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The Zoroastrians
| Article
# : |
10026 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1986 |
10,691 Words |
| Author
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Young Oon Kim Young Oon Kim is professor of systematic theology at the
Unification Theological Seminary in Barrytown, New York. She
is the author of many books, including World Religions,
Unification Theology, and The Types of Modern Theology. This
article appeared originally in Faiths of the Far East, the
third volume of her three-volume World Religions, and is
reprinted here by permission. |
There are a little over 115,000 Parsis practicing today, most of whom live either in Bombay or in towns and villages to the north of it. As their names indicates--Pars being the ancient area of their origin--they are the descendants of Persian ancestors. They, as well as 10,000 of their cousins in Iran, make up most of the worldwide following that has remained loyal to their God--Ahura-Mazda--and His prophet, Zoroaster (Zarathustra). In India, though not really a caste, they are a well-defined community. They emigrated to India in the tenth century because of persecution following the Arab conquest of Iran.
Parsis were one of the first to open themselves to European influence under the British rule, and this was one reason they prospered. Yet ironically, they remain a closed community: neither do they marry outside of their faith nor do they seek to spread their customs and beliefs. They were farmers under a Hindu prince and his Muslim successors, but with the advent of the British, with whom they were the most cooperative, they moved swiftly into commerce, earning them the title, the Jews of India. From the middle of the nineteenth century on, whatever was established in India in the way of shipbuilding, railroads, iron mills, etc. was largely their work.
But they are noted not only for their wealth and industry: They were distinguished in their charities and their education, exemplified by the schools, orphanages and hospitals that they founded without distinction of race or religion. They adopted successfully as well British manners and costume, borrowed the European tradition of education for women and abolished the custom of infant marriages. Several Parsis were knighted by the British Crown, two served as members of
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