Gabol
Total population | |
---|---|
300,000 | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Languages | |
Balochi, Sindhi, Siraiki, Persian, Arabic | |
Religion | |
Islam | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Other Baloch tribes |
The Gabol (Balochi: گبول, literally aggressor or Warrior) are a Baloch tribe settled in the Balochistan, Sindh and Punjab provinces of Pakistan. Gabols claim Rind origin, and are mostly settled in Tikko Baran surrounding the Kirthar Mountains Range, Karachi, Ghotki, Alipur, Sibi, and Jacobabad. This tribe is also considered to be present in Iran and Syria. The exact population of this tribe is unknown, but estimated by some to be over 300,000.
Languages
Gabols residing in Sindh are bilingual in both Balochi and Sindhi. Members of the Gabol tribe living in Balochistan (Jhatt Patt District Jaffarabad and Lehri) speak Balochi, while members speak Balochi and Siraiki in Punjab. Gabols constitute the major Baloch tribe found in Karachi; some people of this tribe migrated to Tehran, Iran. Gabols still live there, and speak the Balochi language to this day, alongside the national language, Persian.
Chief Sardar
Sardar Nabil Ahmed Khan Gabol is the Chief Sardar of the Gabol tribe,[1] a testament to which is the solidarity amongst the Gabols under his leadership. Nabil Gabol's reign is not only restricted to Karachi, or a particular region, but in every Gabol populated area of Pakistan, including Gabols settled internationally such as those in Saudi Arabia and Oman. Under the Chief Sardar there is a network of village and regional heads called "waderas."
Personalities
Sardar Khudadad Khan Gabol owned vast land in Karachi (the economic capital of Pakistan) during the British Raj. His descendents currently own vast acres of land across the nation, including The Quaid-e-Azam International Airport of Karachi and the land around Quaid-e-Azam Mausoleum.[2] Allah Bakhsh Gabol, the son of Sardar Mir Khudadad Khan Gabol, was the leader of the Congress Party, and was the first Deputy Speaker of the Provisional Assembly of Sindh from 1937 to 1938, the Mayor of Karachi (twice) and elected to the parliament several times. The grandsons of Sardar Mir Allah Bakhsh Gabol filed a case in the Supreme Court of Pakistan to change the name of Quaid-e-Azam International Airport to Gabol Airport as the Government of Pakistan has failed to pay the value of the land to the Gabol family, but there is much opposition from other Baloch tribes due to inter tribal rivalry and the government has not felt the need for a name change.
The tribe has great political and government influence in Pakistan.[3] Apart from Nabil Gabol, and his grandfather, the late Abdul Sattar Gabol, son of Allah Bakhsh Gabol and Nabil Gabol's uncle, had been a Federal Minister twice in the 1970s during the age of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. After qualifying as a barrister from Lincoln's Inn he held various government portfolios including Minister of Labour, manpower and health. He represented his country at various international forums, including the United Nations.
Gabol in Punjab With Mir Chakar Khan Rind
When Mir Chakar Khan Rind left Balochistan and travelled to Punjab, the majority of Gabol tribe accompanied him. Upon reaching the Montgomery District, they fought against Sikh Yatri living there. As a result, all tribes were dispersed in Punjab and Sindh. The Gabols then travelled to Muzaffargarh, Alipur in Panjnad, and reached Sindh where they settled till Karachi (which was part of Balochistan).Gabol Tribe is major Tribe of Alipur.No Political Group can won without Support of Gabol Group in Alipur.
Gabols that survived, some lived in Balochistan, while others migrated to Rajanpur District and began to live with the Gorshani tribe as a Clan of Lasharis in the mountains of Harand where they also fought against Sikh Yatris and settled around Dera Ghazi Khan[4] and the Sulaiman Range. In Rajan Pur they settled in Jageer Gabol and in Bungla Gabol, Dera Ghazi Khan in Thatta Gabolan (Choti Zeren), and the tribal area of Dera Ghazi Khan in Koh-e-Suleman Range.
Gabol in Sindh With Mir Bijjar Khan Dombki
When the British Raj government moved the Domkis in Sindh, the Gabols also migrated. The Domkis used to loot the those travelling all around Balochistan, Sindh, along with the Jakhrani. In 1845, The Governor of Sindh General Sir Charles James Napier sent his army to shift them in Sindh near Cantonment area so that they could hold peace in the area. Gabol[5] along with Domkies shifted to Sindh with Bijjar Khan as Tribal Leader and Jhakrani along with Darya Khan as Tribal Leader. In Sindh they were shifted in Dera Jani a few miles away from Jacobabad where they are living in Domki.
Mr. Leech in his report 1835 to 1837 deeply discusses the Balochis, and recorded about sixty Balochi tribes living in mountains of Border (Balochistan and Sindh) .
Mr.Leech in his report comments as follows:
“ | The Gabols have a station in the same mountain called "Kachrok".[6] They are under a Commander Bijjar Khan Dombki Rind, and pay obeisance to the Hyderabad Government. They amount to 1500 in mountains, during the peace they pay no tribune but cultivate and enjoy the fruits of their own country. | ” |
Similarly, discussing "The order of tribes in mountains between Karachi and Sehwan," he writes in his report:
“ | With a view to perfect my information in that time, I had fixed to allot to the Sindhiana Army, I despatched with Captain Burne's permission two of the most intelligent cossides I could procure from Shikarpur, with orders to proceed through the mountains to Karachi, their route will be found in accompanying routes. At peer Ali, the mountains commenced, there they encounterd 500 Gabols with Buland Khan under the Commander Bijjar Khan, and Bhutanis with Sahib Khan. | ” |
See also
References
- ↑ Pakwheels.com
- ↑ Baloch Nation In Light Of History" Sardar Mazhar Ali Lashari Page No. 100.
- ↑ Pap.gov.pk
- ↑ History of Dera Ghazi Khan" by Mir Abdul Qadir Khan Ahmadani Leghari Part-1.
- ↑ Baoch Tribes of Baluchistan
- ↑ Role Of Sindh In History Of Independence and Hurr Movement by Abid Leghari.
- Albloushi.net
- Ansab-online.com
- Koach and Baloch" Urdu Translation Of "Baloch Race" by Mir Gull Khan Naseer Page No. 174, 175, 36, 39.
- Runni Kot author Badr Abro, Page 73.
- History of Dera Ghazi Khan by Abdul Qadir Khan Ahmadani Leghari Part-1.
- Baloch By M.K. Pikolian Translation by Dr. Shah Muhammad Marri, Page No. 74.
- Role Of Sindh In History Of Independence and Hurr Movement by Abid Leghari.
- Muhimmaat-e-Baluchistan Translation of Baloch, a Geoghrafical and Ethnological Sketch by Professor M. Anwar Roman. Same by Sardar Mazhar Ali Khan Lashari in Baloch In Light Of History.
- Baloch Nation And Its Fights By Nazeer-ul-Haq Dashti.
- Baloch Nation And Its Fights Also in Muhimmaat-e-Balochistan In Tribal Division Section (Appendix,Rind Of Kachhi).
- Baloch In Light Of History By Sardar Mazhar Lashari.
- Land of Baluchistan By A. W. Huges Page No. 161.
- Muhimmaat-e-Baluchistan In Tribal Division Section (Rind Of Kachhi).
- Baloch Nation In Light Of History Sardar Mazhar Ali Lashari Page No. 100.
- Gazetteer Of Balochistan.
- Land Of Balochistan Page No. 153.
- The Baloch Race by Long Worth Dames translated as Koach and Baloch by Mir Gull Khan Naseer Page No. 99, 109, 110, 111, 113, 115, 161, 162.
- Baloch in Light of History.
- Baoch Tribes of Baluchistan by Denezil Ibsten.
- Baloch Nation and its Fights.
- Reports papers, Political, Geoghraphical and commercial Submitted to English Government
- By Sir Alexander Burne's, Bo. N. I.; Lieutenant Leech, Bo. E.; Doctor Lords, Bo. M. S.; and Lieutenant Wood, I. N.; Employed on mission in the years 1835-36-37 in Sindh Baluchistan Afghanistan and Adjuscent countries. Printed in Calcutta G. H Huttmann, Bengal Military Orphan Press 1839.
- Muhimmat-E-Balochistan, Section-I By M.L Dames.