Sindhis of Sindh -- south Pakistan (Indus' delta)
Sindhi people of
Sindh, ancient historical land in south
Pakistan (with capital in
Karachi), one of five provinces of
Pakistan. Home to 35 millions of Sindhi people. The region received its name, Sindh, from the
River Sindhu (
Indus), and the people living in the region are referred to as
Sindhi. Sindh was ruled by local
Hindu and Buddhist rulers until
712 CE, when it was invaded by the
Arabs and incorporated into part of the
Umayyad Caliphate, resulting in widespread conversions to
Islam. However, a substantial number of
Sindhis still retain their Hindu beliefs intertwined with elements of Sikhism, and are thus often regarded as simultaneously Hindu and Sehajdhari Sikh.
Sindhi people (
سنڌي): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindhi_
...
Sindh (
سنڌ): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindh
Sndhi language ( سنڌي): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindhi_...
The two main and highest ranked
Rajput or Jamote tribes of Sindh are: the Soomra - descendants of the
Soomra Dynasty, who ruled Sindh during (970 - 1351
A.D.) and the second is Samma - descendants of the
Samma Dynasty, who ruled Sindh during (1351 - 1521 A.D.). During the
Kalhora rule, a number of Jat tribes such as the
Sials, Joyas and Khawars came from the
Punjab and settled in Sindh. They are called the
Seraiki (i.e., people from the north), and speak Seraiki. This group overlaps and is sometimes considered transitional between the
Punjabis and Sindhi people.
Muslim Sindhis tend to have traditional Muslim first names, sometimes with localized variations. Most Sindhis have tribal and clan names as their surnames.
Nearly forty percent of Sindhis have
Baloch tribal names. Hindu Sindhis tend to have surnames that end in '-ani' (a variant of 'anshi', derived from the Sanskrit word 'ansh', which means 'descended from'). The first part of a
Sindhi Hindu surname is usually derived from the name or location of an ancestor. In northern Sindh, surnames ending in 'ja' (meaning 'of') are also common.
A person's surname would consist of the name of his or her native village, followed by 'ja'.
Sindh is the most prosperous province of Pakistan.
Pakistan's political scene has been dominated by Sindhi politicians, including
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and
Benazir Bhutto.
Background music: Sindhi song by
Abida Parveen, Sindhi traditional musician.