Hamza913
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Pakistan was never around. The term Pakistan was coined in 1930s as shown in the OP video. The present day Pakistan was part of Ancient India, Bharatvarsh, Aryavarta or Hind-Hindustan. That's why Bin Qasim can never - NEVER - be called a first Pakistani.
Yes these discussions has happened a billion times and will happen billion times more as long as there is a confusing history on your part. But let's keep the discussion civil, that's all I ask. And thank you for honouring my request
The present day Pakistan was historically part of ancient India or Hindustan so it doesn't really matter. What matters is that the Hindus have always regarded Sindhu as a holy river. many religious text of Hinduism mention this very river. Kailash Mansarovar - where Sindhu originates - has been a place of pilgrimage to all the Hindus around the world. This is the holy river we get our name from and we are extremely proud of it.
Here is a paper from 2018 with 30+ authors from different countries, that concludes this:
• The primary population of the BMAC was largely derived from preceding local Chalcolithic peoples and had
little if any Steppe pastoralist ancestry of the type that is ubiquitous in South Asia today. Instead of being a source for South Asia, the BMAC received admixture from South Asia.
• By 1500 BCE, there were numerous individuals in the Kazakh Steppe with East Asian-related admixture, the
same type of ancestry that was widespread by the Scythian period (34). This ancestry is hardly present in the two primary ancestral populations of South Asia—ANI and ASI—suggesting that Steppe ancestry widespread in South Asia derived from earlier southward movements.
1. After exploring a wide range of models of present-day and ancient South Asia, we identify a unique class of models that fits geographically and temporally South Asians: a mixture of AASI, Indus_Periphery, and Steppe_MLBA. We reject BMAC as a primary source of ancestry in South Asians.
2. A population of which the Indus_Periphery samples were a part played a pivotal role in the formation of the two proximal sources of ancestry in South Asia, the ANI and ASI. Both ends of the Indian Cline had major components of Indus_Periphery admixture: ~39% for the ASI and ~72% for the ANI. Today there are groups in South Asia with very similar ancestry to the ASI and ANI.
You can find the report here: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2018/03/31/292581.full.pdf
Lahore is in present day Pakistan , and this present day Pakistan was not there before 1947. This however doesn't mean that the history starts at 1947. This just means that before 1947, this region had different name(s). Hindustan, Bharatvarsh or Aryavarta or India is one of these.
What is this "Indus Valley" you are referring to exactly? Are you referring to the IVC? The IVC has appx. 1000 sites. India has 616 sites while Pakistan has 406 sites. The biggest site of the IVC till date is Rakhigarhi which is in India.
And no, I don't want to limit it to present day Pakistan, I wanna stick to my original stand that this region was Hindustan. The Mughals you are talking about themselves called this region as Hindustan which is just another name of India.
Yes it was. The name change is pretty much irrelevant.
Even by that logic, Qasim still counts as the first Pakistani at least spiritually. Pakistan was made as a separate homeland for Muslims, and who was the first major Muslim figure to visit a significant chunk of Pakistan? Qasim.
Since you're being so nice, I apologise for you calling you an idiot and a brick wall.
Right, and in Islam people like Qasim are highly revered as Ghazis. But you guys still mock us for liking Qasim. You can't have it both ways, apply the same logic for both of us. If the Indus River is yours, Qasim is ours.
Numerous other studies confirm what I say rather than what you say, even the one you cited:
"Kushans, and Huns, sometimes suggested as sources for the Steppe ancestry influences in South Asia today (17) - contributed to the majority of South Asians"
The ancestry we have from migrants during the Islamic era is minimal, but still there none the less as proven in other studies, and this one doesn't rule it out at all (especially since it used mostly pre-Islamic samples for Pakistan).
Alright, so we agree. The only point of contention is us using the term Pakistan, which is really irrelevant since as you said, the region has been given many names such as Khorasan, Hindustan, Pakistan, the Indus, etc.
The Indus Valley is pretty much the regions surrounding the Indus River, which includes some of eastern Afghanistan and north-west Hindustan. It's basically the core territories of IVC (mostly).