Monga Khan (Potwari: مونگا خاں; c. 1870–1930) was a Muslim immigrant and hawker from British India (now Pakistan) who sold local and imported goods in Victoria, Australia.
[1][2] A now-iconic portrait of him from 1916 (as recorded in the National Archives of Australia) was first used in the year 2016 by Australian artist Peter Drew, as part of a poster campaign called "Real Aussies Say Welcome".
[7][8] He was originally from Bathroi, a village in Dadyal Tehsil of Mirpur District in present-day Azad Kashmir, Pakistan.
[1] The first translation of his place of birth as, the village of Batrohan, near the Punjabi city of Ambala (in what is now Haryana), was by Crystal Jordan in her early research of Monga Khan prior to 2015.
[1] In 1908, Khan suffered from illness and returned to British India aboard the SS Omrah to meet his wife and family.