The 'Cham' people are an ethnic group living in
Cambodia,
Vietnam and
Thailand. Speaking the
Cham language, they are considered to be descendants of the kingdom of
Champa. Cambodia has the largest concentration of Chams, estimated between half a million and one million. In Vietnam, their population of approximately 100,000 is centered on the cities of
Phan Rang and
Phan Thiet in central Vietnam, with Cham communities also found in
Ho Chi Minh City and
An Giang. Cham people form the core of the
Muslim communities in both Cambodia and Vietnam. Approximately 4,000 Cham also live in
Thailand.
The Chams are considered to be of
Malay racial stock. Their language belongs to the
Malayo-Polynesian group in the
Austronesian language family.

Cham statue from Cham Museum in Danang, Vietnam

Cham girl, Mekong river, Vietnam
History
Records of the Champa kingdom go as far back as
2nd century CE 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.
In the 12th century A.D., the Cham fought a series of wars with the Angkorian Khmer to the west. In 1177, the Cham and their allies launched an attack from the lake Tonle Sap and managed to sack the Khmer capital. In 1181, however, they were defeated by the Khmer King Jayavarman VII.
The first religion of the Champa was a form of
Shaivite Hinduism, brought by sea from India. As Arab merchants stopped along the Vietnam coast en route to China,
Islam began to influence the civilization, and Hinduism became associated with the upper classes.
The exact date that Islam came to Champa is unknown, but grave markers dating to the
11th century have been found. It is generally assumed that Islam came to
Indo-China before its arrival in
China during the
Tang Dynasty (618–907).
Migration
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'', who constitute about 15%–20% of the Cham. While they share a common language and history, there is no intermarriage between the groups. A small number of the Cham also follow
Mahayana Buddhism. In Cambodia, the Chams are 90% Muslim, as are the
Utsuls of
Hainan. The isolation of Cham Muslims in central Vietnam resulted in an increased syncretism with Buddhism until recent restoration of contacts with other global Muslim communities in Vietnamese cities, but Islam is now seeing a renaissance, with new mosques being built.
Malaysia has some Cham immigrants and the link between the Chams and the Malaysian state of
Kelantan is an old one. The Malaysian constitution recognizes the Cham rights to Malaysian citizenship and their
Bumiputra status, and the Cham communities in Malaysia and along the Mekong River in Vietnam continue to have strong interactions.
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 by the Vietnamese, in which 120,000 people were either captured or killed, and the kingdom was reduced to a small enclave near
Nha Trang. Between 1607 and 1676 the Champa king converted to Islam, and during this period Islam became a dominant feature of Cham society. Further expansion by the Vietnamese in
1720 resulted in the annexation of the Champa kingdom and its persecution by the Vietnamese king,
Minh Mạng. As a consequence, the last Champa Muslim king, Pô Chien, decided to gather his people (those on the mainland) and migrate south to
Cambodia, while those along the coastline migrated to
Trengganu (
Malaysia). A tiny group fled northward to the Chinese island of
Hainan where they are known today as the
Utsuls. The area of Cambodia where the king and the mainlanders settled is still known as
Kompong Cham, where they scattered in communities across the Mekong River. Not all the Champa Muslims migrated with the king. A few groups stayed behind in Nha Trang, Phan Rang,
Phan Rí, and
Phan Thiết provinces of central Vietnam.
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.
Famous Chams
★
Che Bong Nga
★
Che Linh, popular singer
References
★ Dổ Hải Minh (1965) "Dân Tộc Chàm Lược sử" Saigon.
★ Hourani, George F. (1979) "Arab Seafaring" Princeton University Press, New Jersey.
★ Tarling, Nicholas (1992) "The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia" vol.1 Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
★ Salim, Maryam. (2005) "The Laws of Kedah, 220 Hijrah" A text translation from jawi script to rumi script Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, Malaysia.
See also
★
History of Cambodia
★
History of Vietnam
★
Champa
★
Cu Lao Cham
★
Champasak
★
Islam in Vietnam
★
Art of Champa
External links
★
Proceedings of the Seminar on Champa
★
Vietnam-Champa Relations and the Malay-Islam Regional Network in the 17th—19th Centuries
★
The Survivors of a Lost Civilisation
★
Cham Muslims: A look at Cambodia's Muslim minority
★
The Cham Muslims of Indo-China
★
Article about the Cham people living in Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia by Antonio Graceffo
★
Article about Cham fishermen living near Mekong Island, Cambodia by Antonio Graceffo
★
General article about Cambodian Cham by Antonio Graceffo
★
Stone carvings at Bayon in Cambodia showing a battle between the Khmer and the Cham