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Unnecessary controversy over languages in Afghanistan.
National Identity---There are many ways to oppress people. One way is by taking away their identity. Afghanistan as a country of different ethnicities has always seemed to be troubled with its identities, yet another taboo topic amongst the people. The threat of being called a "traitor" and a "foreigner" hangs over those who dare tread upon the topic of national identity. For the longest time, the term "Afghan" has been pushed upon every ethnic group of Afghanistan and for years, that is what Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks, Turkmans, and other non-Pashtuns were known by the rest of the world. Today, however, it needs to be made clear that "Afghan" is not the rightful national identity for the country.
The history behind the word "Afghan" is disputable due to various sources of where it originated from. However, one thing is clear: "Afghan" has always been synonymous with Pashtun. Writers and travelers to and from the country have stated that the word "Afghan" was always used to distinguish between the Pashtuns and non-Pashtuns such as the Tajiks, Hazaras, Uzbeks etc. The name of country is believed to have been given by the British when they first invaded the country in the 19th Century. The areas that they encountered were predominantly Pashtun and since they knew "Afghan" as synonymous with "Pashtun" they therefore erroneously declared the entire country as "Land of the Afghan" or "Afghanistan." And even though the majority of Afghanistan isn't even Afghans, the name has stuck since then.
Before the invention of the "Afghanistan," the land used to be known as other names: Ariana, Bactria, and Khorasan, with the most recent being Khorasan. The region was called Khorasan for 1500 years and the name was fairer and represented the state as well as the people better. It clearly doesn't favor one ethnicity over another. As Khorasan, the region was once an advancing civilization and embodied many ethnicities. However, as the Pashtun nomads entered and invaded the regions, they scattered and spread over, imposing their existence as well as a need for a country.
Now, it doesn't take a Ph.D.—self-taught or not—to figure out that those events were not just. And no matter what changes the country and the people have gone through, the term "Afghan" is not a legitimate one. Tajiks and Hazaras and Uzbeks and other non-Pashtuns were never and will never be Afghan. When the literal term of a word obviously means something you are not why would you be crazy enough to fight for the right to be called one? By non-Pashtuns adamantly choosing to call themselves Afghan just because they want peace and quiet, they are inadvertently throwing their rights and their heritage away. Losing your identity as a Hazara or a Tajik, Uzbek, or Turkman, you are being oppressed and your heritage and history is being rewritten to those who crawled out of the Suleiman Mountains. When you don't even speak the language of an Afghan (supposedly Pashto) then why call yourself one?
There are a lot of people that will threaten you if you refuse to call yourself an Afghan when you aren't one. They will call you a "traitor" or "foreigner" and try to get the mass against you. There is a full culture and history behind the names of "Tajik" and "Hazara," etc. When the world thinks of "Afghans" hardly anything good will come to mind. It is often associated with the horrors of Ahmad Shah Abdali, pedophilia, the Taliban, and now drug dealers. Though there are some bad within non-Pashtuns, they, however, have contributed greatly to the world and to civilization. When you begin to associate yourself with what you rightfully are, you will see just how rich your past is. Rumi, Avicenna, Sa'adi, they were not Afghans and would never have called themselves one.
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