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Iraqi Biradari

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Iraqi Biradri is a Sunni Muslim caste found chiefly in Ghazipur, Azamgarh, Ballia, Deoria and Gorakhpur districts of the eastern Uttar Pradesh in India. Iraqi Biradri is also referred to as Iraqi Shaikh.

Iraqi Birdari
Regions with significant populations
INDIA, PAKISTAN
Languages
Urdu, Hindi,Bhojpuri,English
Religion
Islam, Sunni
Related ethnic groups
Shaikhs in North India, Sayyid

History and origin

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Iraqi biradri is a descendant population of immigrants from the country of Iraq. Recent facts argue that their ancestors were the immediate descendants of Sayyid Masud Al Hussaini and his poorly defined retinue, all recent immigrants from Iraq. Sayyid Masud Al Hussaini successfully extended the Ghazipur area under the Delhi Sultanate, settling with his family in the newly conquered city during the Mamluk Sultan Firuz Shah Tughlaq circa 1330.[1][2]: 157, 158 

As a result, Iraqi Biradri are known have to settled in Ghazipur in the 14th century, with an origin roughly 700 years ago.[3][4] The ancestors as old as 300 years or more are now very well-identified in many towns/villages of the districts as mentioned above including Ghazipur in the form of distinct family trees.[5]

The above-mentioned Iraqi Biradri and a separate Muslim caste, the converted Hindu Kalals as Araquis, Rakis, or simply 'Kalal Iraqi' were characterized to be in one group in United Provinces (or U.P.) based on the work of British colonial civil administrators and others.[6][7][8] These mistaken reports attributed a fallacy toward the Iraqi Biradri for more than a century in the past.

Ethnic Iraqis

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  • India: Iraqi Biradri from the native places in eastern U.P. are settled in many cities among others,Ethnic communities in Kanpur, and Ethnic communities in Kolkata are mentioned. People of the aforementioned community from Lar, Uttar Pradesh in Deoria district, a known historic center of the community, carry the surname, Lari.
  • Pakistan: After independence in 1947, many Iraqi Families migrated mainly to Karachi Pakistan, names of the most migrants with the places of origin in eastern U.P. are recorded.[9]

Genetics

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A variety of Y-DNA haplogroups are found among certain random samples that represent distinct Iraqi families as outlined above.[5] The Y-DNA haplogroups included: M198(R1a1a), branches R-Y6, R-Y7 and Y39 or M560; Y-DNA haplogroup J2-M172, branches J2a and J2b; Y-DNA Haplogroup J-M267 or J1a; and Y-DNA haplogroup L, L-M27 or L-M76 (23andme, DNA Ancestry results).

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ about district-history"Tehsil | District Ghazipur, Government of Uttar Pradesh | India,"
  2. ^ Nevill, H. R., ed. (1909). Ghazipur: A Gazetteer, Being Volume XXIX of the District Gazetteers of the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh. Allahabad: Government Press. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  3. ^ Alhaj, Mohammad Hanif. Mardam Shumari.pdf-3.7.2022. Archived from the original on 20 October 2023. Retrieved 20 October 2023.p.46-Nonahra, Ghazipur
  4. ^ Nohahra, Ghazipur"Sadat of Subcontinent India and Pakistan". Archived from the original on 7 January 2024. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  5. ^ a b Jalil Ahmad Lari; Javed Ahmad Gauri; Tabrez Akhtar Lari. APNO KI TALASH FINAL Book Urdu. pp. 1–239. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  6. ^ Crooke, W. "The Tribes and Castes of the North-Western Provinces and Oudh".
  7. ^ Zarina Ahmad (1962). "Muslim castes in Uttar Pradesh" (PDF). The Economic Weekly.
  8. ^ Ghaus Ansari (1960). Muslim Caste in Uttar Pradesh: A Study of Culture Contact. Ethnographic and Folk Culture Society. OCLC 1104993.
  9. ^ "iraqibiradripakistan". Archived from the original on 10 November 2018. Retrieved 22 October 2023.retrieved 20 Oct 2023