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Parsis

Parsis (/ˈpɑːrs/) or Parsees are an ethnoreligious group of the Indian subcontinent adhering to Zoroastrianism. They are descended from Persians who migrated to Medieval India during and after the Arab conquest of the Persian Empire (part of the early Muslim conquests) in order to preserve their Zoroastrian identity. The Parsi people comprise the older of the Indian subcontinent's two Zoroastrian communities vis-à-vis the Iranis, whose ancestors migrated to British-ruled India from Qajar-era Iran. According to a 16th-century Parsi epic, Qissa-i Sanjan, Zoroastrian Persians continued to migrate to the Indian subcontinent from Greater Iran in between the 8th and 10th centuries, and ultimately settled in present-day Gujarat after being granted refuge by a local Hindu king, Jadi Rana.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Parsis
A Parsi Lady (c. 1928)
Mahadev V. Dhurandhar
Regions with significant populations
India57,264[1][2]
Pakistan800[3]
Languages
English (Indian dialect or Pakistani dialect), Gujarati, and Hindi–Urdu
Religion
Zoroastrianism
Related ethnic groups
Iranis

Prior to the 7th-century fall of the Sassanid Empire to the Rashidun Caliphate, the Iranian mainland (historically known as 'Persia') had a Zoroastrian majority, and Zoroastrianism had served as the Iranian state religion since at least the time of the Achaemenid Empire. Despite the retreat of many Iranians to the Indian subcontinent,[11] a number of Iranian revolutionary figures such as Piruz Nahavandi, Babak Khorramdin, Mardavij, Sunpadh and al-Isfahani remained in active rebellion against the Rashidun army and the later Islamic caliphates for almost 200 years after the Arab conquest.[12] However, the decline of Zoroastrianism in Iran continued, and most Iranians had adopted Islam by the 10th century.

The word Parsi is derived from the Persian language, and literally translates to Persian (پارسی, Pārsi).[13]

The Parsi and Irani communities are the sole ethnoreligious groups practicing Zoroastrianism in India. However, owing to the more recent migration of the Irani community to the Indian subcontinent, it is legally differentiated from the Parsi community.[14] Despite this legal distinction, the terms "Parsi" and "Zoroastrian" are commonly utilized interchangeably to denote both communities. Notably, no substantial differences exist between the religious principles, convictions, and customs of Parsis and Irani Zoroastrians.[15][16]

Definition and identity Edit

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica,

Parsi, also spelled Parsee, member of a group of followers in India of the Persian prophet Zoroaster. The Parsis, whose name means "Persians", are descended from Persian Zoroastrians who emigrated to India to avoid religious persecution by the Muslims. They live chiefly in Mumbai and in a few towns and villages mostly to the south of Mumbai, but also a few minorities nearby in Karachi (Pakistan) and Chennai. There is a sizeable Parsee population in Pune as well in Bangalore. A few Parsee families also reside in Kolkata and Hyderabad. Although they are not, strictly speaking, a caste, since they are not Hindus, they form a well-defined community. The exact date of the Parsi migration is unknown. According to tradition, the Parsis initially settled at Hormuz on the Persian Gulf but finding themselves still persecuted they set sail for India, arriving in the 8th century. The migration may, in fact, have taken place as late as the 10th century, or in both. They settled first at Diu in Kathiawar but soon moved to South Gujarāt, where they remained for about 800 years as a small agricultural community.[17]

The term Pārsi, which in the Persian language is a demonym meaning "inhabitant of Pārs" and hence "ethnic Persian", is not attested in Indian Zoroastrian texts until the 17th century. Until that time, such texts consistently use the Persian-origin terms Zartoshti "Zoroastrian" or Vehdin "[of] the good religion". The 12th-century Sixteen Shlokas, a Sanskrit text in praise of the Parsis,[18] is the earliest attested use of the term as an identifier for Indian Zoroastrians.

 
Parsis from India, c. 1870

The first reference to the Parsis in a European language is from 1322, when a French monk, Jordanus, briefly refers to their presence in Thane and Bharuch. Subsequently, the term appears in the journals of many European travelers, first French and Portuguese, later English, all of whom used a Europeanized version of an apparently local language term. For example, Portuguese physician Garcia de Orta observed in 1563 that "there are merchants ... in the kingdom of Cambaia ... known as Esparcis. We Portuguese call them Jews, but they are not so. They are Gentios." In an early 20th-century legal ruling (see self-perceptions, below), Justices Davar and Beaman asserted (1909:540) that "Parsi" was also a term used in Iran to refer to Zoroastrians.[19][20] notes that in much the same way as the word "Hindu" was used by Iranians to refer to anyone from the Indian subcontinent, "Parsi" was used by the Indians to refer to anyone from Greater Iran, irrespective of whether they were actually ethnic Persian people. In any case, the term "Parsi" itself is "not necessarily an indication of their Iranian or 'Persian' origin, but rather as indicator – manifest as several properties – of ethnic identity".[21] Moreover, if heredity were the only factor in a determination of ethnicity, the Parsis would count as Parthians according to the Qissa-i Sanjan.[20]

The term "Parseeism" or "Parsiism", is attributed to Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron, who in the 1750s, when the word "Zoroastrianism" had yet to be coined, made the first detailed report of the Parsis and of Zoroastrianism, therein mistakenly assuming that the Parsis were the only remaining followers of the religion.

In addition to above, the term "Parsi" (Persian) existed even before they moved to India:

  • The earliest reference to the Persians is found in the Assyrian inscription of Shalmaneser III (c. 854-824 BC).
  • Darius the Great (521-486 BC) establishes this fact when he records his Parsi ancestry for posterity, "parsa parsahya puthra ariya ariyachitra", meaning, "a Persian, the son of a Persian, an Aryan, of Aryan family" (Inscription at Naqsh-i-Rustam, near Persepolis, Iran).
  • In Outlines of Persian History, Dasturji Hormazdyar Dastur Kayoji Mirza, Bombay 1987, pp. 3–4 writes, "According to the Pahlavi text of Karnamak i Artakhshir i Papakan, the Indian astrologer refers to Artakhshir (Sasanian king, and the founder of the Empire) as khvatay parsikan 'the king of the Persians'.
  • Herodotus and Xenophon, the two great historians who lived in the third and fourth centuries BC, referred to Iranians as Persians.[22]

Origins Edit

In ancient Persia, Zoroaster taught that good (Ohrmazd) and evil (Angra Mainyu) were opposite forces and the battle between them is more or less evenly matched. A person should always be vigilant to align with forces of light. According to the asha or the righteousness and druj or the wickedness, the person has chosen in his life they will be judged at the Chinvat bridge to grant passage to Paradise, Hammistagan (A limbo area) or Hell by a sword. A personified form of the soul that represents the person's deeds takes the adjudged to their destination and they will abide there until the final apocalypse. After the final battle between good and evil, every soul's walk through a river of fire ordeal for burning of their dross and together they receive a post resurrection paradise. The Zoroastrian holy book, called the Avesta, was written in the Avestan language, which is closely related to Vedic Sanskrit.

The Qissa-i Sanjan is a tale of the journey of the Parsis to India from Iran. It says they fled for reasons of religious freedom and they were allowed to settle in India thanks to the goodwill of a local prince. However, the Parsi community had to abide by three rules: they had to speak the local language, follow local marriage customs, and not carry any weapons. After showing the many similarities between their faith and local beliefs, the early community was granted a plot of land on which to build a fire temple.[citation needed]

As an ethnic community Edit

 
Wedding portrait, 1948

Over the centuries since the first Zoroastrians arrived in India, the Parsis have integrated themselves into Indian society while simultaneously maintaining or developing their own distinct customs and traditions (and thus ethnic identity). This in turn has given the Parsi community a rather peculiar standing: they are mostly Indians in terms of national affiliation, language and history, but not typically Indian in terms of consanguinity or ethnicity, cultural, behavioural and religious practices. Based on their notable accomplishments across various fields and high levels of educational attainment, some have postulated that the Parsi community, much like the similarly endogamous Ashkenazi Jewish population, may exhibit a higher average intelligence compared to other communities. Further research is necessary to establish the underlying factors that contribute to any such observed differences..[23]

Self-perceptions Edit

 
Parsi Navjote ceremony (rites of admission into the Zoroastrian faith)

The definition of who is, and is not, a Parsi is a matter of great contention within the Zoroastrian community in India. It is generally accepted that a Parsi is a person who:

(a) is directly descended from the original Persian refugees, and
(b) has been formally admitted into the Zoroastrian religion, through the navjote ceremony.

In this sense, Parsi is an ethno-religious designator, whose definition is of contention among its members, similar to the identity question among Jews.

Some members of the community additionally contend that a child must have a Parsi father to be eligible for introduction into the faith, but this assertion is considered by most to be a violation of the Zoroastrian tenets of gender equality and may be a remnant of an old legal definition of the term Parsi.

An oft-quoted legal definition of Parsi is based on a 1909 ruling (since nullified) that not only stipulated that a person could not become a Parsi by converting to the Zoroastrian faith but also noted:

the Parsi community consists of: a) Parsis who are descended from the original Persian emigrants and who are born of both Zoroastrian parents and who profess the Zoroastrian religion; b) Iranis [here meaning Iranians, not the other group of Indian Zoroastrians] professing the Zoroastrian religion; c) the children of Parsi fathers by alien mothers who have been duly and properly admitted into the religion.[24]

This definition was overturned several times. The equality principles of the Indian Constitution void the patrilineal restrictions expressed in the third clause. The second clause was contested and overturned in 1948.[25] On appeal in 1950, the 1948 ruling was upheld and the entire 1909 definition was deemed an obiter dictum – a collateral opinion and not legally binding (re-affirmed in 1966).[22][26])

There is a growing voice within the community that if indeed equality must be re-established then the only acceptable solution is to allow a child to be initiated into the faith only if both parents are Parsi.[citation needed]

Nonetheless, the opinion that the 1909 ruling is legally binding continues to persist, even among the better-read and moderate Parsis.

Population Edit

Parsi population by census year
Year Population Change
1971 91,266
1981 71,630  -21.52%
1991
2001 69,601
2011 57,264  -17.73%
 
The geographical distribution of modern and ancient Parsis in India and Pakistan.[27]

According to the 2011 Census of India, there are 57,264 Parsis in India.[28][29] According to the National Commission for Minorities, there are a "variety of causes that are responsible for this steady decline in the population of the community", the most significant of which were childlessness and migration.[30]

If Demographic trends project that by 2020 the Parsis will number only 23,000. The Parsis will then cease to be called a community and will be labeled a 'tribe'.[31]

One-fifth of the decrease in population is attributed to migration. There are sizeable Parsi communities in the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and the United States.[32] A slower birthrate than deathrate accounts for the rest: as of 2001, Parsis over the age of 60 make up for 31% of the community. Only 4.7% of the Parsi community are under 6 years of age, which translates to 7 births per year per 1000 individuals.[33] Concerns have been raised in recent years over the rapidly declining population of the Parsi community in India.[34]

Parsis have also been migrating to the traditional homeland of Iran and while the number of Parsis who have returned to Iran is small compared to the overall Zoroastrian community in Iran, their presence has helped to strengthen the ties between the Iranian and Indian Zoroastrian communities. The Parsis played a significant role in the modernization of Iran, particularly in the 20th century. They served as a reminder of Iran's ancient heritage, which was crucial to Iranians. The Parsis also demonstrated to Iranians that it was possible to be both modern and culturally authentic, and that the revival of Zoroastrianism could be a way of modernizing Iranian culture while retaining its original identity.[35]

Both Reza Shah and Muhammad Reza Shah played an active role in encouraging Parsis to invest in Iran and contribute to its economic development by inviting them to return to their homeland. During the Pahlavi dynasty in Iran, the relationship between Zoroastrianism and Iranian national identity was blurred. This was exemplified by Reza Shah's adoption of Zoroastrian calendar names and placement of the Fravahar symbol on prominent government buildings. Additionally, he maintained a close relationship with the Zoroastrian parliamentary representative, Keikhosrow Shahrokh, who was entrusted by him with important governmental tasks.[36]

Reza Shah was also sympathetic to Indian Zoroastrians (Parsis) and actively encouraged their return to Iran to invest and help develop the country's economy. In 1932, he invited Dinshah Irani, a Parsi leader and founder of the Iranian Zoroastrian Anjoman and the Iran League in India, to visit Iran as part of a Parsi delegation. Irani was awarded honors by Reza Shah and entrusted with a message to take back to the Parsi community in India.

You Parsis are as much the children of this soil as any other Iranis, and so you are as much entitled to have your proper share in its development as any other nationals.

We estimate Our Empire's resources to be even greater than those of America, and in tapping them you can take your proper part. We do not want you to come all bag and baggage; just wait a little and watch.

If you find the proposition beneficial both to yourselves and to this land, then do come and We shall greet you with open arms, as We might.

Our dear brothers and sisters.

Iran is a vast country pregnant with many advantages and fresh fields waiting for development. We suggest that the Parsis, who are still the sons of Iran, though separated from her, should look upon this country of to-day as their own, and differentiate it from its immediate past, and strive to derive benefit from her developments.[36][37][38]

Other demographic statistics Edit

The gender ratio among Parsis is unusual: as of 2001, the ratio of males to females was 1000 males to 1050 females (up from 1024 in 1991), due primarily to the high median age of the population (elderly women are more common than elderly men). As of 2001 the national average in India was 1000 males to 933 females.

Parsis have a high literacy rate; as of 2001, the literacy rate is 97.9%, the highest of any Indian community (the national average was 64.8%). 96.1% of Parsis reside in urban areas (the national average is 27.8%). Parsis mother tongue is Gujarati.[citation needed]

In the Greater Mumbai area, where the density of Parsis is highest, about 10% of Parsi females and about 20% of Parsi males do not marry.[39]

History Edit

Arrival in the Indian subcontinent Edit

According to the Qissa-i Sanjan, the only existing account of the early years of Zoroastrian refugees in India composed at least six centuries after their tentative date of arrival, the first group of immigrants originated from Greater Khorasan.[4] This historical region of Central Asia is in part in northeastern Iran, where it constitutes modern Khorasan Province, part of western/northern Afghanistan, and in part in three Central-Asian republics namely Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

According to the Qissa, the immigrants were granted permission to stay by the local ruler, Jadi Rana, on the condition that they adopt the local language (Gujarati) and that their women adopt local dress (the sari).[40] The refugees accepted the conditions and founded the settlement of Sanjan, which is said to have been named after the city of their origin (Sanjan, near Merv, modern Turkmenistan).[4] This first group was followed by a second group from Greater Khorasan within five years of the first, and this time having religious implements with them (the alat). In addition to these Khorasanis or Kohistanis "mountain folk", as the two initial groups are said to have been initially called,[41] at least one other group is said to have come overland from Sari, Iran.[42]

 
Map of the Sasanian Empire and its surrounding regions on the eve of the Muslim conquest of Persia

Although the Sanjan group are believed to have been the first permanent settlers, the precise date of their arrival is a matter of conjecture. All estimates are based on the Qissa, which is vague or contradictory with respect to some elapsed periods. Consequently, three possible dates – 716, 765, and 936 – have been proposed as the year of landing, and the disagreement has been the cause of "many an intense battle ... amongst Parsis".[43] Since dates are not specifically mentioned in Parsi texts prior to the 18th century, any date of arrival is perforce a matter of speculation. The importance of the Qissa lies in any case not so much in its reconstruction of events than in its depiction of the Parsis – in the way they have come to view themselves – and in their relationship to the dominant culture. As such, the text plays a crucial role in shaping Parsi identity. But, "even if one comes to the conclusion that the chronicle based on verbal transmission is not more than a legend, it still remains without doubt an extremely informative document for Parsee historiography."[44]

The Sanjan Zoroastrians were certainly not the first Zoroastrians on the subcontinent.[citation needed] Sindh touching Balochistan, the easternmost periphery of the Iranian world, too had once been under coastal administration of the Sasanian Empire (226-651), which consequently maintained outposts there.[citation needed] Even following the loss of Sindh, the Iranians continued to play a major role in the trade links between the east and west.[citation needed] The 9th-century Arab historiographer Al-Masudi briefly notes Zoroastrians with fire temples in al-Hind and in al-Sindh.[45] There is evidence of individual Parsis residing in Sindh in the tenth and twelfth centuries, but the current modern community is thought to date from British arrival in Sindh.[46] Moreover, for the Iranians, the harbours of Gujarat lay on the maritime routes that complemented the overland Silk Road and there were extensive trade relations between the two regions. The contact between Iranians and Indians was already well established even prior to the Common Era, and both the Puranas and the Mahabharata use the term Parasikas to refer to the peoples west of the Indus River.[47]

"Parsi legends regarding their ancestors' migration to India depict a beleaguered band of religious refugees escaping the new rule post the Muslim conquests in order to preserve their ancient faith."[47][48][5][6][7] However, while Parsi settlements definitely arose along the western coast of the Indian subcontinent following the Arab conquest of Iran, it is not possible to state with certainty that these migrations occurred as a result of religious persecution against Zoroastrians. If the "traditional" 8th century date (as deduced from the Qissa) is considered valid, it must be assumed "that the migration began while Zoroastrianism was still the predominant religion in Iran and economic factors predominated the initial decision to migrate."[47] This would have been particularly the case if – as the Qissa suggests – the first Parsis originally came from the north-east (i.e. Central Asia) and had previously been dependent on Silk Road trade.[19] Even so, in the 17th century, Henry Lord, a chaplain with the English East India Company, noted that the Parsis came to India seeking "liberty of conscience" but simultaneously arrived as "merchantmen bound for the shores of India, in course of trade and merchandise."

Early years Edit

The Qissa has little to say about the events that followed the establishment of Sanjan, and restricts itself to a brief note on the establishment of the "Fire of Victory" (Middle Persian: Atash Bahram) at Sanjan and its subsequent move to Navsari. According to Dhalla, the next several centuries were "full of hardships" (sic) before Zoroastrianism "gained a real foothold in India and secured for its adherents some means of livelihood in this new country of their adoption".[49]

Two centuries after their landing, the Parsis began to settle in other parts of Gujarat, which led to "difficulties in defining the limits of priestly jurisdiction."[50] These problems were resolved by 1290 through the division of Gujarat into five panthaks (districts), each under the jurisdiction of one priestly family and their descendants. (Continuing disputes regarding jurisdiction over the Atash Bahram led to the fire being moved to Udvada in 1742, where today jurisdiction is shared in rotation among the five panthak families.)

Inscriptions at the Kanheri Caves near Mumbai suggest that at least until the early 11th century, Middle Persian was still the literary language of the hereditary Zoroastrian priesthood. Nonetheless, aside from the Qissa and the Kanheri inscriptions, there is little evidence of the Parsis until the 12th and 13th century, when "masterly"[51] Sanskrit translations and transcriptions of the Avesta and its commentaries began to be prepared. From these translations Dhalla infers that "religious studies were prosecuted with great zeal at this period" and that the command of Middle Persian and Sanskrit among the clerics "was of a superior order".[51]

From the 13th century to the late 16th century, the Zoroastrian priests of Gujarat sent (in all) twenty-two requests for religious guidance to their co-religionists in Iran, presumably because they considered the Iranian Zoroastrians "better informed on religious matters than themselves, and must have preserved the old-time tradition more faithfully than they themselves did".[52] These transmissions and their replies – assiduously preserved by the community as the rivayats (epistles) – span the years 1478–1766 and deal with both religious and social subjects. From a superficial 21st century point of view, some of these ithoter ("questions") are remarkably trivial – for instance, Rivayat 376: whether ink prepared by a non-Zoroastrian is suitable for copying Avestan language texts – but they provide a discerning insight into the fears and anxieties of the early modern Zoroastrians. Thus, the question of the ink is symptomatic of the fear of assimilation and the loss of identity, a theme that dominates the questions posed and continues to be an issue into the 21st century. So also the question of conversion of Juddins (non-Zoroastrians) to Zoroastrianism, to which the reply (R237, R238) was: acceptable, even meritorious.[53]

Nonetheless, "the precarious condition in which they lived for a considerable period made it impracticable for them to keep up their former proselytizing zeal. The instinctive fear of disintegration and absorption in the vast multitudes among whom they lived created in them a spirit of exclusiveness and a strong desire to preserve the racial characteristics and distinctive features of their community. Living in an atmosphere surcharged with the Hindu caste system, they felt that their own safety lay in encircling their fold by rigid caste barriers".[54] Even so, at some point (possibly shortly after their arrival in India), the Zoroastrians – perhaps determining that the social stratification that they had brought with them was unsustainable in the small community – did away with all but the hereditary priesthood (called the asronih in Sassanid Iran). The remaining estates – the (r)atheshtarih (nobility, soldiers, and civil servants), vastaryoshih (farmers and herdsmen), hutokshih (artisans and labourers) – were folded into an all-comprehensive class today known as the behdini ("followers of daena", for which "good religion" is one translation). This change would have far reaching consequences. For one, it opened the gene pool to some extent since until that time inter-class marriages were exceedingly rare (this would continue to be a problem for the priesthood until the 20th century). For another, it did away with the boundaries along occupational lines, a factor that would endear the Parsis to the 18th- and 19th-century colonial authorities who had little patience for the unpredictable complications of the Hindu caste system (such as when a clerk from one caste would not deal with a clerk from another).[citation needed]

Age of opportunity Edit

Following the commercial treaty in the early 17th century between Mughal emperor Jahangir and James I of England, the East India Company obtained the exclusive rights to reside and build factories in Surat and other areas. Many Parsis, who until then had been living in farming communities throughout Gujarat, moved to the English-run settlements to take the new jobs offered. In 1668 the English East India Company leased the Seven Islands of Bombay from Charles II of England. The company found the deep harbour on the east coast of the islands to be ideal for setting up their first port in the sub-continent, and in 1687 they transferred their headquarters from Surat to the fledgling settlement. The Parsis followed and soon began to occupy posts of trust in connection with government and public works.[55]

Where literacy had previously been the exclusive domain of the priesthood, in the era of the British Raj, the British schools in India provided the new Parsi youth with the means not only to learn to read and write but also to be educated in the greater sense of the term and become familiar with the quirks of the British establishment. These capabilities were enormously useful to Parsis since they allowed them to "represent themselves as being like the British," which they did "more diligently and effectively than perhaps any other South Asian community".[56] While the colonial authorities often saw the other Indians "as passive, ignorant, irrational, outwardly submissive but inwardly guileful",[57] the Parsis were seen to have the traits that the authorities tended to ascribe to themselves. Johan Albrecht de Mandelslo (1638) saw them as "diligent", "conscientious", and "skillful" in their mercantile pursuits. Similar observations would be made by James Mackintosh, Recorder of Bombay from 1804 to 1811, who noted that "the Parsees are a small remnant of one of the mightiest nations of the ancient world, who, flying from persecution into India, were for many ages lost in obscurity and poverty, till at length they met a just government under which they speedily rose to be one of the most popular mercantile bodies in Asia".[58]

One of these was an enterprising agent named Rustom Maneck. In 1702, Maneck, who had probably already amassed a fortune under the Dutch and Portuguese, was appointed the first broker to the East India Company (acquiring the name "Seth" in the process), and in the following years "he and his Parsi associates widened the occupational and financial horizons of the larger Parsi community".[59] Thus, by the mid-18th century, the brokerage houses of the Bombay Presidency were almost all in Parsi hands. As James Forbes, the Collector of Broach (now Bharuch), would note in his Oriental Memoirs (1770): "many of the principal merchants and owners of ships at Bombay and Surat are Parsees." "Active, robust, prudent and persevering, they now form a very valuable part of the Company's subjects on the western shores of Hindustan where they are highly esteemed".[58]In the 18th century, Parsis with their skills in ship building and trade greatly benefited with trade between India and China. The trade was mainly in timber, silk, cotton and opium. For example Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy acquired most of his wealth through trade in cotton and opium[60] Gradually certain families "acquired wealth and prominence (Sorabji, Modi, Cama, Wadia, Jeejeebhoy, Readymoney, Dadyseth, Petit, Patel, Mehta, Allbless, Tata, etc.), many of which would be noted for their participation in the public life of the city, and for their various educational, industrial, and charitable enterprises."[61][62]).

Through his largesse, Maneck helped establish the infrastructure that was necessary for the Parsis to set themselves up in Bombay and in doing so "established Bombay as the primary centre of Parsi habitation and work in the 1720s".[59] Following the political and economic isolation of Surat in the 1720s and 1730s that resulted from troubles between the (remnant) Mughal authorities and the increasingly dominant Marathas, a number of Parsi families from Surat migrated to the new city. While in 1700 "fewer than a handful of individuals appear as merchants in any records; by mid-century, Parsis engaged in commerce constituted one of important commercial groups in Bombay".[63] Maneck's generosity is incidentally also the first documented instance of Parsi philanthropy. In 1689, Anglican chaplain John Ovington reported that in Surat the family "assist the poor and are ready to provide for the sustenance and comfort of such as want it. Their universal kindness, either employing such as are ready and able to work, or bestowing a seasonable bounteous charity to such as are infirm and miserable, leave no man destitute of relief, nor suffer a beggar in all their tribe".[64]

 
"Parsis of Bombay" a wood engraving, ca. 1878

In 1728 Rustom's eldest son Naoroz (later Naorojee) founded the Bombay Parsi Panchayet (in the sense of an instrument for self-governance and not in the sense of the trust it is today) to assist newly arriving Parsis in religious, social, legal and financial matters. Using their vast resources, the Maneck Seth family gave their time, energy and not inconsiderable financial resources to the Parsi community, with the result that by the mid-18th century, the Panchayat was the accepted means for Parsis to cope with the exigencies of urban life and the recognized instrument for regulating the affairs of the community.[65] Nonetheless, by 1838 the Panchayat was under attack for impropriety and nepotism. In 1855 the Bombay Times noted that the Panchayat was utterly without the moral or legal authority to enforce its statutes (the Bundobusts or codes of conduct) and the council soon ceased to be considered representative of the community.[66] In the wake of a July 1856 ruling by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council that it had no jurisdiction over the Parsis in matters of marriage and divorce, the Panchayat was reduced to little more than a Government-recognized "Parsi Matrimonial Court". Although the Panchayat would eventually be reestablished as the administrator of community property, it ultimately ceased to be an instrument for self-governance.[67]

At about the same time as the role of the Panchayat was declining, a number of other institutions arose that would replace the Panchayat's role in contributing to the sense of social cohesiveness that the community desperately sought. By the mid-19th century, the Parsis were keenly aware that their numbers were declining and saw education as a possible solution to the problem. In 1842 Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy established the Parsi Benevolent Fund with the aim of improving, through education, the condition of the impoverished Parsis still living in Surat and its environs. In 1849 the Parsis established their first school (co-educational, which was a novelty at the time, but would soon be split into separate schools for boys and girls) and the education movement quickened. The number of Parsi schools multiplied, but other schools and colleges were also freely attended.[68] Accompanied by better education and social cohesiveness, the community's sense of distinctiveness grew, and in 1854 Dinshaw Maneckji Petit founded the Persian Zoroastrian Amelioration Fund with the aim of improving conditions for his less fortunate co-religionists in Iran. The fund succeeded in convincing a number of Iranian Zoroastrians to emigrate to India (where they are known today as Iranis) and the efforts of its emissary Maneckji Limji Hataria were instrumental in obtaining a remission of the jizya for their co-religionists in 1882.

In the 18th and 19th centuries, the Parsis had emerged as "the foremost people in India in matters educational, industrial, and social. They came in the vanguard of progress, amassed vast fortunes, and munificently gave away large sums in charity".[69] Near the end of the 19th century, the total number of Parsis in colonial India was 85,397, of which 48,507 lived in Bombay, constituting around 6.7% of the total population of the city, according to the 1881 census.[70] This would be the last time that the Parsis would be considered a numerically significant minority in the city.[original research?]

Nonetheless, the legacy of the 19th century was a sense of self-awareness as a community. The typically Parsi cultural symbols of the 17th and 18th centuries such as language (a Parsi variant of Gujarati), arts, crafts, and sartorial habits developed into Parsi theatre, literature, newspapers, magazines, and schools. The Parsis now ran community medical centres, ambulance corps, Scouting troops, clubs, and Masonic Lodges. They had their own charitable foundations, housing estates, legal institutions, courts, and governance. They were no longer weavers and petty merchants, but now were established and ran banks, mills, heavy industry, shipyards, and shipping companies. Moreover, even while maintaining their own cultural identity they did not fail to recognize themselves as nationally Indian, as Dadabhai Naoroji, the first Asian to occupy a seat in the British Parliament would note: "Whether I am a Hindu, a Mohammedan, a Parsi, a Christian, or of any other creed, I am above all an Indian. Our country is India; our nationality is Indian".[71] While having an outsized role in the Indian independence movement, the majority of Parsis opposed the partition of undivided India.[72][73]

Religious practices Edit

The main components of Zoroastrianism as practiced by the Parsi community are the concepts of purity and pollution (nasu), initiation (navjot), daily prayers, worship at Fire Temples, marriage, funerals, and general worship.[citation needed]

Purity and pollution Edit

The balance between good and evil is correlated to the idea of purity and pollution. Purity is held to be of the very essence of godliness. Pollution's very point is to destroy purity through the death of a human. In order to adhere to purity it is the duty of Parsis to continue to preserve purity within their body as God created them. A Zoroastrian priest spends his entire life dedicated to following a holy life.

Navjote Edit

Zoroastrians are not initiated by infant baptism. A child is initiated into the faith when they are old enough to enter into the faith when they are old enough to recite some required prayers along with the priest at the time of the Navjote ceremony, ideally before they hit puberty. Though there is no actual age by which a child must be initiated into the faith (preferably after 7 years), Navjote cannot be performed on an adult. While the Parsi traditionally do not do adult Navjote (except in cases where it is performed for descendants of Parsi wanting to join the faith), the Iranian Zoroastrian equivalent, the sedreh-pushti can be done at any age for those wanting to convert.[74]

The initiation begins with a ritual bath, then a spiritual cleansing prayer; the child changes into white pajama pants, a shawl, and a small cap. Following introductory prayers, the child is given the sacred items that are associated with Zoroastrianism: a sacred shirt and cord, sudre, and kusti. The child then faces the main priest and fire is brought in to represent God. Once the priest finishes with the prayers, the child's initiation is complete and he or she has become part of the community and religion.

Marriage Edit

 
Parsi wedding 1905.

Marriage is very important to the members of the Parsi community, believing that in order to continue the expansion of God's kingdom they must procreate. Up until the mid-19th century child marriages were common even though the idea of child marriage was not part of the religious doctrine. Consequently, when social reform started happening in India, the Parsi community discontinued the practice[citation needed]. There are, however, rising problems over the availability of brides. More and more women in the Parsi community are becoming well educated and are therefore either delaying marriage or not partaking at all[citation needed]. Women within the Parsi community in India are ninety-seven percent literate; forty-two percent have completed high school or college and twenty-nine percent have an occupation in which they earn a substantial amount of money. The wedding ceremony begins much like the initiation with a cleansing bath. The bride and groom then travel to the wedding in florally decorated cars. The priests from both families facilitate the wedding. The couple begin by facing one another with a sheet to block their view of each another. Wool is passed over the two seven times to bind them together. The two are then supposed to throw rice to their partner symbolizing dominance. The religious element comes in next when the two sit side by side to face the priest.[citation needed]

Funerals Edit

 
Parsi Tower of Silence, Bombay.

The pollution that is associated with death has to be handled carefully. A separate part of the home is designated to house the corpse for funeral proceedings before being taken away. The priest comes to say prayers that are for the cleansing of sins and to affirm the faith of the deceased. Fire is brought to the room and prayers are begun. The body is washed and inserted clean within a sudre and kusti. The ceremony then begins, and a circle is drawn around the body into which only the bearers may enter. As they proceed to the cemetery they walk in pairs and are connected by white fabric. A dog is essential in the funeral process because it is able to see death. The body is taken to the tower of death where the vultures feed on it. Once the bones are bleached by the sun they are pushed into the circular opening in the center. The mourning process is four days long, and rather than creating graves for the dead, charities are established in honor of the person.

 
Parsi Fire Temple Delhi

Temples Edit

 
Parsi Fire Temple of Ahmedabad, India

Zoroastrian festivals were originally held outside in the open air; temples were not common until later. Most of the temples were built by wealthy Parsis who needed centers that housed purity. As stated before, fire is considered to represent the presence of Ahura Mazda, and there are two distinct differences for the types of fire for the different temples. The first type of temple is the Atash Behram, which is the highest level of fire. The fire is prepared for an entire year before it can be installed, and once it is, it is cared for to the highest possible degree. There are only eight such temples located within India. The second type of fire temple is called a Dar-i Mihr, and the preparation process is not as intense. There are about 160 of these located throughout India.

Factions within the community Edit

 
Parsi Jashan ceremony (in this case, a house blessing)

Calendrical differences Edit

This section contains information specific to the Parsi calendar. For information on the calendar used by the Zoroastrians for religious purposes, including details on its history and its variations, see Zoroastrian calendar.

Until about the 12th century, all Zoroastrians followed the same 365-day religious calendar, which had remained largely unmodified since the calendar reforms of Ardashir I (r. 226-241 AD). Since that calendar did not compensate for the fractional days that go to make up a full solar year, with time it was no longer accordant with the seasons.

Sometime between 1125 and 1250 (cf. Boyce 1970, p. 537), the Parsis inserted an embolismic month to level out the accumulating fractional days. However, the Parsis were the only Zoroastrians to do so (and did it only once), with the result that, from then on, the calendar in use by the Parsis and the calendar in use by Zoroastrians elsewhere diverged by a matter of thirty days. The calendars still had the same name, Shahenshahi (imperial), presumably because none were aware that the calendars were no longer the same.

In 1745 the Parsis in and around Surat switched to the Kadmi or Kadimi calendar on the recommendation of their priests who were convinced that the calendar in use in the ancient homeland must be correct. Moreover, they denigrated the Shahenshahi calendar as being "royalist".

In 1906 attempts to bring the two factions together resulted in the introduction of a third calendar based on an 11th-century Seljuk model: the Fasili, or Fasli, calendar had leap days intercalated every four years and it had a New Year's day that fell on the day of the vernal equinox. Although it was the only calendar always in harmony with the seasons, most members of the Parsi community rejected it on the grounds that it was not in accord with the injunctions expressed in Zoroastrian tradition (Dēnkard 3.419).[75]

Today the majority of Parsis are adherents of the Parsi version of the Shahenshahi calendar although the Kadmi calendar does have its adherents among the Parsi communities of Surat and Bharuch. The Fasli calendar does not have a significant following among Parsis, but, by virtue of being compatible with the Bastani calendar (an Iranian development with the same salient features as the Fasli calendar), it is predominant among the Zoroastrians of Iran.

Effect of the calendar disputes Edit

Since some of the Avesta prayers contain references to the names of the months, and some other prayers are used only at specific times of the year, the issue of which calendar is "correct" also has theological ramifications.

To further complicate matters, in the late 18th century (or early 19th century) a highly influential head-priest and staunch proponent of the Kadmi calendar, Phiroze Kaus Dastur of the Dadyseth Atash-Behram in Bombay, became convinced that the pronunciation of prayers as recited by visitors from Iran was correct, while the pronunciation as used by the Parsis was not. He accordingly went on to alter some (but not all) of the prayers, which in due course came to be accepted by all adherents of the Kadmi calendar as the more ancient (and thus presumably correct). However, scholars of Avestan language and linguistics attribute the difference in pronunciation to a vowel-shift that occurred only in Iran and that the Iranian pronunciation as adopted by the Kadmis is actually more recent than the pronunciation used by the non-Kadmi Parsis.

The calendar disputes were not always purely academic, either. In the 1780s, emotions over the controversy ran so high that violence occasionally erupted. In 1783 a Shahenshahi resident of Bharuch named Homaji Jamshedji was sentenced to death for kicking a young Kadmi woman and so causing her to miscarry.

Of the eight Atash-Behrams (the highest grade of fire temple) in India, three follow the Kadmi pronunciation and calendar, the other five are Shahenshahi. The Fassalis do not have their own Atash-Behram.

Ilm-e-Kshnoom Edit

The Ilm-e-Kshnoom ('science of ecstasy', or 'science of bliss') is a school of Parsi-Zoroastrian philosophy based on a mystic and esoteric, rather than literal, interpretation of religious texts. According to adherents of the sect, they are followers of the Zoroastrian faith as preserved by a clan of 2000 individuals called the Saheb-e-Dilan ('Masters of the Heart') who are said to live in complete isolation in the mountainous recesses of the Caucasus (alternatively, in the Alborz range, around Mount Damavand).

There are few obvious indications that a Parsi might be a follower of the Kshnoom. Although their Kusti prayers are very similar to those used by the Fassalis, like the rest of the Parsi community the followers of Kshnoom are divided with respect to which calendar they observe. There are also other minor differences in their recitation of the liturgy, such as repetition of some sections of the longer prayers. Nonetheless, the Kshnoom are extremely conservative in their ideology and prefer isolation even with respect to other Parsis.

The largest community of followers of the Kshnoom lives in Jogeshwari, a suburb of Bombay, where they have their own fire temple (Behramshah Nowroji Shroff Daremeher), their own housing colony (Behram Baug) and their own newspaper (Parsi Pukar). There is a smaller concentration of adherents in Surat, where the sect was founded in the last decades of the 19th century.

Issues relating to the deceased Edit

 
Parsi funerary monument, St Mary's Cemetery, Wandsworth

It has been traditional, in Mumbai and Karachi at least, for dead Parsis to be taken to the Towers of Silence where the corpses are quickly eaten by the city's vultures. The reason given for this practice is that earth, fire, and water are considered sacred elements which should not be defiled by the dead. Therefore, burial and cremation have always been prohibited in Parsi culture. However, in modern day Mumbai and Karachi the population of vultures has drastically reduced due to extensive urbanization and the unintended consequence of treating humans and livestock with antibiotics,[76] and the anti-inflammatory diclofenac, which harm vultures and have led to the Indian vulture crisis.[77] As a result, the bodies of the deceased are taking much longer to decompose. Solar panels have been installed in the Towers of Silence to speed up the decomposition process, but this has been only partially successful especially during monsoons. In Peshawar a Parsi graveyard was established in the late 19th century, which still exists; this cemetery is unique as there is no Tower of Silence. Nevertheless, the majority of Parsis still use the traditional method of disposing of their loved ones and consider this as the last act of charity by the deceased on earth.

The Tower of Silence in Mumbai is located at Doongerwadi at Malabar Hill. In Karachi, the Tower of Silence is located in Parsi Colony, near the Chanesar Goth and Mehmoodabad localities.[78]

Archaeogenetics Edit

Genealogical DNA tests to determine purity of lineage have brought mixed results. Some studies supports the Parsi contention[79] that they have maintained their Persian roots by avoiding intermarriage with local populations. In that 2002 study of the Y-chromosome (patrilineal) DNA of the Parsis of Pakistan, it was determined that Parsis are genetically closer to Iranians than to their neighbours.[80]

A 2004 study in which Parsi mitochondrial DNA (matrilineal) was compared with that of the Iranians and Gujaratis determined that the mitochondrial lineage of some Parsis was genetically closer to Gujaratis than to Iranians. Taking the 2002 study into account, the authors of the 2004 study suggested "a male-mediated migration of the ancestors of the present-day Parsi population, where they admixed with local females [...] leading ultimately to the loss of mtDNA of Iranian origin".[81]

These results were superseded in 2017, when a research study discovered that Parsis exhibit a stronger genetic affinity with Neolithic Iranians than with modern Iranians, who have experienced more recent admixture from the Near East. The study also identified 48% of South-Asian-specific mitochondrial lineages in ancient samples, which could be attributed to the assimilation of local females during the initial settlement or may be representative of mitochondrial lineages that have become extinct in Iran .[27] That would make the population genetics of Parsis about 3/4 Iranian and 1/4 Indian.

The genetic studies of Parsis of Pakistan show sharp contrast between genetic data obtained from mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and Y-chromosome DNA (Y-DNA), different from most populations. Historical records suggests that they had moved from Iran to Gujarat, India and then to Mumbai and Karachi, Pakistan. According to Y-DNA, they resemble the Iranian population, which supports historical records. When the mtDNA pool is compared to Iranians and Gujaratis (their putative parental populations), it contrasted Y-DNA data. About 60% of their maternal gene pool originates from South Asian haplogroups, which is just 7% in Iranians. Parsis have a high frequency of haplogroup M (55%), similar to Indians, which is just 1.7% in combined Iranian sample. According to the research findings, there is a noticeable contrast between the maternal and paternal components of the Parsi population. Despite their small population size, the high diversity observed in both the Y-DNA and mtDNA lineages suggests that a strong drift effect is improbable. The studies suggest a male-mediated migration of Parsi ancestors from Iran to Gujarat where they admixed with the local female population during initial settlements, which ultimately resulted in loss of Iranian mtDNA.[81][27]

A study published in Genome Biology based on high density SNP data has shown that the Parsis are genetically closer to Iranian populations than to their South Asian neighbours. They also share the highest number of haplotypes with present-day Iranians; the admixture of the Parsis with Indian populations was estimated have occurred approximately 1,200 years ago. It is also found that Parsis are genetically closer to Neolithic Iranians than to modern Iranians who had recently received some genes from the Near East.[27]

The absence of lung cancer-related DNA mutational signals among Parsis both point to the community's distinctive non-smoking social practises, which have been practised for millennia. Additionally Parsis have high prevalence of longevity as a genetic feature.[82] Parsis have however been shown to have high rates of breast cancer[83] bladder cancer, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and Parkinson's disease.[84]

Prominent Parsis Edit

D. L. Sheth, the former director of the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), lists Indian communities that constituted the middle class and were traditionally "urban and professional" (following professions such as doctors, lawyers, teachers, engineers, etc.) immediately after Indian partition in 1947. This list included the Kashmiri Pandits, the Nagar Brahmins from Gujarat, the Brahmins from Southern India, the Punjabi Khatris and Kayastha from northern India, the Chitpavans and CKPs from Maharashtra; Bengali Probasis and Bhadraloks, the Parsis, as well as the upper echelons of the Indian Muslim and Indian Christian communities throughout the country. According to Pavan K. Varma, "Education was a common thread that bound together this pan-Indian elite"; almost all of the members of these communities could read and write in English and were educated beyond regular schooling institutions.[85][86]

 
Freddie Mercury, lead singer of the rock band Queen
 
Jamsetji Tata, founder of Tata Group of companies.

The Parsis have made considerable contributions to the history and development of India, all the more remarkable considering their small numbers. As the maxim "Parsi, thy name is charity" alludes to, their most prominent contribution is their philanthropy.

Although their people's name Parsi comes from the Persian-language word for a Persian person, in Sanskrit the term means "one who gives alms".[9][10] Mahatma Gandhi would note in a much misquoted statement,[87] "I am proud of my country, India, for having produced the splendid Zoroastrian stock, in numbers beneath contempt, but in charity and philanthropy perhaps unequaled and certainly unsurpassed."[88] Several landmarks in Mumbai are named after Parsis, including Nariman Point. The Malabar Hill in Mumbai, is a home to several prominent Parsis. Parsis prominent in the Indian independence movement include Pherozeshah Mehta, Dadabhai Naoroji, and Bhikaiji Cama.

Particularly notable Parsis in the fields of science and industry include physicist Homi J. Bhabha, nuclear scientist Homi N. Sethna, industrialists J. R. D. Tata and Jamsetji Tata, regarded as the "Father of Indian Industry",[89] and construction tycoon Pallonji Mistry. The families Godrej, Mistry, Tata, Petit, Cowasjee, Poonawalla, and Wadia are important industrial Parsi families.

Other notable Parsi business persons include Ratan Tata, Cyrus Mistry, Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata, Dinshaw Maneckji Petit, Ness Wadia, Neville Wadia, Jehangir Wadia and Nusli Wadia—all of them related through marriage to Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan. Mohammad Ali Jinnah's wife Rattanbai Petit, was born into two of the Parsi PetitTata families, and their daughter Dina Jinnah was married to Parsi industrialist Neville Wadia, the scion of the Wadia family. The husband of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and son-in-law of Jawaharlal Nehru, Feroze Gandhi, was a Parsi with ancestral roots in Bharuch.

The Parsi community has given India several distinguished military officers. Field Marshal Sam Hormusji Framji Jamshedji Manekshaw, Military Cross, the architect of India's victory in the 1971 war, was the first officer of the Indian Army to be appointed a Field Marshal. Admiral Jal Cursetji was the first Parsi to be appointed Chief of the Naval Staff of the Indian Navy. Air Marshal Aspy Engineer served as India's second Chief of Air Staff, post-independence, and Air Chief Marshal. Fali Homi Major served as the 18th Chief of Air Staff. Vice Admiral RF Contractor served as the 17th Chief of the Indian Coast Guard. Lieutenant Colonel Ardeshir Burjorji Tarapore was killed in action in the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war and was posthumously awarded the Param Vir Chakra, India's highest military award for gallantry in action.

Particularly notable Parsis in other areas of achievement include cricketers Farokh Engineer, Nari Contractor and Polly Umrigar, rock musician Freddie Mercury, composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji and conductor Zubin Mehta; cultural studies theorist Homi K. Bhabha; screenwriter and photographer Sooni Taraporevala; authors Rohinton Mistry, Firdaus Kanga, Bapsi Sidhwa, Ardashir Vakil and investigative journalists Ardeshir Cowasjee, Russi Karanjia, Behram Contractor; actor Boman Irani; educator Jamshed Bharucha, India's first woman photo-journalist Homai Vyarawalla; Actresses Nina Wadia and Persis Khambatta are Parsi who appear primarily in Bollywood films and television serials. Naxalite leader and intellectual Kobad Ghandy is a Parsi. Mithan Jamshed Lam was a suffragist, the first female barrister admitted to practice law at the Bombay High Court, and served as a Sheriff of Bombay. Dorab Patel was Pakistan's first Parsi Supreme Court Justice. Fali S Nariman, Nani Ardeshir Palkhivala are constitutional experts and noted jurist. Soli Sorabjee was a prominent Indian jurist and former Attorney-General of India. Rattana Pestonji was a Parsi living in Thailand who helped develop Thai cinema. Another famous Parsi is the Indian-born American actor Erick Avari, best known for his roles in science-fiction films and television. Cyrus S. Poonawalla and Adar Poonawalla are prominent Indian Parsi businessmen.

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  88. ^ Rivetna 2002.
  89. ^ "Jamshedji Tata - Founder of TATA Industries". webindia123.com.

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  • Boyce, M. (July 2002), "The Parthians", in Godrej, P.J. (ed.), A Zoroastrian Tapestry, New York: Mapin, ISBN 978-1-890206-22-2
  • Chaubey, Gyaneshwer; Ayub, Qasim; Rai, Niraj; Prakash, Satya; Mushrif-Tripathy, Veena; Mezzavilla, Massimo; Pathak, Ajai Kumar; Tamang, Rakesh; Firasat, Sadaf; Reidla, Maere; Karmin, Monika; Rani, Deepa Selvi; Reddy, Alla G.; Parik, Jüri; Metspalu, Ene; Rootsi, Siiri; Dalal, Kurush; Khaliq, Shagufta; Mehdi, Syed Qasim; Singh, Lalji; Metspalu, Mait; Kivisild, Toomas; Tyler-Smith, Chris; Villems, Richard; Thangaraj, Kumarasamy (2017). ""Like sugar in milk": Reconstructing the genetic history of the Parsi population". Genome Biology. 18 (1): 110. doi:10.1186/s13059-017-1244-9. PMC 5470188. PMID 28615043.
  • Darukhanawala, H.; Jeejeebhoy, J (1938), Parsi Lustre on Indian Soil, Vol. I, Bombay: G. Claridge
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  • Eliade, M.; Couliano, I.; Wiesner, H. (1991), The Eliade Guide to World Religions, New York: HarperCollins, ISBN 978-0-06-062145-2
  • Hinnells, John R. (2005), The Zoroastrian Diaspora: Religion and Migration, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-826759-1
  • Hodivala, S. (1920), Studies in Parsi History, Bombay{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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Further reading Edit

  • "Parsi-Religion and Expressive Culture". Countries and their Cultures. Advameg, Inc.
  • . Kwintessentials. Archived from the original on May 1, 2016. Retrieved June 8, 2013.
  • Naoroji, Dadabhai (1861), The Parsee Religion, University of London
  • Haug, Martin. (1878) Essays on the Sacred Language, Writings, and Religion of the Parsis
  • Karaka, Dosabhai Framjee (1884a), History of the Parsis – Including their manners, customs, religion and present position. (Vol. 1), London: Macmillan & Co.
  • Karaka, Dosabhai Framjee (1884b), History of the Parsis – Including their manners, customs, religion and present position. (Vol. 2), London: Macmillan & Co.
  • Karkaria, Bachi (January 9, 2016). "Why is India's wealthy Parsi community vanishing?". BBC.
  • Marashi, Afshin. "Exile and the Nation: The Parsi Community of India and the Making of Modern Iran". University of Texas Press, 2020.
  • Editorial Viewpoint (February 21, 2006), , Parsiana, no. 48, archived from the original on July 15, 2011
  • Uberoi, Anuradha (January 6, 2020), Chennai Brew- Some Voices Some Communities & "These Communities Call Chennai 'home'", The Hindu. ISBN 978-93-5351-676-5.

External links Edit

  • Parsis at Curlie
  • . Hindustan Times. July 27, 2010. Archived from the original on December 25, 2011.
  • —online book
  • "Falling Indian minority hopes romance can stop decline"—BBC News
  • The Story of Parsi Enterprise

parsis, this, article, about, zoroastrian, community, indian, subcontinent, persian, people, persians, persian, language, persian, language, other, uses, parsi, disambiguation, ɑːr, parsees, ethnoreligious, group, indian, subcontinent, adhering, zoroastrianism. This article is about a Zoroastrian community in the Indian subcontinent For the Persian people see Persians For the Persian language see Persian language For other uses see Parsi disambiguation Parsis ˈ p ɑːr s iː or Parsees are an ethnoreligious group of the Indian subcontinent adhering to Zoroastrianism They are descended from Persians who migrated to Medieval India during and after the Arab conquest of the Persian Empire part of the early Muslim conquests in order to preserve their Zoroastrian identity The Parsi people comprise the older of the Indian subcontinent s two Zoroastrian communities vis a vis the Iranis whose ancestors migrated to British ruled India from Qajar era Iran According to a 16th century Parsi epic Qissa i Sanjan Zoroastrian Persians continued to migrate to the Indian subcontinent from Greater Iran in between the 8th and 10th centuries and ultimately settled in present day Gujarat after being granted refuge by a local Hindu king Jadi Rana 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ParsisA Parsi Lady c 1928 Mahadev V DhurandharRegions with significant populationsIndia57 264 1 2 Pakistan800 3 LanguagesEnglish Indian dialect or Pakistani dialect Gujarati and Hindi UrduReligionZoroastrianismRelated ethnic groupsIranisPrior to the 7th century fall of the Sassanid Empire to the Rashidun Caliphate the Iranian mainland historically known as Persia had a Zoroastrian majority and Zoroastrianism had served as the Iranian state religion since at least the time of the Achaemenid Empire Despite the retreat of many Iranians to the Indian subcontinent 11 a number of Iranian revolutionary figures such as Piruz Nahavandi Babak Khorramdin Mardavij Sunpadh and al Isfahani remained in active rebellion against the Rashidun army and the later Islamic caliphates for almost 200 years after the Arab conquest 12 However the decline of Zoroastrianism in Iran continued and most Iranians had adopted Islam by the 10th century The word Parsi is derived from the Persian language and literally translates to Persian پارسی Parsi 13 The Parsi and Irani communities are the sole ethnoreligious groups practicing Zoroastrianism in India However owing to the more recent migration of the Irani community to the Indian subcontinent it is legally differentiated from the Parsi community 14 Despite this legal distinction the terms Parsi and Zoroastrian are commonly utilized interchangeably to denote both communities Notably no substantial differences exist between the religious principles convictions and customs of Parsis and Irani Zoroastrians 15 16 Contents 1 Definition and identity 2 Origins 2 1 As an ethnic community 2 2 Self perceptions 3 Population 3 1 Other demographic statistics 4 History 4 1 Arrival in the Indian subcontinent 4 2 Early years 4 3 Age of opportunity 5 Religious practices 5 1 Purity and pollution 5 2 Navjote 5 3 Marriage 5 4 Funerals 5 5 Temples 6 Factions within the community 6 1 Calendrical differences 6 1 1 Effect of the calendar disputes 6 2 Ilm e Kshnoom 6 3 Issues relating to the deceased 7 Archaeogenetics 8 Prominent Parsis 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksDefinition and identity EditAccording to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Parsi also spelled Parsee member of a group of followers in India of the Persian prophet Zoroaster The Parsis whose name means Persians are descended from Persian Zoroastrians who emigrated to India to avoid religious persecution by the Muslims They live chiefly in Mumbai and in a few towns and villages mostly to the south of Mumbai but also a few minorities nearby in Karachi Pakistan and Chennai There is a sizeable Parsee population in Pune as well in Bangalore A few Parsee families also reside in Kolkata and Hyderabad Although they are not strictly speaking a caste since they are not Hindus they form a well defined community The exact date of the Parsi migration is unknown According to tradition the Parsis initially settled at Hormuz on the Persian Gulf but finding themselves still persecuted they set sail for India arriving in the 8th century The migration may in fact have taken place as late as the 10th century or in both They settled first at Diu in Kathiawar but soon moved to South Gujarat where they remained for about 800 years as a small agricultural community 17 The term Parsi which in the Persian language is a demonym meaning inhabitant of Pars and hence ethnic Persian is not attested in Indian Zoroastrian texts until the 17th century Until that time such texts consistently use the Persian origin terms Zartoshti Zoroastrian or Vehdin of the good religion The 12th century Sixteen Shlokas a Sanskrit text in praise of the Parsis 18 is the earliest attested use of the term as an identifier for Indian Zoroastrians nbsp Parsis from India c 1870The first reference to the Parsis in a European language is from 1322 when a French monk Jordanus briefly refers to their presence in Thane and Bharuch Subsequently the term appears in the journals of many European travelers first French and Portuguese later English all of whom used a Europeanized version of an apparently local language term For example Portuguese physician Garcia de Orta observed in 1563 that there are merchants in the kingdom of Cambaia known as Esparcis We Portuguese call them Jews but they are not so They are Gentios In an early 20th century legal ruling see self perceptions below Justices Davar and Beaman asserted 1909 540 that Parsi was also a term used in Iran to refer to Zoroastrians 19 20 notes that in much the same way as the word Hindu was used by Iranians to refer to anyone from the Indian subcontinent Parsi was used by the Indians to refer to anyone from Greater Iran irrespective of whether they were actually ethnic Persian people In any case the term Parsi itself is not necessarily an indication of their Iranian or Persian origin but rather as indicator manifest as several properties of ethnic identity 21 Moreover if heredity were the only factor in a determination of ethnicity the Parsis would count as Parthians according to the Qissa i Sanjan 20 The term Parseeism or Parsiism is attributed to Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil Duperron who in the 1750s when the word Zoroastrianism had yet to be coined made the first detailed report of the Parsis and of Zoroastrianism therein mistakenly assuming that the Parsis were the only remaining followers of the religion In addition to above the term Parsi Persian existed even before they moved to India The earliest reference to the Persians is found in the Assyrian inscription of Shalmaneser III c 854 824 BC Darius the Great 521 486 BC establishes this fact when he records his Parsi ancestry for posterity parsa parsahya puthra ariya ariyachitra meaning a Persian the son of a Persian an Aryan of Aryan family Inscription at Naqsh i Rustam near Persepolis Iran In Outlines of Persian History Dasturji Hormazdyar Dastur Kayoji Mirza Bombay 1987 pp 3 4 writes According to the Pahlavi text of Karnamak i Artakhshir i Papakan the Indian astrologer refers to Artakhshir Sasanian king and the founder of the Empire as khvatay parsikan the king of the Persians Herodotus and Xenophon the two great historians who lived in the third and fourth centuries BC referred to Iranians as Persians 22 Origins EditIn ancient Persia Zoroaster taught that good Ohrmazd and evil Angra Mainyu were opposite forces and the battle between them is more or less evenly matched A person should always be vigilant to align with forces of light According to the asha or the righteousness and druj or the wickedness the person has chosen in his life they will be judged at the Chinvat bridge to grant passage to Paradise Hammistagan A limbo area or Hell by a sword A personified form of the soul that represents the person s deeds takes the adjudged to their destination and they will abide there until the final apocalypse After the final battle between good and evil every soul s walk through a river of fire ordeal for burning of their dross and together they receive a post resurrection paradise The Zoroastrian holy book called the Avesta was written in the Avestan language which is closely related to Vedic Sanskrit The Qissa i Sanjan is a tale of the journey of the Parsis to India from Iran It says they fled for reasons of religious freedom and they were allowed to settle in India thanks to the goodwill of a local prince However the Parsi community had to abide by three rules they had to speak the local language follow local marriage customs and not carry any weapons After showing the many similarities between their faith and local beliefs the early community was granted a plot of land on which to build a fire temple citation needed As an ethnic community Edit nbsp Wedding portrait 1948Over the centuries since the first Zoroastrians arrived in India the Parsis have integrated themselves into Indian society while simultaneously maintaining or developing their own distinct customs and traditions and thus ethnic identity This in turn has given the Parsi community a rather peculiar standing they are mostly Indians in terms of national affiliation language and history but not typically Indian in terms of consanguinity or ethnicity cultural behavioural and religious practices Based on their notable accomplishments across various fields and high levels of educational attainment some have postulated that the Parsi community much like the similarly endogamous Ashkenazi Jewish population may exhibit a higher average intelligence compared to other communities Further research is necessary to establish the underlying factors that contribute to any such observed differences 23 Self perceptions Edit nbsp Parsi Navjote ceremony rites of admission into the Zoroastrian faith The definition of who is and is not a Parsi is a matter of great contention within the Zoroastrian community in India It is generally accepted that a Parsi is a person who a is directly descended from the original Persian refugees and b has been formally admitted into the Zoroastrian religion through the navjote ceremony In this sense Parsi is an ethno religious designator whose definition is of contention among its members similar to the identity question among Jews Some members of the community additionally contend that a child must have a Parsi father to be eligible for introduction into the faith but this assertion is considered by most to be a violation of the Zoroastrian tenets of gender equality and may be a remnant of an old legal definition of the term Parsi An oft quoted legal definition of Parsi is based on a 1909 ruling since nullified that not only stipulated that a person could not become a Parsi by converting to the Zoroastrian faith but also noted the Parsi community consists of a Parsis who are descended from the original Persian emigrants and who are born of both Zoroastrian parents and who profess the Zoroastrian religion b Iranis here meaning Iranians not the other group of Indian Zoroastrians professing the Zoroastrian religion c the children of Parsi fathers by alien mothers who have been duly and properly admitted into the religion 24 This definition was overturned several times The equality principles of the Indian Constitution void the patrilineal restrictions expressed in the third clause The second clause was contested and overturned in 1948 25 On appeal in 1950 the 1948 ruling was upheld and the entire 1909 definition was deemed an obiter dictum a collateral opinion and not legally binding re affirmed in 1966 22 26 There is a growing voice within the community that if indeed equality must be re established then the only acceptable solution is to allow a child to be initiated into the faith only if both parents are Parsi citation needed Nonetheless the opinion that the 1909 ruling is legally binding continues to persist even among the better read and moderate Parsis Population EditSee also List of countries by Zoroastrian population Parsi population by census year Year Population Change1971 91 2661981 71 630 nbsp 21 52 19912001 69 6012011 57 264 nbsp 17 73 nbsp The geographical distribution of modern and ancient Parsis in India and Pakistan 27 According to the 2011 Census of India there are 57 264 Parsis in India 28 29 According to the National Commission for Minorities there are a variety of causes that are responsible for this steady decline in the population of the community the most significant of which were childlessness and migration 30 If Demographic trends project that by 2020 the Parsis will number only 23 000 The Parsis will then cease to be called a community and will be labeled a tribe 31 One fifth of the decrease in population is attributed to migration There are sizeable Parsi communities in the United Kingdom Australia Canada and the United States 32 A slower birthrate than deathrate accounts for the rest as of 2001 Parsis over the age of 60 make up for 31 of the community Only 4 7 of the Parsi community are under 6 years of age which translates to 7 births per year per 1000 individuals 33 Concerns have been raised in recent years over the rapidly declining population of the Parsi community in India 34 Parsis have also been migrating to the traditional homeland of Iran and while the number of Parsis who have returned to Iran is small compared to the overall Zoroastrian community in Iran their presence has helped to strengthen the ties between the Iranian and Indian Zoroastrian communities The Parsis played a significant role in the modernization of Iran particularly in the 20th century They served as a reminder of Iran s ancient heritage which was crucial to Iranians The Parsis also demonstrated to Iranians that it was possible to be both modern and culturally authentic and that the revival of Zoroastrianism could be a way of modernizing Iranian culture while retaining its original identity 35 Both Reza Shah and Muhammad Reza Shah played an active role in encouraging Parsis to invest in Iran and contribute to its economic development by inviting them to return to their homeland During the Pahlavi dynasty in Iran the relationship between Zoroastrianism and Iranian national identity was blurred This was exemplified by Reza Shah s adoption of Zoroastrian calendar names and placement of the Fravahar symbol on prominent government buildings Additionally he maintained a close relationship with the Zoroastrian parliamentary representative Keikhosrow Shahrokh who was entrusted by him with important governmental tasks 36 Reza Shah was also sympathetic to Indian Zoroastrians Parsis and actively encouraged their return to Iran to invest and help develop the country s economy In 1932 he invited Dinshah Irani a Parsi leader and founder of the Iranian Zoroastrian Anjoman and the Iran League in India to visit Iran as part of a Parsi delegation Irani was awarded honors by Reza Shah and entrusted with a message to take back to the Parsi community in India You Parsis are as much the children of this soil as any other Iranis and so you are as much entitled to have your proper share in its development as any other nationals We estimate Our Empire s resources to be even greater than those of America and in tapping them you can take your proper part We do not want you to come all bag and baggage just wait a little and watch If you find the proposition beneficial both to yourselves and to this land then do come and We shall greet you with open arms as We might Our dear brothers and sisters Iran is a vast country pregnant with many advantages and fresh fields waiting for development We suggest that the Parsis who are still the sons of Iran though separated from her should look upon this country of to day as their own and differentiate it from its immediate past and strive to derive benefit from her developments 36 37 38 Other demographic statistics Edit The gender ratio among Parsis is unusual as of 2001 the ratio of males to females was 1000 males to 1050 females up from 1024 in 1991 due primarily to the high median age of the population elderly women are more common than elderly men As of 2001 the national average in India was 1000 males to 933 females Parsis have a high literacy rate as of 2001 the literacy rate is 97 9 the highest of any Indian community the national average was 64 8 96 1 of Parsis reside in urban areas the national average is 27 8 Parsis mother tongue is Gujarati citation needed In the Greater Mumbai area where the density of Parsis is highest about 10 of Parsi females and about 20 of Parsi males do not marry 39 History EditArrival in the Indian subcontinent Edit According to the Qissa i Sanjan the only existing account of the early years of Zoroastrian refugees in India composed at least six centuries after their tentative date of arrival the first group of immigrants originated from Greater Khorasan 4 This historical region of Central Asia is in part in northeastern Iran where it constitutes modern Khorasan Province part of western northern Afghanistan and in part in three Central Asian republics namely Tajikistan Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan According to the Qissa the immigrants were granted permission to stay by the local ruler Jadi Rana on the condition that they adopt the local language Gujarati and that their women adopt local dress the sari 40 The refugees accepted the conditions and founded the settlement of Sanjan which is said to have been named after the city of their origin Sanjan near Merv modern Turkmenistan 4 This first group was followed by a second group from Greater Khorasan within five years of the first and this time having religious implements with them the alat In addition to these Khorasanis or Kohistanis mountain folk as the two initial groups are said to have been initially called 41 at least one other group is said to have come overland from Sari Iran 42 nbsp Map of the Sasanian Empire and its surrounding regions on the eve of the Muslim conquest of PersiaAlthough the Sanjan group are believed to have been the first permanent settlers the precise date of their arrival is a matter of conjecture All estimates are based on the Qissa which is vague or contradictory with respect to some elapsed periods Consequently three possible dates 716 765 and 936 have been proposed as the year of landing and the disagreement has been the cause of many an intense battle amongst Parsis 43 Since dates are not specifically mentioned in Parsi texts prior to the 18th century any date of arrival is perforce a matter of speculation The importance of the Qissa lies in any case not so much in its reconstruction of events than in its depiction of the Parsis in the way they have come to view themselves and in their relationship to the dominant culture As such the text plays a crucial role in shaping Parsi identity But even if one comes to the conclusion that the chronicle based on verbal transmission is not more than a legend it still remains without doubt an extremely informative document for Parsee historiography 44 The Sanjan Zoroastrians were certainly not the first Zoroastrians on the subcontinent citation needed Sindh touching Balochistan the easternmost periphery of the Iranian world too had once been under coastal administration of the Sasanian Empire 226 651 which consequently maintained outposts there citation needed Even following the loss of Sindh the Iranians continued to play a major role in the trade links between the east and west citation needed The 9th century Arab historiographer Al Masudi briefly notes Zoroastrians with fire temples in al Hind and in al Sindh 45 There is evidence of individual Parsis residing in Sindh in the tenth and twelfth centuries but the current modern community is thought to date from British arrival in Sindh 46 Moreover for the Iranians the harbours of Gujarat lay on the maritime routes that complemented the overland Silk Road and there were extensive trade relations between the two regions The contact between Iranians and Indians was already well established even prior to the Common Era and both the Puranas and the Mahabharata use the term Parasikas to refer to the peoples west of the Indus River 47 Parsi legends regarding their ancestors migration to India depict a beleaguered band of religious refugees escaping the new rule post the Muslim conquests in order to preserve their ancient faith 47 48 5 6 7 However while Parsi settlements definitely arose along the western coast of the Indian subcontinent following the Arab conquest of Iran it is not possible to state with certainty that these migrations occurred as a result of religious persecution against Zoroastrians If the traditional 8th century date as deduced from the Qissa is considered valid it must be assumed that the migration began while Zoroastrianism was still the predominant religion in Iran and economic factors predominated the initial decision to migrate 47 This would have been particularly the case if as the Qissa suggests the first Parsis originally came from the north east i e Central Asia and had previously been dependent on Silk Road trade 19 Even so in the 17th century Henry Lord a chaplain with the English East India Company noted that the Parsis came to India seeking liberty of conscience but simultaneously arrived as merchantmen bound for the shores of India in course of trade and merchandise Early years Edit The Qissa has little to say about the events that followed the establishment of Sanjan and restricts itself to a brief note on the establishment of the Fire of Victory Middle Persian Atash Bahram at Sanjan and its subsequent move to Navsari According to Dhalla the next several centuries were full of hardships sic before Zoroastrianism gained a real foothold in India and secured for its adherents some means of livelihood in this new country of their adoption 49 Two centuries after their landing the Parsis began to settle in other parts of Gujarat which led to difficulties in defining the limits of priestly jurisdiction 50 These problems were resolved by 1290 through the division of Gujarat into five panthaks districts each under the jurisdiction of one priestly family and their descendants Continuing disputes regarding jurisdiction over the Atash Bahram led to the fire being moved to Udvada in 1742 where today jurisdiction is shared in rotation among the five panthak families Inscriptions at the Kanheri Caves near Mumbai suggest that at least until the early 11th century Middle Persian was still the literary language of the hereditary Zoroastrian priesthood Nonetheless aside from the Qissa and the Kanheri inscriptions there is little evidence of the Parsis until the 12th and 13th century when masterly 51 Sanskrit translations and transcriptions of the Avesta and its commentaries began to be prepared From these translations Dhalla infers that religious studies were prosecuted with great zeal at this period and that the command of Middle Persian and Sanskrit among the clerics was of a superior order 51 From the 13th century to the late 16th century the Zoroastrian priests of Gujarat sent in all twenty two requests for religious guidance to their co religionists in Iran presumably because they considered the Iranian Zoroastrians better informed on religious matters than themselves and must have preserved the old time tradition more faithfully than they themselves did 52 These transmissions and their replies assiduously preserved by the community as the rivayats epistles span the years 1478 1766 and deal with both religious and social subjects From a superficial 21st century point of view some of these ithoter questions are remarkably trivial for instance Rivayat 376 whether ink prepared by a non Zoroastrian is suitable for copying Avestan language texts but they provide a discerning insight into the fears and anxieties of the early modern Zoroastrians Thus the question of the ink is symptomatic of the fear of assimilation and the loss of identity a theme that dominates the questions posed and continues to be an issue into the 21st century So also the question of conversion of Juddins non Zoroastrians to Zoroastrianism to which the reply R237 R238 was acceptable even meritorious 53 Nonetheless the precarious condition in which they lived for a considerable period made it impracticable for them to keep up their former proselytizing zeal The instinctive fear of disintegration and absorption in the vast multitudes among whom they lived created in them a spirit of exclusiveness and a strong desire to preserve the racial characteristics and distinctive features of their community Living in an atmosphere surcharged with the Hindu caste system they felt that their own safety lay in encircling their fold by rigid caste barriers 54 Even so at some point possibly shortly after their arrival in India the Zoroastrians perhaps determining that the social stratification that they had brought with them was unsustainable in the small community did away with all but the hereditary priesthood called the asronih in Sassanid Iran The remaining estates the r atheshtarih nobility soldiers and civil servants vastaryoshih farmers and herdsmen hutokshih artisans and labourers were folded into an all comprehensive class today known as the behdini followers of daena for which good religion is one translation This change would have far reaching consequences For one it opened the gene pool to some extent since until that time inter class marriages were exceedingly rare this would continue to be a problem for the priesthood until the 20th century For another it did away with the boundaries along occupational lines a factor that would endear the Parsis to the 18th and 19th century colonial authorities who had little patience for the unpredictable complications of the Hindu caste system such as when a clerk from one caste would not deal with a clerk from another citation needed Age of opportunity Edit Following the commercial treaty in the early 17th century between Mughal emperor Jahangir and James I of England the East India Company obtained the exclusive rights to reside and build factories in Surat and other areas Many Parsis who until then had been living in farming communities throughout Gujarat moved to the English run settlements to take the new jobs offered In 1668 the English East India Company leased the Seven Islands of Bombay from Charles II of England The company found the deep harbour on the east coast of the islands to be ideal for setting up their first port in the sub continent and in 1687 they transferred their headquarters from Surat to the fledgling settlement The Parsis followed and soon began to occupy posts of trust in connection with government and public works 55 Where literacy had previously been the exclusive domain of the priesthood in the era of the British Raj the British schools in India provided the new Parsi youth with the means not only to learn to read and write but also to be educated in the greater sense of the term and become familiar with the quirks of the British establishment These capabilities were enormously useful to Parsis since they allowed them to represent themselves as being like the British which they did more diligently and effectively than perhaps any other South Asian community 56 While the colonial authorities often saw the other Indians as passive ignorant irrational outwardly submissive but inwardly guileful 57 the Parsis were seen to have the traits that the authorities tended to ascribe to themselves Johan Albrecht de Mandelslo 1638 saw them as diligent conscientious and skillful in their mercantile pursuits Similar observations would be made by James Mackintosh Recorder of Bombay from 1804 to 1811 who noted that the Parsees are a small remnant of one of the mightiest nations of the ancient world who flying from persecution into India were for many ages lost in obscurity and poverty till at length they met a just government under which they speedily rose to be one of the most popular mercantile bodies in Asia 58 One of these was an enterprising agent named Rustom Maneck In 1702 Maneck who had probably already amassed a fortune under the Dutch and Portuguese was appointed the first broker to the East India Company acquiring the name Seth in the process and in the following years he and his Parsi associates widened the occupational and financial horizons of the larger Parsi community 59 Thus by the mid 18th century the brokerage houses of the Bombay Presidency were almost all in Parsi hands As James Forbes the Collector of Broach now Bharuch would note in his Oriental Memoirs 1770 many of the principal merchants and owners of ships at Bombay and Surat are Parsees Active robust prudent and persevering they now form a very valuable part of the Company s subjects on the western shores of Hindustan where they are highly esteemed 58 In the 18th century Parsis with their skills in ship building and trade greatly benefited with trade between India and China The trade was mainly in timber silk cotton and opium For example Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy acquired most of his wealth through trade in cotton and opium 60 Gradually certain families acquired wealth and prominence Sorabji Modi Cama Wadia Jeejeebhoy Readymoney Dadyseth Petit Patel Mehta Allbless Tata etc many of which would be noted for their participation in the public life of the city and for their various educational industrial and charitable enterprises 61 62 Through his largesse Maneck helped establish the infrastructure that was necessary for the Parsis to set themselves up in Bombay and in doing so established Bombay as the primary centre of Parsi habitation and work in the 1720s 59 Following the political and economic isolation of Surat in the 1720s and 1730s that resulted from troubles between the remnant Mughal authorities and the increasingly dominant Marathas a number of Parsi families from Surat migrated to the new city While in 1700 fewer than a handful of individuals appear as merchants in any records by mid century Parsis engaged in commerce constituted one of important commercial groups in Bombay 63 Maneck s generosity is incidentally also the first documented instance of Parsi philanthropy In 1689 Anglican chaplain John Ovington reported that in Surat the family assist the poor and are ready to provide for the sustenance and comfort of such as want it Their universal kindness either employing such as are ready and able to work or bestowing a seasonable bounteous charity to such as are infirm and miserable leave no man destitute of relief nor suffer a beggar in all their tribe 64 nbsp Parsis of Bombay a wood engraving ca 1878In 1728 Rustom s eldest son Naoroz later Naorojee founded the Bombay Parsi Panchayet in the sense of an instrument for self governance and not in the sense of the trust it is today to assist newly arriving Parsis in religious social legal and financial matters Using their vast resources the Maneck Seth family gave their time energy and not inconsiderable financial resources to the Parsi community with the result that by the mid 18th century the Panchayat was the accepted means for Parsis to cope with the exigencies of urban life and the recognized instrument for regulating the affairs of the community 65 Nonetheless by 1838 the Panchayat was under attack for impropriety and nepotism In 1855 the Bombay Times noted that the Panchayat was utterly without the moral or legal authority to enforce its statutes the Bundobusts or codes of conduct and the council soon ceased to be considered representative of the community 66 In the wake of a July 1856 ruling by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council that it had no jurisdiction over the Parsis in matters of marriage and divorce the Panchayat was reduced to little more than a Government recognized Parsi Matrimonial Court Although the Panchayat would eventually be reestablished as the administrator of community property it ultimately ceased to be an instrument for self governance 67 At about the same time as the role of the Panchayat was declining a number of other institutions arose that would replace the Panchayat s role in contributing to the sense of social cohesiveness that the community desperately sought By the mid 19th century the Parsis were keenly aware that their numbers were declining and saw education as a possible solution to the problem In 1842 Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy established the Parsi Benevolent Fund with the aim of improving through education the condition of the impoverished Parsis still living in Surat and its environs In 1849 the Parsis established their first school co educational which was a novelty at the time but would soon be split into separate schools for boys and girls and the education movement quickened The number of Parsi schools multiplied but other schools and colleges were also freely attended 68 Accompanied by better education and social cohesiveness the community s sense of distinctiveness grew and in 1854 Dinshaw Maneckji Petit founded the Persian Zoroastrian Amelioration Fund with the aim of improving conditions for his less fortunate co religionists in Iran The fund succeeded in convincing a number of Iranian Zoroastrians to emigrate to India where they are known today as Iranis and the efforts of its emissary Maneckji Limji Hataria were instrumental in obtaining a remission of the jizya for their co religionists in 1882 In the 18th and 19th centuries the Parsis had emerged as the foremost people in India in matters educational industrial and social They came in the vanguard of progress amassed vast fortunes and munificently gave away large sums in charity 69 Near the end of the 19th century the total number of Parsis in colonial India was 85 397 of which 48 507 lived in Bombay constituting around 6 7 of the total population of the city according to the 1881 census 70 This would be the last time that the Parsis would be considered a numerically significant minority in the city original research Nonetheless the legacy of the 19th century was a sense of self awareness as a community The typically Parsi cultural symbols of the 17th and 18th centuries such as language a Parsi variant of Gujarati arts crafts and sartorial habits developed into Parsi theatre literature newspapers magazines and schools The Parsis now ran community medical centres ambulance corps Scouting troops clubs and Masonic Lodges They had their own charitable foundations housing estates legal institutions courts and governance They were no longer weavers and petty merchants but now were established and ran banks mills heavy industry shipyards and shipping companies Moreover even while maintaining their own cultural identity they did not fail to recognize themselves as nationally Indian as Dadabhai Naoroji the first Asian to occupy a seat in the British Parliament would note Whether I am a Hindu a Mohammedan a Parsi a Christian or of any other creed I am above all an Indian Our country is India our nationality is Indian 71 While having an outsized role in the Indian independence movement the majority of Parsis opposed the partition of undivided India 72 73 Religious practices EditThe main components of Zoroastrianism as practiced by the Parsi community are the concepts of purity and pollution nasu initiation navjot daily prayers worship at Fire Temples marriage funerals and general worship citation needed Purity and pollution Edit The balance between good and evil is correlated to the idea of purity and pollution Purity is held to be of the very essence of godliness Pollution s very point is to destroy purity through the death of a human In order to adhere to purity it is the duty of Parsis to continue to preserve purity within their body as God created them A Zoroastrian priest spends his entire life dedicated to following a holy life Navjote Edit Zoroastrians are not initiated by infant baptism A child is initiated into the faith when they are old enough to enter into the faith when they are old enough to recite some required prayers along with the priest at the time of the Navjote ceremony ideally before they hit puberty Though there is no actual age by which a child must be initiated into the faith preferably after 7 years Navjote cannot be performed on an adult While the Parsi traditionally do not do adult Navjote except in cases where it is performed for descendants of Parsi wanting to join the faith the Iranian Zoroastrian equivalent the sedreh pushti can be done at any age for those wanting to convert 74 The initiation begins with a ritual bath then a spiritual cleansing prayer the child changes into white pajama pants a shawl and a small cap Following introductory prayers the child is given the sacred items that are associated with Zoroastrianism a sacred shirt and cord sudre and kusti The child then faces the main priest and fire is brought in to represent God Once the priest finishes with the prayers the child s initiation is complete and he or she has become part of the community and religion Marriage Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Zoroastrian wedding nbsp Parsi wedding 1905 Marriage is very important to the members of the Parsi community believing that in order to continue the expansion of God s kingdom they must procreate Up until the mid 19th century child marriages were common even though the idea of child marriage was not part of the religious doctrine Consequently when social reform started happening in India the Parsi community discontinued the practice citation needed There are however rising problems over the availability of brides More and more women in the Parsi community are becoming well educated and are therefore either delaying marriage or not partaking at all citation needed Women within the Parsi community in India are ninety seven percent literate forty two percent have completed high school or college and twenty nine percent have an occupation in which they earn a substantial amount of money The wedding ceremony begins much like the initiation with a cleansing bath The bride and groom then travel to the wedding in florally decorated cars The priests from both families facilitate the wedding The couple begin by facing one another with a sheet to block their view of each another Wool is passed over the two seven times to bind them together The two are then supposed to throw rice to their partner symbolizing dominance The religious element comes in next when the two sit side by side to face the priest citation needed Funerals Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Dakhma nbsp Parsi Tower of Silence Bombay The pollution that is associated with death has to be handled carefully A separate part of the home is designated to house the corpse for funeral proceedings before being taken away The priest comes to say prayers that are for the cleansing of sins and to affirm the faith of the deceased Fire is brought to the room and prayers are begun The body is washed and inserted clean within a sudre and kusti The ceremony then begins and a circle is drawn around the body into which only the bearers may enter As they proceed to the cemetery they walk in pairs and are connected by white fabric A dog is essential in the funeral process because it is able to see death The body is taken to the tower of death where the vultures feed on it Once the bones are bleached by the sun they are pushed into the circular opening in the center The mourning process is four days long and rather than creating graves for the dead charities are established in honor of the person nbsp Parsi Fire Temple DelhiTemples Edit nbsp Parsi Fire Temple of Ahmedabad IndiaZoroastrian festivals were originally held outside in the open air temples were not common until later Most of the temples were built by wealthy Parsis who needed centers that housed purity As stated before fire is considered to represent the presence of Ahura Mazda and there are two distinct differences for the types of fire for the different temples The first type of temple is the Atash Behram which is the highest level of fire The fire is prepared for an entire year before it can be installed and once it is it is cared for to the highest possible degree There are only eight such temples located within India The second type of fire temple is called a Dar i Mihr and the preparation process is not as intense There are about 160 of these located throughout India Factions within the community Edit nbsp Parsi Jashan ceremony in this case a house blessing Calendrical differences Edit This section contains information specific to the Parsi calendar For information on the calendar used by the Zoroastrians for religious purposes including details on its history and its variations see Zoroastrian calendar Until about the 12th century all Zoroastrians followed the same 365 day religious calendar which had remained largely unmodified since the calendar reforms of Ardashir I r 226 241 AD Since that calendar did not compensate for the fractional days that go to make up a full solar year with time it was no longer accordant with the seasons Sometime between 1125 and 1250 cf Boyce 1970 p 537 the Parsis inserted an embolismic month to level out the accumulating fractional days However the Parsis were the only Zoroastrians to do so and did it only once with the result that from then on the calendar in use by the Parsis and the calendar in use by Zoroastrians elsewhere diverged by a matter of thirty days The calendars still had the same name Shahenshahi imperial presumably because none were aware that the calendars were no longer the same In 1745 the Parsis in and around Surat switched to the Kadmi or Kadimi calendar on the recommendation of their priests who were convinced that the calendar in use in the ancient homeland must be correct Moreover they denigrated the Shahenshahi calendar as being royalist In 1906 attempts to bring the two factions together resulted in the introduction of a third calendar based on an 11th century Seljuk model the Fasili or Fasli calendar had leap days intercalated every four years and it had a New Year s day that fell on the day of the vernal equinox Although it was the only calendar always in harmony with the seasons most members of the Parsi community rejected it on the grounds that it was not in accord with the injunctions expressed in Zoroastrian tradition Denkard 3 419 75 Today the majority of Parsis are adherents of the Parsi version of the Shahenshahi calendar although the Kadmi calendar does have its adherents among the Parsi communities of Surat and Bharuch The Fasli calendar does not have a significant following among Parsis but by virtue of being compatible with the Bastani calendar an Iranian development with the same salient features as the Fasli calendar it is predominant among the Zoroastrians of Iran Effect of the calendar disputes Edit Since some of the Avesta prayers contain references to the names of the months and some other prayers are used only at specific times of the year the issue of which calendar is correct also has theological ramifications To further complicate matters in the late 18th century or early 19th century a highly influential head priest and staunch proponent of the Kadmi calendar Phiroze Kaus Dastur of the Dadyseth Atash Behram in Bombay became convinced that the pronunciation of prayers as recited by visitors from Iran was correct while the pronunciation as used by the Parsis was not He accordingly went on to alter some but not all of the prayers which in due course came to be accepted by all adherents of the Kadmi calendar as the more ancient and thus presumably correct However scholars of Avestan language and linguistics attribute the difference in pronunciation to a vowel shift that occurred only in Iran and that the Iranian pronunciation as adopted by the Kadmis is actually more recent than the pronunciation used by the non Kadmi Parsis The calendar disputes were not always purely academic either In the 1780s emotions over the controversy ran so high that violence occasionally erupted In 1783 a Shahenshahi resident of Bharuch named Homaji Jamshedji was sentenced to death for kicking a young Kadmi woman and so causing her to miscarry Of the eight Atash Behrams the highest grade of fire temple in India three follow the Kadmi pronunciation and calendar the other five are Shahenshahi The Fassalis do not have their own Atash Behram Ilm e Kshnoom Edit Main article Ilm e Khshnoom The Ilm e Kshnoom science of ecstasy or science of bliss is a school of Parsi Zoroastrian philosophy based on a mystic and esoteric rather than literal interpretation of religious texts According to adherents of the sect they are followers of the Zoroastrian faith as preserved by a clan of 2000 individuals called the Saheb e Dilan Masters of the Heart who are said to live in complete isolation in the mountainous recesses of the Caucasus alternatively in the Alborz range around Mount Damavand There are few obvious indications that a Parsi might be a follower of the Kshnoom Although their Kusti prayers are very similar to those used by the Fassalis like the rest of the Parsi community the followers of Kshnoom are divided with respect to which calendar they observe There are also other minor differences in their recitation of the liturgy such as repetition of some sections of the longer prayers Nonetheless the Kshnoom are extremely conservative in their ideology and prefer isolation even with respect to other Parsis The largest community of followers of the Kshnoom lives in Jogeshwari a suburb of Bombay where they have their own fire temple Behramshah Nowroji Shroff Daremeher their own housing colony Behram Baug and their own newspaper Parsi Pukar There is a smaller concentration of adherents in Surat where the sect was founded in the last decades of the 19th century Issues relating to the deceased Edit nbsp Parsi funerary monument St Mary s Cemetery WandsworthIt has been traditional in Mumbai and Karachi at least for dead Parsis to be taken to the Towers of Silence where the corpses are quickly eaten by the city s vultures The reason given for this practice is that earth fire and water are considered sacred elements which should not be defiled by the dead Therefore burial and cremation have always been prohibited in Parsi culture However in modern day Mumbai and Karachi the population of vultures has drastically reduced due to extensive urbanization and the unintended consequence of treating humans and livestock with antibiotics 76 and the anti inflammatory diclofenac which harm vultures and have led to the Indian vulture crisis 77 As a result the bodies of the deceased are taking much longer to decompose Solar panels have been installed in the Towers of Silence to speed up the decomposition process but this has been only partially successful especially during monsoons In Peshawar a Parsi graveyard was established in the late 19th century which still exists this cemetery is unique as there is no Tower of Silence Nevertheless the majority of Parsis still use the traditional method of disposing of their loved ones and consider this as the last act of charity by the deceased on earth The Tower of Silence in Mumbai is located at Doongerwadi at Malabar Hill In Karachi the Tower of Silence is located in Parsi Colony near the Chanesar Goth and Mehmoodabad localities 78 Archaeogenetics EditGenealogical DNA tests to determine purity of lineage have brought mixed results Some studies supports the Parsi contention 79 that they have maintained their Persian roots by avoiding intermarriage with local populations In that 2002 study of the Y chromosome patrilineal DNA of the Parsis of Pakistan it was determined that Parsis are genetically closer to Iranians than to their neighbours 80 A 2004 study in which Parsi mitochondrial DNA matrilineal was compared with that of the Iranians and Gujaratis determined that the mitochondrial lineage of some Parsis was genetically closer to Gujaratis than to Iranians Taking the 2002 study into account the authors of the 2004 study suggested a male mediated migration of the ancestors of the present day Parsi population where they admixed with local females leading ultimately to the loss of mtDNA of Iranian origin 81 These results were superseded in 2017 when a research study discovered that Parsis exhibit a stronger genetic affinity with Neolithic Iranians than with modern Iranians who have experienced more recent admixture from the Near East The study also identified 48 of South Asian specific mitochondrial lineages in ancient samples which could be attributed to the assimilation of local females during the initial settlement or may be representative of mitochondrial lineages that have become extinct in Iran 27 That would make the population genetics of Parsis about 3 4 Iranian and 1 4 Indian The genetic studies of Parsis of Pakistan show sharp contrast between genetic data obtained from mitochondrial DNA mtDNA and Y chromosome DNA Y DNA different from most populations Historical records suggests that they had moved from Iran to Gujarat India and then to Mumbai and Karachi Pakistan According to Y DNA they resemble the Iranian population which supports historical records When the mtDNA pool is compared to Iranians and Gujaratis their putative parental populations it contrasted Y DNA data About 60 of their maternal gene pool originates from South Asian haplogroups which is just 7 in Iranians Parsis have a high frequency of haplogroup M 55 similar to Indians which is just 1 7 in combined Iranian sample According to the research findings there is a noticeable contrast between the maternal and paternal components of the Parsi population Despite their small population size the high diversity observed in both the Y DNA and mtDNA lineages suggests that a strong drift effect is improbable The studies suggest a male mediated migration of Parsi ancestors from Iran to Gujarat where they admixed with the local female population during initial settlements which ultimately resulted in loss of Iranian mtDNA 81 27 A study published in Genome Biology based on high density SNP data has shown that the Parsis are genetically closer to Iranian populations than to their South Asian neighbours They also share the highest number of haplotypes with present day Iranians the admixture of the Parsis with Indian populations was estimated have occurred approximately 1 200 years ago It is also found that Parsis are genetically closer to Neolithic Iranians than to modern Iranians who had recently received some genes from the Near East 27 The absence of lung cancer related DNA mutational signals among Parsis both point to the community s distinctive non smoking social practises which have been practised for millennia Additionally Parsis have high prevalence of longevity as a genetic feature 82 Parsis have however been shown to have high rates of breast cancer 83 bladder cancer glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and Parkinson s disease 84 Prominent Parsis EditMain article List of Parsi peopleD L Sheth the former director of the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies CSDS lists Indian communities that constituted the middle class and were traditionally urban and professional following professions such as doctors lawyers teachers engineers etc immediately after Indian partition in 1947 This list included the Kashmiri Pandits the Nagar Brahmins from Gujarat the Brahmins from Southern India the Punjabi Khatris and Kayastha from northern India the Chitpavans and CKPs from Maharashtra Bengali Probasis and Bhadraloks the Parsis as well as the upper echelons of the Indian Muslim and Indian Christian communities throughout the country According to Pavan K Varma Education was a common thread that bound together this pan Indian elite almost all of the members of these communities could read and write in English and were educated beyond regular schooling institutions 85 86 nbsp Freddie Mercury lead singer of the rock band Queen nbsp Jamsetji Tata founder of Tata Group of companies The Parsis have made considerable contributions to the history and development of India all the more remarkable considering their small numbers As the maxim Parsi thy name is charity alludes to their most prominent contribution is their philanthropy Although their people s name Parsi comes from the Persian language word for a Persian person in Sanskrit the term means one who gives alms 9 10 Mahatma Gandhi would note in a much misquoted statement 87 I am proud of my country India for having produced the splendid Zoroastrian stock in numbers beneath contempt but in charity and philanthropy perhaps unequaled and certainly unsurpassed 88 Several landmarks in Mumbai are named after Parsis including Nariman Point The Malabar Hill in Mumbai is a home to several prominent Parsis Parsis prominent in the Indian independence movement include Pherozeshah Mehta Dadabhai Naoroji and Bhikaiji Cama Particularly notable Parsis in the fields of science and industry include physicist Homi J Bhabha nuclear scientist Homi N Sethna industrialists J R D Tata and Jamsetji Tata regarded as the Father of Indian Industry 89 and construction tycoon Pallonji Mistry The families Godrej Mistry Tata Petit Cowasjee Poonawalla and Wadia are important industrial Parsi families Other notable Parsi business persons include Ratan Tata Cyrus Mistry Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata Dinshaw Maneckji Petit Ness Wadia Neville Wadia Jehangir Wadia and Nusli Wadia all of them related through marriage to Muhammad Ali Jinnah the founder of Pakistan Mohammad Ali Jinnah s wife Rattanbai Petit was born into two of the Parsi Petit Tata families and their daughter Dina Jinnah was married to Parsi industrialist Neville Wadia the scion of the Wadia family The husband of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and son in law of Jawaharlal Nehru Feroze Gandhi was a Parsi with ancestral roots in Bharuch The Parsi community has given India several distinguished military officers Field Marshal Sam Hormusji Framji Jamshedji Manekshaw Military Cross the architect of India s victory in the 1971 war was the first officer of the Indian Army to be appointed a Field Marshal Admiral Jal Cursetji was the first Parsi to be appointed Chief of the Naval Staff of the Indian Navy Air Marshal Aspy Engineer served as India s second Chief of Air Staff post independence and Air Chief Marshal Fali Homi Major served as the 18th Chief of Air Staff Vice Admiral RF Contractor served as the 17th Chief of the Indian Coast Guard Lieutenant Colonel Ardeshir Burjorji Tarapore was killed in action in the 1965 Indo Pakistan war and was posthumously awarded the Param Vir Chakra India s highest military award for gallantry in action Particularly notable Parsis in other areas of achievement include cricketers Farokh Engineer Nari Contractor and Polly Umrigar rock musician Freddie Mercury composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji and conductor Zubin Mehta cultural studies theorist Homi K Bhabha screenwriter and photographer Sooni Taraporevala authors Rohinton Mistry Firdaus Kanga Bapsi Sidhwa Ardashir Vakil and investigative journalists Ardeshir Cowasjee Russi Karanjia Behram Contractor actor Boman Irani educator Jamshed Bharucha India s first woman photo journalist Homai Vyarawalla Actresses Nina Wadia and Persis Khambatta are Parsi who appear primarily in Bollywood films and television serials Naxalite leader and intellectual Kobad Ghandy is a Parsi Mithan Jamshed Lam was a suffragist the first female barrister admitted to practice law at the Bombay High Court and served as a Sheriff of Bombay Dorab Patel was Pakistan s first Parsi Supreme Court Justice Fali S Nariman Nani Ardeshir Palkhivala are constitutional experts and noted jurist Soli Sorabjee was a prominent Indian jurist and former Attorney General of India Rattana Pestonji was a Parsi living in Thailand who helped develop Thai cinema Another famous Parsi is the Indian born American actor Erick Avari best known for his roles in science fiction films and television Cyrus S Poonawalla and Adar Poonawalla are prominent Indian Parsi businessmen References Edit https www thehindu com news national other states Parsi population dips by 22 per cent between 2001 2011 study article14508859 ece Dean Nelson India s dwindling Parsi population to be boosted with fertility clinics The Telegraph https www dw com en pakistan what happened to zoroastrians in karachi a 66897036 a b c Hodivala 1920 p 88 a b Boyce 2001 p 148 a b Lambton 1981 p 205 a b Nigosian 1993 p 42 Khanbaghi 2006 p 17 a b Jackson 1906 p 27 a b Bleeker amp Widengren 1971 p 212 PARSI COMMUNITIES i EARLY HISTORY Encyclopaedia Iranica Iranicaonline org 2008 07 20 Retrieved on 2013 07 28 Akram A I al Mehri A B September 1 2009 The Muslim Conquest of Persia Maktabah Publications ISBN 978 0 9548665 3 2 Parsee n and adj Oxford English Dictionary oed com Retrieved on 2015 03 03 Ganesh Kamala 2008 Intra community Dissent and Dialogue The Bombay Parsis and the Zoroastrian Diaspora Sociological Bulletin 57 3 315 336 doi 10 1177 0038022920080301 JSTOR 23620804 S2CID 148248437 Dadrawala Noshir H April 13 2019 Parsi And Irani Zoroastrians A Historical Perspective Parsi Times Retrieved March 2 2023 What sets Zoroastrian Iranis apart Persian Journal Culture Archaeological History Art Archaeology cultural history news amp Iranian culture newspaper www iranian ws December 19 2007 Archived from the original on December 19 2007 Retrieved March 2 2023 Parsi people Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved July 28 2013 Parsi legend attributes it to a Hindu author cf Paymaster 1954 p 8 incorrectly attributes the text to a Zoroastrian priest a b Stausberg 2002 p I 373 a b Boyce 2002 p 105 Stausberg 2002 p I 373 a b Jamshed Irani v Banu Irani 1966 68 blr 794 Justice Mody Entine Jon October 24 2007 Abraham s Children Race Identity and the DNA of the Chosen People Grand Central Publishing p 236 ISBN 978 0 446 40839 4 Sir Dinsha Manekji Petit v Sir Jamsetji Jijibhai 1909 33 ILR 509 and 11 BLR 85 Justices Dinshaw Davar and Frank Beaman Sarwar Merwan Yezdiar v Merwan Rashid Yezdiar 1948 Parsi Matrimonial Court Justice Coyaji Merwan Rashid Yezdiar v Sarwar Merwan Yezdiar 1950 52 blr 876 Justices Chagla and Gajendragadkar a b c d Chaubey et al 2017 Where we belong The fight of Parsi women in interfaith marriages October 24 2017 Parsi population dips by 22 per cent between 2001 2011 study The Hindu July 25 2016 Roy Unisa amp Bhatt 2004 pp 8 21 Taraporevala 2000 p 9 Roy Unisa amp Bhatt 2004 p 21 Roy Unisa amp Bhatt 2004 p 14 Saving India s Parsis BBC Afshin Marashi talks about the role of the exiled Zoroastrian Parsi community of India in shaping Iranian nationalism when they Zamaneh Media June 27 2020 Retrieved March 15 2023 a b Ringer Monica M 2012 Amanat Abbas Vejdani Farzin eds Iranian Nationalism and Zoroastrian Identity Iran Facing Others Identity Boundaries in a Historical Perspective New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 267 277 doi 10 1057 9781137013408 13 ISBN 978 1 137 01340 8 retrieved March 15 2023 Committee Dinshah J Irani Memorial Fund 1943 Dinshah Irani Memorial Volume Papers on Zoroastrian and Iranian Subjects Dinshah J Irani Memorial Fund Committee The Shah s missive is reproduced in Sir Jehangir C Coyajee A brief Life Sketch of the Late Mr Dinshah Jeejeebhoy Irani in Dinshah Irani Memorial Volume Papers on Zoroastrian and Iranian Subjects Dinshah J Irani Memorial Fund Committee Bombay 1948 pp i xiii Roy Unisa amp Bhatt 2004 pp 18 19 Hodivala 1920 p page needed Vimadalal 1979 p 2 Paymaster 1954 Taraporevala 2000 Kulke 1978 p 25 Stausberg 2002 p I 374 Hinnells 2005 p 199 a b c Maneck 1997 p 15 Paymaster 1954 pp 2 3 Dhalla 1938 p 447 Kulke 1978 p 29 a b Dhalla 1938 p 448 Dhalla 1938 p 457 Dhalla 1938 pp 474 475 Dhalla 1938 p 474 Palsetia 2001 pp 47 57 Luhrmann 2002 p 861 Luhrmann 1994 p 333 a b Darukhanawala amp Jeejeebhoy 1938 p 33 a b White 1991 p 304 Palsetia 2001 pp 53 56 Hull 1911 Palsetia 2001 pp 37 45 62 64 128 140 334 135 White 1991 p 312 Ovington 1929 p 216 Karaka 1884 pp 215 217 Dobbin 1970 pp 150 151 Palsetia 2001 pp 223 225 Palsetia 2001 pp 135 139 Dhalla 1938 p 483 Karaka 1884 pp 91 93 Ralhan 2002 p 1101 Asia and the Americas Asia Press 46 212 1946 Many Muslim organizations are opposed to it Every non Muslim whether he is a Hindu or Sikh or Christian or Parsi is opposed to it Essentially the sentiment in favor of partition has grown in the areas where Muslims are in a small minority areas which in any event would remain undetached from the rest of India Muslims in provinces where they are in a majority have been less influenced by it naturally for they can stand on their own feet and have no reason to fear other groups It is least evident in the Northwest Frontier Province 95 per cent Muslim where the Pathans are brave and self reliant and have no fear complex Thus oddly enough the Muslim League s proposal to partition India finds far less response in the Muslim areas sought to be partitioned than in the Muslim minority areas which are unaffected by it a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint untitled periodical link full citation needed Parsis have made immense contributions to India envoy Business Standard India Press Trust of India April 26 2016 Retrieved July 24 2022 Bachi Karkaria July 11 2005 How Konstantin became Farrokh The Times of India Madan Dhanjishah Meherjibhai 1911 The complete text of the Pahlavi Dinkard Bombay Retrieved March 28 2022 Cellular and humoral immunodepression in vultures feeding upon medicated livestock carrion Rspb royalsocietypublishing org Retrieved on 2013 07 28 News Release The Peregrine Fund 2012 08 23 Retrieved on 2013 07 28 Tower of Silence Clifton Cantonment wikimapia org Nanavutty 1970 p 13 Qamar et al 2002 p 1119 a b Quintana Murci et al 2004 p 840 Patell Villoo Morawala Pasha Naseer Krishnasamy Kashyap Mittal Bharti Gopalakrishnan Chellappa Mugasimangalam Raja Sharma Naveen Gupta Arati Khanna Bhote Patell Perviz Rao Sudha Jain Renuka June 8 2020 The First complete Zoroastrian Parsi Mitochondria Reference Genome Implications of mitochondrial signatures in an endogamous non smoking population 2020 06 05 124891 doi 10 1101 2020 06 05 124891 S2CID 219603800 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help High rate of cancer puts Parsis under microscope The Independent Archived from the original on May 25 2022 Retrieved May 18 2017 Dhavendra Kumar September 15 2012 Genetic Disorders of the Indian Subcontinent Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 1 4020 2231 9 Pavan K Varma 2007 The Great Indian Middle class Penguin Books p 28 ISBN 978 0 14 310325 7 its main adherents came from those in government service qualified professionals such as doctors engineers and lawyers business entrepreneurs teachers in schools in the bigger cities and in the institutes of higher education journalists etc The upper castes dominated the Indian middle class Prominent among its members were Punjabi Khatris Kashmiri Pandits and South Indian brahmins Then there were the traditional urban oriented professional castes such as the Nagars of Gujarat the Chitpawans and the Ckps Chandrasenya Kayastha Prabhus s of Maharashtra and the Kayasthas of North India Also included were the old elite groups that emerged during the colonial rule the Probasi and the Bhadralok Bengalis the Parsis and the upper crusts of Muslim and Christian communities Education was a common thread that bound together this pan Indian elite But almost all its members spoke and wrote English and had had some education beyond school Social Action Indian Social Institute 50 72 2000 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint untitled periodical link full citation needed Can Zoroastrians save their faith Parsi Khabar 2010 01 06 Retrieved on 2013 07 28 Rivetna 2002 Jamshedji Tata Founder of TATA Industries webindia123 com Sources Edit Baird Robert 2009 Religion in Modern India 4th ed New Delhi Manohar Publishers amp Distributors Bleeker Claas Jouco Widengren Geo 1971 Historia Religionum Religions of the present vol II Brill p 715 ISBN 978 90 04 02598 1 Boyce M 1970 On the Calendar of the Zoroastrian Feasts Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 33 3 513 539 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00126540 JSTOR 614520 S2CID 161417703 Boyce Mary 2001 Zoroastrians their religious beliefs and practices 2nd ed New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 252 ISBN 978 0 415 23902 8 Boyce M July 2002 The Parthians in Godrej P J ed A Zoroastrian Tapestry New York Mapin ISBN 978 1 890206 22 2 Chaubey Gyaneshwer Ayub Qasim Rai Niraj Prakash Satya Mushrif Tripathy Veena Mezzavilla Massimo Pathak Ajai Kumar Tamang Rakesh Firasat Sadaf Reidla Maere Karmin Monika Rani Deepa Selvi Reddy Alla G Parik Juri Metspalu Ene Rootsi Siiri Dalal Kurush Khaliq Shagufta Mehdi Syed Qasim Singh Lalji Metspalu Mait Kivisild Toomas Tyler Smith Chris Villems Richard Thangaraj Kumarasamy 2017 Like sugar in milk Reconstructing the genetic history of the Parsi population Genome Biology 18 1 110 doi 10 1186 s13059 017 1244 9 PMC 5470188 PMID 28615043 Darukhanawala H Jeejeebhoy J 1938 Parsi Lustre on Indian Soil Vol I Bombay G Claridge Dhalla M 1938 History of Zoroastrianism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 404 12806 7 Dobbin C 1970 The Parsi Panchayat in Bombay City in the Nineteenth Century Modern Asian Studies 4 2 149 164 doi 10 1017 S0026749X00005102 JSTOR 311609 S2CID 143988257 Eliade M Couliano I Wiesner H 1991 The Eliade Guide to World Religions New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 062145 2 Hinnells John R 2005 The Zoroastrian Diaspora Religion and Migration Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 826759 1 Hodivala S 1920 Studies in Parsi History Bombay a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hull Ernest Reginald 1911 Parsis In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company Jackson Abraham Valentine Williams 1906 Persia past and present a book of travel and research with more than two hundred illustrations and a map The Macmillan Company p 471 Karaka D F 1884 History of the Parsis Including Their Manners Customs Religion and Present Position vol 1 London Macmillan and Co Khanbaghi Aptin 2006 The fire the star and the cross minority religions in medieval and early reprint ed I B Tauris p 268 ISBN 978 1 84511 056 7 Kulke E 1978 The Parsees in India A Minority as Agent of Social Change 2nd ed New Delhi Vikas Pub House Lambton Ann K S 1981 State and government in medieval Islam an introduction to the study of Islamic political theory the jurists reprint ed Routledge p 364 ISBN 978 0 19 713600 3 Luhrmann T M June 1994 The Good Parsi The Postcolonial Feminization of a Colonial Elite Man 29 2 333 357 doi 10 2307 2804477 JSTOR 2804477 Luhrmann Tanya M August 2002 Evil in the Sands of Time Theology and Identity Politics among the Zoroastrian Parsis The Journal of Asian Studies 61 3 861 889 doi 10 2307 3096349 ISSN 0021 9118 JSTOR 3096349 S2CID 163092265 Maneck Susan Stiles 1997 The Death of Ahriman Culture Identity and Theological Change Among the Parsis of India Bombay K R Cama Oriental Institute Nanavutty P 1970 The Parsis New Delhi National Book Trust Nigosian Solomon Alexander 1993 The Zoroastrian faith tradition and modern research Montreal McGill Queen s Press p 154 ISBN 978 0 7735 1144 6 Ovington J 1929 Rawlinson H G ed A Voyage to Surat in the Year 1689 London Humphrey Milford ISBN 978 81 206 0945 7 Palsetia Jesse S 2001 The Parsis of India preservation of identity in Bombay City Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12114 0 Paymaster R 1954 Early History of the Parsees in India Bombay Zarthoshti Dharam Sambandhi Qamar R Ayub Q Mohyuddin A Helgason A Mazhar Kehkashan Mansoor Atika Zerjal Tatiana Tyler Smith Chris Mehdi S Qasim 2002 Y chromosomal DNA variation in Pakistan American Journal of Human Genetics 70 5 1107 1124 doi 10 1086 339929 PMC 447589 PMID 11898125 Quintana Murci Lluis Chaix Raphaelle Wells R Spencer Behar Doron M Sayar Hamid Scozzari Rosaria Rengo Chiara Al Zahery Nadia Semino Ornella Santachiara Benerecetti A Silvana Coppa8 Alfredo Ayub Qasim Mohyuddin Aisha Tyler Smith Chris Mehdi S Qasim Torroni Antonio McElreavey Ken May 2004 Where West Meets East The Complex mtDNA Landscape of the Southwest and Central Asian Corridor American Journal of Human Genetics 74 5 827 845 doi 10 1086 383236 PMC 1181978 PMID 15077202 archived from the original on May 9 2008 Ralhan Om Prakash 2002 Indian National Congress Encyclopaedia of Political Parties New Delhi Anmol Publications ISBN 978 81 7488 865 5 Random House 1993 Parsi Random House Unabridged Dictionary 2nd ed New York Random House Rivetna Roshan ed 2002 The Legacy of Zarathushtra An Introduction to the Religion History and Culture of the Zarathushtis Hinsdale Federation of the Zoroastrian Associations of North America Roy T K Unisa S Bhatt M 2004 Growth of the Parsi population in India Mumbai National Commission for Minorities archived from the original on November 8 2006 Stausberg M 2002 Die Religion Zarathushtras in German Stuttgart Kohlhammer Verlag Taraporevala S 2000 Zoroastrians of India Parsis A Photographic Journey Bombay Good Books ISBN 978 81 901216 0 6 archived from the original on February 14 2006 retrieved February 21 2006 Vimadalal Jal Rustamji 1979 What a Parsee Should Know Bombay a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link White D May 1991 From Crisis to Community Definition The Dynamics of Eighteenth Century Parsi Philanthropy Modern Asian Studies 25 2 303 320 doi 10 1017 S0026749X00010696 JSTOR 312514 S2CID 146758927Further reading Edit Parsi Religion and Expressive Culture Countries and their Cultures Advameg Inc A brief introduction to Zoroastrianism Kwintessentials Archived from the original on May 1 2016 Retrieved June 8 2013 Naoroji Dadabhai 1861 The Parsee Religion University of London Haug Martin 1878 Essays on the Sacred Language Writings and Religion of the Parsis Karaka Dosabhai Framjee 1884a History of the Parsis Including their manners customs religion and present position Vol 1 London Macmillan amp Co Karaka Dosabhai Framjee 1884b History of the Parsis Including their manners customs religion and present position Vol 2 London Macmillan amp Co Karkaria Bachi January 9 2016 Why is India s wealthy Parsi community vanishing BBC Marashi Afshin Exile and the Nation The Parsi Community of India and the Making of Modern Iran University of Texas Press 2020 Editorial Viewpoint February 21 2006 How trust worthy Parsiana no 48 archived from the original on July 15 2011 Uberoi Anuradha January 6 2020 Chennai Brew Some Voices Some Communities amp These Communities Call Chennai home The Hindu ISBN 978 93 5351 676 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Parsi nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Parsis nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Parsees Parsis at Curlie Govt launches scheme to arrest decline in Parsi population Hindustan Times July 27 2010 Archived from the original on December 25 2011 Parsis a photographic journey online book Falling Indian minority hopes romance can stop decline BBC News The Story of Parsi Enterprise Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parsis amp oldid 1178575069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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