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69-493: (Redirected from Sea Gypsy ) Sea Gypsies , Sea Gypsy , Sea Nomads and Sea Nomad may refer to: Ethnography [ edit ] Sama-Bajau peoples , a collective name for several ethnic groups in the Philippines, Sabah, eastern Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia, and parts of Sarawak Moken , an Austronesian ethnic group who maintain a nomadic, sea-based culture Orang laut ,

138-625: A 1974 Memorandum of Understanding, "Indonesian traditional fishermen" are allowed to fish within the Exclusive Economic Zone of Australia, which includes traditional fishing grounds of Sama-Bajau fishermen. However, illegal fishing encroachment of Corporate Sea Trawlers in these areas has led to concern about overfishing , and the destruction of Sama-Bajau vessels. In 2014, Indonesian authorities destroyed six Filipino Sama-Bajau boats caught fishing in Indonesian waters. This

207-664: A group of Malay people living in the Riau Islands of Indonesia Tanka people , a Han ethnic sub-group that lives on boats in Southern China Urak Lawoi , coastal dwellers of Thailand Jalia Kaibarta , an aboriginal Indian fishermen tribe Other uses [ edit ] Badjao: The Sea Gypsies , a 1957 film directed by Philippine National Artist Lamberto V. Avellana and starring Rosa Rosal and Tony Santos, Sr. The Sea Gypsies (1978 film) , starring Robert Logan and Heather Rattray "Gypsies of

276-482: A separate branch altogether from all other Philippine languages. For example, Sinama pronunciation is quite distinct from other nearby Central Philippine languages like Tausūg and Tagalog . Instead of the primary stress being usually on the final syllable; the primary stress occurs on the second-to-the-last syllable of the word in Sinama. This placement of the primary stress is similar to Manobo and other languages of

345-569: A significant number are also illiterate, uneducated, and impoverished, due to their nomadic lifestyle. The number of modern Sama-Bajau who are born and live primarily at sea is diminishing. Cultural assimilation and modernisation are regarded as the main causes. Particularly blamed is the dissolution of the Sultanate of Sulu , the traditional patron of the Sama-Bajau for bartering fish for farm goods. The money-based fish markets which replaced

414-522: A single distinct bangsa ("ethnic group" or "nation"). It is generally accepted that these groups of people can be termed Sama or Bajau , though they never call themselves Bajau in the Philippines. Instead, they call themselves with the names of their tribes, usually the place they live or place of origin. For example, the sea-going Sama-Bajau prefer to call themselves the Sama Dilaut or Sama Mandilaut (literally 'sea Sama' or 'ocean Sama') in

483-610: A three-part self-description, such as "Bajau Suluk Dusun ". The following are the major subgroups usually recognised as distinct: The following are subgroups that do not self-identify as Sama, although they are culturally related to the Sama people and speak a Sama-Bajaw language : The Sama–Bajau peoples speak some ten languages of the Sama–Bajau subgroup of the Western Malayo-Polynesian language family . Sinama

552-403: A unique genetic signal among the Sama-Bajau of the Philippines and Indonesia. This genetic signal (called the "Sama ancestry" by the authors) identifies them as descendants of an ancient migration of Austroasiatic -affiliated hunter-gatherer groups from mainland Southeast Asia via the now sunken land bridges of Sundaland around 15,000 to 12,000 years ago. These populations admixed with both

621-781: A very low status in the caste-based Tausūg Sultanate of Sulu. This survived into the modern Philippines where the Sama-Bajau are still subjected to strong cultural prejudice from the Tausūg. The Sama-Bajau have also been frequent victims of theft, extortion, kidnapping, and violence from the predominantly Tausūg Abu Sayyaf insurgents as well as pirates. This discrimination and the continuing violence in Muslim Mindanao have driven many Sama-Bajau to emigrate. They usually resettle in Malaysia and Indonesia, where they have more employment opportunities. But even in Malaysia, their presence

690-703: Is a tribal group or community whose day-to-day life revolves around the herding and breeding of horses . Beginning with the domestication of the horse on the steppes of Eurasia , the horse transformed each society that adopted its use. Notable examples are the Mongols of Mongolia , the Scythian and Turkic nomads of Central Asia , the Plains Indians , the Guaycuru peoples of the Gran Chaco , and

759-470: Is first celebrated under a sacred dangkan tree ( strangler figs , known elsewhere in the Philippines as balete ) symbolising the male spirit Umboh Tuhan and afterwards in the centre of a grove of kama'toolang trees ( pandan trees ) symbolising the female spirit Dayang Dayang Mangilai . The trance dancing is called mag-igal and involves female and male and igal jinn , called the jinn denda and jinn lella respectively. The jinn denda perform

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828-405: Is not, however, regarded as a spirit possession , since the igal jinn never lose control of their bodies. Instead, the igal jinn are believed to have acquired their familiar spirit ( jinn ) after surviving a serious or near-fatal illness. For the rest of their lives, the igal jinn is believed to share their bodies with the particular jinn who saved them. One important religious event among

897-852: Is particularly serious for the Sama-Bajau, whose boats are also oftentimes their homes. Sama-Bajau fishermen are often associated with illegal and destructive practices, like blast fishing , cyanide fishing , coral mining , and cutting down mangrove trees . It is believed that the Sama-Bajau resort to these activities mainly due to sedentarisation brought about by the restrictions imposed on their nomadic culture by modern nation-states . With their now limited territories, they have little alternative means of competing with better-equipped land-based and commercial fishermen and earn enough to feed their families. The Indonesian government and certain non-governmental organisations have launched several programs for providing alternative sustainable livelihood projects for Sama-Bajau to discourage these practices (such as

966-508: Is retained wholly or partially in some Sama-Bajau groups. The supreme deities in Sama-Bajau mythology are Umboh Tuhan (also known as Umboh Dilaut , the "Lord of the Sea") and his consort, Dayang Dayang Mangilai ("Lady of the Forest"). Umboh Tuhan is regarded as the creator deity who made humans equal to animals and plants. Like other animistic religions, they fundamentally divide the world into

1035-547: Is set aside for making sweet rice cakes ( durul ). Additional prayers ( zikir ), which includes calling the names of ancestors out loud, are offered to the Umboh after the rice meals have been prepared. Pag-umboh is a solemn and formal affair. Another annual religious ceremony among the boat-dwelling Sama Dilaut is the pagkanduli (literally "festive gathering"). It involves ritual dancing to Umboh Tuhan , Dayang Dayang Mangilai , and ancestral ghosts called bansa . The ritual

1104-598: Is still controversial as most of them are illegal immigrants . Most illegal Sama-Bajau immigrants enter Malaysia through offshore islands. From there, they enter mainland Sabah to find work as manual labourers. Others migrate to the northern islands of the Philippines, particularly to the Visayas , Palawan , the northern coast of Mindanao, and even as far as southern Luzon . Though these are relatively safer regions, they are also more economically disadvantaged and socially excluded, leading to Filipinos sometimes stereotyping

1173-420: Is the highly offensive Luwaan , meaning "spat out" or "outcast" based on a folk tale justifying their subservience supposedly out of their trickery and ingratefulness towards God. They were also marginalised by other Moro peoples because they still practised animist folk religions either exclusively or alongside Islam , and thus were viewed as "uncivilised pagans". Boat-dwelling and shoreline Sama-Bajau had

1242-594: Is the most common name for these languages, but they are also called Bajau , especially in Malaysia. Most Sama-Bajau can speak multiple languages. The Sama-Bajau languages were once classified under the Central Philippine languages of the Malayo-Polynesian geographic group of the Austronesian language family. But due to marked differences with neighbouring languages, they were moved to

1311-680: Is the oldest account of the Sama-Bajau. It further corroborates the fact that they predate the arrival of the Tausūg settlers and are indigenous to the Sulu archipelago and parts of Mindanao. Sama-Bajau were first recorded by European explorers in 1521 by Antonio Pigafetta of the Magellan-Elcano expedition in what is now the Zamboanga Peninsula . Pigafetta writes that the "people of that island make their dwellings in boats and do not live otherwise". They have also been present in

1380-594: The Austronesian peoples . This would also explain why even boat-dwelling Sama-Bajau still practice agricultural rituals, despite being exclusively fishermen. Linguistic evidence further points to Borneo as the ultimate origin of the proto-Sama-Bajau people. A genetic study of three groups—the Derawan of Northeast Borneo, the Kotabaru of Southeast Borneo, and the Kendari of Southeast Sulawesi—suggested that their origin

1449-692: The Banguingui ) were involved, along with non-Sama-Bajau groups like the Iranun . The scope of their pirate activities was extensive, commonly sailing from Sulu to as far as the Moluccas and back again. Aside from early European colonial records, they may have also been the pirates described by Chinese and Arabian sources in the Straits of Singapore in the 12th and 13th centuries. Sama-Bajau usually served as low-ranking crewmembers of war boats, directly under

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1518-537: The Brunei Malay word bajaul , which means "to fish". The term Bajau has pejorative connotations in the Philippines, indicating poverty in comparison to the term Sama , especially since it is used most commonly to refer to poverty-stricken Sama-Bajau who make a living through begging. British administrators in Sabah classified the Sama-Bajau as "Bajau" and labelled them as such in their birth certificates. Thus,

1587-508: The Jawi alphabet . Religion can vary among the Sama-Bajau subgroups; from strict adherence to Sunni Islam , forms of folk Islam (itself influenced by Sufi traditions of early Muslim missionaries), to animistic beliefs in spirits and ancestor worship. There is a small minority of Catholics and Protestants in the Bajau diaspora, particularly from Davao del Sur in the Philippines. Among

1656-589: The Mapuche and Tehuelche of Patagonia after horses were imported from Europe , particularly from Spain , during the 16th century. History offers many examples of horse cultures, such as the Huns and other peoples in Europe and Asia . Horse cultures tend to place a great deal of importance on horses and by their very nature are nomadic and usually hunter-gatherer or nomadic pastoralist societies. For example,

1725-615: The Sama or Samah (formally A'a Sama , "Sama people"); or are known by the exonym Bajau ( / ˈ b ɑː dʒ aʊ , ˈ b æ -/ , also spelled Badjao , Bajaw , Badjau , Badjaw , Bajo or Bayao ). They usually live a seaborne lifestyle and use small wooden sailing vessels such as the perahu ( layag in Maranao ), djenging ( balutu ), lepa , and vinta ( pilang ). Some Sama-Bajau groups native to Sabah are also known for their traditional horse culture . The Sama-Bajau are

1794-736: The Tausūg who are more closely related to the northern Philippine ethnic groups like the Visayans . In 1965, the anthropologist David E. Sopher claimed that the Sama-Bajau, along with the Orang laut , descended from ancient " Veddoid " (Australoid) hunter-gatherers from the Riau Archipelago who intermarried with Austronesians . They retained their hunter-gatherer lifestyle, though they became more maritime-oriented as Southeast Asia became more populated by later Austronesian settlers. In 1968,

1863-435: The jinn ( familiar spirits ); some literature refers to all of them as umboh . These include Umboh Baliyu (the spirits of wind and storms), and Umboh Payi or Umboh Gandum (the spirits of the first rice harvest). They include totemic spirits of animals and plants, including Umboh Summut (totem of ants ) and Umboh Kamun (totem of mantis shrimp ). The construction and launch of sailing vessels are ritualised, and

1932-489: The kalamat . The kalamat are known in Muslim Sama-Bajau as the wali jinn (literally "custodian of jinn ") and may adhere to taboos concerning the treatment of the sea and other cultural aspects. The kalamat presides over Sama-Bajau community events along with mediums known as igal jinn . The kalamat and the igal jinn are said to be "spirit-bearers" and are believed to be hosts of familiar spirits . It

2001-733: The "Badjao Girl"), went viral in the Philippines. One Tausug Muslim who was interviewed insulted the Bajau people, who are also Muslim but he declared the Bajau as non-Muslim and compared killing a Bajau to killing a monkey, saying it was not worth the effort for a juramentado to attack Bajau. There are Tausug in Sulu who takfir the Bajau and declared them as non-Muslims despite them following Islam and discriminate against them due to their lifestyle. In Indonesia many discriminate against them with false stereotypes, accusing them of using love potions on women and were untrustworthy. The Sama-Bajau are fragmented into highly diverse subgroups. They have never been politically united and are usually subject to

2070-491: The 16th century. They also engaged in extensive trade with China for "luxury" sea products like trepang , pearls , and shark fin . From Zamboanga, some members of these people adopted an exclusively seaborne culture and spread outwards in the 10th century towards Basilan, Sulu, Borneo, and Sulawesi. They arrived in Borneo in the 11th century. This hypothesis is currently the most widely accepted among specialists studying

2139-656: The 17th-century, the Spanish priest Francisco Combés calls the Sama-Bajau as the Lutao ("[people who] float on water") in his Historia de las Islas de Mindanao, Iolo, y sus adyacentes (1667), and describes them as building houses on the sea because they "hate land". They were described as being the subjects of the Sultanates of Sulu and Maguindanao , and they were esteemed for their shipbuilding skills and were commonly hired as crews of warships. For most of their history,

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2208-696: The Burmese-Thai Mergui Archipelago , the Orang Laut of southeastern Sumatra and the Riau Islands of Indonesia, and the Tanka people of Southern China . The modern outward spread of the Sama-Bajau from older inhabited areas seems to have been associated with the development of sea trade in sea cucumber ( trepang ). Sama-Bajau is a collective term, referring to several closely related indigenous people who consider themselves

2277-581: The Filipino Sama-Bajau have migrated to neighbouring Sabah and the northern islands of the Philippines, due to the conflict in Mindanao . As of 2010, they were the second-largest ethnic group in Sabah. Sama-Bajau have sometimes been called the "Sea Gypsies" or "Sea Nomads", terms that have also been used for non-related ethnic groups with similar traditional lifestyles, such as the Moken of

2346-539: The Philippines to rehabilitate Sama-Bajau refugees and teach them livelihood skills. In 2016, the Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources started a project for distributing fishing boats, gear, and other livelihood materials among Sama-Bajau communities in Luzon . This was largely the result of raised awareness and an outpouring of support after a photo of a Sama-Bajau beggar, Rita Gaviola (dubbed

2415-585: The Philippines, the Sama-Bajau can be divided into three general groups based on where they settle: Other minor Sama-Bajau groups named after islands of origin include the Sama Bannaran, Sama Davao, Sama Zamboanga Sikubung, Sama Tuaran, Sama Semporna, Sama Sulawesi, Sama Simunul, Sama Tabawan, Sama Tandubas (or Sama Tando' Bas), and Sama Ungus Matata. Mixed-heritage Sama-Bajau and Tausūg communities are sometimes known as "Bajau Suluk" in Malaysia. People of multiple ethnic parentage may further identify with

2484-443: The Philippines; in Malaysia, they identify as Bajau Laut. Sea-going Bajau are given the pejorative name Pala'au or Palauh by other Bajau groups, which has been adopted by Malaysian mainstream media. Historically in the Philippines, the term Sama referred to the more land-oriented and settled Sama–Bajau groups, while Bajau referred only to more sea-oriented, boat-dwelling, nomadic groups. Even these distinctions are fading as

2553-411: The Sama-Bajau have a common theme which claims that they were originally a land-dwelling people who were the subjects of a king who had a daughter. After she is lost by either being swept away to the sea (by a storm or a flood) or being taken captive by a neighbouring kingdom, they were then supposedly ordered to find her. After failing to do so they decided to remain nomadic for fear of facing the wrath of

2622-467: The Sama-Bajau have been a nomadic , seafaring people, living off the sea by trading and subsistence fishing. The boat-dwelling Sama-Bajau see themselves as non-aggressive people. They kept close to the shore by erecting houses on stilts and travelled using lepa , handmade boats which many lived in. A 2021 genetic study shows that some Sama-Bajau have Austroasiatic ancestry. Most of the various oral traditions and tarsila (royal genealogies ) among

2691-538: The Sama-Bajau in Malaysia may sometimes self-identify as "Bajau". The Malaysian government recognizes the Sama-Bajau as legally Bumiputera under the "Bajau" subgroup which guarantees easy access to the special sociopolitical privileges also granted to Malaysian Malays ; to a point of them identifying as "Malay" for political reasons. This is especially true for recent Moro Filipino migrants . The indigenous Sama-Bajau in Malaysia have also started labelling themselves as their ancestors called themselves, such as Simunul. In

2760-532: The Sama-Bajau is the annual feast known as pag-umboh or magpaay-bahaw , an offering of thanks to Umboh Tuhan . In this ceremony, newly harvested rice ( paay-bahaw ) are dehusked ( magtaparahu ) while Islamic prayers ( duaa ) are recited. They are dried ( magpatanak ) and are then laid out in small conical piles symbolic of mountains ( bud ) on the living room floor (a process known as the "sleeping of rice"). After two or three nights, two-thirds are set aside for making sweet rice meals ( panyalam ), while one-third

2829-568: The ancestors of the Indonesian Sama-Bajau. However, there are other versions that are more mythological and do not mention a princess. Among the Philippine Sama-Bajau, for example, there is a myth that claims that the Sama-Bajau were accidentally towed into what is now Zamboanga by a giant stingray. Incidentally, the native pre-Hispanic name of Zamboanga City is "Samboangan" (literally "mooring place"), which

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2898-536: The anthropologist Harry Arlo Nimmo, on the other hand, believed that the Sama-Bajau are indigenous to the Sulu Archipelago, Sulawesi, and/or Borneo, and do not share a common origin with the Orang laut. Nimmo proposed that the boat-dwelling lifestyle developed among the ancestors of the Sama-Bajau independently from the Orang laut. A more recent study in 1985 by the anthropologist Alfred Kemp Pallasen compares

2967-732: The arrival of the horse in the Americas altered the cultures of the Native Americans in the Great Plains, the Gran Chaco and Patagonia. The horse increased mobility; the ability of the horse to cover a lot of ground in a very short period of time allowed native people to easily move from place to place, bringing on a nomadic shift in their culture, with an impact on transportation, trade, hunting and warfare. However, there were also disadvantages to adopting horse culture, such as

3036-550: The boat-dwelling Sama-Bajau as beggars and squatters . The ancestral roaming and fishing grounds of the Sama-Bajau straddled the borders of the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia. And they have sometimes voyaged as far as the Timor and Arafura Seas . In modern times, they have lost access to most of these sites. There have been efforts to grant Sama-Bajau some measures of rights to fish in traditional areas, but most Sama-Bajau still suffer from legal persecution. For example, under

3105-786: The command of Iranun squadron leaders, who in turn answered to the Tausūg datu of the Sultanate of Sulu. The Bajoe harbour in Sulawesi was the site of a small settlement of Sama-Bajau under the Bugis Sultanate of Bone . They were significantly involved in the First and Second Bone Wars (1824–1825) when the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army sent a punitive expedition in retaliation for Bugis and Makassar attacks on local Dutch garrisons. After

3174-483: The dominant ethnic group of the islands of Tawi-Tawi . They are also found in other islands of the Sulu Archipelago , coastal areas of Mindanao and other islands in the southern Philippines ; as well as northern and eastern Borneo , Sulawesi , and throughout the eastern Indonesian islands. In the Philippines, they are grouped with the religiously similar Moro people . Within the last fifty years, many of

3243-688: The fall of Bone, most Sama-Bajau resettled in other areas of Sulawesi. During the British colonial rule of Sabah , the Sama-Bajau were involved in two uprisings against the North Borneo Chartered Company : the Mat Salleh rebellion from 1894 to 1905, and the Pandasan Affair of 1915. Modern Sama-Bajau are generally regarded as peaceful, hospitable, and cheerful people, despite their humble circumstances. However,

3312-435: The first dance known as igal limbayan under the dangkan tree, with the eldest leading. They are performed with intricate movements of the hands, usually with metal fingernail extensions called sulingkengkeng . If the dance and music are pleasing, the bansa are believed to take possession of the dancers, whereupon the wali jinn will assist in releasing them at the end of the dance. Horse culture A horse culture

3381-575: The increase of influence and trading activities of the Srivijaya Empire . Genetically, the Sama-Bajau are highly diverse, indicating heavy admixture with the locals or even language and cultural adoption by coastal groups in the areas they settled. However, the study is restricted to the Indonesian Bajo subgroup, and the authors recommend additional studies from Sama-Bajau groups in neighbouring regions. A 2021 genetic study discovered

3450-460: The king. One such version widely told among the Sama-Bajau of Borneo claims that they descended from Johorean royal guards who were escorting a princess named Dayang Ayesha for marriage to a ruler in Sulu . However, the Sultan of Brunei (allegedly Muhammad Shah of Brunei ) also fell in love with the princess. On the way to Sulu, they were attacked by Bruneians in the high seas. The princess

3519-408: The land-based political groups of the areas they settle, such as the Sultanate of Brunei and the former Sultanate of Sulu . Most subgroups of Sama-Bajau name themselves after the place they originated from (usually an island). Each subgroup speaks a distinct language or dialect that are usually mutually intelligible with their immediate neighbouring subgroup in a continuous linguistic chain. In

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3588-540: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sea_Gypsies&oldid=1237657674 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Sama-Bajau peoples The Sama-Bajau include several Austronesian ethnic groups of Maritime Southeast Asia . The name collectively refers to related people who usually call themselves

3657-639: The majority of Sama-Bajau have long since abandoned boat living, most for Sama-style piling houses in the coastal shallows. Sama is believed to have originated from the Austronesian root word sama meaning "together", "same", or "kin". The exact origin of the exonym Bajau is unclear. Some authors have proposed that it is derived from a corruption of the Malay word berjauh ('getting further apart' or 'the state of being away') or in Indonesian word it means boat dwelling. Other possible origins include

3726-653: The modern coastal Sama-Bajau of Malaysia, claims to religious piety and learning are an important source of individual prestige. Some of the Sama-Bajau lack mosques and must rely on the shore-based communities such as those of the more Islamised or Malay peoples . Some of the more nomadic Sama-Bajau, like the Ubian Bajau, are much less adherent to orthodox Islam. They practice a syncretic form of folk Islam, revering local sea spirits, known in Islamic terminology as Jinn . The ancient Sama-Bajau were animistic , and this

3795-425: The name "Bajau" instead of "Sama"). Among the Indonesian Sama-Bajau, on the other hand, their oral histories place more importance on the relationship of the Sama-Bajau with the Sultanate of Gowa rather than Johor. The various versions of their origin myth tell about a royal princess who was washed away by a flood. She was found and eventually married a king or a prince of Gowa. Their offspring then allegedly became

3864-399: The oral traditions with historical facts and linguistic evidence. He puts the date of the ethnogenesis of Sama-Bajau as 800 AD and also rejects a historical connection between the Sama-Bajau and the Orang laut. He hypothesises that the Sama-Bajau originated from a proto-Sama-Bajau people inhabiting the Zamboanga Peninsula who practised both fishing and slash-and-burn agriculture. They were

3933-424: The original inhabitants of Zamboanga and the Sulu archipelago, and were well-established in the region long before the first arrival of the Tausūg people at around the 13th century from their homelands along the northern coast of eastern Mindanao. Along with the Tausūg, they were heavily influenced by the Malay kingdoms both culturally and linguistically, becoming Indianised by the 15th century and Islamised by

4002-418: The physical and spiritual realms which coexist. In modern Muslim Sama-Bajau, Umboh Tuhan (or simply Tuhan or Tuan ) is usually equated with Allah . Other objects of reverence are spirits known as umboh ("ancestor", also variously spelled omboh , m'boh , mbo' , etc.). Traditionally, the umboh referred more specifically to ancestral spirits , different from the saitan ( nature spirits ) and

4071-634: The predominantly animistic ethnic groups of Mindanao, the Lumad peoples . In 2006, the linguist Robert Blust proposed that the Sama-Bajaw languages derived from the Barito lexical region , though not from any established group. It is thus a sister group to other Barito languages like Dayak and Malagasy . It is classified under the Bornean geographic group. Sama-Bajau languages are usually written in

4140-541: The preexisting Negrito populations, and later on, the incoming migrations of the Austronesian peoples (also adopting an Austronesian language in the process). They are genetically clustered with the Lua and Mlabri peoples of mainland Southeast Asia, as well as the Manobo people of mainland Mindanao . The study also identifies minimal South Asian gene flow among Sama populations starting at around 1000 years ago. Sama ancestry

4209-506: The sea", Alexander Dumas' description of Catalans in The Count of Monte Cristo See also [ edit ] Water tribe (disambiguation) "Ocean Gypsy", a song by Renaissance The Water Gipsies (disambiguation) Seasteading Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sea Gypsies . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

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4278-428: The seasonal trade around mooring points necessitates a more land-based lifestyle for greater market penetration. In Malaysia, some hotly debated government programs have also resettled Bajau to the mainland. The Sama-Bajau in the Sulu Archipelago were historically discriminated against by the dominant Tausūg people , who viewed boat-dwelling Sama-Bajau as 'inferior' and as outsiders—the traditional Tausūg term for them

4347-767: The use of fish aggregating devices instead of explosives). Medical health centres ( puskesmas ) and schools have also been built even for stilt-house Sama-Bajau communities. Similar programs have also been implemented in the Philippines. With the loss of their traditional fishing grounds, some refugee groups of Sama-Bajau in the Philippines are forced to resort to begging ( agpangamu in Sinama), particularly diving for coins thrown by inter-island ferry passengers ( angedjo ). Other traditional sources of income include selling grated cassava ( magliis ), mat-weaving ( ag-tepoh ), and jewellery-making (especially from pearls ). Recently, there have been more efforts by local governments in

4416-412: The vessels are believed to have a spirit known as Sumangâ ("guardian", literally "one who deflects attacks"). The umboh are believed to influence fishing activities, rewarding the Sama-Bajau by granting good luck favours known as padalleang and occasionally punishing by causing serious incidents called busong . Traditional Sama-Bajau communities may have shamans ( dukun ) traditionally known as

4485-721: The written records of other Europeans henceforth; including in Sulawesi by the Dutch colonies in 1675, in Sulawesi and eastern Borneo by Thomas Forrest in the 1770s, and in the west coast of Borneo by Spenser St. John in the 1850s and 1860s. Sama-Bajau were often widely mentioned in connection to sea raids ( mangahat ), piracy , and the slave trade in Southeast Asia during the European colonial period, indicating that at least some Sama-Bajau groups from northern Sulu (e.g.

4554-476: Was derived from the Sinama word for a mooring pole , sambuang or samboang . The origin myths claiming descent from Johor or Gowa have been largely rejected by modern scholars, mostly because these kingdoms were established too recently to explain the ethnic divergence. Whether the Sama-Bajau are indigenous to their current territories or settled from elsewhere is still contentious. Linguistically, they are distinct from neighbouring populations, especially from

4623-421: Was highest among the Sama Dilaut, followed by more land-based Sama. But it was also detected among other ethnic groups that do not self-identify as Sama in Palawan , Zamboanga , Basilan , Sulu , and Tawi-Tawi . The epic poem Darangen of the Maranao people record that among the ancestors of the hero Bantugan is a Maranao prince who married a Sama-Bajau princess. Estimated to have happened in AD 840, it

4692-425: Was in southern Sulawesi. Their ethnogenesis is estimated to have dated back to around the 4th century AD by an admixture event between the Bugis people and a Papuan group. The authors suggest that the Sama moved to eastern Borneo at around the 11th century AD, and then towards northern Borneo and the southern Philippines at around the 13th to 14th centuries AD. They hypothesize that they were driven to migrate during

4761-403: Was taken captive and married to the Sultan of Brunei instead. The escorts, having lost the princess, elected to settle in Borneo and Sulu rather than return to Johor. This legend is popular among Sabah Sama-Bajau as it legitimises their claim to "Malay-ness" and strengthens their ties to Islam, which puts them in a favourable position in the Bumiputera laws of Malaysia (similar to the usage of

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