Uruzgani (Hazara tribe)
Part of a series on
Portal WikiProject |
The Uruzgani are a tribe of Hazara people. In old maps of Hazarajat (Afghanistan) Uruzgan and Daikundi provinces are over-written as Dai khata. A 1965 work describes them as "sedentary agriculturalists... speak[ing] Hazaraghi."[1]
History
They are probably descendants of a chieftain Urgun Khan, who was a Mongol chieftain in Ilkhanate court. They mostly inhabited Uruzgan Province and the present day Daikundi Province. The Battle of Uruzgan was fought between Hazaras and Afghans there in 1893. Thereafter, on Hazara defeat, the Uruzganis were uprouted from Uruzgan by Abdur Rahman Khan and Afghan tribes were resettled in Uruzgan. They mostly migrated to Iran and British India (Quetta). In 1901, Amir Habibullāh granted amnesty to Hazaras and asked them to return. Some returning Uruzganis were then resettled in Turkistan and Balkh, but were not allowed to return to Uruzgan.
Legacy
Today all the district names in Uruzgan bears the testimony that this was a Hazara land. Teri (Tarin kot), Chore, Zuli, khas Uruzgan are all Hazara words and are some of the original Uruzgani tribes. DaiChopan is also a sub tribe of Uruzganis and the district with the same name is in Zabul provence. Daichopan are the descendants of Amir Chopan, a Hazara chieftain and whose grave is at Grishik, helamand provence. Hazaras are emotionally attached with Uruzgan, because of the battle of Uruzgan. Even today it is on the agenda of all the Hazaras and Hazara political entities that the question of Uruzgan has to be settled. The communist President Najibullah also had promised that the question will be addressed. In the 2009 presidential elections Ustad Muhaqqiq supported Hamid Karzai, one of the many demands for this support was to resolve the question of Uruzgan. the creation of Daikundi Provence in 2004 is one of the initial steps in resolution of this unsettled issue between Hazaras and Afghans. Incidentally Hamid Karzai and Taliban leader Mullah Omar belong to Uruzgan and are the descendants of the resettled Afghans of 1893.
See also
References
- ↑ Arnold Fletcher. Afghanistan, highway of conquest. Cornell University Press, 1965.