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The Pir Panjal Debate: When Geography enters the Assembly

When a Region Becomes More than a word

Shahid Ahmed Hakla Poonchi by Shahid Ahmed Hakla Poonchi
March 1, 2026
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Recent political remarks questioning the existence of the “Pir Panjal region” have triggered widespread reaction across Poonch, Rajouri, and parts of Reasi. For many, the statement felt less like a technical observation and more like a negation of lived history. Yet before emotion overtakes reason, it is important to examine what Pir Panjal represents—not merely as a term, but as geography, as history, and as culture.

The issue is not about administrative terminology. It is about whether a mountain system that has shaped lives for centuries can be dismissed as an abstraction.

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A Mountain Range Older Than Politics

The Pir Panjal is the largest mountain range of the Lesser Himalayas. It forms the great wall that separates the Kashmir Valley from the Jammu plains. Poonch and Rajouri lie along its folds and slopes, while parts of Reasi are geographically tied to the same mountainous belt.

These mountains determine rainfall patterns, snowfall intensity, forest types, river systems, and road connectivity. They influence what crops are grown, how homes are built, and how communities interact with their environment.

Geology does not respond to legislative debate. The Pir Panjal range has existed for millennia, recorded in survey maps, Himalayan studies, and historical chronicles. It is a geographical fact embedded in the structure of the subcontinent.

The Origin of the Name: Where Faith Met Terrain

The name “Pir Panjal” reflects the layered history of the region. “Pir,” of Persian origin, denotes a spiritual guide or saint—a reminder of the Sufi influences that travelled through these mountain corridors. “Panjal” is linked to older Indic linguistic traditions referring to high ridges or mountainous terrain.

Oral traditions in Rajouri and Poonch speak of saints who crossed these passes, and of shrines that emerged along difficult mountain routes. By the Mughal era, the term Pir Panjal was firmly in circulation. The historic Mughal Road that passes through Peer Ki Gali bears testimony to this continuity of naming.

Dogra administrative records and later British cartography retained the term, embedding it further into official vocabulary. The name did not arise in a recent political moment; it evolved organically at the intersection of geography, spirituality, and governance.

The Cultural Spine of the Mountains: Gujjars and Bakarwals

To understand Pir Panjal fully, one must understand the communities whose lives have been inseparable from its slopes—particularly the Gujjars and Bakarwals.

The Gujjars and Bakarwals, recognised as Scheduled Tribes in Jammu & Kashmir, have historically practiced transhumance—a seasonal migration pattern that follows altitude and climate. During summers, they move with their livestock to the high alpine meadows of the Pir Panjal. As winter approaches, they descend toward lower foothills.

This rhythm of ascent and descent is not random movement; it is ecological intelligence refined over generations. The mountains dictate their calendar. Snowfall signals departure. Melting glaciers signal return.

The Pir Panjal passes are not merely routes for these communities—they are lifelines. Grazing grounds, water sources, forest clearings, and highland pastures form part of an inherited environmental knowledge system. Stories, songs, and oral histories among Gujjar and Bakarwal elders frequently reference specific ridges and meadows within the Pir Panjal belt.

Their traditional dwellings, dietary habits, livestock practices, and clan networks are geographically anchored. Even dispute resolution mechanisms historically followed migratory clusters shaped by mountain routes. To speak of Pir Panjal without acknowledging the Gujjars and Bakarwals is to describe a body without its heartbeat.

Landscape as Identity

In mountainous regions, identity forms differently than in plains. Isolation fosters close-knit communities. Shared hardship creates social cohesion. Snow-bound winters and limited connectivity cultivate resilience. For residents of Poonch and Rajouri, the Pir Panjal is not an abstract cartographic label. It is visible from their doorsteps. It shapes their seasons and economies. Apple orchards, maize fields, walnut groves, and forest produce all reflect mountain ecology. Cultural exchanges across passes have historically connected Jammu’s foothills with Kashmir’s valleys. Markets, marriages, and migration patterns followed mountain logic long before district boundaries were drawn. Thus, “Pir Panjal region” emerged naturally in conversation—not as a separatist identity, but as a geographical descriptor grounded in shared terrain.

Administrative Realities and Development Patterns

Even in contemporary governance, the mountain belt presents distinct developmental challenges. Snowfall affects road connectivity. Landslides complicate infrastructure. Border proximity adds strategic sensitivity. Planning bodies often group Poonch and Rajouri together for logistical and environmental reasons. Weather forecasting agencies recognise the Pir Panjal range as a climatic divider. Disaster response frameworks treat mountain districts differently from plains. This recognition has been practical, not ideological.

Why Words Matter

When a public representative questions the existence of Pir Panjal, the response from the region is not simply defensive. It is rooted in memory. For border districts that have witnessed conflict and economic marginalisation, regional identity provides psychological anchoring. It affirms belonging within the larger framework of Jammu & Kashmir and India. To acknowledge Pir Panjal is not to fragment the Union Territory. It is to respect diversity within unity.

Mountains Outlast Moments

The Pir Panjal range stands indifferent to political controversy. Its ridges have seen empires rise and fall. Its passes have witnessed saints, soldiers, traders, and shepherds. The Gujjar herder leading his flock through alpine meadows today walks paths carved by ancestors generations ago. The Bakarwal child learning migration routes learns geography not from textbooks, but from footsteps.

Geography cannot be legislated away. History cannot be edited by assertion. The Pir Panjal exists—in stone, in snow, in memory, and in movement. And that reality does not depend on debate.

The columnist is a Published Writer in daily leading newspapers of J&K, an Author and an Independent Researcher. He can be contacted at shahidhakla360@gmail.com

 

 

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