Monday, 23 November 2020

133 - Demographics of Balochistan Province According the Census of 1941 (Religions)

Balochistan (also spelled Baluchistan during the British Raj) was the farthest corner of the British Empire in India in every sense of the word. It was sparsely populated, far away from the main centres of population and on the borders in the extreme west of India. British started taking interest in this area in the late 1830s. At that time the East India Company had already subdued the whole of present-day India and just two independent states of Sindh and Punjab were out of their influence. In 1839 EIC and the Punjab state under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, planned to install the deposed King Shah Shuja on his throne in Kabul replacing Dost Muhammad Khan. According to the plan the joint forces were to assemble at Shikarpur in Sindh and then march towards Kandahar via Bolan Pass. During this campaign the British forces occupied Bolan Pass and then the area around Quetta and Chaman, Kandahar fell too and later on Kabul as well. 

 This was the first time that the strategic importance of Quetta was recognized by the British and later on a cantonment was established here, around which a city soon developed. But we all know that the invasion of 1839, known as the first Anglo Afghan war ended in a disastrous retreat three years later in 1842. Soon after that Afghanistan and other occupied areas including Quetta were abandoned. However, during that period in 1839, an expedition from Quetta conquered Kalat and the state, hitherto under the suzerainty of Afghanistan was forced to accept British India as the paramount power. 

The 1840s brought dramatic changes in the political conditions of present-day Pakistan. Sindh was annexed by the EIC in 1943 and soon after that in 1846, Punjab too was defeated and in 1849 fully annexed to India. By this time all the major provinces were conquered by the British but the western frontiers of this vast empire were not clearly defined. That process took a few more decades to complete. In 1854 the treaty of 1839 was renewed and Kalat again accepted the suzerainty of the British government in Delhi. The next milestone was the year 1876, when the British permanently occupied Quetta and extended greater influence over the state of Kalat, including taking responsibility for internal and external peace and security of the state. 

 During this period British kept on increasing their influence and control over the districts of Loralai, Zhob and Sibi as well, with the mixed policy of force and coercion and gradually brought all the tribes of this region to accept the status of the British as the paramount power. The start of the second Afghan war in 1878 only increased the British control of these areas and at the end of this war the next year, the treaty of Gandamak was signed. By the treaty of Gandamak (May 1879), Yaqub Khan, the king of Afghanistan, formally ceded the districts of Pishin, Quetta, Loralai, Sibi, Zhob, etc. to the British. In the meanwhile, Balochistan’s western border with Iran was settled in 1871. 

This is how the British acquired the territories which currently form the Pakistani province of Balochistan. I shall not go any further into the history of Balochistan as the subject of this post is the religious demographics of Balochistan in 1941, the last census before the partition of India in 1947.


Balochistan - Administrative. 

Balochistan - Political Map 1931. 

Balochistan - Muslim Population, 1941. 

Balochistan - Hindu Population, 1941. 

Balochistan - Sikh Population, 1941. 

Balochistan - Sikh Population, 1941. 

Balochistan in British India. 


Population Of Balochistan Province in 1941 (Administrative Units)

 

Ar. Km2

Population

Muslims

%

Hindus

%

Sikhs

%

Christians

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Baluchistan

347,064

857,835

785,181

91.53

54,394

6.34

12,044

1.40

6,056

0.71

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Districts

141,040

501,631

438,980

87.51

44,623

8.90

11,918

2.38

6,002

1.20

Quetta-Pishin

13,753

156,289

113,288

72.49

28,629

18.32

9,787

6.26

5,441

3.48

Loralai

19,101

83,685

79,273

94.73

3,129

3.74

1,124

1.34

159

0.19

Zhob

27,138

61,499

55,987

91.04

4,286

6.97

1,076

1.75

146

0.24

Bolan

1,054

6,009

4,812

80.08

950

15.81

184

3.06

55

0.92

Chaghai

50,321

29,950

27,864

93.04

1,204

4.02

181

0.60

1

0.00

Sibi:

29,673

164,899

157,706

95.64

6,425

3.90

566

0.34

200

0.12

Administered Area

10,723

106,787

99,875

93.53

6,144

5.75

566

0.53

200

0.19

Marri-Bugti Country

18,951

58,112

57,831

99.52

281

0.48

-

-

-

-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

States

206,023

356,204

346,251

97.21

9,771

2.74

126

0.04

54

0.02

Kalat State:

139,846

253,305

245,208

96.80

7,915

3.12

79

0.03

45

0.02

Sarawan

12,914

28,270

27,592

97.60

566

2.00

61

0.22

25

0.09

Jhalawan

53,051

52,272

52,194

99.85

77

0.15

-

-

-

-

Kacchis

13,805

86,112

79,016

91.76

7,095

8.24

1

0.00

-

-

Makran

60,077

86,651

86,406

99.72

177

0.20

17

0.02

20

0.02

Kharan State

47,935

33,832

33,733

99.71

99

0.29

-

-

-

-

Las Bela State

18,241

69,067

67,810

98.18

1,701

2.46

47

0.07

9

0.01



Population Of Balochistan Province in 1941 (Cities & Towns)

 

Population

Muslims

%

Hindus

%

Sikhs

%

Christians

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quetta Town

36,430

19,056

52.31

12212

33.52

4,041

11.09

758

2.08

Quetta Cantt.

28,006

8,879

31.70

11768

42.02

3,323

11.87

1,182

4.22

Pishin

1,890

1,245

65.87

447

23.65

183

9.68

15

0.79

Chaman Town

4,064

2,396

58.96

1286

31.64

194

4.77

176

4.33

Chaman Cantt.

2,586

407

15.74

1616

62.49

503

19.45

24

0.93

Loralai Town

3,419

2,055

60.11

971

28.40

330

9.65

63

1.84

Loralai Cantt.

1,676

272

16.23

565

33.71

786

46.90

12

0.72

Ft. Sandeman Town

5,986

4,087

68.28

1419

23.71

485

8.10

49

0.82

Ft. Sandeman Cantt.

3,367

1,145

34.01

1573

46.72

601

17.85

12

0.36

Machh Town

2,220

1,632

73.51

421

18.96

121

5.45

10

0.45

Sibi

8,854

5,505

62.18

2814

31.78

362

4.09

95

1.07

Usta

1,925

1,154

59.95

688

35.74

77

4.00

1

0.05

Kalat

2,463

2,049

83.19

381

15.47

33

1.34

0

0.00

Mastung

3,137

2,963

94.45

124

3.95

28

0.89

23

0.73

Pasni

3,616

3,547

98.09

69

1.91

0

0.00

0

0.00

Panjgur

473

416

87.95

45

9.51

9

1.90

0

0.00

Bela Town

3,905

3,389

86.79

469

12.01

47

1.20

0

0.00


I hope anybody interested in the history of Balochistan and its demographics will find this post useful. 

Tariq Amir
Doha - Qatar.
November 23, 2020.

6 comments:

  1. Asaam religion data according to 1941 census par bhi blog post banai hindu Christian and muslim population par aur bengal ka data detail mai mil jai to aus par bhi new blog post banai

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good information .As expected hindu Khatri used to had good chunk of population in towns even in Baluchistan .

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you sir for all the hard work and data collection. One thing I have noticed is that in Pakistan, the percentage of Hindus was much larger in cities and towns when compared to villages. The same thing goes for India. The percentages of Muslims was and is much larger in cities and towns when compared to villages.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes your observation is correct. In these areas Hindus and Sikhs were more involved in business activities thus were concentrated in towns and cities.

      Delete