Abie in Papua New Guinea

The Abie have only been reported in Papua New Guinea
Population
Main Language
Dialect
Largest Religion
Christian
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge

Introduction / History

The Abie are a very small people group in Papua New Guinea, living in West New Britain Province on the island of New Britain. Their community has preserved a distinct identity through generations of village life along forest edges, river valleys, and plantation fringes within this tropical island setting. Their traditions and local ties have helped sustain their communal life despite wider regional influences.

They speak the Abie language, an Oceanic Austronesian language of the East New Britain subgroup within the broader Austronesian family. This language is used in daily life and reflects the community's longstanding presence in the region.


What Are Their Lives Like?

The Abie live in rural villages with a lifestyle centered on subsistence gardening, fishing, and participation in local cash?crop activities such as small?scale cocoa or coconut production. Families cultivate root crops, bananas, and greens that grow well in the fertile soil of West New Britain, while fishing and forest gathering help supplement diets.

Homes are typically constructed from materials gathered nearby, like timber and palm thatch. Community life is shaped by extended family relationships, cooperative labor, and mutual support for food production, child?rearing, and shared responsibilities.

Although Tok Pisin and sometimes English are used for wider communication, the Abie language remains the primary language within the community. Access to formal services such as healthcare and secondary education often requires travel to larger towns on New Britain Island. Transportation beyond local villages is usually by footpaths or shared vehicles on rural roads.


What Are Their Beliefs?

Almost all of the Abie identify as Christian, though only a smaller portion are classified as evangelical believers. This suggests that while Christian identity is widespread, a fully biblical understanding of the gospel may not yet be universal. Traditional spiritual beliefs involving unseen forces connected to nature, community life, and spiritual influence may still shape how some interpret events and everyday experiences.

In the Abie language, Scripture translation has not yet produced any Bible portions, New Testament, complete Bible, audio Bible, gospel recordings, or Jesus Film resources. This means that many Abie people have limited access to God's Word in the language spoken within their daily community life.


What Are Their Needs?

The Abie need a clear and faithful presentation of the gospel of Jesus Christ that leads to genuine personal faith and spiritual growth grounded in Scripture rather than blended with traditional beliefs or cultural patterns.

A major need is the translation and availability of Scripture in the Abie language, so that individuals and families can engage directly with God's Word in the language they use daily

There is also a need for trained local leaders who can teach sound doctrine, disciple believers, and help establish strong, biblically grounded church communities.

Practically, improved access to healthcare, education, and reliable transportation would support physical well?being and expand opportunities for long?term community and spiritual development in their rural island setting.


Prayer Items

Pray that the Abie people would come to a clear and saving faith in Jesus Christ.
Pray that those who identify as Christians would grow in deeper biblical understanding and apply God's Word in their daily lives.
Pray for the completion and availability of the Bible in the Abie language so the community can engage directly with Scripture.
Pray for faithful local church leaders to be raised up who can teach, disciple, and shepherd others.
Pray that traditional spiritual beliefs would be replaced by confidence in the truth of Scripture.
Pray for improved access to healthcare, education, and transportation to support overall community well?being.


Scripture Prayers for the Abie in Papua New Guinea.


Profile Source:   Joshua Project  

People Name General Abie
People Name in Country Abie
Alternate Names Abia; Jari; Mori
Population this Country 1,700
Population all Countries 1,700
Total Countries 1
Indigenous Yes
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached No
Frontier No
GSEC 4  (per PeopleGroups.org)
Pioneer Workers Needed
PeopleID3 10128
ROP3 Code 100015
Country Papua New Guinea
Region Australia and Pacific
Continent Australia
10/40 Window No
Persecution Rank Not ranked
Location in Country Oro province: Afore district, both sides of Owen Stanley range; Central province: north from Ianu along Domara and Foasi creeks.   Source:  Ethnologue 2016
Country Papua New Guinea
Region Australia and Pacific
Continent Australia
10/40 Window No
Persecution Rank Not ranked
Location in Country Oro province: Afore district, both sides of Owen Stanley range; Central province: north from Ianu along Domara and Foasi creeks..   Source:  Ethnologue 2016

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Primary Religion: Christianity
Major Religion Estimated Percent
Buddhism
0.00 %
Christianity
92.00 %
Ethnic Religions
8.00 %
Hinduism
0.00 %
Islam
0.00 %
Non-Religious
0.00 %
Other / Small
0.00 %
Unknown
0.00 %
Primary Language Aneme Wake (1,700 speakers)
Language Code aby   Ethnologue Listing
Primary Dialect Mori
Dialect Code 7004   Global Recordings Listing
Written / Published Yes   ScriptSource Listing
Total Languages 1
Primary Language Aneme Wake (1,700 speakers)
Language Code aby   Ethnologue Listing
Primary Dialect Mori
Dialect Code 7004   Global Recordings Listing
Total Languages 1
People Groups Speaking Aneme Wake
Profile Source Joshua Project 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.