Sizable groups of Dinka refugees are in (1) Jacksonville Florida (2) Clarkston Georgia, (3) Omaha Nebraska, (4) Des Moines Idaho, and (5) Sioux Falls South Dakota. If you know the population of Dinkas in these cities, please contact us.
Click here to recommend other locations where this People Group resides.
The Dinka belong to a larger group known as the Nilotics. The term "Dinka" was invented by outsiders. The people now known as the Dinka actually call themselves
Muonjang or Jieng. Among the Dinka, only an educated minority knows that they are called Dinka.
The Central Dinka people came to North America as refugees from South Sudan due to war. The experience of Dinka refugees was portrayed in the documentary movie
Lost Boys of Sudan by Megan Mylan.
Unlike the
Arab, Sudanese who inhabited northern Sudan and adhered to Islam, the Dinka inhabited southern Sudan and mixed indigenous animist religious beliefs with Christianity.
Historically in South Sudan, the Dinka were mainly agripastoral people, relying on cattle herding at riverside camps in the dry season and growing millet (awuou) and other varieties of grains (rap) in fixed settlements during the rainy season.
Please note: The Sudanese people group cluster, numbering over 100,000, includes the Acholi, Anuak, Azande, Bari, Central Dinka, Jur Modo, Kaliko, Mabaan, Madi, Moru, Nuer, Shilluk, plus several other minority people groups. They are socially, culturally, linguistically, and religiously diverse with each having their own unique people group identity.
Prayer Points
Pray that Christians will minister to both the physical and spiritual needs of the Dinka people.
Pray that evangelical Dinkas will take the message of Christ to other unreached African people group now in North America.
Learning Resources
Learn more about "Learning Paths" Online Courses for embracing, encountering and engaging diaspora people. Work at your own pace. Begin anytime and complete the course according to your schedule. Interactive, Hands-On Application.
Learn more about "Reaching the Nations" This book delineates five disciplines Christians should develop in order to effectively reach the nations. More specifically, it will guide Christians to develop an engagement strategy in their locale.