PUNJABI BEAUTY

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IMAN

Age: 124
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How many of u guyz agree with me ...that punjab is the place with goodlookin ppl
Posted 05 Dec 2003

sanam411 says
ummmmmmmmmmmmm!!!!..... NOT ME!....sorryy!!!.... i dont think punjab *is the **only** place with goodlookin people*...... if u go up north..ull see a lot of goodlookin people!
Posted 05 Dec 2003

Rain Man says
nope not me...but i do agree that punjabi girls stinks...
Posted 05 Dec 2003

MR PERFECT says
woh woh woh ease up there srk yaar! lol. they don't suck! u're talkin' abt our punjabi sista's! lol.

punjab is *A* place with goodlookin' peeps, definately. and pakistan in general is home 2 some AMAZING faces. no doubt abt that....!!
Posted 05 Dec 2003

Rain Man says
my bad...sorry bro
Posted 05 Dec 2003

MR PERFECT says
oh n/p...its all good bro...!
Posted 05 Dec 2003

MrDeath says
yup rite topic..
Posted 05 Dec 2003

~Fragi~ says
na ji south mein ayoo to bhi beauty hia

aur waise bhi kaha jata hai k MULTAN to beauty ka central point hia

Posted 05 Dec 2003

DesertBoy says
Punjab is the land of five rivers.....its people are as beautiful as the flowers of saag and sunflower that grows on em......and Punjab is the land.....which spearheaded all the battles for independence from the British......and Punjab is where east meets the west........so beauty as is found in rough places is abound here......Punjab..thy homeland.......we cry for thy golden fields of wheat and the filled lands of rice............Punjab......which feeds the rest of Pakistan thru its enormous water supplies and its food supplements........Pakistan is an empty place without Punjab........and with Punjab....it is all Pakistan!!....
Posted 05 Dec 2003

IMAN says
desertboy said:

Punjab is the land of five rivers.....its people are as beautiful as the flowers of saag and sunflower that grows on em......and Punjab is the land.....which spearheaded all the battles for independence from the British......and Punjab is where east meets the west........so beauty as is found in rough places is abound here......Punjab..thy homeland.......we cry for thy golden fields of wheat and the filled lands of rice............Punjab......which feeds the rest of Pakistan thru its enormous water supplies and its food supplements........Pakistan is an empty place without Punjab........and with Punjab....it is all Pakistan!!....



NICE really....nice
Posted 05 Dec 2003

IMAN says
SRK_FANATIC said:

nope not me...but i do agree that punjabi girls stinks...



they do NOT...r u from karachi...cuz i think only a karachi person can say this...even if ur not.. but i don't why karachi ppl hate lahore
Posted 05 Dec 2003

shaby says
thats wat i use to fink is well and still do kinda of.


wheter its india or pakistan but punjab is the place were beuty is born.

if your are pregnant i suggest you go to lahore or any were in punjab to give birth to your baby.
Posted 05 Dec 2003

MR PERFECT says
shaby said:

if your are pregnant i suggest you go to lahore or any were in punjab to give birth to your baby.



LOLLOLLOLLOLLOLLOL!!!!! i like u're suggestion!
Posted 05 Dec 2003

IMAN says
thx...but i don't like the pic....lolzz
don't u have a better one n a real one not a drawn pic...
Posted 05 Dec 2003

whkhan1 says
IMAN said:

How many of u guyz agree with me ...that punjab is the place with goodlookin ppl



This realy is a bad subject to discuss.

There are good and bad looking people in every part of pakistan.
Just as in rest of the world.
Beauity is in the eye of the beholder , as they say .
Posted 06 Dec 2003

IMAN says
whkhan1 said:

IMAN said:

How many of u guyz agree with me ...that punjab is the place with goodlookin ppl



This realy is a bad subject to discuss.

There are good and bad looking people in every part of pakistan.
Just as in rest of the world.
Beauity is in the eye of the beholder , as they say .


hmm.. ya ur right ...there r good lookin ppl in other places but have u ever heard that punjab is a beauty palace....n if u think this is bad disscussion then don't discuss....my friend
Posted 06 Dec 2003

Cute_gal says
IMAN said:

How many of u guyz agree with me ...that punjab is the place with goodlookin ppl



*cough cough*.......lol....dang girl!!
Posted 06 Dec 2003

Cute_gal says
sanam411 said:

ummmmmmmmmmmmm!!!!..... NOT ME!....sorryy!!!.... i dont think punjab *is the **only** place with goodlookin people*...... if u go up north..ull see a lot of goodlookin people!

   

u'r very right Sanam! 7 don' foget our sweet Karachi....
Posted 06 Dec 2003

scotchtape says

supposedly, alexander the great said some thing like this: if there are beautiful women anywhere in the world, they are here in punjab the land of the five rivers.(he said this when he came to conquer the subcontinent). In India, Punjabis are known to be the most beautiful.


AN article about punjabi women.

PUNJABI women have always been considered among the most beautiful in the country. During the Mughal days, they were sought after by the Kings and Nobles to embellish their harems. There was Anarkali who became a legend as she allured Prince Salim with her grace and charm and even led him to stage a revolt against his father, the Emperor Akbar. Salim on ascending the throne as Jahangir built a mausoleum for Anarkali in Lahore and the famous bazaar of the city is named after her. Rana-Dil was another Punjabi beauty who enchanted Dara-Shikoh and Emperor Shahjahan allowed him to marry her and she was granted the same privileges and honour as other princesses. During the later Mughal period, we come across Lal Kunwar, a performing artiste, whose glamour and charm became part of folklore. Her adventurous romance with Emperor Jahandar Shah, the grandson of Aurangzeb, elevated her to the status of a queen with the title of Imtiaz Mahal and she came to be known as the "Singing Empress".

During the Sikh rule, there was a young Muslim beauty called Moran who enchanted the ‘Lion of Punjab’ — Maharaja Ranjit Singh — and became his favourite mistress. Then we had Maharani Jind Kaur, the youngest wife of the Maharaja, famous for her attractive looks and domineering personality. The surviving portraits of her bear testimony to her loveliness and eye appeal. According to Sir Herbert Edwardes, "she had more wit and daring than any man of her nation".

The institution of zenana and the purdah custom had come into vogue with the advent of Muslim rule and it continued until the beginning of the twentieth century. Punjab came under the British rule in 1849. By that time the racial gulf between the ruler and the ruled was firmly established. While till the early decades of the 19th century, it was quite common for the British civilians and soldiers to have native women as their bibis or unofficial wives, this practice came to be frowned upon and had virtually vanished by the time the British came to Punjab.

Some European generals employed by Maharaja Ranjit Singh had married Punjabi women. There is a fascinating painting, portraying General Jean-Francois Allard and his Punjabi wife, children and female servants, done by a local artist at Lahore in 1838. This painting represents a challenge to the British colonial culture in India. Sir Charles Metcalfe, one of the most distinguished and talented civilian of the East India Company, lived with a Sikh lady he had met during a diplomatic mission to Ranjit Singh’s court in 1809. His romantic and unorthodox liaison with this Punjabi woman was then a common topic of gossip but Metcalfe made no secret of it nor about his three sons from her.


As a great patron of the performing arts, the ‘Lion of Punjab’ maintained a troupe of 150 beautiful dancing girls and entertained his guests with gorgeous nautch parties. W.G. Osborne, who accompanied Governor-General Auckland to Ranjit Singh’s court at Lahore, recalls in his journal an interesting conversation with the Maharaja about these beautiful girls. "How do you like them", asked Ranjit Singh, "Are they handsomer than the women of Hindostan? Are they as handsome as English women?" Osborne replied that he admired them all very much and named the two he thought were the handsomest. Emily Eden, the sister of Auckland who also accompanied him to Lahore, was invited to meet the Ranis. She was struck by their beauty and grace and wrote that "Four of them were very handsome. Two would have been beautiful anywhere".
Sher Singh’s wife is also described as really beautiful, "very little, very fair with enormous black eyes, and a pretty, clever expression". Henry Stenbach a German soldier with the Maharaja pays a glowing tribute to the valour, daring and fortitude of the Ranis of Ranjit Singh as they performed sati on his death. In his vivid description of the event, he wrote: "His four queens dressed in their most sumptuous apparel, then followed, each in a separate gilt chair... Before each of the queens was carried a large mirror, and gilt parasol, the emblems of their rank...To the last moment of this terrible sacrifice, the queens exhibited the most perfect equanimity; far from evincing any dread of the terrible death which awaited them, they appeared in a high state of excitement and ascended the funeral pyre with alacrity".

Until the middle of the 18 century, there was practically no visual record of the Indian people based on first hand observation. The British artists who began arriving in India from the 1760 onwards mostly applied their talent to landscape painting, portraits of the ruling elite and Indian princes or historical events of imperial interest. But there were some, both professional and amateur, who were inspired by the exotic people of India, especially native women. These artists have left behind some paintings and drawings of native women of different classes. There were also Indian artists patronised by the British. They imbibed some of the western techniques and adapted their painting style to meet the taste of their patrons. There is an enormous collection of their drawings in different museums and galleries in India and abroad and these are defined as ‘Company school’ paintings. The British officials and travellers employed local artists at Lahore and Amritsar to make drawings for them depicting famous monuments of Punjab and also the local people. Punjabi women, however, hardly figure in this collection.

Among the notable British artists who visited Punjab in the 19th century and have left behind valuable collection of their paintings and drawings were G.T. Vigne, A.F.P. Harcourt, H.A. Oldfield, C.S. Hadinge, and William Carpenter. Their works chiefly depict Punjab’s picturesque landscape, historical monuments etc. Even Emily Eden, an accomplished artist who had an access to the Royal zenana, did not portray any Punjabi ladies in her monumental work, ‘Portraits of the Princes and people of India’ which include magnificent paintings of Ranjit Singh, his sons and other Sikh personalities. Some artists did succeed in making sketches of women of the Punjab hills who were neither shy nor followed the purdah custom. The Punjabi women of the plains observed strict purdah and would not expose themselves to any male artists, whether foreign or native.

There are practically no true to life pictures of Punjabi women of the upper classes. There is one by a local artist of Maharani Jindan who had come out of the veil to become the regent of Duleep Singh. The only women who readily agreed to pose for artists were public entertainers and dancing girls, and those belonging to lower working classes in exchange for monetary reward. At times, the artists were able to sketch village women as the rural purdah custom was not prevalent in rural areas.

It is observed that Punjabi women were particularly fond of jewellery. A variety of ornaments made by highly skilled craftsmen were worn from head to toe. Emily Eden describes in her journal the gorgeous costumes and ornaments worn by the royal ladies at Lahore. She wrote:

"Their heads look too large from the quantity of pearls with which they load them and their nose-rings conceal all the lower part of the face and hang down almost to the waist. First, a crescent of diamond comes from the nose and to that is hung a string of pearls and tassels of pearls and rings of pearls with emerald drops". Their dress consisted of silver gauze veils, tinselly tunics and very tight trousers.

After the advent of camera, commercial photography rapidly replaced painting by professional portrait artists. Here again, when it came to Punjabi women, they did not want to face the camera wielded by a man. It is only after the spread of education and emancipation of

Indian women in the 20th century that the old taboos of purdah and seclusion were slowly discarded. I still recall that considering the market potential in this field, an enterprising Punjabi lady in Lahore set up a special photo studio for women, sometime in the late 1930s.




     
L to R: Punjabi woman by G.T. Vigne, Lahore, C 1835. (Courtesy The British Library, London);A dancing girl by G.T. Vigne, Lahore, C. 1835 (Courtesy British Library, London);Woman acrobat with a drummer. Inscribed in Persian script — Natyani bazigaran by a Punjabi artist, Lahore, C 1860. (Courtesy British Library, London).

The romanticised image of Punjabi women has been vividly captured in the folklore and love legends of Punjab like Heer Ranjha, Sohni Mahiwal, Mirza Sahiban, Sehti Murad, Balo-Mayia etc. Punjabi woman has been extolled for her extraordinary beauty, grace and seductive charm. Poets and bards have used superlative terms to describe her fair and wheatish complexion with her rosy cheeks. Others have sung praises of her chiselled features and robust health. That reminds me of an old Punjabi lyric ‘Shishe nun taredh pai gayi, wal wondi ne dhyan jadon marya (The force of her gaze drove a crack in the mirror as she looked at it while combing her hair.) A mid-nineteenth century folk song portrays a young maiden from the Maja region of Punjab.

Maje di mastani jati/Amarsar navan chali/Amarsar jaiyai te ki/Kuj liahiye/Mauli, dandasa, kangi patti/Patti oh maya-Maje/di mastani jati

(The happy go lucky jat maiden is going to Amritsar for a dip in the sarovar or holy tank, and from there she would do her shopping of red thread, dentifrice, comb and ribbon).

The romantic expressions used by young lovers contain the most extraordinary similes. The lover is addressed as Chan i.e. moon or sona and the beloved is soni, i.e. the beautiful or the gilded one. Some ardent lovers use the simile of a rose bud as in the following couplet:

Sun kudiye Punjab diye,/Dukh tainu kis gal da-Hai Soniye/Sun Kaliye gulab diye.

Another noteworthy point is that the lover treats the beloved and vice/versa as equal partners in the game of love as is evident from the expression of calling each other ‘Hani’ meaning companion or partner.

The women’s costume both in the rural and urban Punjab has been Suthan Jhaga or Shalwar-Kameez for over a century. In spite of various changes in fashion, this attire has not only survived but has now been universally adopted by Indian women of all age-groups throughout the country. The chuni or the head cover, which goes along with the dress, is the most graceful part of the costume.

The Punjabi women were particularly known to be fastidious about their personal appearance. They used traditional cosmetics and beauty aids for their hair, eyelids, eyebrows, teeth, lips and hands. For their face, they used a kind of pomade made of orange peels ground fine upon a stone and mixed with besan or a paste of wheat flour mixed with butter, cream and ghee. The use of kajal beautified their eyes. We have an amusing couplet about it: ‘Kinwain pavan main akhian ch kajala, ke akhian ch tu wasda’. (How can I put kajal in my eyes because you are residing there).

ANy examples of punjabi people(indian and pakistani)
zara sheikh
meera
sana
noor
noor jehan

indians: kapoor sisters, tina chatwal, akshay kumar
arjun rampal(half punjabi), celina jaitley(half punjabi)
poonam dhillon
any others?



p.s. I am from karachi
Posted 06 Dec 2003

MR PERFECT says
after reading that novel how can one argue?! looks like punjabi women ARE the best lookin'. lol.

way 2 go scotchtape. i don't know where u come up with this stuff (pics and articles) but u da man! lol.

oh...and u can add humaira arshad 2 the list of pakistani punjabi women who look amazing.
Posted 06 Dec 2003

scotchtape says
thanks man!
but pathan, sindhi, urduspeaking/baloch and kashmiri girls are great too.

humera arshad is on the list
amna haq
amna shifaat
amna husain

others
atiqa odho(sindhi, i think)
reema(pathan)
zeba bakhtiar(baloch and french)
marina khan(white and pakistani)
resham(punjabi)

any others??
Posted 06 Dec 2003

IMAN says
ScotchTape said:


supposedly, alexander the great said some thing like this: if there are beautiful women anywhere in the world, they are here in punjab the land of the five rivers.(he said this when he came to conquer the subcontinent). In India, Punjabis are known to be the most beautiful.

ANy examples of punjabi people(indian and pakistani)
zara sheikh
meera
sana
noor
noor jehan

indians: kapoor sisters, tina chatwal, akshay kumar
arjun rampal(half punjabi), celina jaitley(half punjabi)
poonam dhillon
any others?



p.s. I am from karachi



THANK U ....very nice
Posted 06 Dec 2003

MR PERFECT says
definately. pakistan in general is home 2 some goodlookin people.

resham's from faisalabad...does that make her punjabi?! and reema's a pathan?! i had no idea. u learn something new every day eh?! lol.

i'll throw some names out, u tell where they're from...

fariha pervaiz, shabnum majeed, meera, sadia imam, sara chaudry, veena malik, vaneeza ahmed, and natasha (model)...
Posted 06 Dec 2003

scotchtape says
vaneeza is from murree
fariha is lahori
meera is from sheikhupura
sadia imam is from rawalpindi
veena is punjabi
I think all of them are punjabi

natasha, sara, shabnum I dont know about them.
Posted 06 Dec 2003

umair16 says
sadia imam from my home town . cool
Posted 06 Dec 2003

MR PERFECT says
most of them goodlookin ladies r from punjab eh?! wicked!

i'm guessing sara's from lahore 2.

umair...u're lucky 2 share the same hometown as sadia!
Posted 06 Dec 2003

Cute_gal says
ScotchTape said:


but pathan, sindhi, urduspeaking/baloch and kashmiri girls are great too.



xactly......:p
Posted 06 Dec 2003

umair16 says
NFAKFan - - and their i was thinking she was the lucky one (lol)
Posted 07 Dec 2003

IMAN says
NFAKFan said:

most of them goodlookin ladies r from punjab eh?! wicked!

i'm guessing sara's from lahore 2.

umair...u're lucky 2 share the same hometown as sadia!



Yes sara is from lahore
Posted 07 Dec 2003

IMAN says
Cute_gal said:

ScotchTape said:


but pathan, sindhi, urduspeaking/baloch and kashmiri girls are great too.



xactly......:p


may i know where you are from???IMAN37962.1315277778
Posted 07 Dec 2003

shaby says
pathan girls are also very good looking.

maybe because of the nice fair skin.

i remember in a call show on vectone some one asked reema y are you so beutifull and she replied cos i am a pathan.
Posted 07 Dec 2003

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