Torwali | |
---|---|
توروالی | |
Region | Swat District |
Ethnicity | Torwali people |
Native speakers | 130,000 (2020)[1] |
Arabic script (primarily Nastaliq) | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | trw |
Glottolog | torw1241 |
ELP | Torwali |
Torwali is a minor language of Pakistan which is mainly spoken by Torwali nation of Central Swat District, it is given a space in this map. |
Torwali[2] (توروالی), also known as Bahrain Kohistani,[3] is a Dardic language[4] of the Indo-Aryan language family spoken by the Torwali people, and concentrated in the Bahrain and Chail areas of the Swat Kohistan in district Swat in northern Pakistan.[5][6][7][8] The Torwali language is said to have originated from the pre-Muslim communities of Swat.[9] It is the closest modern Indo-Aryan language still spoken today to Niya, a dialect of Gāndhārī, a Middle Indo-Aryan language spoken in the ancient region of Gandhara.[10][11] Torwali and Gawri languages are collectively classified as "Swat Kohistani".[12] The words "Kohistan" and Kohistani are generic terms. Kohistan in Persian and in Urdu means as "land of mountains" whereas "Kohistani" refers to 'language spoken in the land mountains" or 'people of the mountains.[13] Joan Baart is the only author who used the term "Bahrain Kohistani" for the "Torwali" language. Ethnologue, twenty seventh edition suggests Kohistani, Torwalak, Torwalik and Turvali as alterative names for the language while Torwali as an autonym for it.[2]
Torwali is an endangered language: it is characterised as "definitely endangered" by UNESCO's Atlas of Endangered Languages,[14] and as "vulnerable" by the Catalogue of Endangered Languages.[15] There have been efforts to revitalize the language since 2004, and mother tongue community schools have been established by Idara Baraye Taleem-o-Taraqi (Institute for Education and Development) (IBT)..[16]
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) The Pathans call them, and all other Muhammadans of Indian descent in the Hindu Kush valleys, Kohistanis.
... It might be going too far to say that Torwali is the direct lineal descendant of the Niya Prakrit, but there is no doubt that out of all the modern languages it shows the closest resemblance to it. A glance at the map in the Linguistic Survey of India shows that the area at present covered by "Kohistani" is the nearest to that area round Peshawar, where, as stated above, there is most reason to believe was the original home of the Niya Prakrit. That conclusion, which was reached for other reasons, is thus confirmed by the distribution of the modern dialects.