By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The Expat StoryThe Expat StoryThe Expat Story
Font ResizerAa
  • HOME
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • Celebrity
    • LIFESTYLE
      • CULTURE
      • HUMAN INTEREST
    • NEWS
      • PAKISTAN
      • AUTOMOTIVE
      • HEALTH
    • REVIEWS
      • TOURISM
      • SPORTS
      • VIRAL TRENDS
  • NEWS
  • REVIEWS
  • Contact us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
Reading: Sohni Mahiwal and the Limits of Social Order
Share
Font ResizerAa
The Expat StoryThe Expat Story
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • PODCASTS
  • REVIEWS
Search
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • HUMAN INTEREST
    • CELEBRITY
  • LIFESTYLE
    • CULTURE
  • NEWS
    • PAKISTAN
    • AUTOMOTIVE
    • HEALTH
  • REVIEWS
    • TOURISM
    • SPORTS
    • VIRAL TRENDS
  • Contact us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
Follow US
© 2026 The Expat Story. All Rights Reserved.
CULTUREEntertainment

Sohni Mahiwal and the Limits of Social Order

Written by:
Bilal Akram
Last updated: July 8, 2026
Share

Of all the tragedies of romantic love that are part of the Punjabi and Sindhi oral tradition, the tale of Sohni Mahiwal stands out due to the very physicality of its central metaphor, a woman swimming a river every night on only a pot made of clay in order to meet her beloved. It is because of the power and richness of meaning encapsulated within this single action that the tale has lasted. The tale is not just one of frustrated love; it is of the body put in constant peril of a river’s current.

Sohni, the daughter of a potter from Gujrat, and Izzat Baig, a businessman from Bukhara who arrives in the vicinity and decides to take up buffalo herding with the alias Mahiwal, form the crux of the story. They grow closer despite the disapproval of her family, and she is made to marry another man in order to break their relationship. Unfazed, she makes a daily trip across the Chenab River at night, floating by means of an earthen pot, and meets Mahiwal on the other side. Her cousin finds out about this and gives her an unfired pot instead, which sinks in the river.

However, what makes this story different from other regional love stories is its unwillingness to pin down the tragedy to the mere presence of prohibition from the outside world. Family resistance starts off the story, indeed, but the way Sohni loses her life is due to domestic treachery, something done by someone close to her and not by destiny or the forces afar. This changes the tone of the story. The story does not deal with social hierarchy per se, but rather with the constraints put into place by those close.

The river itself merits mention as more than just a setting. In the narrative tradition, water represents the limit beyond which the proper and the improper desires lie, and Sohi’s nightly crossing symbolizes the physical performance of this limit. It is not accidental that Sohi drowns, because it becomes the conclusion of a story constructed since the beginning about the lack of proper land for illicit desires.

When read in conjunction with similar myths like Sassi Pannu, Sohni Mahiwal reveals another common trend within this genre of literature, and that is that love which continues beyond what is socially acceptable usually ends not in solution but in destruction, sometimes very literal destruction. However, this tale cannot be simply categorized into a lesson of morals. The actions of Sohni each night are not condemned as foolish or glorified as heroic; they simply have to be done.

Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Previous Article Is FIFA World Cup 2026 the most controversial in recent years?
Next Article Inside the Luxury VIP Suites at the FIFA World Cup 2026 
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow

You Might Also Like

EntertainmentNEWS

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Get Married at Madison Square Garden

Global music icon Taylor Swift and Kansas City Chiefs…

Writen by
Noor
July 4, 2026
Entertainment

Five Reasons Why Tere Pyar Mein Still Resonates 26 Years Later

Before there was Veer-Zaara, before there was Main Hoon Na in Bollywood,…

Writen by
TheExpatStory
February 22, 2026
Entertainment

The Hateful Eight on Our TV Screens

TV dramas often become memorable for their heroes, but…

Writen by
Omair Alavi
July 10, 2026
Legacy Check: Dhurandhar and the Future of Bollywood
Entertainment

Legacy Check: Dhurandhar and the Future of Bollywood

Every so often, a film or two arrives that…

Writen by
Omair Alavi
April 6, 2026

Pinnacle Journal— Your window to global news, trends, and stories that matter.

  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • PODCASTS
  • REVIEWS
  • Contact us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Author
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?