The Kuwaa — also known as the Belle — are a small but resilient people group of approximately 30,000 individuals living in the interior forests of northwestern Liberia. They are found exclusively in Liberia, concentrated in the Belleh and Bokomo districts of Gbarpolu County and the Zorzor district of Lofa County, nestled between the Bandi and Loma peoples to the north and the Kpelle to the south.
The Kuwaa speak a Kru language of the Niger-Congo family, closely related to other Kruan languages spoken by the Bassa, Kru, Krahn, Grebo, and Dei. They are part of the broader Kru people cluster of Sub-Saharan Africa. Like many of Liberia's indigenous peoples, the Kuwaa migrated into their current territory in southward waves from the north and east over many centuries, carving out a homeland in the dense rainforest of Liberia's interior.
The name "Belle," once commonly applied to the Kuwaa by Liberian government officials, carries disparaging connotations and is now largely rejected by the community in favor of their own name, Kuwaa. The two brutal civil wars that tore through Liberia between 1989 and 2003 devastated communities across the country, and the Kuwaa were not spared. Displacement, loss of life, and the collapse of basic services left deep scars that the community continues to work through today. Liberia has since made progress toward stability, but the path to full recovery in remote areas remains long.
Life among the Kuwaa centers on subsistence farming and the rhythms of the rainforest. Rice is the cornerstone of their diet and the heartbeat of their agricultural calendar. Planting and harvesting rice is not merely a practical activity but a communal event woven with ceremony and shared labor. Cassava, plantains, wild greens, and bush meat round out the diet, with palm oil used extensively in cooking.
Men clear the forest for new fields and take part in hunting, while women do much of the daily farming, cooking, and child-rearing. The extended family is the basic unit of social organization. Elders command deep respect and serve as arbiters of disputes, keepers of oral tradition, and guardians of cultural memory. Traditional societies — like the Poro for men and the Sande for women — have historically played a major role in shaping community identity, initiation, and governance, and their influence continues in many villages today.
Celebrations mark the major milestones of Kuwaa life. Births, marriages, funerals, and successful harvests are all occasions for communal gathering, drumming, singing, and dance. The Kuwaa oral tradition is rich with proverbs, historical narratives, and folklore that pass identity and wisdom from one generation to the next. Most Kuwaa communities remain rural, with limited access to roads, markets, electricity, and formal education beyond the primary level.
Christianity is the primary religion among the Kuwaa, with two-thirds of the population identifying as Christian. Evangelical believers have a modest but meaningful presence, making the Kuwaa a partially reached people group. A New Testament in the Kuwaa language was completed in the late 1980s, and the JESUS Film is available in Kuwaa as well — significant resources that have supported gospel witness in the community.
Yet alongside Christianity, traditional ethnic religion continues to hold real influence. Beliefs in ancestral spirits, forest spirits, and sacred rituals remain woven into everyday life for many Kuwaa. The Poro and Sande secret societies carry deep spiritual significance and can present barriers to full commitment to biblical faith, as members navigate competing spiritual loyalties.
The Kuwaa stand at a spiritually significant moment. With gospel resources available in their language and Evangelical believers present among them, there is real potential for the Kuwaa church to grow in spiritual depth and become a witness to less-reached peoples in Africa.
The Kuwaa face serious physical needs rooted in their geographic isolation. Access to quality healthcare, clean water, and schools remains limited in rural Gbarpolu and Lofa counties. The aftermath of Liberia's civil wars left infrastructure badly damaged, and recovery in remote communities has been slow. Kuwaa families need sustainable agricultural support, literacy programs, and reliable access to basic services that most of the world takes for granted.
Spiritually, the Kuwaa need more workers who can disciple believers, strengthen local churches, and help communities navigate the tension between biblical faith and traditional practices. A complete Bible in the Kuwaa language has not yet been produced, and finishing the work of Scripture translation would be a powerful gift to the community's spiritual formation. Pray that the Evangelical believers among the Kuwaa will deepen in their faith and become an active gospel witness to the unreached peoples living nearby.
Pray for the completion of a full Bible translation in the Kuwaa language so that God's word can speak to every part of life and culture.
Pray that Kuwaa believers will grow in bold, biblically grounded faith and carry the gospel to less-reached peoples in neighboring communities.
Pray for healthcare workers, teachers, and development organizations to bring relief and opportunity to isolated Kuwaa villages.
Pray that the influence of secret societies and spiritual syncretism will diminish as the light of Christ grows brighter among the Kuwaa people.
Scripture Prayers for the Kuwaa, Belle in Liberia.
https://minorityrights.org/country/liberia/
https://www.refworld.org/docid/4954ce5823.html
https://www.everyculture.com/Ja-Ma/Liberia.html
https://www.africabib.org/rec.php-RID=188844236
https://live.bible.is/bible/BLHLBT
https://globalrecordings.net/en/language/blh
https://www.jesusfilm.org/watch/jesus.html/belleh.html
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |


