Hamza913
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This question comes from Quora (I am copy-pasting my answer from there, as this is my Quora account)
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-true-that-the-ancestors-of-Pakistanis-were-Hindu/answer/Taimur-Khurram-1
Answer:
Some of them? Yes. But not all of them.
First of all, Hinduism itself has only existed since the Vedic era:
That was only a few thousand years ago (a relatively short period of time in the grand scheme of things), prior to that, Hinduism did not exist. This means that the overwhelming majority of the ancestors of modern day Pakistanis were not Hindu.
Not only that, but even after Hinduism was established in the region, Buddhism also became very popular. Some of the oldest Buddhist texts in history come from what is now Pakistan:
http://www.historyofinformation.com/expanded.php?id=149
Here’s an old Buddhist monument in Pakistan:
Taxila, an ancient city in what is now Pakistan, was also very well known for being a Buddhist hub:
https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/139
King Kanishka, one of the greatest Buddhist rulers in history, also came from Peshawar (a city in what is now Pakistan). He ruled over the Kushan Empire:
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Kaniska
Not only that, but during the Muslim conquests of the Indian sub-continent, there was gene-flow from foreign migrants (who were already Muslim) into the population of the region.
This has been quite well established, many Muslims from the sub-continent have at least some ancestry from these foreign migrants:
http://cyber.sci-hub.tw/MTAuMTAwMi9hanBhLjEzMzA3NTAzMTA=/10.1002@ajpa.1330750310.pdf
“The study showed that the Muslim Gujjars differ significantly from their counterpart, the Hindu Gujjars.”
http://cyber.sci-hub.tw/MTAuMjMwNy80MTQ2NjYxMw==/10.2307@41466613.pdf
“a significant degree of genetic contribution from Iran to Shia (47%) and Sunni (44%) Muslims suggests genetic inputs from the region”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19809480
“low levels of likely sub-Saharan African, Arabian and West Asian admixture were also observed among Indian Muslims”
Not enough for you?
Here are the DNA test results of multiple Pakistanis, confirming what I’ve said:
To conclude, some of the ancestors of modern day Pakistanis were Hindu (and some Pakistanis remain Hindu to this very day), but others were not.
@Talwar e Pakistan @Indus Pakistan @waz @WAJsal @Dubious @Pan-Islamic-Pakistan @OsmanAli98 @Khafee @IbnAbdullah @Waqas @dexter @Horus @Great Janjua @Sher Shah Awan @Samlee @Desert Fox @DESERT FIGHTER @Zarvan @Clutch @maximuswarrior @Champion_Usmani @Army research @Reichsmarschall @Azadkashmir @AZADPAKISTAN2009 @newb3e @MultaniGuy @UnitedPak
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-true-that-the-ancestors-of-Pakistanis-were-Hindu/answer/Taimur-Khurram-1
Answer:
Some of them? Yes. But not all of them.
First of all, Hinduism itself has only existed since the Vedic era:
That was only a few thousand years ago (a relatively short period of time in the grand scheme of things), prior to that, Hinduism did not exist. This means that the overwhelming majority of the ancestors of modern day Pakistanis were not Hindu.
Not only that, but even after Hinduism was established in the region, Buddhism also became very popular. Some of the oldest Buddhist texts in history come from what is now Pakistan:
http://www.historyofinformation.com/expanded.php?id=149
Here’s an old Buddhist monument in Pakistan:
Taxila, an ancient city in what is now Pakistan, was also very well known for being a Buddhist hub:
https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/139
King Kanishka, one of the greatest Buddhist rulers in history, also came from Peshawar (a city in what is now Pakistan). He ruled over the Kushan Empire:
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Kaniska
Not only that, but during the Muslim conquests of the Indian sub-continent, there was gene-flow from foreign migrants (who were already Muslim) into the population of the region.
This has been quite well established, many Muslims from the sub-continent have at least some ancestry from these foreign migrants:
http://cyber.sci-hub.tw/MTAuMTAwMi9hanBhLjEzMzA3NTAzMTA=/10.1002@ajpa.1330750310.pdf
“The study showed that the Muslim Gujjars differ significantly from their counterpart, the Hindu Gujjars.”
http://cyber.sci-hub.tw/MTAuMjMwNy80MTQ2NjYxMw==/10.2307@41466613.pdf
“a significant degree of genetic contribution from Iran to Shia (47%) and Sunni (44%) Muslims suggests genetic inputs from the region”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19809480
“low levels of likely sub-Saharan African, Arabian and West Asian admixture were also observed among Indian Muslims”
Not enough for you?
Here are the DNA test results of multiple Pakistanis, confirming what I’ve said:
To conclude, some of the ancestors of modern day Pakistanis were Hindu (and some Pakistanis remain Hindu to this very day), but others were not.
@Talwar e Pakistan @Indus Pakistan @waz @WAJsal @Dubious @Pan-Islamic-Pakistan @OsmanAli98 @Khafee @IbnAbdullah @Waqas @dexter @Horus @Great Janjua @Sher Shah Awan @Samlee @Desert Fox @DESERT FIGHTER @Zarvan @Clutch @maximuswarrior @Champion_Usmani @Army research @Reichsmarschall @Azadkashmir @AZADPAKISTAN2009 @newb3e @MultaniGuy @UnitedPak