Karen people

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The KarenTemplate:Efn (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell), also known as the Kayin, are an ethnolinguistic group of peoples who speak Karenic languages and are indigenous to southern and southeastern Myanmar, including the Irrawaddy delta and Kayin State. The Karen account for around 6.69% of the Burmese population.<ref name="ispmyanmar">Template:Cite web</ref> The Karen consist of approximately 20 subgroups, the largest of whom are the S'gaw and the Pwo peoples.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref> Other Karenic-speaking peoples like the Pa'O, Karenni, and the Kayan, have formed distinct identities.<ref name=":2" />

File:Karen traditional costume.jpg
Traditional Karen national attire for men and women

The ethnic identity of the Karen peoples has significantly been shaped by British colonial rule, Christian missionaries, decolonisation, and sociopolitical developments in Myanmar. The group as a whole is heterogeneous and disparate, as many Karenic ethnic groups do not share a common language, culture, religion, or material characteristics.<ref name="cheesman">Template:Cite journal</ref> A pan-Karen ethnic identity is a relatively modern creation, established in the 19th century with the conversion of some Karen to Christianity, and mediated by British colonial policies and practices.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="keyes">Template:Cite book</ref>

Karen insurgent groups, led primarily by the Karen National Union (KNU), have waged war against the Burmese government since early 1949. The original aim of the KNU was to create an independent Karen homeland called Kawthoolei, but since 1976 they have shifted towards calling for a federal system in Myanmar instead. Even so, the KNU has declined invitations to speak with the Burmese junta.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ethnonyms

The Karen are known by various ethnonyms, including Kayin (ကရင်) in Burmese, Kariang (ကရေၚ်) in Mon, and Yang (ယၢင်း) in Shan.<ref name=":3">Template:Citation</ref> "Karen" is an Anglicisation of the Burmese exonym "Kayin," whose etymology is unclear.<ref name="cheesman" /><ref name=":3" /> The word may have originally been a derogatory term referring to non-Buddhist ethnic groups, or it may derive from Kanyan, possibly a Mon name of a vanished civilisation.<ref name="cheesman" />

In pre-colonial times, Burmese and Mon kingdoms recognised two general categories of Karen, the Talaing Kayin (Template:Lang, ကရေၚ်မန်), who were lowlander Pwo Karens who were recognised as the "original settlers" and essential to Mon court life, and the Bamar Kayin (Template:Lang, ကရေၚ်ဗမာ), who were highlander S'gaw Karens who were subordinated or assimilated by the Bamar.<ref name="harriden">Template:Cite journal</ref>

During colonial rule, the British adopted "Karen" as a broad label for diverse groups who speak Karenic languages and lived in the periphery of Mon and Burmese-speaking communities.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Burmese government today groups 11 subgroups under the Karen "national race":<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

  • Karen (Kayin)
  • Sgaw (S’gaw Karen)
  • Pwo Karen (Pwo Kayin)
  • Geba Karen (Kayinphyu)
  • Pa-Le-Chi, maybe Mobwa
  • Mon Kayin (Sarpyu), unknown<ref name="autogenerated1" />
  • Ta-Lay-Pwa, maybe Thalebwa<ref name="autogenerated1" />
  • Bwe (Bwe Karen)
  • Monnepwa (Paku Karen)
  • Monpwa, unknown<ref name="autogenerated1" />
  • Paku (Paku Karen)

Distribution

File:MyanmarKayin.png
Kayin State in Myanmar
File:Thai Earplug 5.jpg
A woman of the "Big Ear" Karen
File:Karen house entrance.JPG
Entrance of a Karen house in northern Thailand

The Karen constitute the third largest ethnic population in Myanmar, after the Bamars and Shans.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Karen people live mostly in the hills bordering the eastern mountainous region and Irrawaddy delta of Myanmar,<ref name="Karen hills">This area is generally referred to as the Karen Hills in colonial literature, especially natural history texts such as Evans (1932).</ref> primarily in Kayin State (formerly Karen State), with some in Kayah State, southern Shan State, Ayeyarwady Region, Tanintharyi Region, Bago Division and in northern<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and western Thailand. Many Karen have migrated to Thailand, having settled mostly on the Myanmar–Thailand border. A few Karen have settled in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India, and other Southeast Asian and East Asian countries.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The total number of Karen is difficult to estimate. The last reliable census of Myanmar was conducted in 1931.<ref>Ethnicity without Meaning, Data without Context- The 2014 Census: Identity and Citizenship in Burma/Myanmar Template:Webarchive 24 February 2014 www.tni.org, accessed 7 January 2020</ref> A 2006 Voice of America article cites an estimate of seven million Karen in Myanmar.Template:Citation needed

Due to the ongoing insurgency, hundreds of thousands of Karen fled to refugee camps along the Thai-Burmese border, while many others (numbers unknown) are internally displaced within Kayin State. Some Karen have resettled elsewhere, including North America, Australia, New Zealand, and Scandinavia. In 2011, the Karen diaspora population was estimated to be approximately 67,000.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Thailand

Approximately 400,000 Karen live in Thailand,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> where they are by far the largest of the hill tribes.

128,000 Karen live in refugee camps on the Thai-Burmese border, the largest of which is Mae La refugee camp, in Tak province, where about 50,000 Karen refugees are hosted.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> According to BMC, "79% of refugees living in these camps are Karen ethnicity."<ref name="Cook, Tonya L. 2015">Template:Cite journal</ref> According to refugee accounts, the camps suffered from overcrowding, disease, and periodic attacks by the Myanmar Army.<ref name="undaunted">Template:Cite book</ref> Their lives are restricted in the camps because they usually cannot go out, and the Thai police might arrest them if they do.<ref name="Cook, Tonya L. 2015" /> Employment for the Karen refugees is scarce and risky.<ref>Home/Background/Thailand-Burma Border/Overview www.burmalink.org, updated 6 October 2016, accessed 2 January 2020</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:2010 Karen girls Khun Yuam district.jpg
Karen girls in Khun Yuam District, Mae Hong Son Province, Thailand.

There is an established governance system in the camps, which are funded by the United Nations, and other donors. The Karen Refugee Committee governs the day-to-day administration of the camp under the authority of the Thai government which guards entrances and exits to the camp. Within the camp there is a robust school system for children up to high school. In some camps there are college courses organised by the Karen Refugee Committee – Education Entity.<ref name="auto1" />

Andaman Islands

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There is a population of 2,500 Karen in India, mostly restricted to Mayabunder Tehsil of the Northern Andaman Islands within the union territory of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Nearly all of them are Baptist Protestant Christians. They retain their language to intercommunicate within community, but use Hindi as a second language to communicate with non-Karen neighbours.<ref name="Maiti" />

North America

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Beginning in 2000, the Karen started resettling in the United States and Canada. Many Karen arrive without speaking the local language. "90% of the Karen refugees reported no knowledge of English or French on arrival."<ref name="Marchbank, Jennifer 2014">Template:Cite web</ref> An estimated 20,000 Karen live in Minnesota,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> primarily Saint Paul.<ref>Saint Paul Public Library. Children's Books in Karen, Amharic, and Oromo. Retrieved from https://sppl.org/childrens-books-in-karen-amharic-and-oromo/</ref> More than 5,000 Karen live in Nebraska,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the Karen have also resettled in Southern California and central New York.Template:Citation needed

In 2014, Ler Htoo was sworn in after graduating from the St. Paul Police Academy in Minnesota as the first Karen police officer in the United States. Mu Aye is a young Karen woman who has resettled in San Diego, CA. Aye said, "After growing up in a place like I did, I wanted to become a nurse. I wanted to help sick people [...] travel to refugee camps in Thailand and care for people who cannot afford medication." Additionally, Eh De Gray, who graduated from San Diego's Crawford High School, wants to go back to the camps and share his knowledge with the school children. Gray said, "I want to share my knowledge and experiences with them."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

History

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Origins

Karen legends refer to a "river of running sand" which their ancestors reputedly crossed. Many Karen believe this refers to the Gobi Desert, even though they have lived in Myanmar for centuries. Most scholars dismiss the notion of a Gobi desert crossing, but instead translate the legend as describing "rivers of water flowing with sand". This could refer to the sediment-laden Yellow River of China, the upper reaches of which are considered to be the Urheimat of Sino-Tibetan languages.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

According to the legends, the Karen took a long time to cook shellfish at the river of flowing sand, until the Chinese taught the Karens to open the shells so as to acquire the meat. It is estimated by linguists Luce and Lehman that the Tibeto-Burman peoples such as the Karen migrated into present-day Myanmar between 300 and 800 CE.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Genetics

Estimates suggest that the Karen began inhabiting what is now Myanmar approximately 2,500 years ago, migrating from regions that are now Mongolia and Tibet. They settled primarily in the hills bordering the eastern mountainous region of Myanmar.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Research indicates that the Karen exhibit signs of genetic isolation, suggesting a distinct genetic lineage separate from neighbouring populations. A study focusing on the Kayah (Red Karen) in Northern Thailand analysed autosomal short tandem repeats (STRs) and Y-chromosomal haplogroups. The findings revealed that the Kayah people are genetically closer to other Southeast Asian populations than to those from Northeast Asia or Tibet.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

British colonial era

Following British victories in the three Anglo-Burmese wars, Myanmar was annexed as a province of British India in 1886. Baptist missionaries introduced Christianity to Myanmar beginning in 1830, and they were successful in converting many Karen.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> Christian Karens were favoured by the British colonial authorities and were given opportunities not available to the Burmese ethnic majority, including military recruitment and seats in the legislature.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Some Christian Karens began asserting an identity apart from their non-Christian counterparts, and many became leaders of Karen ethno-nationalist organisations, including the Karen National Union.<ref name="keyes" />

In 1881 the Karen National Association (KNA) was founded by western-educated Christian Karens to represent Karen interests with the British. Despite its Christian leadership, the KNA sought to unite all Karens of different regional and religious backgrounds into one organisation.<ref>Ardeth Maung Thawnghmung, The "Other" Karen in Myanmar: Ethnic Minorities and the Struggle without Arms (UK: Lexington Books, 2012), 29.</ref> They argued at the 1917 Montagu–Chelmsford hearings in India that Myanmar was not "yet in a fit state for self-government". Three years later, after submitting a criticism of the 1920 Craddock Reforms, they won 5 (and later 12) seats in the Legislative Council of 130 (expanded to 132) members. The majority Buddhist Karens were not organised until 1939 with the formation of a Buddhist KNA.<ref name="ms" /> In 1938 the British colonial administration recognised Karen New Year as a public holiday.<ref name="ms">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

World War II

During World War II, when the Japanese occupied the region, long-term tensions between the Karen and Burma turned into open fighting. As a consequence, many villages were destroyed and massacres committed by both the Japanese and the Burma Independence Army (BIA) troops who helped the Japanese invade the country. Among the victims were a pre-war Cabinet minister, Saw Pe Tha, and his family. A government report later claimed the "excesses of the BIA" and "the loyalty of the Karens towards the British" as the reasons for these attacks. The intervention by Colonel Suzuki Keiji, the Japanese commander of the BIA, after meeting a Karen delegation led by Saw Tha Din, appears to have prevented further atrocities.<ref name="ms" />

Post-war

The Karen people aspired to have the regions where they formed the majority turned into a subdivision or "state" within Myanmar similar to what the Shan, Kachin and Chin peoples had been given. A goodwill mission led by Saw Tha Din and Saw Ba U Gyi to London in August 1946 failed to receive any encouragement from the British government for any separatist demands.

In January 1947 a delegation of representatives of the Governor's Executive Council headed by Aung San was invited to London to negotiate for the Aung SanAttlee Treaty, but none of the ethnic minority groups was included by the British government. The following month at the Panglong Conference, when an agreement was signed between Aung San as head of the interim Burmese government and the Shan, Kachin and Chin leaders, the Karen were present only as observers; the Mon and Arakanese were also absent.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The British promised to consider the case of the Karen after the war. While the situation of the Karen was discussed, nothing practical was done before the British left Myanmar. The 1947 Constitution, drawn without Karen participation due to their boycott of the elections to the Constituent Assembly, also failed to address the Karen question specifically and clearly, leaving it to be discussed only after independence. The Shan and Karenni states were given the right to secession after 10 years, the Kachin their own state, and the Chin a special division. The Mon and Arakanese of Ministerial Myanmar were not given any consideration.<ref name="ms" />

Karen National Union

In early February 1947, the Karen National Union (KNU) was formed at a Karen Congress attended by 700 delegates from the Karen National Associations, both Baptist and Buddhist (KNA, founded 1881), the Karen Central Organisation (KCO) and its youth wing, the Karen Youth Organisation (KYO), at Vinton Memorial Hall in Yangon. The meeting called for a Karen state with a seaboard, an increased number of seats (25%) in the Constituent Assembly, a new ethnic census, and a continuance of Karen units in the armed forces. The deadline of 3 March passed without a reply from the British government, and Saw Ba U Gyi, the first president of the KNU, resigned from the Governor's Executive Council the next day.<ref name="ms" />

After the war ended, Myanmar was granted independence in January 1948, and the Karen, led by the KNU, attempted to co-exist peacefully with the Burman ethnic majority. Karen people held leading positions in both the government and the army. In the fall of 1948, the Burmese government, led by U Nu, began raising and arming irregular political militias known as Sitwundan. These militias were under the command of Major Gen. Ne Win and outside the control of the regular army. In January 1949, some of these militias went on a rampage through Karen communities.

The Karen National Union has maintained its structure and purpose from the 1950s onward. The KNU acts as a governmental presence for the Karen people, offering basic social services for those affected by the insurgency, such as Karen refugees or internally displaced Karen. These services include building school systems in Thailand and inside Burma,<ref name="auto1">Schooling, Identity, and Nationhood: Karen Mother-Tongue-Based Education in the Thai–Burmese Border Region Soc. Sci. 2023, 12(3), 163; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12030163 by Hayso Thako and Tony Waters</ref> providing medical services, regulating trade and commerce, and providing security through the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA), the KNU's army.<ref name="undaunted" />

Post-colonial insurgency

Template:More In late January 1949, the Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Smith Dun, a Karen, was removed from office and imprisoned. He was replaced by the Burmese nationalist Ne Win.<ref name="ms" /> Simultaneously a commission was looking into the Karen problem and this commission was about to report their findings to the Burmese government. The findings of the report were overshadowed by this political shift at the top of the Burmese government. The Karen National Defence Organisation (KNDO), formed in July 1947, then rose up in an insurgency against the government.<ref name="ms" /> They were helped by the defections of the Karen Rifles and the Union Military Police (UMP) units which had been successfully deployed in suppressing the earlier Burmese Communist rebellions, and came close to capturing Yangon itself. The most notable was the Battle of Insein, nine miles from Yangon, where they held out in a 111-day siege till late May 1949.<ref name="ms" />

Years later, the Karen had become the largest of 20 minority groups participating in an insurgency against the military dictatorship in Yangon. During the 1980s, the Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) fighting force numbered approximately 20,000. After an uprising of the people of Myanmar in 1988, known as the 8888 Uprising, the KNLA had accepted those demonstrators in their bases along the border. The dictatorship expanded the army and launched a series of major offensives against the KNLA. By 2006, the KNLA's strength had shrunk to less than 4,000, opposing what is now a 400,000-man Burmese army. However, the political arm of the KNLA – the KNU – continued efforts to resolve the conflict through political means.

Religious tensions within the KNLA worsened conditions, as most front-line soldiers were Buddhists or traditionalists, while their mostly Christian leaders—often Baptists or Seventh-day Adventists—were accused of discrimination, abuse, and using child soldiers.<ref name=":3" /> Reports also cited forced recruitment and corruption within the KNLA.<ref name=":3" /> Disillusionment and government influence led many fighters to defect to the government-backed Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) in 1994, which then helped the Burmese military capture the key KNU stronghold of Manerplaw, during the 1995 Fall of Manerplaw.<ref name=":3" />

A new KNU headquarter was established in Mu Aye Pu, on the BurmeseThai border. In 2004, the BBC, citing aid agencies, estimates that up to 200,000 Karen have been driven from their homes during decades of war, with 160,000 more refugees from Myanmar, mostly Karen, living in refugee camps on the Thai side of the border.

A 2005 New York Times article on a report by Guy Horton into depredations by the Myanmar Army against the Karen and other groups in eastern Myanmar stated:

Using victims' statements, photographs, maps and film, and advised by legal counsel to the UN tribunal on the former Yugoslavia, he purports to have documented slave labour, systematic rape, the conscription of child soldiers, massacres and the deliberate destruction of villages, food sources and medical services.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Reports as recently as February 2010, state that the Burmese army continues to burn Karen villages, displacing thousands of people.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Many Karen, including people such as former KNU secretary Padoh Mahn Sha Lah Phan and his daughter, Zoya Phan, have accused the military government of Myanmar of ethnic cleansing.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The US State Department has also cited the Burmese government for suppression of religious freedom.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

DKBA officially integrated into Myanmar’s military structure as the Kayin Border Guard Force (BGF) on 18 August 2010.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite web</ref> This transition placed the DKBA under the command of the Tatmadaw (Myanmar’s national army), effectively dissolving it as an independent insurgent group.<ref name=":4" />

Language

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The Karen languages, members of the Tibeto-Burman group of the Sino-Tibetan language family, consist of three mutually unintelligible branches: Sgaw, Eastern Pwo, and Western Pwo.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Karen languages are almost unique among the Tibeto-Burman languages in having a subject–verb–object word order; other than Karen and Bai, Tibeto-Burman languages typically feature a subject–object–verb order. This anomaly is likely due to the influence of neighbouring Mon and Tai languages.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Karen languages are written using a modified form of the Mon–Burmese script.

Religion

File:Buddhist Karen in Yangon.JPG
Buddhist Karen pilgrims at Ngahtatgyi Pagoda in Yangon

The majority of Karen are Theravada Buddhists who also practice animism, while approximately 15–30 per cent are Christian.<ref name="kbddf">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Keenan">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="auto">Template:Cite web</ref> Lowland Pwo-speaking Karens tend to be more orthodox Buddhists, whereas highland Sgaw-speaking Karens tend to be heterodox Buddhists who profess strong animist beliefs.

Animism

File:Omens in the Sun.jpg
Mid-19th century manuscript, possibly of Sgau Karen origin.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Karen animism is defined by a belief in ကလၤ k'lar (soul), thirty-seven spirits that embody every individual.<ref name="kbddf"/> Misfortune and sickness are believed to be caused by k'lar that wander away, and death occurs when all thirty-seven klar leave the body.<ref name="Keenan"/>

Buddhism

Karen Buddhists are the most numerous of the Karens and account for around 65 per cent of the total Karen population.<ref name="hayami">Template:Cite journal</ref> The Buddhist influence came from the Mon who were dominant in Lower Burma until the middle of the 18th century. Buddhist Karen are found mainly in Kayin State, Mon State, Yangon, Bago and Tanintharyi Region. There are Buddhist monasteries in most Karen villages, and the monastery is the centre of community life. Merit-making activities, such as alms giving, are central to Karen Buddhist life.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Buddhism was brought to Pwo-speaking Karens in the late-1700s, and the Yedagon Monastery atop Mount Zwegabin became the leading center of Karen language Buddhist literature.<ref name="hayami"/> Many millennial sects were founded throughout the 1800s, led by Karen Buddhist minlaung rebels.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Two sects, Telakhon (or Telaku) and Leke, were founded in the 1860s.<ref name="hayami"/> The Telaku sect, founded in Kyaing and considered a Buddhist sect, is a mixture of spirit worship, Karen customs and worship of the future Buddha Metteyya.<ref name="hayami"/> The Leke sect was founded on the western banks of the Thanlwin River, and is no longer associated with Buddhism (as followers do not venerate Buddhist monks).<ref name="hayami"/>

File:402935 4329556404986 108484308 n1.jpg
A Karen boy wearing traditional clothing

Followers believe that the future Buddha will return to Earth if they maintain their moral practices (following the Dharma and precepts), and they practice vegetarianism, hold Saturday services and construct distinct pagodas.<ref name="hayami"/> Several Buddhist socioreligious movements, both orthodox and heterodox, have arisen in the past century.<ref name="hayami"/> Duwae, a type of pagoda worship, with animistic origins, is also practised.<ref name="hayami"/>

There are several prominent Karen Buddhist monks, including Thuzana (S'gaw), Taung Galay Sayadaw, and Zagara, who was conferred the Agga Maha Saddammajotika title by the Burmese government in 2004.<ref name="hayami"/>

The Karen of Thailand<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> have their own religion, but some have converted to Buddhism through the efforts of missionaries.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 1965, the Dhammacharik Buddhist missionary program began to convert Thai hill tribes from traditional religions to Buddhism, in order to foster a Thai national identity among them, and to secure their loyalty to Thailand.<ref name=":3" /> Its most significant success has been in education, especially by ordaining Karen boys as novice monks and providing them with monastic education, with some eventually attaining college degrees.<ref name=":3" />

Christianity

File:IMG JudsonChurch.JPG
Judson Memorial Baptist Church is the main place of worship for the Karen community in Mandalay, Myanmar.

Alongside orthodox Christianity, some of those who identify themselves as Christian also have syncretised elements of animism with Christianity. An estimated 15 to 20 per cent of Karen identify themselves as Christian today<ref name=":0" /> and about 90 per cent of Karen people in the United States are Christians.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Though other estimates put the Karen Christian population as high as 30 per cent.<ref name="auto" />

Tha Byu, the first convert to Christianity in 1828, was baptised by Rev. George Boardman, an associate of Adoniram Judson, founder of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. Today there are Christians belonging to the Catholic Church and various Protestant denominations. Some of the largest Protestant denominations are Baptists and Seventh-day Adventists.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

A popular legend among the Karen people concerns a prophecy about a book which had been lost and would be returned by a "white brother". This is held to have been fulfilled when the first American Baptist missionaries brought the Bible to the Karen people, but this legend is probably of nineteenth-century origin.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The Karen Baptist Convention (KBC) was established in 1913. Its headquarters is in Yangon with 20 member associations throughout Myanmar. The KBC operates the KBC Charity Hospital in Insein, Yangon. The KBC also operates the Karen Baptist Theological Seminary in Insein. The seminary runs a theology program as well as a secular degree program (Liberal Arts Programme) to fulfill young Karens' intellectual and vocational needs. The Pwo Karen Baptist Convention is in Ahlone, Yangon and also operates the Pwo Karen Theological Seminary.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> There are other schools for Karen people in Myanmar, such as Paku Divinity School in Taungoo, Kothabyu Bible School in Pathein, and Yangon Home Mission School. The Thailand Karen Baptist Convention is in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

The Seventh-day Adventists have built several schools in the Karen refugee camps in Thailand. Eden Valley Academy in Tak and Karen Adventist Academy in Mae Hong Son are the two largest Seventh-day Adventist Karen schools.

Culture

File:Kayin dance(don dance).jpg
Karen traditional don dance team

Crop rotation agriculture has been a part of Karen culture for at least several hundred years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The don dance is a traditional Karen performance. "Don" roughly translates to "in agreement". The dance is a series of uniform movements accompanied by music played from traditional Karen instruments. During the performance, a "Don Koh" leads the troupe of dancers. The don dance originated from the Pwo Karen, who developed it as a way to reinforce community values.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:Traditional musical instruments of Myanmar.jpg
Karen traditional musical instruments on display at the National Museum of Myanmar in Naypyidaw

The sae klee dance or bamboo dance is a traditional Karen performance held during celebrations such as Christmas and New Year's. Performers are typically divided into two groups. One group creates a platform by holding bamboo sticks in a checkered pattern, while the other group dances on top of the platform. Dancers must be careful to avoid stepping into one of the platform's many holes.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Cuisine

File:Talabaw (cropped).jpg
Talabaw, a traditional bamboo soup

Talabaw or bamboo soup is a traditional Karen dish typically prepared with bamboo shoots, snakehead fish and basil leaves. A small amount of rice and some shreds of meat or seafood may also be added.<ref name="mmtime">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="kyaw">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="locpass">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref> The soup was traditionally used as a supplement to rice, which was not readily or cheaply available to them.<ref name="dine">Template:Cite web</ref> Talabaw is one of the best-known soups in Myanmar, and widely considered to be the essential dish of Karen cuisine.<ref name="dine" />

Holidays

The Karen New Year (Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is one of the major holidays that the Karen people celebrate.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The date of the Karen New Year on the Gregorian calendar varies as the Karen people use the lunar calendar. The Karen New Year usually falls on a date in December or January on the Gregorian calendar.

Karen National Day is commemorated on 11 February.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Karen Wrist Tying (Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is an important Karen holiday. This holiday is observed annually in August.

Karen Martyrs' Day (Ma Tu Ra) commemorates the Karen soldiers who have died fighting for Karen self-determination. It is observed annually on 12 August, the anniversary of the death of Saw Ba U Gyi, the first President of the Karen National Union.<ref name="Rand, Nelson 2003">Rand, Nelson. "Martyr's Day in Myanmar: Karen rebellion." Asia Times. Asia Times Online, 14 August 2003. Web. 28 April 2016.</ref><ref>Core, Paul. "Burma/Myanmar: Challenges of a ceasefire accord in Karen state." Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 28.3 (2009): 95–105.</ref>

Eponyms

A species of gecko, Hemidactylus karenorum, is named in honour of the Karen people.<ref>Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. Template:ISBN. ("Karen", p. 138).</ref>

See also

Notes

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References

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Further reading

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