Banyarwanda

Banyarwanda
AbanyaRwanda
Total population
16,044,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda and the DR Congo
Languages
Kinyarwanda
Religion
Christianity, Islam and Rwandan religion
Related ethnic groups
Other Bantu peoples
Rwanda
PersonUmunyaRwanda
PeopleAbanyaRwanda
LanguageIkinyaRwanda
CountryRwanda

The Banyarwanda (Kinyarwanda: Abanyarwanda, plural; Umunyarwanda, singular) are a Bantu ethnolinguistic supraethnicity. The Banyarwanda are also minorities in neighboring Burundi, DR Congo, Uganda, and Tanzania.

Although the ethnic make-up of Burundi is similar to that of Rwanda, Banyarwanda is a political neologism used solely in Rwanda since the 1990s in order to mitigate ethnic division within the country following the Rwandan Civil War and the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

In the 1930s the Belgian colonial authorities, who controlled both Congo, Rwanda and Burundi at the time, implemented programs to encourage large numbers of Banyarwanda to emigrate to the Belgian Congo from Rwanda and Burundi. The population of Banyarwabda has increased later by large numbers fleeing violence in those two countries especially in the 1960s and the 1990s.

An estimated 524,098 Banyarwanda live in Uganda,[2] where they live in the west of the country; Umutara and Kitara are the centres of their pastoral and agricultural areas.

  1. ^ "Kinyarwanda language resources | Joshua Project".
  2. ^ Uganda Bureau of Statistics. "National Population and Housing Census 2014 - Main Report" (PDF).

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