bhapa

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Alternative forms === bhappa, bhappe bhaapa, bhaape === Etymology === From Punjabi ਭਾਪਾ (bhāpā, “father, elder brother”). The term originated in the Potohari dialect of Punjabi spoken around Rawalpindi, and was brought to India by Sikhs, particularly of Khatri background, who fled the 1947 Rawalpindi massacres which occurred prior to Partition. This history continues to form the background of this word as used today. === Noun === bhapa (plural bhapas or bhape) (South Asia, North India, slang, derogatory, offensive) a slur, usually but not always casteist, which emerged after Partition and has different connotations depending on the speaker and the context: a general pejorative term for Khatri Sikhs used by Jatt Sikhs to single out non-Jatts, especially Khatri Sikhs, usually out of a false sense of superiority used by Sikhs to denigrate other Sikhs for excessive loyalty to India (especially if they or their ancestors fled Pakistan during Partition) and friendliness with Hindus denigrates Sikhs living in Delhi, often in combination with the previous definition used by Hindus to taunt the victims of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, mainly Sikhs from Delhi used by Hindus to tarnish non-Khatri Sikhs as disloyal to their caste due to their belief in Sikhi; usually accompanied by an accusation of Sikhi being a "Khatri cult" (referring to the background of the Sikh gurus): falsely alleging that non-Khatris were and still are being taken advantage of by others as a result of abandoning caste consciousness used by Hindus as a catch-all anti-Sikh slur, but with general casteist undertones unlike most other such slurs ==== Usage notes ==== This word is often used in the highly derogatory rhyming phrase "ikk bhapa, [te] sau siapa" (lit. one bhapa, [and] 100 troubles), where bhapa serves as a synonym for Khatri Sikh.