Rawalpindi

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Rawalpindi,Template:Efn colloquially known as Pindi,Template:Efn is the third-largest city in the Pakistani province of Punjab, serving as the principal commercial and industrial hub of northern Punjab. It is the fourth-most populous city in Pakistan and ranks as the world's third-largest Punjabi-speaking metropolis (after Lahore and Faisalabad). Located along the Soan River in north-western Punjab, Rawalpindi lies adjacent to Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, and the two are jointly known as the "twin cities".Template:Efn

Located on the Pothohar Plateau of northern Punjab — a region known for its ancient heritage, for instance the city of Taxila, a UNESCO World Heritage Site — Rawalpindi was founded in 1493 and remained a small town of little importance, with local Punjabi Muslim tribes indirectly ruling it for larger empires, up until 1765 when it was captured by the Bhangi Misl. During the Sikh era, Rawalpindi transitioned from a small regional town into one of the major Punjabi cities, becoming a hub of trade and military. The city also became a cosmopolitan hub, housing various ethnic minorities as immigrants and refugees alongside the native Punjabi majority.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Following Punjab's annexation by the East India Company in 1849, Rawalpindi — located close to Murree, the newly-established summer capital of Punjab — became the largest garrison town of the Northern Command of the British Indian Army with the establishment of the Rawalpindi Cantonment. The city was established as the headquarters of the Rawalpindi Division of British Punjab, and granted municipal status in 1867, elevating its status to one of the largest metropolitan centres in colonial Punjab. Rawalpindi experienced one of Punjab's worst communal riots prior to Partition, with most of the city's non-Muslim population fleeing following the partition of Punjab on 17 August 1947; and them being replaced by Muslim migrants fleeing East Punjab. With Pakistan's independence, the city became home to the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Pakistan Army.Template:Efn

Since Pakistan's independence, Rawalpindi has been at the center of many historic events, including an unsuccessful communist plot to overthrow the federal government in 1951; assassinations of two prime ministers, namely Liaquat Ali Khan in 1953 and Benazir Bhutto in 2007; the 1979 execution of former prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, overthrown in 1977; and the Ojhri Camp disaster in 1989 when an ammunition depot in Rawalpindi Cantonment, housing ammunitions for the Afghan mujahideen during the Soviet–Afghan War, exploded. The city has served as the focal point for all three successful military coups in Pakistan's history. It has also served as the de-facto federal capital of Pakistan, under Ayub Khan, from 1959 until Islamabad's establishment in 1967.<ref name="Mazumder 2003" /><ref name="Burki 2015" />

The construction of Islamabad, the country's new purpose-built national capital city, in the 1960s led to greater investment in adjacent Rawalpindi, provided by the International Monetary Fund and local banks. Modern Rawalpindi is socially and economically intertwined with Islamabad, and the greater metropolitan area. The city is also home to numerous suburban housing developments that serve as bedroom-communities for the twin cities. As home to the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Pakistan Army, the Joint Staff Headquarters (JS HQ) of the Pakistan Armed Forces, and Nur Khan Airbase of the Pakistan Air Force, and with connections to the M-1 and M-2 motorways, Rawalpindi serves as a major logistics and transportation centre for northern Pakistan. The city is home to historic havelis and temples, and serves as a hub for tourists visiting Rohtas Fort, Azad Kashmir, Taxila and Gilgit-Baltistan.Template:Efn

Etymology

Previously known as Fatehpur Baori, the city fell into decay during the Mongol invasions of the fourteenth century. Afterwards, the ruined city came in hand of the Gakhars and a chief named Jhanda Khan restored it naming it Rawalpindi in 1493, literally meaning the "Village of Rawal" in Punjabi.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Some accounts propose that a group of ascetics named Rawals arrived in this area and established the town.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

History

Origins

The region around Rawalpindi has been inhabited for thousands of years. Rawalpindi falls within the ancient boundaries of Gandhara, and is thus in a region containing many Buddhist ruins. In the region north-west of Rawalpindi, traces have been found of at least 55 stupas, 28 Buddhist monasteries, 9 temples, and various artifacts in the Kharoshthi script.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Silverplate with investiture scene. Sasanian 4th century CE, possibly Afghanistan. Middle East, 52 Ancient Iran - 28174064678.jpg
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File:Fasting Buddha BM OA1907.12-28.1.jpg
The "Fasting Buddha", on display at the British Museum in London, was discovered in Rawalpindi.

To the southeast are the ruins of the Mankiala stupa – a second-century stupa where, according to the Jataka tales, a previous incarnation of the Buddha leapt off a cliff in order to offer his corpse to seven hungry tiger cubs.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The nearby town of Taxila is thought to have been home to one of the early universities or education centres of South Asia.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Medieval

The first mention of Rawalpindi's earliest settlement dates from when Mahmud of Ghazni destroyed Rawalpindi and the town was restored by Gakhar chief Kai Gohar in the early 11th century. The town fell into decay again after Mongol invasions in the 14th century.<ref name="IGI 2013">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Situated along an invasion route, the settlement did not prosper and remained deserted until 1493, when Jhanda Khan Gakhar re-established the ruined town, and named it Rawal.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Mughal

File:Rawat Fort - Main Gate East.jpg
The 16th century Rawat Fort offered military protection to Rawalpindi.

During the Mughal era, Rawalpindi remained under the rule of the Ghakhar clan, who in turn pledged allegiance to the Mughal Empire. The city was developed as an important outpost in order to guard the frontiers of the Mughal realm.<ref name="Agrawal 1983" /> Gakhars fortified a nearby caravanserai, in the 16th century, transforming it into the Rawat Fort in order to defend the Pothohar plateau from Sher Shah Suri's forces.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Construction of the Attock Fort in 1581 after Akbar led a campaign against his brother Mirza Muhammad Hakim, further securing Rawalpindi's environs.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> In December 1585, the Emperor Akbar arrived in Rawalpindi, and remained in and around Rawalpindi for 13 years as he extended the frontiers of the empire,<ref name="Agrawal 1983">Template:Cite book</ref> in an era described as a "glorious period" in his career as Emperor.<ref name="Agrawal 1983" />

With the onset of chaos and rivalry between Gakhar chiefs after the death of Kamal Khan in 1559, Rawalpindi was awarded to Said Khan by the Mughal Emperor.<ref name="Griffin 1890" /> Emperor Jehangir visited the royal camp in Rawalpindi in 1622, where he first learned of Shah Abbas I of Persia's plan to invade Kandahar.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Sikh Misl

Rawalpindi declined in importance as Mughal power declined, until the town was captured in the mid-1760s from Muqarrab Khan Gakhar by the Sikhs under Sardar Gujjar Singh and his son Sahib Singh.<ref name="Griffin 1890" /> The city's administration was handed to Sardar Milkha Singh, who then invited traders from the neighbouring commercial centers of Jhelum and Shahpur to settle in the territory in 1766.<ref name="IGI 2013" /><ref name="Griffin 1890">Template:Cite book</ref> The city then began to prosper, although the population in 1770 is estimated to have been only about 300 families.<ref name="Rogers 2022">Template:Cite news</ref> Rawalpindi became for a time the refuge of Shah Shuja, the exiled king of Afghanistan, and of his brother Shah Zaman in the early 19th century.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895">Template:Cite book</ref>

Sikh Empire

Sikh ruler Maharaja Ranjit Singh allowed the son of Sardar Milkha Singh to continue as Governor of Rawalpindi, after Ranjit Singh seized the district in 1810.<ref name="Griffin 1890" /> Sikh rule over Rawalpindi was consolidated by defeat of the Afghans at Haidaran in July 1813.<ref name="Griffin 1890" /> The Sikh rulers allied themselves with some of the local Gakhar tribes, and jointly defeated Syed Ahmad Barelvi at Akora Khattak in 1827, and again in 1831 in Balakot.<ref name="Griffin 1890" /> Jews first arrived in Rawalpindi's Babu Mohallah neighbourhood from Mashhad, Persia in 1839,<ref name="Jewish History 2016">Template:Cite news</ref> in order to flee from anti-Jewish laws instituted by the Qajar dynasty. In 1841, Diwan Kishan Kaur was appointed Sardar of Rawalpindi.<ref name="Griffin 1890" />

On 14 March 1849, Sardar Chattar Singh and Raja Sher Singh of the Sikh Empire surrendered to General Gilbert near Rawalpindi, ceding the city to the British.<ref name="Grewal 1998">Template:Cite book</ref> The Sikh Empire then came to an end on 29 March 1849.

British

File:FJWU main building.JPG
Rawalpindi's Fatima Jinnah Women University is housed in a Victorian mansion.

Following Rawalpindi's capture by the British East India Company, 53rd Regiment of the company army took quarters in the newly captured city.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> The decision to man a permanent military cantonment in the city was made in 1851 by the Marquess of Dalhousie.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" />

The city saw its first telegraph office in the early 1850s.<ref name="Orient Blackswan 2003" /> The city's Garrison Church was built shortly after in 1854,<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> and is the site where Robert Milman, Bishop of Calcutta, was buried following his death in Rawalpindi in 1876.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> The city was home to 15,913 people in the 1855 census.<ref name="Rogers 2022" /> During the 1857 War Of Independence, the area's Gakhars and Janjua tribes remained loyal to the British.<ref name="Orient Blackswan 2003" /> Numerous civil and military buildings were built during the British era, and the Municipality of Rawalpindi was constituted in 1867,<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> while the city's population as per the 1868 census was 19,228, with another 9,358 people residing in the city's cantonment.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" />

The city was also connected to railways that offered connection to India and the northwest frontier in Peshawar in the 1880s.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> The Commissariat Steam Flour Mills were the first such mills in Punjab, and supplied most of the needs of British cantonments throughout Punjab.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> Rawalpindi's cantonment served as a feeder to other cantonments throughout the region.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" />

Rawalpindi flourished as a commercial centre, though the city remained largely devoid of an industrial base during the British era.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> A large portion of Kashmir's external trade passing through the city; in 1885, 14% of Kashmir's exports, and 27% of its imports passed through the city.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> A large market was opened in central Rawalpindi in 1883 by Sardar Sujan Singh, while the British further developed a shopping district for the city's elite known as Saddar with an archway built to commemorate Brigadier General Massey.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" />

File:Queen Victoria's Statue, Rawalpindi, 1939.jpg
Statue of Queen Victoria, Rawalpindi, 1939

Rawalpindi's cantonment became a major centre of military power of the Raj after an arsenal was established in 1883.<ref name="IGI 2013" /> Britain's army elevated the city from a small town, to the third largest city in Punjab by 1921.<ref name="Orient Blackswan 2003" /> In 1868, 9,358 people lived in the city's cantonment – by 1891, the number rose to 37,870.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> In 1891, the city's population excluding the Cantonment was 34,153.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" /> The city was considered to be a favourite first posting for newly arrived soldiers from England, owing to the city's agreeable climate, and the nearby hill station of Murree.<ref name="Gazetteer 1895" />

In 1901, Rawalpindi was made the winter headquarters of the Northern Command and of the Rawalpindi military division. Riots broke out against British rule in 1905, following a famine in Punjab that peasants were led to believe was a deliberate act.<ref name="Nijjar 1996" />

During World War I, Rawalpindi District "stood first" among districts in recruiting for the British war effort, with greater financial assistance from the British government channeled into the area in return.<ref name="Orient Blackswan 2003">Template:Cite book</ref>

By 1921, Rawalpindi's cantonment had overshadowed the city – Rawalpindi was one of seven cities of Punjab in which over half the population lived in the cantonment district.<ref name="Orient Blackswan 2003" /> Communal riots erupted between Rawalpindi's Sikh and Muslim communities in 1926 after Sikhs refused to silence music from a procession that was passing in front of a mosque.<ref name="Nijjar 1996">Template:Cite book</ref>

Template:HMS was launched as an ocean liner in 1925 by Harland and Wolff, the same company which built Template:RMS. The ship was converted into an armed vessel, and was sunk in October 1939. Scientists from Porton Down carried out poison gas tests on British Indian Army soldiers during the Rawalpindi experiments over the course of more than a decade beginning in the 1930s.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Partition

File:Inside raja bazaar Rawalpindi 1.jpg
Andaroon Raja Bazaar streets

On 5 March 1947, members of Rawalpindi's Hindu and Sikh communities took a procession against the formation of a Muslim League ministry within the Government of Punjab. Policemen fired upon protestors, while Hindus and Sikhs fought against weaker Muslim counter-protestors.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The area's first Partition riots erupted the next day on 6 March 1947, when the city's Muslims, angered by the actions of Hindus and Sikhs and encouraged by the Pir of Golra Sharif, raided nearby villages after they were unable to do so in the city on account of Rawalpindi's heavily armed Sikhs.<ref name="Noorani 2014">Template:Cite news</ref> Thousands of Sikhs and Hindus were killed in villages surrounding Rawalpindi, in large scale and widespread violence that came to be known as the Rawalpindi massacres.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

At the dawn of Pakistan's independence in 1947 following the success of the Pakistan Movement, Rawalpindi was 43.79% Muslim, while Rawalpindi District as a whole was 80% Muslim.<ref name="Ispahani 2017" /> The region, on account of its large Muslim majority, was thus awarded to Pakistan. Rawalpindi's Hindu and Sikh population, who had made up 33.72% and 17.32% of the city,<ref name="Ispahani 2017">Template:Cite book</ref> migrated en masse to the newly independent Dominion of India after anti-Hindu and anti-Sikh pogroms in western Punjab, while Muslim refugees from India settled in the city following anti-Muslim pogroms in eastern Punjab and northern India.<ref name="Noorani 2014" />

Modern

File:Murree Road Rawalpindi.jpg
Murree Road is one of the main arteries in Rawalpindi.
File:Bahria Town Rawalpindi 3.jpg
Bahria Town is an affordable locality in Rawalpindi
File:6th road Rawalpindi.jpg
Rehman Abad Clock Tower Rawalpindi

In the years following independence, Rawalpindi saw an influx of Muhajir, Pashtun and Kashmiri settlers. Having been the largest British Cantonment in the region at the dawn of Pakistan's independence, Rawalpindi was chosen as headquarters for the Pakistani Army, despite the fact that Karachi had been selected as the first capital.<ref name="Burki 2015">Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1951, the Rawalpindi conspiracy took place in which leftist army officers conspired to depose the first elected Prime Minister of Pakistan, Liaquat Ali Khan.<ref name="Burki 2015" /> Rawalpindi later became the site of the Liaquat Ali Khan's assassination, in what is now known as Liaquat Bagh Park. In 1958, Field Marshal Ayub Khan launched his coup d'etat from Rawalpindi.<ref name="Burki 2015" /> In 1959, the city became the interim capital of the country under Ayub Khan, who had sought the creation of a new planned capital of Islamabad in the vicinity of Rawalpindi. As a result, Rawalpindi saw most major central government offices and institutions relocate to nearby territory, and its population rapidly expand.

The construction of Pakistan's new capital city of Islamabad in 1961 led to greater investment in Rawalpindi.<ref name="Lonely Planet 2016" /> Rawalpindi remained the headquarters of the Pakistani Army after the capital shifted to Islamabad in 1969, while the Pakistan Air Force continues to maintain an airbase in the Chaklala district of Rawalpindi.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The military dictatorship of General Zia ul Haq hanged Pakistan's deposed Prime Minister, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, in Rawalpindi in 1979.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1980, tens of thousands of Shia protestors led by Mufti Jaffar Hussain marched to Rawalpindi to protest a provision of Zia ul Haqs Islamization programme.<ref name="Ispahani 2017" /> A spate of bombings in September 1987 took place in the city killing 5 people, in attacks that are believed to have been orchestrated by agents of Afghanistan's communist government.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

On 10 April 1988, Rawalpindi's Ojhri Camp, an ammunition depot for Afghan mujahideen fighting against Soviet forces in Afghanistan, exploded and killed many in Rawalpindi and Islamabad.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At the time, the New York Times reported more than 93 were killed and another 1,100 wounded;<ref name="Gordon 1988">Template:Cite news</ref> many believe that the toll was much higher.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Riots erupted in Rawalpindi in 1992 as mobs attacked Hindu temples in retaliation for the destruction of the Babri Masjid in India.<ref name="Ispahani 2017" /> On 27 December 2007, Rawalpindi was the site of the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Modern Rawalpindi is socially and economically intertwined with Islamabad, and the greater metropolitan area. The city is also home to numerous suburban housing developments that serve as bedroom-communities for workers in Islamabad.<ref name="Abbasi 2015" /><ref name="Furniture 2016" /> In June 2015, the Rawalpindi-Islamabad Metrobus, a new bus rapid transit line with various points in Islamabad, opened for service.

Geography

File:Islamabad from Satellite.jpg
Satellite image of Islamabad-Rawalpindi metropolitan area with Margalla Hills to the north and Potohar Plateau on the other 3 sides.

Climate

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Rawalpindi features a humid subtropical climate (Köppen: Cwa)<ref name="Climate-Data.org 2015">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> with hot and wet summers, a cooler and drier winter. Rawalpindi and its twin city Islamabad, during the year experiences an average of 91 thunderstorms, which is the highest frequency of any plain elevation city in the country. Strong windstorms are frequent in the summer during which wind gusts have been reported by Pakistan Meteorological Department to have reached Template:Convert. In such thunder/wind storms, which results in some damage of infrastructure.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The weather is highly variable due to the proximity of the city to the foothills of Himalayas.

The average annual rainfall is Template:Convert, most of which falls in the summer monsoon season. However, westerly disturbances also bring quite significant rainfall in the winter. In summer, the record maximum temperature has soared to Template:Convert recorded in June 1954, while it has dropped to a minimum of Template:Convert several occasions, though the last of which was in January 1967.

Template:Weather box

Cityscape

Social structures in Rawalpindi's historic core centre around neighbourhoods, each known as a Mohallah. Each neighbourhood is served by a nearby bazaar (market) and mosque, which in turn serves as a place where people can gather for trade and manufacturing.<ref name="Hull 2013">Hull, M. S. (2013). "Government of Paper: The Materiality of Bureaucracy in Urban Pakistan", University of California Press.</ref> Each Mohallah has narrow gallies (streets), and the grouping of houses around short lanes and cul-de-sacs lends a sense of privacy and security to residents of each neighbourhood.Template:Original research inline Major intersections in the neighbourhood are each referred to as a chowk.

Rawalpindi is relatively a new city contrasted with Pakistan's millennia-old cities such as Lahore, Multan, and Peshawar.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> South of Rawalpindi's historic core, and across the Lai Nullah, are the wide lanes of the Rawalpindi Cantonment. With tree-lined avenues and historic architecture, the cantonment was the main European area developed during British colonial rule. British colonialists also built the Saddar Bazaar south of the historic core, which served as a retail center geared towards Europeans in the city. Beyond the cantonment are the large suburban housing developments that serve as bedroom communities for Islamabad's commuter population.<ref name="Hull 2013" />

Demographics

The population of Rawalpindi is 2,098,231 in 2017. 84% of the population is Punjabi, 9% is Pashtun, and 7% is from other ethnic groups.

Template:Historical populations

Religion

96.7% of Rawalpindi's population is Muslim, 3.1% is Christian, 0.2% belong to other religious groups. The city's Kohaati Bazaar is site of large Shia mourning-processions for Ashura.<ref name="Rida 2015">Template:Cite journal</ref> The neighbourhoods of Waris Shah Mohallah and Pir Harra Mohallah form the core of Muslim settlement in Rawalpindi's old city.

Prior to partition there was a sizable Sikh and Hindu community living in Rawalpindi. Today, the city is still home to a few hundred Hindu families.<ref name="Dawn 2015">Template:Cite news</ref> Despite the fact that the vast majority of the city's Hindus fled en masse to India after Partition, most Hindu temples in the old city remain standing, although in disrepair and often abandoned.<ref name="Dawn 2015" /> Many of the old city's neighbourhoods continue to bear Hindu and Sikh names, such as Krishanpura, Aria Mohallah, Akaal Garh, Mohanpura, Amarpura, Kartarpura, Bagh Sardaraan, Angatpura.

Rawalpindi was a majority Hindu and Sikh city prior to the Partition of India in 1947,<ref name="Dawn 2015" /> combined composing 51.05 percent of the total population according to the 1941 census.<ref name="Census of India 1941" />Template:Rp The same census detailed Muslims made up 43.79 percent of the total population.<ref name="Ispahani 2017" /><ref name="Census of India 1941" />Template:Rp The Baba Dyal Singh Gurdwara in Rawalpindi was where the reformist Nirankari movement of Sikhism originated.<ref name="Rida 2015"/> The city still has a small Sikh population, but has been bolstered by the arrival of Sikhs fleeing political instability in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

There are 3 main active Hindu temples in the city- Shri Krishna Mandir in Saddar Cantonment, Lal Kurti Temple in Lal Kurti area, and the Valmiki Swamiji Mandir in Gracy lines.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>The Shri Krishna Mandir is the only major functional Hindu temple in Rawalpindi.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It was built in the Kabarri Bazaar in 1897.<ref name="Dawn 2015" /> Other temples are abandoned or were repurposed. Rawalpindi's large Kalyan Das Temple from 1880 has been used as the "Gov't. Qandeel Secondary School for the Blind" since 1973.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Ram Leela Temple in Kanak Mandi, and the Kaanji Mal Ujagar Mal Ram Richpal Temple in the Kabarri Bazaar, are both currently used to house Kashmiri refugees. Mohan Temple in the Lunda Bazaar remains standing, but is abandoned and the building no longer used for any purpose. The city's "Shamshan Ghat" serves as the city's cremation grounds, and was partly renovated in 2012.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The city's Babu Mohallah neighbourhood was once home to a community of Jewish traders who had fled Mashhad, Persia in the 1830s.<ref name="Jewish History 2016" />

In the British era many churches were built for the British soldiers to come to the churches for Sunday prayer because Rawalpindi Cantonment was the home for the British Army.<ref name="Jewish History 2016" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Religious groups in Rawalpindi City (1881−2023)Template:Efn
Religious
group
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1891<ref name="Census of India 1891">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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1901<ref name="Census of India 1901">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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1911<ref name="Census of India 1911">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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1921<ref name="Census of India 1921b">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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1931<ref name="Census of India 1931">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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1941<ref name="Census of India 1941">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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2017<ref name="Census 2017">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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[[Population|Template:Abbr]] Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr Template:Abbr
Islam File:Star and Crescent.svg 23,664 Template:Percentage 32,787 Template:Percentage 40,807 Template:Percentage 40,678 Template:Percentage 47,653 Template:Percentage 55,637 Template:Percentage 81,038 Template:Percentage 2,029,304 Template:Percentage 3,207,449 Template:Percentage
Hinduism File:Om.svgTemplate:Efn 23,419 Template:Percentage 29,264 Template:Percentage 33,227 Template:Percentage 29,106 Template:Percentage 35,279 Template:Percentage 40,161 Template:Percentage 62,394 Template:Percentage 628 Template:Percentage 843 Template:Percentage
Sikhism File:Khanda.svg 1,919 Template:Percentage 4,767 Template:Percentage 6,302 Template:Percentage 8,306 Template:Percentage 9,144 Template:Percentage 15,532 Template:Percentage 32,064 Template:Percentage Template:N/a Template:N/a 118 Template:Percentage
Jainism File:Jain Prateek Chihna.svg 904 Template:Percentage 848 Template:Percentage 1,008 Template:Percentage 963 Template:Percentage 916 Template:Percentage 1,025 Template:Percentage 1,301 Template:Percentage Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a
Christianity File:Christian cross.svg Template:N/a Template:N/a 6,072 Template:Percentage 6,275 Template:Percentage 7,846 Template:Percentage 8,111 Template:Percentage 6,850 Template:Percentage 3,668 Template:Percentage 65,729 Template:Percentage 92,906 Template:Percentage
Zoroastrianism File:Faravahar.svg Template:N/a Template:N/a 51 Template:Percentage 65 Template:Percentage 58 Template:Percentage 39 Template:Percentage 65 Template:Percentage Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a 21 Template:Percentage
Judaism File:Star of David.svg Template:N/a Template:N/a 2 Template:Percentage Template:N/a Template:N/a 16 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 5 Template:Percentage Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a
Buddhism File:Dharma Wheel (2).svg Template:N/a Template:N/a 0 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 10 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 9 Template:Percentage Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a
Ahmadiyya File:Liwa-e-Ahmadiyya 1-2.svg Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a Template:N/a 1,848 Template:Percentage 1,651 Template:Percentage
Others 3,069 Template:Percentage 4 Template:Percentage 1 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 0 Template:Percentage 4,587 Template:Percentage 315 Template:Percentage 733 Template:Percentage
Total population 52,975 Template:Percentage 73,795 Template:Percentage 87,688 Template:Percentage 86,483 Template:Percentage 101,142 Template:Percentage 119,284 Template:Percentage 185,042 Template:Percentage 2,097,824 Template:Percentage 3,303,721 Template:Percentage

Transportation

Public transportation

File:Double road Rawalpindi.jpg
A Double road in Rawalpindi
File:Public transport network in the Rawalpindi Islamabad Metropolitan Area.jpg
Map of Pindi-Islamabad public transport

The Rawalpindi-Islamabad Metrobus is a Template:Convert bus rapid transit system operating in the Islamabad-Rawalpindi metropolitan area. The Metrobus network's first phase was opened on 4 June 2015, and stretches 22.5 kilometres between Pak Secretariat, in Islamabad, and Saddar in Rawalpindi. The second stage stretches 25.6 kilometres between the Peshawar Morr Interchange and New Islamabad International Airport and was inaugurated on 18 April 2022.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The system uses e-ticketing and an Intelligent Transportation System and is managed by the Punjab Mass Transit Authority.

Road

Rawalpindi is situated along the historic Grand Trunk Road that connects Peshawar to Islamabad and Lahore. The road is roughly paralleled by the M-1 Motorway between Peshawar and Rawalpindi, while the M-2 Motorway provides an alternate route to Lahore via the Salt Range. The Grand Trunk Road also provides access to the Afghan border via the Khyber Pass, with onwards connections to Kabul and Central Asia via the Salang Pass. The Karakoram Highway provides access between Islamabad and western China, and an alternate route to Central Asia via Kashgar in the Chinese region of Xinjiang.

The Islamabad Expressway connects Rawalpindi's eastern portions with the Rawal Lake and heart of Islamabad. The IJP Road separates Rawalpindi's northern edge from Islamabad.

Motorways

File:M2 Motorway. Linking Islamabad with Lahore-3.jpg
The M-2 motorway connects Rawalpindi to Lahore, and is part of a network of motorways under construction that will continue to the port city of Karachi.

Rawalpindi is connected to Peshawar by the M-1 Motorway. The motorway also links Rawalpindi to major cities in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, such as Charsadda and Mardan. The M-2 motorway offers high speed access to Lahore via the Potohar Plateau and Salt Range. The M-3 Motorway branches off from the M-2 at the city of Pindi Bhattian, where the M-3 offers onward connections to Faisalabad, and connects to the M-4 Motorway which continues onward to Multan and from there onwards to Sukkur. A new motorway network is under construction to connect Sukkur and Karachi as part of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor. The Hazara Motorway is also under construction as part of CPEC, and will provide control-access motorway travel all the way to Mansehra via the M-1 or Grand Trunk Road.

Rail

File:Rawalpindi Railway Station 3.jpg
Rawalpindi Railway Station

Rawalpindi railway station in the Saddar neighbourhood serves as a stop along Pakistan's Template:Convert-long Main Line-1 railway that connects the city to the port city of Karachi to Peshawar. The stations is served by the Awam Express, Hazara Express, Islamabad Express, Jaffar Express, Khyber Mail trains, and serves as the terminus for the Margalla Express, Mehr Express, Rawal Express, Pakistan Express, Subak Raftar Express, Green Line Express, Sir Syed Express, Subak Kharam Express and Tezgam trains.

The entire Main Line-1 railway track between Karachi and Peshawar is to be overhauled at a cost of $3.65 billion for the first phase of the project,<ref>"PURCHASE OF POWER: PAYMENTS TO CHINESE COMPANIES TO BE FACILITATED THROUGH REVOLVING FUND". Business Recorder. Retrieved 6 December 2015.</ref> with completion by 2021.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Upgrading of the railway line will permit train travel at speeds of 160 kilometres per hour, versus the average 60 to 105 km per hour speed currently possible on existing track.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Air

Rawalpindi is served by the Islamabad International Airport. The airport is located 21 km west of the city. It offers non-stop flights throughout Pakistan, as well as to the Middle East, Europe, North America, Central Asia, East Asia and Southeast Asia.

Administrative divisions

The city of Rawalpindi is one of five tehsils (sub-districts) of Rawalpindi District. The city is sub-divided between a Metropolitan Corporation, two Cantonment Boards (or military towns), and a number of rural union councils (the lowest level of local government in Pakistan), the latter of which are directly governed by the Rawalpindi district council. The Metropolitan Corporation includes 78 urban union councils.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Sr. Component Area (km2) Population (2023)
1 Rawalpindi Metropolitan Corporation Not available citation CitationClass=web

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2 Rawalpindi Cantonment citation CitationClass=web

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740,483<ref name="PBS2023"/>
3 Chaklala Cantonment 34.01<ref name="RCB1"/> 333,115<ref name="PBS2023"/>
4 Rural union councils Not available citation CitationClass=web

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The metropolitan area includes many private housing developments (or "colonies") that have largely developed themselves rapidly. They include Gulraiz Housing Society, Korang Town, Agochs Town, Ghori Town, Pakistan Town, Judicial Town, Bahria Town<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Kashmir Housing Society, Danial Town, Al-Haram City, Education City, Gul Afshan Colony, and Allama Iqbal Colony.

Parks

File:Gate of Pharwala Fort toward the Swaan stream.JPG
The gate of Paharwala Fort.

Ayub National Park is located beyond the old Presidency on Jhelum Road. It covers an area of about Template:Convert and has a playland, lake with boating facility, an aquarium and a garden-restaurant. Rawalpindi Public Park is on Murree Road near Shamsabad. The Park was opened to the public in 1991. It has a playland for children, grassy lawns, fountains and flower beds.

In 2008 Jinnah Park was inaugurated at the heart of Rawalpindi and has since become a hotspot of activity for the city. It houses a state-of-the-art cinema, Cinepax,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> a Metro Cash and Carry supermart, an outlet of McDonald's, gaming lounges, Motion Rides and other recreational facilities. The vast lawns also provide an adequate picnic spot.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

File:Rawal Lake Eastern Bank.jpg
A view of Rawal Lake

Rawalpindi is situated near the Ayub National Park formerly known as 'Topi Rakh' (keep the hat on) is by the old Presidency, between the Murree Brewery Co. and Grand Trunk Road. It covers an area of about Template:Convert and has a play area, lake with boating facility, an aquarium, a garden-restaurant and an open-air theater. This park hosts "The Jungle Kingdom" which is particularly popular among young residents.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • Liaquat Bagh, formerly known as the "company bagh" (East India Company's Garden), is of great historical interest. The first prime minister of Pakistan, Liaquat Ali Khan, was assassinated here in 1950. Pakistan's Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated here on 27 December 2007. She was the youngest and the only woman to be elected as Prime Minister of Pakistan.
  • Rawalpindi Public Park (previously Nawaz Sharif Park, renamed Iqbal Park in 2019<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>) is located on Murree Road just opposite to the Pir Mehr Ali Shah Arid Agriculture University Rawalpindi. The park was opened in 1991. It has a play area for children, lawns, fountains and flower beds. A cricket stadium was built in 1992 opposite the public park. Several matches in the 1996 World Cup were held on this cricket ground.

Economy

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Education

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Rawalpindi District is home to 2,463 government public schools, out of which 1706 are primary schools, 306 middle schools, 334 are high schools, while 117 are higher education colleges.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

97.4% of children ages 6–16 in urban areas of Rawalpindi District are enrolled in school – the third highest percentage in Pakistan after Islamabad and Karachi.<ref name="ASER" /> 77.1% of Rawalpindi's students in Class 5 are able to read sentences in English.<ref name="ASER">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> 27% of children in Rawalpindi attend paid private schools.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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Media

Rawalpindi, being so close to the capital, has an active media and newspaper climate. There are over a dozen of newspaper companies based in the city including Daily Nawa-i-Waqt, Daily Jang, Daily Asas, The Daily Sada-e-Haq, Daily Express, Daily Din, Daily Aajkal Rawalpindi, Daily Islam, and Daily Pakistan in Urdu and Dawn, Express Tribune, Daily Times, The News International and The Nation in English.

There are a large number of Cable TV service providers in the city such as Nayatel, PTCL, SA Cable Network and DWN. Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation has a centre in Rawalpindi.

Recreation

In mid-2012 3D cinema, The Arena, started its operations in Bahria Town Phase-4 in Rawalpindi.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

File:Rawalpindi food street.JPG
Rawalpindi food street, Saddar
  • Rawalpindi Golf Course was completed in 1926 by Rawalpindi Golf Club, one of the oldest golf clubs of Pakistan. The facility was initially developed as a nine-hole course. After several phases of development, it is now a 27-hole course and the biggest in Pakistan.Template:Sfn From the clubhouse, there is a panoramic view of Faisal Mosque, the twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi. Major domestic golf tournaments are regularly held here.
  • Playland is another public park parallel to Ayub Park
  • In 2019, after the Army Heritage Foundation took over Ayub park from Chaklala Cantonment Board, a new amusement park called JoyLand was opened on the site of a previously failed project.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> This newly developed park has a number of rides and activities for visitors, from the relaxing Ferris wheel to the daring Discovery. All rides are imported and meet safety standards. JoyLand is the only amusement park in Pakistan that is ISO 9001:2008 certified.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See also

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Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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