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==Religion==
==Religion==
The ancient religion of Brokpa was animist and use to follow their own god like land god called sabdak , used to beleive in lha and lhu which are supernatural energy etc.
The ancient religion of Brokpa was animist and use to follow their own god like land god called sabdak , used to beleive in lha and lhu which are supernatural energy etc.
But today Brokpa in the [[Ladakh]] are mostly [[Vajrayana Buddhism|Vajrayana Buddhist]] with a minority of [[Muslim |Muslims]] in [[Chulichan]] village of [[Kargil district]].<ref>https://theveganreview.com/the-brokpa-tribe-thousands-of-years-of-veganism-lost-to-climate-change/ </ref>
But today Brokpa in the [[Ladakh]] are mostly [[Vajrayana Buddhism|Vajrayana Buddhist]] while following their ancient religion of lha ,lhu and sabdak , with a minority of [[Muslim |Muslims]] in [[Chulichan]] village of [[Kargil district]].<ref>https://theveganreview.com/the-brokpa-tribe-thousands-of-years-of-veganism-lost-to-climate-change/ </ref>
The Brokpa in [[Gilgit Baltistan]] are all Muslim .
The Brokpa in [[Gilgit Baltistan]] are all Muslim .



Revision as of 13:05, 18 October 2022

Brogpa Minaro, Drokpa, Broqpa
Minaro
File:Brokpa Aryan man with traditional headdress.jpg
Total population
2858 (1981 census)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 India (Garkon, Dha-Hanu, Darchik and Chulichan)
 Pakistan (Ganokh, Morol, Dananusar and Chechethang)
Languages
Brokskat
Religion
Buddhism and Islam
Related ethnic groups
Other Indo-Aryan peoples

The Minaro or Broqpa (Brokstat: مِنارُو/Mináró) are a small ethnic group mostly found in the Indian Union territory of Ladakh, with a smaller population in Kharmang District of Baltistan, Pakistan.[2][3] They speak an Indo-Aryan language of the Dardic subgroup called Brokskat.[4]

They are found in Dah Hanu, Garkon, Darchik, and Chulichan villages of Ladakh and part of the community is also located in the Deosai plateau just across the Line of Control in the villages of Ganokh, Morol, Dananusar, and Chechethang in Baltistan. They are said to have originally come from Chilas and settled in the area generations ago.

Religion

The ancient religion of Brokpa was animist and use to follow their own god like land god called sabdak , used to beleive in lha and lhu which are supernatural energy etc. But today Brokpa in the Ladakh are mostly Vajrayana Buddhist while following their ancient religion of lha ,lhu and sabdak , with a minority of Muslims in Chulichan village of Kargil district.[5] The Brokpa in Gilgit Baltistan are all Muslim .

Name

The endonym of the Brokpa people is "Minaro," which means "Aryan" in the Brokstat language.[6][7] 'Brogpa' is the name given by the Purig people of Kargil, which means more or less "hillbilly"[8] while Drokpa is the name given by the Bod people of Leh district.[9]

[6]

Diet

The traditional Brogpa diet is based on locally grown foods such as barley and hardy wheat prepared most often as tsampa/sattu (roasted flour). It takes in different ways.[clarification needed] Other important foods include potatoes, radishes, turnips, and Gur-Gur Cha, a brewed tea made of black tea, butter, and salt.

Dairy and poultry sources are not eaten because of religious taboos. Brogpa eat three meals a day: Choalu Unis (breakfast), Beali (lunch), and Rata Unis (dinner). Brogpa vary with respect to the amount of meat (mainly mutton) that they eat. A household's economic position decides the consumption of meat. It is only during festivals and rituals that all have greater access to mutton.[10]

Economy and employment

The Brogpa economy has shifted from agropastoralism to wage labor, and the division of labor that relied on stratifications of age and gender is now obsolete. The Brogpa transition to private property, monogamy, nuclear families, formal education, wage labor, and their incorporation into a highly militarized economy of soldiering and portering illuminates the complex workings of modernity in Ladakh.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ "ST-14 Scheduled Tribe Population By Religious Community" (PDF). Census of India. Ministry of Home Affairs, India. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  2. ^ "بروسکت: پاکستان میں ایک نئی زبان دریافت". Independent Urdu (in Urdu). 16 March 2022. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
  3. ^ Lyovin, Anatole; Lyovin, Associate Professor of Linguistics Anatole V. (1997). An Introduction to the Languages of the World. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-508116-9.
  4. ^ Jain, Danesh; Cardona, George (26 July 2007). The Indo-Aryan Languages. Routledge. p. 889. ISBN 978-1-135-79711-9.
  5. ^ https://theveganreview.com/the-brokpa-tribe-thousands-of-years-of-veganism-lost-to-climate-change/
  6. ^ a b atlasofhumanity.com. "India, Brokpa People". Atlas Of Humanity. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  7. ^ Khan, Arman (4 May 2022). "This 'Aryan' Community's 'Exotic' Clothes and Polyamorous Marriages Mask Other Truths". Vice Media. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  8. ^ Advani, Rukun (22 May 2014). Written Forever: The Best of Civil Lines. Hachette India. p. 234. ISBN 978-93-5009-783-0.
  9. ^ "Brokskat". Ethnologue. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  10. ^ "Bhasin, Veena: Social Change, Religion and Medicine among Brokpas of Ladakh, Ethno-Med., 2(2): 77-102 (2008)" (PDF). Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  11. ^ Bhan, Mona (2013). "1.Becoming Brogpa". Counterinsurgency, Democracy and the Politics of Identity in India. Routledge South Asia Series. ISBN 9781138948426.


Template:Ethnic groups of India