Ta Oi people group of Laos
 
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  • Population: 30,876(1995);34,730(2000);43,400(2010)
  • Main Province: Saravan
  • Language Affiliation: Mon-Khmer
  • Religion: Animism
  • Christians: 500

The main information provided here is used by permission from asiaharvest.org

Additional information may be provided by millionelephants.com

Pray for the Ta Oi
  • In prayer, take authority over the powers of darkness that have ruled the Ta Oi for centuries.
  • Pray the Ta Oi Christians would be set ablaze by God’s Spirit.
  • Prayerfully support efforts of Bible translators who are attempting to produce the first Ta Oi Scriptures.

   More than 31,000 Ta Oi people live in southern Laos. The majority are concentrated in Ta-Oy District in the eastern part of Saravan Province towards the Vietnam border. Others live in Savannakhet and Kekong provinces. Since 1989 some Ta Oi have migrated down the mountains to the Bolaven Plateau.

   Although more than 26,000 Ta Oi were recorded in the 1989 Vietnam census, most of the Ta Oi in Vietnam speak a dialect that is only partially mutually intelligible with the Ta Oi in Laos. One source says people from these two groups can not understand each other “until speakers have had at least two weeks contact.”

   After the end of the U.S.-Vietnam War, a small number of Ta Oi families were allowed into the United States as refugees. Today, Ta  Oi, who practice a combination of animism and shamanism, are one of the most demon-oppressed groups in all of Laos. In 1890 one Frenchman recorded the experience of a Ta Oi animistic ritual (which has changed little over the past century): “In a clearing a certain number of them made a circle around a beer jar. To the bowl of the receptacle a lighted wax candle was fixed. Chickens with their throats cut were lying in the ground. An elder, with his head shaved close to the skull, made invocations to the spirits and in turn, the warriors passed in front of him, presenting their arms to him.”

   A complex ritual is performed after a Ta Oi person dies… “A shaman is brought in to help the soul of the deceased find its way to the next life. Ta Oi women are sometimes buried in their traditional clothing, and with ornaments made of copper, silver, ivory or glass. Several years after the burial, the remains of the body are dug up, washed, decorated, and placed in the fence of their former home.

   Although there are now between 350 to 500 Ta Oi Christians (mostly Catholics) in Laos, most Ta Oi oppose the Gospel. In Vietnam the Ta Oi are a completely unreached people group. A few years ago they attacked Bru evangelists who tried to bring the Gospel to them, and drove them out of the area.

 

 

 

Additional Information

  1. Gospel Recording in Taoi here: Taoi resources page If you are aware of other recordings, literature, or anything else for the Taoi people, please let us make it available online.
  2. Getting there - If you make a trip to the Taoi people, share your experience and advice here: Taoi travel page
  3. Information - Do you know something more about the beliefs of the Taoi? Do you have a story to tell? Do you have a picture? Please share it here.
  4. Does anyone know of a Taoi believer inside or outside of Laos?
  5. Intercession - Have you gotten any impressions, scriptures or words while praying for this group? Have you visited their area? Please share these and we will include them on the prayer page here: Taoi prayer page
  6. Adoption - This is a small group, but that doesn't diminish the importance of these people in Gods' heart. If you feel led to focus on this group, maybe God will use in a miraculous way to reach them with the Gospel! Need assistance? Contact us at: millionelephants@gmail.com, subject: adoption