Mizo people

Mizo
Mizo hnam
Mizo traditional Cheraw dance
Total population
1,400,000+ (2011–2019)
Regions with significant populations
 India1,022,616
           Mizoram914,026
           Manipur55,581
           Assam33,329
           Meghalaya6,439
           Tripura5,810
           Arunachal Pradesh1,445
           Nagaland1,264
 Myanmar400,000
 United States50,000
 Singapore22,000
 Malaysia8,000
 Israel6,000
Languages
Mizo
Religion
Majority:
Christianity
Minority:
Judaism, Buddhism, and Mizo religion
Related ethnic groups

The Mizo people, (historically called the Lushais) are a Tibeto-Burman ethnic group primarily from Mizoram in northeastern India with communities beyond Mizoram, living in neighboring northeast Indian states like Manipur, Assam, Meghalaya, and Tripura, with minority populations also found in Myanmar and the United States. Mizoram is the most literate state in India, and the first to reach 100%.

The Chin people of Myanmar and the Kuki people of India and Bangladesh are the kindred tribes of Mizos and many of the Mizo migrants in Myanmar have accepted the Chin identity. The Chin, Kuki, Mizo, and southern Naga peoples are collectively known as Zo people (Mizo: Zohnahthlak; lit. "descendants of Zo") which all speak the Mizo language.

The Mizo language also known as Duhlien is part of the Tibeto-Burman language family. Regionally the language is classed within the Zohnahtlak languages among the Zo people.

Before British rule in the Lushai Hills, the Mizo people organized themselves under a system of Mizo chieftainship. A notable chiefdom was the Confederacy of Selesih. Other notable chiefdoms were Tualte under Vanhnuailiana and Aizawl under Lalsavunga. Following British annexation of the Lushai Hills, the Mizos adopted Christianity via the influence of missionaries. In the decolonisation period, the Mizo people asserted political representation with the founding of the Mizo Union.

The Lushai Hills was constituted as an autonomous district of Assam before being renamed to the Mizo district. Following the mautam famine of 1959, the Mizo National Front declared independence in the Mizo National Front uprising in 1966. The Indian government responded with the Bombing of Aizawl and an extensive village regrouping policy to curb the insurgency. The unrest continued until 1986 where Mizoram was inaugurated as a state.