Monday, August 24, 2009

د ازادۍ قيمت(malang jan)

پتنګ د بلې شمعې ياردیبلبل دګلو خريدار دیدليلی دوه سترګې مجنون پيژنيد آزادی قيمت پښتون پيژنيپتنګ خو مينه په ګلزار نه لريبلبل د شمعې سره کار نه لريپښتانه ټيټ چاته کتلی نشيدچااثرلاندې کيدلی نشيپښتانه ټينګ عزم او همت لريپخپل ناموس باندې غيرت لريلکه زمري په ځای د ننګ دريږيپه ځای د ننګ په وينورنګ دريږيپښتانه بيرته په شاتلل نه کويکه سريې غوڅ شي دروغ وييل نه کوينه دې چازرنه يې پيسو ته ګوريزوۍ د پښتون دپلار پښتو ته ګوريپښتون د بدو نه بيزاردۍپتنګ د بلې شمعې يار دیپيسه په ښه سترګه قارون پېژنيدې ازادۍ قيمت پښتون پېژني


ښتانه لوړدي لوړکارونه کويتل پيروي دوی دې نيکونو کوينه په پيسو چاته اورميږنرموينه دې خپل ګورمړي په ګورشرموينه سپک حالت نه بيباکي خوښويتل ازادي او خپلواکي خوښويدچادلاس لاندې ژوندون نه کويداسې ژوندون زوۍدې پښتون نه کويله خپله حقه تيريدلۍ نشيدغلامۍ نوم قبلولی نشياوس پوهيدلی دۍ پوهيږي پښتوندچاپه مکرنه غوليږي پښتونپښتون دې توري طرفداردیپتنګ دې بلې شمعې يار دینه د بل چارسم وقانون پيژنيدازادۍ قيمت پښتون پېژني


دې پښتون خټه دې غيرت ځنې دهډکه له ننګ اوشجاعت ځنې دهپښتانه چاته خپل بدل نه پريږديځان دې دنيا مخکې خجل نه پريږديدې زهرو ګوټ څوک هضمولی نشيحق دې پښتون څوک ستنولی نشيپه خپل وطن پښتانه سر ورکويدې صورت غوښې په سنګر ورکويدې جنګ په لوبه ازموده دۍ پښتوننه کوي څنګ باتجربه دۍ پښتونزموږ پلرونه دا اساس پاتې دیتوره او سپر موږته په لاس پاتې دیهريوپښتون دې بل نه جارديپتنګ دې بلې شمعې ياردۍيو اتفاق اويوتړون پيژنيدې ازادۍ قيمت پښتون پيژني


الهي ته شې نګهبان دې پښتوننکړې زوال نوم اونښان دې پښتونهمه دې علم خاوندان کړې ربهپه خپل کرم يې عالمان کړې ربهګوندې نفاق نه په امان کړې پښتوندې اتفاق په لورروان کړې پښتونڅوک چې پښتون په بده سترګه ګوريدې بدۍ مخ دې شي دې ده په لورېزه ملنګ جان يم پروا نه دې وطنسرمې دی ايښۍ نذرانه دې وطنخدايه لوګی مې کړې په لاردې وطنچې عاشقانو کې شم شمار دې وطنډک مې له درده داګفتاردیپتنګ دې بلې شمعې يار دیدې مريض نبض افلاطون پيژنيدې ازادۍ قيمت پښتون پيژني

PICTURE ALBUM 8

MEHMOOD KHAN ACHAKZAI AND ASFANDIYAR WALI KHAN THE NATIONALIST LEADERS
NEHRU

THE GREAT BACHA KHAN

SAMAD KHAN ACHAKZAI , BACHA KHAN , DR KHAN SAHIB



BACHA KHAN , NEHRU



THE GREAT BACHA KHAN (FRONTIER GHANDI)







Saturday, August 8, 2009

PICTURE ALBUM 7

SANGEEN WALI KHAN (YOUNGER SON OF WALI KHAN)
BACHA KHAN SITING IN TRIBE COUNCIL MEETING WITH TRIBAL AREA LEADERS
GHANI KHAN


QUOTE BY GHANI KHAN




GHANI KHAN WITH DR.RAJ WALI SHAH KHATTAK




Tuesday, August 4, 2009

سر مې جار ستا له نامه(MALANG JAN)


سر مې جار ستا له نامه پښتونستانهستا نوم مې نقش شوی په ځيګر دی
پښتانه به ژوندون څه کړي بې له تانههر يو ايښي ستا په مينه مال وسر دی
سر مې جارشه ستا د لوړو لوړو غرونهله غيرته چې هر يو جګ تر اسمان دیصدقه شم ستا د ګرانو پښتنو نهچې منلۍ ستا خدمت په ټينګ ايمان دیدښمن کله بری وړی شي له هغو نه که هر څو مکر و فريب کې پهلوان دی
ميړنو ګويا ښکاره کړ له ميړانهځکه سور بيرغ هر ځای کې لروبر دی
په هر ځای کې چې اصيل پښتون زاده ويخاص الخاص پښتونستان له خدايه غواړيهغه څوک چې بې غيرت حرامزاده ويټيټې سترګې به د بل لور ته ولاړ وياولاده به يې پس له مرګه شرمنده ويد وګړو د پېغور ځنې به ژاړي
خپل اولاد ته پيغور نه پريږدي له ځانههغه څوک چې د سوچه پښتون پسر وي
نارينه توب د پښتنو طبعي عادت دیبلې بلې چې رښتيا سره پښتون ويدوی ليدلي د ازاد ژوندون لذت دیمرګ يې بولي چې محکوم د دوی ژوندون ويڅه ناڅه که يې په کور کې عداوت دیخو دښمن د پاره بيا په يو تړون وي
پښتون نه دی په شا تللی له ميدانهټول جهان و ته ښکاره لکه د لمر دی
چې خپل واک او اقتدار يې د ځان نه ويکه نواب وي صدقه شه ما ملنګ نهعاجزۍ کې څه پروا د انسان نه ويخدای دې مانه کړي عاجز له نام و ننګ نهچې په مال و سر ايسار په ميدان نه ويجار قربان شه د پښتون د تورې شرنګ نهخو زما ملنګ جان زړه دی پرې روښانه نن د هر زلمي په لاس د ننګ خنجر دی

PICTURE ALBUM 6

Bacha khan with mahatma ghandi Ghani khan

Ghani khan standing with Bacha khan

Abdul sammad khan achakzai



THE GREAT BACHA KHAN






Monday, August 3, 2009

NON VIOLENT SOLDIER BY (Scott Baldauf )

Here are two words that don't often appear in the same sentence: nonviolent Pashtuns
For centuries, Pashtun tribes in Afghanistan and in India's northwest frontier were famed for their vendettas and feuds, for their bravery and treachery, for their unwillingness to accept outside rule. Pashtuns formed the bulk of Islamic militants who expelled first the British and then the Russian imperial armies from Afghanistan, and later formed a religious extremist movement called the Taliban.
But back in 1930, tens of thousands of Pashtuns tried a path less traveled: nonviolent civil disobedience. This movement - called the Khudai Khidmatgar, or Servants of God - united bickering tribes for an astounding 17 years to end British colonial rule."Pashtuns by nature are peace lovers," says Murtaza Khan Shaheen, a biographer of Abdul Gaffar Khan, the nonviolent leader known to his followers as Badshah Khan, or King of KingsKnowing his statement bucks a good 600 years of history, Mr. Shaheen adds a caveat. "But, they live in an area that is the gateway to India, and throughout history, they were constantly invaded by others. They had to defend themselves, but they never attacked anyone and they never surrendered to anyone either."
From southern Afghanistan to northwestern Pakistan, there is precious little sign of the Pashtuns' peacenik side. Most of the major military bases from which American troops are operating in Afghanistan are in Pashtun areas, putting US soldiers face to face with one of the world's least understood cultures. But historians say the key to avoiding mistakes in Pashtun lands, and undermining potential allies in the region, is understanding the strong pacifist streak that runs through Pashtun history.
"If the [Khudai Khidmatgar] movement had employed guerrilla tactics, it would not have lasted 17 years," writes Mukulika Banerjee, a historian of the movement and anthropologist at University College in London. "Nonviolent demonstration had the virtue of being a surprise tactic, as the British did not expect it from what they saw as an archetypal warrior race."Persuading all those Pashtuns to turn the other cheek required a charismatic man of the people, and Badshah Khan fitted the bill. Son of a wealthy landowner, and product of a British university education, Badshah Khan used his better circumstances as a tool to help his people. Wearing simple clothes and traveling from village to village, the barrel-chested leader convinced one tribe at a time that the only way to improve their lives was to stop fighting each other and start resisting the British.
While others called for jihad, or holy war against the British infidels, Badshah Khan called for a reform of Pashtun culture itself. It was not Britain's superior numbers, weapons, or even culture that kept Pashtuns subjected. Instead, it was the Pashtuns themselves, through endless land feuds and tribal bickering.Badshah Khan knew that Pashtuns could never defeat the British through violence that required money, arms, and complete secrecy, three things that were in short supply on the impoverished frontier. A disciplined moral cause, on the other hand, was cheap, and required only thousands of Pashtuns with attitude.Typical of these activists is Musharraf Din, a 90-something villager who joined the movement at the age of 20 after hearing a speech by Badshah Khan. Khan's compassion for the common man impressed Mr. Din, and his ideology helped Din remain true to nonviolence, even when he felt like grabbing a gun.
"The British used to torture us, throw us into ponds in wintertime, shave our beards, but even then Badshah Khan told his followers not to lose patience," says Din, his Jack Nicholson-style sunglasses perched atop his forehead beneath a broad white turban. "He said, 'there is an answer to violence, which is more violence. But nothing can conquer nonviolence. You cannot kill it. It keeps standing up.'"
Din recalls his first major protest one cold April morning in 1930, when British troops came to Charsadda to break up a public meeting of the Khudai Khidmatgar. Wearing their trademark bright-red baggy uniforms and Sam Browne-style leather belts, Din and his fellow KKs formed a human roadblock.
"The British sent their horses and cars to run over us, but I took my shawl in my mouth to keep from screaming," he says. "We were human beings, but we should not cry or express in any way that we were injured or weak."Firsthand written accounts from the period show that the British administrators clearly had no idea what to do with the Servants of God. Beating and jailing the Khudai Khidmatgar only seemed to make them grow. In a single year, from 1930 to 1931, the KKs had grown from 1,000 to 25,000 members.
Sadly, Khan's attempts to reach across ethnic and religious lines to other independent-minded Indians, such as Mahatma Gandhi and several other Sikh and Hindu leaders, ended up damaging his reputation when Indian independence finally came in 1947. It was then that India was partitioned into two states, with the mostly Muslim north broken off into East and West Pakistan.
Under the new rulers of the Pakistan Muslim League, the Khudai Khidmatgar were banned and jailed as traitors, in part because of their close ties to India's new rulers, the Congress party.But the movement reemerged a few decades later as the Awami National Party. In the brief decade of civilian rule in the 1990s, the Awamis ruled Northwest Frontier Province with little competition. Local political observers say last October's elections, in which the Awamis were defeated in favor of a coalition of extreme religious parties, had more to do with voter discontent with mainstream politics than with the Awamis themselves.
For his part, Musharraf Din says he has no doubt that nonviolence has relevance today among Pashtuns. The clearest evidence is the Pashtun tradition for negotiating disputes through jirgas, or tribal councils, and their distaste for open, face-to-face fights.And even though his legs aren't as strong as they once were, he can still remember the marching drills he learned 70-odd years ago.
"I'm a Khudai Khidmatgar member until death," he says proudly. Pulling himself off a string cot by grasping a hooked cane, he stands at full attention. "Left-face," he shouts, pivoting, and then stomping his right foot. "Ow," he winces, and then smiles. "Need to warm up my knee first."

PICTURE ALBUM 5


GHANI KHAN WITH RAJ WALI SHAH KHATTAK

GHANI KHAN











Saturday, August 1, 2009

NEW BOOK ON GHANI KHAN PUBLISHED


Qalam Taqat Literary Society has published a new book about the literary achievements of Ghani Khan, the legendary Pashtun poet and phosphor. It is titled as "Ghani Khan- Da Pukhto Adab da Shalami Sadai Shakhsiat".It is a thesis by late Fazli Ghani Ghani, the eminent Pashtun writer who was killed when a suicide bomber targeted the house of Asfandyar Wali Khan on October 2, 2008.Since his college days Fazli Ghani Ghani (Shaheed) was greatly inspired by Ghani Khan's life and works. Being an enlightened nationalist himself Fazli Ghani Ghani always appreciated Ghani Khan's nationalistic fervor, his ecstatic poetry and his deep philosophical thought. A time came that the two Ghanis' found themselves in a stronger bond of mutual trust and friendship.
He was a regular visitor of Ghani Khan's study room where they would sit for hours and would resolve issues of an unseen world. Based on his interviews with Ghani Khan, the writer delves deep into Ghani Khan's works and discovers him from quite new and refreshing angles. He discusses Ghani Khan's themes of love, Beauty, Truth and Death with the mastery of a prolific writer and seasoned critic.Many other wrote about Ghani Khan's literary achievements and they wrote pretty well but this thesis written by one of Ghani Khan's most trusted lovers is totally different in its approaches and content. Fazli Ghani Ghani don't rely on accounts written by other people but he himself observes Ghani Khan from a very close angle, talking and laughing with him, learning from him and asking him why is he so different from others?Literary circles have applauded Azad Hashtnaghri for publishing this original and refreshing thesis by his uncle Fazli Ghani Ghani (Shaheed) that discovers Ghani Khan in his true artistic and philosophical colours.The book is available from all good book shops in the city.
The News International added;
The book spanning 115 pages is available for Rs100. Since his college days, Fazli Ghani Ghani (Shaheed) was greatly inspired by Ghani Khan’s life and works. Being an enlightened nationalist himself, Fazli Ghani Ghani always appreciated Ghani Khan’s nationalistic fervour, his ecstatic poetry and his deep philosophical thought. A time came that the two Ghanis found themselves in a stronger bond of mutual trust and friendship. He was a regular visitor to Ghani Khan’s study room where they would sit for hours.Based on his interviews with Ghani Khan, the writer delves deep into Ghani Khan’s works and discovers him from quite new and refreshing angles. He discusses Ghani Khan’s themes of love, beauty, truth and death with the mastery of a prolific writer and seasoned critic.Many others wrote about Ghani Khan’s literary achievements and they wrote pretty well but this thesis written by one of Ghani Khan’s most trusted fan is totally different in its approach and contents. Fazli Ghani Ghani does not rely on accounts written by other people but he himself observes Ghani Khan from a very close angle, talking and laughing with him, learning from him and asking him why is he so different from others?Literary circles have applauded Azad Hashtnagri for publishing this original and refreshing thesis by his uncle Fazli Ghani Ghani (Shaheed) that discovers Ghani Khan in his true artistic and philosophical colours.

PICTURE ALBUM 4

LAVANGEEN WALI KHAN (SON OF SANGEEN WALI KHAN(LATE)
QALANDAR MOMMAND A GREAT POET


BACHA KHAN AND GHANI KHAN



BACHA KHAN WITH HIS 3 SONS






PICTURE ALBUM 3

bacha khan family painting made by ghani khan

made by ghani khan
GHANI KHAN





KHATIR AFRIDI





 
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