Lere in Nigeria

The Lere have only been reported in Nigeria
Population
Main Language
Largest Religion
Christian
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge

Introduction / History

The Lere are an indigenous people of Lere Local Government Area in Kaduna State, north-central Nigeria. They speak Lere — also known by the ISO code gnh — an East Kainji language belonging to the broader Platoid branch of the Benue-Congo family. This places them among a cluster of small, ancient peoples whose languages and identities predate the arrival of Islam and the powerful political structures that later swept across northern Nigeria. The Lere LGA is densely multi-ethnic, home to numerous small language communities including the Akurmi, Tumi, Kuzamani, and others, all of whom share the experience of being minority peoples living in the shadow of dominant Hausa-Fulani culture. Colonial boundary-drawing consolidated these groups under a single administrative umbrella without erasing their distinct identities. The Lere have remained rooted in their home area, maintaining their language and customs even as outside pressures — cultural, religious, and economic — have grown. They exist fully within the 10/40 Window and are among Nigeria's many small peoples who have received little global attention.


What Are Their Lives Like?

The Lere are predominantly subsistence farmers, working the savanna soils of Kaduna State to grow staple crops including millet, sorghum, maize, beans, and yams. Groundnuts and cotton serve as cash crops, providing income for household needs and school fees. Men bear primary responsibility for farming and animal husbandry — goats, chickens, and cattle are common — while women process food, manage households, and engage in small-scale trade at local markets.

Extended family networks are the foundation of Lere social life. Decisions about marriage, land, and community affairs flow through elders and family heads whose authority is respected and rarely challenged. Marriages are celebrated communally, with families investing considerable resources in negotiations, gifts, and festivities that reinforce bonds between clans. Seasonal harvest celebrations bring communities together in music, drumming, and dance — art forms that carry cultural memory, express communal joy, and mark the rhythm of the agricultural year. A typical meal centers on tuwo — stiff grain porridge made from millet or sorghum — served alongside soups rich in vegetables, pepper, and dried fish or goat meat.


What Are Their Beliefs?

Most of the Lere practice traditional ethnic religion, a worldview in which the spirit world and the natural world are deeply intertwined. Ancestors are believed to remain active in the affairs of the living, and rituals, sacrifices, and sacred objects are used to maintain favor with spiritual powers and to ward off harm. Shrines, sacred trees, and designated ritual leaders play important roles in community religious life. A meaningful portion of the Lere community, however, identifies with Christianity — a presence that represents a genuine and significant foothold for the gospel among this people. Yet evangelical, biblically grounded faith is still modest in its reach and depth. The Lere church exists and has a history, but it has not yet grown to the point of sustaining itself without outside support or of reaching its own community comprehensively. Neighboring unreached peoples, some of whom have been specifically identified as needing Lere Christians to share the gospel with them, await a church that is strong enough and outward-looking enough to go. May the Lere who know Jesus be stirred with compassion for their neighbors who do not.


What Are Their Needs?

No Scripture has been recorded as translated into the Lere language, leaving believers without God's word in their heart tongue — an urgent gap that hinders both personal discipleship and the spread of faith. Local church leaders need theological training so that Christian faith among the Lere can be deepened and distinguished from the syncretism that so easily blends traditional spirit practices with nominal Christian identity. Educational and economic development resources are limited in this rural region of Kaduna State, and many Lere families face daily vulnerability to poverty, drought, and inadequate healthcare. Christians in Lere LGA live in one of Nigeria's most dangerous states for religious minorities, and those who follow Christ need courage, protection, and community as they navigate a religiously complex environment.


Prayer Items

Pray that the Holy Spirit will move with power among the Lere, calling many from fear-based religion into the freedom and joy of a genuine relationship with Jesus Christ.
Pray that God will raise up Bible translators and linguistic workers to bring the full Scriptures into the Lere language, and that the Word of God will take root and bear lasting fruit in Lere families and villages.
Pray that Lere believers will be discipled deeply and will grow into a bold, outward-facing church — one that carries the gospel to neighboring unreached communities who are still waiting to hear.
Pray for the protection of Christians in Lere LGA and across Kaduna State, where religious violence has claimed many lives, and for God's peace to reign in a region long marked by conflict.


Scripture Prayers for the Lere in Nigeria.


References

https://www.ethnologue.com/language/gnh
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lere,_Kaduna_State
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaduna_State
https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/12895/NI
https://www.opendoors.org/en-US/persecution/countries/nigeria


Profile Source:   Joshua Project  

People Name General Lere
People Name in Country Lere
Alternate Names
Population this Country 31,000
Population all Countries 31,000
Total Countries 1
Indigenous Yes
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached No
Frontier No
GSEC 1  (per PeopleGroups.org)
Pioneer Workers Needed
PeopleID3 18932
ROP3 Code 114730
Country Nigeria
Region Africa, West and Central
Continent Africa
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 7  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Location in Country Kaduna state: Lere LGA.   Source:  Ethnologue 2016
Country Nigeria
Region Africa, West and Central
Continent Africa
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank 7  (Open Doors top 50 rank, 1 = highest persecution ranking)
Location in Country Kaduna state: Lere LGA..   Source:  Ethnologue 2016

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Ethnolinguistic map or other map

Primary Religion: Ethnic Religions
Major Religion Estimated Percent
Buddhism
0.00 %
Christianity
35.00 %
Ethnic Religions
65.00 %
Hinduism
0.00 %
Islam
0.00 %
Non-Religious
0.00 %
Other / Small
0.00 %
Unknown
0.00 %
Primary Language Lere (31,000 speakers)
Language Code gnh   Ethnologue Listing
Written / Published Unknown
Total Languages 1
Primary Language Lere (31,000 speakers)
Language Code gnh   Ethnologue Listing
Total Languages 1
People Groups Speaking Lere

Primary Language:  Lere

Bible Translation Status:  Unspecified

Resource Type Resource Name Source
None reported  
Profile Source Joshua Project 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.