|
Sama |
| People Group: |
Sama, Southern |
 |
 |
| Location: |
Philippines |
| Population: |
209,000 |
| Religion: |
Islam |
| % Christian: |
0.01% |
| % Evangelical: |
Unknown |
| Ministry
Resources: |
Some Bible
Portions, Some Believers, No Churches |
|
|
Total People Group
Population: |
360,000 |
Other countries People
Group Linked to: |
Malaysia |
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Additional Information:
The Southern Sama of the Philippines
live on the Tawi-Tawi island group in the Sulu Archipelago. The Southern
Sama are a subgroup of a much larger group of Sama. They speak the
Sibutu dialect of the Sama-Bajau language.
The term Sama, or Samal, covers a diverse grouping of Sama-Bajau
speaking peoples located from the central Philippines to the eastern
shores of Borneo and from Sulawesi to Roti, eastern Indonesia. As a
whole, they are a highly fragmented people lacking political unity.
Individual Sama groups identify themselves by dialect and geographic
location.
The Sama were originally located in the islands and coastal areas
separating southwestern Mindanao from the northeastern islands of Sulu.
It is thought that they originally migrated in the first millennium A.D.
as a result of expanding Chinese trade. Most moved south and west,
settling along the main Sulu Archipelago, Cagayan Sulu, and the eastern
Borneo coast.
What Are Their Lives Like?
The
Sama are a maritime people, with fishing being their major economic
activity. They also engage in seafaring trade and some farming.
Throughout much of the area, copra (dried coconut meat yielding coconut
oil) is the major cash crop. However, copra holdings are small, and most
families are unable to support themselves entirely from copra sales.
Thus, trade also occupies a central place in Sama society. Maritime
groups were historically valued for their navigational skills as
seafarers and suppliers of dried fish, trepang (sea cucumbers), pearls,
pearl shells, and other items.
Sama settlements consist of densely clustered houses situated along
well-protected stretches of shoreline. In some places, houses are built
directly over the sea, but in other places, they are located along the
beach front. If over the water, they are connected by planks or narrow
bridges. Built on stilts one to three meters above the ground or
high-water mark, houses usually have one rectangular room with an
attached kitchen.
Households are grouped into larger units called tumpuks (clusters),
which are located near one another and are related by close kinship
ties. Within the village, one household head is acknowledged as the
tumpuk spokesman. In some instances, the tumpuks coincide with the
parishes, whose members belong to a single mosque.
Fishing, boat building, and iron working are primarily male occupations,
while weaving mats and marketing pottery are jobs for women. Both men
and women engage in farming and trade. The Sama are known for their
traditional dances, songs, percussion and xylophone music, dyed mats and
food covers, and wood carvings.
What are their beliefs?
The Sama are almost all Sunni Muslims. Those who are knowledgeable in
religious matters, such as the imans (Islamic leaders) and other mosque
officials, are called paki or pakil. They preside over all important
ceremonies and act as religious counselors. Friday prayers are performed
in the parish mosque, climaxing a weekly cycle of daily prayers. Also,
an annual religious calendar is observed, celebrating Ramadan (yearly
Islamic fast) and the birthday of Mohammed.
The Sama still retain some of their traditional ethnic religious
beliefs. Spirits of the dead are thought to remain in the vicinity of
their graves, requiring expressions of continued concern from the
living. Some graves have reportedly become the sources of miracle
working power. During the month of Shaaban, it is said that God permits
the souls of the dead (roh) to return to this world. To honor them, the
living offer special prayers to the dead and clean the graves.
What are their needs?
Since the early 1970's, the Sulu Archipelago has experienced much
political unrest. The ensuing civil war has resulted in a massive
relocation of peoples to other parts of the Philippines, Indonesia, and
Malaysia. Today, the Muslim extremists are still very active, and there
have been numerous murders, kidnappings, and battles with the Filipino
military forces. Much prayer is needed if the Southern Sama are to find
true peace in Jesus.
Prayer Points
Ask the Lord to call missionaries who will go to the Philippines and
share Christ with the Southern Sama.
Ask the Holy Spirit to grant wisdom and favor to missions agencies
targeting the Southern Sama.
Pray that all of the Bible will be translated into Sibutu.
Pray that God will reveal Himself to the Southern Sama through dreams
and visions.
Ask the Holy Spirit to soften the hearts of the Southern Sama towards
the Gospel.
Take authority over the spiritual principalities and powers that are
keeping the Southern Sama bound.
Ask God to raise up prayer teams who will begin breaking up the soil
through worship and intercession.
Pray that strong local churches will be raised up among the Southern
Sama.
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