| This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (August 2008) |
| Hindko هندکو |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pronunciation: | [Hindko] | |||
| Spoken in: | Pakistan (N.W.F.P., Punjab) Azad Kashmir; India (Jammu and Kashmir, Punjab) |
|||
| Region: | South Asia | |||
| Total speakers: | — | |||
| Language family: | Indo-European Indo-Iranian Indo-Aryan Northwestern zone Lahnda Hindko |
|||
| Writing system: | Nasta'liq script | |||
| Language codes | ||||
| ISO 639-1: | none | |||
| ISO 639-2: | – | |||
| ISO 639-3: | hnd | |||
|
||||
Hindko (هندکو /Hindkoŭ/), also Hindku, Hinko,[1] or Lahnda[2] , لَیہندا) is an ancient Indo-Aryan language spoken in North Western Pakistan, especially in Hazara, Kohat and Peshawar.[3][4] The literal meaning of the word "Hindko" is "Mountains of the Indus". The word "Hind" is the Persianised reference to the regions associated with the Indus River immediately to the east of Persia and "Ko" means mountains[5]. The word Hindko has also been interpreted to mean the language of Indus mountains.[6] The term is also found in Greek references to the mountainous region in eastern Afghanistan and northern Pakistan as Καύκασος Ινδικός (Caucasus Indicus). The language is spoken in the areas of the North West Frontier Province (including Hazara), Punjab (including Attock), and Azad Kashmir by an estimated 2.2 to 4 million people.[7]
There is no generic name for these people because they belong to diverse ethnicities and tend to identify themselves by the larger families or castes. However the people of the largest group in the districts of Haripur, Abbottabad and Mansehra are sometimes recognised collectively as Hazarawal, named after the defunct Hazara Division that comprised these districts. In Peshawar city they are referred to as "Peshawari" or Hindkowan. The important thing is that the word Hazarawal means the people living in Hazara Distt. and the word Peshawari means the people living in the Distt. Peshawar and it shows the area to which they belongs - collectively the Hindko speaking People living throughout Pakistan had been named as HindkowanNATION in the centuries old books and in the different Gazetteers of Pakistan. Also the research scholars like M/s Mukhtar Ali Nayyer, Khatar Ghaznavi, Sabir Hussain Imdaad, Sheen Shaukat and so many others after research named the Hindko Speaking People as HINDKowan. There are only two Nations in North West Frontier Province and these are PAKHTOON NATION and Hindkowan. The word Pashtoon is hardly two centuries old and came on screen after the inter-marriages of the boys and girls of the Hindkowan and Pukhtoon Nations.
Contents |
During the pre-Buddhist era in present day Pakistan, the language of the masses was refined by the ancient grammarian Pāṇini, who set the rules of a structurally rigorous language called Sanskrit which was used principally for scriptures (analogous to Latin in the Western world). Meanwhile, the vernacular language of the masses, Prakrit developed into many tongues and dialects which spread over the northern parts of South Asia. Hindko is believed to be closely related to Prakrit. Due to the geographic isolation of the regions, it has undergone very little grammatical corruption, but has borrowed considerable vocabulary from its neighbours, in particular Pashto. It shows close affinity to Punjabi and the Lahnda sub-group of Indo-Aryan tongues and can be sub-divided into a northern and southern dialect (the southern dialect spoken in Pakistani Punjab shows some similarity with Siraiki as opposed to Punjabi). This language is very similar to the Mirpuri dialect of Potohari and Hindko and Mirpuri speakers can understand each other very well.
Hindkowan
Like the People living in Lahore are called Lahori, in Multan are called Multani and in PESHAWAR are being called PESHAWARI. The people whose mothers' language is Persian and they are Farsiwan but they know the HINDKO Language and they are working to promote the HINDKO Language they called themselves Hindkowan. Hindkowans are being led by M/s Raza Hamadani and Khatar Ghaznavi as they both were Farsiwans. The People whose mothers' language is Pashto or Pukhto and they are working to promote the Hindko Language they are being called as Hindko Bolnay Walay Pathan by themselves. The Hindko speaking people from Peshawar to Karachi, as a whole, are being called as Hindkowan . The words Hindkowan appears in the centuries old books and Gazetteers of North West Frontier Province, Rawalpindi and Multan also. The research scholars like Khatar Ghazanavi, Mukhtar Ali Nayyer, Sheen Shaukat and Sabir Hussain Imdaad, after laborious research, have also declared the Hindko Speaking People as Hindkowan.
The largest geographically contiguous group of Hindko speakers [Hindkowan Nation] is concentrated in the districts of state Abbottabad, Haripur, Mansehra, Attock, Muzaffarabad and Kaghan valley of Pakistan, while there are a substantial number of geographically isolated speakers of Hindko Language in cities like Peshawar, Mardan, Dera Ismail Khan and Kohat.
People in Hazara tend to associate themselves with the larger families (or caste as it used to be called), having distinct ethnic roots. The more prominent among them are Abbasi,([Qureshies)] Awan, Karlal, Jadoon,Tanoli, Tareen, etc. People who speak Hindko are referred to by some academics as Punjabi Pathans probably because of the many Pashtun tribes, for example Jadoons,Tanolis and Tahirkhelis, who settled in places like Hazara, adopted Hindko Language and its Culture as their first language and gained political power in these areas during the British rule, and also because of many ethnic Pushtun people who speak Hinkdo Language as their first language in Peshawar and Kohat. The Hindko speaking people as a whole Hindkowan Nation living in major cities Peshawar, Kohat, Nowshera,Abbottabad, Harpur, Mansehra , Batagram and so on.
In most Hindko-speaking areas, speakers of Pashto live in the same or neighbouring communities (although this is less true in Abbottabad and Kaghan Valley than elsewhere). In the mixed areas, many people speak both languages. The relationship between Hindko and Pashto is not one of stable bilingualism. In the northeast, Hindko is the dominant language both in terms of domain of usage and in terms of the number of speakers, whereas in the southwest, Pashto seems to be advancing in those same areas.
Gandhara Hindko Board (Registered) is the most active organisation that has been offering great services for the preservation and promotion of Hindko language and Hindkowan culture since 1993. The board was launched way back in year 1993 to preserve and promote Hindko language-- the second main lanuage of Gandhara province (officially known as North-West Frontier Province) of Pakistan. It brings out two regular publications-- "Hindkowan" and "The Gandhara Voice" and a number of occasional publications. The board is headed by Professor Dr Zahoor Ahmad Awan of Peshawar city.The board has to its credit first Hindko dictionary and several other books on a variety of topics. With head office in Peshawar, the organisation has regional offices in other cities of the province where Hindko language is spoken and understood. The organisation has arranged a number of mega events to raise awareness among the Hindkowans about the importance of their language and culture. The board seeks respect for and due attention to all the languages spoken in Gandhara province and has a leading role in marking the World Mother Language Day in Peshawar, capital of Gandhara Province.The organisation has its own website-- www.hindko.pk.However, it must be remembered that we intentionally ignore the poets and writers who are residing out side Peshawar.We do not even want to mention their names any where.
Idara e Faroghe Hindko [Regd.] Peshawar Pakistan is another worth-mentioning body that is rendering valuable services to promote the Hindko language. Riffat Sawatti and Aurangzeb Ghaznavi are the heart and soul of this Organization. The Idara has published the first Hindko translation of the Holy Quran by Haider Zaman Haider. A monthly Magazine name Faroogh is also published regularly from Peshawar under supervision of Aurangzeb Ghaznavi. In Karachi Dr.Syed Mehboob is also working for the promotion of Hindko language.
8. 1974: Phonlogy of Verbal Phrase in Hindko,Dr Elahi Bkahsh Akhtar Awan published by Idara-e-Farogh-e-Hindko Peshawar in 1992. 9. 2004: Hindko Sautiyat,Dr E.B.A. Awan, published by Gandhara Hindko Board Peshawar in 2004. 10. 2005: Hindko Land a thesis presented by Dr E.B.A. Awan at the World Hindko Conference at Peshawar in 2005. 11. *1980: "Hindko in Kohat and Peshawar." Bulletin of SOAS, 1980, 482-510 12. *1978: "Rival linguistic identities in Pakistan Panjab." Rule, protest, identity: aspects of modern South Asia (ed. P. Robb & D. Taylor), 213-34. London: Curzon 13. *1986: Addleton, Jonathan S., "The Importance of Regional Languages in Pakistan," al'Mushir, Vol. 28, No. 2 (1986), pp. 55-80. 14. * 2000: According to the last census held in 2000(prob) by the Govt. of Paksitan, the total population of the Hindkowan Nation(Hindko speakers)of the country (from Peshawar to Karachi) was declared to be 49.50 %. 16. * "PUKKHTO OR PUSHTO LANGUAGE" [1867] by Henry Walter Bellew 17. * "Tareekh e Peshawar" [1869] by Munshi Gopaal Daas 18. * Gazetteer of N.W.F.P. 1905 19. * Gazetteer of N.W.F.P. 1930 20. * "Pakistani Adab Men Zubaan ka Masla" by Dr. Abo ul Lais Siddiqui 21. * "Muaaraf e Saraiki" by Syed Noor Ali Zamin Hussaini 22. * "Hindustani Lisaaniat" by Dr. Syed Muhyyuddin Qadri 23. * "Aariaie Zubaanen" by Prof. SudheshVar Verma 24. * "Al-Ateeq Al-Ateeq" by Abdul Hamid Ateeq Fikri 25. * "Hindko Da Muqadma" by Muhammad Zia ud Din 26. * "Military and Politics in Pakistan" by Hasan Askari Rizvi 27. * "Punjabi Zuban o Adab Ki Tareekh" by Inaam ul Haq Javed 28. * "Deeni Adab" by Syeda Kulsoom Akhtar 29. * "Lisaaniat" by Prof Aashiq Raheel 30. * "Ashab ul Ras" by Syed Noor Ali Zamin Hussaini 31. * Gazetteer of Multan 1902 32. * "Hindko Zuban o Adab Ka Tareekhi Jaeza" by Sheen Shaukat 33. * "Urdu Zuban ka Maakhiz - Hindko" by Khatir Ghaznavi 34. * "Agar ab bhi no Jagay to---" by Maulana Shams Naveed Usmani 34. * "Arab Hind Taalaqaat" by Syed Sulman Nadvi 35. * So many Magazines of Quarterly WARIS Multan, PUNJABI ADAB Lahore, Monthly LEHRAN Lahore. 36. * so many brouchures, articles and other literature
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
No comments have been added.