- Asia used the term
kafir for Hindus, Buddhists,
Sikhs and Jains.
Raziuddin Aquil states that "non-Muslims were
often condemned as
kafirs, in
medieval Indian...
- the
Kafirs used to be
collectively known as Sped-Posh
Kafirs. The term Siah-posh
Kafirs used to
designate the
dominant group of
Hindu Kush
Kafirs inhabiting...
- men in the region. Klimburg, Max (2004). "The Arts of
Societies of the
Kafirs of the
Hindu Kush".
Journal of the
Royal Society for
Asian Affairs. 35 (3)...
-
Kafir Kot or
Kafirkot (Urdu: کافرکوٹ; Pashto: کافر کوټ) is an
ancient Hindu temple complex in the Dera
Ismail Khan
district of the
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa...
- Look up kaffir, Kaffir, or
kafir in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Kaffir or
Kafir may
refer to:
Kafir, a term for a non-Muslim
Kaffir (racial term)...
-
found the
Kafirs,
mustered an army, and took over villages, all the
while dreaming of
building a
unified nation or even an empire. The
Kafirs were impressed...
-
through Laghman. The
Kafirs were
resettled in
Laghman while the
region was
settled by
veteran soldiers and
other Afghans. The
Kafirs were
converted and...
- The
Kafirs of the
Hindu Kush
published in 1896. The book
dispelled many po****r
fictions about the
Kafirs,
their customs and
their lineage. The
Kafirs of...
-
Kefir (/kəˈfɪər/ kə-FEER;
alternative spellings:
kephir or kefier; Russian: кефир; Karachay-Balkar: гыпы) is a
fermented milk
drink similar to a thin yogurt...
- Katir/Kator/Kata and Kam/Kom with
ancient Kambojas and
identified the
Kafirs,
especially the Siah-Posh
Kafirs, as
having descended from ancient. The Kata
Tribe also...