As the world focuses on Afghanistan in …

Years: 1996 - 2007

As the world focuses on Afghanistan in the wake of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the names of the country's tribal peoples begin to be more familiar to the public.

One such is the Tajiks, an ethnic minority opposed to Afghanistan's ruling Taliban.

The Tajik of present Afghanistan are Mediterranean Caucasoid in physical type, but those in present Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and China's Xinjiang province appear more Mongoloid.

The genetic mixtures resulting from amalgamation with the various invading peoples have yielded red or blond hair, blue or mixed eye colors, high cheekbones, and inner-eyelid skin folds.

The traditional Tajik economy is based on agriculture and crafts such as silk weaving, pottery, and leatherwork.

Mountain farmers and herders, the Tajik are noted for their irrigated terraces, gristmills, and unirrigated grainfields.

Eaters of bread, fish, fowl, nuts, fruits, rice, and dairy products, the Tajik reputedly bake bread from almost anything, including peas and mulberries.

Village of residence, lineage, and authority rest in the male line.

Women also play an important role, however: few decisions are made without female advice.

Veiling of women is uncommon, and polygamy is rare.

The Tajiks in the early 1990s number more than seven million, of whom 3.7 million are in Afghanistan, 3.6 million in Tajikistan, over a million in Uzbekistan, and perhaps forty thousand in the Uighur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang (Sinkiang), China.

In China, Tajik speakers are the only representatives of the Indo-European linguistic family.

Tajik-Uzbek tensions have continued down to the present in both Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

The cities of Samarkand and Bukhara, although controlled for centuries by Uzbeks, were traditionally Tajik in culture, and the Tajik have never reconciled themselves to their loss.

The two groups continue to form sizable minorities within each other's borders.

The Tajik officially constitute five percent(probably a low estimate) of Uzbekistan's population, and Uzbeks form almost twenty-four percent of Tajikistan's.

In Tajikistan, where the Tajiks constitute nearly two-thirds of the population, they are divided into subgroups with historic rivalries.

The eastern Tajik of Gorno-Badakhshan have traditionally been at odds with their western brethren.

In Afghanistan, where they are second in number only to the Pashtuns, they constitute about one-fourth of the population.

The Dari-speaking Tajik, the second most influential community in Afghanistan, are strongly identified with sedentary farming and town life, mostly in the fertile eastern valleys north and south of the Hindu Kush.

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