Monday 30 September 2013

HISTORY OF DILZAK AND DURRANI

HISTORY OF DILZAK AND DURRANI:

Durrani:

Durrani (Persian: درانی) or Abdali (Persian: ابدالی) tribe is one of the two largest Pashtun tribes of Afghanistan and is also found in large numbers in western Pakistan. They are estimated to be roughly 20% of the population of Afghanistan and number around 7 million there with another 1-2 million found in Pakistan and hundreds of thousands also live in northeast Iran. The Durrani are the most "Persianized" of Pashtun tribes, often bilingual in Dari (or Afghan Persian), as well as arguably being among the most urbanized and educated of the Pashtuns in Afghanistan.

The Durrani have been prominent leaders, as the royal family of Afghanistan is derived from the tribe, and a substantial number of Durrani are bureaucrats and public officials, as well as businessmen and merchants. The particular dialect of Pashto favored by the Durrani tends to be tinged with a slight Persian inflection and is considered the more genteel and urbane dialect, often viewed by Pashtuns overall as the more 'proper' dialect, as opposed to the rougher "Pukhtu" version favored in the north and by most of the Pashtuns of Pakistan. The Durrani, like most other Pashtuns, are Muslim and are mostly of the Hanafi Sunni Islamic sect and, like most Pashtuns, continue to follow the Pashtun honor code known as Pashtunwali.


A brief history

The Durrani are, like other Pashtuns, primarily descendants of Aryan invaders of the Iranian variant (as well as the various invaders, such as the Greeks, and migrants who have passed through Afghanistan over the centuries) and probably arose in what is today southern Afghanistan near the Suleiman Mountains at some point between 2000 BCE to 1500 BCE. The Durrani were known as the Abdali since Islamic times and frequently lived under Persian rule in ancient times. They emerged near the city of Kandahar and were most likely Pagan, Buddhist and Zoroastrian in religion prior to the coming of Muslim Arabs who began the conversion of the local population to Islam. The Abdalis appear to have begun to spread out during the early Middle Ages along with other Pashtun tribes and came to inhabit most of what is today Afghanistan by 1000 CE at the latest. Often affiliated with the Persians of Iran, some rose to upper ranks of the Persian military during the reign of the Safavids and gained particular prominence under the rule of Nadir Shah. One of his prominent generals was a young Pashtun Abdali chieftain named Ahmad Shah Abdali who would later make himself the king of Afghanistan.

The name 'Durrani' or 'Durr-i-Durran' means the 'pearl of pearls' in Persian and was given to the Abdali tribe in 1747 when Ahmad Shah Abdali united the Pashtun tribes following a loya jirga and changed his own name to Ahmad Shah Durrani when he became the king of Afghanistan and founded the Durrani Empire. Since this period, the kings of Afghanistan have been of Durrani extraction. The Durrani were the most divided Pashtun tribe during the rule of the Ghilzai-dominated Taliban, with some having openly opposed them. The Durrani are the politically dominant Pashtun group in Afghanistan as the current President of Afghanistan is Hamid Karzai who is of the Durrani sub-group known as the Popalzay and has close ties to the former king of Afghanistan Zahir Shah, another member of the Durrani tribe.


Current social conditions

Like most Pashtun groups, the Durrani can be sub-divided into smaller clans and subtribes (such as the aforementioned Popalzai) which will still acknowledge each other as kinsmen. The literacy rate of the Durrani is the highest of all of the Pashtun tribes in Afghanistan and hovers around 25%. Perhaps the most liberal of the Pashtun groups, the Durrani are currently at the forefront of rebuilding war-torn Afghanistan and are quickly filling the ranks of the military and are valued as city officials and policemen in cities such as Kandahar and Kabul. The Durrani in Pakistan are largely refugees, but many have become prominent merchants in Quetta and Peshawar. The Durrani continue to live in close proximity to other Afghans and culturally overlap in many ways with the Tajiks with whom they often share more cultural and socio-economic traits in comparison to the more tribal Pashtuns such as the Ghilzai, who are the other major Pashtun group in Afghanistan. The Durrani are part of Sarbans, a Pashtun tribal group.
DILAZAK:
TheDilazak 17:02, 3 January 2007 (UTC)==DILAZAK-AN AFGHAN TRIBE ==

It is an Afghan Tribe which descended into the valley of Peshawar (Pakistan) in Smanyid's dynasty from 'Suleman Range’ between 750 AD and 850 AD. They were the First of all Afghans and were Muslims by that time. They expelled or subdued local people of Swati, Degan and Tirahi castes. By the time of Mehmood Ghaznavi, they had reached up to Sind River (Also called Abaseen & Neelaab. They participated in Mehmood Ghaznavi's campaigns in large numbers under their leader Malik Yahya. Later they extended up to present day Hassan Abdal (Near Taxila) and towards north up to Abbott Abad. Around 1520 AD, another Afghan Tribe Yousafzi was expelled from Kabul (Afghanistan) by the uncle of Mughal Emperor Zaheeruddin Muhammad Babur, Mirza ulugh Beg. The Yousafzi's migrated to Peshawar valley and sought help from The Dilazak which was granted to them by The Dilazak. Later on relation between the two Tribes deteriorated and a long war ensued. Ultimately Yousafzi along with few other tribes (Including Utmanzi-Cousins of The Dilazak) were able to push away The Dilazak east of Sind River under their leader Malik Ahmed Khan after 20 Years. Tragedy of The Dilazak did not end here. The Mughals had fluctuating relations with the Afghans. To their hard luck, The Dilazak were on the eastern side of Sind River and thus totally accessible to a properly trained huge Mughal Army. Around 1607 AD, Mughal Emperor Jahangir (Muhammad Saleem) once visiting Kabul in Afghanistan, left His large Army under the command of Zaffar Khan Koka son of Zain Khan Koka and ordered him to wipe out The Dilazak and arrest the leaders of Khhattar Tribe (Non-Afghan).Zain Khan Koka did it well and deported 0.1 million (1,00,000) families of The Dilazak to Lahore for onward dispersal in whole of India. Only few families of The Dilazak survived from this tragic event. These families still survive. Today they are found in Districts Abbott Abad, Haripur, Charsadda, Swat, Peshawar (All in North West Frontier Province) and Attock (In Punjab Province). They are in districts Shahjehan Pur & also in village Shahjahanpur District(Meerut)on Meerut Garh Road(Uttar Perdesh), Jullandhar (Indian Punjab), Bari Town (Rajasthan) and Dilazi & other villages in Andhera Perdesh-old Deccan), Western Bengal and few other regions of India. References to this article are more than 100 English books and same no of Urdu/Pashto and Persian books. However, read 'The Pathans" by Sir Olaf Caroe, 'Baburnama' by Anitta S.Beverage, 'Taareekh-e-Khanjehani Wa Makhzan-e- Afghani' by Nematullah Hurvi etc. If you want to know anything more about this Karrani (Karlani) Tribe, Send an E mail to me at dilazak1@yahoo.com

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