Lari people (Congo) explained

Lari people (Congo) should not be confused with Lari people (Iran).

The Lari (alternatively Ladi, Laari, Laadi,, Baladi, Balaadi, Balari or Balaari) is an ethnic group of the Republic of the Congo and the name of the language they speak. A subgroup of the Kongo people, the Lari live in the communes of Brazzaville, the capital; and Pointe-Noire, and within the surrounding Pool Department. This subgroup was born in the 19th century.[1] where they constitute almost the entire population. There are an estimated 1.2 million Lari living in Congo.

History

The establishment of the capital Brazzaville by the French colonizer near the Kongo settlements led to the merging of several Kongo subgroups into a new group with a new identity. Indeed, towards the end of the nineteenth century, the Ladi (pronunciation: lari or ladi) are people from different Kongo subgroups (subgroups originating from the former province of the Kongo Kingdom « Nsundi »): Sundi, Buende, Manianga, Gangala (or Hangala).[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

With the rapid commercial and demographic expansion, Ladi became the Kongo vernacular between the different branches (Sundi, Manianga, Kongo (or Koongo) ba Nseke), reshaping the Kongo identity, following the colonial railroad. The clear delimitations between these branches are thus defined not by language but by and region of origin (Mpangala, Mvula Ntangu or Mbula Ntangu, Manianga). In addition, there is old neighborhood with the Teke people, which is materialized by matrimonial alliances.[3]

Several hypotheses have been put forward for the origin of the word ladi or lari, but it seems to be taken from the word Nladi, Muladi, M'ladi (translation: He or she who disappears (or loses), a word derived from the verb Lala disappear/lose in Kikongo, more specifically in Kimbata and Kitsotso) or from the Luladi or Lulari river (called Lelali by the Téké-Yaka), a river near Kimpanzu, the village of Malonga Mi Mpanzu alias Bueta Mbongo or Bweta Mbongo; Boueta Mbongo in French (about 1860–1898). He was a mfumu kanda and mfumu tsi/nsi (clan chief and land chief), of the Mpanzu and Buende; his people and allies were thus designated bisi Buende, baBuende (in reference to the Buende/Bwende). Him and Mabiala ma Nganga (Nsundi, Sundi or Suundi) organized armed resistance against the French colonial settlement from the late 1880s, and then he became the leading figure of the resistance after the death of Mabiala ma Nganga in 1896. After the death of Bueta Mbongo in 1898, the mfumu (chiefs) signed a surrender in 1899, accepting French authority in the region. In these years, the Buende ethnonym gradually disappeared, giving way to that of Ladi. Thus the Ladis are originally the bisi Buende or baBuende, a Sundi stictosensu and lato sensu subgroup. Later, other Kongos (Haangala, Sundi/Nsundi, etc.) from Nsundi were added and some Tékés who remained in the Pool became part of it.[3]

References

• Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ethnicité et territorialité : Deux modes du vécu identitaire chez les Teke du Congo-Brazzaville . fr. Cahiers d'études africaines. Jean-Pierre MISSIé . 14 April 2022.
  2. Georges Balandier, Sociologie actuelle de l'Afrique noire, Presses Universitaires de France, Paris, 1982.
  3. Côme Kinata, LES ETHNOCHEFFERIES DANS LE BAS-CONGO FRANÇAIS: collaboration et résistance, 1896-1960, Paris, L'harmattan, 2001.
  4. Côme Manckasa, La société ba-Kongo et ses dynamiques politiques, École pratique des Hautes études, 1968.
  5. J. Cuvelier, Nkutama a mvila za Makanda, Impr. Mission Catholique, 1934.
  6. R. P. J. VAN WING, S.J., Études Bakongo – Religion et magie, Bruxelles, Librairie Falk fils, GEORGES VAN CAMPENHOUT, Successeur, 1938, page 155.
  7. Bruce Mateso and Talongokeno, QUI SONT BALADI (BALARI), WordPress,2021.
  8. Auguste Miabeto, Témoignages oraux, République du Congo.