Bará people
The Bará (also called Waímajã and Waípinõmakã) are an indigenous people originating from the northwest of the Amazon rainforest, which lives in the headwaters of the Tiquié River, above the village of Trinidad and in the upper Igarapé Inambú (tributary of the Papurí River that goes to the Vaupés River) and the upper Colorado and Lobo (tributaries of Pira-Paraná that goes to Apaporis).
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Colombia | 1,008 (2018) |
Brazil | 30 (2014) |
Languages | |
Waimajã | |
Religion | |
Traditional religion | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Tucano, Tuyuca, and Barasana |
The Bará are an exogamous phratry identified as "pez people" (Waí mahã) and conformed to eight patrilineal clans. They form part of a regional cultural system of linguistically differentiated exogamous phratries. They speak an Eastern Toucan language, as well as the languages of exogamous ethnic groups or phratries, which form part of this regional system of the Vaupés, based on marriage exchange between them. The wives and mothers of each, as well as the husbands, and children of the sisters of the members of a phratry or linguistic unit do not belong to the same. In practice each person speaks several languages, in addition to the language of their unit or fraternity.