The Harni are a Muslim community found in the province of Punjab, Pakistan.
Historically, the Harni were found in what is now Indian Punjab, in particular on the districts of Ludhiana, Jalandhar, and Hoshiarpur. In Jalandhar District, the Harni were found in the villages of Mari Harnian and Sadachak. According to their traditions, the Harni are descended from Najaf Khan, a Pathan, who with his eight sons accompanied Mahmud of Ghazna on his attacks on India. The sons took Hindu Rajput wives, and as such became part of the Rajput community. Their initial settlement was in Bikaner in Rajasthan, and from there they spread to Bhatner and Uch. Famine drove the Harni from Rajasthan to Kapurthala, where they were granted land by the Bhatti Nawabs. With the rise of Ahluwalia Sikhs, the harni were expelled from Kapurthala and settled in Jallandhar and Ludhiana. The word Harni is derived from the word Hindi heri meaning a huntsman, which was their traditional occupation. In the Colonial period, Harni were listed under the Criminal Tribes Act, 1871, as being a tribe "addicted to the systematic commission of non-bailable offences."
And so we came riding end with us, we came with Pain, Hunger, with Death.
And over the soil was cast coldness, unlight and vanishing life.
Your time is over.
Ours is in beginning and soon it shall ever be.
Your end will come always again, yours is the eternal death.
We hate you, your belief!
We smash you into ground, we crush your weak race!
So shall always be.
We burn your Father’s churches.
We burn them down.
We exterminate the christian “plague” for all time.
And we look into past, enjoying your pain, we enjoyed christian death,