User:Mar4d/Malayalis in Pakistan
Malayalis in Pakistan are Malayali people originating from the South Indian state of Kerala, based in the city of Karachi. They are mainly Malayali Muslims. The number of Malayalam speaking Malayalis is reported to be up to 6,000. There could be over 200,000 people with Malayali ethnic background that have assimilated into local population since the independence of Pakistan in 1947.
History
[edit]The Malayalis in Pakistan are Muslims of Mappila origin, hailing from the Malabar region in northern Kerala. There was a large community of Malayalis, with strong leftist roots, in Karachi before the independence of Pakistan numbering at least 50,000.[1] Notably among them was Biyyathil Mohyuddin Kutty, a Pakistani social activist of Malayali origin, who migrated from Chennai to Karachi in 1951 at the age of 20. According to Kutty, "it was the most compact community once upon a time". Malayalis have assimilated with the local Muslim population through marriage and have adopted the Urdu language. However, much of the Malayalam speaking population has declined since the independence. As of 2005, the total population of Malayalam speaking Malayalis was reported to be from 5,000 to 6,000.
The first wave of Malayali immigration to Karachi occurred in 1921, in the wake of a British crushing of a peasant rebellion in Kerala (see Malabar Rebellion and Mappila riots). These Malayalis formed the Malabar Muslim Jamaat, a body that is said to still exist.[1] Most Malayalis made their living by brewing and selling tea, and trading betel leaves. They were reputed to be an enterprising community, going on to set up four star and five star hotels within five years of their arrival. Today, most of them are engaged in small and medium enterprises. They have assimilated over time, with some marrying locally.
Diaspora
[edit]Before the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965 and in the month of Ramadan, many Malayalis used travel to India to meet their relatives and celebrate Eid al-Fitr. With the closing down of the Indian consulate in Karachi, traveling across the border was no longer possible. This accelerated the assimilation of nearly all Malayalis into local culture and the new generation only spoke the Urdu language.[2] A large number of Pakistani Malayalis are working in the Gulf countries, joining the large Kerala Gulf diaspora.
See also
[edit]In popular culture
[edit]External links
[edit]- Muslim_Mappila#Diaspora
- The Nowhere people
- From Kerala to Karachi
- Why does India shun these Malayalis?
- Federal minister’s statement worries Kerala’s ‘Pak nationals’
- From Kerala to Pakistan, to be back in India brokering peace
- Kerala film director P.T. Kunhimohammad honoured at Oxford event for his film 'Paradesi'
- Meet the Kerala family from Pakistan living in UAE
- Prisoners of circumstance yearning to return home
- The Agony of ‘Pakistani’ Indians
- The missing traders
- From Kerala to Islamabad
- Exiles in their homeland
- Malabar betel leaves still a hit in Pakistan
- Betel leaves, with love from Kerala to Pakistan
- From Kerala to Pakistan, to be back in India brokering peace
- [1]
- The Malayalees in Pakistan
- 'Paradesi is basically about the India-Pak partition'
- Release of prisoners brings cheer to ‘Pakistan' citizens
- 'I never strayed from politics because I am a Malayalee'
- Meet the Malayali Marxist living in self-exile in Pakistan
- A true-blood Malayalee from Pakistan pushes for friendship
- A Moplah in Sindh
- Q&A: B M Kutty, Pakistan Peace Coalition Secretary
- A Pakistani- Malayali family in UAE Weekend Arabia 20-2
- I fear for my daughter's life in Pakistan
- Some good info here Protest Against Potential 'Mini-Pakistan'; Moplastan; Muslim League in Kerala
References
[edit]- ^ a b Swami, M.R. Narayan (5 October 2005). "Where Malayalees once held sway". DNA India. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ^ Malappuram in Karachi