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Theory Of Pashtun Descent From Israelites




It is widely believed by many Muslim scholars and some Jew ish scholars that the majority Ethnic Group of Afghanistan , the Pashtun s, are descended from the exiled Lost Tribes Of Israel . They cite oral history and the names of various clans, which resemble the names of the Tribes that were exiled by the Assyrian Empire 2,700 years ago, as evidence for this claim. This evidence, however, was not substantiated by a recent genetic test that was focused on a small non-descript group of Pashtuns, which found no substantial connection between Jewish populations and the Pashtuns. Nor is the Eastern Iranian Language of the Pashtuns taken into account when examining the claims of Hebrew ancestry. It could be concluded that these claims appear to have emerged amongst the Pashtuns following the Islamic conquest of Afghanistan; it is conceivable that many tribes have created elaborate ancestral lineages to link themselves to prominent peoples mentioned in the Qur'an such as Jews, Greeks (see Alexander The Great in the Qur'an), and Arabs , all of whom have come to the region, but appear to have contributed to various minority genetic strains in the population rather than drastically altering the demographics of Afghanistan.

Some anthropologists lend credence to the oral traditions of the elder Pashtun tribes themselves. For example, according to the '' people.)

Bukhtawar Khan in his most valuable universal history ''Mirat-ul-Alam'' – '' The Mirror Of The World '' – gives a vivid account of the journeys of the Afghans from the Holy Land to Ghor , Ghazni , and Kabul . Similarly Hafiz Rahmat Bin Shah Alam in his '' Khulasat-ul-Ansab '' and '' Fareed-ud-Din Ahmad '' in '' Risala-i-Ansab-i-Afghana '' provide the history of the Afghans and deal with their genealogies.

Two of the most famous historical works on the subject are ''Tarikh-i-Afghana'' – ''History of the Afghans'' – by Niamatullah , which was translated by Bernard Dork in 1829 , and ''Tarikh-i-Hafiz Rahmatkhani'', by Hafiz Muhammad Zadeek which he wrote in 1770. These books deal with the early history of the Afghans, their origin and wanderings in general. They particularly discuss the Yusuf Zyes (the Yusefzai, "Sons of Joseph") and their occupation of Kabul, Bajoor , Swat , and Peshawar .

Additional authors Syed Jamal-ud-Din Afghani (''Tarikh-i-Afghana'', the ''History of Afghans''), and Syed Abdul Jabbar Shah (''Mun'ameen-i-Bani Israel'', MS.), ex-Ruler of Swat, discuss the question exhaustively and come to the conclusion that the Afghans represent the Lost Tribes Of Israel as viewed from the perspective of the Jewish/Western world.

If we turn to Anglo-Western writers during the time of the British Empire we find that they also have come to the same conclusion. The first to reach such is Henry Vansittart . In a letter which appeared in '' Indian Researches '' he commented on the Israelitish descent of the Afghans. He expressed the opinion that the claim of the Afghans to be Bani Israel are more than justified given his own observations of their indigenous traditions. Researches'', 1788, Vol. 2: 69

Sir , after the overthrow of Israel, transplanted them into the towns of Ghore near Bamean and that they were called after their Chief Afghana… they say that they lived as Israelites till Khalid summoned them in the first century of the Muslims … Having precisely stated the traditions and history of the Afghans I see no good reason for discrediting them… the Afghans look like Jews and the younger brother marries the widow of the elder. The Afghans entertain strong prejudices against the Jewish nation, which would at least show that they have no desire to claim – without just cause – a descent from them. Alexander Brunes, ''Travels into Bokhara'', Vol. 2:139-141.

Brunes was again in 1837 sent as the first British Envoy to the Court of Kabul. For some time he was the guest of King Dost Muhammad Khan . He questioned the King about the descent of the Afghans from the Israelites. The King replied that "his people had no doubt of that, though they repudiated the idea of being Jews".

William Moorcroft traveled during 1819 to 1825 through various countries adjoining India, including Afghanistan. "The Khaibarees ," he says, "are tall and have a singularly Jewish cast of features." At Push Kyun , within Afghan territory, he came across a very old copy of the '' Old Testament '' in Hebrew . ''Travels in Himalayan Provinces of Hindustan and the Punjab ; in Ladakh and Kashmir , in Peshawar, Kabul, Kunduz and Bokhara'', 12

… they preserved the purity of their religion until they met with Islam ." Frazer, ''A Historical and Descriptive Account of Persia and Afghanistan'', 298

J.P. Ferrier wrote his History of the Afghans in 1858. It was translated by Capt. W. M. Jesse. He too was disposed to believe that the Afghans represented the Ten Tribes of Israel. In support of his view he recorded, among others, a very significant fact: “When Nadir Shah marching to the conquest of India arrived at Peshawar, the chief of the tribe of Yoosoof Zyes (Sons of Joseph) presented him with a Bible written in Hebrew and several other articles that had been used in their ancient worship and which they had preserved. These articles were at once recognized by the Jews who followed the camp.” – J.P. Ferrier, History of the Afghans, 4.

to Afghanistan and India marked by a series of intermediate stations bearing the names of several of the tribes and clearly indicating the stages of their long and arduous journey." Moore, ''The Lost Tribes''

Moore goes on to say: "Sir William Jones, Sir John Malcolm and the missing Chamberlain, after full investigation, were of the opinion that the Ten Tribes migrated to India, Tibet , and Cashemire through Afghanistan." [George Moore, ''The Lost Tribes''

Moore has mentioned only three eminent writers on the subject. But reference can also be made to General Sir George Macmunn (''Afghanistan from Darius to Amanullah'', 215), Col. G.B. Malleson (''The History of Afghanistan from the Earliest Period to the outbreak of the War of 1878'', 39), Col. Failson, (''History of Afghanistan'', 49), George Bell (''Tribes of Afghanistan'', 15), E. Balfour (''Encyclopedia of India'', article on Afghanistan), Sir Henry Yule ('' Encyclopædia Britannica '', article on Afghanistan), and the Hon. Sir George Rose (Rose, ''The Afghans, the Ten Tribes and the Kings of the East'', 26). They, one and all, independently came to the same conclusion. Another, Major H.W. Bellew, went on a political mission to Kandahar and published his impressions in his ''Journal of a Mission to Kandahar'', 1857-8. He then wrote in 1879 his book ''Afghanistan and Afghans''. In 1880 he was sent, once again on another mission to Kabul, and in the same year he delivered two lectures before the United Services Institute at Simla : "A New Afghan Question, or "Are the Afghans Israelites?" and "Who are the Afghans?" He then published another book: ''The Races of Afghanistan''. Finally he collected all his facts in ''An Enquiry into the Ethnography of Afghanistan'', which was published in 1891.

In this work he mentions ''Killa Yahoodi'' ("Fort of the Jews") (H.W. Bellew, ''An Enquiry into the Ethnography of Afghanistan'', 34), as being the name of the eastern boundary of their country, and also speaks of ''Dasht-i-Yahoodi'' ("Jewish plain") (ibid., 4), a place in , of Moses and the Exodus , of the Wars of the Israelites with the Amalekites and conquest of Palestine , of the Ark Of The Covenant and of the election of Saul to the Kingdom, etc., etc., are clearly founded on the Biblical records, and clearly indicate a knowledge of the Old Testament, which if it does not prove the presence of the Christians at least corroborates their assertion that the Afghans were readers of the Pentateuch up to the time of the appearance of Mohammad." (Ibid., 191)

Note, it is well understood and undisputed that there have never been Christian communities in Afghanistan pre- or for many centuries after the dawn of Islam.

Thomas Ledlie wrote an article in the '' Calcutta Review '', which he subsequently elaborated and published in two volumes. He expressed his views on the subject very clearly: "The Europeans always confuse things, when they consider the fact that the Afghans call themselves Bani Israel and yet reject their Jewish descent. Indeed, the Afghans discard the very idea of any descent from the Jews. They, however, yet claim themselves to be of Bani Israel." Ledlie, More Ledlian, ''Calcutta Review'', January, 1898

Ledlie goes on to explain: "Israelites, or the Ten Tribes, to whom the term Israel was applied – after their separation from the House of David, and the tribe of Judah, which tribe retained the name of Judah and had a distinct history ever after. These last alone are called Jews and are distinguished from the Bani Israel as much in the East as in the West." 7

Among more contemporary writers Dr. and latterly, with almost convincing evidence (so far as it is possible) to the Afghans as descendants from the Lost Tribes." Alfred Edersheim, ''The Life and Times of Jesus, the Messiah'', 15

Sir and Ham , who have adopted a strange mixture of Mosaic Law in Ordinances in their moral code, who (some sections at least) keep a feast which strongly accords with the Passover ,… and for whom no one has yet been able to suggest any other origin than the one they claim, and claim with determined force, and these people are the overwhelming inhabitants of Afghanistan." – Sir Thomas Holditch, ''The Gates of India'', 49.

There are many additional references, recorded incidents, manuscripts and artifacts related to the Hebraic history of the Pashtuns for the dedicated objective researcher who seeks them out.

In his 1957 classic ''The Exiled and the Redeemed'', Itzhak Ben-Zvi , second President of Israel , writes that Hebrew migrations into Afghanistan began, "with a sprinkling of exiles from Samaria who had been transplanted there by Shalmaneser , King of Assyria ( 719 BC ). From the recurrent references in the Book Of Esther to the "one hundred and twenty seven dominions" of King Ahasuerus , the deduction is permissible that eastern Afghanistan was among them." Exiled and the Redeemed'', 176

Ben-Zvi continues, "The Afghan tribes, among whom the Jews have lived for generations, are Moslems who retain to this day their amazing tradition about their descent from the Ten Tribes. It is an ancient tradition, and one not without some historical plausibility. A number of explorers, Jewish and non-Jewish, who visited Afghanistan from time to time, and students of Afghan affairs who probed into literary sources, have referred to this tradition, which was also discussed in several encyclopedias in European languages. The fact that this tradition, and no other, has persisted among these tribes is itself a weighty consideration. Nations normally keep alive memories passed by word of mouth from generation to generation, and much of their history is based not on written records but on verbal tradition. This was particularly so in the case of the nations and the communities of the Levant. The people of the Arabian Peninsula , for example, derived all their knowledge of an original Pagan cult, which they abandoned in favor of Islam, from such verbal tradition. So did the people of Iran , formerly worshipers of the religion of Zoroaster ; the Turk ish and Mongol tribes, formerly Buddhists and Shaman ists; and the Syria ns who abandoned Christianity in favor of Islam. Therefore, if the Afghan tribes persistently adhere to the tradition that they were once Hebrews and in course of time embraced Islam, and there is not an alternative tradition also existent among them, the matter certainly deserves careful and critical examination." Exiled and the Redeemed''

Ben-Zvi continues to give first hand Jewish witness accounts of the Pashtuns, and other interesting information.

Today, one of the most pre-eminent living Western researchers in this area is Rabbi Avichail of Israel.


REFERENCES

References refuting the theory of Pashtun Jewish decent:


References advocating the theory of Pashtun descent from the Israelites:



  • Bellew: ''Races of Afghanistan''

  • Yu V. Gankovsky, Syed Bahadur Shah Zafar Kaka Khel: ''Pukhtana''

  • Sir Olaf Caroe: ''The Pathans''.


Two recent articles summarizing the rejection of this theory by contemporary anthropoligists are:
  • Yossi Klein Halevi, "In Search of the Ten Lost Tribes", ''The Jerusalem Report'' , Jun 13, 1991, 18.

  • Shalva Weil, "Our Brethren the Taliban?", ''The Jerusalem Report'', Oct 22, 2001, 22.


Other references:


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