A single mistranslated word has shaped two centuries of policy, conquest, and suffering. Not a battlefield error, not a diplomatic miscalculation - a word. Scholars wrote it down, officials read it, governments acted on it, and people died. That word is Badal. For over two hundred years, Badal, a foundational concept in Pashtunwali, the living code of one of the world's largest ethnic groups, has been mistranslated into English as "revenge." And the consequences of that wrongness have been catastrophic. This book is about how ideas become weapons. It traces the lifecycle of a colonial misreading: how it was born in the courts of Mughal Emperor Jehangir, where a Persian diplomat cast the Pashtuns as offspring of the Jinn; how British administrators in the North-West Frontier inherited and institutionalised that characterisation; and how generations of scholars, citing one another in a self-reinforcing loop, transformed a political convenience into received academic truth. The result was a portrait of the Pashtun as a blood-thirsty, revenge-driven savage, a portrait that justified laws, borders, military campaigns, and occupation. Badal: Not Revenge is a work of decolonisation. It examines the colonial scholarship, legislation, and institutions built specifically for the Pashtun territories of British India and dismantles the intellectual scaffolding that held them up. It challenges the long-dominant claim that Pashtunwali's social order rests on the twin pillars of Honour and Revenge, and offers instead a rigorously argued account of what holds that social architecture together. The Pashtuns number approximately 60 million people, spread across Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and diaspora communities throughout Europe, North America, and Australia. They are the single largest ethnic group in the world. For most of modern history, the terms on which the world has understood them - and the terms on which states have governed, attacked, and occupied them - have been set by those who misread them. This book begins the work of correction. Badal does not mean revenge. What it does mean changes everything.
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