In this thread I will share a few remarks by @IbrahimiNiamat about the war.
For those interested to read more details, please read Mr. Ibrahimi’s book ‘The Hazaras and the Afghan state: Rebellion, Exclusion and Struggle for Recognition’.
1. "Amir Abd Rahaman Khan is often recognised as the founder of modern Afghanistan for his role in imposing a centralised authority over the country’s present territories. He is one of the most contested figures in Afghanistan’s history.
2. "The Amir’s reign was a period of constant violence, much of which was directed towards various groups in Afghanistan. In his semi-autobiographical account, he claims he fought 40 separate rebellions (nearly 2 per year). He describes four of them as civil wars (p.249).
3. "Amir’s statebuilding strategy consisted of four elements: 1.British patronage in the forms of cash and military assistance, 2.instrumental use of Islam as a source of legitimacy, 3.extensive spy network, and 4. a policy of mobilising one group against the other.
4. "The Amir claimed he waged war against d Hazaras because they refused to pay tax & accept d authority of central gov. Nationalist/official historiography uncritically accept and repeat this narrative.
5. "Amir’s control was weaker in Hazara areas (most of Uruzgan, parts of Zabul and north of Kandahar) that had become known as Yaghistan. The term Yaghistan was a social and political construct as there was no active rebellion against the gov in d region.
6. "Like other areas in 19th century, these communities were internally fragmented & could not mount a collective rebellion. They demanded to negotiate Amir’s excessive taxation. They were also concerned about abuses by gov soldiers, and manipulation of local divisions by gov.
7. "In 1887, the Amir began planning for a full attack on the Hazaras. The planning involved collection of detailed info & map by local officials, and appointment of new military and gov. officials in the region.
8. "In spring 1891, 10,000 troops led by Abd. Qudus Khan marched on Uruzgan. They faced no resistance, and took control of all the areas. The troops began looting the local population and mass arrest of local elites. An incident of rape led to rebellion across Uruzgan.
9. "The Amir declared a full jihad against the Hazaras, and tasked mullahs to proclaim the same in Friday prayers across the country. He also tasked each region in the country to provide specific numbers of fighters who would also receive a share of the booties of the war.
10. "According to Kakar (1971, pp.165-166), the most extensive mobilisation in April 1892 involved about 100,000 fighters, including up to 40,000 tribal volunteers. The forces crashed local resistance one after the other.
11. "Heavy-handed suppression and looting led to another round of rebellion in the spring of 1893, which was put down by fresh deployment of forces by August-September that year.
12. "For d Hazaras & the country, in general, the war was catastrophic. The Hazara population shrank dramatically as a result of forced displacement, mass migration, slavery and deaths caused by war, subsequent famine & disease.
13. "Several communities in Uruzgan, Zabul and north of Kandahar were entirely decimated or reduced to small numbers. Pashtun tribes from other places were settled. In Uruzgan 12,000 Durrani and 4,000 Ghilzai families moved to formerly Hazara lands (Kakar, 1971, p. 174).
14. "Hazaras were not the only group targeted. After defeating the Shinwaris and erecting two towers out of the heads of the tribesmen, he said: ‘You may try gently for hundreds of years to make friends
But it is impossible to make scorpions, snakes, and Shinwari, friends’.
15. "However, For reasons, including instrumental use of religious differences, the relatively large size of the Hazara population at that time, the Amir’s violence against Hazaras reached new heights and had particularly different aspects and consequences.
16. "In Amir's own views, the Hazara war had particularly important roles in consolidating his rule. See a quote from his semi autobiography in next tweet.
17. "'This [Hazara War] is the last of the four great civil wars that took place during my rule, and I consider that the prestige, the strength and power, as well as the peace and safety of my kingdom, have gained more by this war than perhaps any of the others’ (p.276).

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More from @Kon__K

24 Aug
Following up on the last thread here I am going to share @IbrahimiNiamat observations about what a critical understanding of incidents like this war mean for understanding of #Afghanistan history & politics.
1. "In 1893, the Hazara War ended with a total one-sided victory. No significant effort was to heal the deep wounds that were left behind by the Amir. In 1921, Amanullah Khan outlawed slavery but structural and socio-economic power relations that developed in 1893 persisted.
2. "When he died, in the words of Prof. @BRRubin, the Amir left behind a ‘consolidated if terrorized state’ (2002, p. 52). That is to say, the state gained an overwhelming coercive power but the society it governed was left with deep traumas and wounds.
Read 23 tweets
22 Aug
25. "Most #Hazara men were killed during the fight which spanned from 1891 to 1893. Dr Lee says that over 50 percent of the Hazara "male population" died as "a direct or indirect result of the war." This is, in my personal opinion, a very reasonable figure.
26. "Most for the Hazara women and children were taken captive and sold as slaves. Throughout the country, #Hazaras constituted the overwhelming majority of slaves in the bazaars. In fact there were so many that they greatly decreased the prices of slaves.
27. "According to Dr Lee, "thousands of [Hazara] women were forcibly married to #Pashtuns in a deliberate attempt to destroy #Hazara social and religious hierarchies."
Read 7 tweets
22 Aug
I am going to share some findings of @NamaKadrie about the history of the Hazaras in this thread. This may help you in understanding the current situation in Afghanistan a bit better.
1. "In analysing the history of #Afghanistan, scholars and historians often assessed the independence and autonomy of a given region based on their ability to resist an imposition of tax. Paying levies was therefore the way power-relations and supremacy was understood.
2. "In this sense, the #Hazarajat as a whole was what scholars often deemed as a “semi-independent” region. By 1891, aside from #Uruzgan, every other region (14 districts) of the #Hazarajat paid taxes to Abdur Rahman Khan.
Read 25 tweets
22 Aug
I am going to share some findings of @KadrieNama about the history of the Hazaras in this thread.
1. "In analysing the history of #Afghanistan, scholars and historians often assessed the independence and autonomy of a given region based on their ability to resist an imposition of tax. Paying levies was therefore the way power-relations and supremacy was understood.
2. "In this sense, the #Hazarajat as a whole was what scholars often deemed as a “semi-independent” region. By 1891, aside from #Uruzgan, every other region (14 districts) of the #Hazarajat paid taxes to Abdur Rahman Khan.
Read 25 tweets
21 Aug
The Taliban has been presenting their soft image to the world as the Afghanistan issue is hot and the whole world is watching it closely. But this doesn’t mean that the Taliban has changed. I’ll explain in this thread and will show you some evidence as well.
The Taliban opened fire and killed at least a dozen of Afghanistan’s Special Forces units on 16 June in the town of Dawlat Abad in Faryab province, close to Afghanistan's border with Turkmenistan.
edition.cnn.com/2021/07/13/asi…
“After taking over Spin Boldak district, the Taliban chased and identified past and present government officials and killed these people who had no combat role in the conflict,” the group said, adding at least 40 people had been killed by the Taliban.
aljazeera.com/news/2021/8/2/…
Read 7 tweets
11 Jun 20
We want all refugees in onshore detention centres & hotel prisons to know the @ASRC1 are still fighting for your rights. Today we lodged 16 page submission to Senate Committee to try & stop a dangerous new amendment. Here is a thread on why this must be stopped. Please read & RT.
What is Dutton trying to do? He is trying to get passed Migration Amendment) Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention (Facilities) Bill 2020. Here are all the reasons it's dangerous, must be rejected completely and would severely curtail the rights of refugees in detention 2/20
It is a Bill which has no valid purpose, as existing powers are more than sufficient for the safe and orderly management of detention centres. Its main purposes are to remove
detainees’ access to devices with internet connectivity, which are their ‘life-line’ to family.. 3/20
Read 20 tweets

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