The village has around 3000 inhabitants, and the majority of families have several children, with an average of 5-6 children per family. The isolated location of the village has harboured a separate language,
Kumzari. The language is a
Southwestern Iranian language that has been influenced by up to 45 languages, including
Arabic,
Larestani,
English and
Hindi.
Relationship with Khasab Most Kumzari families have two houses, one in Kumzar and the second in Khasab. The extreme heat in the summer makes Kumzar almost uninhabitable, so from May to September, most people leave Kumzar to stay in Khasab, where they also help the locals at Khasab harvest dates. In Khasab, the Kumzari are
isolationist, living in their own separate district close to the sea. ==References==