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Miao in China
Overview
History. While some traditions state that the Miao originally came from Tibet or Mongolia, it is generally believed that 4500 years ago they inhabited the valleys of the Yellow River region. They likely moved to Southwest China from 221 BC — AD 220. They are a persecuted people whose history is closely tied to rebellion against oppressive governments, one of the biggest and bloodiest occurring between 1851 and 1874. In 1975 there was major migration of Hmong freedom fighters from Laos, many relocating to the USA, France, Australia, and several other countries.
Miao Society. The Miao are a friendly, affectionate people who enjoy music, festivals, and entertaining guests. They live in close-knit communities, their villages often made up of one or two clans. It is taboo to marry someone with the same family name, so Miao young people look forward to festivals as a chance to meet youth from other villages. Extended families usually live together under one roof in wooden "hanging houses," standing on stilts short on the uphill side and long on the downhill side. Many homes have three stories, the top for grain storage, the middle for the family, and the bottom for animals. In other areas, homes may be made of mud bricks or stone.
Language. While the Miao are ethnically one people, so much divergence in language and culture has developed among the group that they cannot be considered one unified people for church planting efforts. (See below for links to the rich tapestry of Miao culture).
Political situation. The majority of Miao live in countries ruled by communist-controlled governments (Vietnam, Laos, China). While these governments espouse religious freedom, in actual practice little toleration is shown for those wanting to freely convert and live out the commands of Jesus. Any attempts to engage in evangelism and training, or provide Christian materials for the Miao/Hmong are strictly prohibited.
Religion. The Miao are animists, believing the spirit world touches every aspect of life. Spirits can be benevolent or mischievous, protecting or bringing harm to men, beasts, and crops. Elaborate rituals and sacrifices are used for protection; and shamans (spirit mediums) are responsible for identifying demons and instructing the afflicted in how to appease them. Every home houses an altar to ancestral spirits of grandparents and other relatives who died natural deaths in old age; but if a Miao dies a tragic death, his spirit is left behind to bring havoc to his family and village unless he is properly appeased.
Christianity. The first Christian efforts among the Farwestern Hmongic groups started in the late 1890’s by China Inland Mission and Methodist missionaries. A significant impact was made among 2 dialect groups. Of the estimated 300,000 Miao believers, approximately 250,000 of these are among the A-Hmao (Big Flowery) and Gha-Mu tribes (Small Flowery). (Both these tribes are subgroups of the Farwestern Hmong). Their dialects are mutually unintelligible with other Miao dialects. A significant impact was also made among some Hua Miao groups (also Farwestern) located near Anshun in Guizhou Province. The vast majority of Miao, however, are completely unevangelized with no knowledge even of the name "Jesus".
Facts
|
Population:
7900000
Religion:
Animist
Unevangelized:
80.0%
Miao
See map: Google Maps
Evangelization
- Whole Bible: Enshi, Chuan and Horned Miao only
- Jesus film: only selected subgroups
- Christian Radio Broadcast: very few subgroups supported
- Christian Audio Recordings: very few subgroups supported
Poverty
Table 2: Selected indicators of human poverty for China |
|||
| Probability of not
surviving to age 40 (%) |
Adult
illiteracy rate (% > age 14 ) |
People not
using an
improved water source (%) |
Children
underweight for
age (% aged under 5) |
| 1. Hong Kong, China (1.4) |
1.
Georgia (0.0) |
1.
Barbados (0) |
1.
Croatia (1) |
| 59. China (6.2) |
56. China (6.7) |
77. China (12) |
46. China (7) |
| 153. Lesotho (47.4) |
151.
Mali (73.8) |
150.
Afghanistan (78) |
138.
Bangladesh (4So8) |
Links/Resources
These online profiles from the Joshuaproject.net website share the diversity of tradition and culture within the Miao peoplegroup. While very little unites them outside of their ethnicity, they all share a need for salvation through Jesus Christ.
Prayer
- Pray that God would raise up people like Rahab (Joshua 2) who will shelter and protect the workers who go into...
- Pray for efforts to develop a culturally relevant approach to sharing the gospel with the Miao.
- Pray for the Lord of the harvest to raise up workers who are willing to do "whatever it takes" to get...