The Tedim people, also called Tedim Chins and Tiddim (Hai-Dim) people, are a Zomi ethnic group, part of the Chin people, primarily inhabiting the Tedim Township in the Chin State of Myanmar. They speak the Tedim language, a northeastern Kuki-Chin language.

The Tedim people were early adopters of the Zomi identity, founding the Zomi Baptist Convention in 1953, after a careful discussion of nomenclature. According to Khup Za Go, most people called "Chins" by the Burmese do not recognize that name as their identifier, and also feel the Burmese use of it to be abusive or degrading. However, the Burmese government never accepted the term "Zomi" and most outsiders do not recognize it either, and so "Chin" is often added to the label "Zomi".

The Bible was translated into the Tedim language in 1983, although the New Testament had been translated into and published in it in 1932.

References

Sources
  • Go, Khup Za (2008), Zo Chronicles: A Documentary Study of History and Culture of the Kuki-Chin-Lushai Tribe, Mittal Publications, ISBN 9788183242103

External links

  • Article on Tiddim Chin language
  • Ethnologue entry for Tiddim
  • World scriptures article on Tiddim

Tedim Stock Photos, Royalty Free Tedim Images Depositphotos

Tedim & Rih Lake information

Our first impressions of Myanmar in the remote Chin state One night

Elevation of Tedim, Myanmar (Burma) Topographic Map Altitude Map

Tedim Industry Fato Logistic Equipments SpA