What's new

Is Pakistan part of South Asia?

Aryan this..Aryan that.

Tell me if Aryan are so amazing why "Dravidian" Kerala have higher literacy rate than "Aryan" NWFP :lol:
 
.
Pakistan keep losing war to "Dravidian" India that is why they want to dream of "Aryan" defeating "Dravidian" so that they don't feel like loser :lol:
 
.
i think i have praise for them...and yes, they are religious and ethical as well... :) the tamil indians are altogather different species and even normal indians dread them. see what they have done in malaysia. in 1991 , there was a marshal law in kuala lumpur because muslims were beheading the chinese who were beheading the tamils and vice versa.

ps: see my posts, i am a pro taliban fundamentalist :) but a rational view is a rational view :)
Any North Indian who travels to south first thing he says is people in South much more nicer and civilized than an average North Indian. So i don't know from where u got this stupid idea.
I don't know about Malaysia and Tamil but something that is well known is that Pakistani along with Indian went to England. Both of them were from same economic background Indians have made a name for themselves there where as the Pakistanis just made a mess of things. Pakistani has become a racial slur there.
 
Last edited:
.
Q: Is Pakistan part of south asia?
Ans: No Pakistan is part of Scandinavia....:hitwall:
Come on indians get a life. Whatever meaningless babbling you do, does not change a dime. Pakistan is strategically located between the South-Asia, Middle East and Central Asia. :pakistan:

Three mountain ranges meet here. We have a 6000 years of civilisation and chronicled history. Out of those 6000 years, we were ruled by Mughals of subcontinent for around 400-500 years. We are proud to be Muslims and love Islam and our roots.
 
.
.
Simple Pakistan is part of the Asia :hitwall:
 
.
Is Pakistan part of South Asia?
By Aparna Pande

Pakistan’s Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir recently remarked that “Pakistan, India and other countries in South Asia and the region’s population of over one billion people cannot be geographically separated.”

The remark represents a departure from years of attempts by Pakistan to deny its South Asian identity and link up instead
with the Muslim Middle East.
Geographically, linguistically, culturally and historically South Asia is a vital part of Pakistan’s personality. Yet for decades a majority of Pakistani policy makers, intellectuals and strategists have attempted to virtually relocate Pakistan within the Muslim Arab Middle East.

India’s name is derived from the river Indus, which now flows primarily through Pakistan. Most of Pakistan’s pre-partition history is the same as that of India. The term Pakistan is an acronym patterned on place names used in Central Asia, names that were brought to India by rulers of Central Asian origin who eventually merged or became an integral part of India.

They are not Arabic in origin. Pakistanis do not speak any of the major languages identified with the Middle East -Arabic, Persian and Turkish – and their cuisine and costumes, too, have greater similarity with South Asian food and clothing. Linguistically most of Pakistan’s languages are spoken in other parts of the South Asian subcontinent -Punjabi, Sindhi and Urdu (and before the separation of Bangladesh, Bengali).

Culturally Islam as practiced in South Asia has been different from rituals in other regions of the Muslim world, especially the Middle East. It has been more influenced by Sufism and has been more tolerant. The impact of Hindu customs and local culture on local practice of Islam and on South Asian Muslims is also very discernible.

However, since 1947, both at the level of domestic politics and foreign policy Pakistan’s policy makers have made a conscious effort to redefine the shared heritage with India. Marginalizing Pakistan’s South Asian identity and closer identification with a Muslim Middle Eastern identity seems to have been part of a larger strategic decision aimed at consolidating a unique Pakistani identity. This is a point I have further described in my book (Explaining Pakistan’s Foreign Policy: Escaping India, Routledge, March 2011).

Soon after partition, Pakistani leaders faced the question of defining a Pakistani national identity distinct from that of India. Pakistan’s various provinces had ethnic or linguistic distinctiveness, which provided a basis for ethnic or language based nationalism, while their shared historical experience and heritage linked them to India as well. Pakistan had to be different from India if partition was to be justified and that raised the question of Pakistani identity.

Pakistan had little history of its own to appeal to but that of the Indian civilization (including India’s Muslim history) it had broken away from. Partition of the British Raj into India and Pakistan led to the separation of the new Pakistani state from the heart of the Muslim empire in South Asia, which now formed part of “Hindu” India. For centuries Delhi had consistently been the capital of India’s Muslim empires. The legacy of Indo-Muslim culture had evolved in kingdoms such as Oudh, Hyderabad, Rampur, Bhopal, Murshidabad, Golconda and Bijapur. The territory of these former kingdoms was located now in India and not in Pakistan. This left the new country with little within its territory to connect with the golden symbols of Muslim South Asian traditions.

Pakistan could have taken one of two roads- acknowledge its Indian history and laid itself open to constant critique over its raison d’etre or try and craft a narrative of history that matched its current ambitions. Pakistan’s leaders opted for the latter and in doing so, searched for episodic evidence in the relatively recent history of Indian Muslims.

Pakistan’s foreign policy has been cast in the same terms: because India is dominated by Hindus, with whom Muslims have little in common, Pakistan must draw closer to the Muslim states to its west. Many Pakistani strategists hold the view that Pakistan should by-pass South Asia and the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) because the latter is only an umbrella to “legitimize Indian hegemony.” Although Pakistan has been a member of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) since its founding in 1985, Pakistan continues to give greater importance to its membership of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC). Some Pakistani scholars and journalists assert that active membership of the OIC and a low-key association with SAARC denies legitimacy to an organization where India has a dominant or primary role.

It is in this context that the recent remark by Pakistan’s top diplomat is worth noting Instead of seeing this as an acknowledgement of a Pakistani South Asian identity we must analyze the context. Pakistan, resents India being placed “in a different league” than Pakistan and Pakistanis do not
Is Pakistan part of South Asia? | PK ARTICLES HUB

Pakistan belongs to Gulf rim no doubt about it :D

Is Pakistan part of South Asia?
answer- no Pakistan is part of western Sahara god damn

Bhai jaan pakistan belongs to Pakistan :D

Q: Is Pakistan part of south asia?
Ans: No Pakistan is part of Scandinavia....:hitwall:
Come on indians get a life. Whatever meaningless babbling you do, does not change a dime. Pakistan is strategically located between the South-Asia, Middle East and Central Asia. :pakistan:

Three mountain ranges meet here. We have a 6000 years of civilisation and chronicled history. Out of those 6000 years, we were ruled by Mughals of subcontinent for around 400-500 years. We are proud to be Muslims and love Islam and our roots.

Yahhh pakistan should detach itself from SAARC ;)

You mean that nobody claims to be Punjabi, Sindhi, Pashtun, Baloch? Please stick to real facts. Pakistanis are native to the Indus region.

Arey bhai who are u new to PDF :D ?
 
.
Pakistan is part of South Asia, We Pakistanis consider ourselves part of South Asia though the land mass is big and it does go into other regions as well like Persian Gulf and Central Asia but we are South Asians.
 
.
Simple Pakistan is part of the Asia :hitwall:

Lools like you are not . Thank god you dint became a christian states or else some fanatics would had shifted geography to romans .

Best answers should be Pakistan departed from Hindus to become pakistan . This put an end to these nonsense articles.
 
.
South East (or more precisely Indian Subcontinent) ends on eastern side of Indus River. The eastern side of Indus River of Pakistan is Punjab and Sind.
The western side of Indus River is KP, FATA, Balochistan & GB. Parts of Gilgit Baltistan, KP and FATA comes in Central Asia while part of Balochistan comes in West Asia.
 
.
I read that Indian claiming to be American, White, Israeli etc etc etc too.

Who is he ? Must be some dalit who got converted for family pack tooth paste at some sunday class . As many Ram Pauls roaming arround with "A brown m roman Catholic tag" .
 
.
What is South Asia? Depends on how we define it right? We can keep extending the boundaries to the west all the way to Mediterranean or the Bosphorus strait (!), or come up with more geographically acceptable boundaries.

So how about the "land directly south of the Himalayan mountain range". Sounds reasonable? With this definition, Pakistan is no longer part of South Asia! ;)
 
.
What is South Asia? Depends on how we define it right? We can keep extending the boundaries to the west all the way to Mediterranean or the Bosphorus strait (!), or come up with more geographically acceptable boundaries.

So how about the "land directly south of the Himalayan mountain range". Sounds reasonable? With this definition, Pakistan is no longer part of South Asia! ;)

With this definition Pakistan is still in South Asia. Their Kashmir area has some parts of Himalaya. As long as its disputed area Pakistan is not part of SA. That includes Myanmar as a part of South Asia too.
 
.
Pakistan is south asia and South asia is Pakistan.

Anything in South asia by default belong to pakistna stretching upto sri lanka including the people,history,land and culture.
 
.
What is South Asia? Depends on how we define it right? We can keep extending the boundaries to the west all the way to Mediterranean or the Bosphorus strait (!), or come up with more geographically acceptable boundaries.

So how about the "land directly south of the Himalayan mountain range". Sounds reasonable? With this definition, Pakistan is no longer part of South Asia! ;)
Oh dear I presume you are one pretty girl originally from canada or another lost soul to Alalua gang and got converted . The who mess about identity crisis is vecause of Arab and European invasion . Its high time india pakistan team up and fuk the shit outta our invaders . But sadly it wont happen because pakistan already identified itself as invaders state .

But just my dream if we all team up once again atleast like European Union if not as one one country we will eat europeans or arabs for our dinner :) :D
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom