Drukpa
Community
The people of Bhutan are called Drukpas, derived from the name
of the country, DRUK YUL, land of the Thunder Dragon. The Drukpas
consist of a variety of ethnicity who are mainly categorized
into three broad ethnic groups.
The Sharchops are believed to be the earliest inhabitants of
Bhutan. Apparently Indo-Mongoloid in origin, the question of
their exact origin or how they reached Bhutan, remains unsolved.
Today the Sharchops live largely in the eastern regions. The
second group, known as the Ngalops, are the descendants of Tibetan
immigrants who migrated to Bhutan since the ninth century onwards,
settling primarily in the west. The third section of the population
are the nepalese, who began to settle in the south towards the
end of the nineteenth century.
Rugged,
mountainous terrain and extremes of climate have made the Bhutanese
a hardy, well-built people, accustomed to hard work. Despite
the strong martial spirit which has enabled them to retain their
national independence and sovereignty over the centuries, they
are peaceful and fun-loving.
As much as 85% of Bhutan's population live on subsistence farming,
scattered throughout the countryside in sparsely populated villages
across rugged mountainous terrain. In the lower valleys rice
remains the staple diet whereas maize, wheat, buckwheat are
more common in higher valleys. The people farm on narrow terraces
cut into the slopes of the mountains. Topography largely determines
the settlement patterns.
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