The Ubang are an indigenous people living in Obudu Local Government Area of Cross River State in southeastern Nigeria. Their community comprises three contiguous villages — Ofambe, Okiro, and Okweriseng — nestled between two mountains, Ogburu-Ochoi and Okwe-Iruan, in the highland rainforest zone of the state's northern interior. The Ubang are known across Nigeria and to linguists worldwide for a phenomenon found nowhere else on earth: men and women speak distinct vocabularies within the same language, a feature scholars call gender-based diglossia.
The Ubang speak the Ubang language (also spelled Ubang, language code uba), which belongs to the Cross River Bendi branch of the Niger-Congo language family. Within this single language, male speakers use one set of words for everyday objects and concepts, while female speakers use entirely different words for the same things. A husband and wife calling for water or yam at the same table use words with no shared resemblance. Yet speakers of both varieties understand each other perfectly without an interpreter. Boys grow up speaking the female vocabulary alongside their mothers and transition to the male vocabulary around the age of ten. A shared communicative variety is also used in public settings. A Bible translation in Ubang has been started, and audio Scripture recordings are available, though a full Bible translation has not yet been completed.
The Ubang trace the origin of their dual language to a divine act at the mountain in their midst, where they believe God distributed languages at creation. The giant footprint etched into the rock at the summit of Okwe Asirikwe is pointed to by community elders as the place where God stood. This cosmology permeates Ubang identity — they understand themselves as uniquely blessed with a gift no other community received.
The Ubang are primarily farmers, and cocoa is their most significant agricultural product — community elders assert that the Ubang were the first to introduce cocoa cultivation to the Obudu area. They also produce palm oil, yam, banana, groundnuts, kola nuts, pear, and timber in quantities large enough to supply traders who send lorries from across the region. These lorries, however, can only come so far. Poor road infrastructure means that transport of produce is difficult and costly, limiting the income farmers receive for their hard labor.
Family life is organized along patriarchal lines, with elders and traditional rulers holding significant authority. The Ekwo society, observed when a head chief dies, is restricted to men and represents one of the traditional institutions that govern ceremonial and social life. Marriage is exogamous within the community — a person from any of the three Ubang villages does not marry within their own village, strengthening kinship bonds across the three communities while also connecting Ubang families to neighboring peoples such as the Alege, Boki, and Utugwang.
The Obudu Cattle Ranch, one of Cross River State's most visited tourist destinations, sits in the broader Obudu area. While it has brought some infrastructure development to the region, the Ubang villages remain rural and poorly served, particularly when it comes to clean water, for which residents must travel long distances to a single stream especially in the dry season.
The majority of the Ubang identify as Christian, and the community is broadly characterized as a Christian community by its own leaders. Churches are part of village life, and faith in Christ has taken root across the Ubang villages. However, a substantial portion of the community continues to practice traditional ethnic religion, which is woven into communal ceremonies and social structures. The Ekwo society, for instance, reflects a layer of spiritual and cultural practice that operates alongside the Christian faith for many families. The Ubang's own cosmology — their understanding of God as the creator who visited their mountain and distributed languages — reflects a pre-Christian spirituality that has not fully yielded to biblical teaching in every household. Evangelical believers, those who hold to personal faith in Christ and the authority of Scripture, are present among the Ubang but represent a modest portion of the Christian community. The depth of biblical discipleship in the community is uneven, and genuine spiritual transformation remains an ongoing need.
Completing the Bible translation in the Ubang language is one of the most pressing spiritual needs the community faces — the Ubang language, with its unique two-gender vocabulary, presents documentation challenges, and getting the full Word of God into this language would serve both the preservation of the language and the spiritual nourishment of believers. Reliable roads would transform the Ubang economy by allowing farmers to sell their cocoa and other produce at fair market prices without the losses imposed by difficult transport. Access to clean drinking water is an urgent daily need, as the community currently relies on a single distant stream. The Evangelical believers present among the Ubang carry a significant calling: with a gospel witness already present in their community, they are positioned to bring the good news of Jesus Christ to other peoples in Cross River State and beyond who have even less access to the gospel.
Pray for the completion and distribution of a full Bible translation in the Ubang language, giving believers God's Word in the very tongue they use at home.
Pray for the Ubang church to grow in biblical depth and for Evangelical believers to become bold witnesses who carry the gospel to less-reached peoples throughout Cross River State.
Pray for practical provision — clean water, passable roads, and economic opportunity — so that Ubang families can flourish and their community thrive.
Pray that those who blend Christian faith with traditional practices will come to a full and saving knowledge of Jesus Christ as the only Lord and Savior.
Scripture Prayers for the Ubang in Nigeria.
https://guardian.ng/life/dynamic-language-culture-of-the-ubang-community-where-language-transcends-into-gender/
https://dailytrust.com/ubang-cross-river-community-where-men-women-dont-speak-same-language/
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/10/tower-babel-ubang-criver-community-men-women-speak-different-languages/
https://theafricanhistory.com/1395
https://eldp.access.preservica.com/dk0492/
https://globalrecordings.net/en/language/uba
https://www.ethnologue.com/language/uba/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obudu
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |


