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Rizeigat tribe
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| Rizeigat الرزيقات | |
|---|---|
Rizeigat warrior | |
| Ethnicity | Baggara Arab |
| Location | Darfur (Sudan) or Republic of Chad |
| Population | 400,000 |
| Branches |
|
| Language | Sudanese Arabic or Chadian Arabic |
| Religion | Sunni Islam |
The Rizeigat (also spelled Rizigat, Rezeigat, and in standard Arabic, Rizayqat) are a Muslim and an Arab tribe of the nomadic Baggara people predominantly in Sudan's Darfur region and Chad. The Rizeigat belong to the greater Baggara Arabs fraternity of Darfur and Chad, and speak both Sudanese and Chadian Arabic. They are primarily nomadic herders and their journeys are dependent upon the seasons of the year. They are a branch of the Juhayna group. They are divided into the Abbala (camel-herding) Rizeigat, who live in northern Darfur and Chad, and the Baggara who inhabit south-east Darfur. In turn they are divided into several large clans, notably the Mahamid, Mahariya and Nawaiba. The ecological differences between the north and south of Sudan allowed for two different types of nomadism to evolve: camel herders in the north and cattle herders in the south. They are a substantial part of the Janjaweed turned Rapid Support Forces.
The Baggara Rizeigat backed the Sudanese government during the conflict with the SPLA. They formed the Murahileen, mounted raiders that attacked southern villages to loot valuables and slaves.[1] During the Second Sudanese Civil War thousands of Dinka women and children were abducted and subsequently enslaved by members of the Messiria and Rizeigat tribes. An unknown number of children from the Nuba tribe were similarly abducted and enslaved.[2]
In the Darfur conflict the Abbala Rizeigat were instrumental to the Sudanese government's counterinsurgency campaign and gained notoriety as part of the Janjaweed militia.[3] Musa Hilal of the Mahamid, and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo aka Hemedti of the Mahariya are the two most prominent leaders.
Northern Rizeigat
[edit]
The Northern Rizeigat are Arab nomads who herd camels. The northern Rizeigat have the Mahamid, Mahariya and Nuwaiba sections in common with the southern Rizeigat but there are two other sections that are solely Abbala - these are the Atayfat and the Irayqat.[4] The Northern Rizeigat are traditionally found in Northern Darfur and in Eastern Chad, around Arada[5] in the Wadi Fira region (formerly known as the Biltine prefecture), but have migrated throughout Darfur from Northern Darfur and Eastern Chad, in particular to West Darfur. They possess no Dar (tribal homeland) in Darfur unlike their Southern cousins,[6] only Damra - temporary settlements allocated to Arab nomads within land under the jurisdiction of other tribes.[7]
Camels
[edit]Camels are at the center of status and identity. Ownership of camels is directly related to the power of the tribe and defines the nomads relationships to land, resources, and farmers. Owning camels has produced systems that allowed for a symbiotic relationship between the nomads and settled farmers. However, certain pressures have negatively affected this livelihood. These range from population growth and increases in farming (including associated economic and commercial agriculture) to climate change and restrictive legislation. This challenged their lifestyle and led to feeding competition between the nomads and farmers, which shepherds in inevitable conflict.[8]
Education
[edit]Power is closely linked to education and it fuels how they understand themselves, their status, and attaining power. The nomads are aware of their lack of education and therefore influence. This leads to a desire for education which pressures them to convert to a sedentary lifestyle with the idea of making education more accessible.[8]
Southern Rizeigat
[edit]They are cattle herders and live in East Darfur with their tribal capital at Ed Daein, under the authority of the Madibbo family.
The Baggara Rizeigat were a constant thorn for the Fur Sultans, residing in south-east Darfur. The sultans had never been able to bring the Baggara tribes under their control, the Rizeigat particularly were experts at guerrilla warfare suited to their homeland and used space and time to draw the Fur forces into a series of disasters.[9] German explorer Gustav Nachtigal who was in Darfur in the 19th century, documented in detail the failure of the 18 military campaigns sent against the Rizeigat in the mid 19th century by Fur Sultan Muhammad al-Husayn in his 35-year reign.[10]
The Baggara Rizeigat played a major role in the Mahdist revolt in Darfur. After a leadership dispute that led to the removal of Madibbo Ali as chief of the tribe, he went East and joined up with the Mahdi who then sent him back to Darfur to raise a rebellion in Southern Darfur against the Turco-Egyptian administration which he did successfully as he won several victories against government forces and gained support from the Berti, Habbaniya and Beni Halba tribes. In 1882, the governor of Darfur, Slatin Pasha assembled a force made up of 2,000 regular troops along with a support of 7,00 irregulars from among sections of the Birgid, Zaghawa, Messiria, Beigo, and others hostile to the local elites who aligned themselves to the Mahdist movement such as Madibbu Ali. This force was decisively defeated by Madibbo Ali's Rizeigat and allies.[11] In 1883, Slatin Pasha surrendered to Madibbo Ali.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ ""Sudan: Breaking the Abyei Deadlock"" (PDF). (456 KiB), International Crisis Group, 12 October 2007, p. 2
- ^ United States Department of State, "Trafficking in Persons Report 2008 - Sudan, 4 June 2008". Online. UNHCR Refworld, available at: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/484f9a3ec.html [accessed 24 June 2008]
- ^ Young, Helen M. (2009). Livelihoods, Power, and Choice: The Vulnerability of the Northern Rizaygat, Darfur, Sudan. Feinstein International Center, Tufts University. p. 88.
- ^ Young, Helen M. (2009). Livelihoods, Power, and Choice: The Vulnerability of the Northern Rizaygat, Darfur, Sudan. Feinstein International Center, Tufts University. p. 29.
- ^ Decalo, Samuel (1997). Historical Dictionary of Chad. Scarecrow Press. p. 58. ISBN 9780585104652.
- ^ Julie Flint, Alex de Waal (2008). Darfur: a new history of a long war. Zed Books. p. 8. ISBN 9781842779507.
- ^ Julie Flint, Alex de Waal (2008). Darfur: a new history of a long war. Zed Books. p. 34. ISBN 9781842779507.
- ^ a b Young, Osman, Abusin, Asher, and Egemi, 2009, Livelihoods, Power, and Choice -- The Vulnerability of the Northern Rizaygat, Darfur, Sudan, Feinstein International Center.
- ^ Daly, Martin (2010). Darfur's sorrow: the forgotten history of a humanitarian disaster. Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9781139781640.
- ^ Vaughan, Chris (2015). Darfur Colonial Violence Sultanic Legacies and local Politics 1916-1956. James Currey. p. 36. ISBN 9781847011114.
- ^ Daly, Martin (2010). Darfur's sorrow: the forgotten history of a humanitarian disaster. Cambridge University Press. pp. 63–64. ISBN 9781139781640.
Rizeigat tribe
View on GrokipediaOrigins and History
Early Origins and Migration
The Rizeigat, a subgroup of the Baggara nomadic pastoralists, originated from Arab tribes that migrated into Sudan from the Arabian Peninsula via Egypt and the Nile Valley during the medieval era. Initial waves of these camel-nomadic Arabs reached northern Sudan by the 12th century, gradually intermingling with local African populations and shifting toward cattle herding as they encountered suitable savanna environments.[3] This transition formed the distinctive Baggara cultural complex, blending Arab linguistic and Islamic traditions with indigenous African practices in animal husbandry.[4] Further migrations between the 14th and 17th centuries propelled Rizeigat ancestors southward into the Sahel zones of Kordofan and Darfur, driven by the pursuit of seasonal pastures, water sources, and opportunities amid expanding trade routes and political instabilities in the Nile corridor.[5] These movements were part of broader Juhaynah Arab dispersals, with Rizeigat clans forming loose confederations that emphasized mobility and kinship ties for survival in arid grasslands. Northern Rizeigat branches retained stronger camel-based nomadism from earlier phases, while southern groups intensified cattle reliance, reflecting adaptive responses to ecological gradients.[6] By the late medieval period, Rizeigat migrations east and south positioned them as influential actors in western Sudan's pastoral economy, predating formal integration into the Darfur Sultanate established in the 17th century.[7] Genetic and oral histories indicate a hybrid ancestry, with self-ascribed Arab patrilineages coexisting alongside maternal African lineages from intermarriage during these expansions.[3]Settlement in Darfur and Integration
The Rizeigat, a confederation of Arab pastoralist clans belonging to the broader Baggara grouping, began migrating into the Darfur Sultanate from the west—primarily regions encompassing modern-day Chad and adjacent Sahelian areas—during the mid-18th century.[7] This influx formed part of a larger wave of Arab tribal movements into the region, driven by pastoral expansion and opportunities in the fertile southern peripheries of the Fur-dominated sultanate.[3] The Keira sultans, seeking to bolster alliances and control over nomadic groups, granted the Baggara Rizeigat—cattle-herding southern subgroups—jurisdiction over extensive southeastern territories, establishing defined dars (tribal lands) that formalized their presence and resource access.[8] Southern Rizeigat integrated through this administrative recognition, appointing nazirs (paramount chiefs) who mediated tribute payments to the sultanate and regulated seasonal transhumance routes (marahil) alongside sedentary Fur farmers.[2] Northern Rizeigat subgroups, primarily Abbala camel nomads, remained more mobile without equivalent fixed dars, relying on fluid alliances and north-south migrations for grazing, which positioned them as peripheral actors in early sultanate politics.[9] Integration involved pragmatic accommodations, such as negotiated grazing rights and occasional intermarriages with local African groups like the Fur, fostering hybrid cultural elements while preserving Arab identity and Islamic practices.[9] However, underlying resource competition persisted, with pastoral incursions occasionally straining relations with agriculturalists. By the 19th century, under Anglo-Egyptian rule (post-1898 conquest), colonial native administration reinforced Rizeigat autonomy by confirming nazirships—e.g., for southern leader Said Madibo—and allocating hawakir (sub-tribal reserves) totaling over 20,000 square kilometers in southern Darfur for Southern Rizeigat.[7] This era saw partial sedentarization attempts, including limited cultivation and trade in livestock, integrating them into regional economies via markets in towns like Nyala.[2] Post-independence (1956), state policies oscillated between co-optation and marginalization, with Rizeigat nazirs influencing land tenure amid population pressures; yet, nomadic traditions endured, complicating full assimilation amid recurrent droughts that prompted southward shifts of northern clans starting in the 1970s.[9] Overall, integration hinged on tribal governance balancing mobility with territorial claims, though it sowed seeds for later inter-ethnic frictions over shrinking pastures.[2]Demographics and Geography
Population Estimates and Distribution
The Rizeigat tribe, a nomadic Baggara Arab group, is estimated to number approximately 429,000 people in Sudan, with all members residing within the country according to available profiles. [10] Other assessments suggest a higher figure of 562,000 individuals. [11] These estimates account for the challenges of enumerating nomadic populations, which rely on ethnographic surveys rather than comprehensive censuses, and may not fully capture recent displacements from conflicts in the region. The tribe's primary distribution centers in Sudan's Darfur region, where they form the largest and most dominant Arab tribal confederation. [10] [9] Northern Rizeigat, known as Abbala and specializing in camel pastoralism, predominantly occupy northern Darfur, with seasonal migrations extending into adjacent areas of Chad. [9] [2] In contrast, Southern Rizeigat, who focus on cattle herding as Baggara, are concentrated in southeastern Darfur, including parts of what is now East Darfur state. [9] This division reflects ecological adaptations, with northern groups suited to arid camel economies and southern ones to wetter cattle zones along migration corridors. [2] Ongoing violence, including inter-tribal clashes and broader Sudanese conflicts, has led to significant internal displacement among Rizeigat communities, particularly in North Darfur, altering traditional distributions and concentrating populations in urban peripheries or camps. [12] Precise post-conflict figures remain elusive due to limited access and fluid mobility patterns.
