Deim Zubeir[1]
Uyujuku | |
---|---|
Town | |
Deim Zubeir[1] Location in South Sudan | |
Coordinates: 7°43′N 26°13′E / 7.717°N 26.217°E | |
Country | South Sudan |
State | Western Bahr el Ghazal |
County | Raga County |
Payam | Kuru |
Boma | Uyujuku |
Time zone | UTC+2 (CAT) |
Deim Zubeir, from the Arabic ديم الزبير ["Daim az-Zubayr"], commonly translated as the "Camp of Zubeir", is the historically established but highly controversial name of Uyujuku town in the Western Bahr el Ghazal of the Republic of South Sudan,[1] located in the Western Bahr El Ghazal part of the country, some 70 km from the border with the Central African Republic (CAR), near the Biri tributary of the River Chel.[2]
Due to different transliterations from the Arabic, the name components are also spelled in various combinations Dem, Dehm, Deym, Dam, Daym or Daim, and Zubair, Zubayr, Zoubair, Zoubeir, Zoubayr, Zobeir, Ziber, Zebehr, or Zubier, respectively.
The historical remains of the slave camp have been designated a potential UNESCO World Heritage Centre site.[3] In the collective memory of South Sudanese people, the very name Deim Zubeir rings as a synonym for millennia of slavery,[4] at least since Pharaonic times.[5][page needed]
Stefano Santandrea (1966) had written a lexicon and grammatical sketch of the Mboto dialect of the Birri language as spoken in Deim Zubeir.[6]