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Prayer Profile
The Fula Jalon of Sierra Leone

[IMAGE] The Fula Jalon are a large people group located in the western African nations of Guinea, Sierra Leone, and Senegal. The majority live in Middle Guinea, or the Fouta Djallon, an area of mountains and plateaus. Fulani herdsmen settled this region over two hundred years ago and have since spread throughout western Africa. The Fula Jalon are a sub-group of this vast Fulani people group. Whether in Guinea, Sierra Leone, or Senegal, the culture of the Fulan Jalon is virtually identical.

The Fula Jalon of Sierra Leone occupy a tropical region that has heavy rainfall and high humidity. There are many mountains and plateaus stretching into northern Sierra Leone from the Fouta Djallon of Guinea. The people there have lighter skin and are taller than other groups in Sierra Leone. They speak a Niger-Congo language called Fuuta Jalon (or Pulaar) and are skilled in raising cattle.

What are their lives like?
The Fula Jalon livelihood is based primarily on farming and herding livestock. Gathering forest produce, hunting, fishing, and trading are also part of their daily lives. Staple crops include millet, rice, and peanuts. Cattle herds, along with sheep and goats, are the primary livestock. The cattle are not the usual Fulani humped breed, but a native Fouta Djallon breed called Ndama, which is resistant to the disease-carrying tsetse fly.

Herding cattle is usually a male activity; however, the women milk and take care of the cattle. Women also tend to the small livestock and poultry, cultivate gardens, and carry containers of milk and cheese to the local markets for sell or trade.

Daughters remain with their mothers until they marry. However, as soon as a son reaches puberty, he leaves the family compound and lives alone in a nearby compound, usually with some cattle. This new compound will become the home of the son and his future wife.

The first marriage of a man is usually arranged by the man's father. A bride-service of helping the girl's father with his livestock is performed by the man, who usually marries in his early twenties. Polygyny (the practice of having more than one wife) is practiced, up to the Muslim limit of four wives. There is one chief wife, however, who has authority over the other wives.

Children belong to "age-sets" until they marry. An age-set occurs at three or four year intervals, with every child born in those years belonging to that set. The children in an age-set go to school together and often work together. When the time for marriage arrives, they may even help one another with the bride-service. Within each age-set, there is a leader, a deputy, and a judge.

Although Fula Jalon villages are scattered, each village has a central court and a mosque. Houses belonging to the settled Fula Jalon are typically round with mud walls and thatched roofs. Each hut has an encircling veranda. The nomadic Fula Jalon live in open, beehive-shaped huts without walls or verandas. Each hut is surrounded by a cattle corral. In each village, a headman handles village affairs and answers to a chief.

What are their beliefs?
The Fula Jalon of Sierra Leone are 95% Muslim; the other 5% do not follow any religion. The Muslims faithfully follow the teachings of the Koran, Islam's holy book. They believe that Allah is the only god and that Mohammed is his prophet.

What are their needs?
The Fula Jalon of Sierra Leone have portions of the Bible written in their own language, have Christian broadcasts available to them, and have three missions agencies currently working among them. This large effort to evangelize these people, however, has resulted in only a very small number of Fula Jalon believers. They are apparently very devoted to their Islamic religion and see it as a fulfillment of their needs. To win these people to Christ, further prayer is needed for God to open their hearts and eyes to the Truth.

Prayer Points

  • Ask the Lord of the harvest to send full-time missionaries to share the Gospel with the Fula Jalon of Sierra Leone.
  • Ask the Holy Spirit to grant wisdom and favor to the three missions agencies that are targeting them.
  • Ask God to anoint the Gospel as it goes forth via radio in their area.
  • Pray that God will give the small number of Fula Jalon believers boldness to share Christ with their own people.
  • Take authority over the spiritual principalities and powers that are keeping the Fula Jalon bound.
  • Ask God to raise up prayer teams who will begin breaking up the soil through worship and intercession.
  • Pray for God to soften the hearts of the Fula Jalon so that they will be receptive to the Gospel.
  • Ask the Lord to bring forth a triumphant Fula Jalon church for the glory of His name!

See also the following related groups:
the Adawama Fulani of Cameroon;
the Bagirmi Fula of Chad and the Central African Republic;
the Bauchi Fulani of Nigeria; the Benin/Togo Fulani of Togo; the Bororo Fulani of Cameroon;
the Fula of Benin and Burkina Faso;
the Fula Jalon of Guinea, Mali, amd Senegal;
the Fula Kita of Mali;
the Fula Macina of Mali and Maruitania;
the Fula Toro of Senegal;
the Fula Kunda of Guinea Bissau, and Senegal;
The Fulani of Chad, Gambia, and Sudan;
the Gurma Fulani of Burkina Faso; the Krio Fula of Sierra Leone;
the Sokoto Fulani of Niger and Nigeria;
the Liptako Fula of Burkina Faso; the Toroobe Fulani of Nigeria; and the Western Fulani of Niger.

Statistics
Latest estimates from the World Evangelization Research Center.

THE PEOPLE

  • People name: Fula Jalon
  • Country: Sierra Leone
  • Their language: Fuuta Jalon
  • Population: (1990) 150,700
    (1995) 169,900
    (2000) 191,100
  • Largest religion: Muslim (Malikite) 95%
    Nonreligious 4.9%
  • Christians: <1%
  • Church members: 34
  • Scriptures in their own language: Portions
  • Jesus Film in their own language: None
  • Christian broadcasts in their own language: Available
  • Mission agencies working among this people: 3
  • Persons who have heard the Gospel: 37,400 (22%) Those evangelized by local Christians: 5,100 (3%)
    Those evangelized from the outside: 32,300 (19%)
  • Persons who have never heard the Gospel: 132,500 (78%)
THEIR COUNTRY
  • Country: Sierra Leone
  • Population: (1990) 3,999,100
    (1995) 4,509,000
    (2000) 5,069,300
  • Major peoples in size order: Mende 28.5%
    Temne 26.6%
    Krio 7.5%
    W. Central Limba 7%
    Kuranko 4.4%
  • Major religions: Ethnic religionist 47.2%
    Muslim 43.5%
    Christian 9.2%
  • Number of denominations: 37

© Copyright 1997
Bethany World Prayer Center

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