Oku 2012 Edition (OKUWYI)
Overview
The Oku 2012 Edition is the first New Testament translation in the Oku language (ISO 639-3: oku), a Grassfields Bantu language spoken by approximately 87,000 people in the Northwest Region of Cameroon. [1] The translation project was born from a vision conceived by three Bible school students approximately 30 years before its completion. [1] The Cameroon Association for Bible Translation and Literacy (CABTAL) formally took on the project in 2001, and in 2006 OneBook, a Canadian organization affiliated with Wycliffe Global Alliance, joined to provide funding. [1] The Book of Luke was the first portion published, in 2003. [1] The completed New Testament was dedicated on October 12, 2013, in a celebration featuring a royal procession with nine choirs and pastors from multiple denominations. [1] Approximately 3,600 copies were printed, with nearly 2,000 sold on the first day. [1] Rev. Ngum Peter, one of the three original Bible school students, led the translation and literacy project. [1] The translation effort also involved creating a written alphabet for Oku, developing literacy programs, and producing at least 30 books on various subjects by local authors. [2]
References
- [1] Bible Translation Celebrated in Cameroon (archived) - Christian Reformed Church. Report on the Oku NT dedication, October 2013.
- [2] Cameroon (archived) - OneBook. Overview of OneBook's Bible translation work in Cameroon including the Oku project.
Language and People
Oku (ISO 639-3: oku) is spoken by approximately 87,000 people in Southwestern Cameroon, Enlarged Area. [Glottolog: okuu1243]
Publishing and Organizations
Published by OneBook and Cabtal, [s.l.]. Translation type: First.
References
- NT - Online text, Faith Comes By Hearing
- Global Bible Catalogue - Global Bible Catalogue entry.
- bible.com - YouVersion.
- ebible.org entry - ebible.org.