I meat with Pathan Friends in Karachi , Steel Town , whose father was working in Steel Mills of pakistan and they had settled in Steel Town after migration from Kohat NWFP.
They were Very haltingly speaking in Pashto and prefered speaking URDU and one of my friend’s brother told that he understand Pushto , but can speak Pushto very hardly.
I thought your Children will never speak Pushto as You the Parants wou’nt know/practice it.
Pashtuns stick to their langauge and culture as lmg as they remain in their own areas. Outside their native area, when settled, forget their pashto within 2nd generation.
i think disloyalty to mother tongue is done only by pashtuns bcoz i have observed that punjabis settled in our area long time ago, still speak punjabi in their homes.
Mostly modern and educated pashtun families settled outside pakhtunkhwa abonden their mother tongue perhaps because they feel shame in being identified as pashtuns who are usually chokidaars, mazdoors and labourers.
Mostly modern and educated pashtun families settled outside pakhtunkhwa abonden their mother tongue perhaps because they feel shame in being identified as pashtuns who are usually chokidaars, mazdoors and labourers.
Why do they abodon their selves to speak in Pushto , there may be many reasons ? , But if some one have this mantelity that , doing Hardwork , Even chokidari , Mazdoori etc is some thing to be offended for could not appriciated.
If yes, then its strange that you are complaining of Pashtun's disloyalty towards their langauge while you have already take a step ahead by repeatively using the improper word "Pathan" instead of "Pashtun".
Pashtuns stick to their langauge and culture as lmg as they remain in their own areas. Outside their native area, when settled, forget their pashto within 2nd generation.
i think disloyalty to mother tongue is done only by pashtuns bcoz i have observed that punjabis settled in our area long time ago, still speak punjabi in their homes.
Don't agree - My siblings and I are 2nd generation pashtoons living in UK and we speak pakhto fluently. I have 2nd generation friends whose young kids also speak pakhto fluently.
The same can be said of 2nd and 3rd generation punjabis who I know, we all make a conscious effort to keep the language going.
Don't agree - My siblings and I are 2nd generation pashtoons living in UK and we speak pakhto fluently. I have 2nd generation friends whose young kids also speak pakhto fluently.
The same can be said of 2nd and 3rd generation punjabis who I know, we all make a conscious effort to keep the language going.
wrora, i can say that u r fluent in pashto bcoz u have got gifted pashtun parents
Not wrora, its khoro, and no my parents aren't gifted, neither are the parents of friends I mentioned, I guess it was a matter of principle, they knew that if they didn't keep the language going, it would be lost.