Culture of Hunza the famous Area in the World

 Culture of Hunza the famous area in the World

For  numerous centuries the "people of Hunza Valley" in Northern Pakistan have been living in the  murk of the  potent Karakoram Mountains. It wasn't until the Karakoram Highway opened in the late 1970s that  pierce to the  colorful  denes that make up the lesser "Hunza region" was indeed possible by auto.  Hunza is Different  There are two main ethnical groups and languages that make up Hunza Valley.  Lower Hunza( Karimabad/ Aliabad/ Nagar, etc) – Burushaski- speaking people.  Upper Hunza( All  townlets north of "Attabad Lake" –( Gulmit/ Ghulkin/ Shimshal/ Charpursan, etc) – Wahki- speaking people.  

Though only 30 kilometers separate these two areas, Burushaski and Wahki are two  fully different languages. There's  surely some artistic imbrication between the two groups in terms of  life and religion but in order to communicate with one another, people from these two distinct communities  generally speak together in Urdu – the  public language of Pakistan.  The Burushaski language doesn't have any solid  verbal links to other languages – making it one of the  further unique languages from South Asia. Some ancient Tibetan  textbooks source a written  handwriting from Gilgit that might have been written in Burushaski – although no spoken  workshop from history have survived in the "Burushaski language". 

Culture of Hunza the famous Area in the World


The Wahki language comes from an Eastern Iranian language  however, in more recent centuries, native speakers tend to  haul from the Wakhan Corridor and Pamir Mountains( a triangular area with participated borders with Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and Pakistan) – the ancestral  motherland of the Wahki people  set up in Hunza. My  musketeers in Upper Hunza have told me their families moved to the Gilgit Baltistan region that's now Hunza roughly 300 times ago – but first- hand  proved history of the Wahki people doesn't  feel to  live – adding to the lesser  riddle that makes up the people and culture of Hunza.  Traditional Hunza Sport  While there may not be basketball and skateboarding  passing in the Hunza Valley – Huzai folks love to get down on some sport.

Due to the fact that the lives of Hunza  residers are  nearly intertwined with beast, it's no surprise that some of the most popular sports in the region involve  creatures.  Horse Polo is a favorite pastime of men – and there are some truly  grand high altitude polo grounds to be  set up in remote alpine  ranges. The rules of the game aren't what they're in the west – and matches can get downright  rumbustious

 , with LOTS more physical contact between players than one would see at a match in the UK for  illustration.  Buzkashi is an ancient sport unique to  corridor of Central Asia and the Pamir region. It also involves mounted horsewomen, a  thing – and  stay for it – a headless  corpse of a  scapegoat or small cow. This sport is losing fashionability with the  youngish generations without a  mistrustfulness – but is still played annually in the summer and downtime throughout Gilgit Baltistan and Hunza. numerous people who formally enjoyed playing Buzkashi have  vended their  nags for the cash to make life more comfortable in the short term – which is making this  crazy yet fascinating sport indeed less common in Hunza these days.

"Long Life in Hunza",  It's said that the people from the Hunza region have some of the loftiest life  expectation rates in Pakistan. Diet  presumably has a lot to do with it, as until recent times  utmost of the food in Hunza was locally produced and organically grown without the use of  poisonous chemicals. It's also not uncommon to see old people out working hard in their fields well into their eighties.  Unlike in the west, access to regular or indeed  introductory health care was and still is enough  important  missing. People  reckoned on original remedies and treatments when they got sick – and indeed now if someone needs serious treatment for  commodity – they must travel back to one of the  metropolises in Punjab or Sindh –  occasionally thousands of kilometers down.  Note to  tone eat well, walk in the mountains a lot.

Culture of Hunza the famous Area in the World

 "Hunza Agriculture",  This subject is  surely linked to the long  dates of original  residers mentioned above – because eating a ton of  lately grown  yield throughout your life is sure to keep you healthier than drinking Cocacola and eating Lays potato chips.  Hunza is  notorious for its fruit trees that light up the  denes in  tinges of pink, red, and white each spring. When these quiet  townlets pull out downtime, they do so in style. growers are out  tending up the fields, sowing seeds of  chief crops they will gather in the summer and the fall as the fruit- bearing trees put on a display that rivals the  notorious cherry blossom scenes in Japan.  Part of the mindset in Hunza for generations has been  tone- reliance. There's a real can- do  station amongst the people then – and this  specific is  presumably a big reason why the communities of lower and upper Hunza have thrived in the face of relative  insulation for so long.  Education in Hunza  The average rate of  knowledge in Pakistan hangs at about 60 – and in some  pastoral areas of Punjab and the south –  knowledge rates are far lower – as low as 15 in some small  townlets, and indeed lower for women. In Hunza  still,  knowledge rates are among the loftiest in the country – around 95. 

"Education for girls and women", is also  veritably high when compared to other  corridor of the country – which is largely due to the fact that there are no societal or artistic pressures in Hunza placing restrictions on  womanish education.  kiddies as  youthful as 12 times old might be fluent in Urdu, Wahki, and conversational in English – which is  surely below and beyond the  capacities of the average  sprat born in America.  Internet access in recent times has  bettered 1000 across Hunza, giving people direct access to western and original media culture, Youtube, social media, and the  suchlike. many generations.

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