzeb Vang ]) and other non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and human rights organizations opposed the forced repatriation of Hmong and Laotian political refugees and asylum seekers from Thailand back to the government in Laos that they fled.<ref>Lao Veterans of America, Inc., (LVA), Washington, D.C., http://wwww.laoveteransofamerica.org</ref>
], Vietnam]]
{{see also|Languages of China|Ethnic groups in Chinese history}}


]]]
Although some accusations of forced repatriation were denied,<ref> Refugee and Migration Affairs Unit, United States Embassy (Thailand), 1992, Retrieved 2007-07-27</ref> thousands of Hmong people refused to return to Laos. In 1996, as the deadline for the closure of Thai refugee camps approached, and under mounting political pressure, the U.S. agreed to resettle Hmong refugees who passed a new screening process.<ref>STEVE GUNDERSON, "STATE DEPARTMENT OUTLINES RESETTLEMENT GUIDELINES FOR HMONG REFUGEES," Congressional Press Releases, May 18, 1996.</ref> Around 5,000 Hmong people who were not resettled at the time of the camp closures sought asylum at ], a Buddhist monastery in central Thailand where more than 10,000 Hmong refugees were already living. The Thai government attempted to repatriate these refugees, but the Wat Tham Krabok Hmong refused to leave and the Lao government refused to accept them, claiming they were involved in the ] and were of non-Lao origin.<ref>"Laos refuses to take back Thai-based Hmong refugees," Deutsche Presse-Agentur, August 20, 1998.</ref>
] house –building technique of Flower Hmong in Vietnam]]


===Hmong/Mong controversy===
In 2003, following threats of forcible removal by the Thai government, the U.S., in a significant victory for the Hmong, agreed to accept 15,000 of the refugees.<ref>{{Wayback |date=20090117073258 |url=http://www.state.gov/g/prm/rls/fs/2004/28212.htm |title="Refugee Admissions Program for East Asia" }} Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, January 16, 2004, archived January 17, 2009 from {{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref> Several thousand Hmong people, fearing forced repatriation to Laos if they were not accepted for resettlement in the U.S., fled the camp to live elsewhere within Thailand where a sizable Hmong population has been present since the 19th century.<ref>{{Wayback |date=20081021133910 |url=http://www.centralcallegal.org/hrtf/history/index.html |title=History of the Hmong Resettlement Task Force }} Hmong Resettlement Task Force, archived October 21, 2008 from {{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref>
{{globalize|section|date=February 2018}}
When Western authors first came in contact with Hmong people in the 18th century, they referred to them by writing ] which were previously assigned to them by the Chinese (i.e., Miao, or variants).{{Citation needed|reason=reliable source needed for the whole sentence{{snd}}perhaps cite actual authors who made contact with Hmong in the 18th century|date=September 2010}} This practice continued into the 20th century.<ref name="SongsStories">{{Cite book | last = ] | first = David Crockett | title = Songs and Stories of the Ch'uan Miao | publisher = Smithsonian Institution | series = Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections | volume = 123,1 | location = Washington, D.C. | year = 1954 }}</ref> Even ]s studying the Hmong people in Southeast Asia often referred to them as Meo, a corruption of Miao applied by Thai and Lao people to the Hmong. Although "Meo" was an official term, it was often used as an insult against the Hmong people, and it is considered to be derogatory.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=The Thousand-Year Myth: Construction and Characterization of Hmong |journal=Hmong Studies Journal |year=1998 |first=Mai Na |last=Lee |volume=2 |issue=2 |url=http://members.aol.com/hmongstudiesjrnl/HSJ-v2n1_Lee.html#Fn5txt |access-date=10 September 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050526123017/http://members.aol.com/hmongstudiesjrnl/HSJ-v2n1_Lee.html |archive-date=26 May 2005 }}</ref><ref>{{e25|mww|Hmong Daw}}</ref>


The issue came to a head during the passage of ] Bill (AB) 78, in the 2003–2004 season.<ref> by Kao-Ly Yang {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091027113906/http://www.geocities.com/kaoly_y/archives/HistoryBill78.html |date=27 October 2009 }}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2016}} Introduced by Doua Vu and Assembly Member ], District 31 (Fresno), the bill encouraged changes in secondary education curriculum to include information about the ] and the role of Hmong people in the war. Furthermore, the bill called for the use of oral histories and first-hand accounts by Hmong people who had participated in the war and were caught up in its aftermath. Originally, the language of the bill mentioned only "Hmong" people, intending to include the entire community. Several Mong Leng activists, led by Dr. ] (Professor of Linguistics and Education at ]), drew attention to the problems associated with omitting "Mong" from the language of the bill. They noted that despite nearly equal numbers of Hmong Der and Mong Leng in the United States, resources are disproportionately allocated to the Hmong Der community. This not only includes scholarly research, but also the translation of materials, including the curriculum proposed by the bill.<ref>Romney, Lee. "." L.A. Times, 24 May 2003.</ref> Despite these arguments, "Mong" was not added to the bill. In the version of the bill that was passed by the assembly, "Hmong" was replaced by "Southeast Asians," a broader and more inclusive term.
In 2004 and 2005, thousands of Hmong fled from the jungles of Laos to a temporary refugee camp in the Thai province of ].<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4724199.stm | work=BBC News | title=Hmong refugees pleading to stay | date=July 28, 2005 | accessdate=May 4, 2010}}</ref> These Hmong refugees, many of whom are descendants of the former-CIA Secret Army and their relatives, claim that they have been attacked by both the Lao and Vietnamese military forces operating inside Laos as recently as June 2006. The refugees claim that attacks against them have continued almost unabated since the war officially ended in 1975, and have become more intense in recent years.


Dr. Paoze Thao and some others strongly feel that "Hmong" can only be used in reference to Hmong Der people because it does not include "Mong" Leng people. He feels that the use of "Hmong" in reference to both groups perpetuates the marginalization of the Mong Leng language and culture. Thus, he advocates the use of "Hmong" and "Mong" in reference to the entire ethnic group.<ref>Thao, Paoze and Chimeng Yang. "". Mong Journal, vol. 1 (June 2004). {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160204073037/http://www.mong.ws/publications/Mong%20and%20Hmong%20Article%20June%202004.pdf |date=4 February 2016 }}</ref> Other scholars, including anthropologist Dr. ] (a Hmong Der person), suggests that for the past 30&nbsp;years, "Hmong" has been used in reference to the entire community and as a result, the inclusion of Mong Leng people is understandable.<ref>Lee, Gary and Nicholas Tapp. " {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070321221201/http://members.ozemail.com.au/~yeulee/Topical/12point%20statement.html |date=21 March 2007 }}".</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2016}} Some argue that such distinctions create unnecessary divisions within the global community, arguing that the use of these distinctions will only confuse non-Hmong and Mong people who are both trying to learn more about Hmong and Mong history and culture.<ref>Duffy, John, Roger Harmon, Donald A. Ranard, Bo Thao, and Kou Yang. " {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120916061602/http://www.cal.org/co/hmong/hpeop.html |date=2012-09-16 }}". In The Hmong: An Introduction to their history and culture. The Center for Applied Linguistics, Culture Profile No. 18 (June 2004): 3.</ref>
Lending further support to earlier claims that the government of Laos was persecuting the Hmong, filmmaker ] documented first-hand accounts in her documentary, ''Hunted Like Animals'',<ref> Rebecca Sommer Film Clips</ref> and in a comprehensive report which includes summaries of claims made by the refugees and was submitted to the U.N. in May 2006.<ref> Rebecca Sommer, May 2006</ref>


As a compromise alternative, multiple iterations of "Hmong" have been proposed. A Hmong theologian, Rev. Dr. Paul Joseph T. Khamdy Yang has proposed the use of the term "'''HMong'''" in reference to the ''Hmong'' and the ''Mong'' communities by capitalizing the '''H''' and the '''M'''. The ethnologist Jacques Lemoine has also begun to use the term (H)mong in reference to the entirety of the Hmong and Mong communities.<ref name="Lemoine2005"/>
The European Union,<ref name="EU@UN"> EU@UN, February 1, 2007</ref> UNHCHR, and international groups have since spoken out about the forced repatriation.<ref name="EU@UN"/><ref>{{Wayback |date=20071013140444 |url=http://web.amnesty.org/wire/March2007/Hmong |title=Hmong refugees facing removal from Thailand }} The Wire - Amnesty International's monthly magazine, March 2007, archived October 13, 2007 from {{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref><ref> Gesellschaft für bedrohte Völker, January 30, 2007</ref><ref> Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, February 5, 2007</ref> The Thai foreign ministry has said that it will halt deportation of Hmong refugees held in Detention Centers Nong Khai, while talks are underway to resettle them in ], ], the ] and the United States.<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6314463.stm | work=BBC News | title=Thailand halts Hmong repatriation | date=January 30, 2007 | accessdate=May 4, 2010}}</ref>


===Hmong and Miao===
For the time being, countries willing to resettle the refugees are hindered to proceed with immigration and settlement procedures because the Thai administration does not grant them access to the refugees.
], Vietnam]]


Some non-Chinese Hmong advocate for the term 'Hmong' to be used not only to designate their dialect group {{citation needed span|date=April 2021|but also other Miao groups living in China.}} They generally claim that the word "Miao" or "Meo" is a derogatory term, with connotations of barbarism, that probably should not be used at all. The term was later adopted by ]-speaking groups in Southeast Asia where it took on especially insulting associations for Hmong people despite its official status.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Tapp |first=Nicholas |year=2002 |title=Cultural Accommodations in Southwest China: The "Han Miao" and Problems in the Ethnography of the Hmong |url=https://asianethnology.org/downloads/ae/pdf/a1413.pdf |journal=Asian Folklore Studies |volume=61 |issue=1 |pages=77–104 |doi=10.2307/1178678 |jstor=1178678 |id={{ProQuest|224529908}}}}</ref>
On 27 December 2009, '']'' reported that the Thai military was preparing to forcibly return 4,000 Hmong asylum seekers to Laos by the end of the year:<ref>{{Cite news| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/28/world/asia/28hmong.html?_r=1&src=twt&twt=nytimes | work=The New York Times | title=Thailand Begins Repatriation of Hmong to Laos | first=Seth | last=Mydans | date=December 28, 2009 | accessdate=May 4, 2010}}</ref> the BBC later reported that repatriations had started.<ref name="2009thailand"/> Both United States and United Nations officials have protested this action. Outside government representatives have not been allowed to interview this group over the last three years. ] has refused to assist the Hmong refugees because of what they have called "increasingly restrictive measures" taken by the Thai military.<ref> The Nation, December 23, 2009</ref> The Thai military jammed all cellular phone reception and disallowed any foreign journalists from the Hmong camps.<ref name="2009thailand">{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8432094.stm |title=Thailand starts deporting Hmong refugees back to Laos |publisher=BBC |date=2009-12-28 |accessdate=2009-12-28}}</ref>


In modern China, the term "Miao" does not carry these negative associations, and people of the various sub-groups that constitute this officially recognized nationality freely identify themselves as Miao or Chinese, typically reserving more specific ]s for intra-ethnic communication. During the struggle for political recognition after 1949, it was members of these ethnic minorities who campaigned for identification under the umbrella term "Miao"{{snd}}taking advantage of its familiarity and associations of historical political oppression.<ref>Cheung Siu-Woo "Miao Identity in Western Guizhou: Indigenism and the politics of appropriation in the southwest china during the republican period" in Hmong or Miao in Asia. 237–40.</ref>
====Alleged plot to overthrow government of Laos====
{{Main|2007 Laotian coup d'état conspiracy allegation}}
On 4 June 2007, as part of an investigation labeled "]," warrants were issued by U.S. federal courts ordering the arrest of ] and nine others for plotting to overthrow the government of Laos in violation of the federal ] and for multiple weapons charges.<ref>Walsh, Denny. {{Wayback |date=20080427063714 |url=http://www.sacbee.com/292/story/206120.html |title=Ten accused of conspiring to oust government of Laos }} The '']'', June 5, 2007, archived April 27, 2008 from {{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref> The federal charges allege that members of the group inspected weapons, including ]s, smoke grenades, and Stinger missiles, with the intent of purchasing them and smuggling them into Thailand in June 2007 where they were intended to be used by Hmong resistance forces in Laos. The one non-Hmong person of the nine arrested, ], a 1968 ] graduate and retired Army infantry officer, allegedly attempted to recruit ] veterans to act as ].


Contemporary transnational interactions between Hmong in the West and Miao groups in China, following the 1975 Hmong emigration, led to the development of a global Hmong identity that includes linguistically and culturally related minorities in China with no previous ethnic affiliation.<ref>Schien, Louisa. "Hmong/Miao Transnationality: Identity Beyond Culture." in Hmong or Miao in Asia. 274–75.</ref> Scholarly and commercial exchanges, increasingly made over the internet, have also resulted in an exchange of terminology, including some Hmong people accepting the designation "Miao" after visiting China and some nationalist non-Hmong Miao peoples identifying as Hmong.<ref name=":0" /> Such realignments of identity, while largely the concern of economically elite community leaders reflects a trend towards the interchangeability of the terms "Hmong" and "Miao".<ref>Lee, Gary Y.
In an effort to obtain the weapons, Jack allegedly met unknowingly with undercover U.S. federal agents posing as weapons dealers, which prompted the issuance of the warrants as part of a long-running investigation into the activities of the U.S.-based Hmong leadership and its supporters.


{{usurped|1=}}. Hmong Studies Journal, 7:1–33.</ref>
On 15 June, the defendants were indicted by a ] and a ] was also issued for the arrest of an 11th man, allegedly involved in the plot. Simultaneous raids of the defendants homes and work locations, involving over 200 federal, state and local law enforcement officials, were conducted in approximately 15 cities in ] and ] in the US.


==Diaspora==
The defendants faced possible life prison terms for violation of the ] and various weapons charges. They initially were denied bail, with a federal court ruling that they were likely flight risks, given their extensive connections, access to private aircraft, and resources.
{{Further|Integration of Hmong people into urban society}}


Linguistic data shows that the Hmong of the peninsula stem from the Miao of southern China as one among a set of ethnic groups belonging to the ] language family.<ref>Ratliff and Niederer, in Tapp, Michaud, Culas and Lee, Hmong/Miao in Asia, Silkworm Press, 2004</ref> Linguistically and culturally speaking, the Hmong and the other sub-groups of the Miao have little in common.<ref>Tapp, N. 2001, Hmong in China. Brill{{page needed|date=January 2016}}</ref>
Multiple protest rallies in support of the suspects, designed to raise awareness of the treatment of Hmong peoples in the jungles of Laos, took place in California, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Alaska, and several of ]'s high-level supporters in the U.S. criticized the California court that issued the arrest warrants, arguing that Vang is a historically important American ally and a valued leader of U.S. and foreign-based Hmong. However, calls for then Californian ] Governor ] and former President ] to pardon the defendants were not answered, presumably pending a conclusion of the large and then still-ongoing federal investigation.<ref>Magagnini, Stephen and Walsh, Denny. {{Wayback |date=20071213074347 |url=http://www.sacbee.com/291/story/229794.html |title=Hmong Rally for 'The General' }} The Sacramento Bee, June 19, 2007, archived December 13, 2007 from {{dead link|date=June 2012}}</ref>


], where their presence is attested from the late 18th century onwards and characterized with both assimilation, cooperation and hostility, is likely to be the first ] country into which the Hmong migrated.<ref>Culas and Michaud, 2004, in Tapp, Michaud, Culas and Lee, Hmong/Miao in Asia. SIlkworm.</ref> At the 2019 national census, there were 1,393,547 Hmong living in Vietnam, the vast majority of them in the north of the country. The traditional trade in ] with China and cultivation of the ] – not prohibited in Vietnam until 1993 – long guaranteed a regular cash income. Today, ]ping is the main economic activity. As in China and Laos, Hmong participate to a certain degree in local and regional administration.<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Bonnin |first1=Christine |title=Markets in the mountains: upland trade-scapes, trader livelihoods, and state development agendas in northern Vietnam |url=https://escholarship.mcgill.ca/concern/theses/s4655m46k }}</ref> In the late 1990s, several thousands of Hmong started moving to the ] and some crossed the border into ], constituting the first attested presence of Hmong settlers in that country.{{citation needed|date=April 2018}}
On 18 September 2009, the US federal government dropped all charges against Vang Pao, announcing in a release that the federal government was permitted to consider "the probable sentence or other consequences if the person is convicted."<ref> The New York Times, September 18, 2009</ref> On 10 January 2011, after Vang Pao's death, the federal government dropped all charges against the remaining defendants saying, "Based on the totality of the circumstances in the case, the government believes, as a discretionary matter, that continued prosecution of defendants is no longer warranted," according to court documents.<ref>{{cite news | title=Charges dropped against 12 Hmong men accused in plot to overthrow Laotian government | url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/01/charges-dropped-against-12-hmong-men-accused-in-plot-to-overthrow-laotian-government.html | publisher=Los Angeles Times | date=January 10, 2011 | accessdate=2011-01-15 }}</ref>

In 2015, the Hmong in Laos numbered 595,028.<ref name="Census2015">{{cite web|url=https://lao.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/pub-pdf/PHC-ENG-FNAL-WEB_0.pdf|title=Results of Population and Housing Census 2015 |publisher=Lao Statistics Bureau |access-date=1 May 2020}}</ref> Hmong settlement there is nearly as ancient as in Vietnam.

After the 1975 Communist victory, thousands of Hmong from ] had to seek refuge abroad (see Laos below). Approximately 30 percent of the Hmong have left, although the only concrete figure we have is that of 116,000 Hmong from Laos and Vietnam together seeking refuge in Thailand up to 1990.<ref>Culas and Michaud 2004</ref>

In 2002 the Hmong in Thailand numbered 151,080.

] most likely includes a modest number of Hmong (perhaps around 2,500) but no reliable census has been conducted there recently.<ref>Michaud et al. 2016</ref>

As result of ] movements in the wake of the Indochina Wars (1946–1975), in particular, in Laos, the largest Hmong community to settle outside Asia went to the United States where approximately 100,000 individuals had already arrived by 1990. By the same date, 10,000 Hmong had migrated to France, including 1,400 in ]; ] admitted 900 individuals, while another 360 went to ], 260 to ], and 250 to ]. Over the following years and until the definitive closure of the last refugee camps in Thailand in 1998, additional numbers of Hmong have left Asia, but the definitive figures are still to be produced.<ref>Culas and Michaud 2004.</ref>

]
Approximately 5% of the Hmong population currently lives outside of Asia, with the United States home to the largest Hmong diaspora community. The 2008 census counted 171,316 people solely of Hmong ancestry, and 221,948 persons of at least partial Hmong ancestry.<ref>2008 Southeast Asian American Data from the American Community Survey (Released Fall 2009)</ref> Other countries with significant populations include:<ref>Lemoine. "What is the number of the (H)mong in the world."</ref>
* ]: 15,000
* ]: 2,000
* ]: 1,500
* ]: 835
* ]: 600

] is centered in the ] (], ]) and ].<ref>Pfeifer, Mark (compiler). University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire{{cite web|url=http://www.uwec.edu/Econ/Research/Hmong/HPopulation.htm |title=Hmong Population Research Project – Population |access-date=7 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080725181757/http://www.uwec.edu/Econ/Research/Hmong/HPopulation.htm |archive-date=25 July 2008 }} archived 25 July 2008 from {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090822123712/http://www.uwec.edu/Econ/research/hmong/HPopulation.htm |date=22 August 2009 }}</ref>

===Vietnam===

Hmong people in ] have been perceived differently by various modern political organizations and in different historical periods. Since the Hmong are an ethnic minority in Vietnam, their loyalty toward the Vietnamese state has been frequently questioned by the state. However, many Hmong in Vietnam are fiercely loyal, regardless of the current ideologies of the government;<ref>{{cite web|url=https://theculturetrip.com/asia/vietnam/articles/the-history-of-vietnams-hmong-community/|title=The History of Vietnam's Hmong Community|last=Pike|first=Matthew|website=Culture Trip|date=29 April 2018|access-date=20 January 2020}}</ref> the Hmong in ] and ] are the most supportive of active resistance. These tend to be Hmong Christians that have been targeted by all three Vietnamese governments.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ucanews.com/news/hmong-catholics-keep-faith-in-vietnam-despite-hardship/83137|title=Hmong Catholics keep faith in Vietnam despite hardship - UCA News|website=ucanews.com}}</ref> The Hmong in Vietnam also receive cultural and political incentives from the government,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.vietnamroyaltourism.com/Hmong-People-in-Vietnam.html|title=Hmong People in Vietnam|website=vietnamroyaltourism.com}}</ref> which led to the Vietnamese Hmong further diverging from the Laotian Hmong, since the latter are strongly anti-Vietnamese due to the Secret War and Communism.

===Laos===

There are 595,028 Hmong people in Laos. They mainly live in northern regions.

===Thailand===
], ]]]
{{see also|Wat Tham Krabok}}
The Hmong presence in Thailand dates back to the turn of the 20th century when families migrated from China through Laos and Burma, according to most authors. A relatively small population, they still formed dozens of villages and hamlets throughout the northern provinces. The Hmong were registered by the state as the Meo hill tribe. Then, more Hmong migrated from Laos to Thailand following the victory of the ] in 1975. While some ended up in refugee camps, others settled in mountainous areas among more ancient ].<ref name="Baird 2013 120–151">{{cite book|last=Baird|first=Ian G.|title=The monks and the Hmong: The special relationship between the Chao Fa and the Tham Krabok Buddhist Temple in Saraburi Province, Thailand. In Vladimir Tikhonov and Torkel Brekke (eds.), Violent Buddhism – Buddhism and Militarism in Asia in the Twentieth Century|year=2013|publisher=Routledge|location=London|pages=120–151}}</ref>


===Americas=== ===Americas===
{{Main|Hmong Americans}}{{see also|List of Hmong Americans|History of the Hmong in Merced, California|Hmong archives|Lao Veterans of America|Laos Memorial|The Center for Public Policy Analysis}}
{{Main|Hmong American}}
Many Hmong refugees resettled in the United States after the ]. Beginning in December 1975, the first Hmong refugees arrived in the U.S., mainly from refugee camps in Thailand; however, only 3,466 were granted asylum at that time under the ]. In May 1976, another 11,000 were allowed to enter the United States, and by 1978 some 30,000 Hmong people had immigrated. This first wave was made up predominantly of men directly associated with General Vang Pao's secret army. It was not until the passage of the ] that families were able to enter the U.S., becoming the second wave of Hmong immigrants. Today, 260,073 Hmong people reside in the United States<ref name=autogenerated1>http://www.factfinder2.census.gov</ref> the majority of whom live in California (91,224), Minnesota (66,181), and Wisconsin (49,240), an increase from 186,310 in 2000.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.census.gov |title=Census Bureau Homepage |publisher=Census.gov |date=2012-05-25 |accessdate=2012-06-08}}</ref> Of them, 247,595 or 95.2% are Hmong alone, and the remaining 12,478 are mixed Hmong with some other ethnicity or race. The vast majority of part-Hmong are under 10 years old. Many Hmong refugees resettled in the United States after the ]. Beginning in December 1975, the first Hmong refugees arrived in the U.S., mainly from refugee camps in Thailand; however, only 3,466 were granted asylum under the ]. In May 1976, another 11,000 were allowed to enter the United States, and by 1978 some 30,000 Hmong people had emigrated. This first wave was made up predominantly of men directly associated with General Vang Pao's secret army. It was not until the passage of the ] that families were able to enter the U.S., becoming the second wave of Hmong immigrants. Hmong families scattered across all 50 states but most found their way to each other, building large communities in California, Minnesota and Wisconsin. As of the 2010 census, 260,073 Hmong people reside in the United States,<ref name="wwwcensusgov">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/en.html|title=Census.gov|website=Census.gov}}</ref> the majority of whom live in California (91,224), then Minnesota (66,181), and Wisconsin (49,240), an increase from 186,310 in 2000.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov |title=Census Bureau Homepage |publisher=Census.gov |date=25 May 2012 |access-date=8 June 2012}}</ref> 247,595 or 95.2% are Hmong alone, and the remaining 12,478 are mixed Hmong with some other ethnicity. The vast majority of part-Hmong are under 10&nbsp;years old.


In terms of cities and towns, the largest Hmong-American community is in ] (29,662), followed by ] (24,328), ] (16,676), ] (10,245), and ] (7,512).<ref name=autogenerated1 /> In terms of cities and towns, the largest Hmong-American community is in ] (29,662), followed by ] (24,328), ] (16,676), ] (10,245), and ] (7,512).<ref name="wwwcensusgov" />


There are smaller Hmong communities scattered across the country, including those in Michigan (] and ]); ]; ]; Oregon ; Washington ;North Carolina; Georgia (], ], ], ], and ]); Florida (Tampa Bay, Clearwater, Plant City); Wisconsin (], ], ], ], ], ], and ]); ]; ]; ]; ]; Des Moines, Iowa; Southwest Missouri; and Northwest Arkansas.<ref name=autogenerated1 /> There are smaller Hmong communities scattered across the United States, including those in Minnesota (], ], ]); Michigan (] and ]); ]; ]; ]; Washington; North Carolina (], ]); South Carolina (]); Georgia (], ], ], ], and ]); Florida (]); California (]); Wisconsin (], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]); ]; ]; ]; ]; ]; ]; ], ],<ref name="wwwcensusgov" /> and ].<ref name="ProJoHmong">{{cite news|title=Rhode Island's Hmong-Lao community to mark 40 years of resettlement|url=http://www.providencejournal.com/news/20160508/rhode-islands-hmong-lao-community-to-mark-40-years-of-resettlement|access-date=19 September 2017|newspaper=The Providence Journal|date=8 May 2016}}</ref>


] of ] is a notable Hmong-American; she is a three time Olympic medalist in artistic gymnastics. In the ], Lee won silver in the women's artistic team all-around, followed by gold in the women's artistic individual all-around and bronze in the women's uneven bars. With these results, Sunisa made history as both the first Hmong-American to compete in the Olympics in any sport and the first Hmong-American to win an Olympic medal.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wpr.org/hmong-community-rejoices-sunisa-lee-becomes-first-hmong-american-gold-medalist|title=Hmong Community Rejoices As Sunisa Lee Becomes First Hmong American Gold Medalist|website=Wisconsin Public Radio|date=29 July 2021|author=Rob Mentzer}}</ref>
There is also a small community of several thousand Hmong who migrated to ] in the late 1970s and early 1980s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hmongcenter.org/hmoninfrengu.html |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070901225550/http://www.hmongcenter.org/hmoninfrengu.html |archivedate=2007-09-01 |title=Info about the Hmong in French Guyana - KaYing Yang, Hmong Cultural Center, 1994 |publisher=Web.archive.org |date=2007-09-01 |accessdate=2012-06-08}}</ref>

Canada's small Hmong population is mostly concentrated within the province of ]. ] has 515 residents of Hmong descent, and has a Hmong church.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/nhs-enm/2011/dp-pd/prof/details/page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=CSD&Code1=3530013&Data=Count&SearchText=kitchener&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&A1=All&B1=All&Custom=&TABID=1|title=2011 National Household Survey Profile – Census subdivision|publisher=]|date=8 May 2013}}</ref><ref>, ''Diane Publishing''</ref>

There is also a small community of several thousand Hmong who migrated to ] in the late 1970s and early 1980s,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hmongcenter.org/hmoninfrengu.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070901225550/http://www.hmongcenter.org/hmoninfrengu.html |archive-date=1 September 2007 |title=Info about the Hmong in French Guyana – KaYing Yang, Hmong Cultural Center, 1994 |date=1 September 2007 |access-date=8 June 2012}}</ref> that can be mainly found in the Hmong villages of ] (1200 individuals) and ] (950 individuals).

The Hmong immigrant population of ] is a central focus of the 2008 film ], though that city does not have a significant Hmong population.

==Religious persecution==
Hmong ]s, ]s, and ]s have been subjected to military attacks, police arrest, imprisonment, ]s, ]s, and ] in ] and ] on ] grounds.<ref>{{cite press release|url=http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO1104/S00423/laos-vietnam-troops-execute-4-hmong-christians.htm|title=Laos, Vietnam Troops Execute 4 Hmong Christians|via=Scoop News|date=16 April 2011|publisher=Center for Public Policy Analysis|quote=Laotian and Hmong minority Christian and Animist believers continue to be hunted, brutally tortured, and killed by the Lao military in significant numbers in key provinces in Laos.}}</ref>

A significant example was the deportation of Zoua Yang and her 27 children from Thailand on 19 December 2005, after the group was arrested attending a church in Ban Kho Noi, ], ]. Ms. Yang and her children were detained upon their return to Laos, after which the whereabouts of much of the family is unknown.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/115/hres992/text|title=H.Res. 992 (115th): Condemning the actions taken by the Lao People's Democratic Republic against the Hmong ChaoFa Indigenous people, and for other purposes|via=GovTrack}}</ref>

In 2011, ] troops were used to crush a peaceful demonstration by Hmong Catholic, Protestant and ]s who gathered in ] and the ] area of northwestern Vietnam, according to Philip Smith of ], independent journalists and others.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Vietnam+troops+%27use+force%27+at+rare+Hmong+protest-a01612457562|archive-url=https://archive.today/20141202154541/http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Vietnam+troops+'use+force'+at+rare+Hmong+protest-a01612457562|url-status=dead|archive-date=2 December 2014|title=Agence France Press (AFP), (6 May 2011) "Vietnam troops 'use force' at rare Hmong protest"}}</ref> In 2013, ], a Christian pastor of Hmong ancestry, was beaten to death by Vietnamese police and security forces.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://morningstarnews.org/2013/03/hmong-christian-leader-in-vietnam-beaten-to-death-in-police-custody-sources-say/|title=Hmong Christian Leader in Vietnam Beaten to Death in Police Custody, Sources Say|first=Our Vietnam|last=Correspondent|date=28 March 2013|website=Morningstar News}}</ref> In ], Vietnamese government officials refused to allow medical treatment for a Hmong Christian leader, Duong Van Minh, who was suffering from a serious ] illness, in February 2014.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rfa.org/english/news/vietnam/duong-van-minh-02142014180616.html|title=Hanoi Hospitals Refuse Treatment to Ailing Hmong Christian Leader|website=Radio Free Asia}}</ref>

The ] has documented official and ongoing religious persecution, religious-freedom violations against the Laotian and Hmong people in both Laos and Vietnam by the governments. In April 2011, ] also researched and documented cases of Hmong Christians being attacked and summarily executed, including four Lao Hmong Christians.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Laos,+Vietnam+troops+kill+four+Hmong+Christians%3A+NGO-a01612449350|title=''Agence France Press'' (AFP), (15 April 2011) "Laos, Vietnam troops kill four Hmong Christians: NGO"|access-date=11 December 2014|archive-date=13 December 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141213030820/http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Laos%2c+Vietnam+troops+kill+four+Hmong+Christians%3a+NGO-a01612449350|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Asia}} {{Portal|Asia}}
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* ] a noted ancestor of Hmongs * ], (Huab Tais Txiv Yawg) a noted ancestor of the Hmong People
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
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* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* ], Inc.
* ] in Arlington National Cemetery.
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
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* ] * ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* '']''
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==Notes== == Notes ==
{{Reflist|30em}} {{NoteFoot}}


==References== == References ==
{{reflist}}
* {{Cite book|author=Fadiman, Anne |title=]: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures. |publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux |year=1997 |isbn=0-374-26781-2}}

* Forbes, Andrew, and Henley, David, 'Chiang Mai's Hill Peoples' in: ''Ancient Chiang Mai'' Volume 3. Chiang Mai, ], 2012. ASIN: B006IN1RNW
=== Sources ===
* Hillmer, Paul. ''A People’s History of the Hmong'' (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2010) 327 pp. ISBN 978-0-87351-726-3
{{refbegin}}
* The section on nomenclature draws heavily on ''Thai-Yunnan Project Newsletter'', Number 17, June 1992, Department of Anthropology, ]. Material from that newsletter may be freely reproduced with due acknowledgment.
* {{cite book |last=Fadiman |first=Anne |title=]: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures. |publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux |year=1997 |isbn=0-374-26781-2}}
* W.R. Geddes. Migrants of the Mountains: The Cultural Ecology of the Blue Miao (Hmong Njua) of Thailand. Oxford: ], 1976.
* Tapp, N., J.Michaud, C.Culas, G.Y.Lee (Eds) 2004 Hmong/Miao in Asia. Chiang Mai (Thailand): Silkworm, 500p. * Forbes, Andrew, and Henley, David, 'Chiang Mai's Hill Peoples' in: ''Ancient Chiang Mai'' Volume 3. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books, 2012. {{ASIN|B006IN1RNW}}.
* Hillmer, Paul. ''A People's History of the Hmong'' (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2010). 327 pages. {{ISBN|978-0-87351-726-3}}.
* Vang, Chia Youyee. ''Hmong America: Reconstructing Community in Diaspora'' (] Press; 2011) 200 pages; Combines scholarly and personal perspectives in an ethnographic history of the Hmong refugee experience in the United States.
* The section on nomenclature draws heavily on ''Thai-Yunnan Project Newsletter'', Number 17, June 1992, Department of Anthropology, ]. Material from that newsletter may be freely reproduced with due acknowledgment.
* W.R. Geddes. ''Migrants of the Mountains: The Cultural Ecology of the Blue Miao (Hmong Njua) of Thailand''. Oxford, England: ], 1976.
* Tapp, N., J.Michaud, C.Culasc, G.Y.Lee (Eds.) (2004). ''Hmong/Miao in Asia''. Chiang Mai (Thailand): Silkworm. 500 pages.
* ]. ''Hmong America: Reconstructing Community in Diaspora'' (] Press; 2011) 200 pages; Combines scholarly and personal perspectives in an ethnographic history of the Hmong refugee experience in the United States.
* "". ], Explore Minnesota.
{{refend}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
{{Refbegin}}
* Edkins, ''The Miau-tsi Tribes''. Foochow: 1870.
* Henry, ''Lingnam''. London: 1886. * Bourne, ''Journey in Southwest China''. London: 1888.
* Bourne, ''Journey in Southwest China''. London: 1888.
* A. H. Keaw, ''Man: Past and Present''. Cambridge: 1900.
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Miaotsze}} * {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Miaotsze}}
* Edkins, ''The Miau-tsi Tribes''. Foochow: 1870.
* Johnson, Charles. ''Dab Neeg Hmoob: Myths, Legends and Folk Tales from the Hmong of Laos''. ]: ], 1983. - bilingual oral literature anthology, includes introduction and explanatory notes from a language professor who had sponsored the first Hmong family to arrive in Minnesota<!--Fadiman 294-->
* Hamilton-Merritt, Jane (1999). ''Tragic Mountains: The Hmong, the Americans, and the Secret Wars for Laos, 1942–1992''. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
* Lee, Mai Na M. "." () '']''. v2n2. Northern hemisphere Spring 1998.
* Henry, ''Lingnam''. London: 1886.
* Meneses, Rashaan. "." UCLA International Institute.
* Hookaway, James. "." '']''. 28 December 2009.
* Merritt, ''Tragic Mountains: The Hmong, the Americans, and the Secret Wars for Laos, 1942–1992''. Indiana: 1999.
* Johnson, Charles. ''Dab Neeg Hmoob: Myths, Legends and Folk Tales from the Hmong of Laos''. ]: ], 1983. – bilingual oral literature anthology, includes introduction and explanatory notes from a language professor who had sponsored the first Hmong family to arrive in Minnesota<!--Fadiman 294-->
* Mottin, Father Jean. "History of the Hmong". ]:], 1980. written in Khek Noi, a Hmong village in northern Thailand, Translated into English by an Irish nun, printed in Bangkok <!-- -->
* Keaw, A. H. ''Man: Past and Present''. Cambridge: 1900.
* Quincy, Keith. ''Hmong: History of a People''. ]: ], 1988.
* Lloyd George, William (24 July 2010). "." '']''.
* Savina, F.M. ''Histoire des Miao''. 2nd Edition. ]: Impremerie de la Société des Missions-Etrangères de Paris, 1930. Written by a French missionary who worked in ] and ].<!--Fadiman p. 294-->
* ]. "." () '']''. v2n2. Northern hemisphere Spring 1998.
* George, William Lloyd. "." '']''. Saturday July 24, 2010.
* Meneses, Rashaan. "." UCLA International Institute.
* Hookaway, James. "." '']''. December 28, 2009.
* Mottin, Father Jean. ''History of the Hmong''. ]: Odeon Store, 1980. Written in Khek Noi, a Hmong village in northern Thailand, and translated into English by an Irish nun.

* Quincy, Keith. '']''. ]: ], 1988.
== Film ==
* Savina, F. M. ''Histoire des Miao''. 2nd edition. ]: Impremerie de la Société des Missions-Etrangères de Paris, 1930. Written by a French missionary who worked in ] and ].<!--Fadiman p. 294-->
* ] (producer, director, actor): '']'' (2008). Story also refers to today in the USA living Hmong people.
{{Refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Sister project links}} {{Sister project links|c=Category:Hmong}}
* edited by Mark Pfeifer of the Hmong Cultural Center. *
*
* Laos & Hmong Refugee Crisis & human rights violations against Hmong people in Southeast Asia, Centre for Public Policy Analysis, Washington, D.C.
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120417174405/http://www.hmongnet.org/ |date=17 April 2012 }} edited by Mark Pfeifer of the Hmong Cultural Center.
*
*
*
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120527160023/http://www.hmongnet.org/publications/ |date=27 May 2012 }}
* multimedia educational content
* {{usurped|1=}}
* articles by Hmong Australian anthropologist, Dr. Gary Yia Lee
* {{usurped|1=}} multimedia educational content
* by Hmong French anthropologist and linguist, Dr. Kao-Ly Yang (English, French, and Hmong languages)
* articles by Hmong Australian anthropologist, Dr. Gary Yia Lee
* ]
* by Hmong French anthropologist and linguist, Dr. Kao-Ly Yang (English, French, and Hmong languages)
* ]
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230628213621/http://www.hmongculture.net/hmong-people |date=28 June 2023 }}
*

{{Ethnic groups in China}} {{Ethnic groups in China}}
{{Ethnic groups in Thailand}} {{Ethnic groups in Thailand}}
{{Ethnic groups in Vietnam}} {{Ethnic groups in Vietnam}}
{{Ethnic groups in Laos}}
{{Ethnic groups in Cambodia}}
{{UNPO}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Hmong People}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Hmong People}}
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Latest revision as of 06:59, 20 January 2025

Ethnic group in southwest China and Southeast Asia

Ethnic group
Hmong people
𖬌𖬣𖬵
Flower Hmong women in traditional dress at the market in Bắc Hà, Vietnam
Total population
4–5 million
Regions with significant populations
 China2,777,039 (2000, estimate)
 Vietnam1,393,547 (2019)
 Laos595,028 (2015)
 United States368,609 (2021)
 Thailand250,070 (2015)
 Myanmar2,000–3,000 (2007)
 Argentina600 (1999)
 Australia3,438 (2011)
 France (French Guiana)2,000 (2001)
 France15,000
 Canada600 (1999)
Languages
Native: Hmong
Regional: Chinese, Thai, Vietnamese, Lao, French, English, Burmese
Religion
ShamanismChristianityBuddhism
This article contains Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong Unicode characters. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong. This article contains Pahawh Hmong Unicode characters. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of the Pahawh Hmong characters.

The Hmong people (RPA: Hmoob, CHV: Hmôngz, Nyiakeng Puachue: 𞄀𞄩𞄰, Pahawh Hmong: 𖬌𖬣𖬵, IPA: [m̥ɔ̃́], Chinese: 苗族蒙人) are an indigenous group in East Asia and Southeast Asia. In China, the Hmong people are classified as a sub-group of the Miao people. The modern Hmong reside mainly in Southwestern China and Mainland Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, and Myanmar. There are also diaspora communities in the United States, Australia, and South America.

Etymology

See also: Miao people § Nomenclature: Miao or Hmong

The term Hmong is the English pronunciation of the Hmong's native name. It is a singular and plural noun (e.g., Japanese, French, etc.). Very little is known about the native Hmong name as it is not mentioned in Chinese historical records, since the Han identified the Hmong as Miao. The meaning of it is debatable and no one is sure of its origin, although it can be traced back to several provinces in China. However, Hmong Americans and Hmong Laotians often associate it with "Free" and/or "Hmoov" (Fate); it serves as a reminder to them of their history of fighting oppression.

Before the 1970s, the term Miao or Meo (i.e. barbarians, wild, seedlings, and even "Sons of the Soil") was used in reference to the Hmong. In the 1970s, Dr. Yang Dao, a Hmong American scholar, who at the time was the head of the Human Resource Department of the Ministry of Planning in the Royal Lao Government of Laos, advocated for the term "Hmong" with the support of clan leaders and General Vang Pao. Yang Dao had insisted that the terms "Meo" and "Miao" were both unacceptable as his people had always called themselves by the name "Hmong," which he defined as "free men". Surrounding countries began to use the term "Hmong" after the U.S. Department of State used it during Immigration screening in Thailand's Ban Vinai Refugee Camp. In 1994, Pobzeb Vang registered the term "Hmong" with the United Nations, making it the proper term to identify the Hmong people internationally.

Soon after, there was a political push from Hmong American politicians and activists to replace the term Miao with the term Hmong in China with little to no success. To date, China is the only country that does not recognize the term Hmong. Rather, they are still categorized under the umbrella term Miáo (苗) along with three other indigenous groups of people. Historically, the term Miao carried strong pejorative connotations in both China and Southeast Asia. In modern times, however, it has lost such negative connotations in China and has since been officially recognized as an ethnicity, which includes the Hmong. The Hmong in China are often happy or proud to be known as Miao while most Hmong outside China find it offensive.

Little is known about the origin of the Miao term and the people it referenced historically, since the Han used it loosely to identify non-Han in Southern China until the Tang Dynasty when evidence of its association with the Hmong became more apparent. Its origin can be dated before the Qin dynasty (221 BCE). Thereafter it was perceived as barbaric, and resurfaced more often in Chinese historical records during the Miao's rebellions against the Ming and Qing dynasties between the 1300s and early 1900s that are still chanted by guides in most Hmong funerals today when guiding the spirits of the deceased individuals to their origins so they can reincarnate. The term Miao was more of a stereotype such as uncivilized, uncooperative, uncultivated, harmful, and inhumane than a name of an ethnic group and was used in daily conversations as an expression for ugliness and primitivity.

In Southeast Asia, Hmong people are referred to by other names, including: Vietnamese Mèo, Mông or H'Mông; Lao Maew (ແມ້ວ) or Mong (ມົ້ງ); Thai Maew (แม้ว) or Mong (ม้ง); and Burmese mun lu-myo (မုံလူမျိုး). With a slight change in accent, the word "Meo" in Lao and Thai can be pronounced to mean "cat". The term Maew and Meo derived from the term Miao.

Origins

Genetic origins

Likely routes of early rice transfer, and possible language family homelands (archaeological sites in China and SE Asia shown)

A DNA study in 2005 in Thailand found that Hmong paternal lineage is quite different from lu Mien and other Southeast Asian tribes. The Hmong–Mien and Sino-Tibetan speaking people are known as hill tribes in Thailand; they were the subject of the first studies to show an impact of patrilocality vs. matrilocality on patterns of mitochondrial (mt) DNA vs. the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) variation. According to linguist Martha Ratliff, there is linguistic evidence to suggest that they have occupied some of the same areas of southern China for over 8,000 years. Evidence from mitochondrial DNA in Hmong–Mien–speaking populations supports the existence of southern origins of maternal lineages even further back in time, although it has been shown that Hmong-speaking populations had comparatively more contact with northern East Asians than had the Mien. Overall, Hmong–Mien cluster with Tai-Kadai and Sino-Tibetan speakers compared to other Chinese populations.

Homeland

The most likely homeland of the Hmong–Mien languages is in Southern China between the Yangtze and Mekong rivers.

Migration of people speaking these languages from South China to Southeast Asia took place ca. 1600–1700 CE. Ancient DNA evidence suggests that the ancestors of the speakers of the Hmong–Mien languages were a population genetically distinct from that of the Tai–Kadai and Austronesian language populations at a location on the Yangtze River. Recent Y-DNA phylogeny evidence supports the theory that people who speak the Hmong–Mien languages are descended from a population that is distantly related to those who now speak the Mon-Khmer languages.

The time of Proto-Hmong–Mien has been estimated to be about 2500 BP (500 BCE) by Sagart, Blench, and Sanchez-Mazas using traditional methods employing many lines of evidence, and about 4243 BP by the Automated Similarity Judgment Program (ASJP), an experimental algorithm for automatic generation of phonologically based phylogenies.

History

China

The historical migration of the Hmong according to Hmong tradition

Hmong traditions and legends indicate that they originated near the Yellow River region of northern China, but this is not substantiated by any scientific evidence. According to linguist Martha Ratliff, there is linguistic evidence to suggest that they have occupied some of the same areas of southern China for over 8,000 years. Evidence from mitochondrial DNA in Hmong–Mien–speaking populations supports the southern origins of maternal lineages even farther back in time, although it has been shown that Hmong-speaking populations had comparatively more contact with northern East Asians than the Mien. A rare haplogroup, O3d, was found at the Daxi culture in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River, indicating that the Daxi people might be the ancestors of modern Hmong–Mien populations, which show only small traces of O3d today.

In 2011, Hmong DNA was sampled and found to contain 7.84% D-M15 and 6%N(Tat) DNA. The research found a common ancestry between Hmong–Mien peoples and Mon-Khmer groups dating to the Last Glacial Maximum, approximately 15,000 to 18,000 years ago.

In 2021, researchers found that a 500 year old 'GaoHuaHua' population in Guangxi contributed to the ancestries of modern Hmong-Mien groups in Guangxi. The 'GaoHuaHua' population was modeled as having 66% Dushan-related ancestry and 34% Bushan-related ancestry. They also received Northeast Asian-related Shandong ancestry, which emerged 9,500–7,700 years ago.

The author of Guoyu, written in the 4th to 5th century, considered Chi You's Jiu Li tribe to be related to the ancient ancestors of the Hmong, the San-Miao people. Chi You is the Hmong ancestral God of War. Today, a statue of Chi You has been erected in the town named Zhuolu.

A scene depicting the Qing dynasty's campaign against the Hmong people at Lancaoping in 1795

Conflict between the Hmong of southern China and newly arrived Han settlers increased during the 18th century under repressive economic and cultural reforms imposed by the Qing dynasty. This led to armed conflict and large-scale migrations well into the late 19th century, the period during which many Hmong people emigrated to Southeast Asia. However, the migration process had begun as early as the late 17th century, before the time of major social unrest, when small groups went in search of better agricultural opportunities.

The Hmong people were subjected to persecution and genocide by the Qing dynasty government. Arthur A. Hansen wrote: "In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, while the Hmong lived in south-western China, their Manchu overlords had labeled them 'Miao' and targeted them for genocide."

Since 1949, the Miao people (Chinese: 苗族; pinyin: miáo zú) has been an official term for one of the 56 official minority groups recognized by the government of the People's Republic of China. The Miao live mainly in southern China, in the provinces of Guizhou, Hunan, Yunnan, Sichuan, Guangxi, Hainan, Guangdong, and Hubei. According to the 2000 census, the number of 'Miao' in China was estimated to be about 9.6 million. The Miao nationality includes Hmong people as well as other culturally and linguistically related ethnic groups who do not call themselves Hmong. These include the Hmu, Kho (Qho) Xiong, and A-Hmao. The settling region of the Hmong in China is further western than that of the other groups, mainly in Guizhou, Yunnan, Sichuan, Chongqing, and Guangxi.

Xijiang, a Hmong-majority township in Guizhou, China

Vietnam

The Hmong or Miao began to migrate to Tonkin (Northern Vietnam) in 19th century, where they struggled to establish their community on the high mountains. They recognized the Tai-speaking overlords of valleys, who were vassals of the Vietnamese court in Hue. The Hue court of Tu Duc at the time was facing crisis after crisis, unable to retake control of Tonkin and the border regions. The Taiping rebellion and other Chinese rebels spilled over into Vietnam and had caused anarchy; the Hmong communities thrived on either sides of the Red River, harmonizing with other ethnic groups, and were largely ignored by all factions.

During the colonization of 'Tonkin' (North Vietnam) between 1883 and 1954, a number of Hmong decided to join the Vietnamese Nationalists and Communists, while many Christianized Hmong sided with the French. After the Viet Minh victory, numerous pro-French Hmong had to fall back to Laos and South Vietnam.

Red Dao in Vietnam

Laos

After decades of distant relations with the Lao kingdoms, closer relations between the French military and some Hmong on the Xieng Khouang plateau arose after World War II. There, a rivalry between members of the Lo and Ly clans developed into open enmity, also affecting those connected with them by kinship. Clan leaders took opposite sides; as a consequence, several thousand Hmong participated in the fighting against the Pathet Lao Communists, while almost as many were enrolled in the communist Lao People's Revolutionary Army. In Laos, numerous Hmong genuinely tried to avoid getting involved in the conflict in spite of the extremely difficult material conditions under which they lived during wartime.

The U.S. and the Laotian Civil War

Main article: Laotian Civil War

In the early 1960s, partially as a result of the North Vietnamese invasion of Laos, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Special Activities Division began to recruit, train and lead the indigenous Hmong people in Laos to fight against North Vietnamese Army divisions that were invading Laos during the Vietnam War. This "Secret Army" was organized into various mobile regiments and divisions, including Special Guerrilla Units, all of whom were led by General Vang Pao. An estimated sixty-percent (60%) of Hmong men in Laos joined up.

While there were Hmong soldiers who fought with the communist Pathet Lao and the North Vietnamese, others were recognized for serving in combat against the NVA and the Pathet Lao, helping block Hanoi's Ho Chi Minh trail inside Laos and rescuing downed American pilots. Though their role was generally kept secret in the early stages of the conflict, they made great sacrifices to help the U.S.

Thousands of economic and political refugees have resettled in Western countries in two separate waves. The first wave resettled in the late 1970s, mostly in the United States after the North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao takeovers of the pro-U.S. governments in South Vietnam and Laos respectively. The Lao Veterans of America, and Lao Veterans of America Institute, helped to assist in the resettlement of many Laotian and Hmong refugees and asylum seekers in the United States, especially former Hmong veterans and their family members who served in the "U.S. Secret Army" in Laos during the Vietnam War.

Hmong Lao resistance

Main articles: Conflict in Laos involving the Hmong and United League for Democracy in Laos
Hmong girls meet possible suitors while playing a ball-throwing game in Laos.

For many years, the Neo Hom political movement played a key role in resistance to the Vietnam People's Army in Laos following the U.S. withdrawal in 1975; Vang Pao played a significant role in this movement. Additionally, a spiritual leader, Zong Zoua Her, as well as other Hmong leaders, including Pa Kao Her or Pa Khao Her, rallied some of their followers in a factionalized guerrilla resistance movement called ChaoFa (RPA: Cob Fab, Pahawh Hmong: 𖬒𖬯 𖬖𖬜𖬵 ). These events led to the yellow rain controversy when the United States accused the Soviet Union of supplying and using chemical weapons in this conflict.

Small groups of Hmong people, many second or third generation descendants of former CIA soldiers, remain internally displaced in remote parts of Laos, in fear of government reprisals. Faced with continuing military operations against them by the government and a scarcity of food, some groups have begun coming out of hiding, while others have sought asylum in Thailand and other countries. Hmong in Laos, in particular, developed a stronger and deeper anti-Vietnamese sentiment than their Vietnamese Hmong cousins, due to historic persecution perpetrated by the Vietnamese against them.

Controversy over repatriation

Main article: Human rights in Laos § Hmong refugees and forced repatriation
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In June 1991, after talks with the UNHCR and the Thai government, Laos agreed to the repatriation of over 60,000 Lao refugees living in Thailand, including tens of thousands of Hmong people. Very few of the Lao refugees, however, were willing to return voluntarily. Pressure to resettle the refugees grew as the Thai government worked to close its remaining refugee camps. While some Hmong people returned to Laos voluntarily, with development assistance from UNHCR, coercive measures and forced repatriation was used to send thousands of Hmong back to the places they had fled. Of the Hmong who did return to Laos, some quickly escaped back to Thailand, describing discrimination and brutal treatment at the hands of Lao authorities.

In the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, The Center for Public Policy Analysis, a non-governmental public policy research organization, and its executive director, Philip Smith, played a key role in raising awareness in the U.S. Congress and policy-making circles in Washington, D.C. about the plight of the Hmong and Laotian refugees in Thailand and Laos. The CPPA, backed by a bipartisan coalition of members of the U.S. Congress and human rights organizations, conducted numerous research missions to the Hmong and Laotian refugee camps along the Mekong River in Thailand, as well as the Buddhist temple of Wat Tham Krabok.

Amnesty International, the Lao Veterans of America, Inc., the United League for Democracy in Laos, Inc., Lao Human Rights Council, Inc. (led by Dr. Pobzeb Vang Vang Pobzeb, and later Vaughn Vang) and other non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and human rights organizations joined the opposition to forced repatriation.

Although some accusations of forced repatriation were denied, thousands of Hmong people refused to return to Laos. In 1996, as the deadline for the closure of Thai refugee camps approached, under mounting political pressure, the U.S. agreed to resettle Hmong refugees who passed a new screening process. Around 5,000 Hmong people who were not resettled at the time of the camp closures sought asylum at Wat Tham Krabok, a Buddhist monastery in central Thailand where more than 10,000 Hmong refugees were already living. The Thai government attempted to repatriate these refugees, but the Wat Tham Krabok Hmong refused to leave and the Lao government refused to accept them, claiming they were involved in the illegal drug trade and were of non-Lao origin.

In 2003, following threats of forcible removal by the Thai government, the U.S., in a significant victory for the Hmong, agreed to accept 15,000 of the refugees. Several thousand Hmong people, fearing forced repatriation to Laos if they were not accepted for resettlement in the U.S., fled the camp to live elsewhere within Thailand where a sizable Hmong population has been present since the 19th century. In 2004 and 2005, thousands of Hmong fled from the jungles of Laos to a temporary refugee camp in the Thai province of Phetchabun.

The European Union, UNHCHR, and international groups have since spoken out about the forced repatriation.

Alleged plot to overthrow the government of Laos

Main article: 2007 Laotian coup d'état conspiracy allegation

On 4 June 2007, as part of an investigation labeled Operation Tarnished Eagle, U.S. federal courts ordered warrants issued for the arrest of Vang Pao and nine others for plotting to overthrow the government of Laos in violation of federal Neutrality Acts and for multiple weapons charges. The federal charges alleged that members of the group inspected weapons, including AK-47s, smoke grenades, and Stinger missiles, in order to buy and smuggle into Thailand in June 2007, where they were intended to be used by Hmong resistance forces in Laos. Out of the 9 arrested, one was an American, Harrison Jack, a 1968 West Point graduate and retired Army infantry officer who allegedly attempted to recruit Special Operations veterans to act as mercenaries.

To obtain the weapons, Jack allegedly met unknowingly with undercover U.S. federal agents posing as weapons dealers, prompting the warrants, part of a long-running investigation into the activities of the U.S.-based Hmong leadership and its supporters.

On 15 June, the defendants were indicted by a grand jury; a warrant was also issued for the arrest of an 11th man allegedly involved in the plot. Simultaneous raids of the defendants' homes and work locations, involving over 200 federal, state and local law enforcement officials, were conducted in approximately 15 U.S. cities in Central and Southern California.

Multiple protest rallies in support of the suspects, designed to raise awareness of the treatment of Hmong peoples in the jungles of Laos, took place in California, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Alaska. Several of Vang Pao's high-level supporters in the U.S. criticized the California court that issued the arrest warrants, arguing that Vang was a historically important American ally and a valued leader of U.S. and foreign-based Hmong. Calls to Californian Republican governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and President George W. Bush to pardon the defendants went unanswered pending a conclusion to the large, ongoing federal investigation.

On 18 September 2009, the U.S. federal government dropped all charges against Vang Pao, announcing that the federal government was permitted to consider "the probable sentence or other consequences if the person is convicted". On 10 January 2011, after Vang Pao's death, the federal government dropped all charges against the remaining defendants saying, "Based on the totality of the circumstances in the case, the government believes, as a discretionary matter, that continued prosecution of defendants is no longer warranted."

Thailand

The presence of Hmong settlements in Thailand is documented from the end of the 19th century on. Initially, the Siamese paid little attention to them. But in the early 1950s, the state suddenly took a number of initiatives aimed at establishing links. Decolonization and nationalism were gaining momentum in the peninsula and wars of independence were raging. Armed opposition to the state in northern Thailand, triggered by outside influence, started in 1967 while again many Hmong refused to take sides in the conflict. Communist guerrilla warfare stopped by 1982 as a result of an international concurrence of events that rendered it pointless. Priority has since been given by the Thai state to sedentarizing the mountain population, introducing commercially viable agricultural techniques and national education, with the aim of integrating these non-Tai animists within the national identity.

In the United States

Main article: Hmong AmericanSee also: List of Hmong Americans; History of the Hmong in Merced, California; Hmong archives; Lao Veterans of America; Laos Memorial; and The Center for Public Policy Analysis

Many Hmong refugees resettled in the United States after the Vietnam War. Beginning in December 1975, the first Hmong refugees arrived in the U.S., mainly from refugee camps in Thailand; however, only 3,466 were granted asylum at that time under the Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975. In May 1976, another 11,000 were allowed to enter the United States, and by 1978 some 30,000 Hmong people had emigrated. This first wave was made up predominantly of men directly associated with General Vang Pao's secret army. It was not until the passage of the Refugee Act of 1980 that families were able to enter the U.S., becoming the second wave of Hmong immigrants. Hmong families were scattered across all 50 states but most found their way to each other, building large communities in California, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Washington State and Oregon. Smaller, but still sizeable communities also formed in Massachusetts (Lowell), Michigan (Detroit), Montana (Missoula) and Alaska (Anchorage).

Culture

A pair of traditional Hmong fine silver earrings

Hmong people have their own terms for their cultural divisions. Hmong Der (Hmoob Dawb), and Hmong Leng (Hmoob Leeg) are the terms for two of the largest groups in the United States and Southeast Asia. These subgroups are also known as the White Hmong, and Blue or Green Hmong, respectively. These names originate from the color and designs of women's dresses in each respective group, with the White Hmong distinguished by the white dresses women wear on special occasions, and the Blue/Green Hmong by the blue batiked dresses. The name and pronunciation "Hmong" is exclusively used by the White Hmong to refer to themselves, and many dictionaries use only the White Hmong dialect.

In the Romanized Popular Alphabet, developed in the 1950s in Laos, these terms are written Hmoob Dawb (White Hmong) and Hmoob Leeg (Green Hmong). The final consonants indicate with which of the eight lexical tones the word is pronounced.

White Hmong and Green Hmong speak mutually intelligible dialects of the Hmong language, with some differences in pronunciation and vocabulary. One of the most characteristic differences is the use of the voiceless /m̥/ in White Hmong, indicated by a preceding "H" in Romanized Popular Alphabet. Voiceless nasals are not found in the Green Hmong dialect. Hmong groups are often named after the dominant colors or patterns of their traditional clothing, style of head-dress, or the provinces from which they come.

Vietnam and Laos

The Hmong groups in Vietnam and Laos, from the 18th century to the present day, are known as Black Hmong (Hmoob Dub), Striped Hmong (Hmoob Txaij), White Hmong (Hmoob Dawb), Hmong Leng (Hmoob Leeg) and Green Hmong (Hmoob Ntsuab). In other places in Asia, groups are also known as Black Hmong (Hmoob Dub or Hmong Dou), Striped Hmong (Hmoob Txaij or Hmoob Quas Npab), Hmong Shi, Hmong Pe, Hmong Pua, and Hmong Xau, Hmong Xanh (Green Hmong), Hmong Do (Red Hmong), Na Mieo and various other subgroups. These include the Flower Hmong or the Variegated Hmong (Hmong Lenh or Hmong Hoa), so named because of their bright, colorful embroidery work (called pa ndau or paj ntaub, literally "flower cloth").

Main article: Miao people
Hmong folk costume in Sa Pa, Vietnam
See also: Languages of China and Ethnic groups in Chinese history
A Flower Hmong woman in Vietnam
A typical rammed earth house –building technique of Flower Hmong in Vietnam

Hmong/Mong controversy

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When Western authors first came in contact with Hmong people in the 18th century, they referred to them by writing ethnonyms which were previously assigned to them by the Chinese (i.e., Miao, or variants). This practice continued into the 20th century. Even ethnographers studying the Hmong people in Southeast Asia often referred to them as Meo, a corruption of Miao applied by Thai and Lao people to the Hmong. Although "Meo" was an official term, it was often used as an insult against the Hmong people, and it is considered to be derogatory.

The issue came to a head during the passage of California State Assembly Bill (AB) 78, in the 2003–2004 season. Introduced by Doua Vu and Assembly Member Sarah Reyes, District 31 (Fresno), the bill encouraged changes in secondary education curriculum to include information about the Secret War and the role of Hmong people in the war. Furthermore, the bill called for the use of oral histories and first-hand accounts by Hmong people who had participated in the war and were caught up in its aftermath. Originally, the language of the bill mentioned only "Hmong" people, intending to include the entire community. Several Mong Leng activists, led by Dr. Paoze Thao (Professor of Linguistics and Education at California State University, Monterey Bay), drew attention to the problems associated with omitting "Mong" from the language of the bill. They noted that despite nearly equal numbers of Hmong Der and Mong Leng in the United States, resources are disproportionately allocated to the Hmong Der community. This not only includes scholarly research, but also the translation of materials, including the curriculum proposed by the bill. Despite these arguments, "Mong" was not added to the bill. In the version of the bill that was passed by the assembly, "Hmong" was replaced by "Southeast Asians," a broader and more inclusive term.

Dr. Paoze Thao and some others strongly feel that "Hmong" can only be used in reference to Hmong Der people because it does not include "Mong" Leng people. He feels that the use of "Hmong" in reference to both groups perpetuates the marginalization of the Mong Leng language and culture. Thus, he advocates the use of "Hmong" and "Mong" in reference to the entire ethnic group. Other scholars, including anthropologist Dr. Gary Yia Lee (a Hmong Der person), suggests that for the past 30 years, "Hmong" has been used in reference to the entire community and as a result, the inclusion of Mong Leng people is understandable. Some argue that such distinctions create unnecessary divisions within the global community, arguing that the use of these distinctions will only confuse non-Hmong and Mong people who are both trying to learn more about Hmong and Mong history and culture.

As a compromise alternative, multiple iterations of "Hmong" have been proposed. A Hmong theologian, Rev. Dr. Paul Joseph T. Khamdy Yang has proposed the use of the term "HMong" in reference to the Hmong and the Mong communities by capitalizing the H and the M. The ethnologist Jacques Lemoine has also begun to use the term (H)mong in reference to the entirety of the Hmong and Mong communities.

Hmong and Miao

Hmong people at the Can Cau market, Si Ma Cai, Vietnam

Some non-Chinese Hmong advocate for the term 'Hmong' to be used not only to designate their dialect group but also other Miao groups living in China. They generally claim that the word "Miao" or "Meo" is a derogatory term, with connotations of barbarism, that probably should not be used at all. The term was later adopted by Tai-speaking groups in Southeast Asia where it took on especially insulting associations for Hmong people despite its official status.

In modern China, the term "Miao" does not carry these negative associations, and people of the various sub-groups that constitute this officially recognized nationality freely identify themselves as Miao or Chinese, typically reserving more specific ethnonyms for intra-ethnic communication. During the struggle for political recognition after 1949, it was members of these ethnic minorities who campaigned for identification under the umbrella term "Miao" – taking advantage of its familiarity and associations of historical political oppression.

Contemporary transnational interactions between Hmong in the West and Miao groups in China, following the 1975 Hmong emigration, led to the development of a global Hmong identity that includes linguistically and culturally related minorities in China with no previous ethnic affiliation. Scholarly and commercial exchanges, increasingly made over the internet, have also resulted in an exchange of terminology, including some Hmong people accepting the designation "Miao" after visiting China and some nationalist non-Hmong Miao peoples identifying as Hmong. Such realignments of identity, while largely the concern of economically elite community leaders reflects a trend towards the interchangeability of the terms "Hmong" and "Miao".

Diaspora

Further information: Integration of Hmong people into urban society

Linguistic data shows that the Hmong of the peninsula stem from the Miao of southern China as one among a set of ethnic groups belonging to the Hmong–Mien language family. Linguistically and culturally speaking, the Hmong and the other sub-groups of the Miao have little in common.

Vietnam, where their presence is attested from the late 18th century onwards and characterized with both assimilation, cooperation and hostility, is likely to be the first Southeastern Eurasian country into which the Hmong migrated. At the 2019 national census, there were 1,393,547 Hmong living in Vietnam, the vast majority of them in the north of the country. The traditional trade in coffin wood with China and cultivation of the opium poppy – not prohibited in Vietnam until 1993 – long guaranteed a regular cash income. Today, cash cropping is the main economic activity. As in China and Laos, Hmong participate to a certain degree in local and regional administration. In the late 1990s, several thousands of Hmong started moving to the Central Highlands and some crossed the border into Cambodia, constituting the first attested presence of Hmong settlers in that country.

In 2015, the Hmong in Laos numbered 595,028. Hmong settlement there is nearly as ancient as in Vietnam.

After the 1975 Communist victory, thousands of Hmong from Laos had to seek refuge abroad (see Laos below). Approximately 30 percent of the Hmong have left, although the only concrete figure we have is that of 116,000 Hmong from Laos and Vietnam together seeking refuge in Thailand up to 1990.

In 2002 the Hmong in Thailand numbered 151,080.

Myanmar most likely includes a modest number of Hmong (perhaps around 2,500) but no reliable census has been conducted there recently.

As result of refugee movements in the wake of the Indochina Wars (1946–1975), in particular, in Laos, the largest Hmong community to settle outside Asia went to the United States where approximately 100,000 individuals had already arrived by 1990. By the same date, 10,000 Hmong had migrated to France, including 1,400 in French Guiana; Canada admitted 900 individuals, while another 360 went to Australia, 260 to China, and 250 to Argentina. Over the following years and until the definitive closure of the last refugee camps in Thailand in 1998, additional numbers of Hmong have left Asia, but the definitive figures are still to be produced.

Hmong girl (aged 15) preparing wedding dress, Phố Cáo commune, Hà Giang province, Vietnam

Approximately 5% of the Hmong population currently lives outside of Asia, with the United States home to the largest Hmong diaspora community. The 2008 census counted 171,316 people solely of Hmong ancestry, and 221,948 persons of at least partial Hmong ancestry. Other countries with significant populations include:

The Hmong population within the United States is centered in the Upper Midwest (Wisconsin, Minnesota) and California.

Vietnam

Hmong people in Vietnam have been perceived differently by various modern political organizations and in different historical periods. Since the Hmong are an ethnic minority in Vietnam, their loyalty toward the Vietnamese state has been frequently questioned by the state. However, many Hmong in Vietnam are fiercely loyal, regardless of the current ideologies of the government; the Hmong in Laos and Cambodia are the most supportive of active resistance. These tend to be Hmong Christians that have been targeted by all three Vietnamese governments. The Hmong in Vietnam also receive cultural and political incentives from the government, which led to the Vietnamese Hmong further diverging from the Laotian Hmong, since the latter are strongly anti-Vietnamese due to the Secret War and Communism.

Laos

There are 595,028 Hmong people in Laos. They mainly live in northern regions.

Thailand

Hmong girls in Thoeng District, Thailand
See also: Wat Tham Krabok

The Hmong presence in Thailand dates back to the turn of the 20th century when families migrated from China through Laos and Burma, according to most authors. A relatively small population, they still formed dozens of villages and hamlets throughout the northern provinces. The Hmong were registered by the state as the Meo hill tribe. Then, more Hmong migrated from Laos to Thailand following the victory of the Pathet Lao in 1975. While some ended up in refugee camps, others settled in mountainous areas among more ancient Hill Tribes.

Americas

Main article: Hmong AmericansSee also: List of Hmong Americans; History of the Hmong in Merced, California; Hmong archives; Lao Veterans of America; Laos Memorial; and The Center for Public Policy Analysis

Many Hmong refugees resettled in the United States after the Vietnam War. Beginning in December 1975, the first Hmong refugees arrived in the U.S., mainly from refugee camps in Thailand; however, only 3,466 were granted asylum under the Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975. In May 1976, another 11,000 were allowed to enter the United States, and by 1978 some 30,000 Hmong people had emigrated. This first wave was made up predominantly of men directly associated with General Vang Pao's secret army. It was not until the passage of the Refugee Act of 1980 that families were able to enter the U.S., becoming the second wave of Hmong immigrants. Hmong families scattered across all 50 states but most found their way to each other, building large communities in California, Minnesota and Wisconsin. As of the 2010 census, 260,073 Hmong people reside in the United States, the majority of whom live in California (91,224), then Minnesota (66,181), and Wisconsin (49,240), an increase from 186,310 in 2000. 247,595 or 95.2% are Hmong alone, and the remaining 12,478 are mixed Hmong with some other ethnicity. The vast majority of part-Hmong are under 10 years old.

In terms of cities and towns, the largest Hmong-American community is in St. Paul (29,662), followed by Fresno (24,328), Sacramento (16,676), Milwaukee (10,245), and Minneapolis (7,512).

There are smaller Hmong communities scattered across the United States, including those in Minnesota (Rochester, Mankato, Duluth); Michigan (Detroit and Warren); Anchorage, Alaska; Denver, Colorado; Portland, Oregon; Washington; North Carolina (Charlotte, Morganton); South Carolina (Spartanburg); Georgia (Auburn, Duluth, Monroe, Atlanta, and Winder); Florida (Tampa Bay); California (Merced); Wisconsin (Madison, Eau Claire, Appleton, Green Bay, Milwaukee, Oshkosh, La Crosse, Sheboygan, Manitowoc, and Wausau); Aurora, Illinois; Kansas City, Kansas; Tulsa, Oklahoma; Missoula, Montana; Des Moines, Iowa; Springfield, Missouri; Arkansas, Fitchburg, Massachusetts, and Providence, Rhode Island.

Sunisa "Suni" Lee of Saint Paul, Minnesota is a notable Hmong-American; she is a three time Olympic medalist in artistic gymnastics. In the 2020 Summer Olympics, Lee won silver in the women's artistic team all-around, followed by gold in the women's artistic individual all-around and bronze in the women's uneven bars. With these results, Sunisa made history as both the first Hmong-American to compete in the Olympics in any sport and the first Hmong-American to win an Olympic medal.

Canada's small Hmong population is mostly concentrated within the province of Ontario. Kitchener, Ontario has 515 residents of Hmong descent, and has a Hmong church.

There is also a small community of several thousand Hmong who migrated to French Guiana in the late 1970s and early 1980s, that can be mainly found in the Hmong villages of Javouhey (1200 individuals) and Cacao (950 individuals).

The Hmong immigrant population of Detroit is a central focus of the 2008 film Gran Torino, though that city does not have a significant Hmong population.

Religious persecution

Hmong Catholics, Protestants, and animists have been subjected to military attacks, police arrest, imprisonment, forced disappearances, extrajudicial killings, and torture in Laos and Vietnam on anti-religious grounds.

A significant example was the deportation of Zoua Yang and her 27 children from Thailand on 19 December 2005, after the group was arrested attending a church in Ban Kho Noi, Phetchabun Province, Thailand. Ms. Yang and her children were detained upon their return to Laos, after which the whereabouts of much of the family is unknown.

In 2011, Vietnam People's Army troops were used to crush a peaceful demonstration by Hmong Catholic, Protestant and Evangelical Christians who gathered in Dien Bien Province and the Dien Bien Phu area of northwestern Vietnam, according to Philip Smith of the Center for Public Policy Analysis, independent journalists and others. In 2013, Vam Ngaij Vaj, a Christian pastor of Hmong ancestry, was beaten to death by Vietnamese police and security forces. In Hanoi, Vietnamese government officials refused to allow medical treatment for a Hmong Christian leader, Duong Van Minh, who was suffering from a serious kidney illness, in February 2014.

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has documented official and ongoing religious persecution, religious-freedom violations against the Laotian and Hmong people in both Laos and Vietnam by the governments. In April 2011, the Center for Public Policy Analysis also researched and documented cases of Hmong Christians being attacked and summarily executed, including four Lao Hmong Christians.

See also

Notes

  1. There is no official census of the Hmong people in China, as they are classified as a subgroup of the Miao people there.

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Sources

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