Burundi - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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D Way of Life
Most Burundians live in self-contained compounds of small round grass huts scattered over the country’s many hills.
The rugo , the traditional Tutsi hut, is divided into sections and surrounded by an enclosure and cattle corrals.
Families farm scattered plots of land on different soils at different altitudes to minimize crop failure.
Thefloors of valleys are avoided due to higher temperatures and tsetse fly infestation.
Social roles are largely determined by ethnicity, with the Tutsi as herders, the Hutuas peasant farmers, and the Twa as hunter-gatherers.
Family life is central in all groups.
Traditionally, the principal goal in life has been parenthood.
Women traditionallydress in brightly colored wraps, and men in white.
However, many have adopted Western clothes.
The Burundian diet consists mainly of sweet potatoes and beans, withbananas, cassava, corn, peas, millet, and fruits added in season.
Cattle are herded as signs of wealth and status rather than for their value as food.
Meat is consumedby most Burundians only about once or twice a month.
Fish is eaten more frequently.
Gourds are grown for use as containers.
Beer and milk are common beverages.Pastimes include soccer, poetry recitation, storytelling, and mancala, a board game common throughout Africa.
E Social Issues
Hutu-Tutsi ethnic rivalry has been the dominant feature of Burundian society since independence.
This severe and often violent problem is compounded by poverty,high unemployment, overcrowding, environmental stress, and the high incidence of AIDS.
Crime is high in and around Bujumbura.
IV CULTURE
The richness of Burundian culture is apparent in a strong literary and musical tradition and a wide range of fine crafts.
Little government funding for cultural activities isavailable.
However, an art school at Gitega and an artisans’ center at Giheta have done much to encourage artistic expression and preservation.
The major libraries areat the University of Burundi, the American Cultural Center, and the French Cultural Center in Bujumbura and the Burundi Literature Center in Gitega.
The mostimportant museums are Bujumbura’s Living Museum (founded in 1977) and the National Museum (founded in 1955) in Gitega.
A Literature, Music, and Dance
Burundians cherish strong oral traditions.
Folk tales and fables are often set to music and no distinction is made between music and poetry.
The Tutsi are particularlyknown for their epic songs and dynastic poetry, strongly flavored with traditional mythology.
Cattle, local history, and the travels of the god Imana throughout thecountry are the most important themes of Burundian literary and musical traditions.
Tall, splendidly adorned intore dancers and tambourinaires (drummers) were traditionally entertainers for the royal elite and tourists.
B Art and Architecture
Traditional Burundian art includes basketry, ironworking, and the making of gourd containers.
The Twa are famed for their pottery.
The traditional Tutsi hut or rugo is considered the most important local architectural style, while modern European-style construction predominates in the capital and in government buildings.
V ECONOMY
One of the world’s poorest nations, Burundi has a predominantly agricultural economy.
The country’s estimated gross domestic product (GDP) was $903 million in 2006.Export earnings are dominated by a single crop: coffee.
National budget figures for 1999 showed a large deficit, with $167 million in revenues and $128 million inexpenditures.
The government and foreign companies dominate the export sector of the economy.
Burundi is heavily dependent on foreign aid, principally from WesternEurope.
Past austerity measures have added to ethnic tensions.
In turn, ethnic and political instability has severely affected Burundi’s production capacity.
Burundi’slabor force numbers 4.2 million people, of which 15 percent are engaged in agriculture, 22 percent in industry, and 59 percent in services.
A Agriculture and Fishing
Subsistence agriculture is the main means of livelihood.
Chief food crops are sweet potatoes, cassava, bananas, beans, and maize.
The most important cash crop iscoffee.
Cotton and tea are also grown for export.
In 2006 livestock numbered 395,741 cattle, 750,000 goats, and 242,933 sheep.
Social and cultural importance isattached to the ownership of large cattle herds.
They are, however, economically underutilized and overgrazing has contributed to soil erosion.
Commercial fisheries andsubsistence fishing around Lake Tanganyika supply domestic demand.
B Mining
Mining includes the small-scale exploitation of gold and peat.
Important reserves of uranium and nickel (estimated at 5 percent of the world’s reserves) remain to beexploited.
Tin and bastnasite ores have been mined sporadically in the past.
Test drilling has indicated the presence of oil under Lake Tanganyika, but petroleumexploitation has not yet proved significant.
C Manufacturing and Services
Manufacturing is limited to processing agricultural products, particularly coffee, and producing consumer goods intended to decrease reliance on imports.
Theseconsumer goods include cigarettes, soap, glass, blankets, cement, shoes, beer, and insecticides.
Almost all banking, insurance, transportation, communication,technical, and trading services are located in Bujumbura.
Despite official efforts, tourism has not proved to be significant.
D Energy
Burundi has two small coal-fired generating plants and two small hydroelectric dams, which in 2003 produced 141 million kilowatt-hours of electricity, or 80 percent ofthe country’s needs.
A portion of the country’s electricity is now supplied by hydroelectric facilities in Bukavu, the DRC.
However, for most Burundians, wood and othertraditional fuels remain the primary source of energy for heating and cooking, providing 94 percent of all the energy used.
E Transportation and Communications
Burundi has no railroads but possesses a road network of about 14,500 km (about 9,000 mi), of which 640 km (400 mi) are paved, and about 1,950 km (about 1,210mi) are classified as national roads.
Most trade is shipped by way of Tanzania through the port of Bujumbura at the head of Lake Tanganyika.
Bujumbura has the only.
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Liens utiles
- LA MUSIQUE COUNTRY
- Country- und Western-Musik - Musik.
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- Descolonización Colonias belgas NOMBRE ACTUAL NOMBRE ANTERIOR A LA FECHA DE LA DESCOLONIZACIÓN DESCOLONIZACIÓN Burundi Ruanda-Urundi 1962 República del Congo Congo Belga 1960 Ruanda Ruanda-Urundi 1962 Colonias británicas NOMBRE
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