Chamling in Nepal

The Chamling have only been reported in Nepal
Population
Main Language
Largest Religion
Other / Small (Kirati)
Christian *
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge
* Data can be from various sources including official census, agencies, and local research. Data from these sources can sometimes differ even by orders of magnitude. Joshua Project attempts to present a conservative, balanced estimate.

Introduction / History

The Chamling are one of the Kirati ethnic groups of eastern Nepal and are closely related to the larger Rai peoples of the Himalayan foothills. They are found primarily in the hilly regions of eastern Nepal, especially in areas of Koshi Province. The Chamling have their own distinct language, Chamling Rai, which belongs to the Tibeto-Burman language family.

Historically, the Chamling lived in scattered hill communities where agriculture, clan relationships, and local traditions shaped daily life. Like other Kirati peoples, they preserve a strong ethnic identity connected to ancestral customs, oral traditions, and regional heritage. Over generations, many Chamling communities interacted with both Hindu and Buddhist cultural influences while still maintaining older indigenous religious practices.

Migration, education, and economic pressures have led some Chamling families to move toward cities or abroad for work. Even so, many still maintain close ties to their ancestral villages and cultural traditions in eastern Nepal.


What Are Their Lives Like?

Many Chamling families live in hill villages where farming, livestock raising, labor, trade, and seasonal employment support daily life. Terraced agriculture is common in the mountainous terrain of eastern Nepal, and families often grow crops such as rice, maize, millet, and vegetables.

Meals commonly include rice, lentils, vegetables, fermented foods, and locally produced grains. Tea is widely consumed, and family gatherings remain an important part of social life. Hospitality toward guests and cooperation between relatives are strongly valued within Chamling communities.

Extended family relationships and clan identity continue to influence marriage, social responsibilities, and community interaction. Traditional songs, dances, and festivals remain important expressions of cultural identity among many Chamling families.

Remote geography can create challenges involving transportation, healthcare access, educational opportunity, and economic development. Younger generations sometimes leave rural villages in search of employment or schooling in larger towns and cities.


What Are Their Beliefs?

The Chamling traditionally follow a mixture of Kirati religious traditions, animistic beliefs, ancestor practices, and influences from Hinduism and Buddhism. Religious life is often connected to rituals involving ancestral spirits, nature spirits, sacred places, and ceremonial observances performed by traditional spiritual leaders.

Among many Chamling, spiritual practices may include offerings, ritual ceremonies, festivals honoring ancestors, and customs intended to seek protection, blessing, healing, or guidance from spiritual forces. Hindu influence has also shaped aspects of religious identity and community practice.

This syncretistic mixture of beliefs can strongly influence spiritual understanding and daily life. Many Chamling still have limited access to clear biblical teaching about salvation through Jesus Christ alone. While some Christian presence exists among Rai peoples in Nepal, many Chamling communities remain unreached or only lightly reached with the gospel.


What Are Their Needs?

The Chamling need greater access to faithful Christian witness communicated clearly within their cultural and linguistic setting. Many still have limited opportunity to study Scripture or interact personally with mature followers of Christ.

There is a need for believers who are willing to build long-term relationships, learn local languages and customs, and disciple those who may face family or community pressure for following Jesus Christ. Access to Scripture, Christian teaching materials, and healthy local fellowships is important for lasting spiritual growth.

Practical needs also remain significant in many Chamling communities, including healthcare access, educational opportunity, infrastructure development, and stable economic opportunities for families living in remote hill regions. Compassionate Christian ministry can help demonstrate the love of Christ while opening doors for meaningful gospel conversations.

The Chamling would benefit from strong local churches capable of discipling believers, strengthening families, and continuing to share the gospel throughout eastern Nepal.


Prayer Items

Pray that the Chamling people will hear a clear presentation of the gospel and come to understand salvation through Jesus Christ alone.
Pray that God will raise up faithful Christian workers who are willing to serve among the Chamling with wisdom, humility, endurance, and compassion.
Pray that the Chamling people will be adopted through the People Group Adoption program so that sustained prayer, outreach, discipleship, and future gospel engagement will continue among them.
Pray that existing believers among the Rai and other Himalayan peoples will grow strong in biblical faith and boldly share the truth of Christ with neighboring communities.


Scripture Prayers for the Chamling in Nepal.


References

https://peoplegroups.org/explore/GroupDetails.aspx?peid=22450
https://www.britannica.com/place/Nepal
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Tibeto-Burman-languages
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamling_language
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirati_people


Profile Source:   Joshua Project  

People Name General Chamling
People Name in Country Chamling
Pronunciation CHAHM-leeng
Alternate Names चामलिंग
Population this Country 7,100
Population all Countries 7,100
Total Countries 1
Indigenous Yes
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached Yes
Frontier Yes
GSEC 6  (per PeopleGroups.org)
Pioneer Workers Needed 1
PeopleID3 20741
ROP3 Code 102001
Country Nepal
Region Asia, South
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 46  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Total States on file 5
Largest States
Koshi
6,300
Bagmati
600
Madhesh
100
Lumbini
40
Gandaki
20
Country Nepal
Region Asia, South
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 46  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Total States 5
  Koshi 6,300
  Bagmati 600
  Madhesh 100
  Lumbini 40
  Gandaki 20
Website South Asia Peoples
Primary Religion: Other / Small (Kirati)
Major Religion Estimated Percent *
Buddhism
15.46 %
Christianity
0.00 %
Ethnic Religions
0.00 %
Hinduism
25.49 %
Islam
0.00 %
Judaism
0.00 %
Non-Religious
0.00 %
Other / Small
59.05 %
Sikhism
0.00 %
Unknown
0.00 %
* From latest Nepal census data.
Current Christian values may substantially differ.
Primary Language Chamling (6,400 speakers)
Ethnologue Language Code rab
Ethnologue Language Familly Sino-Tibetan
Glottolog Language Family Sino-Tibetan
Written / Published Yes   (ScriptSource Listing)
Total Languages 2
Secondary Languages
Nepali
Primary Language Chamling (6,400 speakers)
Ethnologue Language Code rab
Ethnologue Language Familly Sino-Tibetan
Glottolog Language Family Sino-Tibetan
Written / Published Yes   (ScriptSource Listing)
Total Languages 2
Secondary Languages
  Nepali 10

Primary Language:  Chamling

Bible Translation Status  (Years)
Bible-Portions Yes
Bible-New Testament Yes  (2015)
Bible-Complete No
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 Jesus Film: view in Chamling Jesus Film Project
General Scripture Earth Gospel resources links Scripture Earth
Photo Source Christopher J. Fynn - Wikimedia  Creative Commons 
Map Source People Group data: Omid. Map geography: UNESCO / GMI. Map Design: Joshua Project  
Profile Source Joshua Project 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.