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Shan |
| People Group: |
Shan |
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 |
| Location: |
Myanmar |
| Population: |
4,227,000 |
| Religion: |
Buddhism |
| % Christian: |
0.90% |
| % Evangelical: |
0.70% |
| Ministry
Resources: |
Bible Completed
2002, One Known Church |
|
|
Total People Group
Population: |
4,328,000 |
Other countries People
Group Linked to: |
Laos,
Thailand |
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Additional Information:
The Burmese Shan are a large group of
civilized people who migrated south from China in the twelfth century
and established three small states in Myanmar (Burma). The Shan language
belongs to the southwestern group of tonal languages. The people refer
to themselves as the "Great Tai."
Myanmar has a long history of coups, wars, and rebellions. Ethnic
divisions and political unrest have been common since the first Burman
kingdom in the eleventh century. Today, the Shan have their own army who
fight against the current Burmese military regime. The Burmese military
forcibly maintains control over the country's various ethnic groups,
especially the Shan, who wish to have equal importance in government and
commerce. As civil war divides families, many sons have died fighting
against the Burmese government or have joined the secessionist Shan
State Army.
What Are Their Lives Like?
Agriculture
is the driving force in the Shan economy. Rice is the major cash and
family crop. Other crops include tea, soybeans, peanuts, coffee, and
cotton. People living near larger villages or towns grow vegetables to
sell in the market. Shan farmers grow one other crop-it is estimated
that as much as fifty percent of the world's illegal opium is produced
in the Shan State.
Traditionally, rice is grown in irrigated fields, especially along the
Salween River. However, farmers sometimes resort to "slash and burn"
cultivation to grow hill rice. Farmers raise cattle and buffalo, not for
meat, but to draw heavy wooden plows since farming is not mechanized.
Because many of their sons have lost their lives in the ongoing civil
war, farmers are finding it necessary to hire outside labor.
Shan farmers live in villages of ten to five hundred or more households
clustered or lined among trees along roads or riverbanks. The Shan have
neither clans nor family lines. Marriages are monogamous, based on the
couple's mutual consent. Newlyweds usually live with the bride's parents
for the first two or three years or until they can set up their own
home. Gossip and reputation are important social restraints.
Shan social culture is a hierarchy based on age, gender, and wealth. The
Myanmar constitution dictates the political organization-an unbroken
line of administrative authority from the Prime Minister to the village
headman. The community, which elects a single headman, is accounted for
in the national census as a territorial unit and accessed taxes. For the
common citizen, the government is one of five traditional enemies along
with fire, famine, flood, and plague.
Shan are wholesalers who move trade good through northwestern Thailand
and eastern Myanmar. As a result of improved transportation, women have
become retailers of domestic goods sold in village markets instead of
individually trading with one another. The people are good silversmiths
who make beautiful buttons and daggers. They also market bamboo products
and paper.
What are their beliefs?
Buddhism was introduced into Myanmar in the fifth century and more than
ninety-nine percent of the Shan are Buddhists. The Buddhist's goal is to
seek the middle path to nirvana, or ultimate peace. The Shan view of the
world centers on the idea of 'power protection,' which protects people
from the consequences of their actions, allowing them to do as they
please. Buddha and Buddhist monks are the most powerful beings, followed
by spirits of the village, spirits associated with fields, households,
and the forest. For the Buddhist, death is not a threat if one has done
good deeds; it is simply passing from one life to another.
What are their needs?
The tiny Shan Church (less than one percent) needs more leadership and
the opportunity to train their leaders within Myanmar. The Bible is
available in the Shan language, as are the Jesus film and Christian
radio broadcasts.
Prayer Points
Take authority over the spiritual principalities and powers that are
keeping the Burmese Shan bound.
Ask God to strengthen, encourage, and protect the Shan Christians.
Ask the Holy Spirit to complete the work of adequate discipleship begun
in the hearts of the Burmese Shan.
Pray for the effectiveness of the Jesus film among the Burmese Shan.
Pray that God will raise up prayer teams to break up the soil through
worship and intercession.
Ask God to grant wisdom and favor to the missions agency that is
targeting the Burmese Shan.
Pray for opportunities to train Shan leaders within their country.
Ask God to anoint the Gospel as it goes forth via radio to the Burmese
Shan.
Ask the Lord to raise up strong local churches among the Burmese Shan.
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