Kunta people
The Kunta people (also known as Abakunta or Abasuba) Bantu community living on the eastern shores of Lake Victoria in South Nyanza , Kenya. The Kunta people nest on the coast of the Lake Victoria, i. e. Ngodhe area in Gembe locality and Muhuru Bay area, and the nearby islands like Mfangano, Ringiti, Takawiri, Elemba and Rusinga. The Abakunta have been overlooked in both colonial and independent Kenya. Kenyan government today take them to be Suba people.
Total population | |
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50,000 Kenya | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Mfangano, Rusinga/Gembe and Muhuru Bay in Western Kenya | |
Languages | |
Dholuo, Olukunta, Swahili, and English | |
Religion | |
Christianity, African Traditional Religion | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Ganda, Soga, Luhya, other Bantu peoples |
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Culture of Kenya |
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Cuisine |
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References
There are scanty sources as the Abakunta are transforming themselves to Abasuba:
- Okoth-Okombo, Duncan (1999) 'Language and ethnic identity: the case of the Abasuba', Kenya Journal of Sciences (Series C, Humanities and Social Sciences) 5, 1, 21-38.
- Heine, Bernd & Brenzinger, Mathias (eds.) (2003) 'Africa', in UNESCO Red Book of Endangered Languages . (Suba entry )
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