Are Pashtuns the Lost Tribe of Israel?

08 December 2023, Version 9
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

The recently resurfaced rumors propped up by certain Israeli circles that the Pashtuns are the lost tribe of Israel has given academic circles a lingering pause. Its biblical claims are anecdotal, its historical documentation is inconsistent, its geographic claims are incoherent, and its linguistic assertions are implausible. The claim doesn’t stand a chance of DNA verification. Politically, the claim has hit a raw nerve in Afghanistan where the legitimacy of Pashtun power as an ethnic majority is challenged while in Pakistan the Pashtun cultural identity is threatened. Amidst this hyped ethnolinguistic strife that threatens regional stability, the ‘why now’ of the resurfaced controversy is as unnerving as the ‘why then’ of its origins is disconcerting. This article examines the claim from historical, cultural, linguistic, and genetic perspectives as it explores the root causes of how the rumors may have started in the first place and the reasons for its persistence.

Keywords

Afghans
Afghanistan
Pashtun
Pathan
Patan
Patna
Sher Shah Suri
Indo-Iranian
Aryans
Delhi Sultanate
the Indus Valley
the Lost Tribes of Israel
Israel
Khazaria
Palestine
Jews
Zionism
Talmudic Jews
Ashkenaz
Afghans
Afghanistan
Pashtun
Pathan
Patan
Patna
Sher Shah Suri
Indo-Iranian
Aryans
Assyrian
Delhi Sultanate
the Indus Valley
the Lost Tribes of Israel
Israel
Khazaria
Palestine
Jews
Balfour Declaration
Palestine
Zionism
Talmudic Jews
Ashkenaz
Israelism

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