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Home Culture Population

The Bunong People: Guardians of the Eastern Highlands

Pascal Medeville by Pascal Medeville
March 9, 2026
in Population
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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The Bunong people, also known as Phnong or Pnong (Khmer: ព្នង), represent one of Southeast Asia’s most ancient indigenous communities. Living primarily in the lush, forested highlands of northeastern Cambodia, particularly in Mondulkiri Province, the Bunong have developed a distinctive culture shaped by the region’s natural abundance, spiritual beliefs, and evolving societal pressures. Their traditions, worldviews, and relationships with the land offer profound insight into the resilience and adaptability of indigenous peoples in the face of rapid change.

Traditional Bunong house with thatched grass roof (Pygathrix nigripes, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Origins and Homeland

The Bunong have resided for centuries in Mondulkiri’s hills and valleys, carving their settlements amid mountains, rivers, and extensive forests. Their homeland’s vast, rolling terrain is punctuated by spirit-forests, burial grounds, and agricultural fields, forming a living, interconnected cultural landscape. Each site carries distinct social, spiritual, and historical significance, providing the physical and metaphysical foundation for Bunong identity.

Language and Identity

The Bunong language, also known as Mnong, distinguishes them from Cambodia’s majority Khmer population. It belongs to the Mon-Khmer language family, and, until recent years, was largely unwritten. Preservation efforts in the last decade have sought to record and teach Bunong in written form, a vital step in safeguarding their fragile cultural heritage. The community maintains a strong sense of shared identity, expressed in oral traditions, ritual songs, and intergenerational storytelling.

Spiritual Beliefs

Central to the Bunong worldview is animism—a deep-seated belief that the natural realm teems with spirits. Forests, rivers, mountains, and even specific trees are regarded as inhabited by powerful spirit beings. The Bunong relate to these entities through daily rituals, ceremonies, and offerings of wine or animal sacrifices. Ancestors also play an essential role: each generation invokes their presence in life events and appeals for guidance and protection.

Spirit-forests are especially sacred, acting as both ecological treasures and sanctuaries where human activity is heavily restricted. Before altering the landscape, such as felling trees for farming or construction, individuals seek consent from the spirits. Disregard for these spirits is believed to invite misfortune, illness, or environmental calamities.

Funerary Practices and the Cycle of Life

Death in Bunong society is a transition rather than an end. When a community member dies, burial grounds become sites of continuity, where descendants believe the spirit of the departed merges with the surrounding trees and forest. These ancestral burial areas are carefully maintained and never disturbed, fostering a sense of collective belonging that stretches forward and backward through time.

Agriculture and Subsistence

For centuries, the Bunong have relied on swidden (slash-and-burn) agriculture, a practice adapted to the highland environment. They cultivate rice, maize, cassava, and various tubers, rotating fields to maintain soil fertility. In addition, the forests supply wild fruits, vegetables, medicinal herbs, honey, and crucial building materials. Rattan and bamboo are emblematic resources, used in construction, craft-making, and everyday tools.

Collective stewardship underscores their approach to land: the forest is communally shared and managed, and individual land ownership is a foreign concept. This principle both reflects and reinforces their respect for natural balances.

Weaving and Artistic Expression

Traditional Bunong textiles are brilliantly colored and carry symbolic motifs representing aspects of daily life, agricultural cycles, and nature. Scarves (kramas), blankets, and garments are woven on miniature looms, often operated by women. Each design—arrows, tigers, leafy vines, rice stalks, rivers, and mountain contours—embodies stories or traits considered vital for survival and prosperity. These textiles serve both functional and ceremonial purposes and are crucial in expressing Bunong identity and aesthetics.

Elephants: Friends and Cultural Pillars

Elephants occupy a revered status within Bunong communities. Historically, the Bunong have been renowned elephant trainers and keepers, a role that has influenced regional history and myth. Elephants are intimately involved in cultural rituals, spiritual practices, and community processions, representing strength, wisdom, and harmonious coexistence with nature. Losing elephants to habitat loss or exploitation is considered a profound communal wound.

Social Structure and Kinship

Extended family networks form the backbone of Bunong society. Decision-making is consensus-driven, interlacing respect for elders with communal welfare. Roles are often defined by age, gender, and experience, with elders transmitting oral history, ceremonial duties, and survival knowledge to younger generations. Social cohesion is reinforced through seasonal festivals, collective labor in farming, and the reciprocal sharing of forest resources.

Changes and Challenges

Modern times have brought considerable upheaval. The Khmerization policies of the mid-20th century, migration of lowland Khmer populations, and the spread of new religions have eroded many traditional customs. Today, alongside ancestral beliefs and animism, Christianity and Buddhism are present in Bunong villages, often blending with older rituals.

The advance of technology, media, and development projects poses existential dilemmas. The rise of commercial agriculture, land concessions, and rampant logging threaten the forests and sacred sites upon which Bunong culture depends. Disputes over land rights, lack of legal recognition, and marginalization in national policy processes exacerbate their vulnerability. Many young Bunong now leave their villages for education or labor, risking disconnection from ancestral knowledge and community bonds.

Preservation and Resilience

Despite these pressures, the Bunong continue to defend their roots with determination. Grassroots organizations, educational initiatives, and alliances with conservation movements strive to safeguard community land, document language and customs, and assert indigenous rights. Storytelling, artistic revivals, and leadership by elders and youth alike nurture cultural resilience amid uncertainty.

The Global and National Context

The Bunong’s struggle for recognition echoes broader indigenous movements across the globe. Like many similar peoples, their future hinges on the delicate negotiation between development and tradition, autonomy, and integration. Government and civil society must honor the wisdom enshrined in Bunong stewardship of the land—a model for sustainable living and bio-cultural diversity.

Conclusion

The story of the Bunong is one of profound connection to place, spirit, and memory. Their traditions, eked from the forest and guarded across generations, challenge assumptions about progress and offer alternative visions of harmony with nature. As Cambodia and the world at large grapple with complex futures, the Bunong voice—rooted in reverence, community, and creativity—resonates with urgent relevance. Their ongoing journey underscores the imperative to recognize, respect, and learn from indigenous ways before irreparable losses occur.

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Tags: Bunong peopleCambodia populationIndigenous people in CambodiaMondulkiriPnong peopleជនជាតិព្នងព្នង
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Pascal Medeville

Pascal Medeville

Author of the blog Wonders of Cambodia, I share my passion for Cambodia through stories, cultural insights, and personal reflections on the country. I'm also the founder of Simili Consulting, where we provide high-quality, professional translation services to international clients.

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