Chebo people

Chebo or Chabo is an ethnic group of the Debub Mirab Shewa Zone and West Shewa Zone of the Oromia Region of south-west Ethiopia. The Chebo speak the Oromo language but originate from a Gurage ethnic groups. their religion is Ethiopia Orthodox Christianity,[1] The livelihood of the Chebo-Inchini area of is described as enset (Ethiopian banana), barley, and cattle.[2]

Name

One possible explanation of the name Chebo is from the Chebe plant, Croton gratissimus (lavender croton),[3] which is normally burned during Meskel damera celebrations.

Another possible explanation is the name of the area where the Chebo people live. Parts of the Debub Mirab Shewa Zone had been incorporated in Chebo and Gurage districts[4][5] in the Shewa province, as it was called prior to 1995.

Notable Chebo

  • Esteban Mitsou Errandonea

Notes

  1. Trimingham, J. Spencer (2013). Islam in Ethiopia. Taylor & Francis. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-136-97029-0.
  2. "An Atlas of Ethiopian Livelihoods" (PDF). USAID. February 2016. p. 124. The area is marked CIE and is at the centre of the map.
  3. Tadele, et al. 2014
  4. Kloos, et al. 1987
  5. Kloos, et al. 1989
gollark: We do‽
gollark: Oh dear, ABR has become bee.
gollark: OH LOOK IT CRASHED BECAUSE I RAN OUT OF SPACE ON /TMP
gollark: So now I'm just sitting here waiting for `pg_dumpall` to run.
gollark: `pg_upgrade` is simple enough, but I still have to reinitialize the entire data directory every major version, and it *didn't work* because it refuses to migrate the encoding of my data.

References

  • Kloos, Helmut, A. Etea, A. Degefa, H. Aga, B. Solomon, K. Abera, A. Abegaz, G. Belemo. 1987. Illness and health behaviour in Addis Ababa and rural central Ethiopia. Soc. Sci. Med., 25 (9): 1003-1019.
  • Kloos, Helmut, A. Adugna. 1989. Settler migration during the 1984/85 resettlement programme in Ethiopia. Geo Journal, 19.2: 113-127.
  • Tadele, Desalegn, E. Lulekal, D. Damtie, A. Assefa. 2014. Floristic diversity and regeneration status of woody plants in Zengena Forest, a remnant montane forest patch in northwestern Ethiopia. Journral of Forestry Research, 25 (2): 329-336.



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