Zoroastrianism
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Parsi or Zarathushtrian?

What is the difference between a Parsi and a Zarathushtrian?
Simply put, Parsi refers to being a member of a community of people who left Iran circa 716 AD and settled in Gujrat, India.
The local Indian population, referring to the Iranian province of Pars where these people originally lived, called them Parsi.
It is a cultural definition, with the inference that a Parsi is also a Zarathushtrian. This is not necessarily true anymore.
A person born a Parsi (i.e. of Parsi parentage) may choose to be a practicing Christian or a Hindu. However, his Parsi status
does not change.
A Zarathushtrian is one who follows the principles of life as prescribed by Asho Zarathushtra. You can be a Zarathushtrian and
not be a Parsi, as are the Irani Zarathushtrians.
Being a Parsi is a matter of birth. You cannot choose to be Parsi because it depends on your parentage. Can you choose to be a
Zarathushtrian? Well, that is the pivot on which the whole issue of intermarriage, acceptance and conversion revolves. Everyone
is entitled to their own opinion in this matter, as there are valid reasons for and against the issue of acceptance and conversion.
Both sides can quote scriptures and historic practice to further their case. One's opinion depends on one's own experience, value
system and perspective, and one school of thought should not stoop to denounce the other. What most of us need to do is learn to
agree to disagree.

What is the difference between acceptance and conversion?
Many Zarathushtrians agree with the premise that Zarathushtrians should not actively proselytise, but they feel that children
born of a marriage between a Zarathushtrian and a non-Zarathushtrian should be "accepted" into the fold.
There are still others who are also against active proselytising, but feel that any person who knowledgeably accepts the message
of Asho Zarathushtra out of free choice should be accepted into the faith.

What is the role of women in the Parsi community?
During Zarathushtra's era, the treatment of women vacillated between respect and bigotry. Although granted great economic and
social freedom, and seen as a central figure in the household, they were not valued intrinsically. For instance, it was believed
that Paradise was reserved for men as only their deeds on earth were of any account. Also, the payment to a physician for treating
a man was an ox, a prized animal, while for a woman it was a she-ass. And as was common with the primitive people of that time,
the men feared women during their menstrual cycle and isolated them.
Asho Zarathushtra in his Divine Gathas does not discriminate against women in any way. In fact, in one of his most famous verses
he exhorts each individual - man and woman - to think with their own good mind and choose the right path. This illustrates that
he credited women with the ability to make their own decisions. In the Yengeh Hatam prayer the words "…tascha taoscha yazamaide.."
say that all men and women who are righteous are deserving of respect. The only criterion for homage was righteousness, not caste,
not status, not gender. This effectively put paid to the belief that only men were worthy of Paradise.
The Farvardin Yasht lists the names of 250 men and women who are worthy of being venerated because of their righteousness.
Women in the early civilizations ruled by Zarathushtrians enjoyed social, legal and religious rights unknown to women in other
parts of the world. The ancient Zarathushtri women did not wear the veil; they owned and managed property; they accompanied men
to religious and social events; they could be witnesses as well as judges in court. Women acted as officiating priestesses.
Females had the same Navjote (initiation) ritual as the males and wore the same badges of the religion - the sudreh and kusti.
In a marriage, the woman's consent was essential. The father could not arrange a marriage for his daughter without her consent and
that of her mother. Asho Zarathushtra promoted monogamy and in those days the common people had only one wife. However, there are
instances recorded of kings and warriors having more than one wife. But then the rulers and leaders throughout time and throughout
the world have always followed their own laws!
When the Zarathushtris fled Iran because of religious upheaval thirteen hundred years ago and settled in Gujrat, India they came
to be known as Parsis or people of Pars, the province in Iran from which many of them had emigrated. To a great extent the Parsis
adopted the mores of the Gujrati Hindu culture. This included social inequalities like disassociating widows from celebrations,
child marriages and dowry. The British influence eliminated these practices showing that these elements were assimilated
superficially. One of the more colourful customs still prevalent is the tilli (the red powder mark on the forehead). Few realise
that the symbolism is gender biased - men have a vertical stroke representing the rays of the sun, and women have the red dot
signifying the moon that shines in the light of the sun. Another glaring oversight is the prayer for male offspring in the
Ashirwad (Blessings) given to the bride and groom.
After the community's prolonged stay in a country where the general status of women is low, Parsi women too had taken on a docile
and unassuming role - a far cry from the positive role they had played in ancient Iran. The major factor responsible for changing
the status of women in the Parsi community was education. In the 1840s, Sir Jamshedji Jeejibhoy and Framji Cowasji Banaji educated
their daughters. But they did this in the utmost secrecy to avoid criticism from the community for their revolutionary ideas.
Within a generation, however, secondary education for girls had become a norm. By 1870, over 1000 Parsi girls had already had
the benefit of secondary education. The major reason why the education of women became so popular so rapidly was that there was
no religious opposition to it.
Reformers like Dadabhai Naoroji, Kharshedji Cama and Sohrabji Bengalee were pioneers in the emancipation of women. In the
mid-nineteenth century they created quite a storm in the local community when they started taking their wives and daughters to
public functions and let them mingle with the British. After that, there was no looking back as Parsi women came into their own.
They participated in all walks of life, including the national movement for swaraj (independence). The first Parsi woman to carve
for herself a niche in the freedom movement was Bhikaji Cama. She took every opportunity to make fiery speeches against the British
and even edited a revolutionary paper Vandemataram. In the 1920s, the first Indian woman to qualify as a Barrister at Law from
London was Mithan Jamshed Lara. She helped to draft the Hindu Code Bill and various Acts that became Indian law in the 1950s. In
1962, she was awarded the Padma Bhushan by the government of India. In Pakistan too, several Parsi women have been honoured by
the government for their services including Gool Minwalla for education; Meher Marker for social service; and Goshpi Avari for
yachting.
Today's Parsi woman in India and Pakistan is a breed apart from her counterparts from other communities. The problems of inequality
in family laws such as divorce, or dowry are not her problems. Forced marriages and inadequate reproductive health are not her
problems.
The Parsi woman's problems are, in fact, unique to her, a result of Western influence. Women's education, independence and earning
power makes their expectations of marriage, and marriage partners, too high. This has led to delayed marriages or not getting
married at all. In the Parsi community, there is no social stigma attached to a single woman. Elders of the community fear that
delayed marriages and working women will result in a declining community. Parsiana a widely read community magazine had a picture
of the Bengal tiger and a Parsi on one of their covers with the caption "Endangered Species." The community leaders are now trying
to instill having children as a civic duty. So, ironically, where in most communities the woman is held responsible for giving
unwanted multiple births and she has no say in the matter of contraception, in the Parsi community she is held responsible for
having too much say in the matter, and not giving enough births!
Another issue of discrimination that has raised its head since the emancipation of women is acceptance of children born to Parsi
mothers and non-Parsi fathers. Traditionally the Parsis have been a patriarchal community and over the years, offspring of Parsi
fathers and non-Parsi mothers have been accepted if not wholly welcomed into the fold. Increasingly, women are chafing against
the discrimination. The issue has several complexities not easily explained to a non-Parsi. Suffice to say that the matter has
not yet been resolved.
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Information provided by Farishta Murzban Dinshaw