The Comechingon (Henia–Kamiare) are an Indigenous people with present-day community life documented especially in Córdoba Province, Argentina. A concrete example is the Comunidad Comechingón Ctalamochita, whose territorial survey (under national Law 26.160) was formally recognized by the state in INAI Resolution 205/2023. The INAI has also facilitated intercultural dialogue between Ctalamochita leaders and public enterprises, indicating active community organization and recognition processes. Academic work from Córdoba analyzes how colonial labels and later narratives shaped Comechingon identity and how communities today navigate identity reassertion.
Sources place contemporary Comechingon communities in Córdoba's urban/peri-urban corridor (e.g., Villa Nueva / Villa María for the Ctalamochita community), with ancestral ties across the Sierras de Comechingones, a range spanning Córdoba and neighboring San Luis Province. Public records and reporting show official interactions and recognition steps occurring in Córdoba; mention of Comechingon presence in San Luis is common in regional references to the mountain range and heritage but is less tied to current legal-community documentation than Córdoba.
Daily language is Spanish; the historic Comechingon language is extinct and poorly attested, with no ISO code assigned. Communities organize through recognized Indigenous structures and interact with agencies on land/territory and infrastructure consultations (e.g., INAI–Ctalamochita dialogues), suggesting civic participation and advocacy capacity. Group-specific data on livelihoods, mobility, schooling, and media access were not located; while Argentina's Censo 2022 reports such characteristics for indigenous populations, those results are not disaggregated to published, easily retrievable profiles for this specific pueblo in the sources accessed.
No reliable, group-specific description of current religious affiliation for the Comechingón was found in government statistics or peer-reviewed literature consulted. Most likely, about two-thirds identify as Christian, either Catholic or Evangelical.
Because community language is Spanish, Scripture access is not a language barrier: complete Bible, audio resources, and the JESUS Film are available in Spanish (spa). Practical ministry needs include respectful partnership with recognized community authorities, support during territorial/legal processes (INAI), and contextual discipleship in Spanish that honors identity revitalization. Targeted field research could document the current population by pueblo, settlement patterns, and religious affiliation to inform planning.
Pray for Comechingon leaders to steward land and culture wisely in ongoing dialogues with authorities.
Ask God to raise up humble local churches in Córdoba/San Luis to serve Comechingon families with a clear Spanish witness and cultural respect.
Pray for youth and elders as they balance identity recovery with urban/peri-urban education and work realities.
Pray for researchers and community partners to gather people-specific demographic and spiritual data that avoids stereotypes.
Scripture Prayers for the Comechingon in Argentina.
INDEC's Censo 2022 includes a table "Población… según pueblo indígena u originario" (Cuadro 8), but the Comechingon total could not be read directly from the XLS via our tools; therefore the right-rail population is left Unknown to avoid misquotation.
Secondary/encyclopedic pages sometimes quote specific 2010/2022 totals, but without direct, citable table extracts; these were not used.
The Comechingon language is reported as extinct and poorly attested; no ISO 639-3 code exists. Tertiary summary was used cautiously only to note extinction status.
Why: Core claims rely on recent official sources (INDEC 2024, INAI 2023) and a peer-reviewed article for context. Confidence is reduced because a pueblo-specific 2022 population number couldn't be verified in-document here, and religion data at the group level were not found.
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |



