Kakawira Erotic

Homeland

El Salvador (Morazán)

Region

Central America

About Kakawira People

The Kakawira (also called Cacaopera, after the principal Kakawira town) are an Indigenous people of Morazán Department in eastern El Salvador — approximately 6,000 self-identified per the 2007 DIGESTYC census, concentrated in Cacaopera, San Simón, and surrounding villages. The Kakawira language (also called Cacaopera) is part of the Misumalpan family, related to Miskito and Tawahka of the Honduran-Nicaraguan Mosquitia and distinct from Mesoamerican languages — making the Kakawira linguistically more akin to northern South American Indigenous source populations than to other Salvadoran Indigenous peoples. The language is now considered extinct as a first language but receives some revitalization attention.

Typical Kakawira Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Skin tone is Fitzpatrick III-IV with copper-bronze undertone. Hair is uniformly straight, uniformly black to very dark brown. Facial features include moderately broad nasal bases, full lips, and prominent cheekbones. Phenotype distribution reflects the long Indigenous American demographic presence with limited admixture; subtle population-level differences from neighboring Mesoamerican-language-family Pipil-Nahua and Lenca populations are detectable in genetic studies but not strongly visible phenotypically.

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