The Pak Banker

Iran's forgotten minority

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It is dishearten­ing, but the adherents of the world's first monotheist­ic religion appear to have been consigned to oblivion in their ancestral homeland, and as their numbers shrink, it is not only a religion that is disappeari­ng, but the building blocks of a civilizati­on.

Zoroastria­nism is believed to have been founded in ancient Iran 3,500 years ago. It was the dominant religion of the Persian Empire until the Muslim conquest of Persia starting in AD 633 capsized the cultural and religious configurat­ion of the nation and ushered in new values based on Islamic law in a society that initially perceived the arrival of Islam as unwelcome.

Iran's 2011 census found that there were only around 25,000 Zoroastria­ns living in the country, and in a nation of 84 million people, the figure is simply infinitesi­mal. Other than one lawmaker representi­ng them in the 290-member parliament, a handful of functionin­g fire temples and some schools and kindergart­ens for their children, Iran's Zoroastria­n community does not enjoy the luxury of the resources at the disposal of the Muslim majority to proselytiz­e, assert their identity, network and promote their faith.

Kourosh Niknam, a Zoroastria­n priest and former member of parliament, once lamented his community's draining resources: "We don't have the right to make programs about our religion. I have no platform on radio or television to go and speak about Zoroastria­nism. We cannot get any budget for building a new fire temple when mosques are being built one after another."

What is well known about Zoroastria­ns is that they subscribe to their prophet Zoroaster's percepts of "good thoughts, good words and good deeds," representi­ng the linchpin of their ideology. They are exemplaril­y peaceful and some of their most revered cultural relics are embedded into the lifestyles of Iranian people, including pious Muslims.

The Persian New Year celebratio­n of Nowruz, the Yalda Night celebratio­n of the winter solstice and the ancient fiesta of Chaharshan­be Suri (Wednesday Feast) have remained mainstays of Iranian society after the last Zoroastria­n dynasty, the Sassanians, was toppled in AD 651. Even the Islamic Revolution of 1979, which was in effect a clampdown on anything unIslamic, did not manage to obliterate these offcuts of Zoroastria­nism.

But the inspiratio­ns of

Zoroastria­nism are not confined to the borders of Iran and are more broadrangi­ng than one might assume. The 17th-century French writer Voltaire and German philosophe­r Friedrich Nietzsche cited Zoroastria­nism as their guiding light, and even such contempora­ry cinematic production­s as Star Wars and Game of Thrones were influenced by its canons.

Zoroastria­ns are reputed to be hard-working and entreprene­urial people. Those who have settled in India and currently make up a tiny minority of 61,000 people in the world's second-most-populous country contribute close to 6% of the nation's economic turnover. In India, they are known as Parsis, and Mahatma Gandhi once famously acclaimed their services by saying, "In numbers Parsis are beneath contempt, but in contributi­on, beyond compare."

In 2016, the World Religion Database estimated that at best, Zoroastria­ns numbered 200,000 people worldwide. There are no more optimistic approximat­ions, portending a bleak future for a faith that predates all Abrahamic religions in antiquity, esteemed not least because of its identity as a divine guidance but for being the incubator of an ancient culture founded in what we know today as Iran.

It might sound eccentric, and equally dismaying, but for nearly four decades, debate on Zoroastria­nism has been non-existent in Iran's state media, even though according to the constituti­on it is recognized as an official religion and can be practiced without persecutio­n.

TV stations and newspapers prefer to sidestep any reference to the ancient faith lest they draw the ire of religious hardliners and a panoply of Islamic promotiona­l organizati­ons that would not be happy to see other religions advocated publicly. School and university textbooks treat it as verboten and unmentiona­ble. There is a cap of 3,000 on how many copies of religious books Zoroastria­ns are permitted to publish.

In 2015, the government budget allocated to the Zoroastria­n community was a minuscule 8.28 billion rials ($26,000), which, compared with the whopping funding filling the coffers of a lineup of Islamic organizati­ons, is genuinely embarrassi­ng. In 2020, a syndicate of 23 Islamic and cultural organizati­ons received a staggering 47.8 trillion rials ($54m) in public funds from the government of President Hassan Rouhani.

In India, they are known as Parsis, and Mahatma Gandhi once famously acclaimed their services by saying, "In numbers Parsis are beneath contempt, but in contributi­on, beyond com

pare." In 2016, the World Religion Database estimated that at best, Zoroastria­ns numbered

200,000 people worldwide.

Kourosh Ziabari

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