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Pathans of Sindh

Ethnic communities in Sindh


Ethnic communities in Sindh

FieldValue
groupPathans of Sindh
population7-10 million
popplaceShikarpur•Larkana•Kandhkot•Sukkur•Dadu•Karachi•Ghotki, Sindh
langsSindhi • Urdu • Pashto
rels[[File:Star and Crescent.svg15px]] Islam
relatedPashtuns • Pathans of Punjab • Rohilla • Pathans of Gujarat • Pathans of Rajasthan • Pathans of Uttar Pradesh • Pathans of Bihar • Pathans of India

Pashtuns of Sind or Sindhi Pathan (Sindhi: پٺاڻ) are communities of Pashtun descent settled in Sindh and can be referring to Sindhified Pashtun communities. They are living in Sindh for centuries and have adopted the norms and culture of Sindh.

Many bear the tribes Tareen, Naghar, Agha, and Kakar. The vast majority of Sindhi Pathans originate from Quetta and southern Afghanistan, and a few come from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Shikarpur, New Zarkhail, Pir Bux Khan Wandh, Garhi Yasin, and Sultan Kot Shahpur Chakar, whereas others live in other urban, sub-urban, and rural areas of Sindh. The tribes most commonly found in the Sindh region are the Tareen, Muhammadzai, Niazi, Kundi, Miana, Bangash, Yusufzai, Hassan Zai, Mandanr, Lodi, Kakar, Shinwari, Sherwani Orakzai, Sulemankhel Sulemani, Afridi, Khattak, Kakazai, Karlani, Barakzai, Khizerzai, Babar, and the Zamand Pathans.

Moreover, a large minority of Pashto-speaking Pashtuns exist in the cities of Karachi and, to a lesser extent, Interior Sindh, who have migrated after around the 60's and 70's and even a portion of these Pashtuns are Afghan refugees. Also, it's estimated that 30% of the Urdu-speaking Muhajirs of Karachi and Hyderabad make a claim to the ancestry of Pashtuns that mostly assimilated into North Indian culture. They have arrived in the cities after the India-Pakistan partition. Pashto-speaking Pashtuns are highly distinct from ancestrally Pashtun Urdu-speaking Muhajirs as well as ancestrally Pashtun Sindhi-speakers.

Notable people

  • Agha Siraj Durrani, Speaker of the Provincial Assembly of Sindh
  • Nuzhat Pathan, member of the National Assembly of Pakistan
  • Bilal Abbas Khan, actor
  • Sahir Lodhi, actor
  • Shaista Lodhi, doctor, actress, and television host
  • Rafiq Ghaznavi, musician and actor of British Indian era.

References

References

  1. Mehdi, Tahir. (2013-08-15). "The invisible partition of Sindh".
  2. "Pathans in Sindh asked not to take part in rallies".
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