Medicinal Plant Use and Health Sovereignty: Findings from the Tajik and Afghan Pamirs

Abstract

Medicinal plants are indicators of indigenous knowledge in the context of political volatility and sociocultural and ecological change in the Pamir Mountains of Afghanistan and Tajikistan. Medicinal plants are the primary health care option in this region of Central Asia. The main objective of this paper is to demonstrate that medicinal plants contribute to health security and sovereignty in a time of instability. We illustrate the nutritional as well as medicinal significance of plants in the daily lives of villagers. Based on over a decade and half of research related to resilience and livelihood security, we present plant uses in the context of mountain communities. Villagers identified over 58 cultivated and noncultivated plants and described 310 distinct uses within 63 categories of treatment and prevention. Presence of knowledge about medicinal plants is directly connected to their use.

Keywords: Afghanistan, Indigenous knowledge, Food security, Food sovereignty, Health security, Health sovereignty, Medicinal plants, Pamir Mountains, Tajikistan

Introduction

Indigenous peoples have the right to their traditional medicines and to maintain their health practices, including the conservation of their vital medicinal plants, animals and minerals. Indigenous individuals also have the right to access, without any discrimination, to all social and health services (United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 2008, Article 24, Section 1).

The notions of health security and health sovereignty are analogous to the discussion of food security and food sovereignty. Unlike food security, which suggests access to food to meet minimum nutritional needs, food sovereignty encompasses the right and ability of individuals and groups to choose their own food based on the socio-cultural and ecological systems they inhabit (Mousseau 2005; Kassam 2010; Nabhan 2009; Windfuhr and Jonsén 2005). The idea of health sovereignty includes the ability to choose medicines that are socio-culturally and ecologically appropriate thereby providing practical, reliable, and contextually-relevant health care options (Kickbush 2000; Smith 2006). Denial of self-determination over food and medicine is a repudiation of fundamental rights of autonomy as guaranteed by Article 24 Section 1 of the UN Deceleration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (quoted above).

The significance of medicinal plant use to food and health sovereignty is amplified under conditions of socio-cultural and ecological change in the Pamir Mountains of Afghanistan and Tajikistan. The peoples of this region, whose history is associated with the Silk Road, have been at the vanguard of violations on their sovereignty in the form of imperial machinations of the British Empire and Russia, and subsequent cold war alliances between the West and the Eastern Bloc countries. More recently, civil unrest during the 1990s in Tajikistan and a 30-year global war localized to Afghanistan has contributed to regional instability. Under these conditions, food and health systems are compromised and the threat of famine is ever-present. Given the collapse of the command economy in Tajikistan and continued political and social instability resulting from war in Afghanistan, locally available foods and medicines are important options for food and health sovereignty.

Indigenous knowledge of medicinal plant use is context-specific as it is related to, and contained within, a group of people who live in a defined geographic region—in this case the Pamir Mountains of Central Asia. Knowledge for this context is derived from the web of interactions between humans, plants, animals, natural forces, and land forms. Therefore, social, ethical, and spiritual relationships also have an ecological foundation. Context-specific knowledge about soil variation, temperature, water, characteristics of local plants, and seasonal conditions accumulated over generations enables medicinal plant users in the Afghan and Tajik Pamirs to sustain dynamic relationships within their habitat (Kassam 2009a). Research consistently indicates that agrobiodiversity based on indigenous farmer knowledge contributes to food sovereignty (Rerkasem et al2002). Similarly, medicinal plant knowledge contributes to health sovereignty, in which local peoples have meaningful options in their social and ecological systems.

Indigenous knowledge of medicinal plant use in the Pamir Mountains may be threatened by continued socio-political instability, climatic change, and the impacts of the globalized market system (Voeks and Leony 2004). For instance, under the Soviet command-economy, communities in Tajikistan were forced into industrial agriculture, resulting in the losses of valuable ecological knowledge and a diversity of seeds which had been adapted for local cultivation. Similarly, the intervention of institutional medical systems connected to the profit-driven international pharmaceutical industry might compromise long term retention of medicinal plant use. We do not suggest that there is no role for ‘western’ medicine and hospitals in these regions, but such facilities are hard to sustain with limited resources and may not be easily accessible in terms of both cost and distance for the majority of the rural inhabitants of this region (AKF-T 2004; Bartlett et al2005).

Our objective is to demonstrate indigenous human ecological knowledge related to medicinal plants. After describing the research approach, we examine indigenous knowledge of plant diversity, plant use categories with respect to health sovereignty, the notion that food is medicine, seasonal availability and storage of plants, and conclude with suggestions for further research on medicinal plants in the Pamir Mountains of Afghanistan and Tajikistan.

via Medicinal Plant Use and Health Sovereignty: Findings from the Tajik and Afghan Pamirs.

Pamir

PASSES

Every ridge and region of Pamir has its passes’ set  of any complication category.

In this case, passes from 2B and higher  prevail, the number of passes with  1A  and 1B complication is not great. The height of passes in the whole is in the limits from 4000 to 6000 meters. The height of general mass of  passes  is about 5000 meters, the number of passes exceeding this height is also considerable.

Thus treks and expeditions on Pamir are  connected with a long continuous staying  on  the altitudes of over 4000 meters, it happens that  the  time of a continuous staying on  the altitudes over 5000 meters sometimes reaches its highest value (about half of a month).

As  a rule, passes and mountains of Pamir require long up and down approach  with getting through water obstacles, glaciers, snow- capped ice slopes  and rocky areas. Passes and interesting to climb are mainly located in remote, difficult-to-access regions (the Lenin’s Peak from the North is an rare exception). The approach to many of them is possible only from reserved areas where you can run only through complicated passes or by using helicopter.  For more complicated passes the passage of the  main passing  obstacle with neighboring up approaches takes 4-5 days. Passes 1A and 1B being inside the region often takes one-two days walk. During passes’ walking often happen overnight stayings on the stone moraines, on the snow, on the ice, on  the slopes  and saddle of passes, sometimes  arises necessity to  build  neve blocks walls and in digging of snowy caves. Getting over passes  requires  the usage of complete set of climbing gear, technical means and tactical methods which are practiced in mountaineering.

    TREKKING AND MOUNTAINEERING IN PAMIR AREA

Pamir is characterized by 4-6 categories of complication for the trekking and pass-hopping routes. The elaboration of rules for logical treks of less complication  with running through the everlasting snow zone is  difficult. Objectively,  this fact is caused by rather small number of low difficulty passes, and also its scanty comfortable combination passes of other complication. So, Pamir is more suitable area to mountaineering. Natural-climatic conditions of Pamir and characteristics of passes requiring  high physical, technical, tactical training of trekkers make from tour safety point of view the organization of the treks of 3 and less complication category is too problematic. Climbing routes are mostly ice, snow and neve, less rocky, that’s can be considered as common for high mountain areas.

Administratively Pamir lies mainly on the territory of Tajikistan. Only the northern outskirts of Zaalaisky ridge descending to the Alaiskaya valley  belong to Kirgiziya.

The main means of communication  on Pamir is automobile and aviation transport. The basis of automobile  connection here is the Cross-Pamir  road which begins from the town Osh in the  Ferganskaya  valley. This road crosses Alaiskaya valley from the North to the South, stretches to the South on  the Pamir plateau along the river Piandge to the North  and then to the West towards the city Dushanbe (the capital of Tajikistan, which is connected by air to the Moscow, Novosibirsk and some of the Central Asia states). From this main road, roads of the local importance  are constructed to the South and to the East along Piandge, there  are small parts by the valleys of rivers Shahdara, Bartang, Yazgulem, Vanch, Obi-Hingou. Near  the lake Kharakul truck road goes to the valleys of rivers Khokhuibel and Tanimas. The city of Dushanbe is connected  with such small towns as Murgab and Horog, with district centers Rushan, Vanch by local airlines. There is also an airline to the towns  Tavil-Dara and Jirgatal situating on the western borders of Pamir. The  start and the finish points of treks belong to this transport network.

  GEOGRAPHY

        Pamir is the highest alpine chain in  the South of the ex-SU, these days the territory of the Kirghizia (Kirgiztan) and Tajikistan. It occupies the area of approximately 60 000 square kilometers and presents the extensive network of eversnow- covered ridges and vast intermountain valleys which form Pamir plateau.

      EXPLORATION HISTORY

       Mountaineering Pamir exploration began together with the first research expeditions of Soviet Academy of Sciences on Pamir in the 1928 – 1933ths. Tourist expeditions on Pamir  were firstly made in 50ths and for the time being Pamir is the most popular outdoor mountainous region among those of CIS. In mountaineering practical experience Pamir’s boundaries are accepted on the basis of ridges’ orography  and their trek’s resources. From the East Pamir is limited by Sarykolsky ridge on the axis of which there are borders of ex-USSR and China. The southern border passes along the river Piandge separating Tajikistan and Kirgizia  from Afghanistan and the northern one is limited by the river Kyzyl -Soo (Kyzylsoo), consecutively adopting the name Sourhob and then Vakhsh. In the West Pamir finishes with the ridges  outskirts  – of Peter The Great and Darvazsky. 
        The highest ridges and massive glaciers are clustered in the western part of Pamir. Most  ridges’ peaks are more than 6000 meters high and sometimes  rise over 7000 meters high. There are 3 of 4 peaks above 7000 meters high on Pamir including  the highest mountain of ex-USSR – Communism Peak in Akademii Nauk range (recently this peak is re-named to “Ismoili Somoni peak”), and Lenin peak (7134 m) – popular peak for those who’re trying their 1st attempt of high-altitude climbing. The highest top of the whole Pamir area however situated in the Chinese part of the East Pamir – it is Muztag Ata peak (7546 m).
       The plateau of 4000 meters high and more occupies the eastern part of Pamir and stretches from its north to the south, being only once separated by Muzcol ridge.


via Pamir (http://www.adventuretravel.ru/eng/Pamir/index.html).

Ethnologue report for Tajikistan

Languages of Tajikistan

See language map.

[See also SIL publications on the languages of Tajikistan.]

Tajikistan. 7,011,556. National or official language: Tajiki. Literacy rate: 99%. Immigrant languages: Aimaq, Armenian (6,000), Bashkort (5,410), Belarusan, Dungan, Georgian (810), Hazaragi, Kazakh (9,610), Korean (13,000), Lak (860), Lithuanian (470), Osetin (8,000), Romanian (580), Russian (237,000), Standard German, Tatar (80,000), Turkish, Turkmen (14,000), Ukrainian (41,000), Uyghur (3,580), Western Balochi (4,840). Information mainly from S. Akiner 1983; B. Comrie 1987; A. Kibrik 1991; T. Sebeok 1963. The number of individual languages listed for Tajikistan is 12. Of those, all are living languages.

Arabic, Tajiki Spoken

[abh] 1,000 in Tajikistan. Population total all countries: 6,000. Khatlon Province, Vakhsh Valley villages; Kuliab and Leninabad cities. Mainly small villages. Also in Afghanistan, Uzbekistan. Alternate names: Arabic, Bukhara Arabic, Buxara Arabic, Central Asian, Jugari, Tajiji Arabic.  Classification: Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Central, South, Arabic

Farsi, Western

[pes] 50,000 in Tajikistan (Johnstone and Mandryk 2001).  Alternate names: Persian.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Western, Southwestern, Persian

Kyrgyz

[kir] 64,000 in Tajikistan.  Classification: Altaic, Turkic, Western, Aralo-Caspian

Parya

[paq] 3,000 in Tajikistan (2008). Population total all countries: 4,250. Hissar Valley. Also in Afghanistan, Uzbekistan. Alternate names: Afghana-Yi Nasfurush, Afghana-Yi Siyarui, Laghmani, Pbharya.  Dialects: May be Marwari [rwr] dialect, related to Panjabi[pan], or Laghman dialect of Southeast Pashayi [psi] of Afghanistan. Subgroups: Kalu, Jitain, Juni, Maggar, Bisiyan, Mussali, Shuiya.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Central zone, Unclassified

Pashto, Southern

[pbt] 4,000 in Tajikistan (1970).  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern, Southeastern, Pashto

Sanglechi-Ishkashimi

[sgl] 500 in Tajikistan. Ethnic population: 1,000 in Tajikistan (1990 A. Kibrik).  Dialects: Ishkashimi (Ishkashim, Eshkashmi), Zebak (Zebaki), Sanglich.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern, Southeastern, Pamir

Shughni

[sgh] 40,000 in Tajikistan (1975 SIL). 20,000 Shugan, 1,500 to 2,000 Oroshor, 15,000 Rushan. Population total all countries: 60,000. Ethnic population: 73,000 (1990 A. Kibrik) including 50,000 Shugni, 2,000 Oroshor, 18,000 Rushan, 800 Khufi, 3,000 Bartang. Gorno-Bagakhshan, Pamir Mountains. Also in Afghanistan. Alternate names: Shugnan-Rushan.  Dialects: Rushani (Rushan, Roshani, Oroshani), Bartangi (Bartang), Oroshor (Roshorvi), Khufi (Khuf, Chuf), Shughni (Shugan, Shugnan, Shighni, Khugni). Khufi and Bartangi dialects may be separate languages. Oroshani may be separate from Rushani. Not intelligible with Sarikoli [srh] (called ‘Tajiki’ in China).  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern, Southeastern, Pamir, Shugni-Yazgulami

Tajiki

[tgk] 3,340,000 in Tajikistan (1991). Population total all countries: 4,457,500. Also in Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russian Federation (Asia), Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan. Alternate names: Galcha, Tadzhik, Tajiki Persian.  Dialects: 4 groups of small dialects; no distinct boundaries. Dialect blending into Dari Persian [prs] in Afghanistan.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Western, Southwestern, Persian

Uzbek, Northern

[uzn] 873,000 in Tajikistan.  Classification: Altaic, Turkic, Eastern

Wakhi

[wbl] 7,000 in Tajikistan (1993 UBS). Ethnic population: 20,000 in Tajikistan (1990 A. Kibrik). Gorno-Badakhshan, Pamir Mountains. Alternate names: Guhjali, Khik, Vakhan, Wakhani, Wakhigi.  Dialects: Western Wakhi, Central Wakhi, Eastern Wakhi.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern, Southeastern, Pamir

Yagnobi

[yai] 12,000. Zafarabad; north of Dushanbe; Yagnob River, (the homeland) high mountain valley. Alternate names: Yaghnabi, Yaghnobi, Yaghnubi, Yagnabi, Yagnob, Yagnubi.  Dialects: Western Yagnobi, Eastern Yagnobi.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern, Northeastern

Yazgulyam

[yah] 4,000 (1994 UBS). Ethnic population: 5,710. Along Yazgulyam River, Gorno-Badakhshan Ao. Alternate names: Iazgulem, Yazgulam, Yazgulyami.  Dialects: Upper Yazgulyam, Lower Yazgulyam. Little dialect difference.  Classification: Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern, Southeastern, Pamir, Shugni-Yazgulami

Lewis, M. Paul (ed.), 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Sixteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International. Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com/.

via Ethnologue report for Tajikistan.

Pamiri women and the melting glaciers of Tajikistan – YouTube

The glaciers of the Pamir mountains, which provide over 50% of Central Asia’s water resources, are rapidly melting at a rate similar to Greenland’s continental glacier. Three generations of of Pamiri women share the impacts of the melt and decreasing water levels.

via Pamiri women and the melting glaciers of Tajikistan – YouTube.

Energy for the Pamir mountains – Tajikistan – YouTube

Inhabitants of the Eastern Pamir Mountains are pressured to overuse a highland shrub for firewood as imported fuel becomes too costly.

via Energy for the Pamir mountains – Tajikistan – YouTube.

BBC News – Afghanistan avalanche kills 42 in Badakhshan

At least 42 people have been killed and many more are missing in an avalanche in Afghanistan’s north-eastern Badakhshan province.

The provincial governor’s office said that one village near the Tajikistan border had been completely swept away.

The number of people killed in the village in Shekay district is expected to rise, a spokesman for the governor told the BBC.

Badakhshan is one of the country’s poorest and most remote regions.

Parts of it are shut off by heavy snow for at least six months every year.

The BBC’s Bilal Sarwary in Kabul says Afghanistan is suffering one of its harshest winters in many years.

Nasir Hemat, director of the Red Crescent in Badakhshan, said rescue teams had reached the remote site.

“There were 190 people living in the village – 39 people have been killed, six injured,” he told the BBC.

Correspondents say the rescue effort has been hampered because all roads to and from the village are closed. Many more people in the village are missing or presumed dead.

Mr Hemat said three people had also died in a nearby district.

Officials told the BBC that provincial governor Shah Wali Ullah had been visiting at the time the avalanche hit on Monday night.

He was rescued by helicopter and taken to a remote area on the border with Tajikistan, he said.

About 60 people have been killed by snow in Badakhshan this year and homes and thousands of cattle have been lost.

via BBC News – Afghanistan avalanche kills 42 in Badakhshan.

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Geology of the Pamir Mountains

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Geologically the Pamir Mountains constitute the bend of the Himalaya-Hindukush moun- tain massif, and were formed by the north- ward drift of the Indian craton and its final collision with Eurasia. Although there are no volcanic phenomena, strong convergence rates produce intensive seismic activity along the large fault systems in this region. Over 500 earthquakes with a magnitude greater than 5 on the Richter Scale have been regis- tered since the beginning of the 20th centu- ry. The ongoing processes of orogeny and denudation are the driving force of modern relief processes in the Pamirs.

Continue reading Geology of the Pamir Mountains

Welcome to Tajikistan

Welcome to Tajikistan-video about Tajikistan;

Pomir, Tajikistan;

Located in Central Asia, the Pamir Mountains are formed by the junction or “knot” of the Tian Shan, Karakoram, Kunlun, and Hindu Kush ranges. They are among the world?s highest mountains. The Pamir region is centered in the Tajikistani region of Gorno-Badakhshan (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia).

Tajikistan – Badakshan Roadblock;

Tajik roads in the Pamir;

Tajikistan, Pamir Highway: over de Ak-Baital pass;

chinese truck is crossing a bit difficult passage;

This is the celebration of Aga Khan’s birthday by Ismali’s in the Pamirs, Tajikistan. Langar village, it is on the Tajik-Afghan border.
For Tajikistan photos and stories go:
http://wokling.com/