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The land Hazarajat» |
The habitat of Hazara nation is usually knows as the Hararajat, this is the
land, which used to be known as Paropamizan or Paropamisus. Besides it common
name, Hazarajat. It has also been referred to as Hazaristan and Barbaristan.
The historical background of Hazarajat is almost nonexistent. However, the passing
of the lands surrounding this mountainous region from one ruler to another gives
us an idea about the history of the Hararajat. About six centuries before Christ,
the land of most of the modern-day Afghanistan was captured by Persona Emperor,
Darius I. Bactria, the present of day of Balkh became the capital of the kingdom.
After the three centuries of Persian rule, the Greeks under their king, Alexander
the Great, once again overran this land. The Greeks were about to establish
a dependant mini-Greek kingdom of Bactria wit hits capi9tal of Balkh. The Greek
lettered petrographies found in different parts of Hazarajat leads us to believe
that it was part of the Greek kingdom.
The most of the present day Hazarajat came under the medieval kingdom of Zabulistan
which according to LeStrange, include the whole of the great mountainous district
of the upper waters of the Helmand and the Qandahar (i.e. Arghandab) rivers,
to the Arabs this land was also known as Zabulistan, a term of vague affliction.
Discoveries of Professor Bivar in the Jaghuri and Uruzgan district of southern
Hazarajat leave no doubt that Hazarajat was indeed in the heart of Zabulistan,
a kingdom ruled by the Mihiraluka dynasty around 500 A.D.
Before the introduction of Islam in the present day Afghanistan, the land was
ruled by small dynasties. While Kabul was governed by Hindu Shahi, the regions
of Qandahar, Ghor and Zamindawar were ruled by Buddhist Kushans, Hazarajat was
believed to be governed by the king named Babar Shah, whose capital's ruin at
Chel Burj still exists in the Yak Aoland region of northwestern Hazarajat. These
Kushan kingdoms were destroyed by the ruler of Saffarid dynasty, who ruled the
region during 861-910 A.D. though it is a common belief among the Hazaras that
Babar Shah was defeated by their spiritual leader Ali there is of course no
truth in such belief as Ali never came to this land. The Hindu Shahi king of
Kabul was defeated by the Arabs under the command of Arab governor of Sistan,
but he and his family continued to rule Kabul as the vassals of the Umayyid
Caliphs from 661-750.
During the reign of Abbasid Caliphs of Baghdad, a Central Asian Dynasty of Samanid
who ruled from their capital of Bokhara during the period of 819-1005 ruled
most of the present-day Afghanistan. It was during the Samanid rule that the
way was paved for the establishment of a Turkish dynasty, the Ghaznavids of
Ghazni. Subuktagin established the Ghaznavid dynasty in 994, which was glorified
by his son, Mahmood of Ghazni. During Mahmood?s rule, an independent king of
Ghor who was overthrown by Mahmood in 1002 ruled Hazarajat. The Saljuks, who
mastered Persia and Anatolia (Eastern Turkey, displaced the Ghaznavids. One
of the great rulers of the Seljuk dynasty was Sultan Sinjir who ruled the region
from 1095-1157, with his capital at Khorasan. The Ghorids who, rising from Ghor,
destroyed Ghazni and established an empire stretching from heart to Ajmir, in
India, followed Seljuk?s. The Ghorid, according to Dupree, was possible one
of the last of the Kushans; the Ghorid dynasty lasted from about two centuries
from 1000-1215. Khwarzam shah replaced the Ghorids, the rulers of the Khiva
Oasis in Transoxiana, who by 1217 had created a Turco-Persaon state that included
the whole of Afghanistan. The empire disintegrated when Chengiz Khan attacked
it in1220. Chengiz Khan was followed by his grandson, Halaku Khan who, after
conquering the region south of river Oxus, established a Mangolian dynasty of
Persian Ilkhanids, while most of the Hazarajat remained a cantonment for the
Chaghatian armies marching towards India, it remained permanently a part of
the Ilkhanid northeastern province of the Khurasan. At the downfall of Ilkhanid
dynasty of the Hazaras achieved their independence, and most of Hazarajat remained
a free country until 1893 when the Afghans finally occupied it.
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The HAZARAJAT BOUNDARIES» |
Hazarajat never had true and specific borders, but whenever the Hazaras came in
contact wit the dwelling of non-Hazara tribes, i.e., at the ethnic gray line,
those places where considered to the boundaries of Hazarajat. According to the
recently published maps of Afghanistan by Humlum, Dullin, Dupree, Ferdinand, and
especially maps published by the War Office, United States Army, Washington, MC.
The Hazarajat lies roughly between 600 and 680 East-West and 330 and 350 North-south
covering about 15,000 square miles, it stretches from the east about a distance
of 50 miles of west Kabul. I.e., in the region of Unai Kotal-Maidan, the west
nears the Chakcharan in Ghorat. Although Koh-e Baba is considered the northern
limit of Hazarajat, the border stretches farther north, in the region of Dara-e
Yousuf, Yak Aolang, and east of Bamiyan. To the south, Hazarajat's boundaries
stretch down to the foothills of Ghazni, Muqor and just north of Qandahar. Thus
Hazarajat of today includes the western extremity of the Hindu Kush girdle of
mountain valleys immediately bordering to the southwest, north, and northeast,
on the original Tajik areas, Besides the Hazarajat proper, small groups of Hazaras
also live in Badakhshan, Mazar-e Sharif, Afghan Turkistan, Qataghan and most of
the urban areas, especially Kabul,, Ghazni, Heart, etc. outside Afghanistan large
number of Hazara live in Pakistan and Iran, which will be discussed in separate
chapter.
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COMMUNICATION AND MOUNTAIN
PASSES» |
Because of the rocky nature of Hazarajat, communication between its valleys is
extremely difficult. People have to travel a long distance through the narrow
passes just to visit a village a few miles away. This mountains character of the
land has not only isolated the Hazaras from their non-Hazara neighbors, but also
kept them away from each other.
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HAZARAJAT» |
"The
area known as Hazarajat comprises Bamiyan province and parts of adjacent provinces.
The exactly boundaries are open to debate, but for the purpose of this study are
taken to be those of the old Shura area. This comprises the districts of Shebar,
Bamiyan, Panjao, Waras, Yakawlang (Bamiyan province); Balkhab (Jowzjan); Dar-e-Souf
(Samanghan); Lal o Sari Jangal (Ghor); Dai Kundi, Sharistan (Uruzgan); Malistan,
Jaghori, Nawor (Ghazni); Behsud I and Behsud II (Wardak). Although it would be
possible to argue for a historically larger concept of Hazarajat, all of these
districts would be generally recognized as being part of Hazarajat and so this
definition fits with agencies' operational realities. The area so defined also
includes all of the poorest Hazara districts.
Conflict and inability of the population to feed itself means that population movements, both temporary and permanent, have long been a feature of Hazarajat. Currently, there are three main types of population movement in Hazarajat: migration out, mainly in search of work; returnees from Iran, usually at least to some extent forced; and IDPs, caused mainly by the conflict. The line between voluntary migration and forced displacement is not always clear in practice, especially when considering population movements caused by food shortages.
The 1992-4 fighting in Kabul in some ways benefited Hazarajat, as educated people fled the city for safer places and whilst some went to Quetta, Iran, and even further a field, a small educated group came back to Hazarajat, where they provide the core of professional staff for many agencies. Fighting in Mazar in 1997 and 1998 brought more IDPs, as did the fighting in Bamiyan in 1998. Most recently, in May 1999, the fighting and destruction in Bamiyan town and surrounding villages sent terrified families fleeing to the hills. Many came through Yakawlang and their stories precipitated a wave of IDPs from there also, although these were not as desperate as the Bamiyan IDPs as they were at least able to take things with them. At that time Solidarites recorded a total of 13,032 families, or 89% of the population, leaving Bamiyan. Of these, 5,615 went to Behsud and 1,987 to the mountains of Koh-i-Baba. Others went to Pul-i-Khumri, Kamard, Kabul and even further a field. The weather at that time was still very cold and Solidarities recorded that 155 children died of cold and 78 women and old people died of hunger and cold, plus a further 23 from the fighting. The number of single women heading households rose from 24 in January to 248 by August. At the end of 1999, 424 IDP families from Bamiyan were still known to be living in central Hazarajat. 150 of these were in Yakawlang, mostly living with relatives, mainly in far away villages; 53 more families were in Panjao center; 23 in Lal center; and most of rest in the remote areas of Targai, Mur and Tarapas. There were also IDPs from the fighting in Dara e Suf, 25 in Lal centre." (UN's Coordinator Office, March 2000, Part I)
This number includes an exodus of 45,000 people from the central highlands to
other parts of Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan. According to the UN Regional Coordinating
Officer, three quarters of this number indicated they were leaving for Iran (90
percent) or Pakistan (10 percent). The 25 percent who remained behind in Afghanistan
are located in Kabul [east] , Ghazni [south east] and Herat [west]. A further
5,000 are estimated to have been displaced in late January due to violent clashes
near Yawkawlang, in Bamyan Province. Relief agencies expect that impoverished
residents in the central highlands will try to cope over winter by reducing their
food consumption. UN sources estimate a high mortality over winter as many families
who chose to remain are unprepared." (IRIN 8 February 2001)
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BAMIYAN » |
"After the traditional lull during winter, fighting has progressively intensified. In February, opposition forces briefly captured the Hazarajat town of Yakowlang, 100 kilometers west of the provincial capital, Bamiyan, and briefly Bamiyan itself. The Taliban offensive to capture these areas caused significant levels of destruction and displacement. Sporadic guerrilla activity has taken place in the eastern, northwest and western provinces throughout the year." (UNOCHA, UNRCO November 1999)
"Between March and May 1999, some 115,000 people were uprooted in Bamiyan, fleeing to the neighboring districts and provinces, to Kabul, northern Afghanistan and to Pakistan. People displaced from Bamiyan have sought refuge in all surrounding districts, including Kamard, Yakaolang, Panjao, Waras, Behsud 1 and Behsud 2. Central Bamiyan and parts of neighboring Saigan District and Shibar were totally depopulated by the climax of the fighting on 15 May. Many of these displaced people have been relocating from one district to another, trying to find accommodation and food to enable them to survive the winter. (UNOCHA 14 October 1999)
"Following clashes between the Taliban and Hezb-e-Wahdat forces in the central highlands in the beginning of 1999, it was reported that " there was a steady exodus of the civilian population from Bamyan from February to mid-April 1999 and that the civilian population had been almost totally displaced from the area by the end of the conflict there in mid-May." "[M]ost of the population evacuated the city and took refuge in the mountains. They were facing a serious situation given the weather in the cold mountainous areas and the acute shortage of food. It was reported that a group of 150 people, including women and children, were taken captive by the Taliban from Berson village and transferred to Parwan province.
Yakawlang was also evacuated by people who feared being killed or arrested by the Taliban. A few families managed to reach Ghazni while others went to Panjab or Bahsood districts."
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The Climate» |
Hazarajat, being a high elevated mountainous region, is dominated by a cold and
long winters, its climate is mostly alpine tundra, and has been described as extremely
cold and dry. While the winters are long and dominated by heavy snowfall and snow
storm, the summers, on the other hand are short and hot. The winter starts by
the end of September; the first now falls in October; and from December on heavy
snow falls and lies on the ground for the next four or five months. Whereever
meteorological stations were built, scantly information about rainfall is available
thes weather stations are located in Bamian, Lal, Moqur, Nawar and Panjab showing
the annual rainfalls of 1.92, 7.06, 5.5, 5.4 and 9.0 inches, respectively. During
summer months, most of the Hazarajat weather is dry with clear blue skies, little
or no rain falls during the summer months and days are comfortable warm and nights
are briskly cool.
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FLORA » |
Like most of Afghanistan, Hazarajat also lacks greenery and is poorly covered
with vegetation, there is no forest in the region and the slopes are bare.
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FAUNA » |
Like the limited plant species found in the region, the animal kingdom of the Hazarajat is also limited. Of the inferior animals wolves, foxes and hares are commonly found in the mountains and populated valleys. The wild sheep and goats (Markhor) are found in Dai Zangi region. Deer could be found in the mountain ranges which offer springs and fountains. Domesticated dogs and greyhounds can also be found in the valleys. The stress, and rivers of Hazarajat are filled with fish of different dins. The lake of Band-e Amir are especially known for fish of considerable size, which are of yellow color and locally, knows as Chush. Mules and donkeys which are used for transportation are found in the valleys.
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Minerals» |
Hazarajat has been knows to be rich in minerals and in the past rulers of the neighboring countries tried to subjugate the Hazaras to control the mies. Harlan mentioned Murad Beg of Kunduz, who had attacked Dai Zangi for its mineral wealth. Another Englishman, Wood, reported the presence of copper and sulfur. It has also been reported that there are deposits of jade, beryl, quartz, mica, marble, antimoine, cuivre, aargent, zinc, iron, graphite and gypsum more recently, Griffiths reported the discovery of large and very high grade iron ore deposits near Hajigak in the Bamian region. These all reports were produced during the cold war. The recent government of Taliban bend all the foreign projects in Afghanistan. Now there are only some of the Oil companies are involved in the region.
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Villages and Towns» |
Here are some of the names of the villages and towns.
Main
Villages and towns |
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Places
to visit |
- Ajrestan
- Anguri
- Akzarat
- Ashtarlai
- Bamyan
- Basud
- Bidsay
- Bad-e Asiah
- Chora
- Dai Kundi
- Daulat Yar
- Deh Mirdad
- Daya wa Chopan
- Ghizao
- Khamenil
- Khidir
- Loman
- Malistan
- Niak
- Nawar
- Panjao
- Qarabgh
- Sabz-Ab
- Sang-e Masha
- Sar-e-Jangal
- Sharistan
- Uruzgan
- Yak Aolang
- Zardalu
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- Band-e Amir
- Buddha Citdel at Bamian
- Shahr-e Barbar
- Chihl Burj
- Sang-e Khane
- Kafir Qalah
- Kaftar Ghar
- Shah Kurghan
- Koh-e Arus
- Shahr-e Gholghola
- Azdaha or Dragon
- Shar-e Zohak
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Calender. |
Special places in Hazaragi:
M
C
Ci
W
R
N
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