Inku language


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Not to be confused with Hindko.

"Jakati language" redirects here. Not to be confused with languages known as Jataki.

Inku is an Indo-Aryan language spoken, at least historically, throughout Afghanistan by four of the country's itinerant communities: the Jalali, the Pikraj, the Shadibaz and the Vangawala. Itinerant communities in Afghanistan, whether Inku-speaking or not, are locally known as "Jats" (not to be confused with the Jats of India and Pakistan), a term which is not a self-designation of the groups but rather a collective, often pejorative name given by outsiders.[1] The reference work Ethnologue has an entry for what could be this language, but under the name Jakati (with the corresponding ISO 639-3 code jat), but that entry is at least partly erroneous.[2]

Inku
Native toAfghanistan
Language codes
ISO 639-3jat
Glottologjaka1245

Each of the four groups speaks a variety with slight differences compared to the others.[3] According to their local tradition, their ancestors migrated in the 19th century from the Dera Ismail Khan and Dera Ghazi Khan regions of present-day Pakistan.[4] Such an origin suggests that Inku may be related to the Saraiki language spoken there,[5] though nothing is conclusively known.[6]

The total population of the four Inku-speaking groups was estimated to be 7,000 as of the end of the 1970s.[7] There is no reliable information about their present state, though it is unlikely that many have survived the subsequent upheavals in the country,[1] and according to the entry in Ethnologue, which however may not necessarily refer to this language,[2] the last speakers "probably survived into the 1990s".[8]

Linguistic materials about the varieties spoken by the Shadibaz, Vangawala and Pikraj were collected by Aparna Rao in the 1970s, but they have not been published or analysed yet.[3]

The following is an extract of a text narrated in 1978 by a man of the Chenarkhel subgroup of the Vangawala:[9]

  1. ^ a b Hanifi 2012.
  2. ^ a b Glottolog 4.6.
  3. ^ a b Rao 1995, p. 82.
  4. ^ Rao 1986, p. 266.
  5. ^ Rao 1986, p. 267.
  6. ^ Rao 1995.
  7. ^ Rao 1986, pp. 267–71.
  8. ^ Eberhard, Simons & Fennig 2019.
  9. ^ Rao 1995, p. 85.
  • Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D., eds. (2019). "Jakati". Ethnologue: Languages of the World (22nd ed.). SIL International.
  • Hanifi, M. Jamil (2012). "Jāt". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  • Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2022). "Inku". Glottolog (4.6 ed.). Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  • Kieffer, Charles (1983). "Afghanistan: V. Languages". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. I. pp. 501–516.
  • Rao, Aparna (1986). "Peripatetic Minorities in Afghanistan: Image and Identity". In Orywal, Erwin (ed.). Die ethnischen Gruppen Afghanistans. Wiesbaden: L. Reichert. pp. 254–83. ISBN 3-88226-360-1.
  • Rao, Aparna (1995). "Marginality and language use: the example of peripatetics in Afghanistan". Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society. 5 (2): 69–95.