Tareen
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The Tareen (or Tarin) (Pashto: ترین) is a Pashtun tribe inhabiting southern Afghanistan, and western region of Pakistan.[1][2]
History
[edit]Much of the tribe continues to live in their native lands in the southern parts of Afghanistan and Pishin in Baluchistan, Pakistan.[3] During the reign of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan (1628 to 1658) a group of Tareen/Tarin emigrated to the area which is now the Hazara region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.[3][4] The Tareen Chiefs resisted the Sikh occupation of Hazara region which resulted in their properties/ land being usurped by Sikh armies.[4][5]
Branches (Clans)
[edit]According to Ni'mat Allah al-Harawi in History of the Afghans, Tareen had three sons namely: Tor, Spin (Aspin or Speen) and Awdal/Born Tareen/Abdali. Their descendants today have adopted the names above as tribal identities and are known as Tor Tareen, Spin Tareen and Bor Tareen. These three major clans are further divided into smaller units.[6][7]
Languages
[edit]The principal languages of Tareen are Tareeno and Pashto and Urdu Punjabi in Pakistan.[citation needed]
Location
[edit]Tareens primarily live in Pishin,[8] Dukki, Loralai, Quetta, Ziarat, Mastung, and Harnai districts of Balochistan, while smaller populations are spread all over the province. They can also be found in parts of Afghanistan, punjab and sindh provinces of Pakistan, aswell as in India they are present. [citation needed]
In Khyber Pukhtunkhwa, the tribe has 'Tareen Vand' in Mardan.[9] In Haripur, a number of Tareen families claim to have settled there since 1600s, after migrating mainly from Pishin and Kandahar. They are also scattered in other parts of kpk aswell like Upper Dir, Lower Dir, Swat, Shangla, Buner, Malakand, Nowshera, Peshawar, Charsadda, Swabi, Bannu, D I Khan and in other districts of Kpk. In most of the parts of KPK Tareens speak Pashto as their 1st language whilst in haripur they speak Hindko and Saraiki in DI khan as 1st language. [citation needed]
Notable people of Tareen descent
[edit]- Ahmad Khan Abdali Tareen (1747–1772 AD) 1st Emir of the Durrani Empire.
- [[Risaldar Muhammad Habib Khan Tarin, CSI, cavalry officer .
- Abdul Latif Khan Tarin (1884-1916), IDSM, British-Indian Army officer, WWI.
- Risaldar Mir Dad Khan Tarin, retired cavalry officer and father of late Field Marshal Ayub Khan.
- Field Marshall Ayub Khan (President of Pakistan) (1907-1974) was a Tareen ancestrally from Pishin (Batezai) in Quetta District.[3]
- Sardar Bahadur Khan (1908-1975) Pakistani politician (Chief Minister of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa)
- Gohar Ayub Khan (b. 1937) Pakistani ex-Army officer, politician and businessman.
- Abdul Majid Khan Tarin, OBE, (1877-1939) Magistrate during British times and MP latter.
- Abdus Salim Khan Tarin, (1907-1957) former Indian and later Pakistani civil servant and diplomat.
- Jehangir Khan Tareen (b. 1953) Pakistani politician and businessman.
- Shaukat Tarin (b. 1953) Pakistani banker and politician.
- Habibullah Khan Tarin (b. 1947) Pakistani army officer and politician.
- Naseer Ahmed Khan Tareen (b. 1936) Pashtun tribal chieftain, social activist and philanthropist
- Jalees Ahmed Khan Tareen (b. 1947) Vice-chancellor of B. S. Abdur Rahman University, former vice-chancellor of Pondicherry University.
- Haris Tarin (b. 1978) Afghan-American, director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, USA.
- Nadeem Tarin Indian businessman, philanthropist and educationist settled in Saudi Arabia
- Muhammad Israr Tareen, politician and member of the Pakistani National Assembly.
- Yousuf Ayub Khan, former politician and a businessman.
- Omar Ayub Khan, politician and minister .
- Akbar Ayub Khan (b. 1971) Member of Parliament from Haripur district, NWFP, Pakistan.
References
[edit]- ^ Caroe O. The Pathans 550 B.C.- A.D. 1957 Oxford University Press ISBN 978-0-19-577221-0. Page 521.
- ^ Muhammad Hyat Khan, "Hayat i Afghan" (Orig. in Persian 1865) trans. by Priestley H. B. "Afghanistan and its Inhabitants", 1874; Reprint Lahore: Sang i Meel Press, 1981
- ^ a b c "Panni 1969"
- ^ a b Hazara District Gazetteer 1883 and 1907.
- ^ Rawalpindi Gazetteer 1890.
- ^ Dorn B. History of the Afghans: translated from the Persian of Neamet Ullah Third edition p42.
- ^ Elphinstone, II. p. 162.[full citation needed]
- ^ 1998 District census report of Pishin. Census publication. Vol. 113. Islamabad: Population Census Organization, Statistics Division, Government of Pakistan. 2000. p. 7.
- ^ "Tazkira by Roshan Khan"