For many years the tribal people have
brainwashed us with the idea of national unity
and, naively, we have accepted the idea. At the
same time, they brutally violated the very
fabrics of this imposed national unity that they
have advocated. The following is an example of
the conniving nature of these tribal people and
the lies of national unity that they tried to
force upon us.
In one of the counties of
the Ghor Province in Central Afghanistan, the
people of the county gathered in the middle of
the town to discuss the dark times that their
region was facing. They were all in a frenzied
state, everyone throwing in what they knew. One
person in the crowd was saying that Kabul has
been looted by the mercenary army forces of
Nadir Shah, who was himself the servant of the
British. Another town member chimed in that
tens of thousands of people had been
slaughtered. Another person added that hundreds
of people, including Amir Habibullah Kalakani,
have been shot and/or hanged by Nadir Shah and
his mercenary pack while someone else said that
the forces had no mercy, that they hadn’t even
spared the 11-year old son of Kalakani and had
tore apart the little boy like a hawk might do
to a field mouse. One man said that the entire
north of Kabul was looted by the tribes of
Mangal Zazai as well as the tribes of Awghans
from the other side of the Durand Line who
accompanied Nadir Shah from British India.
Someone else said that the British generals were
running the massacre show and that Nadir Shah
was just a puppet. Then one loud voice overtook
them all, saying no one in the history of
Khorasan has proven to be as dishonorable as
Nadir Shah. They never thought that such an
ignoble and corrupted person like Nadir Shah,
who broke the promise he swore on the Quran,
existed in this land. All in all, the
discussion was very heated.
Salar, the chief of the county, rose
from the crowd and said in a sad and
disheartened loud voice, “Brothers, I have just
received the news that the tribal and barbaric
mercenaries of Nadir Shah are heading towards
our province and county and will reach us by
late night or early tomorrow morning.” This
sent the town people into a further frenzy and
Salar had to raise his voice even more in order
to be heard. “You must hide whatever goods or
valuable belongings you posses. Take as many as
your animals — your cows, sheep, horses – and
hide them in the mountains. We must hide our
women: our mothers, daughters, sisters. We need
to keep everything of value away from their
sight. They are dishonorable people and will
not show mercy on anyone. They will loot
everything, kidnap, rape, and even kill.”
In a scared uproar, the people
returned back to their houses to hide their
goods and valuables. They dug holes deep into
the ground to throw their valuable possesses in,
told their women to keep covered and hidden in
the houses, and took their animals into the
rugged mountains to hide. That night, the
entire town palpitated with fear and the
anticipation of the imminent danger kept them
from sleeping. They knew their lives would
change for the worse because of the barbaric
tribal people who would soon be upon them. The
night turned into early morning and the town was
awake earlier than usual. A dead silence hung
like a pall over the town. No one wanted to
venture outside of their house and the people
who had stayed in the mountain were too scared
to come out of hiding. Everyone was plagued
with uncertainty and fear, expecting nothing but
the worse. As the sun slowly rose, bringing
daylight unto the town and not too far in the
distance the mercenary force of Nadir Shah could
be seen approaching in a malicious cloud of
dust. There were over 1,000 people; some of
them had clearly brought their families to aid
in the thievery and looting. Within a short
time, they had the town surrounded and forced
the people out of their houses and had them
gathered together. The looters took whatever
possession they were able to find themselves and
knowing that the townspeople who have hidden a
lot of their goods, they commenced in torturing
them for the remainder of the valuables. They
tortured and beat them to try to make them
talk. Mothers were forced to witness their
children beaten to death, daughters were torn
from the sides of their families, and fathers
were beheaded to serve as examples. Screams of
pain and mercy filled the town and went unheeded
by the mercenaries. Young children lay crying
in pools of blood.
The people had no choice but to
confess their hiding places. The unlucky ones
were the people who had no possess to give up.
Those who had nothing to give were thought to be
lying and they died under the torture inflicted
by the barbarians. Aside from the stolen goods,
the mercenaries also found and took the pistols,
guns, and swords of the townspeople. As they
continued to torture the town, they managed to
find out about the people hiding in the
mountains. A group of the mercenaries headed
towards the mountains and dragged the hidden
people and their animals out, administering the
same torture on them.
After all the looting and killing was done,
Mahmat Gul Khoman, the leader of the band of
robbers, took note of the agricultural land and
then gathered the townspeople in the center of
the town. Amid the whimpers and cries of pain,
he stood before them and naming a few of his
accomplices, he then said, “We are the new
rulers of this land. We are sent by Nadir Shah,
the new king. He has awarded us the fertile
land of this county.”
He looked around and took pleasure in the
frightened state that town was in. “From now
on,” he continued, “these lands will belong to
my people. They will choose their lands from
among yours. And no one can oppose them. It
does not matter who it belonged to before, it is
all up for grabs now. No one can object
to this. The slightest hint of a threat shown
by you towards my people will be dealt with
swiftly and severely. We will kill you and your
entire family. My people are armed and you will
never be allowed to carry any kind of arms. We,
as the army of the new King Nadir Shah, are the
rulers and we will provide security for you as
well.”
He then named fifty families and said these
families will settle in the town and choose
their land. Gul Khoman called out to one of the
uninvited foreigner and introduced him to the
town as Mangal Khan Afridi. He said, “From now
on, Mangal Khan Afridi is the head of the town.”
Mangal Khan Afridi stood in front of
the townspeople, a smug look on his face. He
had a thick, long moustache that stretched all
the way to both ears. Turning to Gul Khoman, he
asked, “Why do these Khorasanis have such
different features? They don’t look all that
similar and when they were talking earlier, we
heard them talking in different languages.
Some of them didn’t even speak in Parsi and
those that did, spoke in different dialects of
Parsi.” He turned to them in confusion. “But
yet, we know they are all Khorasanis.”
Gul Khoman said, “They are not Khorasanis
anymore.” He indicated towards the townspeople
with his hand and said, “They are Tajiks Uzbeks,
and Hazaras. From now on, they will not be
referred to as Khorasanis but by these other
names. Never again, will they be Khorasanis.
Me and you, we are Awghans and now, we are a
part of this region and community. We are the
rulers and authority figures and no one must
forget that. They are our subjects and we will
rule over them.”
After a while, all of the
mercenaries left the town, except for the fifty
Awghan families chosen by Gul Khoman. The
townspeople temporarily forgot the possession
they had lost as they desperately tried to tend
to the injured and dead people. They were more
worried about the deaths of their people than
their materialistic loss. Whimpers of pain and
wails of mourning arose as the townspeople
surveyed the loss of human loss. Some of the
injured people begged to be killed and put out
of their misery, their pain was too great, their
injuries irreparable. The townspeople’s heart
broke collectively, and those who had survived
wished they hadn’t. People cried over the
senseless tragedy that had befallen the town.
One woman came across her son’s body which had
been cut to pieces and she fell over him,
shrouding with her shawl as if to protect him
from more harm. A young girl who had been
physically assaulted was beating herself,
knowing the shame that would befall upon her
parents. As the townspeople suffered this
misfortune, the Awghan families began picking
out their newly won lot.
A few months passed and though the
two groups resided in the same town, they could
not have been further a part from each other.
The intruders had chosen most and best of the
fertile land while the others struggled to
rebuild their lives. The county people referred
to the intruders as Naqileens (Aliens,
Intruders). These Naqileens never hesitated in
performing any oppressive or inhumane act
towards the people of the town. While the
Naqileens were always armed, the townspeople had
no weapons to defend themselves or fight back.
They were normal civilians; civilized farmers
and merchants and living in this oppressed
environment was something new to them. Day by
day, the situation grew more tense and
unbearable. The townspeople never allowed the
Naqileens any mental comfort. They never
forgave them or forgot the fact that the
Naqileens were brought in by the mercenary army
of Nadir Shah, had stolen their livelihood and
had access to all the weapons. The county
people hated and detested them and made their
feelings obvious. There were several occasions
where quarrels and scrimmages broke out between
the county people and the Naqileens. These
fights always ended with the death of a
townsperson.
Though the people of the county were of
different ethnicities, they had lived together
peacefully in that region for thousands of
years. They had always been the indigenous
people of the land, generation after generation
had lived side by side with each other with no
trouble. The intruders, Naqileens, now tried to
bring about the idea of division to the town,
starting with themselves first, claiming that
they were Afghans (Awghans) and thus deserved
special privileges.
According to Nadir Shah, since he
was the one who had seized control of the
government, the Awghans were the citizens,
rulers and authoritative figure of the country.
Because of this new, enforced rule, Awghans who
had arrived from the other side of the Durand
Line and the south part of Khorasan considered
themselves as the owner of the towns and
counties. They figured themselves to be the
real owners since they had the backing of the
government and they considered the indigenous
people as the outsiders and as their subjects.
Whenever there was an issue between the two
different sets of people, they would claim, “We
are Awghan and the King is Awghan and it’s our
country. Whatever we want and whatever pleases
us, we will do.” Being an Awghan came with
self-given privileges which they backed with
violence and force. The Tajiks, Hazaras, and
Uzbeks hated the Intruders, the Naqileens, who
had disrupted their entire way of life.
One night, the chief Mangal Afridi
held a meeting with the other Intruders. Once
they all arrived in his house, he stated the
purpose of the meeting. He said, “Dear Awghans,
it’s been several years since we’ve lived here
but these Khorasanis evidently refuse to be
friendly towards us. They don’t want any normal
relationship with us and always look at us with
hatred and contempt in their eyes. And these
feelings of contempt are so strong, we can feel
it.”
The rest of the Naqileens nodded in
agreement.
“Yes, we have taken their land.
But, still, are we not their neighbors?” Mangal
Afridi continued. “The events of the past can’t
be changed and they should get over it. But
yet, they refuse to accept us as their
neighbors. Wherever we go, we have to make sure
we are armed. We can’t live a normal life like
this… always making sure we are protected,
always having to be careful and watching our
backs. We can’t relax and I know many of us are
scared. And many of our kind have disappeared
after having killed a townsperson over a
quarrel. We don’t know where they are, those
five or six of us that have disappeared. Nor do
we have any hopes of finding out what happened
to them. There is no evidence or any clue and
these county people will never cooperate with us
or help us in finding out. Even though we
are the authority figures and we are the armed
ones, we are also the one who are scared and who
live in fear and in a tense situation. We are
going crazy! What should we do to have a normal
life?”
The rest of the Naqileens started
shouting agreements.
Pacha Khan Zazai, one of the Awghans,
said loudly, “Everything you say is true. It is
a bad situation. Especially after the arrival
of Mahlim (Teacher) Shah Rukh from Kabul. I
heard that after Kabul was captured by our
forces, Shah Rukh was fired from his teaching
position and he moved back to his native home,
which was this county. His arrival has
drascially increased our problems by several
folds. Shah Rukh is teaching the boys of the
town how to read and write as well as educating
the people of the county. He’s injecting ideas
into their heads, and turning the people against
us. They are becoming more and more aware of
their desolate situation and are not readily
accepting their fate.”
Everyone murmured their agreement as
Pacha Khan continued. “He’s educating the boys
on history and what ‘occupation’ is. He is
emphasizing on the differences between us and
them in a bad way. The situation has become
worse, tenser. They hate us more and more. The
other problem is that Shah Rukh is even teaching
our own children how to write and read. Our own
children don’t listen to us but they seem to
hand on every word Shah Rukh says. Whatever
that teacher says, they listen. Just the other
day, my own son told me that Mahlim Shah Rukh
said that in the Quran, God says that all humans
are equal and all humans are brothers. That
there are no differences between men.”
Mangal Afridi said, “Yes, Pacha
Khan. I have called you all in for this exact
reason. I do have an idea, a solution to our
problems.”
Pacha Khan said, “Then tell us what
this solution is.”
Mangal Khan said, “If we want to
live in this town – to live peaceful and normal
lives and have regular relationships with the
indigenous people then we have no choice but to
become friends.
The crowed buzzed with confusion.
Pacha Khan asked, “But how can we be friends
with them? We took their land which their
families have owned for generations. We took it
by force and are only able to live there because
we have our arms and because we have established
ourselves as the rulers. It’s not possible to
have their things and be friends at the same
time.”
Chief Mangal Khan said, “Well, we
can share our privileges with them.”
The discussion continued for a while
as they thought of ways to get the townspeople
to become friendly towards them. In the
morning, the group of Naqileens called out for
the representatives of the non-Awghan
townspeople and asked for a meeting between the
two groups. Once the group had assembled with
the Awghans on one side and the non-Awghans on
the other, Mangal Khan stood forth and for the
first time he referred to the indigenous people
as “brothers.” He said, “We have decided to
live like brothers. We are equals and can live
here together in harmony.”
Salar came forward and said, “Yes,
you are right. We are equal. God has created
all humans as equal to one another and in
Islam, all human beings are brothers. The only
differences among us are our actions and the way
God will judge us based on those actions and
deeds.” Salar gave a pointed look towards
Mangal Khan. “So I must say that it is a good
sign, indeed, that you have come to
realize this, as well. So, tell me. How can we
start this brotherly friendship and equality?”
Mangal Khan said, “Well, to begin
with, you can become Afghans. And since we are
Muslims, too, and Islam does not give privilege
to any one group, we are therefore all brothers
and are equal. The King is an Afghan, the
Kingdom is an Afghan one, and you can become
Afghan as well, and we will, of course, share
our privileges with you.” Mangal Khan took out
the treaty he had written down and commenced
reading from it. “Our children and youngsters
can marry one another, go to school together.
We can do business with one another, etc.”
After the discussion was over, both
sides agreed upon the treaty and parted ways.
However, after a few days, the people of the
town requested another meeting to be held. Both
sides met up once more and this time Salar came
forth first to speak.
He said, “Now that we are all
Afghans and we are equal brothers, it is better
that you share your other privileges with us.
Just being considered as Afghans is not
enough. You must share your other privileges.”
Mangal asked him, “Give us an
example. What would like us to do?”
Salar said, “Shah Rukh has written
down some of our demands and requests on a piece
of paper and he will read it out loud to you.”
Shah Rukh came forth and started
reading from the list. He began, “In the name
of God, the most Beneficent, the most Merciful.
First, you have taken all the fertile and of the
people of this county. You have taken most of
the good land and have left practically nothing
for us. You can return at least half of them
back to the people of the town. Second, you can
not continue to use what little agricultural
field that the townspeople have left for your
animal’s grazing needs. Third, from now on our
town will be governed through a counsel. The
head of the town will be elected through the
counsel which will be made up of both sides.
The people will rule themselves. Fourth, you
have to get rid of your weapons. Like us, you
must live without them. Fifth, you need to send
a message to your King and rulers, that they
shouldn’t forcefully place our sons in the
army. Our sons are there to just act like
slaves. They always remain soldiers and they
are never promoted to officers of any kind.
They should at least have the option of higher
ranks. Sixth, the scholars of the town should
be allowed to become judges. Whenever there is
a quarrel among our people, there is never a
fair hearing. We have no voice and your people
are always unfair and biased. We need a voice
in the courts, too.” Shah Rukh looked up from
the paper and looked directly at the Awghans.
“There are other demands that we will share with
you, but right now, we want you to take care of
these issues first. So Afghan brothers, these
are our demands and our rights.”
The Awghans made a circle and
started talking to one another but they could
not come up with a proper answer to the list of
conditions read by Shah Rukh. One on hand, they
didn’t want to give up their illegitimate
privileges, weapons, or their land. And on the
other hand, they did not want to give up the
shaky peace they had made with the townspeople.
They knew it would provide psychological and
material security if they had a peaceful
relationship with the people. Ultimately, they
just wanted to trick the townspeople into
accepting a few minor conditions while they
still continued to enjoy the more advantageous
privileges. The Awghans wanted the best of both
worlds by cheating the people of the county so
that they can live in security.
On behalf of the Awghans, Mangal
Khan said, “We will consider and think over your
conditions and discuss them with King Nadir
Shah. As you know, some of your conditions are
out of our hands, like the one regarding the
army and your sons. We need to ask the King.”
Salar said, “We will wait for your
response then.”
Mangal left immediately to consult
with his King. A week passed and the Khorasanis
and the Naqileens impatiently awaited his
arrival. One day, several young boys who were
playing outside of the county when they noticed
movements from far away. It was a shadow of a
person approaching their town. They started
yelling, “Mangal Khan is back!” and ran into
town.
All the people of the county and the Awghans
came out of their houses. As Mangal Khan
approached the town, he had the stance of man
who had just conquered the world. He could not
hide the smug look on his face as he
energetically approached the people and
proceeded to shake hands with a few of them. He
was so excited at the message he had to convey
that the tiresome trip he had endured was all
but forgotten.
Without anyone having to ask, Mangal Khan went
right into the subject. “People of the county,
I have the answer to all your questions and your
demands. It is just ONE simple answer.”
Everyone started at him in anticipation.
He said, “Your answer is, ‘don’t we AWghans
speak Pashto?’”
Confused, the townspeople said, “Yes.”
Mangal Khan gave a quick look towards Pacha
Khan, a look full of evil and mockery and Pacha
Khan knew his chief had another way to deceive
the townspeople.
Mangal Khan then said, “Ze pakhtuwayum (I speak
Pashtu). Aw Pakhtanayam (and I’m Pashtun).
Besides being Awghan, our language is Pashtu and
we are Pashtun. And because we are Pashtun and
you are not, we are allowed those extra
privileges that you don’t have. But our
brotherhood still works because we are still all
Awghan.”
With this conniving response, the townspeople
looked like Mangal Khan had thrown ice-cold
water on their faces. They were so shocked and
surprised by this supposed simple answer. And
they were disappointed. They looked at each
other and said, “This is another one of their
tricks, another way for them to deceive us
again. They want to deny us our rights. Until
yesterday, they were calling themselves Awghans
and now they are Pakhtun AWghans and we are
other kinds of Awghans.”
Mangal Khan said, “We are all brothers.”
The Khorasanis looked at him with hatred and one
by one, they left him rambling on with his
excuse. When he had first arrived, Mangal Khan
had a wide smile on his face but as the
townspeople left him, his smile slowly died and
he tried to tell them not to go and to please
listen to him. He ran towards Salar and asked
him to say something to the people to make them
stay.
Salar looked towards Shah Rukh and made a
gesture. Mangal noticed this gesture and he
also turned to the Mahlim.
Shah Rukh said, “I know exactly what the people
of the town are thinking. I know what they
want. And until you stop deceiving the people,
and stop oppressing them with these illegitimate
claims, there will never be any brotherhood
between us nor will there be peace. With all
your cheating and deceiving you think you can
have security? Evil and trickery does not bring
about equality or brotherhood. I just want to
tell you something so that you can think over
it. You made your way here with mercenary
forces. In order to have security, we need to
establish justice here. If you believe in Islam
and our great Prophet Mohammad then you will
discontinue your evil acts. It is possible to
have security and progress in a country without
Islam. But you can not have peace or security
in a country without justice. I want to make
something clear to you and your Awghans. We
will not become Afghans. We are Tajik,
we are Uzbek, we are Hazara. And we are
Khorasanis. Our fathers lived here for
centuries like brothers and we will continue
that. They lived under these ethnicity
identities as well as the identity of Khorasani.
And if you want to be our brothers and live with
us here and shake our hands in brotherhood then
you must stop these tricks. Then we can make a
United Nation of Great Khorasan. And you can
become Khorasanis and give up the illegitimate
privileges. No more deception. Only equality,
brotherhood, and justice.”
May God grant victory for people seeking
justice.