Kallawaya language
| Kallawaya | |
|---|---|
| Pohena, Qollahuaya | |
| Machaj juyay | |
| Native to | Bolivia | 
| Region | La Paz Department: Charazani; highlands north of Lake Titicaca | 
| Ethnicity | Kallawaya | 
| Native speakers | L1: none L2: 10–20 | 
| Official status | |
| Official language in | Bolivia | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | caw | 
| Glottolog | call1235 | 
| ELP | Kallawaya | 
Kallawaya, also Callahuaya or Callawalla (Callawalla: Machaj Juyai, meaning 'folk language' or 'speech of the men'), is an endangered, secret, mixed language in Bolivia; another name sometimes used for the language is Pohena. It is spoken by the Kallawaya people, a group of traditional itinerant healers in the Andes in their medicinal healing practice living in Charazani, the highlands north of Lake Titicaca, and Tipuani.