Hmong Be in China

The Hmong Be have only been reported in China
Population
Main Language
Largest Religion
Christian
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge

Introduction / History

The Hmong Be are a small Hmong subgroup living primarily in southern China, especially in parts of Yunnan Province. They are officially classified within the broader Miao nationality by the Chinese government, though they maintain their own distinct identity, customs, and style of dress. The Hmong Be call themselves "Mountain Hmong," while neighboring Hmong groups use other names to distinguish them from surrounding communities. Their language is closely related to other Hmong dialects, though their separate identity has been preserved through generations of cultural and social separation.

Historically, the Hmong peoples originated in southern China and experienced repeated displacement, migration, and conflict over many centuries. Various Hmong-related groups gradually spread throughout the mountainous regions of southwest China and later into Southeast Asia. The Hmong Be developed as one of many distinct Hmong branches that formed after generations of geographic isolation and cultural separation from other groups.

The mountainous terrain where many Hmong Be communities live helped preserve their language, traditional clothing, oral history, and social customs. Even though modernization has influenced younger generations, many Hmong Be families continue to value ancestral traditions, clan relationships, and inherited cultural identity.


What Are Their Lives Like?

Many Hmong Be families live in mountainous rural areas where agriculture remains central to daily life. Rice, corn, vegetables, and other crops are commonly cultivated on steep hillsides or terraced fields. Livestock raising, small-scale trade, and seasonal labor also provide income for some households. Economic opportunities are often limited in remote mountain communities, causing some younger people to migrate toward cities for work.

Family and clan relationships are highly important within Hmong society. Extended families often live close together, and elders are respected for their wisdom and role in preserving traditions. Weddings, funerals, festivals, and community gatherings continue to play a major role in maintaining cultural identity. Traditional Hmong clothing, embroidery, music, and ceremonial customs remain important markers of identity among many families.

Meals commonly include rice, corn, vegetables, herbs, and locally raised meat when available. In remote areas, daily life may involve physically demanding agricultural work, collecting firewood, caring for livestock, and maintaining hillside farms. Education and healthcare access can vary greatly depending on location and economic conditions.


What Are Their Beliefs?

The Hmong Be traditionally practice forms of animism mixed with ancestor reverence and folk religious customs common among many Hmong groups. Spiritual beliefs often center around unseen spirits, household protection, ancestral influence, healing rituals, and maintaining harmony between the spiritual and physical worlds. Shamans may play an important role in ceremonies intended to heal sickness, guide souls, or protect families from spiritual harm.

In some regions, elements of Buddhism, Chinese folk religion, or local religious customs may also influence spiritual life. Religious practices are often deeply tied to family tradition, clan identity, festivals, and ceremonial obligations passed down through generations.

Although some neighboring Hmong groups in parts of China have responded to the gospel in recent decades, there is little known Christian presence among the Hmong Be specifically. Many have never heard a clear explanation of salvation through Jesus Christ alone.


What Are Their Needs?

The Hmong Be face both practical and spiritual challenges. Many families live in isolated mountain regions where access to healthcare, education, transportation, and stable employment opportunities may be limited. Economic hardship and geographic isolation can make long-term advancement difficult for many communities.

Spiritually, the Hmong Be remain largely unreached with the gospel. There is a great need for faithful Christian workers who are willing to learn the language and culture, build long-term relationships, and communicate biblical truth with humility and compassion. Scripture resources, discipleship, and culturally understandable gospel teaching are greatly needed.

Practical ministry involving education support, healthcare assistance, agricultural training, literacy programs, and family encouragement can also help address real-life needs while opening doors for meaningful gospel witness among the Hmong Be people.


Prayer Items

Pray that the Hmong Be people would hear the gospel clearly and come to faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.
Pray for Christian workers to serve among the Hmong Be with humility, wisdom, compassion, and perseverance.
Pray that the Hmong Be people would be adopted through the People Group Adoption program so that ongoing prayer, outreach, discipleship, and future gospel engagement would continue among them.
Pray that believers among other Hmong groups in China would grow in spiritual maturity and faithfully share the gospel with the Hmong Be and neighboring peoples.


Scripture Prayers for the Hmong Be in China.


References

https://www.peoplegroups.org/explore/GroupDetails.aspx?peid=47387
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hmong_people
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hmong
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Miao
https://learnuake.org/articles/hmong-history/hmong-in-china/


Profile Source:   Joshua Project  

People Name General Hmong Be
People Name in Country Hmong Be
Pronunciation mung beh
Alternate Names Hmong Drout Raol; Hmong Nzhil; Hmong, Luzhai; Luzhai Miao; Miao, Luzhai; Mountain Hmong; Peppery Miao; Six Village Miao
Population this Country 1,400
Population all Countries 1,400
Total Countries 1
Indigenous Yes
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached Yes
Frontier Yes
Unengaged Yes
Pioneer Workers Needed 1
PeopleID3 18491
ROP3 Code 114101
Country China
Region Asia, Northeast
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 17  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Location in Country Approximately 1,000 members of the Hmong Be tribe live in a compact community in Luzhai Village near Babao Township. The area lies within Dafang County in the northwestern part of Guizhou Province. This part of southern China is a hilly region with lush forests watered by numerous rivers and streams.   Source:  Operation China, 2000
Country China
Region Asia, Northeast
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 17  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Location in Country Approximately 1,000 members of the Hmong Be tribe live in a compact community in Luzhai Village near Babao Township. The area lies within Dafang County in the northwestern part of Guizhou Province. This part of southern China is a hilly region with lush forests watered by numerous rivers and streams..   Source:  Operation China, 2000

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Ethnolinguistic map or other map

Primary Religion: Ethnic Religions
Major Religion Estimated Percent
Buddhism
0.00 %
Christianity
0.00 %
Ethnic Religions
80.00 %
Hinduism
0.00 %
Islam
0.00 %
Judaism
0.00 %
Non-Religious
20.00 %
Other / Small
0.00 %
Sikhism
0.00 %
Unknown
0.00 %
Primary Language Miao, Large Flowery (1,400 speakers)
Ethnologue Language Code hmd
Ethnologue Language Familly Hmong-Mien
Glottolog Language Family Hmong-Mien
Written / Published Yes   (ScriptSource Listing)
Total Languages 1
Primary Language Miao, Large Flowery (1,400 speakers)
Ethnologue Language Code hmd
Ethnologue Language Familly Hmong-Mien
Glottolog Language Family Hmong-Mien
Written / Published Yes   (ScriptSource Listing)
Total Languages 1

Primary Language:  Miao, Large Flowery

Bible Translation Status  (Years)
Bible-Portions Yes  (1907-2009)
Bible-New Testament Yes  (1917-1936)
Bible-Complete Yes  (2009)
FCBH NT (www.bible.is) Online
Possible Print Bibles
Amazon
World Bibles
Forum Bible Agencies
National Bible Societies
World Bible Finder
Virtual Storehouse
Resource Type Resource Name Source
Audio Recordings Audio Bible teaching Global Recordings Network
Film / Video God's Story video God's Story
Film / Video Jesus Film: view in Miao, Large Flowery Jesus Film Project
Film / Video Magdalena video Jesus Film Project
Film / Video My Last Day video, anime Jesus Film Project
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Scripture Earth Gospel resources links Scripture Earth
Photo Source Copyrighted © 2026  Peoples of the World Foundation  All rights reserved.  Used with permission
Profile Source Joshua Project 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.