
Uzbek
About
1.3 million Uzbek live mingled with the Tajik all across the northern plains
of Afghanistan, from Faryab Province to Faizabad, capital of Badakhshan
Province. There are many mixed Uzbek and Tajik villages, although each live
in separate residential quarters. In 1983 a sizeable group of Uzbek were
included among the group of 4,000 Turkic speakers from Afghanistan that were
resettled in Turkey. Uzbek also reside north of the Afghan border in
Uzbekistan, Tajikstan and Turkmenistan.
The
Uzbek are Mongoloid with considerable Mediterranean admixture. They are
Sunni Muslim and speak central Turkic dialects called Uzbeki. Uzbek practice
agriculture and herding, but many live in towns where they are known as
astute businessmen and skillful artisans as silver and goldsmiths,
leatherworkers, and rug makers.
Some
Afghan Uzbek refer to themselves by old tribal names; others identify with
their towns of origin in Central Asia. Uzbek social structure is strictly
patriarchal, giving considerable authoritarian power to leaders called
begs, arbabs or khans. Marital endogamy is of prime
importance. Although interethnic marriages between Uzbek, Turkoman and Tajik
do take place, antipathy to marriage with Pushtun is widespread.
Afghan
Uzbek originally came from Central Asia and their rise as the dominant
political force in north Afghanistan followed the demise in 1506 of the
Timurid dynasty centered at Herat. They
established eleven strong principalities from Maimana to Kunduz under strong
leaders, sometimes independent, sometimes nominally acknowledging allegiance
to either Bokhara or Kabul, but always jockeying for power among themselves.
At the
end of the nineteenth century Amir Abdur Rahman consolidated these Uzbak
khanates under his rule. Later, fresh immigrations took place in the 1920s
and 1930s as Russian conquests and local uprisings in Central Asia
continued. During this same period many Pushtun settled among the Uzbeks
with the result that by the 1960s the Uzbek had become a small minority
within the area they once dominated. Since 1992, the Uzbek General Abdul
Rashid Dostom, principal leader of the coalition opposing the Taliban, has
controlled the predominant centers of power in the north.
See Also:
Tajik |
Pashtun |
Hazara
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