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A little-known Pakistani tribe that loves wine and whiskey fears its Muslim neighbors

This is how world Largest Secular Democracy treats her minorities
hang-to-tree.jpg

What does the government has to do with the actions of some insane b@_st@_rds ?? And you don't have the moral right to question Indian government since your's is the only country which permits persecution of your minorities as per law (infamous Blasphemy Law).

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...c-Pakistan-say-tortured-confessing-crime.html

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia/...an-couple-killed-mob-2014115154959911691.html

http://tribune.com.pk/story/786012/christian-couple-killed-for-desecrating-quran-in-pakistan-police/

http://tribune.com.pk/story/1150849/blasphemy-backlash-hindu-teenager-killed-mirpur-mathelo/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blasphemy_law_in_Pakistan

I won't say India is better. Both Pakistan and India is having somewhat the same level of intolerance. Yet again we are a more heterogeneous society with many religions, casts, culture and where the majority population still live peacefully irrespective of cast, creed and religion. :)

How I love the fear mongering! If your way life is nonsensical then of course you're afraid of losing it to a better way of living. There is no such thing as forced conversion in Islam. There are many so called keyboard wanabe ''molanas'' on here, educate us on how Islamically a person can be forcefully converted? Impossible!

Are you kidding ?? You mean to say no such thing happens ??

Then please enlighten yourself, first one is from your own newspaper. :p:

http://tribune.com.pk/story/1124108/clash-chitral-kalash-girls-forced-conversion-islam/

http://www.bpnews.net/10796/christian-woman-recalls-horror-of-forced-conversion-to-islam

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_conversion
 
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Whole of Pakistan loves whiskey and vodka just take our Zia ul Haq shariat...
 
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View attachment 327515


KALASH VALLEY, Pakistan — Hidden up in the mountains near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, the Kalash tribe loves homemade wine and whiskey, dances for days at colorful festivals, and practices a religion that holds that God has spirits and messengers who speak through nature.

Long before the campaign of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, the villagers fretted over whether they needed walls or do-not-enter lists to protect them from their more conservative Muslim neighbors — ultimately deciding that the towering heights of the Hindu Kush would protect them.

But over the past century, Muslims from modern-day Pakistan and Afghanistan began moving in. Now villagers say their Kalash culture and religion are threatened by forced conversions, robberies and assaults.

“We are scared,” said Yasir Kalash, the manager of a hotel here in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. “They capture our lands, our pastures and our forests and sometimes take our goats and women. . . . We are afraid, in the next few years, we will be finished.”

The Kalash religion was once widespread in Central Asia, but the 4,200 villagers who live here in Pakistan’s Chitral Valley make up the last known Kalash settlement in the world. And now those villages are yet another test of Muslim-dominated Pakistan’s tolerance for minorities and cultural diversity.

The Kalash tribe is so fearful of being overrun that its members are considering packing up their children and goats and embarking on a modern-day pilgrimage in search of a new country.

“The younger generation think they cannot live here anymore,” said Zahim Kalash, 34.

In June, a two-day riot erupted on this plateau after Kalash villagers said a 15-year-old girl was tricked into converting to Islam. Last month, two Kalash goat herders were killed in a mountain pasture, the latest in a series of attacks on the tribe. And heated arguments are erupting overpractices as simple as using the local spring water.


View attachment 327516

“According to our traditions, we consider all the springs to be holy,” said Imran Kabir, who lives in the valley and acts as an unofficial spokesman for the tribe. “We don’t allow anyone to wash clothes or take baths in the springs.”

Last month, several of their Muslim neighbors started doing just that — bathing and washing clothes in the cool, emerald waters that flow from the nearby heights.

“We said, ‘Please don’t do that. People drink from those springs.’ They said, ‘You people are stupid.’ ” And then a scuffle broke out.

The Kalash villages are accessible only by one-lane jeep trails, and residents live in wood-and-mud houses that contain few furnishings except for cots. They eat mostly what they can produce, including hundreds of pounds of butter each year.

The Kalash believe in one God who has a number of messengers. To communicate with them, the tribe erects outdoor altars where worshipers offer sacrifices, usually goats.

Some scholars say the Kalash religion originated during Alexander the Great’s conquest of South Asia around 300 B.C. But other scholars and villagers are skeptical, noting that neither the tribe’s written history nor its oral traditions, including song and poetry, includes any reference to Alexander.



View attachment 327517

The Kalash religion at one time flourished in the Hindu Kush region. Over the centuries, however, armies and members of competing faiths moved in, and many followers of the Kalash religion were converted. Those who remained fled into the mountain passes, largely left alone when the area was a western frontier of British colonial India.

After Pakistan became a country in 1947, Muslim families began moving into the Kalash Valley, drawn by the crisp climate, undisturbed forests and rich grazing lands.

Salamat Khan, who doesn’t know his age but estimates it to be at least 75, said that for much of his life, the Kalash and their new neighbors lived in relative harmony.

But he and other villagers said the mood has changed over the past decade as a less-tolerant form of Islam began taking hold here.

Traveling Islamic scholars are increasingly showing up in the valley, and after each visit, villagers say, their Muslim neighbors appear less tolerant.

“They will say, ‘Why do you people make wine?’ ” recalled Yasir Kalash. “We make wine because it’s our culture. We use wine in our rituals, we use wine to cook, and we use wine because, in our mind, wine is purification.”

In June, according to police and local officials, a 15-year-old girl named Rina wandered away from home and ended up at a local Islamic seminary.

After a few hours, the cleric declared that Rina had converted to Islam. She later returned to her village, saying she had not intended to convert.


View attachment 327518

But angry Muslim villagers began pelting Kalash villagers with bricks and stones, arguing that a conversion to Islam cannot be undone. A judge agreed, effectively severing ties between the girl and her parents.

“The conversion rate is very high, and we are afraid if this goes on, our culture will be finished within the next few years,” Yasir Kalash said.

Kalash villagers are also fearful of violent attacks, including raids by Taliban militants.

Zabir Shah, 26, a Kalash villager, said that two years ago, Taliban militants from Afghanistan sneaked into Bumberet, the unofficial capital of the valley, and stabbed a 15-year-old boy to death.

“I saw 25 Taliban, from a distance, surrounding the guy and killing him,” Shah said. “There can be no reason for them to kill him except that he was a non-Muslim.”

Villagers say the recent killing of two Kalash goat herders underscores the overall threats to the tribe’s way of life.

“If we cannot take our goats high up in the pasture, then our culture cannot survive,” said one Kalash villager, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he feared for his safety. “The goats are part of religion, and we sacrifice our goats, and down in the valley, there is not enough grazing land.”

Kalash menuse goat blood in religious cleansing rituals.

Not everyone believes tensions are rising between the two groups.

Qimat Shah, 24, a local Muslim man who spends his day making flat bread in a wood-fired oven, noted that young Muslim and Kalash villagers go to school together. He said that whatever problems exist stem from a lack of education among village elders.

“We are people from both religions living together,” Shah said

But Javed Michael, chairman of the Karachi-based Pakistan Minorities Front, said the problems facing the Kalash community are a subset of the intolerance that afflicts minority groups in Pakistan.

Thousands of Christians, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists and non-Sunni Muslims have fled the country fearing persecution or state-sponsored policies including harsh laws on blasphemy.

“No minorities in this country are safe,” said Michael.

What makes the Kalash community especially frightened, villagers here say, is a feeling of being “isolated and alone,” Yasir Kalash said.

He said Christians can turn to the Vatican or the West for support, while Hindus can look to India, and Shiite Muslims can seek some protection from Iran. Kalash villagers, he added, feel as if no other country cares about them.

“We request to the world, preserve us,” he said.

http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/world...fears-its-muslim-neighbors/ar-BBvIbGx#image=4
They can look up to us Indians ... we sheltered their Persian ancestors now known Parsis ... Plenty of mountain passes in India which they can inhabit Eg Dharmashala hosts Tibetans...

4500 individuals is a far to fewer numbers and our country and our hearts are bigger...
 
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Since they are part of GB, Government of India considers them as citizens of India. They should not have any problem in settling in an part of India (including J&K under article 370 as they are natives to the state)

Hope Modi gets their attention and provides all the support, security and help they need.
 
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But illiterate villagers and dumb terrorists dont know your nation's effort to protect them .

On topic :4200 is not a big deal to us .We have resources ,climate etc .They can find safe places in Himachal Pradesh and surrounding areas .India will welcome you if you cant find peace in your homeland
are bhai, first give safe places to your own people starting from kashmir to assam...unfortunately a dog name modi is your pm.
 
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They can look up to us Indians ... we sheltered their Persian ancestors now known Parsis ... Plenty of mountain passes in India which they can inhabit Eg Dharmashala hosts Tibetans...

4500 individuals is a far to fewer numbers and our country and our hearts are bigger...

:secret: Well what if they become our citizens without migrating :secret:
 
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...unfortunately a dog name modi is your pm.
I am glad that Dog is not known for disloyalty. but only one of your sharif can be labelled as one though I am not sure about the other. Are You ?
 
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I am glad that Dog is not known for disloyalty. but only one of your sharif can be labelled as one though I am not sure about the other. Are You ?
only a dog can recognize another dog, no wonder they love each other, you can have another dog if you want but at the same time you can keep your street dog with you, you never know when the municiple corporation clean them up.
 
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India is home to many religions and every religion is at peace with each other (baring two only and that too created by political parties for votes). We can assimilate yet another peaceful religion and 4200 is not a big number.
:coffee:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969_Gujarat_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurgency_in_Northeast_India
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984_anti-Sikh_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Christian_violence_in_India
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nellie_massacre
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980_Moradabad_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hashimpura_massacre
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985_Gujarat_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_Bhagalpur_violence
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombay_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002_Gujarat_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Vadodara_riots
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_2014_Assam_violence
http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-24159594


What I posted was just 20%

View attachment 327515


KALASH VALLEY, Pakistan — Hidden up in the mountains near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, the Kalash tribe loves homemade wine and whiskey, dances for days at colorful festivals, and practices a religion that holds that God has spirits and messengers who speak through nature.

Long before the campaign of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, the villagers fretted over whether they needed walls or do-not-enter lists to protect them from their more conservative Muslim neighbors — ultimately deciding that the towering heights of the Hindu Kush would protect them.

But over the past century, Muslims from modern-day Pakistan and Afghanistan began moving in. Now villagers say their Kalash culture and religion are threatened by forced conversions, robberies and assaults.

“We are scared,” said Yasir Kalash, the manager of a hotel here in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. “They capture our lands, our pastures and our forests and sometimes take our goats and women. . . . We are afraid, in the next few years, we will be finished.”

The Kalash religion was once widespread in Central Asia, but the 4,200 villagers who live here in Pakistan’s Chitral Valley make up the last known Kalash settlement in the world. And now those villages are yet another test of Muslim-dominated Pakistan’s tolerance for minorities and cultural diversity.

The Kalash tribe is so fearful of being overrun that its members are considering packing up their children and goats and embarking on a modern-day pilgrimage in search of a new country.

“The younger generation think they cannot live here anymore,” said Zahim Kalash, 34.

In June, a two-day riot erupted on this plateau after Kalash villagers said a 15-year-old girl was tricked into converting to Islam. Last month, two Kalash goat herders were killed in a mountain pasture, the latest in a series of attacks on the tribe. And heated arguments are erupting overpractices as simple as using the local spring water.


View attachment 327516

“According to our traditions, we consider all the springs to be holy,” said Imran Kabir, who lives in the valley and acts as an unofficial spokesman for the tribe. “We don’t allow anyone to wash clothes or take baths in the springs.”

Last month, several of their Muslim neighbors started doing just that — bathing and washing clothes in the cool, emerald waters that flow from the nearby heights.

“We said, ‘Please don’t do that. People drink from those springs.’ They said, ‘You people are stupid.’ ” And then a scuffle broke out.

The Kalash villages are accessible only by one-lane jeep trails, and residents live in wood-and-mud houses that contain few furnishings except for cots. They eat mostly what they can produce, including hundreds of pounds of butter each year.

The Kalash believe in one God who has a number of messengers. To communicate with them, the tribe erects outdoor altars where worshipers offer sacrifices, usually goats.

Some scholars say the Kalash religion originated during Alexander the Great’s conquest of South Asia around 300 B.C. But other scholars and villagers are skeptical, noting that neither the tribe’s written history nor its oral traditions, including song and poetry, includes any reference to Alexander.



View attachment 327517

The Kalash religion at one time flourished in the Hindu Kush region. Over the centuries, however, armies and members of competing faiths moved in, and many followers of the Kalash religion were converted. Those who remained fled into the mountain passes, largely left alone when the area was a western frontier of British colonial India.

After Pakistan became a country in 1947, Muslim families began moving into the Kalash Valley, drawn by the crisp climate, undisturbed forests and rich grazing lands.

Salamat Khan, who doesn’t know his age but estimates it to be at least 75, said that for much of his life, the Kalash and their new neighbors lived in relative harmony.

But he and other villagers said the mood has changed over the past decade as a less-tolerant form of Islam began taking hold here.

Traveling Islamic scholars are increasingly showing up in the valley, and after each visit, villagers say, their Muslim neighbors appear less tolerant.

“They will say, ‘Why do you people make wine?’ ” recalled Yasir Kalash. “We make wine because it’s our culture. We use wine in our rituals, we use wine to cook, and we use wine because, in our mind, wine is purification.”

In June, according to police and local officials, a 15-year-old girl named Rina wandered away from home and ended up at a local Islamic seminary.

After a few hours, the cleric declared that Rina had converted to Islam. She later returned to her village, saying she had not intended to convert.


View attachment 327518

But angry Muslim villagers began pelting Kalash villagers with bricks and stones, arguing that a conversion to Islam cannot be undone. A judge agreed, effectively severing ties between the girl and her parents.

“The conversion rate is very high, and we are afraid if this goes on, our culture will be finished within the next few years,” Yasir Kalash said.

Kalash villagers are also fearful of violent attacks, including raids by Taliban militants.

Zabir Shah, 26, a Kalash villager, said that two years ago, Taliban militants from Afghanistan sneaked into Bumberet, the unofficial capital of the valley, and stabbed a 15-year-old boy to death.

“I saw 25 Taliban, from a distance, surrounding the guy and killing him,” Shah said. “There can be no reason for them to kill him except that he was a non-Muslim.”

Villagers say the recent killing of two Kalash goat herders underscores the overall threats to the tribe’s way of life.

“If we cannot take our goats high up in the pasture, then our culture cannot survive,” said one Kalash villager, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he feared for his safety. “The goats are part of religion, and we sacrifice our goats, and down in the valley, there is not enough grazing land.”

Kalash menuse goat blood in religious cleansing rituals.

Not everyone believes tensions are rising between the two groups.

Qimat Shah, 24, a local Muslim man who spends his day making flat bread in a wood-fired oven, noted that young Muslim and Kalash villagers go to school together. He said that whatever problems exist stem from a lack of education among village elders.

“We are people from both religions living together,” Shah said

But Javed Michael, chairman of the Karachi-based Pakistan Minorities Front, said the problems facing the Kalash community are a subset of the intolerance that afflicts minority groups in Pakistan.

Thousands of Christians, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists and non-Sunni Muslims have fled the country fearing persecution or state-sponsored policies including harsh laws on blasphemy.

“No minorities in this country are safe,” said Michael.

What makes the Kalash community especially frightened, villagers here say, is a feeling of being “isolated and alone,” Yasir Kalash said.

He said Christians can turn to the Vatican or the West for support, while Hindus can look to India, and Shiite Muslims can seek some protection from Iran. Kalash villagers, he added, feel as if no other country cares about them.

“We request to the world, preserve us,” he said.

http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/world...fears-its-muslim-neighbors/ar-BBvIbGx#image=4

Kalash is more of a religion than an ethnic group. Most of the people in the region were once apart of Kalash, but once you convert to a different religion; you can no longer be considered a Kalash.

The current tribe is probably not even 1% of it's original size.
 
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Don't worry Hindvuvta neighbors to the south... they have survived over 1400 years alongside with their Muslim neighbours... they will Inshallah survive another 1400 years!

Funny how when ever an Indian Hinduvta oppression is highlighted on this forum.. our Southern neighbours on this forum start saying.. "India is a democracy, we are plural society etc".... but when those similar concerns arise in Pakistan these same people berate... "oh, this is Pakistan, this is Islam" etc.

I think neither one of us really knows the other... we all bring our biases to the table without either party willing to learn. The Internet has not really brought about the age of enlightenment or the age of knowledge... it is rather an age of information (polluted with a lot of misinformation) where an On-line mob mentality reigns supreme.

We live in an age where reality and appearances are usually opposite to each other.
 
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Don't worry Hindvuvta neighbors to the south... they have survived over 1400 years alongside with their Muslim neighbours... they will Inshallah survive another 1400 years!


Yeah. Buddhas of Bamiyan have also survived for over 1500 years only to be destroyed by the people who received full support from Government of Pakistan.
 
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Yeah. Buddhas of Bamiyan have also survived for over 1500 years only to be destroyed by the people who received full support from Government of Pakistan.
Everybody can in one way another be connected with some degree of separation... only those who do the deeds are truely guilty.

Yeah. Buddhas of Bamiyan have also survived for over 1500 years only to be destroyed by the people who received full support from Government of Pakistan.
The same Buddhist that are massacring the muslims in Burma... play the blame game and the merry go around can go forever... the same Buddhists that were invading Asian countries during WW II etc.

To everyone... the other is more evil. Yet it is the entire human race that has blood on its hands
 
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