Jump to content

Niazi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Atiqniazi (talk | contribs) at 12:51, 31 July 2010 (→‎Notable Niazi's: they have not done any thing that they should be prominent in this article. having done phd or having a rank in army does not constitute prioority over other people.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Major ethnic groups of Pakistan (1980); Pashtun in green.
North-West Frontier Province and region

Niazi نیازی (Pashto: نیازی) is a major Pashtun tribe, a tribe of the Ghilzai Pashtuns of Afghanistan and Pakistan. The word Niazi is derived from Niazai, like the other forms of Pashtun tribes, such as Yusafzai and Orakzai. In the Pashtun tribal hierarchy Niazi is one of the most respected tribe.

The history of the Pashtuns is ancient, and much of it has yet to be fully researched. From the 2nd millennium BC to the present, Pashtun regions have seen invasions and migrations including Aryan tribes (Iranian peoples, Indo-Aryans), Medes, Persians, Mauryas, Scythians, Hephthalites, Greeks, Arabs, Turks, and Mongols. There are many conflicting theories about the origins of the Pashtun people, some modern and others archaic, both among historians and the Pashtuns themselves. Some anthropologists lend credence to the theory of Pashtun descent from Israelites, however, most modern authorities have found this oral tradition to be inconsistent. Ghilzais are reputed to be descended from the Mongolic people, as well as the numerous other invaders from Central Asia and the Middle East who have entered Afghanistan over the centuries. Their name being another form of Khitali the Turkish word for 'swords man' who early settled, perhaps as mercenaries rather than as a corporate tribe, in the Siah-band range of the Ghor mountains. They first rose into notice in the time of Mahmud of Ghazni when they accompanied in his invasions of India.

History

Imran Khan Niazi: Pakistani cricketer and politician

The tribes of the Dera Ismail Khan district and the surrounding areas belong almost exclusively to the lineage of Sheikh Baitan, third son of Qais Abdur Rashid. His descendents are known as Bitanni. In the early part of the 8th century, when Baitan was living in his original home on the western slopes of the Ghor mountains, prince Shah Husain of Persia, a descendant of the Ghori kings, flying before the Arab invaders took refuge with him, and married his daughter Bibi Matto. From him are descended the Matti section of the nation, which embraces the Ghilzai, Lodhi, and Sherwani pathans. The Ghilzai were the most prominent of all the Afghan tribes till the rise of the Durrani power, while the Lodhi section gave to Delhi the Lodhi and Suri dynasties. To the Ghilzai and Lodhi, and especially to the former, being almost all the tribes of warrior traders who are included under the term Pawindah, from parwindah, the Persian word for a bale of goods, or perhaps more probably, from the same root as powal, a Pashto word for 'to graze'.

It is not to be wondered that these warlike tribes cast covetous eyes on the plains of Indus, held as they were by a Jat population. Early in the 13th century, about the time of Shahab ud-Din Ghori, the Prangi and Suri tribes of the Lodhi branch, with their kinsmen the Sherwani, settled in the northern part of the district immediately under the Sulaimans, the Prangi and the Suri holding Tank and Rori, while the Sherwani settled south of the Luni in Draban and Chandwan. In the early part of the 15th century the Niazi, another Lodhi tribe, followed their kinsmen from Shalgar (Ghazni) into Tank, where they lived quietly as Pawindahs for nearly a century, when they crossed the trans-Indus Salt Range and settled in the country now held by the Marwat in the south of the Bannu district, then almost uninhabited save by a sprinkling of pastoral Jats, where Babur mentioned them as cultivators in 1505.

During the reign of the Lodhi and Suri sultans of Delhi, the Prangi and Suri tribes from which these dynasties sprang, and their neighbors the Niazi, seem to have migrated almost bodily from Afghanistan into Pakistan, where the Niazi rose to considerable power, one of their being the Governor of Lahore. In the early days of Akbar's reign the Lohani, another Lodhi tribe, who had been expelled by the Sulaiman Khel Ghilzai from their homes in Katawaz in the Ghazni mountains, crossed the Sulaiman range, the other Lodhi tribes were too weak to resist them; and they removed the remaining Prangi and Suri from the Tank. The Lohani are divided into four subtribes, the Marwat, Daulat Khel, Mian Khel and Tator. About the beginning of the 17th century the Daulat Khel quaralled with the Marwats and the Mian Khel and drove them out of Tank. The Marwats moved northwards across the Salt Range and drove the Niazi eastwards across the Kurram and Salt Range into Isa Khel and the banks of the Indus, where they found a mixed Awan and Jat population whom they expelled. Their ancestor Niazai had three sons, Bahai, Jamal and Khaku. The descendents of the first are no longer distinguishable; while the Isa Khel among the Jamal, and the Mushani and Sarhang clans among the Khaku, have overshadowed the other clans and given their names to the most important existing divisions of the tribe. The Isa Khel took root in the south of their new country and shortly developed into agriculturists; the second settled farther to the north round about Kamar Mushani, and seem for a time to have led a pastoral life; while the majority of the Sarhangs, after drifting about for several generations, permanently established themselves across Indus, on the destruction of the Gakhar stronghold of Muazam Nagar by one of Ahmad Shah's lieutenants. That event occurred about 1748, and with it terminated the long connection of the Gakhars with Mianwali. They seem to have been dominant in the northern parts of the country even before the Emperor Akbar presented it in jagir to two of their chiefs. During the civil commotions of Jahangir's reign, the Niazi are said to have driven the Gakhars across the Salt Range, and though in the following reign the latter recovered their position, still their hold on the country was precarious, and came to an end about the middle of the nineteenth century. The Niazi established themselves in Isa Khel about 270 years ago, but their Sarhang branch did not finally obtain its present possessions in Mianwali until nearly 150 years later. The acquisition of their cis-Indus possessions was necessarily gradual, the country having a settled though weak government, and being inhabited by Awans and Jats.

People

Niazis in Pakistan currently live mainly in Bhakkar, Bannu, Lakki Marwat, Chakwal District, Swabi, Mardan, Hangu, Balochistan, Kohat and Mianwali. However, a large number of the Niazi tribe still lives in parts of Afghanistan, mainly in Qalaye Niazi, Gardez, Logar and Paktia province. A considerable number have also settled in Karachi and other major Pakistani cities such as Lahore, Islamabad and Peshawar.

Tribe members living in Afghanistan speak Pashto, as do those inhabiting the districts of Hangu, Kohat, Swabi, Mardan, Lakki Marwat and Bannu in Pakhtunkhwa. However, those Pashtuns living east of Kohat and those living in Punjab have not retained their ancestral language and mostly speak Saraiki dialect which is influenced by Pashto. Like other Pashtun tribes, Niazis strongly observe the honor code formally known as Pashtunwali.

Niazi-inhabited places in Pakistan and Afghanistan

  • Ghazni, Long 68.42722, Lat 33.37528
  • Qalaye Niazi
  • Kabol, Long 69.21833, Lat 34.46889
  • Logar, Long 69.10833, Lat 33.7575
  • Parwan, Long 69.22917, Lat 34.99278
  • Wardak, Long 68.68333, Lat 34.3
  • Paktika, Long 68.87028, Lat 33.37889
  • Kohat, NWFP, Pakistan
  • Mardan, Sawabi, NWFP
  • Hangu, NWFP
  • Bannu, N.W.F.P
  • Katti Khel, Tank, Pukhtunkhwa
  • Pishin bazar, Balochistan, Pakistan
  • District Mianwali, Punjab, Pakistan
  • Basti Boher Multan , Punjab
  • Rahim Yar Khan, Punjab
  • Union Council Fazil & Ghulama, Kalurkot, Bhakkar, Punjab
  • Jaranwala, District Faislabad, Punjab
  • Katora, Khanewal, Punjab
  • Union Council Kot Gulla,Lawa. Tehsil Talagang District Chakwal , Punjab

Notable Niazi's

Niazi's have produced some of the most famous people of both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Prominent Niazis in Afghanistan

  • Ghulam Mohammed Niazi,(founder of Jamiat-e-Islami Afghanistan)
  • Mullah Manon Niazi, Governor of Mazar-e-Sharif.
  • Nasima Niazi, Helmand Province Representative in the lower house of parliament.

Current members of the Provincial Assembly of Pakistan

  • Amir Abdullah Khan Rokhri/Niazi, Samand Khel(Former MNA, Former Senator)
  • Gul Hameed Khan Rokhri/Niazi, Samand Khel, (Current Punjab Minister for Revenue, Relief, & Consolidations)
  • Maqbool Ahmed Khan Niazi, Zaman Khel (Former Federal Minister)
  • Maulana Abdul Sattar Khan Niazi (Former Minister; Founder of Jamiat Ulema-i-Pakistan Niazi)
  • Maulana Kausar Niazi, (Former Federal Minister)
  • Obaid Ullah Khan Niazi, Shadi Khel (former member of the National Assembly, current Nazim of Mianwali)
  • Aamir Hayat Khan Niazi/Rokhri, Samand Khel, (Former Member National Assembly, Currently Member Provincial Assembly)
  • Gul Hameed Khan Rokhri/Niazi, Samand Khel (MPA Mianwali)
  • Amanat Ullah Khan Niazi, of Shadikhel (MPA Mianwali)
  • Abdur Razzaq Khan Niazi, Zaman Khel (MPA Khanewal)
  • Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Niazi,Pai Khel(former Minister for Forest,Tourism,Culture and Fishries)MPA
  • Najeeb ullah Khan Niazi, Sherman Khel (Bhakkar Pakistan Muslim League N.)MPA
  • Tariq Abbas Khan Niazi, Taja Khel, Advisor to Chief Minister (You was not a MPA,Why do you keep putting Your name Here?)
  • Abdul Rehman Khan Niazi alias Babli Niazi (ex Provincial Minister Prisons}MPA
  • Saleem Ullah Khan Niazi Paikhel PUNJAB PAKSTAN MPA
  • Inam Ullah Khan Niazi Shermankhel PUNJAB PAKISTAN MPA


Notable Contributors

  • Ghazanfar Ullah Khan Niazi (1912-1994), Founder GTMC, Tamgha-e-Quaide Azam
  • Hameed Ullah Khan Niazi/Kalla Khel, Rokhri(1910-1986)(Alig), Superintendent Police

Notable military personnel

  • Haibat Khan Niazi, Most Powerful General under Sher Shah Suri and was given title of Masnad-i-Ali and Azam Humayun
  • Isa Khan Niazi (Afghan Amir) The Famous Niazi Chief and one of the Most Powerful Military Commander in times of King Babur And Sher Shah Suri.
  • Lt. General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi, Sitara-i-Jurat twice and Military Cross, British Army, known as Tiger Niazi(Commander of East Pakistan Army 1971)

Sportspeople

  • Imran Khan Niazi, Shermankhel (Ex.Captain Pakistan Cricket team)
  • Tariq Niazi (Olympic Gold Medalist,Pakistan Hockey team)
  • Misbah ul Haq Khan Niazi (Batsman, Pakistan Cricket team)
  • Sami ullah Khan Niazi (Bowler, Pakistan Cricket team)

References