Pashtuns of Pakistan

By Roadjunky, Posted Dec 02, 2006

Pathan warrior

The Pashtuns are the mountain people who live in North West Pakistan and about half of Afghanistan. They are as tough a people as you could imagine and fiercely traditional.

Islam= here is as restrictive as it gets and the women are made to walk around in burkhas that cover them from head to toe. Women are moving bundles of cloth here, never speaking aloud in public unless they have to and never going out in public unless absolutely necessary.

The Pashtuns walk around with rifles like they were umbrellas and age is not seen as any limit as fire arms go. The communities are fiercely tribal and respect to the elders is absolute.

Yet they have a strong tradition of hospitality and they truly see the guest as ‘the face of God’, as the Koran says. Make a Pashtun friend and he will defend you to the death.

They are absolutely ruthless to their enemies, though and when the British army was fighting them in the 19th century if a soldier was lost behind enemy lines they made every possible attempt to get him back. They knew full well to what kind of treatment he would be subjected.

An observer once commented on this dichotomy of character:

“The Pashtun would remove the skin of an enemy with a razor blade without a moment’s remorse yet break into tears if his daughter grazed her knee outside.”

The Pashtuns hold little truck with national government and pretty much continue to live as they always have.


Want to meet other road junkies?
Come to the Road Junky Sahara Retreat Feb 6-11 2012 to hang out with 30 other travelers to meditate, make yoga, tell stories and dance under the full moon in the desert.

Follow Road Junky on Twitter for live updates @roadjunky

Read More

Fake Visa in India Escape Story

It was always a good idea in Goa to look down at your feet once in a while. Months of treading the dusty roads and trails of red sand took ...

Continue reading >>

Overland Through the Ex-Soviet Republics in an Old Army Truck?

Neither had we. Then we bumped into the guys at Soviet Truck and they got us thinking about this vast tract of land which for most travelers is an unknown ...

Continue reading >>