Qidwai

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Qidwai
Classification Muslim
Religions Islam
Languages Arabic and Urdu and Hindi[
Populated States Uttar Pradesh India and Sindh Pakistan
Subdivisions none

The Qidwai or Kidwai (Urdu: قدوای ‎) are a community of Muslims in Pakistan and India. They are mostly settled in the state of Uttar Pradesh in India. They are also settled in the city of Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan, also they are settled in areas of the Middle East.[1] The Qidwai, together with the Milki, Malik and Chaudhary are one of the four sub-group of a community who collectively form the Mian Muslim. The Mian Muslim were once a community of substantial landowners in the Awadh region.[2]


History and origin

The Qidwai were native Muslims of Uttar Pradesh. Sufi saints are claimed to have gone to the Awadh region to spread Islam, where he is said to have won over fifty villages to Islam. These fifty villages were later awarded to him, and the region became known as Qidwara.[1] According to another tradition, Qazi Qidwa is said have defeated a local ruler in the Awadh region by the name of Raja Jagdeopur. This Raja was said to have belonged to the aboriginal Bhar community. The original settlement of the tribe was Juggaur in Lucknow district, from where they spread to Barabanki District. The taluqdar families have historically intermarried with the Awadhi Bhatti, a neighbouring Muslim Rajput community, with whom they share many cultural traits.[3]

Present circumstances

The abolishment of the zamindar system by the newly independent India in 1947 had a major impact on the Qidwai community. The larger estates were broken, and land given to the farmers who worked on their lands. This led to some emigration of the Qidwais to Pakistan.[4] The Qidwais are still found mainly in the districts of Lucknow, Faizabad and Barabanki in Awadh Sultanpur region of Uttar Pradesh.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Caste and Social Stratification Among Muslims (Manohar, 1978), edited by Imtiaz Ahmed, p. 212.
  2. People of India Uttar Pradesh (Manohar Publications), Volume XLII Part One, edited by A Hasan & J C Das pp. 968-972.
  3. Barabanki: A Gazetteer (Government of India Press, 1904), Volume XLVIII, by H. R Neville, p. 100.
  4. Caste and Social Stratification among Muslims (Manohar, 1978), edited by Imtiaz Ahmed, pp. 209-215.