About the People
About 150,000 Otammari live in Northern Benin and Togo. They are famous for their masonry and their traditional homes that resemble mud castles. Most are subsistence farmers and hunters.
Illiteracy is high among this group. Many people only read French, the administrative language of Benin. Very few can read or write their heart language, Ditammari. Most cling to animism and ancestor worship and have resisted both Islam and Christianity. Each household has a family altar called the fetish, where the father of the household makes sacrifices and appeals to the spirits of the ancestors. Participation in initiation ceremonies is of the highest importance for teenage boys and girls.
The whole Bible is translated into Ditammari, but it is out of print. However, the Holy Spirit is moving among these people who have traditionally been extremely resistant to outsiders. Evangelical Christians of several denominations have noticed a dramatic change in their openness in recent years.
About the Project
AFM missionaries have been ministering to the Otammari people since Linden and Michelle St. Clair launched the project in 1996. Today, Ulrike Baur-Kouato leads the project, assisted by her husband Toussaint and three local evangelists. They are working to nurture the church in Natitingou and a growing number of groups in surrounding villages. Suzy Baldwin worked on the Otammari Project for many years and now serves on the Pendjari Project.
People-Group Facts
- Population: 150,000
- Language: Ditammari
- Religion: Animist
Jacques had been sick for several years. The doctors said it was stomach cancer.
By:
Suzy Baldwin
January 01 2014, 9:55 am | Comments 0
Bony, our Adventist evangelist, returned home one day and went in to see his son, little Espoir, who had come down with malaria.
By:
Suzy & Fidel Baldwin-Noutehou
December 01 2013, 11:26 am | Comments 0
Last Sabbath, I had the joy of seeing the baptism of two of my young friends, Augustin and Donny.
By:
Suzy Baldwin
October 01 2013, 10:27 am | Comments 0
Recently I’ve been thinking about all the things I’m grateful for.
By:
Maggi Harral
October 01 2013, 10:26 am | Comments 1
I was the only white person on the bus from Natitingou to Cotonou to renew my visa. Next to me sat a big guy, sweating profusely, eating something that looked and smelled strange. I tried to listen to my headphones, but the bus driver cranked up the volume on the bus radio, and it totally drowned out my MP3 player.
By:
Naomi Kromer
April 01 2012, 7:33 am | Comments 0
“Adventist!“ the immigration officer said before I could, his face lighted up with recognition.
By:
Jason & Maggi Harral
April 01 2012, 7:23 am | Comments 0
Our prayer is that in the future, more and more people will see us and remember a Namethe very special Name of Somebody who knows them very well and wants them to know Him, too.
By:
Jason Harral
March 01 2012, 5:53 am | Comments 0