|
||||||
Kargil
The western
parts of Ladakh comprising the river valleys, which are drained and formed
by the Himalayan tributaries of the high Indus, constitute Kargil
district. Prominent among these are the spectacular valleys of Suru
and Zanskar, which lie nestled along the northern flank
of the Great Himalayan wall. The smaller lateral valleys of Drass,
Wakha-Mulbek and Chiktan constitute important
subsidiaries.
This region formed part of the erstwhile Kingdom of Ladakh. In fact it is believed to be the first to be inhabited by the early colonizers of Ladakh, the Indo-Aryan Mons from across the Great Himalayan range, assorted Dard immigrants from down the Indus and the Gilgit valleys and itinerant nomads from the Tibetan highlands. Also, being contiguous with Baltistan, Kashmir, Kulu etc. these valleys are believed to have served as the initial recipients of successive ethnic and cultural influences emanating from the neighbouring regions. Thus, while the Mons are believed to have introduced north-Indian Buddhism to these valleys, the Dard and Balti immigrants are credited with introducing farming and the Tibetan nomads with the tradition of herding and animal husbandry.
About 15,000
sq. kms. in area, Kargil district has an agrarian population of
approximately 120,000 people, who cultivate the land, along the course of
the drainage system, wherever artificial irrigation from mountain streams
is possible. About 85 % are Muslims, mainly of the Shia sect, Islam having
been introduced to the original Buddhist population around the middle of
the 16th century by missionaries from Kashmir and Central Asia. Their
descendants, locally titled Agha, are mostly religious
scholars who continue
to hold sway over the population, even as the age-old traditions of
Buddhist and animistic origin are discernible in the culture. Many
elements of the ancient supernatural belief systems, especially many
traditions connected with agricultural practices, are still followed with
subdued reverence.