Photo Source:
Fulvio Spada - Wikimedia
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People Name: | Uzbek, Northern |
Country: | Georgia |
10/40 Window: | No |
Population: | 800 |
World Population: | 32,964,600 |
Primary Language: | Uzbek, Northern |
Primary Religion: | Islam |
Christian Adherents: | 0.00 % |
Evangelicals: | 0.00 % |
Scripture: | Complete Bible |
Ministry Resources: | Yes |
Jesus Film: | Yes |
Audio Recordings: | Yes |
People Cluster: | Uzbek |
Affinity Bloc: | Turkic Peoples |
Progress Level: |
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The earliest ancestors of the Uzbeks, the Central Asian Turks, aided Genghis Khan in his conquest of Eastern Europe in the 1300s. Eventually, as unity between the Turks and Mongols faded, there were numerous warring kingdoms that emerged. It was from several of these kingdoms that the Uzbeks descended. As time progressed, they developed their own language and culture, though it is like the others in Central Asia. By the mid-1800s, the Russians had conquered most of the Uzbeks. The Russians controlled much of Central Asia including what is now Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Azerbaijan.
They lived under czarist rule until the Bolshevik Revolution brought the communists to power in 1917. The new socialist government forced many of the Uzbek nomads and farmers to live on collective farms. When the Soviet Union broke up in 1991, the Central Asians controlled by Moscow became independent of Russian rule. There are two basic Uzbek dialects, southern and northern Uzbek. They are mutually intelligible. The main differences are about the grammar and certain loan words from other languages.
There are large Uzbek communities in Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan, as well as small communities in many other nations, including Georgia, Belarus, Turkey, Azerbaijan and even the United States.
Pasta is a common staple food item for Uzbeks wherever they live including Georgia. It was probably brought to Central Asia hundreds of years ago by Italian or Chinese traders who traveled along the Silk Road. Two favorite pasta dishes are ash (a noodle dish sometimes mixed with yogurt) and ashak (an Uzbek-style ravioli).
In urban settings Uzbeks wear Western style clothing and live in small apartment complexes. The buildings, which are drab in appearance, are typical of those built during the communist era throughout their spere of influence including Georgia. Uzbek families are extended, with a patriarchal authority ruling over several generations.
Uzbeks in Georgia are Sunni Muslims of the conservative Hanafite branch. Like other Muslims, the Uzbeks believe that there is one God, Allah, whose will was revealed through the prophet Mohammed and then recorded in the Koran. They are generally not Orthodox Muslims since they usually adhere to traditional beliefs along with their Islamic practices. Many of the younger generation are either atheists or non-religious especially in non-Muslim places like Georgia. The Uzbeks are not open to outside spiritual input.
Uzbeks in Georgia need to allow Jesus to give them abundant and eternal life. As it stands, they will not consider his ways.
Pray for the Holy Spirit to give the Uzbek people teachable and understanding hearts.
Pray that a strong movement of the Holy Spirit will bring entire Uzbek families into a rich experience of God's blessing.
Pray for Uzbek families to be drawn by the Holy Spirit to seek forgiveness, and to understand the adequacy of Christ's work on the cross.
Pray for teams of believers to do sustained, focused prayer for the Lord to open the hearts of Uzbek family leaders to experience God's blessing through a movement of family-based discovery Bible studies.