fbpx
Wikipedia

Neelum District

The district of Neelum (spelt also Neelam; Urdu: نیلم [niːləm]) is the northernmost of 10 districts located within the Pakistani-administered territory of Azad Kashmir. Taking up the larger part of the Neelam Valley, the district has a population of around 191,000 people (as of 2017).[2] It was among the worst-hit areas of Pakistan during the 2005 Kashmir earthquake.[3]

Neelum District
ضلع نیلم
Photograph showing the heavily-forested landscape of the Neelum Valley in April 2015
Map of the Pakistani-administered territory of Azad Jammu and Kashmir with the Neelum District highlighted in red
CountryPakistan
TerritoryAzad Kashmir
DivisionMuzaffarabad Division
Founded byMufti Mansoor ur Rehman in his rule during 2005 on Feb 5
HeadquartersAthmuqam
Government
 • TypeLocal bodies elections conducted after 31 years gape
 • Deputy CommissionerSardar Tahir Mehmood up (Mian Abdul Waheed MLA(PPP) Shah Ghulam Qadar MLA (PMLN))
 • District Police OfficerSajid Imran
 • District Health OfficerAbdul Mateen
Area
 • Total3,621 km2 (1,398 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[2]
 • Total216,000
 • Density53/km2 (140/sq mi)
Hindko Kashmiry Gojri shina Pashto
 • OfficialUrdu
 • LocalHindko, Kashmiri, Shina, Gojri, Kundal Shahi
Number of Tehsils2

Location

The district is bordered on the north and north-east by the Diamer District, the Astore District, and the Skardu District of Gilgit-Baltistan, on the south by the Kupwara District and the Bandipora District of Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, on the south-west by the Muzaffarabad District, and by the west by the Mansehra District of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province.

The Neelum Valley was known before the partition as Kishanganga and was subsequently renamed for the village of Neelam.[4] It flows from the Gurez Valley in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir and roughly follows first a western and then a south-western course until it joins the Jhelum River at Muzaffarabad. The valley is a thickly wooded[citation needed] region with an elevation ranging between 4,000 feet (1,200 m) and 7,500 feet (2,300 m), with mountain peaks on either side reaching 17,000 feet (5,200 m).[5] The Neelum Valley is 144 kilometres (89 mi) long.[6] The Line of Control runs through the valley, either across the mountains to the south-east or in places right along the river, with several villages on the left bank falling on the Indian side of the border.[7]

Administration

 
Dosut

The Neelum District was part of the Muzaffarabad District until 2005.[5] It is made up of two tehsils:[8] the Athmuqam Tehsil, in which the district headquarters is located, and the Sharda Tehsil. The Neelum District is the largest district of Azad Kashmir by area. The valley extends for approximately 200 kilometers along the Neelum River. This is a generally poor region, reliant on subsistence agriculture and handicrafts, with tourism growing in importance in recent years.[9] According to the Alif Ailaan Pakistan District Education Rankings 2015, The Neelum District is ranked 33 out of 148 districts in terms of education. For facilities and infrastructure, the district is ranked 136 out of 149.[10] The Neelum Valley has opportunities for everyone, including hiking, fishing, white-water rafting, and kayaking.[11]

Languages

Several languages are spoken natively in the district. The predominant one is Hindko. It is the language of wider communication in the area and is spoken at a native or near-native level by almost all members of the other language communities, many of whom are abandoning their language and shifting to Hindko.[12] This language is usually called Parmi (or Parimi, Pārim), a name that likely originated in the Kashmiri word apārim 'from the other side', which was the term used by the Kashmiris of the Vale of Kashmir to refer to the highlanders, who spoke this language. The language is also sometimes known as Pahari, although it bears a closer resemblance to the Hindko of neighbouring Kaghan Valley than to the Pahari spoken in the Murree Hills.[13] Unlike other varieties of Hindko, Pahari or Punjabi, it has preserved the voiced aspirated consonants at the start of the word: for example, gha 'grass' vs. Punjabi , where the aspiration and voicing have been lost giving rise to a low tone on the following vowel. This sound change however, is currently spreading here as well, but it has so far only affected the villages situated along the Neelam highway.[12] This variety of Hindko is also spoken in nearby areas of India-administered Kashmir. Since Partition, the language varieties on either side of the Line of Control have diverged in a number of ways. For example, in the Neelam Valley, there is a higher proportion of Urdu loanwords, while the variety spoken across the Line of Control has retained more traditional Hindko words.[14]

The second most widely spoken language of the Neelam Valley is Kashmiri. It is the majority language in at least a dozen or so villages, and in about half of these, it is the sole mother tongue. It is closer to the variety spoken in northern Kashmir (particularly in Kupwara District) than to the Kashmiri of the city of Muzaffarabad.[15]

The third-largest ethnic, though not linguistic,[16] group are the Gujjars, whose villages are scattered throughout the valley. Most of them have switched to Hindko, but a few communities continue using the Gujari language at home. Gujari is more consistently maintained among the Bakarwal, who travel into the valley (and beyond, into Gilgit-Baltistan) with their herds in the summer and who spend the winters in the lower parts of Azad Kashmir and in Punjab.[17]

In the upper end of the valley, there are two distinct communities speaking two different varieties of Shina (locally sometimes called Dardi). One of them is found at Taobutt and the nearby village of Karimabad (formerly known as Sutti) near the border with India. Its speakers claim that their variety of Shina is close to the one spoken further up the valley in Indian Gurez. The community is bilingual in Kashmiri and is culturally closer to the neighbouring Kashmiri communities than to the other Shina group, who inhabit the large village of Phulwei 35 kilometres (22 mi) downstream. The Shina people of Phullwei claim to have originally come from Nait near Chilas in Gilgit-Baltistan.[18]

A Pashto dialect is spoken in two villages (Dhaki and Changnar) that are situated on the Line of Control. Because of cross-border firing since the early 1990s, there has been large-scale migration away from these villages. The local dialect is not completely intelligible with the ones spoken in the rest of Pakistan.[19]

One language that is unique to the Neelum Valley is the endangered Kundal Shahi. It is spoken by some of the inhabitants of the Kundal Shahi village near Athmuqam.[20]

Additionally, Urdu is spoken by the formally educated and, like English, is used as a medium of instruction in schools.[21]

Education

According to Pakistan District Education Ranking 2017, a report released by Alif Ailaan, the district of Neelum stands at number 58 nationally in the ranking related to education, with an education score of 60.87. The Neelum District is lowest-ranked district in all of Azad Kashmir.

See also

References

  1. ^ AJK at a glance 2015 (PDF) (Report). p. 22.
  2. ^ a b *"Census 2017: AJK population rises to over 4m". The Nation. 26 August 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 September 2007. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  4. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 65. The village is 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) upstream from Athmuqam. An alternative etymology links the name to the colour of the river: "sapphire". (Faruqi 2016)
  5. ^ a b Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 65.
  6. ^ "Length of Neelum Valley". en.dailypakistan.com.pk. 8 May 2017. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  7. ^ Baart & Rehman 2005, p. 4; Akhtar & Rehman 2007, pp. 65–66.
  8. ^ "Tehsils of Neelum District on AJK map". ajk.gov.pk. AJK Official Portal. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  9. ^ Faruqi 2016.
  10. ^ "Individual district profile link, 2015". Alif Ailaan. Retrieved 6 May 2015.
  11. ^ Asia, Incredible. "Incredible Asia". Incredible Asia. Faysal Islam. Retrieved 30 December 2022. {{cite web}}: External link in |ref= (help)
  12. ^ a b Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 69.
  13. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 68. The variant Parimi as well as the local use of the terms Pahari and Hindko are from Rehman (2011, p. 227).
  14. ^ Sohail, Rehman & Kiani 2016, p. 108.
  15. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 70. Additionally, Kashmiri speakers are better able to understand the variety of Srinagar than the one spoken in Muzaffarabad.
  16. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 72.
  17. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, pp. 71–72.
  18. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, pp. 72–74.
  19. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, pp. 74–75.
  20. ^ Baart & Rehman 2005.
  21. ^ Akhtar & Rehman 2007, pp. 75–78.

Bibliography

  • Akhtar, Raja Nasim; Rehman, Khawaja A. (2007). "The Languages of the Neelam Valley". Kashmir Journal of Language Research. 10 (1): 65–84. ISSN 1028-6640.
  • Baart, Joan L. G.; Rehman, Khawaja A. (2005). "A first look at the language of Kundal Shahi in Azad Kashmir". SIL Electronic Working Papers.
  • Faruqi, Sama (18 August 2016). "Neelum Valley: The sapphire trail". Herald (Pakistan). Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  • Rehman, Khawaja A. (2011). "Ergativity in Kundal Shahi, Kashmiri And Hindko". In Turin, Mark; Zeisler, Bettina (eds.). Himalayan languages and linguistics: studies in phonology, semantics, morphology and syntax. Brill's Tibetan studies library, Languages of the greater Himalayan region. Leiden : Biggleswade: Brill. pp. 219–234. doi:10.1163/ej.9789004194489.i-322.61. ISBN 978-90-04-19448-9.
  • Sohail, Ayesha; Rehman, Khawaja A.; Kiani, Zafeer Hussain (2016). "Language divergence caused by LoC: a case study of District Kupwara (Jammu & Kashmir) and District Neelum (Azad Jammu & Kashmir)". Kashmir Journal of Language Research. 19 (2): 103–120. ISSN 1028-6640.

External links

  • Neelum Valley-AJ&K Tourism & Archaeology Department
  • Neelum Valley-AJ&K Community Website

neelum, district, district, neelum, spelt, also, neelam, urdu, نیلم, niːləm, northernmost, districts, located, within, pakistani, administered, territory, azad, kashmir, taking, larger, part, neelam, valley, district, population, around, people, 2017, among, w. The district of Neelum spelt also Neelam Urdu نیلم niːlem is the northernmost of 10 districts located within the Pakistani administered territory of Azad Kashmir Taking up the larger part of the Neelam Valley the district has a population of around 191 000 people as of 2017 2 It was among the worst hit areas of Pakistan during the 2005 Kashmir earthquake 3 Neelum District ضلع نیلمDistrict of Azad KashmirPhotograph showing the heavily forested landscape of the Neelum Valley in April 2015Map of the Pakistani administered territory of Azad Jammu and Kashmir with the Neelum District highlighted in redCountryPakistanTerritoryAzad KashmirDivisionMuzaffarabad DivisionFounded byMufti Mansoor ur Rehman in his rule during 2005 on Feb 5HeadquartersAthmuqamGovernment TypeLocal bodies elections conducted after 31 years gape Deputy CommissionerSardar Tahir Mehmood up Mian Abdul Waheed MLA PPP Shah Ghulam Qadar MLA PMLN District Police OfficerSajid Imran District Health OfficerAbdul MateenArea 1 Total3 621 km2 1 398 sq mi Population 2020 2 Total216 000 Density53 km2 140 sq mi Hindko Kashmiry Gojri shina Pashto OfficialUrdu LocalHindko Kashmiri Shina Gojri Kundal ShahiNumber of Tehsils2 Contents 1 Location 2 Administration 3 Languages 4 Education 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksLocation EditThe district is bordered on the north and north east by the Diamer District the Astore District and the Skardu District of Gilgit Baltistan on the south by the Kupwara District and the Bandipora District of Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir on the south west by the Muzaffarabad District and by the west by the Mansehra District of Pakistan s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province The Neelum Valley was known before the partition as Kishanganga and was subsequently renamed for the village of Neelam 4 It flows from the Gurez Valley in Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir and roughly follows first a western and then a south western course until it joins the Jhelum River at Muzaffarabad The valley is a thickly wooded citation needed region with an elevation ranging between 4 000 feet 1 200 m and 7 500 feet 2 300 m with mountain peaks on either side reaching 17 000 feet 5 200 m 5 The Neelum Valley is 144 kilometres 89 mi long 6 The Line of Control runs through the valley either across the mountains to the south east or in places right along the river with several villages on the left bank falling on the Indian side of the border 7 Administration Edit Dosut The Neelum District was part of the Muzaffarabad District until 2005 5 It is made up of two tehsils 8 the Athmuqam Tehsil in which the district headquarters is located and the Sharda Tehsil The Neelum District is the largest district of Azad Kashmir by area The valley extends for approximately 200 kilometers along the Neelum River This is a generally poor region reliant on subsistence agriculture and handicrafts with tourism growing in importance in recent years 9 According to the Alif Ailaan Pakistan District Education Rankings 2015 The Neelum District is ranked 33 out of 148 districts in terms of education For facilities and infrastructure the district is ranked 136 out of 149 10 The Neelum Valley has opportunities for everyone including hiking fishing white water rafting and kayaking 11 Languages EditSeveral languages are spoken natively in the district The predominant one is Hindko It is the language of wider communication in the area and is spoken at a native or near native level by almost all members of the other language communities many of whom are abandoning their language and shifting to Hindko 12 This language is usually called Parmi or Parimi Parim a name that likely originated in the Kashmiri word aparim from the other side which was the term used by the Kashmiris of the Vale of Kashmir to refer to the highlanders who spoke this language The language is also sometimes known as Pahari although it bears a closer resemblance to the Hindko of neighbouring Kaghan Valley than to the Pahari spoken in the Murree Hills 13 Unlike other varieties of Hindko Pahari or Punjabi it has preserved the voiced aspirated consonants at the start of the word for example gha grass vs Punjabi ka where the aspiration and voicing have been lost giving rise to a low tone on the following vowel This sound change however is currently spreading here as well but it has so far only affected the villages situated along the Neelam highway 12 This variety of Hindko is also spoken in nearby areas of India administered Kashmir Since Partition the language varieties on either side of the Line of Control have diverged in a number of ways For example in the Neelam Valley there is a higher proportion of Urdu loanwords while the variety spoken across the Line of Control has retained more traditional Hindko words 14 The second most widely spoken language of the Neelam Valley is Kashmiri It is the majority language in at least a dozen or so villages and in about half of these it is the sole mother tongue It is closer to the variety spoken in northern Kashmir particularly in Kupwara District than to the Kashmiri of the city of Muzaffarabad 15 The third largest ethnic though not linguistic 16 group are the Gujjars whose villages are scattered throughout the valley Most of them have switched to Hindko but a few communities continue using the Gujari language at home Gujari is more consistently maintained among the Bakarwal who travel into the valley and beyond into Gilgit Baltistan with their herds in the summer and who spend the winters in the lower parts of Azad Kashmir and in Punjab 17 In the upper end of the valley there are two distinct communities speaking two different varieties of Shina locally sometimes called Dardi One of them is found at Taobutt and the nearby village of Karimabad formerly known as Sutti near the border with India Its speakers claim that their variety of Shina is close to the one spoken further up the valley in Indian Gurez The community is bilingual in Kashmiri and is culturally closer to the neighbouring Kashmiri communities than to the other Shina group who inhabit the large village of Phulwei 35 kilometres 22 mi downstream The Shina people of Phullwei claim to have originally come from Nait near Chilas in Gilgit Baltistan 18 A Pashto dialect is spoken in two villages Dhaki and Changnar that are situated on the Line of Control Because of cross border firing since the early 1990s there has been large scale migration away from these villages The local dialect is not completely intelligible with the ones spoken in the rest of Pakistan 19 One language that is unique to the Neelum Valley is the endangered Kundal Shahi It is spoken by some of the inhabitants of the Kundal Shahi village near Athmuqam 20 Additionally Urdu is spoken by the formally educated and like English is used as a medium of instruction in schools 21 Education EditAccording to Pakistan District Education Ranking 2017 a report released by Alif Ailaan the district of Neelum stands at number 58 nationally in the ranking related to education with an education score of 60 87 The Neelum District is lowest ranked district in all of Azad Kashmir See also EditHunza Valley Naltar Valley Kaghan Valley Swat Valley Kalasha Valleys Kumrat Valley Sharada Peeth DosutReferences Edit AJK at a glance 2015 PDF Report p 22 a b Census 2017 AJK population rises to over 4m The Nation 26 August 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2017 rmc org pk Earthquake Map Archived from the original on 21 September 2007 Retrieved 9 January 2018 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 p 65 The village is 12 kilometres 7 5 mi upstream from Athmuqam An alternative etymology links the name to the colour of the river sapphire Faruqi 2016 a b Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 p 65 Length of Neelum Valley en dailypakistan com pk 8 May 2017 Retrieved 11 June 2018 Baart amp Rehman 2005 p 4 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 pp 65 66 Tehsils of Neelum District on AJK map ajk gov pk AJK Official Portal Retrieved 17 November 2019 Faruqi 2016 Individual district profile link 2015 Alif Ailaan Retrieved 6 May 2015 Asia Incredible Incredible Asia Incredible Asia Faysal Islam Retrieved 30 December 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code ref code help a b Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 p 69 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 p 68 The variant Parimi as well as the local use of the terms Pahari and Hindko are from Rehman 2011 p 227 Sohail Rehman amp Kiani 2016 p 108 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 p 70 Additionally Kashmiri speakers are better able to understand the variety of Srinagar than the one spoken in Muzaffarabad Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 p 72 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 pp 71 72 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 pp 72 74 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 pp 74 75 Baart amp Rehman 2005 Akhtar amp Rehman 2007 pp 75 78 Bibliography EditAkhtar Raja Nasim Rehman Khawaja A 2007 The Languages of the Neelam Valley Kashmir Journal of Language Research 10 1 65 84 ISSN 1028 6640 Baart Joan L G Rehman Khawaja A 2005 A first look at the language of Kundal Shahi in Azad Kashmir SIL Electronic Working Papers Faruqi Sama 18 August 2016 Neelum Valley The sapphire trail Herald Pakistan Retrieved 8 January 2017 Rehman Khawaja A 2011 Ergativity in Kundal Shahi Kashmiri And Hindko In Turin Mark Zeisler Bettina eds Himalayan languages and linguistics studies in phonology semantics morphology and syntax Brill s Tibetan studies library Languages of the greater Himalayan region Leiden Biggleswade Brill pp 219 234 doi 10 1163 ej 9789004194489 i 322 61 ISBN 978 90 04 19448 9 Sohail Ayesha Rehman Khawaja A Kiani Zafeer Hussain 2016 Language divergence caused by LoC a case study of District Kupwara Jammu amp Kashmir and District Neelum Azad Jammu amp Kashmir Kashmir Journal of Language Research 19 2 103 120 ISSN 1028 6640 External links EditNeelum Valley AJ amp K Tourism amp Archaeology Department Neelum Valley AJ amp K Community Website Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neelum District Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neelum District amp oldid 1141491314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.