Honour among them
Dec 19th 2006 | GARDEZ AND PESHAWAR From The Economist print edition
Thieves, murderers, rapists; and how the Pushtuns' ancient tribal code 
is fighting for survival against radical Islam
IN A cinema hoarding in Peshawar's Khyber bazaar, Arbaz Khan brandishes 
a Kalashnikov rifle with a muscular brown arm dripping with scarlet 
blood. Two nicely plump, pink-cheeked maidens are arranged on the grey 
rocks behind the actor, manacled and in chains. Mr Khan's roaring, 
jet-moustachioed mouth bellows the name of the film: "It is my sin that 
I am Pushtun!" As an examination of moral equivalence, the film raises 
difficult questions. To simplify: Mr Khan's father is killed in a 
blood-feud, after which, according to the tribal code of the Pushtuns-or 
Pakhtuns, or Pathans, as they are also called-Mr Khan's uncle should 
marry his dead brother's widow and accept Mr Khan as his son. But Mr 
Khan's mother is rather long-in-the-tooth, so Mr Khan's uncle (or 
father) takes up with a dancing-girl, whom, to satisfy his mother's 
honour, Mr Khan kills. Mr Khan then falls in love.
But, dash it, his uncle (or father) makes a play for his girl! Herein 
lies a dilemma. According to the tribal code, which is called 
Pushtunwali, Mr Khan must honour his father and also slaughter anyone 
who messes with his lady. Which way should he choose? After brief 
anguish, Mr Khan slots his randy uncle.
To Western critics, "Aayeena" might sound like Bollywood schlock. But it 
has real-life resonance in Peshawar, the capital of Pakistan's 
North-West Frontier Province (NWFP). Your correspondent recently paid a 
visit there to a politician, Anwar Kamal Marwat, a florid gentleman of 
military bearing and parliamentary leader of the Pakistan Muslim 
League-Nawaz in the NWFP assembly. By chance, Mr Kamal had that evening 
returned from a distant jirga, or tribal council, involving several 
hundred elders from Pakistan and Afghanistan, representing several dozen 
Pushtun tribes and their constituent clans. The jirga had been convened 
to settle a blood-money claim against the Marwat tribe, which Mr Kamal 
leads, incurred in April 2004.
For several years previously, the Marwat had been feuding with their 
neighbours, the Bhattani, another small Pushtun tribe. The tit-for-tat 
offences were quite piffling, said Mr Kamal-a spot of thieving or 
kidnapping of fighting-age males. Then some Bhattani hotheads abducted 
two Marwat girls; and Mr Kamal went Pushtun-postal. Leading an army of 
4,000 Marwat fighters, equipped with artillery, he levelled a Bhattani 
town, killing 80 people, including the two unlucky, but nonetheless 
dishonoured, girls.
Neither the bloodletting, nor the jirga that followed it (which stung Mr 
Kamal and his tribe for $60,000),
About sponsorship
AP
seem even to have been mentioned in the Pakistani press.
Asked whether he saw any contradiction in a senior lawmaker instigating 
such extreme violence, Mr Kamal appeared astonished. "Well, we don't 
claim this is something to be proud of," he stuttered. "But it is a 
question of prestige, you see, a question of honour." In other words, he 
might have said, paraphrasing Mr Khan: it is his sin that he is Pushtun.
It is over 250 years since Afghanistan was cobbled together, from many 
ethnic groups, and two centuries since British colonisers tried 
stretching their writ to India's (now Pakistan's) north-western 
frontier, where the plains crumple up towards the Hindu Kush. Yet, in 
both places, a large part of the population is still wedded to 
Pushtunwali. Some 15m Pushtuns live in Afghanistan, or 50% of its 
population; and 28m in Pakistan, mostly in NWFP, representing about 15% 
of the population there. Most of them are ruled by their tribal code, 
the notable exception being where the rival Islamist code, of the 
stringent Saudi variety which is preached by the Taliban and quite new 
to Afghanistan, is strong. Islamism has rivalled Pushtunwali for 
centuries; it has often gained prominence, as currently, in time of war. 
More typically, the two competing ways have cross-fertilised in 
Afghanistan, each subtly influencing the other.
Pushtunwali's principles have not changed in centuries-certainly not 
since they were recorded by Victorian ethnographers, middle-class 
soldiers and civil servants: players of the Great Game. Most lionised 
the fierce tribesmen, who periodically murdered them. Some even 
swallowed a delicious Pushtun claim to be descended from a lost tribe of 
Israel. But not all Westerners fell for the Pushtun. As a reporter for 
the Daily Telegraph, attached to the Malakand Field Force, Winston 
Churchill wrote: "Their system of ethics, which regards treachery and 
violence as virtues rather than vices, has produced a code of honour so 
strange and inconsistent that it is incomprehensible to a logical mind." 
Pushtun amateur genealogists (that is, most Pushtun men) say Pushtunwali 
is 5,000 years old. But as Pushtu was first written less than 500 years 
ago, the theory is hard to test. The code's sine qua non is honour, or 
nang, a word which, according to Sir Olaf Caroe, an imperial scholar of 
the Pushtuns, contains a mythical sense of chastity. According to Khusal 
Khan Khattak, a great 17th-century Pushtun poet, credited with 45,000 
poems: "I despise the man who does not guide his life by nang,/the very 
word nang drives me mad!" In dusty Pushtun villages today, few bearded 
men would not nod approvingly at this.
"Any man who loses his honour must be completely ostracised," said 
Sandaygul, a long-beard of the Mangal tribe in Afghanistan's 
south-eastern Paktia province. "No one would congratulate him on the 
birth of child. No one would marry his daughter. No one would attend his 
funeral. His disgrace will endure for generations. He and his family 
must move away." In Pushtu, to be disgraced means literally to be an 
outsider.
The insulting Americans
There are infinite ways to slight a Pushtun's nang, but most involve 
zar, zan or zamin: gold, women or land. The search tactics of American 
troops in Afghanistan, five years after they invaded the country, tend 
to offend on all counts. By forcing entry into the mud-fortress home of 
a Pushtun, with its lofty buttresses and loopholes, they dishonour his 
property. By stomping through its female quarters, they dishonour his 
women. Worse, the search may end with the householder handcuffed and 
dragged off before his neighbours: his person disgraced. America and its 
allies face a complicated insurgency in Afghanistan, driven by many 
factors. But such tactics are among them.
His honour besmirched-and here's the problem for the Americans-a Pushtun 
is obliged to have his revenge, or badal. Last year, in one of the 
myriad such examples that arise in conversations in northern Pakistan 
and Afghanistan, the daughter of a prominent businessman in Gardez, 
Paktia's capital, eloped with her beau. So the businessman sold up his 
property, moved to Kabul and tracked down and killed his daughter's 
lover. His daughter, whom he must also kill if the stain is to be 
removed, has been given sanctuary by a human-rights organisation. Her 
prospects are not good. According to a Pushtu saying: "A Pushtun waited 
100 years, then took his revenge. It was quick work." In addition, the 
honourable Pushtun embraces two obligations. He will offer hospitality, 
malmastai, to anyone needing it. And he will give sanctuary, nanawatai, 
to whoever requests it. Stories of extreme
Corbis
generosity are common in Pushtun places. Near the village of Saidkhail, 
in the Zadran tribal area of eastern Khost province, a wandering Islamic 
student, or talib, killed a man with a knife, recounts Mohammed Omar 
Barakzai, the deputy minister for tribal affairs. The talib knocked on 
the nearest door and said to the woman who opened it: "I have killed a 
man. Shelter me." She let him in. And sure enough, to trim an elegantly 
told tale, the murdered man was the woman's son.
"I am a Pushtun and have given this man refuge," the woman told her 
blood-lusting husband and brothers. "Take him to safety." But 
Pushtunwali is not all fierce imperatives.
The code also contains many flexible means of preventing conflict 
through consensus and compromise. Chief among these is the jirga, of 
which each of Afghanistan's main groups, Uzbeks, Tajiks, Pashai, Hazaras 
and Baloch, has its version. By one estimate, jirgas settle over 95% of 
Afghanistan's disputes, civil and criminal. The figure for northern 
Pakistan is perhaps only slightly lower. This is not just because the 
regular courts are incompetent and corrupt (Afghanistan's were recently 
reformed by Italy). It is because, given high levels of illiteracy, many 
Afghans and Pakistanis find it easier to understand unwritten customary 
law, in Pushtu called narkh. And, where authority is contested by a 
well-armed citizenry, the jirga's verdicts, delivered with the warring 
parties' consent, tend to be more enforceable than off-the-peg legal or 
Islamic judgments.
A juddering two-hour drive from Peshawar, at Jamrud, in Khyber Agency, a 
60-strong jirga recently settled half a dozen cases in a day-more than a 
bent Pakistani magistrate might manage in a week. Two disputes over 
money and property, including one involving the murder of five people, 
were ended with compromises. A dispute over a murderer who had been 
given sanctuary by a neighbour was postponed, pending deliberation from 
the spingeeri-literally, white-beards-who make up the jirga on a 
forerunning series of killings. A man accused of "adultery", of rape in 
fact, was told to pay 1m Pakistani rupees ($16,500) to his victim's 
family; he may thank his stars he had lived so long.
Among the spingeeri sat Adam Khan Afridi, who had himself been judged 
shortly before. For 25 years he squabbled with a cousin over which of 
them would inherit an uncle's lands, until Mr Khan killed his cousin and 
his cousin's sons and grandson. Then he killed their uncle. This was 
excessive, Mr Khan conceded; he had committed the crime of 
miratha-annihilating every male in the rival camp. The jirga decreed 
that two of Mr Khan's houses be destroyed, and fined him 500,000 rupees. 
He thought this harsh.
Jirgas do even greater service, as with the Marwat and the Bhattani, in 
ending tribal wars. On a chill recent morning in Kabul, your 
correspondent sat with a jirga convened to settle a dispute between two 
nomadic clans of the Siddiquekhail, a sub-tribe of the powerful Pushtun 
Ahmedzai. In 1980, a 17-yearold youth of one the clans, named Babur, 
disappeared while travelling through Pakistan with members of the other; 
then in 1992, a 60-year-old shepherd of the second clan was found 
murdered, allegedly killed with an axe by an uncle of Babur.
Previous attempts to settle the dispute had foundered in part on a 
deposit of $10,000 that each tribe had been asked to lodge with the 
jirga, with a vow to abide by its decision. "It is time for this feud to 
end," said Haji Naim Kuchi, the chief mediator, or narkhi, and member of 
a different Ahmedzai clan. "You should be at home sleeping with your 
wives, not plotting to kill each other!" Mr Kuchi, who is famed for his 
deep knowledge of customary law, asked the feuders to "place a stone" on 
their dispute-to suspend hostilities while the jirga sat. "We all know 
that if this continues many men will die before you return to the 
jirga," said Mr Kuchi, who had been released from American custody 
shortly before, after three years' imprisonment without trial in 
Guantánamo Bay.
To settle disputes, Mr Kuchi has two main options. He can order a guilty 
party to compensate its victim with cash, a practice known as wich pur, 
"dry debt", or he can order the two parties to exchange women,
None is more equal than others
"Their system of ethics, which regards treachery and violence as virtues 
rather than vices...is incomprehensible to a logical mind"-Churchill
AFP
or lund pur, "wet debt". By binding the antagonists together-just as in 
medieval European diplomacy- lund pur is considered more effective. 
Typically it involves exchanging a 15-year-old, a ten-year-old and a 
five-year-old girl, to be married into three succeeding generations of 
the enemy clan. Thereby, and though human-rights groups understandably 
revile the practice, Pushtuns have peace and happy grandfathers. "Blood 
cannot wash away blood," runs a Pushtu proverb. "But blood can be turned 
into love."
In a land far, far away
If Pushtunwali is about more than killing, its strictures are still 
remarkably unforgiving. Many Tajiks, like Pushtuns, would die before 
they suffered a slight. But, unlike Pushtuns, they do not fear their 
peeved neighbours to the extent of living in castles. A recent European 
Union analysis of jirgas in eastern Afghanistan found that elopement was 
the crime most often heard by Pashai jirgas, but Pushtun jirgas rarely 
considered it. That could be because few Pushtun lads and lasses elope 
or, more likely, because they are more likely to be killed when they do. 
What makes Pushtunwali so durable and so harsh? One reason is 
remoteness. At the confluence of civilisations, between Central Asia, 
ancient Persia and India's plains, Afghanistan has been contested by 
marauding armies and strange traders for millennia. A ruined capital, or 
two, lies buried in most of its 34 provinces, and each has left its 
trace in the languages and traditions of today. Pashto, for example, is 
believed to have originated in Bactrian, the language spoken by Greek 
descendants of Alexander the Great. And yet the wildest Pushtun places, 
especially along the lofty border where the strictest Pushtunwali is 
practised, have been relatively untouched by outsiders for centuries. 
Waziristan, in Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal area, has never been 
held by any foreign power.
Another reason for Pushtunwali's rude health lies in the nature of 
Pushtun society. Once rulers of Delhi, in the ranks of the Mughal 
emperors, and never vanquished for long, Pushtuns consider their society 
every bit as superior as Winston Churchill considered his. And it is 
defined by Pushtunwali: there is no Pushtun nation or, in fact, 
ethnicity. A Pushtun is simply someone who speaks Pushtu and who 
therefore follows the tribal code: Pushtunwali literally means to "do 
Pushtu".
A third factor promoting Pushtunwali is one of its most appealing 
features, egalitarianism. Leadership among Pushtuns is rarely inherited. 
It is more often bestowed by a jirga on merit. Even then, the most 
elevated Pushtun elder dares not condescend to another man of his tribe. 
When lunch is served at a Pushtun feast, with tasty dishes of mutton, 
raisins and rice, there are no servants, but servers, of equal status to 
host and guests. Where a good name is the cost of social inclusion, 
Pushtuns will fight to keep it so.
It is above all this political function that makes Pushtunwali so 
resistant to change; but it is not unchanging. Pushtun tribes constantly 
update their code.
Three years ago, the Mangals of Paktia ended a practice of 
revenge-taking by proxy, whereby a weak man had only to slaughter a 
sheep outside the house of his stronger neighbour to make him accept his 
blood-debt. "We were doing too much killing," explained Sandaygul, the 
Mangal in Gardez.
More traumatic change to the code has come from external pressures. In 
urban places, where the Pakistani and Afghan states somewhat function, 
aspects of Pushtunwali have been jettisoned; jirgas of the Kasi tribe, 
which is based in the Pakistani city of Quetta, rarely meet. More 
powerful opposition has come from political Islam, which seeks to 
replace the authority of the jirga with the mullah, customary law with 
Islamic sharia.
Over the past millennium or so, the Pushtuns' religious and tribal codes 
have roughly co-existed. As a mark of a time-honoured accommodation, 
Pushtun elders and mullahs often insist there is no contradiction 
between the two prerogatives. "The sharia and jirga systems are not 
opposed," said Maulvi Sayeed, a member of the Muslim council, or shura, 
in Kandahar, capital of southern Afghanistan. "To solve a problem 
through the use of a shura, a council, is the aim of both. The jirga is 
not against sharia law. If there has been a murder then the aim is to 
satisfy the relatives of the victim," said the mullah, seated 
cross-legged amid stacks of religious texts, with a vast white turban 
atop his grizzled head.
Compensation typically involves exchanging a 15 year-old, a tenyear old 
and a five-year-old girl, to be married into three succeeding 
generations of the enemy clan
AFP
In fact, sharia courts, which in Afghanistan are often indistinguishable 
from regular courts, are an alternative to blood-feuding and jirgas. 
Like jirgas, they can urge the victims of a crime to settle the matter 
through compensation. But where this is rejected, the courts can issue 
death sentences, or other harsh penalties, which jirgas do not. A 
plaintiff who is unhappy with a jirga's verdict may seek an alternative 
ruling from a sharia court. According to Maulvi Sayeed: "If the brother 
of a man who has been murdered does not agree to forgive his killer 
according to the jirga, then he can go to the sharia court. If the 
murder was unjust then the sharia court will say that the killer has to 
be killed." Another big difference between the codes is in their 
treatment of women. In sharia law, there can be no exchange of women as 
a means to end disputes, and women are guaranteed some rights of 
inheritance-unlike in Pushtunwali. Nor does sharia law recognise the 
Pushtun habit of wife inheritance, wherein a widow is forcibly married 
to her dead husband's brother or cousin. "Such things happen when people 
are uneducated," sniffed Maulvi Sayeed. "We don't oppose the system of 
tribal elders but they must follow the way of Islam. They can convene 
jirgas and dispense the law, but the law must be that of sharia." Though 
fiercely religious, Pushtuns have mostly preferred their leaders and law 
to be tribal. The great exception has been in times of duress, when a 
standard is needed to rally their fractious tribes and subtribes:
then they have tended to hoist the flag of jihad. Of the 19th-century 
Masood tribe of Waziristan, Sir Olaf wrote that they wanted "at all 
costs to resist subjection and to preserve their own peculiar way of 
life. To attain this end they were always prepared to make use of 
adventitious aids such as appeals with a pan-Islamic flavour." Thus the 
jihad launched in the 1980s against Soviet invaders united all Afghan 
tribes. It was generously backed by Saudi Arabia and America and given 
sanctuary by Pakistan, which was home to 3m Afghan refugees. Yet still 
its Pushtun leaders found it necessary brutally to suppress their tribal 
peers, terrorising the refugee camps and murdering the jirga-leaders who 
defied them there.
In the early 1990s, after the Soviets had been driven out and the former 
jihadist chiefs were fighting a civil war, Pushtuns again rallied around 
Islam. A band of Ghilzai Pushtuns near Kandahar, led by a mullah named 
Omar, backed by Pakistan and calling themselves the Taliban, raised the 
black flag. Gushing with Islamist zeal, Pushtun youths rushed to join 
them as they swept the feuding militias away.
But once the Taliban restored order to most of Afghanistan, Pushtuns 
began recoiling against their rulings. Their public executions and other 
outrages to public decency were anathema to them. So too when the 
Taliban-despite their celebrated chauvinism-outlawed wich pur and 
advocated female inheritance. No wonder if the lives of the vast 
majority of Afghan women have not eased since the Taliban were bombed 
from power.
For two years after their demise, the Taliban were not mourned in 
Afghanistan. But since then an insurgency has gathered pace. It is not 
quite clear what is driving it. An exploding opium harvest, which is 
providing cash for the Taliban and a reason for Pushtun farmers to keep 
the government away, is one reason. Another, as Sir Olaf might have 
foretold, is the response of the most remote and traditional Pushtuns to 
a foreign invasion.
AP
In late 2001, thousands of Taliban and several hundred Arab and Central 
Asian followers of Osama bin Laden poured into northern Pakistan's 
tribal areas-including Waziristan, home of the Masood. To hunt them, and 
in a bid to save Western troops in Afghanistan from the same 
cross-border insurgency that hobbled the Soviet Union, Pakistan sent 
80,000 troops into the tribal areas.
Alas, they have achieved the very opposite effect of that intended. 
Calling themselves the Pakistan Taliban, fighters of Waziristan's main 
tribes have rallied against the army, killing several hundred soldiers. 
As in the former refugee camps, jihadist assassins have killed several 
hundred Pushtun elders, ensuring that sharia, not Pushtunwali, is the law.
If history is any guide, many Pushtuns in northern Pakistan and southern 
Afghanistan will continue their drift to Islamist militancy until they 
are defeated, which looks impossible, or the Pakistani and Western 
forces are withdrawn.
They are then likely to return to their simmeringly murderous tribal 
ways. That would be better than the current mess. But it would also 
leave millions of people outside the writ of Pakistan and Afghanistan. 
If either state is to succeed, the alternative writs of Pushtunwali and 
jihadist Islam will have to wither. But that will not be soon.
To imagine quite how long it may take, consider Nakband. It is a suburb 
of Peshawar, the most developed Pushtun city, a mere two-hour drive from 
Pakistan's smart capital of Islamabad. Yet it is little different from 
the craggy and forbidding tribal areas, where Pakistan's constitution 
does not apply.
Nakband's inhabitants have no state services except the electricity they 
steal from the mains. There is no half-serious hospital for 20 miles. 
Pushtunwali, with a sprinkling of the Koran, is the law in Nakband. 
Blood-feuding, as marked by the ratchet of gunfire in the unbroken gloom 
of night, is routine. The government makes no effort to intervene in 
these disputes. Combing his long black hair beside a baked-mud road, a 
resident of Nakband said that, in theory, the city police were free to 
enter his suburb. But the locals had not permitted them to do so, so far 
as he could recall, since 1998.
If history is any guide, the Pushtun will continue their drift to 
Islamist militancy until they are defeated, which looks impossible, or 
the outside forces are withdrawn
Copyright © 2006 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All 
rights reserved.

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