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Islamic Slave trade: "Slaughter of the Hindu's": Hindu Kush | Kashmir |
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27-03-2022
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Neha.Kulkarni is offline
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Islamic Slave trade: "Slaughter of the Hindu's": Hindu Kush | Kashmir
#Kashmir #Islam #Hindus
Islamic Slave trade: "Slaughter of the Hindu's": Hindu Kush | Kashmir
"There are historical implications with respect to the Islamic invasion of Hindustan. In other parts of Asia and Europe, the conquered nations quickly opted for conversion to Islam rather than death. But in India, because of the staunch resistance of the 4000 year old Hindu faith, the Muslim conquests were for the Hindus a pure struggle between life and death. Entire cities were burnt down and their populations massacred. Each successive campaign brought hundreds of thousands of victims and similar numbers were deported as slaves. Every new invader made often literally his hill of Hindu skulls.
Thus the conquest of Afghanistan in the year 1000, was followed by the annihilation of the entire Hindu population there; indeed, the region is still called Hindu Kush, 'Hindu slaughter'. The Bahmani sultans in central India, made it a rule to kill 100.000 Hindus a year. In 1399, Teimur killed 100.000 Hindus IN A SINGLE DAY, and many more on other occasions. Koenraad Elst quotes Professor K.S. Lal's "Growth of Muslim population in India", who writes that according to his calculations, the Hindu population decreased by 8O million between the year 1000 and 1525."
https://academickids.com/encyclopedi...php/Hindu_Kush
International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition
https://en.unesco.org/commemorations...remembranceday
"
(Bābor-nāma, foll. 130a-31a, 272b. tr. Beveridge, pp. 204-5, 485). Ebn Baṭṭuṭa sees the origin of the name Hindu Kush
(Hindu-killer) in the fact that numerous Hindu slaves fell victim to the dangers of the unknown world of the high
mountain range while crossing the pass on their way from India to Turkestan. Later the name spread to the east;
in the 19th century it was used for the whole range up to the Baroghil Pass (Yule, p. LXII)."
https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/hindu-kush
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