Buddhist and Shia Identity in Ladakh

Authors

  • Patrick Kaplanian Independent researcher

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/himalaya.2025.10173

Keywords:

Ladakh, Buddhism, Islam, Purig, Baltistan, Shiism

Abstract

There are many ways to define Ladakh: geographically (as an area between the Himalayas and the Karakoram), historically (as a kingdom from the 10th century until the Dogra conquest in 1834), or linguistically (as a region sharing a common language—a Tibetan dialect). However, most of these definitions have been put forward by foreigners or officials. Do the inhabitants of these areas feel that they belong to the same community? The author's answer is “no.” He concludes that Shi’as in Kargil and Buddhists in Leh consider themselves to constitute separate communities. The survey draws on sociology, ethnology, and some history, extending back to 1931.

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Author Biography

  • Patrick Kaplanian, Independent researcher

    Patrick Kaplanian is an independent researcher who has been working on Ladakh ethnology since 1975. He published a monograph about Ladakhis (1981) and organized the second symposium on Ladakh in 1985, the proceedings of which he published twice. He has written about 30 articles. Most of them are on hal. He has also done some research on Greek mythology. The subject of his thesis is: « Analysis of the myth of Prometheus and Pandora, from Hesiod to the Caucasus ».

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Published

12-Jun-2025

Issue

Section

Research Articles