Carabayo language

Carabayo
Aroje, Caraballo, Amazonas Macusa
Yacumo
Native toColombia
Ethnicity200 Carabayo (aerial survey)
Native speakers
150 (2007)
Ticuna–Yuri
  • Carabayo
Early form
Language codes
ISO 639-3cby
Glottologcara1245
ELPCarabayo
Carabayo is classified as Extinct by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger

The Carabayo (Caraballo) language is a poorly documented language spoken by the Carabayo people, also known as Yuri and Aroje, an uncontacted Amazonian people of Colombia living in at least three longhouses, one of several suspected uncontacted peoples living along the Rio Puré (now the Río Puré National Park) in the southeastern corner of the country. They are known as the Aroje to the Bora people. Maku and Macusa are pejorative Arawak terms applied to many local languages, not anything specific to Carabayo. The name "Carabayo" is taken from a mock name, "Bernardo Caraballo", given to a Carabayo man during his captivity in the Capuchin mission at La Pedrera in 1969 after the Colombian boxer. It has been reported that their self-designation is Yacumo.