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{{short description|Community in India}} | |||
{{Other uses}} | {{Other uses}} | ||
{{EngvarB|date=April 2024}} | |||
{{Multiple issues | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}} | |||
| refimprove=January 2010 | |||
{{Infobox caste | |||
| disputed=February 2010 | |||
|caste_name=Arora | |||
}} | |||
|languages = ] (] − ], ], ], ], ], ], ]),<ref name=":1822">{{Cite book|last=Oonk|first=Gijsbert|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BkwsMTyShi8C&dq=they+are+the+only+hindus+known+in+central+asia+khatris&pg=PA44|title=Global Indian Diasporas: Exploring Trajectories of Migration and Theory|date=2007|publisher=Amsterdam University Press|isbn=978-90-5356-035-8|pages=43–45|language=en}}</ref><ref name=":222">{{Cite book|last=Singer|first=André|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=asqdNQAACAAJ|title=Guardians of the North-West Frontier: The Pathans|date=1982|publisher=Time-Life Books|isbn=978-0-7054-0702-1|language=en}}</ref>{{sfnp|Levi|2002|p=107}}<ref>{{Cite web|date=25 September 2016|title=Blame caste for Pakistan's violent streak, not faith|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/aakarvani/blame-caste-for-pakistans-violent-streak-not-faith/|access-date=17 September 2021|website=Times of India Blog|language=en-US}}</ref> ], ] | |||
{{Infobox ethnic group | |||
|religions= ] • ] | |||
|group=Aroras | |||
|region = '''Contemporarily'''<br/>] • ] • ] • ] • ] • ]<br/><br/>''']'''<br/>] (] • ] • ]), ] and ] | |||
|image= | |||
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| related= ] • ] • ] | ||
|rels= ] ] • ] ] • ] ] | |||
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}} | }} | ||
'''Arora''' is a community of ] and ],<ref name="Boivin2020">{{cite journal |last1=Boivin |first1=Michel |title=The Transmission of Colonial Knowledge |journal=The Sufi Paradigm and the Makings of a Vernacular Knowledge in Colonial India: The Case of Sindh (1851–1929) |date=2020 |pages=74 |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-41991-2_3 |url=https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-41991-2_3 |publisher=Springer International Publishing |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bhardwaj |first=Surinder M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D6XJFokSJzEC&pg=PA231 |title=Hindu Places of Pilgrimage in India: A Study in Cultural Geography |date=8 July 1983 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-04951-2 |pages=231 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="bka" /> comprising both ] and ]. The name is derived from their ancestral place ], ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Experts |first=Disha |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V89CEAAAQBAJ&q=aror+ancestral+place |title=Errorless 16 Year-wise MPPSC General Studies Prelims Solved Paper 1 (2003 - 21) 2nd Edition |date=2021-09-01 |publisher=Disha Publications |isbn=978-93-91551-70-4 |quote=Aror is the ancestral town of the Arora Community. In 711, Aror was captured by the army of Muslim general Muhammad bin Qasim .}}</ref><ref name="one">{{Cite book|last=Hanks|first=Patrick|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FJoDDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA58|title=Dictionary of American Family Names|date=8 May 2003|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-977169-1|pages=58}}</ref>{{efn|Now known as ], a city near ] in present-day ], Pakistan.}} In 712, the Arora people are said to have left Aror and started to settle in the cities of ],<ref name="Malhotra2002">{{cite book|last=Malhotra|first=Anshu|title=Gender, Caste, and Religious Identities: Restructuring Class in Colonial Punjab|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_ykqAAAAYAAJ|accessdate=8 October 2014|year=2002|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780195656480|quote=The Aroras were also said to be the Khatris of Arorkot, or Aror, the ancient capital of Sindh.}}</ref> mainly in South ].<ref name="bka" /> However, according to ], many Aroras originally came from the ] area in North Punjab.<ref name="McLeod">{{Cite book|last=McLeod|first=W. H.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vgixwfeCyDAC&pg=PA21|title=The A to Z of Sikhism|date=24 July 2009|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=978-0-8108-6344-6|pages=21, 213, 128}}</ref> | |||
The '''Arora''' is an ]{{cn|date=October 2011}} community of the ]. Commentators differ in their opinions regarding the relationship between the Arora and the ] community. | |||
Historically, the Arora section of the ] community had been principally found in ], in the districts to the south and west of ]. Scott Cameron Levi, believes that they are a "sub-caste of the Khatris".{{sfnp|Levi|2002|p=107}} | |||
They are traditionally a Kshatriya community, whom Lakshmi Chandra Jain, an economic historian writing in 1929, believes "control the finance of much of the commerce of India with central Asia, Afghanistan and Tibet."<ref>Jain (1929), p. 32.</ref> | |||
After ], Punjabis who migrated from erstwhile West Punjab were mostly Khatris and Aroras. Studies reveal that "Arora Khatri, Bedi, Ahluwalia etc. are some of the important castes among the ]".<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|last=Government of Haryana|first=Department of Welfare|title=Report of Backward Classes Commission|url=http://haryanascbc.gov.in/report-of-haryana-backward-classes-commission-2012|url-status=bot: unknown|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210515063352/http://haryanascbc.gov.in/report-of-haryana-backward-classes-commission-2012|archive-date=15 May 2021|access-date=15 May 2021|website=Welfare of Scheduled Caste & Backward Classes Department|pages=05,135}}</ref> | |||
The name of the community is claimed to have originated from the ancient city of ] in the northwestern part of what is now the ] province of Pakistan. The ] and the Hindu ] built and maintained by them{{cn|date=October 2011}} still exist.{{clarify|reason=built by Arora, by Khatris, or what? The linked articles do not make these claims|date=October 2011}} | |||
] in ] of ], sketched in 1842.]] | |||
Aroras were mainly concentrated in ] (now Pakistan) along the banks of the ] and its tributaries; in the ] region in ] (a part of India), although not greatly in what became the ] from 1901; in ] (mainly as Sindhi Aroras but there were many Punjabi and ] speaking Aroras as well); in ] (as ]i and ]i Aroras/Khatris); and in ]. In post-independence and post-partition India, Aroras mainly reside in ], ], ], ], ], Rajasthan, ], ] and ]. | |||
== Divisions in Sikh traditions == | |||
==Origins== | |||
Per Sikhism, the Arora are divided into four territorial groups: the Uttarādhīs from the north, the Ḍakhaṇās from the south, the Dāhrās from the West and the Sindhīs, from ]. The Dāhrās and Ḍakhaṇās are sometimes classed as one groups.<ref name="bka">{{cite journal |author1=H. Syan Singh |title=Khatrīs and Aroṛās |journal=Encyclopedia of Sikhism Online |date=2017 |doi=10.1163/2589-2118_beso_com_031682 |url=https://doi.org/10.1163/2589-2118_BESO_COM_031682 |publisher=Brill |language=en}}</ref> | |||
] in ] as sketched in 1842]] | |||
According to ] mythology, the Arora are a people from the ] group of the ]. According to ancient religious texts, Devaneek, who was an eighth-generation descendant of ], had three sons.<ref>"Lord Rama had two sons- Lava and Kusha. Lineage of Rama grew as follows- Atithi, Nishadh, Anal, Nabh, Pundareek, Kshemdhanwa, Devaneek, Ahinaka, Ruru, Pariyatrak, Deval, Vanchal, Ulka, Vajranabha, Shankhan, Yushhitashva, Vishvasaha, Hiranyanam, Pushya, Dhruvasandhi, Sudarshan, Agnivarn, Shighrag, Maru, Prasushrut, Susandhi, Amarsh, Sahaswan and Vishvabhav. Vishvabhav had a son Brihdal who was killed by Abhimanyu in the battle of Mahabharata." From Chapter four "Description of Suryavansh", Index of 16 Hindu Puranas </ref> Of the three, Ruru{{clarify|reason=this entire section relies on the Ruru connection = Arora, but we have nothing actually to connect them|date=October 2011}} is regarded by all Aroras as their eponymous ancestor. The lineage from there on is well-preserved by their bards right up to King Dadror.{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
== History == | |||
], who wrote the Report for the Indian census of 1881, notes that "The Aroras are often called Roras in the east of the Panjab". However, he considers the community calling itself ] to be distinct from the Punjabi Arora, stating that "I can hardly believe that the frank and stalwart Ror is of the same origin as the Arora" even though they shared a common account of their origin. The account was that in the past they had denied their original status in order to avoid persecution, and were in fact "Rajputs who escaped the fury of Paras Ram by stating that their caste was ''aur'' or 'another'", from which word their name came.<ref>Ibbetson (1916), pp. 178, 251.</ref> | |||
=== Origin === | |||
{{See also|Battle of Aror|Umayyad conquest of Sindh}} | |||
Aror is the ancestral town of the Arora community.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hanks |first=Patrick |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FJoDDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA58 |title=Dictionary of American Family Names |date=8 May 2003 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-977169-1 |pages=58 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Garg |first=Gaṅgā Rām |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0U2QRpDv2KMC |title=Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World |date=1992 |publisher=Concept Publishing Company |isbn=978-81-7022-373-3 |language=en |quote=When Muhammad-bin-Qāsim plundered the place Arora in 712 and defeated Rājā Dāhar, who belonged to the Arorā dynasty, the Arorā people left Sind and settled in the Punjāb cities, situated on the banks of the rivers Sind, Jhelum, Cenāb and Rāvī.}}</ref><ref name="Malhotra2002" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Thakur |first=U. T. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FuItAAAAMAAJ |title=Sindhi Culture |date=1959 |publisher=University of Bombay |pages=58 |language=en |quote=This Arorkot is Arore or Alore and the Aroras are called after the name of the ancient capital Arore.}}</ref><ref name="Vikas Publishing House">{{Cite book |last1=Dogra |first1=R. C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=upLXAAAAMAAJ |title=Encyclopaedia of Sikh Religion and Culture |last2=Mansukhani |first2=Gobind Singh |date=1995 |publisher=Vikas Publishing House |isbn=978-0-7069-8368-5 |pages=40 |language=en}}</ref> Little is known about the city's history prior to the Arab invasion in the 8th century CE.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hughes |first1=Albert William |url=https://archive.org/details/agazetteerprovi00unkngoog |title=A Gazetteer of the Province of Sind |date=1876 |publisher=G. Bell and Sons |page= |quote=aror. |accessdate=19 December 2017}}</ref> | |||
According to Ibbetson, the belief of the Punjabi community is that in fleeing the persecution there was at some point a bifurcation, with some members moving north and others moving south. From this arose the two major ] divisions within the Arora, respectively known as Uttradhi and Dakhna, which in turn had subdivisions.<ref name=Ibbetson1916p251/> ] is more specific, considering this to be the belief of the Arora of ], who maintain that ] pushed the community towards ], where they founded the town of ],{{#tag:ref|The town that Rose calls Arorkot may be ].|group=nb}} probably near to the present day ]. That town was subsequently cursed and its inhabitants fled in different directions through its north, south and west gates. While Rose agrees with Ibbetson that the Dakhna division is sometimes thought to include a subdivision called Dahra, he states that the Dahra went westwards, rather than south, and that there is also another major division known as the Sindhi of Sindh.<ref name=Rose1911p17>Rose (1911), p. 17.</ref> | |||
The ] was an ancient kingdom of the lower ] mentioned in ] literature.<ref>Michael Witzel (1987), "On the localisation of Vedic texts and schools (Materials on Vedic Śākhās, 7)" in G. Pollet (ed.), ''India and the Ancient world. History, Trade and Culture before A.D. 650''</ref> Roruka (Aror), capital of the Sauvira Kingdom, is mentioned as an important trading center in early Buddhist literature. In the Chachnamah, members of the Brahman group were noted in the city of Aror.<ref>Derryl N. MacLean (1989), , p.51,136</ref> Aror was the capital of the Arora dynasty,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Garg |first=Gaṅgā Rām |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0U2QRpDv2KMC |title=Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World |date=1992 |publisher=Concept Publishing Company |isbn=978-81-7022-373-3 |pages=624 |language=en |quote=When Muhammad-bin-Qāsim plundered the place Arora in 712 and defeated Rājā Dāhar, who belonged to the Arorā dynasty, the Arorā people left Sind and settled in the Punjāb cities, situated on the banks of the rivers Sind, Jhelum, Cenāb and Rāvī.}}</ref> which was followed by the ] and then the ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=MacLean|first=Derryl N.|title=Religion and Society in Arab Sind|publisher=BRILL|year=1989|isbn=9004085513}}</ref> | |||
For the purposes of his report on the census, Ibbetson treats the Arora as a separate community from that of the Khatri, although similarly one of the "great mercantile castes".<ref>Ibbetson (1916), p. 214.</ref> He notes that the Arora claimed to be of Khatri origin, evidenced by their claims to have denied their true origin to avoid persecution, but that the Khatri themselves rejected this.<ref name=Ibbetson1916p251/> ], writing in 1896, goes further and states that only the Arora believe this connection to be true.<ref>Bhattacharya (1896), p. 140.</ref> However, a more recent commentator, Scott Cameron Levi, believes that they are a "sub-caste of the Khatris".<ref>Levi (2002), p. 107.</ref> | |||
In 711, Aror was captured by the army of Umayyad general ].<ref>History of the Punjab, Volume 1 by Fauja Singh, Published by the Department of Punjab Historical Studies, Punjabi University, 1977</ref> | |||
==Occupation and demographics== | |||
At the time of the 1881 census, more than half the Arora in the then ] lived in the areas of ] and ], with another significant presence at ]. Their influence extended as far as ] and ], as well as towards ]. Unlike other mercantile castes of the region, the Arora had almost sole control of the mercantile activities in their areas of abode, sharing them with no other mercantile community as defined by Ibbetson. He noted of the Punjab mercantile classes that {{quote|They do not engage in the carrying trade, nor do they traffic in cattle; being for the most part Hindus they will not sell liquor or meat; and being of fair social standing they do not sell vegetables; but with these exceptions almost the whole of the mercantile and commercial transactions, excepting as a general rule petty hawking and peddling, are conducted ....<ref>Ibbetson (1916), pp. 237, 250.</ref>}} | |||
=== Mughal decline and Afghan revival === | |||
Ibbetson further noted that unlike other Punjabi mercantile castes such as the ], the Arora did not confine themselves solely to that economic activity, although it was nonetheless their primary occupation: they had a "peculiar versatility .... trader first indeed, but after that anything and everything."<ref>Ibbetson (1916), p. 242.</ref> He considers that the Khatri shared the same trait. The Arora were "the trader ''par excellence'' of the Jakti-speaking or south-western portion of Panjab", which corresponded to the lower river valleys, and were a match for the Khatri in the higher reaches of those rivers.<ref name=Ibbetson1916p250>Ibbetson (1916), p. 250.</ref> | |||
On 13 April 1752, Lahore and Multan in Punjab were ceded to ] after the fall of Kaura Mal in the battlefield and retreat of ]. Afghanistan was the conduit for the trade between ] and ]. ] in Afghanistan was in the hands of the Hindu Punjabi Arora/Khatris. Reportedly, they gave loans to the Durrani rulers to carry out military expeditions in India. Moreover, the disappointed princes of India "encouraged ] to invade the subcontinent and overthrow the British" in 1798.<ref>{{cite book|author=Roy|first=Kaushik|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ps5JDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT64|title=War and Society in Afghanistan From the Mughals to the Americans, 1500–2013|publisher=Oxford University Press India|year=2015|isbn=978-0-19-908944-4|page=64|chapter=Mughal Decline and Afghan Revival :1707-1810}}</ref> | |||
To restrict the Afghans in Punjab, Hindu Diwan Kaura Mal Arora "died while fighting against the army of Ahmed Shah Durrani on March 6, 1752". He was the Governor of Multan and had also served as the Minister of Lahore twice. Earlier, he led the Lahore Darbar and "made a joint-attack on Multan in 1749", along the Sikhs led by Jassa Singh. Post his victory over Multan, "Diwan Kaura Mall was given the title of Maharaja Bahadur" by the Mughals.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=Dilagīra|first=Harajindara Siṅgha|url=http://archive.org/details/sikhreferenceboo0000dila|title=The Sikh reference book|date=1997|publisher=Edmonton, Alb., Canada : Sikh Educational Trust for Sikh University Centre, Denmark; Amritsar : Available from Singh Bros.|others=Internet Archive|isbn=978-0-9695964-2-4|pages=480}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Ahluwalia|first=M. L.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FpBHAAAAMAAJ|title=Life and Times of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia|date=1989|publisher=Publication Bureau, Punjabi University|pages=43|language=en}}</ref> | |||
Despite their versatility and industry - they worked in such occupations as agriculture, metalwork, weaving and basket-making, as well as trading - they were not well respected and were particularly liable to be referred to as ''kirár'' (roughly, "coward"). This term was also used, but less frequently, in respect of other mercantile communities, except the Khatri. Ibbetson believes that the prevalence of usage against Arora may have been connected to their status as Hindus in an area where Hindus were looked down upon.<ref name=Ibbetson1916p251>Ibbetson (1916), p. 251.</ref>{{#tag:ref|Ibbetson also uses the word ''Kirár'' as a general term for trading communities.<ref>Ibbetson (1916), p. 15.</ref>|group=nb}} | |||
Prior to the British colonial rule, Aroras were one of the three main money-lending castes of Punjab. The Aroras were often subjected to oppression and humiliation by peasant communities in muslim-dominated areas of Punjab. Socially discriminatory laws were also passed against them.<ref name="Chaudhari08">{{cite book|title=Peasant History of Late Pre-colonial and Colonial India-Volume 8|author=B.B.Chaudhari|editor=D.P.Chattopadhayaya|publisher=Pearson Longman|year=2008|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ljmIJySEm4UC&pg=PA137|pages=137–138|isbn=9788131716885}}</ref> According to ], it was only "'when British rule freed him from restraint and armed him with the power of the law ... he became as oppressive as he had been submissive'".<ref name="bose94">{{cite book|title=Credit, Markets, and the Agrarian Economy of Colonial India|chapter=Introduction |author=]|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1994 |pages=7 |isbn=978-0195633085 }}</ref> | |||
In 1911, Rose reported that the Arora of Bahawalpur were " ... dealing in every commodity, and even selling shoes and vegetables. Some are contractors, bankers or moneylenders, and in the latter capacity they have now acquired a considerable amount of land by mortgage or purchase from Muhummadan owners, though forty or fifty years ago they did not own an acre of cultivated land".<ref>Rose (1911), pp. 16-17.</ref> | |||
The Aroras were often good farmers, and also engaged in metalworking, goldsmithery, and weaving.<ref>{{Cite book|author=]|title=The Punjab Peasant In Prosperity And Debt|date=1928|publisher=]|pages=212|language=en|quote=Often a good farmer, even when he does not actually drive the plough, he looks after his land with care, and any improvement to be found in his neighbourhood is generally due to his capital, industry and thrift. He will turn his hand to anything that promises gain, and may be found weaving baskets and mats, beating out vessels of copper and of brass, working as a goldsmith, or even plying the tailor's needle and thread.}}</ref> | |||
According to the Imperial Gazetteer of India (1901), the three major mercantile communities of the Punjab province—the Aroras, the Bania, and the ] — were dominant in the southwest (] division), the southeast (] division including present Haryana), and the northeast (] division) respectively; in the central area (] division) and the northwest (] division), Aroras and Khatris were almost equal in numbers. | |||
=== British colonial era === | |||
The numerical strength of the Arora community in the 1901 census of the province (which included Delhi) was 653,000.{{cn|date=October 2011}} In the former ] of ], practically the entire commerce was in the hands of Aroras.{{cn|date=October 2011}} A majority of the government employees were Aroras.{{cn|date=October 2011}} In the same census, the Arora population in North-West Frontier Province was 69,000;{{cn|date=October 2011}} in the province of Sindh and the princely state of ], both Aroras and Khatris were probably counted as ],{{cn|date=October 2011}} the mercantile community of Sindh. Many Aroras were promoted in all departments of the Indian government as Extra Assistant commissioners, accountants, professors, doctors, civil surgeons, engineers, military officers, and court officers. After the partition of India in 1947, the majority of Sikh and Hindu Aroras from all over Pakistan migrated to India.{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
] | |||
Pettigrew notes that in the 19th century, the Aroras were working as shopkeepers and small traders within the Sikh community in Punjab.<ref>{{cite book|title=Robber Noblemen: A Study of the Political System of the Sikh Jats|author=Joyce Pettigrew|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1975|page=41|quote=The Aroras, who formed 9 per cent of the Sikh population and who generally supplied most of Punjab's petty traders and small shopkeepers...}}</ref> During the ], in some parts of Punjab their population was so high that they had to seek employment outside their traditional occupations shopkeeping, accountancy and money-lending<ref name= "abbi97">{{cite book|title=Post-green revolution rural Punjab: A profile of economic and socio-cultural change, 1965-1995|page=36|editor1=B. L. Abbi|author= Kesar Singh | year=1997 |quote=Of the clean caste households in the village, Arora, a traditional shopkeeping and petty - business caste, is lacking in the Jat's prestige and power in this village}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Imperial Rule in Punjab: The Conquest and Administration of Multan 1818-1881|author=J. Royal Roseberry|year= 1987 |page=4|quote=The Aroras were so numerous that many had to find employ outside the traditional caste occupations of shopkeeper, moneylender and village accountant.}}</ref> For the Hindu merchant castes, Agarwal Banias, Khatris and Aroras, ] was also one of the trades they followed before 1900. However, since 1900 the smallest merchant sect, the Suds, started this trade and later dominated it in eastern Punjab.<ref>{{cite book|title=A Forest History of India|author=Richard P. Tucker|quote=Others represented several Hindu merchant castes, who invested in timber as only one of several lines of trade. They included Agarwal Banias, Khatris, and Aroras. From about 1900 the smallest Hindu merchant sect, the Suds, began moving toward their later dominance in the timber trade of eastern Punjab.|publisher=SAGE|year=2011|page=79|isbn=9788132119524|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jaKoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT79}}</ref> | |||
The ''Amritsar Gazetteer'' says:{{blockquote| Aroras trace their origin from the Khatris. It is said that Khatris are Khatris of Lahore and Multan, whereas Aroras are Khatris of Aror, modern Rori and Sukkar (Sind) in Pakistan. There is a street in Amritsar named as ‘Arorianwali Gali’. The Aroras seem to have settled in Amritsar during the time of Maharaja Ranjit Singh or even earlier. It is presumed that they migrated to Amritsar from Lahore to which place they might have originally migrated from Sind or Multan.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Gazetteers of India|first=Barkat Rai Chopra|title=Amritsar|publisher=Government of Punjab|year=1976|location=Chandigarh|pages=88}}</ref>}} | |||
===Independence=== | |||
Aroras joined with the rest of India to fight for ]. Many were imprisoned for '']'' (nonviolent resistance).{{cn|date=October 2011}} Some were involved in the ] in fighting for independence, including ].{{cn|date=October 2011}} As the Aroras are mainly from the Western Punjab region, most Aroras had to migrate to India during the partition of India in 1947.{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
The ''Hoshiarpur Gazetteer'' says: {{blockquote|Before independence, the Aroras did not constitute a sizeable population in the district. With the migration of the non-Muslim population from Pakistan to India in 1947, they settled here, though in small numbers. The Aroras were generally settled in West Punjab (Pakistan) and in the Firozepur District. Their representation in the eastern districts of the Punjab was not notable. Whatever be their origin, the fact is that they resemble Khatris in certain traits. They are also divided into many groups and castes, Uchanda, Nichanda, etc., but in social life, these groups are of no importance. They intermarry in their groups like others. They also intermarry among Khatris. In the All-India meeting in 1936, held by the Khatris at Lahore (Pakistan), it was decided that the Aroras, Soods and Bhatias were Khatri for all intents and purposes. And, as such, they should be admitted to the Khatri stock. This interpretation did not find much favour then, but with the lapse of time, it has almost been accepted.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://punjabrevenue.nic.in/gaz_hsp4.htm |title=Chapter Iii<!-- Bot generated title --> |access-date=21 November 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101024205011/http://punjabrevenue.nic.in/gaz_hsp4.htm |archive-date=24 October 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>}} | |||
===After partition=== | |||
The Aroras settled in ] during the time of Maharaja ] or even earlier.<ref name=DistGazAmritsar/> It is presumed that they migrated from Sind or Multan to Lahore, and then to Amritsar. This is inferred from the fact that, after a very long stay in the central Punjab, they ceased to speak their ] dialect.<ref name=DistGazAmritsar/> The Arora Sikhs are mostly found in big towns, especially in Amritsar. They were living there even before the partition. Their Hindu counterparts, the majority of whom migrated from Pakistan, arrived in India in 1947 after a journey lasting up to a month or more to cross only 100 to 400 miles, starved, dehydrated, ill, and often with only the clothes they were wearing. Aroras not only have survived but have prospered.<ref name=DistGazAmritsar/> The ''Amritsar Gazetteer'' claims Aroras are very energetic and intelligent. They are mostly engaged in trade and industry. They are superior in business acumen to their counterparts settled in the district. A good number of them have also joined public and private services.<ref name=DistGazAmritsar>{{cite web |url=http://punjabrevenue.nic.in/gaz_asr9.htm |title=Religions And Castes |work=District Gazetteer - Amritsar |year=1976- |publisher=Department of Revenue, Rehabilitation and Disaster Management, Government of Punjab |accessdate=2011-10-23}}</ref> The Hoshiarpur Gazetteer says {{quote|Before independence, the Aroras did not constitute a sizeable population in the district. With the migration of the non-Muslim population from Pakistan to India in 1947, they settled here, though in small numbers. The Aroras were generally settled in West Punjab (Pakistan) and in the Firozepur District. Their representation in the eastern districts of the Punjab was not notable. According to Ibbetson, the Aroras are the Khatris of Ror (Rori Sukkur, Sindh, in Pakistan). Whatever be their origin, the fact is that they resemble Khatirs in certain traits. In certain respects, they are even superior to them. They are also divided into many groups and castes, Uchanda, Nichanda, etc., but in social life, these groups are of no importance. They intermarry in their groups like others. They also intermarry among Khatirs. In the All-India meeting in 1936, held by the Khatris at Lahore (Pakistan), it was decided that the Aroras, Soods and Bhatias were Khatri for all intents and purposes. And, as such, they should be admitted to the Khatri stock. This interpretation did not find much favour then, but with the lapse of time, it has almost been accepted.<ref></ref>}} | |||
] (north), Dakhanadhi (south) and Dahre (west) are three major sub-groups of the Arora people based on territorial differentiations.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Singh|first=Surely Kumar|title=People of India: India's communities|publisher=Anthropological Survey of India|year=1997|location=Kolkata|pages=126}}</ref> Before the independence of India, Arora used to marry in their own sub-group i.e. Uttradhi, Dakkhna or Dahra but after the independence, spheres of permissible arranged matrimonial alliances were widened to include other sub-groups of Arora.<ref name=DistGazAmritsar>{{cite web |url=http://punjabrevenue.nic.in/gaz_asr9.htm |title=Religions And Castes |work=District Gazetteer - Amritsar |year=1976 |publisher=Department of Revenue, Rehabilitation and Disaster Management, Government of Punjab |access-date=23 October 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926235916/http://punjabrevenue.nic.in/gaz_asr9.htm |archive-date=26 September 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
Before the partition, Aroras used to marry only among their sub-group i.e. Uttradhi, Dakkhna or Dahra and members of the same geographic region. But after the partition, spheres of permissible arranged matrimonial alliances were widened to others of Punjabi origin,<<ref name=DistGazAmritsar/> especially Khatris, Bhatias, and Sood. Inter-caste marriages with other communities of Punjab (with Brahmins and Baniyas especially) and other parts of India and world have become quite common and are becoming more common every day. These sub-castes have mixed so overwhelmingly that all of these castes together are now referred to as the Punjabi Aroras or simply the 'Punjabi' community. Aroras have been increasingly shunning the caste system, twith he Aroras (and all Punjabis in general) becoming more liberal, especially the populace in bigger towns and cities.{{or|date=October 2011}} Among Punjabis, socioeconomic status has replaced caste as the primary concern in matrimonial alliances.{{or|date=October 2011}} | |||
British ethnographer ] observed that Arora-Khatris were centered in ] and ] (region consisting of ] and ]) which are now part of ] and ] regions of modern-day Pakistan. They conducted business throughout ] and ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Oonk|first=Gijsbert|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BkwsMTyShi8C&q=arora+sub+caste+of+khatris&pg=PA43|title=Global Indian Diasporas: Exploring Trajectories of Migration and Theory|date=2007|publisher=Amsterdam University Press|isbn=978-90-5356-035-8|pages=43|language=en}}</ref> | |||
==Role in Indian society== | |||
Arora families in India place great emphasis and attention to the education of their children, including their daughters; because of this, they have become prosperous and are successful in many diverse professions{{cn|date=October 2011}} such as ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]. They are a very small minority, lack a political power-base, and have in the pre-partition period suffered from Muslim attempts to disparage and suppress them.{{cn|date=October 2011}} Some lost their homes, businesses, properties, and bank deposits (at ], owned and controlled by three Sikh Khatri families) at the time of partition in 1947.{{cn|date=October 2011}} Another prominent bank in Punjab at that time (Punjab National Bank) is reported to have played a very positive role by encashing bank deposits of migrants based on pass book entries, even though the bank had lost its records in Pakistan.<ref>{{cite book |title= Banking century: a short history of banking in India & the pioneer, Punjab National Bank |first=Prakash |last=Tandon |publisher=Penguin |year=1989|isbn=9780140107951 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=uTMvAAAAMAAJ |accessdate=2011-10-22}}</ref>{{Pn|date=October 2011}} | |||
=== Post-independence === | |||
Aroras have taken roles in the ]. ] was a prominent member of the Arora community in the Indian Armed Forces. Aroras were prominent in the ].{{cn|date=October 2011}} Squadron Leader ] was declared a war hero and died during the conflicts.{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
In the census of 1951, Aroras that were settled in Punjab returned their caste names as Khatris, Arora Khatris, Arorae, Rore, Aror, Rora Khatris, Arore, Aror Khatris etc. Some of the Aroras simply returned their caste names with Arora sub-caste names such as Arya, Ahuja, Batheja, Bathla, Kukreja, Chawla, Chhabra, Dang, Juneja, Taneja, Upneja, Wadhwa etc.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web|last=Government of India|first=Deputy Registrar General|date=23 August 1956|title=GLOSSARY OR CASTE NAMES RETURNED AT THE CENSUS OF 1951 IN THE DISTRICTS OF PEPSU|url=http://lsi.gov.in:8081/jspui/bitstream/123456789/7127/1/47712%20_1951_GLO.pdf|url-status=bot: unknown|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210504060550/http://lsi.gov.in:8081/jspui/bitstream/123456789/7127/1/47712%20_1951_GLO.pdf|archive-date=4 May 2021|access-date=4 May 2021|website=Linguistic Survey of India}}</ref> | |||
==Religion== | |||
At the time of the 1881 census, Ibbetson noted that most of the Punjabi Arora were Hindu and around 7% were Sikh; a few were Muslim. However, he queried the classification because, for example, some who were recorded as Hindu were in his opinion "really Munna (shaven) Sikhs, or followers of Baba Nanak".<ref name=Ibbetson1916p251/> | |||
According to the Commission Reports by ] Gurnam Singh (1990) and ] K.C. Gupta (2012), Arora is a ] socially, educationally and economically. It was reported that "despite of being uprooted from their homeland", Arora community has high ]. An economic survey conducted by ] states that Arora/Khatri people have good representation both in government as well as private sector. They are both in business, services and other fields. They are "economically well-off and not dependent on money-lending or shopkeeping". They are engaged as "], ]s, ] and are represented in ]". The Arora were divided in two main sub groups, namely ] Arora and ] Arora depending upon the religion pursued.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web|last=Government of Haryana|first=Department of Welfare|title=Report of Backward Classes Commission|url=http://haryanascbc.gov.in/report-of-haryana-backward-classes-commission-2012|url-status=bot: unknown|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210515063352/http://haryanascbc.gov.in/report-of-haryana-backward-classes-commission-2012|archive-date=15 May 2021|access-date=15 May 2021|website=Welfare of Scheduled Caste & Backward Classes Department|pages=135–136}}</ref> | |||
Aroras are very tolerant in their religious faith. Most are followers of Hindu Dharma; however, they respect the sanctity of and frequently visit ] temples, Jain temples, Mazars and Sikh ]s. For several centuries in the past, the eldest son of an Arora Hindu family voluntarily changed his religion to Sikhism as a family devotion to the ] in the 18th century. The Arora community is in charge of most of the temples in Delhi, Haryana, and Punjab areas.{{Cn|date=October 2011}} Most of the Shiv Mandirs, Hanuman Mandirs, Sanatan Dharma Mandirs, Durga Mandirs, and Krishna Mandirs are managed by Arora communities in the provinces with significant Arora population.{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
] became the first lady ] of the Indian Army in 2004.<ref>{{Cite web |title=First Lady Lt Gen of Indian Army |url=https://archive.pib.gov.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=3623 |access-date=22 August 2022 |website=archive.pib.gov.in}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=rediff.com: The General in a Sari - A Slide Show |url=http://specials.rediff.com/news/2004/sep/16army1.htm |access-date=22 August 2022 |website=specials.rediff.com}}</ref> | |||
==Divisions== | |||
Aroras share cultural and genetic similarity with Khatris/Kukhrans.{{cn|date=October 2011}} The Arora existed in western districts of Punjab, and only influenced towards Sanatan Dharma or Shiv Lingam Poojan,{{clarify|date=November 2010}} but Khatris in eastern Punjab followed Sikh and other beliefs.{{cn|date=October 2011}} After the Khatris started condemning Brahmins,{{clarify|date=November 2010}} the Arora stopped being known by the name Khatri.{{cn|date=October 2011}} Another genetically similar group living in Pakistan is the ].{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
As of 2009, many Aroras were prominent shopkeepers in several cities of Punjab including ].<ref name="McLeod"/> McLeod adds that they played prominent role in the ]. Aroras such as ] and Mehtab Singh{{efn|Mehtab Singh, a Sikh Arora, was an eminent political leader in the early 20th century.<ref name="McLeod"/>}} were influential within the Sikh community.<ref name="McLeod"/> | |||
The folk dance of the Arora community is the ], a slow moving and expressive dance, and the Khatri folk dance is the ], which is more aggressive.{{cn|date=October 2011}} | |||
In the ], 11 legislatures in the majority government, come from Arora community.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Punjab Election |date=20 March 2022 |title=Arora community seeks representation in ministry |work=] |url=https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/punjab/arora-community-seeks-representation-in-ministry-379269 |access-date=20 April 2023}}</ref> | |||
==Notable Aroras== | |||
{{Main|List of Aroras}} | |||
==Culture== | |||
] notes that marriages between Aroras and the ]s are common.<ref name="McLeod"/> | |||
According to the ] sociologist, Bam Dev Sharda, in the "status allocation in village India", the Aroras are considered a mercantile caste belonging to the ] varna - like the Khatris, ], ] and ], and they claim "]" status.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Shape of Social Inequality: Stratification and Ethnicity in Comparative perspective |editor=David Bills|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lf3q3zePi2UC&pg=PA253|page=253|year=2005|author=Bam Dev Sharda|publisher=Elsevier |isbn=9780080459356}}</ref> So does historian Kenneth Jones by citing ]'s study.<ref name="JonesJones1976">{{cite book|author1=Kenneth W. Jones|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RpvXCtNzrz8C&pg=PA4|title=Arya Dharm: Hindu Consciousness in 19th-century Punjab|author2=Kenneth W.Jones|publisher=University of California Press|year=1976|isbn=978-0-520-02920-0|pages=4–5}}</ref> | |||
According to the ] anthropologist, Nicola Mooney, the Aroras are of ] varna, along with the Khatris.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Mooney|first=Nicola|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3Hu4X3AOhS8C|title=Rural Nostalgias and Transnational Dreams: Identity and Modernity Among Jat Sikhs|date=17 September 2011|publisher=University of Toronto Press|isbn=978-1-4426-6268-1|pages=152|language=en|quote=Aroras, however, are significantly higher than Jats in the caste hierarchy: along with Khatris, they are of the warrior varna, Kshatriya, the second of the four varna}}</ref> Similarly, ] describes Arora as a "sub-group of the Khatri jati of the Kshatriya Varna".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Evans|first=Grant|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cySBAAAAMAAJ|title=Asia's Cultural Mosaic: An Anthropological Introduction|date=1993|publisher=Prentice Hall|isbn=978-0-13-052812-4|pages=299|language=en|quote=An example of a jati might be to be the member of a Lahore Arora, a regional sub - group within the Khatri jati of the Kshatriya varna.}}</ref>{{clarify|reason=The page 299 also mentions:"Some non - Khatri would assign the Arora to the lower, Vaisya category". Please can we get full context for the quote?|date=October 2021}} | |||
According to one legend, the Aroras are of Kshatriya stock, but dissociated themselves from the other Kshatriyas and escaped prosecution by ], calling themselves ''aur'' (someone else).<ref name="one"/><ref name="Vikas Publishing House"/> | |||
In the opinion of a "Ford-Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies" at ], the merchant-type castes such as the Rajasthani Baniyas, Agarwals, Guptas, Mittals, Goels are ] castes. However in Punjab, there is a large number of merchant type jatis, "Arora" being their generic name, both Hindu and Sikh, and they are not ]. Yet they share about the same status in the wide regional ranking". He calls this "deferred caste denial" which he explains as the rule that "hierarchy persists in the Hindu mind even where caste is denied in any of the senses and by any of the strategies adumbrated".<ref>{{cite book|title=Dimensions of Social Life: Essays in Honor of David G. Mandelbaum|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|year=1987|isbn=9783110846850|editor=Paul Hockings|page=518|chapter=The Denial of Caste in modern Urban Parlance|quote=..hindi speaking Aggrawals, Guptas Mittals, Goels, i.e. all of them are mostly twice born, most vegetarians. In Punjab, there is a large number of merchant type jatis, "Arora" being their generic name, both Hindu and Sikh, and they are not twice-born and in an all Hindu ranking would classify as clean shudras. Yet they share about the same status in the wide regional ranking.|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ERQp5YCXiWsC&pg=PA518}}</ref> | |||
In the opinion of a Professor of Sociology at ] (India), "every Hindu is supposed to have a caste" and Aroras (including its sub-castes) are identified as a sub-division of the ]s. It is noted that "whether Khattris belong to Kshatriya varna or Vaishya varna is a point of controversy".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Madan|first=Gurmukh Ram|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z4rCn2C5eHUC|title=India And The West: A Cultural Contrast|date=2004|publisher=Mittal Publications|isbn=978-81-7099-862-4|pages=5|language=en}}</ref> According to Ethne K. Marenco, the ]s were placed at the top in the ] caste hierarchy, above the Khatri and Arora Sikhs. In contrast, per the ] traditions, "the Khatris and Aroras were accorded Kshatriya status", while "the status of the Jat Sikhs was equated with that of Shudras".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Marenco|first=Ethne K.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OeseAAAAMAAJ|title=The Transformation of Sikh Society|date=1974|publisher=HaPi Press|pages=167–168, 296|language=en}}</ref> | |||
Majority of the male members of the ] in the late 19th century Punjab came from the Arora and ] merchant castes. In Punjab, the Kshatriya castes who were hierarchically higher than the Aroras and Khatris had been disempowered and thus the Brahmins who had lost their patrons had to turn to these merchant castes. ] explains the attraction of these trading castes to the Arya Samaj as a means of social mobility associated with their prosperity during the British rule. He cites N.G.Barrier to show that the philosophy of the Arya Samaj founder, ], was responsible for the aspirations of these ] castes from Punjab to higher status:<ref name="Jaffrelot2010">{{cite book | author = Christophe Jaffrelot | date = 2010 | title = Religion, Caste, and Politics in India | publisher = Primus Books | pages = 98– | isbn = 9789380607047 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=XAO3i_gS61wC&pg=PA98|quote=In 1891, more than half the 9,105 male members of the movement belonged to the Khatri and Arora merchant castes. This sociological composition reflected the same socio-cultural logic as in Gujarat where Dayananda had set up the Arya samaj with the support of traders seeking a better status more in keeping with their new prosperity (Jordens 1978) linked with the economic advance of British India; in the Punjab, his movement developed along the same lines among the merchant castes which felt that they could aspire all the more legitimately to the leadership of their community as the Brahmins and Kshatriyas, who had been hierarchically superior to them had been marginalized. Barrier hence explains the attraction that the Arya Samaj exercised over the merchant castes by the fact that: Dayananda's claim that caste should be determined primarily by merit not birth, opened new paths of social mobility to educated Vaishyas who were trying to achieve social status commensurate with their improving economic status.}}</ref>{{blockquote| Dayananda's claim that caste should be determined primarily by merit not birth, opened new paths of social mobility to educated ] who were trying to achieve social status commensurate with their improving economic status<ref name="Jaffrelot2010"/>}} | |||
In a study of cultural geography and ], it was recorded that "Khatri-Aroras are surely among the most numerous Hindu caste groups" in the areas of ] and Delhi. Khatri-Arora along with ] and Mercantile castes "dominated the total mass of pilgrims" at ] Dham. Similarly, the total number of pilgrims at ] and ] were also predominated by the Khatri-Arora. At ] pilgrim, the Arora was found to be numerically dominant pilgrim group particularly during the ] ] fair.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bhardwaj |first=Surinder M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D6XJFokSJzEC&q=arora+ |title=Hindu Places of Pilgrimage in India: A Study in Cultural Geography |date=8 July 1983 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-04951-2 |pages=176–179 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* |
*] | ||
==External links== | |||
{{Wikivoyage}} | |||
* | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
'''Citations''' | |||
;Notes | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
{{reflist|group=nb}} | |||
;Citations | |||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
'''Bibliography''' | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
*{{cite book |title=Hindu castes and sects: an exposition of the origin of the Hindu caste system and the bearing of the sects towards each other and towards other religious systems |first=Jogendra Nath |last=Bhattacharya |authorlink=Jogendra Nath Bhattacharya |publisher=Thacker, Spink |location=Calcutta |year=1896 |url=http://www.archive.org/details/hinducastesands00bhatgoog}} | |||
*{{citation |title=The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade, 1550–1900 |first=Scott Cameron |last=Levi |publisher=BRILL |location=Leiden |year=2002 |isbn=978-90-04-12320-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9qVkNBge8mIC |access-date=23 October 2011 }}{{Dead link|date=September 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} | |||
*{{cite book |title=Panjab castes; being a reprint of the chapter on "The races, castes and tribes of the people" in the report on the census of the Panjab published in 1883 by the late Sir Denzil Ibbetson |first=Denzil |last=Ibbetson |publisher=Government Printing Press |location=Punjab |year=1916 |authorlink=Denzil Ibbetson |url=http://www.archive.org/details/panjabcastesbein00ibbeuoft |accessdate=2011-10-23}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
*{{cite book |title=Indigenous banking in India |first=Lakshmi Chandra |last=Jain |publisher=Macmillan and Co. |location=London |year=1929 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_vQp5Bqiuw0C |accessdate=2011-10-23}} | |||
*{{cite book |title=The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade, 1550–1900 |first=Scott Cameron |last=Levi |publisher=BRILL |location=Leiden |year=2002 |isbn=9789004123205 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=9qVkNBge8mIC |accessdate=2011-10-23}} | |||
*{{cite book |url=http://www.archive.org/details/glossaryoftribes03rose |first=H. A, |last=Rose |title=A Glossary of The Tribes & Castes of The Punjab & North West Frontier Province |year=1911 |volume=II |location=Lahore |publisher=Samuel T. Weston |authorlink=H. A. Rose |accessdate=2011-10-23}}</ref> | |||
{{Ethnic groups, tribes and clans of the Punjab}} | {{Ethnic groups, tribes and clans of the Punjab}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:35, 8 January 2025
Community in India For other uses, see Arora (disambiguation).
Arora | |
---|---|
Religions | Hinduism • Sikhism |
Languages | Punjabi (Lahnda − Saraiki, Thali, Riasti, Pahari-Pothwari, Hindko, Khetrani, Jatki), Sindhi, Hindustani |
Region | Contemporarily Punjab (India) • Sindh • Haryana • Delhi • Rajasthan • Uttar Pradesh Historically Derajat (Punjab • Balochistan • Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), Sindh and Pothohar Plateau |
Related groups | Khatri • Bhatia • Sood |
Arora is a community of Punjab and Sindh, comprising both Hindus and Sikhs. The name is derived from their ancestral place Aror, Sindh. In 712, the Arora people are said to have left Aror and started to settle in the cities of Punjab, mainly in South Punjab. However, according to W. H. McLeod, many Aroras originally came from the Pothohar area in North Punjab.
Historically, the Arora section of the Khatri community had been principally found in West Punjab, in the districts to the south and west of Lahore. Scott Cameron Levi, believes that they are a "sub-caste of the Khatris".
After Partition of India, Punjabis who migrated from erstwhile West Punjab were mostly Khatris and Aroras. Studies reveal that "Arora Khatri, Bedi, Ahluwalia etc. are some of the important castes among the Punjabis".
Divisions in Sikh traditions
Per Sikhism, the Arora are divided into four territorial groups: the Uttarādhīs from the north, the Ḍakhaṇās from the south, the Dāhrās from the West and the Sindhīs, from Sindh. The Dāhrās and Ḍakhaṇās are sometimes classed as one groups.
History
Origin
See also: Battle of Aror and Umayyad conquest of SindhAror is the ancestral town of the Arora community. Little is known about the city's history prior to the Arab invasion in the 8th century CE.
The Sauvira Kingdom was an ancient kingdom of the lower Indus Valley mentioned in Late Vedic literature. Roruka (Aror), capital of the Sauvira Kingdom, is mentioned as an important trading center in early Buddhist literature. In the Chachnamah, members of the Brahman group were noted in the city of Aror. Aror was the capital of the Arora dynasty, which was followed by the Rai dynasty and then the Brahman dynasty.
In 711, Aror was captured by the army of Umayyad general Muhammad ibn al-Qasim.
Mughal decline and Afghan revival
On 13 April 1752, Lahore and Multan in Punjab were ceded to Ahmad Shah Durrani after the fall of Kaura Mal in the battlefield and retreat of Adina Beg. Afghanistan was the conduit for the trade between Central Asia and India. Grain trade in Afghanistan was in the hands of the Hindu Punjabi Arora/Khatris. Reportedly, they gave loans to the Durrani rulers to carry out military expeditions in India. Moreover, the disappointed princes of India "encouraged Zaman Shah Durrani to invade the subcontinent and overthrow the British" in 1798.
To restrict the Afghans in Punjab, Hindu Diwan Kaura Mal Arora "died while fighting against the army of Ahmed Shah Durrani on March 6, 1752". He was the Governor of Multan and had also served as the Minister of Lahore twice. Earlier, he led the Lahore Darbar and "made a joint-attack on Multan in 1749", along the Sikhs led by Jassa Singh. Post his victory over Multan, "Diwan Kaura Mall was given the title of Maharaja Bahadur" by the Mughals.
Prior to the British colonial rule, Aroras were one of the three main money-lending castes of Punjab. The Aroras were often subjected to oppression and humiliation by peasant communities in muslim-dominated areas of Punjab. Socially discriminatory laws were also passed against them. According to Sugata Bose, it was only "'when British rule freed him from restraint and armed him with the power of the law ... he became as oppressive as he had been submissive'".
The Aroras were often good farmers, and also engaged in metalworking, goldsmithery, and weaving.
British colonial era
Pettigrew notes that in the 19th century, the Aroras were working as shopkeepers and small traders within the Sikh community in Punjab. During the British Raj, in some parts of Punjab their population was so high that they had to seek employment outside their traditional occupations shopkeeping, accountancy and money-lending For the Hindu merchant castes, Agarwal Banias, Khatris and Aroras, Timber trade was also one of the trades they followed before 1900. However, since 1900 the smallest merchant sect, the Suds, started this trade and later dominated it in eastern Punjab.
The Amritsar Gazetteer says:
Aroras trace their origin from the Khatris. It is said that Khatris are Khatris of Lahore and Multan, whereas Aroras are Khatris of Aror, modern Rori and Sukkar (Sind) in Pakistan. There is a street in Amritsar named as ‘Arorianwali Gali’. The Aroras seem to have settled in Amritsar during the time of Maharaja Ranjit Singh or even earlier. It is presumed that they migrated to Amritsar from Lahore to which place they might have originally migrated from Sind or Multan.
The Hoshiarpur Gazetteer says:
Before independence, the Aroras did not constitute a sizeable population in the district. With the migration of the non-Muslim population from Pakistan to India in 1947, they settled here, though in small numbers. The Aroras were generally settled in West Punjab (Pakistan) and in the Firozepur District. Their representation in the eastern districts of the Punjab was not notable. Whatever be their origin, the fact is that they resemble Khatris in certain traits. They are also divided into many groups and castes, Uchanda, Nichanda, etc., but in social life, these groups are of no importance. They intermarry in their groups like others. They also intermarry among Khatris. In the All-India meeting in 1936, held by the Khatris at Lahore (Pakistan), it was decided that the Aroras, Soods and Bhatias were Khatri for all intents and purposes. And, as such, they should be admitted to the Khatri stock. This interpretation did not find much favour then, but with the lapse of time, it has almost been accepted.
Uttaradhi (north), Dakhanadhi (south) and Dahre (west) are three major sub-groups of the Arora people based on territorial differentiations. Before the independence of India, Arora used to marry in their own sub-group i.e. Uttradhi, Dakkhna or Dahra but after the independence, spheres of permissible arranged matrimonial alliances were widened to include other sub-groups of Arora.
British ethnographer Denzil Ibbetson observed that Arora-Khatris were centered in Multan and Derajat (region consisting of Dera Ismail Khan and Dera Ghazi Khan) which are now part of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa regions of modern-day Pakistan. They conducted business throughout Afghanistan and Central Asia.
Post-independence
In the census of 1951, Aroras that were settled in Punjab returned their caste names as Khatris, Arora Khatris, Arorae, Rore, Aror, Rora Khatris, Arore, Aror Khatris etc. Some of the Aroras simply returned their caste names with Arora sub-caste names such as Arya, Ahuja, Batheja, Bathla, Kukreja, Chawla, Chhabra, Dang, Juneja, Taneja, Upneja, Wadhwa etc.
According to the Commission Reports by Justice Gurnam Singh (1990) and Justice K.C. Gupta (2012), Arora is a forward caste socially, educationally and economically. It was reported that "despite of being uprooted from their homeland", Arora community has high literacy rate. An economic survey conducted by Maharishi Dayanand University states that Arora/Khatri people have good representation both in government as well as private sector. They are both in business, services and other fields. They are "economically well-off and not dependent on money-lending or shopkeeping". They are engaged as "doctors, engineers, administrators and are represented in white-collar jobs". The Arora were divided in two main sub groups, namely Hindu Arora and Sikh Arora depending upon the religion pursued.
Punita Arora became the first lady Lieutenant General of the Indian Army in 2004.
As of 2009, many Aroras were prominent shopkeepers in several cities of Punjab including Amritsar. McLeod adds that they played prominent role in the Singh Sabha movement. Aroras such as Vir Singh and Mehtab Singh were influential within the Sikh community.
In the 2022 Punjab Legislative Assembly election, 11 legislatures in the majority government, come from Arora community.
Culture
McLeod notes that marriages between Aroras and the Khatris are common.
According to the University of Utah sociologist, Bam Dev Sharda, in the "status allocation in village India", the Aroras are considered a mercantile caste belonging to the Vaishya varna - like the Khatris, Agarwal, Bania and Ahluwalia, and they claim "twice-born" status. So does historian Kenneth Jones by citing Denzil Ibbetson's study.
According to the University of Toronto anthropologist, Nicola Mooney, the Aroras are of Kshatriya varna, along with the Khatris. Similarly, Grant Evans describes Arora as a "sub-group of the Khatri jati of the Kshatriya Varna".
According to one legend, the Aroras are of Kshatriya stock, but dissociated themselves from the other Kshatriyas and escaped prosecution by Parashurama, calling themselves aur (someone else).
In the opinion of a "Ford-Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies" at Syracuse University, the merchant-type castes such as the Rajasthani Baniyas, Agarwals, Guptas, Mittals, Goels are twice born castes. However in Punjab, there is a large number of merchant type jatis, "Arora" being their generic name, both Hindu and Sikh, and they are not twice-born. Yet they share about the same status in the wide regional ranking". He calls this "deferred caste denial" which he explains as the rule that "hierarchy persists in the Hindu mind even where caste is denied in any of the senses and by any of the strategies adumbrated".
In the opinion of a Professor of Sociology at Lucknow University (India), "every Hindu is supposed to have a caste" and Aroras (including its sub-castes) are identified as a sub-division of the Khatris. It is noted that "whether Khattris belong to Kshatriya varna or Vaishya varna is a point of controversy". According to Ethne K. Marenco, the Jat Sikhs were placed at the top in the Sikh caste hierarchy, above the Khatri and Arora Sikhs. In contrast, per the Hindu traditions, "the Khatris and Aroras were accorded Kshatriya status", while "the status of the Jat Sikhs was equated with that of Shudras".
Majority of the male members of the Arya Samaj in the late 19th century Punjab came from the Arora and Khatri merchant castes. In Punjab, the Kshatriya castes who were hierarchically higher than the Aroras and Khatris had been disempowered and thus the Brahmins who had lost their patrons had to turn to these merchant castes. Christophe Jaffrelot explains the attraction of these trading castes to the Arya Samaj as a means of social mobility associated with their prosperity during the British rule. He cites N.G.Barrier to show that the philosophy of the Arya Samaj founder, Dayananda Saraswati, was responsible for the aspirations of these Vaishya castes from Punjab to higher status:
Dayananda's claim that caste should be determined primarily by merit not birth, opened new paths of social mobility to educated Vaishyas who were trying to achieve social status commensurate with their improving economic status
In a study of cultural geography and pilgrimage in India, it was recorded that "Khatri-Aroras are surely among the most numerous Hindu caste groups" in the areas of Punjab and Delhi. Khatri-Arora along with Brahmans and Mercantile castes "dominated the total mass of pilgrims" at Badrinath Dham. Similarly, the total number of pilgrims at Haridwar and Jwalaji were also predominated by the Khatri-Arora. At Chintapurni pilgrim, the Arora was found to be numerically dominant pilgrim group particularly during the Shravan Ashtmi fair.
See also
External links
References
Citations
- Now known as Rohri, a city near Sukkur in present-day Sindh, Pakistan.
- Mehtab Singh, a Sikh Arora, was an eminent political leader in the early 20th century.
- Oonk, Gijsbert (2007). Global Indian Diasporas: Exploring Trajectories of Migration and Theory. Amsterdam University Press. pp. 43–45. ISBN 978-90-5356-035-8.
- Singer, André (1982). Guardians of the North-West Frontier: The Pathans. Time-Life Books. ISBN 978-0-7054-0702-1.
- ^ Levi (2002), p. 107.
- "Blame caste for Pakistan's violent streak, not faith". Times of India Blog. 25 September 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
- Boivin, Michel (2020). "The Transmission of Colonial Knowledge". The Sufi Paradigm and the Makings of a Vernacular Knowledge in Colonial India: The Case of Sindh (1851–1929). Springer International Publishing: 74. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-41991-2_3.
- Bhardwaj, Surinder M. (8 July 1983). Hindu Places of Pilgrimage in India: A Study in Cultural Geography. University of California Press. p. 231. ISBN 978-0-520-04951-2.
- ^ H. Syan Singh (2017). "Khatrīs and Aroṛās". Encyclopedia of Sikhism Online. Brill. doi:10.1163/2589-2118_beso_com_031682.
- Experts, Disha (1 September 2021). Errorless 16 Year-wise MPPSC General Studies Prelims Solved Paper 1 (2003 - 21) 2nd Edition. Disha Publications. ISBN 978-93-91551-70-4.
Aror is the ancestral town of the Arora Community. In 711, Aror was captured by the army of Muslim general Muhammad bin Qasim .
- ^ Hanks, Patrick (8 May 2003). Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-19-977169-1.
- ^ Malhotra, Anshu (2002). Gender, Caste, and Religious Identities: Restructuring Class in Colonial Punjab. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195656480. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
The Aroras were also said to be the Khatris of Arorkot, or Aror, the ancient capital of Sindh.
- ^ McLeod, W. H. (24 July 2009). The A to Z of Sikhism. Scarecrow Press. pp. 21, 213, 128. ISBN 978-0-8108-6344-6.
- Government of Haryana, Department of Welfare. "Report of Backward Classes Commission". Welfare of Scheduled Caste & Backward Classes Department. pp. 05, 135. Archived from the original on 15 May 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Hanks, Patrick (8 May 2003). Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-19-977169-1.
- Garg, Gaṅgā Rām (1992). Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World. Concept Publishing Company. ISBN 978-81-7022-373-3.
When Muhammad-bin-Qāsim plundered the place Arora in 712 and defeated Rājā Dāhar, who belonged to the Arorā dynasty, the Arorā people left Sind and settled in the Punjāb cities, situated on the banks of the rivers Sind, Jhelum, Cenāb and Rāvī.
- Thakur, U. T. (1959). Sindhi Culture. University of Bombay. p. 58.
This Arorkot is Arore or Alore and the Aroras are called after the name of the ancient capital Arore.
- ^ Dogra, R. C.; Mansukhani, Gobind Singh (1995). Encyclopaedia of Sikh Religion and Culture. Vikas Publishing House. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-7069-8368-5.
- Hughes, Albert William (1876). A Gazetteer of the Province of Sind. G. Bell and Sons. p. 677. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
aror.
- Michael Witzel (1987), "On the localisation of Vedic texts and schools (Materials on Vedic Śākhās, 7)" in G. Pollet (ed.), India and the Ancient world. History, Trade and Culture before A.D. 650
- Derryl N. MacLean (1989), Religion and Society in Arab Sind, p.51,136
- Garg, Gaṅgā Rām (1992). Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World. Concept Publishing Company. p. 624. ISBN 978-81-7022-373-3.
When Muhammad-bin-Qāsim plundered the place Arora in 712 and defeated Rājā Dāhar, who belonged to the Arorā dynasty, the Arorā people left Sind and settled in the Punjāb cities, situated on the banks of the rivers Sind, Jhelum, Cenāb and Rāvī.
- MacLean, Derryl N. (1989). Religion and Society in Arab Sind. BRILL. ISBN 9004085513.
- History of the Punjab, Volume 1 by Fauja Singh, Published by the Department of Punjab Historical Studies, Punjabi University, 1977
- Roy, Kaushik (2015). "Mughal Decline and Afghan Revival :1707-1810". War and Society in Afghanistan From the Mughals to the Americans, 1500–2013. Oxford University Press India. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-19-908944-4.
- Dilagīra, Harajindara Siṅgha (1997). The Sikh reference book. Internet Archive. Edmonton, Alb., Canada : Sikh Educational Trust for Sikh University Centre, Denmark; Amritsar : Available from Singh Bros. p. 480. ISBN 978-0-9695964-2-4.
- Ahluwalia, M. L. (1989). Life and Times of Jassa Singh Ahluwalia. Publication Bureau, Punjabi University. p. 43.
- B.B.Chaudhari (2008). D.P.Chattopadhayaya (ed.). Peasant History of Late Pre-colonial and Colonial India-Volume 8. Pearson Longman. pp. 137–138. ISBN 9788131716885.
- Sugata Bose (1994). "Introduction". Credit, Markets, and the Agrarian Economy of Colonial India. Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0195633085.
- Malcolm Lyall Darling (1928). The Punjab Peasant In Prosperity And Debt. Oxford University Press. p. 212.
Often a good farmer, even when he does not actually drive the plough, he looks after his land with care, and any improvement to be found in his neighbourhood is generally due to his capital, industry and thrift. He will turn his hand to anything that promises gain, and may be found weaving baskets and mats, beating out vessels of copper and of brass, working as a goldsmith, or even plying the tailor's needle and thread.
- Joyce Pettigrew (1975). Robber Noblemen: A Study of the Political System of the Sikh Jats. Routledge & Kegan Paul. p. 41.
The Aroras, who formed 9 per cent of the Sikh population and who generally supplied most of Punjab's petty traders and small shopkeepers...
- Kesar Singh (1997). B. L. Abbi (ed.). Post-green revolution rural Punjab: A profile of economic and socio-cultural change, 1965-1995. p. 36.
Of the clean caste households in the village, Arora, a traditional shopkeeping and petty - business caste, is lacking in the Jat's prestige and power in this village
- J. Royal Roseberry (1987). Imperial Rule in Punjab: The Conquest and Administration of Multan 1818-1881. p. 4.
The Aroras were so numerous that many had to find employ outside the traditional caste occupations of shopkeeper, moneylender and village accountant.
- Richard P. Tucker (2011). A Forest History of India. SAGE. p. 79. ISBN 9788132119524.
Others represented several Hindu merchant castes, who invested in timber as only one of several lines of trade. They included Agarwal Banias, Khatris, and Aroras. From about 1900 the smallest Hindu merchant sect, the Suds, began moving toward their later dominance in the timber trade of eastern Punjab.
- Gazetteers of India, Barkat Rai Chopra (1976). Amritsar. Chandigarh: Government of Punjab. p. 88.
- "Chapter Iii". Archived from the original on 24 October 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2010.
- Singh, Surely Kumar (1997). People of India: India's communities. Kolkata: Anthropological Survey of India. p. 126.
- "Religions And Castes". District Gazetteer - Amritsar. Department of Revenue, Rehabilitation and Disaster Management, Government of Punjab. 1976. Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
- Oonk, Gijsbert (2007). Global Indian Diasporas: Exploring Trajectories of Migration and Theory. Amsterdam University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-90-5356-035-8.
- Government of India, Deputy Registrar General (23 August 1956). "GLOSSARY OR CASTE NAMES RETURNED AT THE CENSUS OF 1951 IN THE DISTRICTS OF PEPSU" (PDF). Linguistic Survey of India. Archived from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Government of Haryana, Department of Welfare. "Report of Backward Classes Commission". Welfare of Scheduled Caste & Backward Classes Department. pp. 135–136. Archived from the original on 15 May 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - "First Lady Lt Gen of Indian Army". archive.pib.gov.in. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
- "rediff.com: The General in a Sari - A Slide Show". specials.rediff.com. Retrieved 22 August 2022.
- Punjab Election (20 March 2022). "Arora community seeks representation in ministry". The Tribune (Chandigarh). Retrieved 20 April 2023.
- Bam Dev Sharda (2005). David Bills (ed.). The Shape of Social Inequality: Stratification and Ethnicity in Comparative perspective. Elsevier. p. 253. ISBN 9780080459356.
- Kenneth W. Jones; Kenneth W.Jones (1976). Arya Dharm: Hindu Consciousness in 19th-century Punjab. University of California Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-520-02920-0.
- Mooney, Nicola (17 September 2011). Rural Nostalgias and Transnational Dreams: Identity and Modernity Among Jat Sikhs. University of Toronto Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-4426-6268-1.
Aroras, however, are significantly higher than Jats in the caste hierarchy: along with Khatris, they are of the warrior varna, Kshatriya, the second of the four varna
- Evans, Grant (1993). Asia's Cultural Mosaic: An Anthropological Introduction. Prentice Hall. p. 299. ISBN 978-0-13-052812-4.
An example of a jati might be to be the member of a Lahore Arora, a regional sub - group within the Khatri jati of the Kshatriya varna.
- Paul Hockings, ed. (1987). "The Denial of Caste in modern Urban Parlance". Dimensions of Social Life: Essays in Honor of David G. Mandelbaum. Walter de Gruyter. p. 518. ISBN 9783110846850.
..hindi speaking Aggrawals, Guptas Mittals, Goels, i.e. all of them are mostly twice born, most vegetarians. In Punjab, there is a large number of merchant type jatis, "Arora" being their generic name, both Hindu and Sikh, and they are not twice-born and in an all Hindu ranking would classify as clean shudras. Yet they share about the same status in the wide regional ranking.
- Madan, Gurmukh Ram (2004). India And The West: A Cultural Contrast. Mittal Publications. p. 5. ISBN 978-81-7099-862-4.
- Marenco, Ethne K. (1974). The Transformation of Sikh Society. HaPi Press. pp. 167–168, 296.
- ^ Christophe Jaffrelot (2010). Religion, Caste, and Politics in India. Primus Books. pp. 98–. ISBN 9789380607047.
In 1891, more than half the 9,105 male members of the movement belonged to the Khatri and Arora merchant castes. This sociological composition reflected the same socio-cultural logic as in Gujarat where Dayananda had set up the Arya samaj with the support of traders seeking a better status more in keeping with their new prosperity (Jordens 1978) linked with the economic advance of British India; in the Punjab, his movement developed along the same lines among the merchant castes which felt that they could aspire all the more legitimately to the leadership of their community as the Brahmins and Kshatriyas, who had been hierarchically superior to them had been marginalized. Barrier hence explains the attraction that the Arya Samaj exercised over the merchant castes by the fact that: Dayananda's claim that caste should be determined primarily by merit not birth, opened new paths of social mobility to educated Vaishyas who were trying to achieve social status commensurate with their improving economic status.
- Bhardwaj, Surinder M. (8 July 1983). Hindu Places of Pilgrimage in India: A Study in Cultural Geography. University of California Press. pp. 176–179. ISBN 978-0-520-04951-2.
Bibliography
- Levi, Scott Cameron (2002), The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade, 1550–1900, Leiden: BRILL, ISBN 978-90-04-12320-5, retrieved 23 October 2011