Hinduism: Details about 'Cham People'

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Cham
Total population: 500,000 to 1 million
Significant populations in: Cambodia, Southern Vietnam (Champa)
Language: Cham, Malay

Khmer or Vietnamese as second languages.

Religion: Sunni Islam, Bashi Islam
Related ethnic groups: Malaysians, Indonesians
This article is about the Cham people of Asia. For the ethnic Albanian minority of northern Greece, see Cham Albanians

The Cham people are descendants of the kingdom of Champa. Their population of approximately 100,000 is centered on the cities of Phan Rang and Phan Thiet in central Vietnam. However, Cham communities are also found in Ho Chi Minh City. Neighbouring Cambodia has the largest concentration of Chams where their



numbers range from as low as half a million to perhaps as high as a million. Presently, the Cham people form the core of the Muslim communities in both Cambodia and Vietnam.

The Chams are considered to be of Malay ethnic stock. Their language is similar to Malay and belongs to the same Austronesian language family.

Records of the Champa go as far back as 2nd century China. At its height in the 9th Century, the kingdom controlled the lands between Hue, in central Annam to the Mekong Delta in Cochinchina. Its prosperity came from maritime trade in sandalwood and slaves and probably included piracy.

The first religion of the Champa was a form of Shaivite Hinduism, brought over the sea from India. But as Arab merchants stopped along the Vietnamese coast en route to China, Islam



began to infiltrate the civilization, and Hinduism became associated with the upper-classes.

Between the rise of the Khmer Empire around 800 and Vietnam's territorial push to the south, the Champa kingdom began to diminish. In 1471 it suffered a massive defeat to the Vietnamese, where 120,000 were either captured or killed, and was reduced to a small enclave near Nha Trang. Further expansion by the Vietnamese in 1720 resulted in the Champa king and many of his followers fleeing to Cambodia. Few survived this near annihilation of the race, basically genocide. A tiny group fled northwards to the Chinese island of Hainan where they are known today as the Utsuls.

During the rule of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, the Chams of that country suffered serious purges with as much as half of their population exterminated.

The Vietnamese Chams live mainly in coastal and Mekong Delta provinces. They have two distinct religious communities, Muslim or Cham Bani constitute about 80-85% of the Cham, and Hindu or Balamon, which constitutes about 15-20% of the Cham, and, while they share a common language and history, intermarriage between the two is taboo. A small number of the Cham also follow Mahayana Buddhism. In Cambodia, the Chams are 90% Muslim and so are the Utsuls.

Malaysia has some Cham immigrants and the link between the Chams and the Malaysian state of Kelantan is an old one. The Malaysian constitution recognises the Cham rights to Malaysian citizenship and their Bumiputra status.

Cham (volk) Người Chăm


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cham_people". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.