Thursday, January 19, 2023

The Pre-Muslim Ancestors of Pakistanis and the pre-1947 non-Muslim population

 - Before the advent of Islam, the majority of people in the region of Pakistan practised Buddhism, Zoroastrianism (and its derivatives like Mithraism, Saurism, Manichaeism, etc.), Animism (nature worship), Paganism (Hellenic and other deities), and Shamanism.

- Harappans ate beef, buried their dead, and had no "Hindu" temples/idols/deities/texts.

- RigVedic Aryans forbade idolatry, ate beef, sacrificed cows, had no caste system, and were culturally closer to ancient Iranic Avestan peoples.

- Under Persian rule, Zoroastrianism started to spread.

- Similarly, Greek Paganism (Hellenism) spread under the Greeks.

- Mauryan Ashoka introduced Buddhism.

- Buddhism was later also propagated along with Zoroastrianism, Animism, Shamanism, and Hellenism under the Bactrians, Sakas/Scythians, Parthians, and Kushans for many centuries.

- Hephthalites/White Huns were not very fond of Buddhism but it still remained popular among the masses.

- The Hellenized-Iranianized Brahmanist and Shaivite converts were a minority in Pakistan.

- Kafirs of Kalasha, the only people in Pakistan who have retained their ancient religion are an example of the non-Hindu religions practised by the ancestors of Pakistanis.

- Many different Gangetic holy texts call Pakistan region and its people as "outlandish," "sinful," "outcaste," "mlechas," etc.

- The pre-Muslim ancestors of most Pakistanis never called themselves "Hindu" nor practised any religion called "Hinduism." Thus, the pre-Muslim ancestors of most Pakistanis had nothing to do with "Hinduism."

- The fact is there is barely any trace of "Hindu" past in Pakistan region yet there are plentiful of Buddhist and other non-Vedic archeological remains in Pakistan region. The very few "Hindu" temples found in Pakistan region cannot be dated past the 9th century AD.

- When Muslims invaded Pakistan region the majority of its people were Buddhists (as testified in Chachnama), so much so that the word for idol became "budh".

- The words/terms of Hindu/Hinduism are recent constructs. It were the Muslim invaders (Ghorids) who for the first time in history imposed the foreign term Hindu on the many different peoples and religions of South Asia. The term Hinduism was given by the British colonialists. Not a single pre-Muslim/British era Vedic, Brahman, Buddhist, Jain, or any other South Asian scriptures/inscriptions mention the words Hindu/Hinduism. Similarly, Sanata Dharma was a term invented in the 19th century AD by Gangetic Brahmans in their desperate attempt to replace the Muslim/British terms Hindu/Hinduism.

- Terms such as Hindu/Hinduism/Sanata Dharma are artificial in nature because of its foreign origins and contradictions in its beliefs/practices. Just because we call all indigenous peoples of the Americas or their descendents as "Native Americans" it does not make them one people as they have many racial, subracial, religious, linguistic, cultural, and historical differences. 

By the same token, if the Ghorid Muslim invaders imposed the foreign word/term "Hindu" on the non-Muslim peoples of South Asia it does not mean that they were one people since there were/are countless different religions, cultures, histories, languages, and races in South Asia.

- Also, by the time of Ghorid invasions (12th century AD), Pakistan region was already mostly Muslim. Most of Pakistan region was a part of Arab empires previously (later also ruled by local Muslim kingdoms). Arabs never called them Hindus. So the Ghorid imposition of the artificial term Hindu was mostly for present day north India for their ruled non-Muslim subjects.

- A significant minority of Pakistanis are descendents of Arab, Iranian, Turkic/Mughal and Afghan invaders/migrants, who just like the rest of the ancestors of Pakistanis were Zoroastrians, Animists, Pagans, Shamanists, and Buddhists before Islam.

- It was mostly due to Islamic Sufism that the ancestors of Pakistanis converted en masse to Islam.

- Pre-1947 region of present-day Pakistan only had less than 15% non-Muslims, out of which half were Sikhs. Many of the "Hindus" were actual migrants from the region of present day India during the British rule. For example, most of the "Hindus" in pre-1947 Karachi had migrated from Gujarat and Rajasthan during British rule because of Karachi's economic boom then. The other remaining "Hindus" of local origin were converts due to Shankarcharya's missionaries from India region during post- 9th century AD period.

- The pre-1947 non-Muslim population in present day region of Pakistan had: 6% "Hindu" and 10% Sikh in W. Punjab, 9% "Hindu" and 2% Sikh in Sindh, 1% "Hindu" and 2% Sikh in NWFP, and 2% "Hindu" in Baluchistan.

- According to the UN and other respected organizations, 12 million is the total estimate of migrations from both India and Pakistan (East Pakistan included) of Muslims, "Hindus" and Sikhs combined at the time of independence. So if "Hindus" and Sikhs are taken as 50% of that figure (although there were much more migrations of "Hindus"/Sikhs than Muslims) of population, that would make about 6 million "Hindus"-Sikhs in both East and West Pakistan that migrated to India. 

Now, we know that there was almost an equal (50% each) number of migrants leaving East and West Pakistan (although"Hindu" population in East Pakistan was much higher), that would make the "Hindu"-Sikh population in West Pakistan about 3 million. Now we know that West Pakistan's population at that time was about 25-30 million which makes the total "Hindu"-Sikh population about 10-12% (+ add the current 1.5%) in West Pakistan before partition. Also, it is estimated that out of the non-Muslim population in West Pakistan, +40% were Sikhs, so that leaves Hindus with even lesser numbers. We know that Sikhs do not consider themselves as "Hindus" and some of them have been fighting for independence from India. 



A Shaman in the Hunza Valley, Northern Pakistan drinking blood from a beheaded goat.

Shaman from the Hunza Valle, Northern Pakistan y performing a dance. Probably ritualistic.


Another Shaman form the Hunza Valley, Northern Pakistan performing dance.

  Shaman in the Hunza Valley, Northern Pakistan playing a flute.


Kalash ritualistic dance from the Chitral Valley, Northern Pakistan

 

 ------------Article contributed by Kamran Bhutt

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