Yaghnob Valley, Tajikistan - Adriaan Devillé
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Yaghnob Valley, Tajikistan - Adriaan Devillé
Wedding in Yaghnob Valley, Tajikistan - Adriaan Devillé
Waiting for morning #tea. #Yaghnob #Valley, #Pamir, #Tajikistan.
On the Edge of the Snow - a trailer to a documentary about Yaghnobi people
During 1969 and 1970 the Soviet authorities forcibly deported the entire population of the Yaghnob valley to the cotton plantations in the area of Zafarbod on the northwest border between the Tajik and Uzbek SSRs. The deportation was both politically and economically motivated. The fact that the Yaghnobis’ remote location had allowed them to effectively resist Soviet authority, coupled with the pressing economic need for laborers in the cotton fields motivated the government to force the Yaghnobi people from their mountain homes at gunpoint and fly them by helicopter to grow cotton in irrigated desert land. The population of the Yaghnob valley at that time numbered between three and four thousand. Due to the harsh desert climate with temperatures over 105 degrees Fahrenheit, inadequate housing, lack of sanitary drinking water, and exposure to tuberculosis, between 400 and 700 Yaghnobis died during their first year in Zafarabod. During the first few years some of the Yaghnobi fled back to the Yaghnob valley only to be deported again.
In 1990, the Dushanbe based Council of Ministers passed a resolution to reestablish all villages from which people had been deported. Tajikistan became an independent country in 1991. Since independence, the government of Tajikistan has promoted national awareness of the country’s Sogdian heritage as part of an effort to construct a new national identity. Although the Yaghnobi are now permitted to return to live in the Yaghnob valley, only about three hundred have done so since all of the homes had been destroyed and the valley is completely lacking any kind of infrastructure or economic base. About 6,500 Yaghnobis remain in Zafarabod, the largest Yaghnobi population center.
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Yaghnobi people from the Yaghnob Valley, Tajikistan (x)
Yaghnobis are considered to be descendants of the ancient Sogdians who once inhabited most of Central Asia beyond the Amu Darya River. They speak the Yaghnobi language, a living Eastern Iranian language considered to be a direct descendant of Sogdian and has often been called Neo-Sogdian in academic literature. The estimated number of Yaghnobi people is approximately 25,000. (x)
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Yaghnob Valley, Tajikistan (x)
The valley is home to the Yaghnobi people, a people directly descended from the ancient Sogdian civilization of Central Asia. Due to its natural isolation and limited infrastructure access, the people of Yaghnob Valley have been able to preserve their distinct lifestyle, culture and language, Yaghnobi, which is closely related to ancient Sogdian. Pre-Islamic beliefs and customs are still found in the valley today. Currently, the valley comprises approximately ten settlements, each housing between three and eight families. (x)
Inside a typical mud brick house in the Yaghnob Valley of Tajikistan (x)
The valley is home to the Yaghnobi people, a people directly descended from the ancient Sogdian civilization of Central Asia. Due to its natural isolation and limited infrastructure access, the people of Yaghnob Valley have been able to preserve their distinct lifestyle, culture and language, Yaghnobi, which is closely related to ancient Sogdian. Pre-Islamic beliefs and customs are still found in the valley today. Currently, the valley comprises approximately ten settlements, each housing between three and eight families. (x)
A flock of 1000 sheep stream through the mountain town of Margheb, at the mouth of Tajikistan's Yaghnob valley. With the onset of spring, bands of shepherds are moving massive herds of sheep to high altitude pastures all over Central Asia.