Qais Abdur Rashīd or Qays
ʿAbd ar-Rashīd
(The Founding Father of Pashtun)
Qais Abdur Rashid (Imaginatory sketch) |
Qais Abdur Rashid (575 – 661) (قيس عبد الراشد’ ) also known as Kesh, Qesh and Imraul Qais is said to be the legendary founding
father of the Pashtun people. He was
born in Zhob region of modern day Baluchistan, Pakistan. Qais Abdur
Rashid is thirty-seventh in descent from King Saul or Malik Talut (Hazrat Talut
A.S.).
There are doubts about the historicity and existence of such a figure: as the
Pashtun ethnicity began taking shape in the Bronze age and Islam
spread through Afghanistan over a period time as opposed to people changing
faith in a single day. It is likely the conception of such a figure was
promoted to bring harmony between religious identity and ethnic identity.
He was sent by his tribe to Medina in Saudi Arabia.
He met the Prophet of Islam Muhammad P.B.U.H. and embraced Islam there, and was
given the name ‘Abdur Rashid’ by Muhammad P.B.U.H.
In introducing Qais Abdur Rashid, the Messenger of
Allah P.B.U.H. mentioned to his companions, here is a prince of the line of the
kings of Israel to witch both Qais and the companions attested.
The Prophet also gave him the ominous and truly
prophetic title of Batan from which the word Pathan (modern day usage) has
descended. It is also important to note here that Pathan is also the name of
one of the progenitors of Qais (Kish) and a a grandson of Abraham (Hazrat
Ibrahim A.S.) mentioned in the bible.
Qais returned to the region of Afghanistan (ghazni,
Ghour and Zhob) and introduced Islam to his tribe.
According
to the folk tale, Qais had three sons: Sarbaṇ (سربڼ), Beṭ (بېټ),
and Gharghax̌t (غرغښت). His sons founded three tribal
confederacies named after them: Sarbani, Bettani, and Gharghashti. Qais also
had an adopted son, Karlani Ormur Baraki who is progenitor of the Karlani tribe.There
are multiple versions of the legend, including several regional variants that
mention only one, two, or three of the four legendary brothers.
Some
Afghan genealogies list Qais as the 37th descendant of King Talut (or Saul, reigned c. 1050 BC–1010 BC) through
Malik Afghana, a legendary grandson of Talut.
The British Indian administrator Muhammad Hayat Khan, in his book Hayāt-e
Afghānī (حیات افغانی; orig 1865, English
translation 1874), writes that Qais was the 101st descendant of Saul through
Saul's son Yehonatan.
According
to the Encyclopaedia of Islam, the theory of Pashtun
descent from the ancient Israelites is traced to Tārīkh-e Khān Jahānī wa
Makhzan-e Afghānī (تاریخ خان جهانی ومخزن افغانی), a history compiled by Nimat Allah al-Harawi during the reign of
the Mughal emperor Jahangirin the 17th century. The Makhzan-e
Afghānī's Israelite theory, however, has been dismissed by modern authorities
due to numerous historical and linguistic inconsistencies.
Legend
has it that Qais was born in the Ghor region of present-day
central Afghanistan. Upon hearing about the advent
of Islam, his tribe sent him to Medina in the Arabian
Peninsula, in
present-day Saudi Arabia. He met the Prophet Muhammad and embraced Islam there,
and was given the name Abdur Rashīd by the Prophet. He then returned
to Ghor and introduced Islam to his tribe. According to Mountstuart Elphinstone, in legend the famous military
leader and companion of Muhammad, Khalid ibn al-Walid, introduced Qais to the Prophet
Muhammad.
The Afghan historians proceed to relate that the Jewish tribe, both
in Ghor and in Arabia, preserved their knowledge of
the unity of God and the purity of their
religious belief, and that on the appearance of the last prophet and messenger,
Prophet Muhammad, the Afghans of Ghor listened to
the invitation of their Arabian brethren, the chief of whom
was Khalid ibn al-Waleed, so famous for his conquest
of Syria, and marched to the aid of the
true faith, under the command of Kyse, afterwards surnamed "Abdul
Rasheed"
One
legend has it that when Qais felt his time was near, he asked his sons to take
him from Ghor to the Sulaiman Mountains and bury him at the spot
where his ancestor Malik Afghana was buried, and he was
buried on top of Takht-e-Sulaiman ("Throne of
Solomon"), also called Da Kasī Ghar (د
کسي غر,
"Mount of Qais"), located near the village of Darazinda in Frontier Region Dera
Ismail Khan of
the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan, close to Frontier Region Dera
Ismail Khan's borders with both South
Waziristan and Zhob District, Balochistan. Some people visit the place, mostly in the
summer, since in winters the snowfall makes it difficult to climb, and sacrifice an animal, usually a sheep or a goat at
the tomb of Qais.
According to another legend, however, Qais settled in the Balkh region of present-day northern Afghanistan. From there, his different descendants migrated south, west, and east.
Nearly all of the major Pashtun tribes are linked or associated with Qais Abdur Rashid and his descent from King Saul (Hazrat Talut) through Malik Afghan.
Though Qais Abdur Rashid is not the direct ancestor or progenitor of all Afghans Pashtun/Pukhtuns), he was the grand leader of the Afghans at the time of the Holy Prophet Muhammad P.B.U.H. and the first Muslim Afghan.
According to another legend, however, Qais settled in the Balkh region of present-day northern Afghanistan. From there, his different descendants migrated south, west, and east.
Nearly all of the major Pashtun tribes are linked or associated with Qais Abdur Rashid and his descent from King Saul (Hazrat Talut) through Malik Afghan.
Though Qais Abdur Rashid is not the direct ancestor or progenitor of all Afghans Pashtun/Pukhtuns), he was the grand leader of the Afghans at the time of the Holy Prophet Muhammad P.B.U.H. and the first Muslim Afghan.
Afghans refer to him as Qais the father and all
tribes associate themselves with him out of respect for he is recognized as the
1st Afghan who reverted to Islam. Therefore even though Afghans lived and
existed long before him ever since the destruction of the Temple of Solomon in
~ 587 BCE by Nebuchadnezzar II, in essence he is the 1st Afghan.
It is said that Qais Abdur Rashid (Kish) is
that he is the blood father of all modern day Afghan (Pashtun) people and that
all tribes are descended from him.
In fact, he was only a leader (Chieftain) of the group of seven Tribal
elders (Tribal leaders) sent along with a group of 76 Afghans (Pashtuns) to
meet the Prophet Muhammad in Medina.
There is,
however, no strong evidence to show any genealogical connection between the
present-day Pashtuns and the ancient Semitic-speaking Israelites. DNA shows that Pashtuns have
several Y-haplogroups, although R1a makes up about 51% among
Pashtuns. Hence, Pashtuns have a significant affinity with their
neighboring Indo-European speaking ethnic groups, and most present-day Pashtuns
descended from the original Indo-European population who have lived in the
territory by other names, such as Arachosians, (Indo-Iranians), and their forebears.
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4 comments:
mashallah great information,
Am imran khan ghaori what is meaning my tribe
قبیلہ
💞
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