The Gorowa, also known as Fyomi are a Cushitic ethnic group and Iraqw community inhabiting the Manyara and Dodoma regions in Tanzania.
They speak the Gorowa language as a mother tongue, which belongs to the South Cushitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family.
Estimating the Gorowa population is difficult, as ethnic affiliation or language is not recorded in the national census.
[3] Traditional Gorowa belief systems see the natural world as sacred, and a suite of indigenous land management practices, inspired by myth, have developed around this view.
Gorowa rituals and social gatherings often take place in forests and sacred groves carefully preserved for these purposes, that large trees (especially ficus) are protected as dwellings of rain-bringing sprits, and various unsustainable land use practices were prohibited.