EthnosPeoples of the World |
TutsiThe Tutsi, more correctly the Batutsi, are one of three native peoples of the nations of Rwanda and Burundi in central Africa. Large numbers of them were slaughtered in the Rwandan Genocide of 1994. The term Tutsi is actually an indeterminate term. In the Kinyarwanda language, a single Tutsi is termed batutsi, and more than one (the plural) is termed watutsi. This is the source of the dance name Watusi. The Watutsi are actually the most recent arrivals in Rwanda and Burundi. The original inhabitants were the Twa (or Watwa), a pygmy people. The Hutu (Wahutu), a Bantu-derived people, subsequently moved in and dominated the Twa. Later yet, the Tutsi immigrated from the north during the 1400's and dominated both the Hutu and the Twa, establishing kingdoms that they ruled. There is no difference between the culture and language of the Tutsi and Hutu. Traditionally the rate of intermarriage has been very high. Relations between the groups were generally peaceful until the 20th century. These significant similarites lead many to conclude that Tutsi is an expression of class or caste rather than ethnicity. Experts still dispute over whether these similarities between Hutus and Tutsis came from a common ancestry or a high rate of intermarriage. By the 1800's the Hutus and Tutsis had also evolved into socioeconomic castes. Belgian colonialists created the notions of two different races rather than castes. Hutu, Tutsi and Twa all speak the same language. *** |
***This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tutsi"