The Asian Age

With vultures gone, Parsis turn to cremations

- PETER HUTCHISON

Kaikobad Rustomfram always thought that when he died vultures would feast on his corpse, as is Zoroastria­n tradition. But then the scavenging birds disappeare­d from India’s skies.

The 90- year- old was cremated last month instead of receiving a sky burial, one of a growing number of Parsis opting to use a new prayer hall in Mumbai that is changing the ancient community’s funeral customs.

Rustomfram’s wife, Khorshed, who died in January aged 82, also chose cremation at the ten- month- old facility, which conservati­ve Zoroastria­ns oppose, in the centre of India’s bustling financial capital.

“They wanted to be cremated ever since they learnt that the traditiona­l way of disposing of the dead wasn’t working because there were no vultures,” their daughter, Hutokshi Rustomfram said. Zoroastria­ns believe in the god Ahura Mazda and follow the teachings of the ancient Prophet Zoroaster. They worship in ‘ fire temples’, believing fire to be a symbol of god’s purity.

Known as Parsis, Zoroastria­ns first arrived in India more than 1,000 years ago after fleeing persecutio­n in Persia.

They became one of India’s wealthiest communitie­s, boasting a number of famed industrial­ists including the Tata family synonymous with the financial rise of Mumbai.

For centuries the community, which is dwindling at such a rapid rate that its future existence is now under threat, have laid their dead out at the city’s Towers of Silence.

Ravenous vultures would devour the flesh of the body within an hour, leaving the bones to dry in the sun before being placed in a well, an efficient disposal system believed to purify the deceased.

 ??  ?? A Parsi priest conducts a funeral service at a Parsi prayer hall in Mumbai.
A Parsi priest conducts a funeral service at a Parsi prayer hall in Mumbai.

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