[As members of the Pakistani community, please help spread this message to inform the world of the hidden yet charming community of people whose existence is doubtful in the coming decades. Visit & see them in Pakistan before they are gone. Hurry up before all their beautiful women get married! Luckily, they belong to one of the few tribal communities in Pakistan where girls are free to choose their life partners without any influence from the male members in the family. (Watch Video here)]
Forwarded By Satish Dewan
The
Kalash with their unique culture, traditions, rituals, values, festivals and
attire are not be found anywhere else in the world. Kalash are considered ‘infidels'
and their habitations are known as ‘Kafirastan' — the land of infidels —
amongst the local Pakistani community. The Kalash valleys are located in
Chitral in the northern district of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province
bordering Afghanistan.
Several historians have written about the Kalash and most of them have linked them to descendants of the army of Alexander the Great since many of their rituals, customs and traditions are indicative of the way of life of the ancient Greeks.
Several historians have written about the Kalash and most of them have linked them to descendants of the army of Alexander the Great since many of their rituals, customs and traditions are indicative of the way of life of the ancient Greeks.
They
lead a centuries-old primitive way of life with a religion which has no name, no
written book or prophets and are now concentrated in three valleys which are
called ‘Kalash gooni' among the Kalash and the ‘Kafir Kalash' (land of infidels)
amongst others.
But
it is not just the place which fascinates, also the women of Kalash — who
legend says are part-fairy and part-human because of their ethereal beauty. Local
people say the Kalash woman can make a man lose his religion. As the story goes,
when a Kalash woman drinks water, you can see it streaming down her throat. Yet
they are considered impure in their own community; they are also called "whiter
than the white".
The
Kalash feel threatened by the outside world as their number are dwindling with
every passing day. Many Kalash are accepting Islam and the influence of other
cultures. With more members of the community getting educated, people are also
reluctant to follow their primitive traditions and rituals.
The
tribe does not face any threat from militants but the pressure is more from
members who are embracing Islam. "Though, no one forces them to convert, they
are under constant pressure from their own converts to quit their way of living,"
There
are less than 4,000 Kalash left. 3,554 to be precise when the last count was
done in 2009
As
members of the Pakistani community, please help spread this message to inform
the world of the hidden yet charming community of people whose existence is
doubtful in the coming decades. Visit & see them in Pakistan before they are gone. Hurry up before all
their beautiful women get married! Luckily, they belong to one of the few
tribal communities in Pakistan where girls are free to choose their life
partners without any influence from the male members in the family.
*
THE PAKISTANI TRIBE THAT DARES TO DEFY THE FUNDAMENTALISTS
[The role of women in Kalash society is perhaps the most obvious aspect that separates their culture from their Muslim neighbours. Where Muslim women in the region generally remain indoors or hidden from public view, their Kalash counterparts are conspicuous in the fields working alongside their men. During the festivals that celebrate the various summer harvests and preparations for winter, it is not unusual to find Kalasha women drinking apricot wine and dancing in public with males that are neither their husband nor family. Although some marriages are arranged by families, it is perfectly acceptable for Kalasha women to choose their husbands. If they are treated unkindly during the marriage the women are expected to leave the house and take a lover.]
Give or take the occasional advertising hoarding or glitzy film from
But
in the remote Chitral region nestled high in the Hindu Kush mountain range are the last remnants of a
tribe where the women walk unveiled in bright red and black dresses. Lavishly
decorated with orange bead necklaces and colourful hats made from cowrie shells,
they dance in public and are often free to marry and take lovers. They are the
Kalasha, one of Pakistan 's only remaining indigenous non-Muslim
communities and a remarkable living throwback to a pre-Islamic era.
Yet
according to the Kalasha themselves, their unique way of life is under attack
like never before. Thanks to rising extremism among a small minority of
Pakistanis and the growing appeal of populist orthodox mullahs who espouse
sharia law and Taliban-like austerity, the Kalasha are increasingly in the
firing line.
"We've
always been called kafirs (infidels) but most people simply left us alone,"
says Azam Kalash, one of the few members of his 3,500-strong community who
managed to go to university and now campaigns for his tribe's welfare. "Now
we are deemed enemy number one. Particularly after September 11 and the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq , the missionaries and mullahs are determined
to see us wiped out."
Isolated
from the outside world by the remoteness of their valleys and the heavy
Himalayan snows that block the mountain passes in winter, the Kalash somehow
managed to survive successive waves of Muslim invaders and missionaries that
pushed back the pre-Islamic Hindu, Buddhist and pagan tribes who once filled
the fertile plains of the Indus valley.
Until
last century, very few outsiders had ever made it as far as the three valleys
of Rumbur, Bumboret and Birir where the Kalasha now live. Even today the
valleys are only accessible by 4x4 along a tortuous road perilously carved into
the shifting mountain side. But 20 years ago, following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the rise of the religious mujahedin, things
began to change.
"For
a long time the Kalasha lived in total isolation," says Cecil Chaudhury, General
Secretary of the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance. "I remember going there
in the 1950s with a mountaineering expedition and they were blissfully happy
living in their own distinct social system. But with the mujahedin came the
missionaries and the Kalasha were always going to be an easy group to target. Now
the extremists are back."
Although
the fighters have largely disappeared from the Chitral region, the Kalasha are
now outnumbered in their own villages by converts and outsiders. During the
Soviet war in Afghanistan , the notoriously brutal Afghan warlord Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar used the valley as his hideout and many believe he has returned to
the region to continue his fight against Nato forces and the Afghan government.
After
a 10-year lull, the missionaries are returning and many fear that if orthodox
preachers, such as those who, until recently, ran Islamabad 's Red Mosque, continue to increase their
appeal, the country's last non-Muslim tribe may sink into oblivion.
No
Kalasha would mean no Zonor Bibi. The mother of five sits on the front porch of
her mud-walled house perched high above the swollen glacial river that roars
through the heart of her village. It is harvest time and apricots lie drying in
the summer sun eyed by her eight-year-old daughter Walena.
Zonor's
husband has just set off on the daily three-hour walk to the grazing meadows
that lie high above the village but that does not stop Zonor from welcoming
outsiders with open arms, an act that would be unthinkable to her Muslim
neighbours.
Deeply
proud of her culture, she bursts into laughter when asked how long it takes to
make the iconic cowrie shell hats that all Kalasha women wear.
"They
take us months," she says. "It is important to continue our
traditions so not to anger our spirits and god."
Kalasha
believe that failure to practice their ancient traditions has profound
religious implications and can bring disaster on the village which may explain
why their dress and distinct practices have managed to survive against such
odds.
The
role of women in Kalash society is perhaps the most obvious aspect that
separates their culture from their Muslim neighbours. Where Muslim women in the
region generally remain indoors or hidden from public view, their Kalash
counterparts are conspicuous in the fields working alongside their men. During
the festivals that celebrate the various summer harvests and preparations for
winter, it is not unusual to find Kalasha women drinking apricot wine and
dancing in public with males that are neither their husband nor family. Although
some marriages are arranged by families, it is perfectly acceptable for Kalasha
women to choose their husbands. If they are treated unkindly during the
marriage the women are expected to leave the house and take a lover.
Such
comparative sexual and social freedom has led to the false but commonly held
perception among many lowland Pakistanis that the tribe's women are sexually
promiscuous. But while Kalasha men do seem to extend a greater level of
physical and social freedom to their other halves, the lives of their women-folk
are still strictly regimented.
To
the Kalash the world is divided into two states, onjesta (pure, sacred) and
pragata (impure, profane). Women are considered pragata, particularly during
menstruation and childbirth where they are exiled to special huts away from the
village. Only once they have purified themselves can they return to the tribe. Certain
fields and shrines considered pure and sacred to the community are also out of
bounds for the tribe's women.
Such
peculiarly distinct customs have fascinated anthropologists, linguists and
travellers alike for centuries, not just because the survival of the Kalasha in
a sea of Islam is so unusual but because no one is sure
exactly where they came from.
Their
tongue, like many of the dialects spoken in the Hindu Kush range, is closest to the Dardic branch of
the Indo-European languages of Central
Asia . But Kalash
oral history tells a different story, that they are descended from Shalak Shah,
one of Alexander the Great's generals whose armies conquered as far as the Indus river before turning back towards Europe . Although blond hair and blue eyes are
common amongst the Kalash, recent genetic testing has suggested that they may
be an aboriginal group that are, in fact, indigenous to the area.
But
how did the Kalasha manage to cling on to their distinct polytheistic pagan
traditions in an area renowned for its particularly orthodox brand of Islam?
"I
think they were just lucky," says Siraj Ul Mulk, a direct descendant of
the Sunni Muslim royal family that once ruled the Chitral region until they
ceded to Pakistan in the 1960s.
"Despite
their orthodox appearance, Chitralis have always been very relaxed about the
Kalasha and other minorities. The missionaries always tend to come from outside."
Walking through the dusty fort that his father, the Mehtar of Chitral, once
used as his summer palace, Mr Ul Mulk also offers another explanation for why
the Kalasha of Pakistan remained unharmed: India 's partition. "Under British partition
we were lucky enough to be placed on the Pakistani side," he says. "If
we'd ended up in Afghanistan I doubt the Kalasha would have survived."
Two
hundred years ago Afghanistan was also home to numerous Kalasha tribes, known
locally as the Red Kafirs, but they were annihilated at the end of the 19th
century. After receiving a bloody nose in two disastrous conflicts with the
Afghans, the British simply stood by as the founding father of modern Afghanistan , Abdur Rahman Khan, systematically forced
the non-Muslim tribes in the east of the country to convert at the point of a
sword. A small number of Afghan Kalasha managed to flee towards Chitral and can
still be seen in the upper valleys wearing their distinctive red dresses but
all Kalasha are fully aware of the threat that extremist beliefs pose to their
very survival.
That
the Kalash are frightened of the current climate in Pakistan is testament to how seriously they take the
current threats. They survived the marauding armies of Tamerlaine, the
religious zeal of Abdur Rahman and even the anti-Soviet mujahedin. But now, like
many of Pakistan 's religious and ethnic minorities, they once
again feel unprotected and vulnerable.
@ The Independent
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This article was published by The Independent but the URL is dead now. It is published here also >