Pamiris in Tajikistan

Overview
Historical Background
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Conflict Type

Peak Years

Intensity

An indigenous language conflict exists in Tajikistan between the dominant Tajik ethnicity and the minority Pamiri population. A loose association of several dozen languages, the term ‘Pamiri’ describes these related dialects from the Iranian language family and the ethnicities that speak them. Isolated in Tajikistan’s autonomous Gorno-Badakhshan region, the Pamiris did not develop a written form of their language until the 1920s and remained undisturbed until their assimilation into the Soviet Union in 1929 [Ilolov, M., Ilolova, P., & Yusufbekov, S., 2015]. A Pamiri push for independence during the late 1980s led to a separatist movement that plunged the country into a bloody civil war in 1992. As a result, Pamiris were targeted by the Tajik government and, although peace accords were signed in 1997, tensions remain between the Pamiri minority and Tajik majority [Sobiri, 2017]. Today, the Tajik government does not recognize the Pamiri ethnicity or language, complicating the Pamiris’ ability to use their language in schools, government, and legal affairs. 

Historical Background

Inhabiting Tajikistan’s mountainous Gorno-Badakhshan region for centuries, the Pamiri had limited contact with the outside world until the late nineteenth century [Kolga, 2001]. They remained largely undisturbed until the 1920s when the Soviet Union surveyed ethnic minorities on the fringes of its territory [Kolga, 2001]. After World War II, the Soviet government ordered the resettlement of 40-70% of Pamiris living in villages deemed too isolated or lacking in arable land for continued habitation [Kolga, 2001]. Resettlement efforts peaked between 1951-54, with Pamiris deported against their will to farms at lower altitudes. By the 1960s, the Soviet government had transitioned towards single-crop agriculture while discouraging the production of traditional Pamir crafts and crops [Kolga, 2001]. These agricultural policies were ultimately unsuccessful, leaving Gorno-Badakhshan one of the poorest regions in Tajikistan [Minority Rights Group International, 2018]. Additional complications arose as Pamiri languages were not written and were kept out of schools in favor of Russian or Tajik, disenfranchising Pamiri people [Kolga, 2001].  

By the 1980s, these policies resulted in a separatist push for Gorno-Badakhshan’s independence [Minority Rights Group International, 2018]. Resentment grew in 1989 with the introduction of a law that would make Tajik the only official language of Tajikistan by 1996, preventing Pamiris from speaking Pamiri in business, government, and education [Open Society Institute, n.d.]. In 1991, a Pamiri political party called Lali Badakhshan rose to prominence in Gorno-Badakhshan as anti-government protests broke out, calling for independence in 1992 [Minority Rights Group International, 2018]. This sparked a bloody civil war between the new Tajik government and the United Tajik Opposition from 1992 to 1997. Pamiris were targeted by the Tajik government as supporters of insurgents, and while a 1993 peace accord gave Gorno-Badakhshan relative autonomy, economic blockades weakened the province while the war continued for four more years [Minority Rights Group International, 2018].  

After the war’s conclusion, Pamiris faced discrimination and limited language rights outside Gorno-Badakhshan [Minority Rights Group International, 2018]. In 2012 and 2015, Gorno-Badakhshan saw outbreaks of violence and protests between the Tajik government and Pamiri opposition forces, while the presence of former opposition leaders furthered tensions between Pamiris and Tajiks [Mostowlansky, 2019]. Most recently, the Tajik government has refused to recognize Pamiris as having a distinct language or ethnic identity and associated Pamiri militias with Islamist fighters in efforts to crack down on terrorism, furthering Pamiri resentment [Mostowlansky, 2019]. Additional complaints about Tajiks discriminating against Pamiris continue into the present, with Pamiris claiming they are second-class citizens within their own country [Minority Rights Group International, 2018]. 

The Rise of Russian Language Schools

a school building with white arches, a beige brick exterior, and red doors
A School in Dushanbe

In January 2020, Tajikistan’s parliament agreed to continue building five new schools providing instruction in Russian, a proposition funded by the Russian government and reflecting close ties between the two countries. These schools will provide education for upwards of 6000 students. Under the Soviet regime, Russian language instruction was common at all educational levels, a practice that decreased after the 1992 collapse of the Soviet Union, granting Tajikistan its independence. Much of Tajikistan’s remaining ethnic Russian population fled the country during the 1992-97 civil war. Schools began teaching primarily in Tajik, with limited accommodations made depending on the region and requirements of pupils. Despite the lack of an ethnic Russian population and state promotion of Tajik as an official language, the demand for Russian-language schools has increased in recent years. Approximately one-third of Tajikistan’s economy is directly from remittances from Tajik migrant workers in other countries, namely Russia and Uzbekistan, and Russia remains a popular destination for institutions of higher education. Parents believe providing their children with Russian language skills will improve their employment prospects and that Russian schools provide a better quality of education overall. Tajikistan remains one of the poorest former Soviet states, with a high youth population facing low average wages and high unemployment, statistics even higher among Pamiri populations in Gorno-Badakhshan. Due to this, studying in Russian-language schools is becoming increasingly popular, as the language is seen as a chance for a more prosperous future [Najibullah, 2020]. 

Pamiri Cooking

traditional Tajik foods displayed on a white tablecloth
Tajik food decoration during traditional Nawruz celebration

In 2016, Jamila Haider and Frederik van Oudenhoven, a pair of Swedish and Dutch researchers, published With Our Hands, a cookbook featuring a collection of recipes from Pamiri villages in Afghanistan and Tajikistan. The book was published in three languages: English, Afghan Persian or Dari written in the Arabic script, and Tajik Persian written in the Cyrillic alphabet. The result is a book that accommodates readers from different languages and cultures while exposing them to Pamiri traditional foods, holidays, and cultural traditions that otherwise would remain largely constrained to the Pamir Mountains and their inhabitants. In an interview, Haider recounts an experience working in Tajikistan where a Pamiri grandmother asked her to write down traditional recipes that she was concerned her children would forget as her language - like most of the Pamir languages - does not have a written form. As a result, Haider and a group of female scientists from educational institutions in Gordo-Badakhshan began collecting recipes in the region that previously only been passed down orally. The resulting book ties in traditional foods from the Pamir Mountains with holidays, religious observances, and cultural practices while preserving Pamiri culture for future generations and external audiences [Oudenhoven, 2016]. 

Female Entrepreneur of the Year

the landscape of the mountainous region. A steep, rocky cliff rises into a blue sky
The Kuhistani Badakhshan Autonomous Region (also known as Gorno-Badakhshan is an autonomous region in eastern Tajikistan.

A 2012 Eurasianet article tracks the progress of Tajik and Pamiri women attempting to grow their own businesses in a sociopolitical climate that promotes women remaining at home and discourages foreign investment. In 2012, an event called Farah [‘brilliance’ in Tajik] was set up to name the country’s “first female entrepreneur of the year” [Eurasianet, 2012]. Nabot Gomadina is a Pamiri businesswoman who described the difficulties of running a profitable business in Gorno-Badakhshan, where isolated towns, poor roads blocked by snow for months at a time, and a largely impoverished population complicate business activity. Gomadina became the founder of the first micro-loan business in Gorno-Badakhshan and has since began operating workshops helping other women with their finances. Her role is unusual in a country where men make up most of the workforce, often working outside Tajikistan and sending remittances to their wives and families at home. The work of Gomadina and women like her represents a step towards greater gender equality in Tajikistan, as well as a chance for Pamiri communities to improve their economic status [Eurasianet, 2016]. Pamiri families tend to emphasize the role of education for their children, especially girls, who enjoy more freedom and less pressure to marry than Tajik girls their same age. This has a mixed effect: on the one hand, it makes it easier to identify and discriminate against Pamiris; however, Pamiri women benefit from greater social freedoms in a nation that is largely male dominated [Anti-Discrimination Centre, 2017]. 

Compare Language Similarities

Language name
ID
Language
Endonym(s)
Exonyms
Dialect
sgh
хуг̌ну̊н зив (khughnön ziv)
Shugni, Khugni
NA
rus
Русский язык (russkiy yazyk)
Russian
NA
kir
Кыргызча (Qırğızça)
Kyrgyz, also spelled as Kirghiz, Kirgiz and Qirghiz
NA
uzb
oʻzbek tili, oʻzbekcha
Uzbek
NA
tgk
Тоҷикӣ (Tojikī)
Tajik, Tajiki
Tajiki Persian
Lexical properties
ID
GEN1
GEN2
GEN3
GEN4
GEN5
sgh
Indo-European
Indo-Iranian
Iranian
Eastern Iranian
Shugni-Yazgulami
rus
Indo-European
Balto-Slavic
Slavic
East Slavic
NA
kir
Turkic
Common Turkic
Kipchak
Kyrgyz-Kipchak
NA
uzb
Turkic
Common Turkic
Karluk
NA
NA
tgk
Indo-European
Indo-Iranian
Iranian
Western Iranian
Southwestern Iranian
ID
GEN6
GEN7
GEN8
GEN9
GEN10
sgh
Shughnani
NA
NA
NA
NA
rus
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
kir
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
uzb
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
tgk
Persian
NA
NA
NA
NA
ID
Loanword Sources
sgh
Tajik, Arabic, Turkic, Russian
rus
Greek, Latin, Polish, Dutch, German, French, Italian, and English, Uralic, Turkic, Persian, Arabic, Hebrew
kir
Arabic, Kazakh, Mongolian languages, Uzbek, Tajik, Persian, Russian
uzb
Arabic, Persian, Russian
tgk
Russian, Uzbek, Arabic, Persian
Phonological properties
ID
Vowels
Consonants
Accent
Special Features
Syllable Types
sgh
10
27
last syllable
NA
3
rus
5
21
variable
NA
25
kir
8
17
last syllable
NA
3
uzb
7
28
last syllable
NA
NA
tgk
6
24
variable
NA
3
Morphosyntactic properties
ID
Word Order
Genders
Cases
Word Formation
sgh
SOV
2
1
agglutinative
rus
variable
3
5
fusional
kir
SOV
1
6
agglutinative
uzb
SOV
1
1
agglutinative
tgk
SOV
1
1
Analytic
Orthographic properties
ID
Type
Script
Characters/Special Characters
sgh
Alphabetic
Cyrillic
43 / 15
rus
alphabetic
cyrillic
33
kir
Alphabetic
Cyrillic
36 / 3
uzb
alphabetic
latin
29 / 5
tgk
alphabetic
cyrillic
35 / 6

Linguistic Background

  1. Genealogy/relatedness: Tajik, also called Tajik Persian, is an Indo-European language and a member of the West Iranian branch of the Iranian language family [Center for Languages, Indiana University Bloomington, n.d.]. Its closest relation is Dari, the Persian language spoken primarily in Afghanistan, followed by Farsi, the Persian language spoken primarily in Iran. The three languages are all mutually intelligible to a degree and have been collectively described as various dialects of Persian [UCLA Language Materials Project, n.d.]. To a lesser degree, Tajik is related to more distant West Iranian and Persian languages and additional East Iranian languages including Yaghnobi and Pashto. Tajik has two dialects, northwestern and southwestern, with northwestern being the dominant dialect [UCLA Language Materials Project, n.d.]. The Pamiri language is more accurately described as a group of related languages spoken in Tajikistan’s Gorno-Badakhshan province, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Western China by communities living in the Pamir Mountains. These languages are, like Tajik, Indo-European members of the Iranian language family, although they are members of the East Iranian languages and not mutually intelligible with Tajik [Kalandarov, 2020]. Generally, the Pamiri languages include Shughni-Yazgulami branch with Shughni, Sarikoli, and Yazgulyam languages and dialects of Roshani, Bartangi, Oroshori, Shughni, and Khufi; Munji and Yidgha languages; Sanglechi, and Ishkashimi languages; and the Wakhi language [Kolga, 2001]. Both Tajik and Pamiri languages are rooted in Old Iranian, although Tajik has more Turkish influences and Russian loanwords while Pamiri languages preserved more Old Iranian structure due to their relative isolation [Indiana University Bloomington, n.d.].
  2. Phonology/phonetics: Most Pamiri languages do not have sufficient speakers or records of their language to describe their phonologies, morphologies, lexicon/vocabularies, and orthographies [Kalandarov, 2020]. Shughni, which developed a written form in the 1930s, is the Pamiri language with the most speakers in Tajikistan and the most academic literature. Shughni has 10 vowels (with long and short distinction) and 27 consonants [Edelman, 1999]. It is more complex than Tajik which has six vowels and 24 consonants [Nasrullo & Thompson, 2009]. Shughni and other Pamiri languages have more in common with Old Iranian languages due to their geographic isolation [Omniglot, n.d.]. Shughni has many borrowings from Tajik, Arabic and Russian [Edelman, 1999]. Tajik is also influenced significantly by Russian. One difference between Tajik and Shughni is that in some loanwords, Tajik makes use of Russian sounds such as /ɕː/ represented by a letter ‘щ’ that are absent in Shughni and other Pamiri languages [Omniglot, n.d.].
  3. Morphology and grammar: Tajik and Shughni follow subject-object-verb (SOV) word order [Edelman, 1999]. Tajik affixes endings to nouns to distinguish by possession and number but does not separate individual nouns as masculine or feminine [Perry, 2005]. Shughni, however, distinguishes between grammatical gender [Edelman, 1999]. Tajik inflections typically are on the last syllable of a word’s root. Tajik verbs are distinguished as singular or plural, as first, second, or third person; in either past, present, or inferential past tenses; in indicative, subjunctive, or counterfactual conditional moods; in imperfective and perfective tenses, and when referring to the future, using a modality rather than a tense. Tajik uses personal pronouns in either singular or plural first, second, or third person and enclitic forms to indicate possession [Perry, 2005].
  4. Lexicon and vocabulary: There is relatively little overlap between these two groups. Both are Iranian languages, but Tajik is a West Iranian language while the Pamiri languages are East Iranian languages [UCLA Language Materials Project, n.d.]. The two languages did not interact much historically, and while Tajik has overlap with Russian, Uzbek, Dari Persian, Farsi Persian, and some Turkic languages, the isolated nature of the Pamir Mountains meant Pamiri languages were not overly influenced by or influencing Tajik [Indiana University Bloomington, n.d.].
  5. Orthography/writing system: Most Pamiri languages do not have a writing system. Some dialects were transliterated into the Cyrillic alphabet and written down according to the Tajik language sounds and rules during the 1920s and 1930s, but these systems are not widely in use and only fragments of most Pamiri languages have been published or listed online [Kolga, 2001]. Shughni is the Pamiri language with the most prominent written language system, having been written in the Arabic script up to 1931, the Latin alphabet from 1931-1938, and the Cyrillic alphabet from 1938 to the present. However, there are insufficient speakers for it to compete with Tajik [Omniglot, n.d.]. Like Shughni, Tajik was written in the Arabic script until 1928, when the Latin alphabet was introduced, only to be replaced by the Cyrillic alphabet in 1940. The Cyrillic alphabet was popularized during the Soviet Union and taught in schools, a practice common in Central Asian states under Soviet control [UCLA Language Materials Project, n.d.]. The Cyrillic alphabet is still used for Tajik in Tajikistan today.
  6. Discourse/sociolinguistic factors/influences on development/history: Due to the proliferation of Russian language under the Soviet Union, Tajik has been influenced by Russian [Omniglot, n.d.]. Tajik is the official language of Tajikistan, is spoken by the majority of the population, and is used in much of the country although Russian is permitted for use in internal affairs. In contrast, the diversity of Pamiri languages, their geographic isolation, and the relatively small percentage of speakers in Tajikistan has resulted in Pamiris being underrepresented in governmental issues and public life as well as discriminated against socially [Anti-Discrimination Centre, 2017]. 

Resources

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Images:

Geoalex. (1931). Shugni Alphabet 1931 [Digital image]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Shugni_alphabet-1931.JPG. 

 

Harrington Spier, B. (1997). BelAZ dump trucks burned during the Civil War in Tajikistan [Digital image]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:BelAZ_dump_trucks_burned_during_the_Civil_War_in_Tajikistan.jpg. 

 

Math920Me. (2003, June 5). Tajik Pamiri Children [Digital image]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tajik_Pamiri_children.jpg 

  

McDonald, J. (2012, August 4). 2012 Khorog Barricade on M41 Highway in Tajikistan [Digital image]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2012_Khorog_Barricade_on_M41_Highway_in_Tajikistan.png. 

 

MrPenguin20. (2014, July 7). Flag of the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan [Digital image]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_the_Islamic_Renaissance_Party_of_Tajikistan.svg. 

 

Ninara. (2018, July 9). Gorno-Badakhshan, Tajikistan [Mountainous roads usable only half of the year]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/   

File:Gorno-Badakhshan,_Tajikistan_(43300148104).jpg  

 

Saadiev, S. (2018, February 11). School in Dushanbe [Digital image]. Retrieved October 24, 2020, from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:School_in_Dushanbe.jpg. 

Credits

Posted:  19 June 2021

Previous versions:  

Contributing Analysts: Jill Boggs  

Editors: Gareth Rees-White, Elena Galkina