Quantcast
Channel: Parsi Khabar
Viewing all 3374 articles
Browse latest View live

Remembering an Indian Prometheus: Homi J. Bhabha

$
0
0

On 12 March 1944, a proposal was despatched from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) at Bangalore to the Sir Dorab Tata Trust in Bombay. The letter read ‘I have for some time past nurtured the idea of founding a first class school of research in the most advanced branches of physics in Bombay… when nuclear energy has been successfully applied for power production in say a couple of decades from now, India will not have to look abroad for its experts but will find them ready at hand’. The letter would set in motion events of great historical consequence.

Article by Sankar R | The Week

Homi-Jehangir-Bhabha-wikiThe author of these momentous tidings, whose birth anniversary is on Tuesday, was a dashing, young Indian physicist who whilst in his 30’s enjoyed a European reputation. Professor Homi Jehangir Bhabha, then head of the cosmic ray research unit at IISc, was a most unusual man. He was a brilliant experimental physicist, with a keen mathematical mind and a taste for music and arts. In the firmament of world physics, he was one of the brightest stars.

We now hail him as ‘the father of Indian nuclear programme’. That he was able to orchestrate the creation of a world-class nuclear enterprise in a third world country itself is a tribute to his genius. His visionary enterprise was born of a composite vision. There was the influence of the scientific west, Indian nationalism, the birth of ‘big science’, decolonisation and the marriage of science with state building.

Homi Bhabha was born into an affluent Parsi family in Bombay in 1909. His parents, Jehangir and Meheren Bhabha were a very enlightened and remarkable couple and young Homi and his younger brother Jamshed grew up in a charming home with books and music as their companions. He blossomed into youth breathing in a rarefied air that created in him a sense of the sublime and absolute. At school, he mastered French, Latin and had read Einstein’s theory of relativity even before he sat for his Senior Cambridge exams.

In 1927, he arrived at the famous Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge for a BA degree in mechanical engineering. Cambridge at that point of time drew the most gifted sons of the world’s elite. There were aspiring prime ministers, spies, scientists, aesthetes, avante garde artists and writers droning in and around this cathedral of genius. The famed Cavendish laboratory was then the Mecca of physics and attracted eager young minds from across the globe. Rutherford, Bohr, Oppenheimer, Yuli Khariton, Cockcroft, Blackett had all passed through its hallowed portals.

It was all too dazzling for the impressionable young Indian, who now proceeded to junk the mechanics of engineering for the metaphysics of frontier science. Exciting new discoveries had been made in atomic physics in recent years and with sufficient hard work and talent, a young researcher could do path breaking and original research in the field. Bhabha proceeded to study cosmic rays and electron showers, a field in which he made his name during much of the 1930’s. He also travelled to other temples of science in continental Europe and struck friendships with its high priests like the legendary Neils Bohr.

Though he continued to entrench himself in his field, he had developed a panoramic vision that saw emergent forces beyond the immediate horizon and was able to appreciate their significance. Nuclear physics came into its own in 1932 when James Chadwick discovered the elusive neutron. It opened up a fertile field of discovery for scientists often working independently in Russia, Germany, the United States and France.

In the same decade, another paradigm change came up in science. Hitherto, scientific research had been conducted through table top experiments by small groups of gentlemen scientists with a puritanical thirst of truth and knowledge. As the nature of research evolved, this format began to change. As particle accelerators and atom smashing became critical, it also became necessary to marshal large and diverse talent pools. ‘Big science’ started to take shape in the form of large budgets, industry support and multi-disciplinary research teams, all working under government or industry administration. Bhabha’s field of vision encompassed these developments, and later on, he would lay greater and greater emphasis on the correct and most rational form of organisation for research and development.

He returned to India in 1939 and found congenial employment at IISc, then headed by the formidable Sir C.V. Raman. Here his ardent spirit melded with the nationalistic and anti-imperialistic politics of the times. Though anglicised by his upbringing and education, he constantly looked for avenues to promote scientific research in India. Indeed much later, while he was helming the nascent nuclear programme, though he promoted foreign collaboration, he always laid emphasis on building indigenous capability. ‘If Indian industry is to take off and be capable of independent flight it must be powered by science and technology based in the country’.

Bhabha’s famous letter of 1944, got a favourable response and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) was born. As its director, he was a keen and assiduous administrator who paid attention to the tiniest details while maintaining a far sighted view of the future of his institution. Several generations of Indian researchers would hone their talents at this institute.

Jawaharlal Nehru, who had first met Bhabha in 1937, embraced this vision of a vanguard nuclear enterprise to propel a backward nation into modernity and an independent future. The world over, governments were scrambling to harness the energy and destructive potential of nuclear fission.

With Nehru’s support, the Atomic Energy Commission was set up in 1948 with Bhabha as its head. His vision entailed an autonomous body answerable to the prime minister of India and exercising a broad mandate in its domain. He was wise enough to insist on cutting out the generalist civil service and as well as the new body being run by technocrats and manned by specialists. Secrecy was also embraced as a paramount virtue as any such state activity will attract hostile foreign interests determined to wreck it.

In the early 1950’s, Bhabha looked for innovative ways to create indigenous capability in a high-tech field in a country which did not possess a substantial industrial base. The Americans had by 1954, adopted a derivative of their submarine reactor for power production. This, however, was dependent on enriching uranium and the Americans were not forthcoming with this technology.

It is then that Homi Bhabha looked to the Canadian heavy water moderated experimental reactor. Using this model reactor as the linchpin of the Indian atomic powered effort, he visualised a three-stage programme for power production. India was poorly endowed with uranium, but generously blessed with thorium. Bhabha envisioned a programme that would utilise its vast thorium reserves to produce the energy that a developing country would need.

Like others in the field, Bhabha understood the duality of his programme. While it was advertised as a peaceful nuclear programme, he understood the latent military potential of the programme. The plutonium industry which he created in the atomic energy establishment would later become the bedrock of India’s strategic programme.

Bhabha’s death in a freak airplane accident, robbed India of his services prematurely. Today, in India we must celebrate his spirit and continue with the mission he bequeathed to us.


Month-long feast in Colaba celebrates Parsi lagan fare

$
0
0

Oct 30, 2018, 07:59 IST |

The pop-up curated by Perzen Patel, known for her catering service The Bawi Bride Kitchen, will feature dishes authentic to the community and common to a Parsi wedding menu

Wedding-Bounty-a_d

Mamaji’s curry and rice

If marriages are about two people, then Indian weddings are about two people, their families, and possibly, everyone on the mailing list, too. The Parsi community is not be left out either, offering an exquisite feast at lagans.

Article by Suman Mahfuz Quazi | Mid-Day

“I am from a catering background and when we were in college, we had to do 50 outdoors each year. Everybody wanted to go for Parsi weddings because that’s where we would get to taste the best food, and especially those big patra ni pomfrets. So, Parsi food has always been something that I really enjoyed,” shares Sumit Gambhir, co-owner of Bombay Vintage at Colaba, ahead of a month-long pop-up, Lagan Nu Bhonu, beginning today at the restaurant. The pop-up curated by Perzen Patel, known for her catering service The Bawi Bride Kitchen, will feature dishes authentic to the community and common to a Parsi wedding menu.

Wedding-Bounty
Kolah nu achaar na pattice

“You are likely to find dishes like the patra ni machchi, jardaloo chicken, and pulao dal at a Parsi wedding. And while this pop-up is about wedding food, it is also about the more rarer dishes that you would find at a Parsi wedding. Earlier, guests or relatives settled overseas would come and stay with the family and the wedding would become a three-to-four-day affair. So, these dishes are the ones that would be served to guests for lunch or dinner at home, rather than the food that was prepared for the main ceremony,” Patel clarifies. And this comes through in the eclectic menu with dishes such as kolah nu achaarna pattice, a traditional carrot and dry-fruit pickle that she has re-imagined as a cutlet, Mamaiji’s curry and rice, a prawn curry recipe Patel inherited from her grandmother, and dhandaar and lagan no patio, a tangy tomato curry served with rice and a Parsi version of the yellow dal, that will be on offer.

Perzen-Patel
Perzen Patel

Not long ago, Gambhir also hosted a pop-up highlighting traditional fare from the kitchens of the city’s diverse Catholic communities in the city, from Goans to the East Indians. “We are inspired by the communities and the people who have helped build Bombay as a city. People tend to think about chaats and street food when they think of food in the city, but there is so much more. We are trying to collaborate with people who are passionate about their culinary heritage and who come from different backgrounds,” he says, reflecting on what urged him to host these regionally inclined pop ups.

ON: Today, 12 pm to 1 am
AT: Indian Mercantile Mansion, Regal Circle, Colaba.
CALL: 22880017

South Bombay varsity to be named after Homi Bhabha

$
0
0

The new cluster university in south Mumbai is set to be called Dr Homi Bhabha University after the notable alumnus of the Institute of Science, the lead college in the cluster.

A notification from the Centre is expected in a couple of months.

imageBesides the Institute of Science, the university – the first cluster university in the state – will comprise the Sydenham, Elphinstone and the Government B.Ed colleges as component colleges. It can have up to a 100 affiliated colleges in future.

Colleges currently affiliated to Mumbai University can switch to the new university, said Vasant Helavi, director of Institute of Science. “The huge sizes of public universities in the state have resulted in difficulties in managing the administration, affecting research, delaying exam results, and other goof-ups. The new university can help reduce the burden on Mumbai University,” he added.

Once all four colleges of the cluster university, including Sydenham and Elphinstone, cease to be part of Mumbai University and convert into an independent university, they will follow a separate admission process, curriculum, academic calendar, exam pattern, etc. drawn up by their own academic bodies. With fewer students in the new university, exam results could be announced within 15 days, giving a proper vacation to students as well as teachers, said an official. Helavi said a double blind assessment system will be introduced, where answer papers will be assessed by two teachers and an average of the marks will be awarded to the student. If there is a huge discrepancy, it will be assessed by a third evaluator, he said.

Students of the four colleges as well as others that seek affiliation with the cluster university will get degrees in the name

of Dr Homi Bhabha University (pending final notification) instead of Mumbai University. An official from RUSA said students need to be sensitised about this major change in their degrees.

While the new university’s administration is prepared to split with the parent university at the earliest, a government official said students from each of the colleges must be notified about the new name. The new university can start functioning soon after the Centre notifies it. It is expected to use the infrastructure available with the colleges currently.

Among other reforms, Helavi said they would introduce more practicals-based learning even for traditional arts, science and commerce courses and make internships mandatory. Starting a host of new post-graduate departments and allowing students to benefit from the specialty of the four colleges is also in the pipeline.

Amyra Dastur on being an actress, ‘It’s scary’

$
0
0

Talents coming from a non-Bollywood background and standing on two feet in the industry gain more respect from the audience, says actress Amyra Dastur. Daughter of a doctor and a businesswoman, Amyra belongs to a Parsi family. She made her acting debut in Bollywood with Issaq in 2013 and was later seen in Hindi films like Mr. X, Kaalakaandi and Kung Fu Yoga.  She also featured in Tamil and Telugu movies like Anegan, Manasuku Nachindi and Raja Gadu.

1540890243-Amyra_Dastur_ians_ok

Asked if she feels the industry is tougher for an ‘outsider’, Amyra told IANS in an e-mail interview from Mumbai: “Getting that debut film is definitely harder than someone who has got a known last name. I mean some star kids don’t even audition… I think one gains more respect from the general public as well when you have no ties to the film background and manage to stand on your own two feet in this industry.”

The 25-year-old actress said she went through over 30 film auditions and got rejected until she finally managed to bag her debut film Issaq in 2013.

“Then there’s the survival aspect which again is definitely harder for someone who is not a part of the industry. If your first film does badly, there’s no guarantee of the second film. There’s no one to shield you from the dark side of the industry either. But I feel that’s why outsiders are stronger mentally as well.

“You just have to be. Only you can take care of yourself and only you can push yourself to do better and work harder and make someone believe in your talent,” she said.

Talking about the pressures of being an actress, Amyra said: “What aren’t the pressures of being an actress? Don’t get me wrong, I love my job. It has been my one and only dream but it’s scary. There’s a certain lifestyle and image one has to live up to or face the criticism which is quite harsh and cruel.” But times are changing, she said.

“People are becoming more accepting. One doesn’t have to be a size zero any more or ridiculously fair or tall. Women in the industry are voicing their opinions more and change is definitely occurring,” she added.

On the work front, Amyra has several films in her kitty, including Mental Hai Kya, Made In China and Rajma Chawal. For director Leena Yadav’s Rajma Chawal, which will release on OTT platform, Amyra is sporting a side-shaved look. Was she apprehensive about partly shaving her head?

“I was really excited about this look. We shaved it a month in advance to see how it would look and if any changes needed to be incorporated once it was done. I didn’t tell my parents about the look, I just showed up once it was done and they freaked out in the best way possible,” she said.  The actress said her mother was a little apprehensive but her father cracked up in laughter.

“I got used to it and forgot it was even there. So when people in Delhi would stare at me, I’d scream and be like — ‘Kya dekh rahe hain? (What are you seeing) and they’d say, ‘Madam nice hairstyle’ It would be quite entertaining for people around me,” she added.

Adi Bulsara: Navy scientist selected for ONR’s Outstanding Lifetime Achievement in Science

$
0
0

Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (SSC Pacific) is proud to announce Dr. Adi Bulsara has been selected by the Office of Naval Research for the Dr. Fred E. Saalfeld Award for Outstanding Lifetime Achievement in Science. Bulsara will be honored during a ceremony at the Office of Naval Research in Arlington, Virginia, Nov. 5, 2018.

Article by Patrick Petrie | DVIDS

1000w_q95

Bulsara, the U.S. Navy ‘s Distinguished Scientist for Nonlinear Dynamics, is being honored for his contributions in the area of physics of nonlinear dynamic systems, stochastic resonance phenomenon and other noise-mediated cooperative phenomena.

In 1991, Bulsara and his collaborators postulated the importance of the “Stochastic Resonance” phenomenon in the processing of information by sensory neurons; this work was recognized by the prestigious journal Nature. His work in the physics of coupled arrays of nonlinear dynamic devices (e.g. neurons, superconducting quantum interference devices, and room temperature magnetometers) was featured on the cover of Physics Today in 1996 and led to his being awarded SSC Pacific’s highest recognition, the Lauritsen-Bennet Award for Excellence in Science. Currently, this work, along with other innovations from his group have led to a compact, cheap and very sensitive magnetometer that is being tested for a variety of land and sea applications

Bulsara was invited to serve as a visiting scientist with the Office of Naval Research (ONR)-Global in London during 2004-2006, and in Tokyo from 2008-2009. He has numerous academic collaborations regularly reviews, and serves as final publication authority of journal manuscripts; he also has 20 awarded patents, with five patents pending, and some 220 journal articles. He was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2004 and a member of the National Academy of Inventors in 2016.

Bulsara is the first member of SSC Pacific to receive this award.

For more information, please contact Patric Petrie in the SSC Pacific Public Affairs Office at (619) 553-4395 or email Arlene.petrie@navy.mil.

#

SSC Pacific’s mission: To conduct research, development, engineering, and support of integrated command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, cyber, and space systems across all warfighting domains, and to rapidly prototype, conduct test and evaluation, and provide acquisition, installation, and in-service engineering support. www.spawar.navy.mil/pacific.

Jeejeebhoy’s Bombay

$
0
0

The scion of a leading business family was among the first historians to document the city’s hidden stories, and was deeply affected by the loss of its heritage.

If one were to think of a household name in Bombay that has endured for over the last two centuries, it would most probably be Jeejeebhoy. Hospitals, schools, colleges, dharamshalas, and whatnot: the Jeejeebhoy name is ubiquitous in Bombay. This name is associated with Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy (1783–1859), famous philanthropist and opium merchant who made his fortune by trading with China in the first half of the nineteenth century. Any namesakes were sure to be burdened with the reputation of this famous man.

Now imagine if Jeejeebhoy was both your first and last names; the chances of being confused with the original Jeejeebhoy doubled. Improbably, such a person existed and he was Jeejeebhoy Rustomjee Byramjee Jeejeebhoy, who, upon entering public life, preferred to be known as J R B Jeejeebhoy. Born in 1885 with the proverbial silver spoon in his mouth, JRBJ was a scion of the Byramjee Jeejeebhoy family, then leading industrialists of Bombay with a range of textile mills and heavy industries under their control. With such a privileged background, JRBJ could have very well led a life of leisure. However, he had other plans for his life.

Jeejeebhoy went to St. Xavier’s College for undergraduate studies but did not bother to acquire a degree. After a brief stint in London, he first turned to politics and joined the Congress in 1914. A close associate of Sir Pherozeshah Mehta, Jeejeebhoy was aligned with the liberal faction that advocated a less confrontational policy against the British. By 1919, the National Liberal Federation had been formed in direct opposition to the Congress and its new leader, Mahatma Gandhi. Actively working against Gandhi’s campaigns, JRBJ took the attack to the enemy camp by writing a pamphlet titled Non-Co-operation: Its Pros and Cons in 1921. Though pushed to the sidelines by the charisma and public appeal of Gandhi, the Liberal Party continued to pursue its programmes, and JRBJ was associated with them at least until the late 1930s.

It was just as well that active politics did not consume Jeejeeboy. He could devote his time to his first love: writing about Bombay, its history and its heritage. For nearly four decades, from the 1920s to the late 1950s, Jeejeebhoy wrote numerous long and short pieces on Bombay, and presented various facets of its history to public view for the first time. Linking the past to the present, he was perhaps one of the first to be concerned with the city’s heritage and its loss.

Practically everything about Bombay and its history interested Jeejeebhoy and often provoked an article or two. It could be the famed mango trees of Bombay which fruited twice a year, in May and December, or the first elephants in the city — Richard Bourchier, Governor of Bombay from 1750 to 1760 was presented an elephant by the Peshwa Balaji Bajirao. The East India Company was so alarmed by the food bill which the elephant ran up that the Governor was asked to get rid of it forthwith.

clip_image001

Everything about Bombay and its history interested Jeejeebhoy. Subjects as diverse as rituals around the Sabbath, and the practice of witchcraft in the city, caught his attention. J R B Jeejeebhoy (inset)

The first consignment of ice in Bombay (imported from Boston in 1834) interested him as much as the manufacturing of aerated waters (again from the 1830s). Subjects as diverse as the rituals around the Sabbath, and the practice of witchcraft in the city, also caught his attention. From describing the advent of moving pictures in Bombay and complaining about the perennial problem of rash driving in the city, to remembering the long-forgotten first Indian judge of the High Court of Bombay and recalling the prevalence of slave trade in the city, Jeejeebhoy wrote on a variety of subjects.

Jeejeebhoy was perhaps one of the first people to lament the rapid destruction of built heritage in the city. During his own lifetime, Bombay lost hundreds of structures built in the nineteenth century, including his birthplace, the famed Mazagaon Castle, which was the residence of Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy, his maternal great-grandfather. The destruction by fire of the historical Police Court Building at Mazagon in 1942 resulted in a piece of nostalgic writing. The closure of iconic institutions be it the Deccan College (in 1934) or judicial institutions like the Honorary Presidency Magistrate’s Courts (in 1947) troubled him, and he used the opportunity to talk about their history in the hope that others could be perpetuated. The Parsi community, to which Jeejeebhoy belonged, was an area of special interest. Not only was he concerned with their history, including their settling in Bombay from the seventeenth century and their achievements in numerous fields, but he also documented the rapid cultural reforms that the community adopted during his lifetime.

Scouring decaying volumes of old Bombay newspapers such as the Bombay Courier, the Bombay Gazette and the Bombay Saturday Review, Jeejeebhoy excavated nuggets of information which he polished into entertaining articles. He was the first person to attempt a history of the law and judiciary in Bombay; this resulted in a corpus of writings that could serve as a standard reference on the subject. Crime and punishment also held a great fascination for Jeejeebhoy. While he worked hard to rehabilitate released prisoners in the Bombay Presidency, he also traced the gruesome history of corporal punishments and executions with a certain gusto. His magnum opus, Bribery and Corruption in Bombay(published in 1952), is also concerned with the same subject.

Many of his Bombay writings appeared in the special Pateti and Nowroze issues of Anglo-Gujarati periodicals such as the Sanj Vartaman and Kaiser-i-Hind that have vanished from the public eye. He also wrote for the leading English newspapers of Bombay: the Times of India and the Bombay Chronicle. Though positioned on opposite sides of the political spectrum, both dailies opened their columns to Jeejeebhoy gladly. During his lifetime, Jeejeebhoy enjoyed a reputation as “Bombay’s leading historian,” but after his death in 1960, his numerous writings gradually faded from public memory. Jeejeebhoy, thus, shared this fate with many of the subjects of his articles, who had long been forgotten until he wrote about them. And like them, Jeejeebhoy can also hope to enjoy a second lease of life through the works of twenty-first century writers.

J R B Jeejeebhoy’s select writings on the history of Bombay have been collected together in a volume titled J R B Jeejeebhoy’s Bombay Vignettes: Explorations in the History of Bombay (edited with an introduction by the writer). It is published by the Asiatic Society of Mumbai

clip_image002

Jeejeebhoy’s writings were published in Anglo-Gujarati periodicals such as Sanj Vartaman and Kaiser-i-Hind; (R) A depiction of the Parsi Tower of Silence at Bombay. Jeejeebhoy documented the community’s history and cultural reforms

Jimmy Engineer: “The servant of Pakistan”

$
0
0

Jimmy described his wall paintings depicting Allama Iqbal’s masterpiece Javed Namah as his most difficult work, but also one of his major artistic achievements

“I have been sent here,” said an unfamiliar man, in a dark shalwar kameez, as he stood silhouetted in the doorway of my Karachi hotel room. It was late in the evening and he had insisted on seeing me personally and alone, an unnerving demand in 1997, when the filming had just started on my film Jinnah. There was a storm of controversy and the film, its cast, and crew were being attacked in the media. We were taken to court and a case was instituted to shut down production. Although we won the case, commentators speculated whether the entire enterprise would collapse mid-way.

Jimmy-Engineer1

Op-Ed by Akbar Ahmed  | Daily Times , Lahore

It is in this context that the man’s words sounded inspirational to me. “From now on,”he said, “I will be by your side and will escort you to your plane when the film is completed. You will succeed despite the opposition.”

The man was Jimmy Engineer, one of the most famous painters and social activists of Pakistan.

Jimmy, a Zoroastrian, hinted that a “transcendental power” had sent him. He presented a video cassette to me and insisted that I watch it. In the darkly-lit sequence filmed with a hand held camera, Jimmy was seen entering a cave and there was a cage containing two lions. At first, the lions were agitated, but they calmed down eventually.

“talking to people, showing my work and telling them that we are not all extremists. We are artists, lecturers, doctors and scientists. It became my mission to travel all over the world creating a positive image of Pakistan.” — Jimmy Engineer

“Your position is quite similar to what has been shown in the film. You too are facing ferocious lions in a cage. But I have been sent to be by your side, and in the end, you will accomplish your mission.”

True to his word, throughout the long and difficult shooting in Karachi and Lahore Jimmy was by my side. He even walked from Karachi to Lahore on a one-man crusade to raise funds, after the government reneged on its agreement to contribute funds for Jinnah. As he had promised, he ultimately saw me off at the Karachi airport.

Jimmy’s Parsi community immigrated to the Subcontinent from Persia in the seventh century. There are fewer than 1,800 Parsis in Pakistan today with fewer than 190,000 in the world total, he told me. The Zorastrians have a tradition where one’s profession is reflected in their name, so Jimmy’s last name was given because his father and grandfather were engineers, although he did not end up pursuing their careers.

Jimmy was born in Loralai, Balochistan, in 1954. At the age of only six, doctors told his family that his kidneys were failing and that he had only three months to live. Three months later, however, he was still alive and the doctors informed his family his kidneys appeared “brand new.” It was, his family said, a “miracle” and Jimmy believes he was given a second chance. “I’m trying to repay God through my work,” he said in 2009, “I don’t refuse anyone if they need help.”

He went on to study at St. Anthony High School and at the National College of Arts, both in Lahore, and became a professional painter in 1976. A theme running through his work has been universal compassion for all people, especially the poor and down trodden. Jimmy has produced over 3,000 paintings-which have sold for as much as 1.6 million pounds-and more than 1,500 drawings and 1,000 calligraphies. 700,000 of his prints are held in private collections in over 60 countries. His drawings and paintings encompass many genres including abstracts, human figures, animals, landscapes, calligraphies, seascapes, religious, historical, and philosophical works, and still-lifes.

“As I grew up,” Jimmy elaborated in an interview in Sri Lanka’s Daily News, “I became a student of nature. You are dealing with the perfect master then, because nature is perfect while we are imperfect….”

Jimmy described his wall paintings depicting Allama Iqbal’s masterpiece Javed Namah as his most difficult work, but also one of his major artistic achievements. Jimmy explained that he was invited to paint Javed Namah by Iqbal’s son. Iqbal had written a letter to his son,Jimmy said in 2012,”that he would like some artist to create a visual display of the philosophy in the poem. There were two or three great painters from other countries who tried their hand at the deed. They were only able to paint one scene not the whole thing.  I went through his letter and discovered that he had written that the man who paints ‘Javed Nama’ will have a great name in the world”. When Iqbal’s son, came to ask Jimmy when the work would be finished, Jimmy said that”I would tell him that his father too comes to me asking that question.”

Jimmy has held over 80 art exhibitions in Pakistan and around the world. “I have traveled all over the world,” he said in 2013, “talking to people, showing my work and telling them that we are not all extremists. We are artists, lecturers, doctors and scientists. It became my mission to travel all over the world creating a positive image of Pakistan.”

He is keenly aware of this importance in the west. “Whenever I show my work in Europe or the United States,”Jimmy said in 2009 in Houston, Texas,”it changes the mind of people when they look at it. For a moment they forget that I’m from Pakistan. They feel that I’m part of the international community, and it helps change their perception and image of my country, which is often negative.” Jimmy’s father, as it turns out, is a prominent religious leader based in Houston, where there is a distinguished Zoroastrian community. Among its members is the famous Pakistani novelist Bapsi Sidhwa.

In 2017, Jimmy exhibited his artwork in China at the prestigious Zhengyangmen Museum in Beijing. The exhibit was entitled, “Art, Culture and Heritage of Pakistan” and included his striking and moving painting “The Last Burning Train of 1947,” which depicts the impact on refugees during the horrific violence that befell the Subcontinent during Partition. The painting is part of a series of paintings on canvas depicting the human tragedy of Partition.

Jimmy has additionally led more than 100 walks for social causes, arranged over 140 awareness programs for handicapped and orphaned children, and donated 700,000 prints of his work to charity.

When I asked him who inspires him, he told me, demonstrating his embrace of other religions, that he was “a close disciple of Sufi Barkat Ali of Faisalabad,” and “I accepted all religions as my personal belief.” Invoking Zarathustra of his Zoroastrian faith, Jimmy elaborated on his philosophy, “Our Prophet taught us three words. Good Words. Good Thoughts. Good Deeds.”

This philosophy comes through in his painting that he presented to me as a gift when he met me in Washington, D.C. It is a large work of calligraphy of the shahada, and I have it proudly displayed in my office. When guests come and ask about it, I point out that it is by one of Pakistan’s most famous painters who is not a Muslim, and they are invariably surprised.

Jimmy has received many awards from all over the world, including The National Endowment of the Arts Award in the United States in 1988 and the Sitara-e-Imtiaz for Art from the Government of Pakistan in 2005. Despite these numerous accolades, he says, “I call myself the servant of Pakistan. That is the only title I am proud of.”

The writer is the Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at American University, Washington, DC, and author of Journey into Europe: Islam, Immigration, and Identity

Neomi Rao: First Parsi Judge Nominated on the D.C. Circuit Court in the United States.

$
0
0

Neomi Rao, Trump’s Deregulatory Leader, Gets DC Circuit Nod to Replace Kavanaugh

Neomi Rao, who has led the Trump administration’s push to curtail agency regulations, would succeed Brett Kavanaugh on the D.C. Circuit, whose docket is teeming with administrative disputes.

White House regulatory czar Neomi Rao will be nominated to fill the vacancy left by Justice Brett Kavanaugh on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, President Donald Trump said Tuesday.

181113144919-neomi-rao---1-exlarge-169

Rao, confirmed in 2017 to lead the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, has spearheaded the Trump administration’s deregulatory agenda, including the effort to cut two regulations for every new one introduced. A lawsuit challenging the administration’s two-for-one order was dismissed earlier this year.

At a recent American Bar Association conference, Rao trumpeted the administration’s efforts, citing billions of dollars in regulatory cost savings. She credited deregulation for contributing to the job creation Trump has repeatedly noted in tweets and at campaign-style rallies.

“So I think this is really a tremendous amount of progress in a short period of time. And one of the things that has been the result of these efforts is there’s been a slowing of the imposition of costly new regulations and guidance documents, and kind of a fundamental shift away from the inertia that has favored a steady expansion of the regulatory state,” Rao said on Nov. 1.

If confirmed by the Senate, Rao would rise to a court widely considered the second highest in the nation, in part because it receives the bulk of cases challenging the federal government’s actions. In its reviews of those actions, the D.C. Circuit regularly weighs how much deference is owed to federal agencies.

Rao, in her Nov. 1 remarks, said her office has worked closely with federal agencies to “ensure that they are relying on what we consider to be the best interpretation of the statute—not necessarily a strained interpretation that they believe will get deference in the courts but really the fairest and best understanding of what their authority is.”

In a June speech at the Heritage Foundation, she touched on the topic of Chevron deference, a judicial doctrine under which courts have deferred to “reasonable” agency interpretations of statutes that are ambiguous. Calling for a “more robust review of regulatory action in the courts,” Rao said she believed “courts can provide more meaningful checks on agency action and authority, enforcing both statutory and constitutional due process.”

Thanks in part to her views on administrative agencies, Rao’s name has long been floated as a possible D.C. Circuit pick. Trump interviewed Rao for the seat in October after Don McGahn, in one of his last acts as White House counsel, recommended her for the D.C. Circuit.

In joining the White House last year, Rao took leave from her position as a law professor at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School, where she also founded the school’s Center for the Study of the Administrative State.

If confirmed, Rao would become the second Trump administration official—after former White House lawyer Gregory Katsas—to join the D.C. Circuit. She would also join a long list of former Justice Clarence Thomas clerks, including Katsas, nominated to federal court seats under the Trump administration.

Rao clerked for Justice Clarence Thomas from 2001 to 2002 and Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit from 1999 to 2000. Between her two clerkships, she was counsel to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

She also previously served as an associate counsel at the George W. Bush White House, from 2005 to 2006.

Trump nominates Neomi Rao to replace Kavanaugh on DC Circuit

President Donald Trump announced during a Diwali ceremonial lighting ceremony at the White House Tuesday that he is nominating Neomi Rao to fill Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s seat on the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.

“I won’t say today that I just nominated Neomi to be on the DC Circuit Court of Appeals, the seat of Justice Brett Kavanaugh,” Trump said, 24 hours before a planned announcement. “She’s going to be fantastic — great person.”

Trump said the early announcement “gives me a big story.”

We were going to announce that tomorrow and I said you know, here we are Neomi — we’re never gonna do better than this — I thought it was an appropriate place”

    The President has interviewed Rao, who currently serves as administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, an agency within the White House Office of Management and Budget, CNN’s Ariane de Vogue reported.

      Rao is on leave of absence from George Mason University Scalia School of Law, where she is an associate law professor.

      Asked to say something by Trump, Rao responded with “thank you very much, Mr. President, for the confidence you’ve shown in me. I greatly appreciate it.”


      Jiyo Parsi scheme gains ground in Gujarat

      $
      0
      0

      The dwindling population of Parsi community nationwide has long been a cause of concern and was the primary motivation for the Jiyo Parsi scheme.

      Funded by the Ministry of Minority Affairs, and conceived and promoted by Parzor Foundation of the Bombay Parsi Punchayet, the Tata Institute of Social Sciences and the federation of Zoroastrian Anjumans of India, its primary aim was to aid Parsi couples facing difficulties in conceiving with IVF treatment. After a sluggish start, it has finally gained ground in Gujarat, where as opposed to just one birth two years ago, the number has now risen to around 12.

      Article by Tanushree Bhatia | DNA

      753739-parsi-community-dna

      In the past four years, a total of 168 babies across the country have been born under the Jiyo Parsi scheme, considered to be an achievement by the team working on this programme. Unfortunately, Ahmedabad has only had one baby till date. “Infertility is still a taboo in Ahmedabad. Also, most Parsis are quite well off to approach us seeking financial and medical help.”

      “However, the response from Surat and Navsari has been quite good. We are also trying to reach out to gynaecologists across the state, requesting them to direct Parsi couples visiting them, to us so that we can help them,” says Pearl Mistry, counsellor, Jiyo Parsi in Gujarat.

      At present, the Jiyo Parsi programme is in the second phase that aims at getting Parsi men and women to rapidly marry and procreate in significant numbers. Last week, a Parsi matrimony meet was held in Ahmedabad, in which nearly 90 Parsis participated.

      Under the scheme, a couples opting for IVF get reimbursement of nearly 8 lakh, covering expenses till the child is born. However, the biggest challenge is to counsel the couple as distraught couple lose patience as IVF can take multiple cycles. “Even as we encourage couples to opt for a second baby, we offer them Rs 4,000 per month for it to help cover cost of crèche for the first eight years.”

      “The scheme is aimed at increasing the shrinking population and does not see a good response as most Parsi couples do not aim to have children. It is important to overcome the mindset and make them see reason. Only then there will be a change and they will go for early marriage and early kids,” says Rashna Daruwalla, manager, admissions, Anant National University, adding, “For every 200 new born, there are 800 dead. These figures are equally responsible for the decline.”

      12 Births And Counting
      • In Gujarat, as opposed to one birth two years ago, it has now gone up to around 12 
      • Over the past 4 years, 168 babies born across the country under the scheme 
      • Couples opting for IVF get reimbursement of nearly 8 lakh per child till birth

      DNA Editorial: Increasing Numbers – The success of Jiyo Parsi scheme offers hope

      While India requires measures to contain its swelling population, the Parsis, a tiny, endangered minority needed some serious encouragement to save itself from extinction. Hence, the launch of the Jiyo Parsi scheme in 2013-14 to inspire Parsis to rapidly procreate.

      Now in its second phase, Jiyo Parsi’s success can be gauged from the fact that in Gujarat, as opposed to one birth two years ago, the number has shot up to 12. This means that a community generally reluctant to have babies is expressing eagerness to swell its ranks.

      Though the numbers are still much too small — in the last four years, 168 babies born across the country under the scheme and the incidence of death in an aging populace is much more than the number of newborns — there is hope.

      The sops offered under the scheme — for IVF treatment, couples get reimbursed up to Rs 8 lakh per child till birth — have definitely helped. But the journey to becoming a vibrant, robust population is going to be long and arduous.

      Interestingly, Parsis have more females compared to males in their community — about 1,050 females per 1,000 males, which is much higher than India’s average of 933 females, according to the 2001 Census. India still has the highest population of Parsis in the world and despite being numerically weak, the contributions of the Parsis in various fields, especially, in business and the armed forces, have been noteworthy.

      The Parsis, apparently, have one of the lowest fertility rates in the world as well as the highest numbers of bachelors and spinsters. But, apart from accelerating birth rate, the community also needs crucial reforms that can clear the way for a departure from calcified norms and traditions.

      Inside House of Daaruwala, the café inspired by a Mumbai institution

      $
      0
      0

      The all-day café in Andheri pays homage to the legacy of Irani cafés that once dotted every prominent corner of the city

      Article by Kermin Bhot | Architectural Digest

      clip_image002

      Mumbai’s House of Daaruwala is a new-age adaptation of the old: The classic Irani café bentwood chairs here are made of wood for sturdiness, rather than cane or bamboo, and have comfortable padded seats in olive green and walnut brown.

      A staple of Mumbai life from the early 20th century, Irani cafés have been on the verge of extinction for a while now. Set up by migrant Iranis, the cafés quickly became a place where people from all walks of life, irrespective of class, religion, or caste could catch up over a cup of Irani chai and bun maska. The relaxed environs provided solace to and hosted everyone from writers to dock workers, body builders, gangsters, actors, labourers, artists, revolutionaries, sex workers, and cricketers. Minimal prices and the lack of socio-economic boundaries made it easy for Irani cafés to flourish. With their high ceilings and simple but elegant European-style décor mixed in with Zoroastrian artefacts and motifs, the cafés were, as someone once called them, “the poor man’s parlours”.

      clip_image004

      clip_image006

      Popping Up In Inauspicious Corners

      Irani cafés were often set up on the corners of buildings left vacant by superstitious Hindu traders who avoided these spots, considering them inauspicious for business. The prime location made the cafés accessible from two streets, helping drum up business and ensure their longevity. But their luck seems to be running out. Only a handful of Irani cafés are now left in Mumbai. Over time the spread of Udipi restaurants, new-age coffee shops, fast food joints, lack of interest from the new generation of owners, and disagreements between partners have resulted in many Irani café’s downing their shutters.

      It is this part of the city’s heritage that the House of Daaruwala taps into and introduces to a new generation in a way they can relate to. Iranis and Parsis are known for their wisecracks, jovial nature and immense love for food, drink, and all things vintage—elements Red Brick Restaurants, the group behind House of Daaruwala, decided to capitalise on to entertain diners and get them to join in the fun. It all starts with the Daaruwala family, a set of characters specially created for the brand to engage with patrons. They range from the family Casanova, the Bairi Master, to the carrom-loving Kaivan Uncle, and the beautiful daughter of the house, the Hoosna Pari. The characters are visible everywhere—on almost every page of the menu, the dinnerware, and on the big hand painted mirrors.

      Subtle Colonial Motifs

      For Minnie Bhatt, the creative design mind weaving this rich tapestry, the key lies in retaining the subtle colonial atmosphere of an Irani café, with its vintage saloon-style doors, glass-topped tables, bentwood chairs, checkered tablecloths, and padded booths, and elevating it by adding elements from a quaint, old Parsi home. These come in the form of a grandfather clock, antique sideboards with colourful tiles, black and white family photos, shelves packed with curios collected from around the world, along with books, old bone china crockery, and vintage glassware.

      “Our central thought while doing the interiors of House of Daaruwala was to re-establish the dying culture of Iranian Parsi cafes. Every element at House of Daaruwala is a trip down memory lane. From engaging accessories of a Parsi family collected over the years…lights that have existed for 50 years to booth spaces that offer a little privacy,” says Minnie, the Design Director at Minnie Bhatt Designs, whose portfolio includes other eclectic spaces like Mirchi and Mime, Burma Burma, and Fable.

      clip_image008

      Quirky Catchphrases of the Daaruwalas

      But remember, the House of Daaruwala is a new-age adaptation of the old. So the classic Irani café bentwood chairs here are made of wood for sturdiness, rather than cane or bamboo, and have comfortable padded seats in olive green and walnut brown. The four-seater tables have carrom board tabletops with quirky Parsi phrases painted on the rim. The Daaruwala family characters and their catchphrases appear on dinnerware as well as on four large mirrors placed on a statement wall with wood panelling.

      The dark green pillars and beam running through the centre add a pop of colour to a space that’s otherwise anchored in woody browns. The floral wallpaper behind the booths and blue and white neo-classic tiles, reminiscent of the cement tiles of old, bring a light-hearted vibe to the space. Colour is also added with smaller accents like colourful miniature cars (because which Parsi doesn’t love his car?), Delft Blue collectibles, porcelain figurines, teapots, and other curios on display. The vintage umbrella-shaped glass light fixtures sourced from Chor Bazaar in Mumbai add a touch of whimsy, and lighten the solid lines, while the low-hanging lampshades will remind you of carrom rooms in the gymkhanas of your childhood. The end result is a cosy, cheerful, well-lit space that makes dining a treat.

      clip_image010

      Antique Style Bar

      The walk down memory lane continues at the antique-style bar. The front bar wall is decorated with vintage advertising posters on one end and old glass barnis (jars) filled with biscuits favoured by Parsis/Iranis, like khari, Nankhatai (shortbreak biscuits), and Shrewsbury, reminiscent of the display counter at Irani cafés and bakeries. The backbar serves as another showcase with etched glass and crystal decanters and sparkling glassware taking pride of place. The bar menu, which includes drinks by the quarter, is heavy on cocktails, wines, and whiskies, with a few shooters and liqueurs thrown in for good measure.

      Continuing with the theme, the menu at House of Daaruwala features a healthy mix of Parsi/Irani classics that have been adapted to appeal to a broader palate. There is also regular modern cafe fare like pizzas, pastas, grilled dishes and even fried rice. The idea is to cater to a wider audience who might not want to experiment too much with Parsi cuisine. Unlike traditional Irani cafés, there’s quite a lot on the menu for vegetarians (Jains included) and the growing tribe of vegans.

      clip_image012

      From Salli Boti to Jain Poppers

      The menu is the brainchild of Chef Sameer Bhalekar, of Mirchi and Mime fame, and Parsi food lovers will be delightfully surprised by how he reinvents traditional dishes while retaining their flavours. There’s a sizeable breakfast menu with a variety of egg dishes like any self-respecting Irani café (available from 9 am to 7 pm). Since we’re there for dinner, we started with the Chicken and Prawn Farcha, both of which were wonderfully crisp. The Spicy Paneer sliders were sure-shot winners, with their melt-in-your-mouth paneer and flinger-licking chutney. The Mutton Chops fared better than the Chicken Kebab and Bombil Fry, which was a bit heavy on the batter. For the main course, we started with the Salli Boti with tender mutton ramakras (pieces) as the Parsis say. Then came the tad bland Prawn Curry and the Saus Nu Chicken. The Berry Pulav was another hit with its chicken pieces marinated in a rich, flavourful masala. We wrapped up our meal with the creamy, classic Caramel Custard (available in an eggless option) that made for the perfect ending.

      Address: 1, Green Fields Society, Lokhandwala Complex, Andheri (W), Mumbai | Timings: 9 am to 1.30 am | Tel: +91 9136279904 / +91 9136279905

      Perfect Letter for All Eeda (Egg) Loving Bawajis

      $
      0
      0

      A write up by a parsi mother to her son!

      Perfect letter for all eeda (Eggs) loving bawas!!

      Dear Son,

      Today I am writing to you about a strange topic. Eggs. After all, what kind of a Parsi caterer would I be if I didn’t try to squeeze in our favourite ‘Eedu’ into just about any conversation possible.

      Right now the only kind of eggs you have tried is in a tomato omelette but I am hoping that your Parsi genes will awaken and soon you will want to try every kind of eggs possible. So here is a list of 10 different kinds of eggs you must try and also life lessons you can learn from them (I am a parent now so it is my prerogative to teach you something at any given point of time even though it may seem totally random and meaningless at the time).

      Parsi_Scrambled_Eggs_(Akoori)_700_559_84_int_c1

      Sunny Side Up — When cooked perfectly, this egg is crispy and firm at the edges but the yolk is soft and runny. Similarly learn to be firm and stick to your decisions once you make them but also still stay fluid to change and filled with warmth at your center.

      Parsi Akoori — Nothing beats a good morsel of creamy Akoori served on top of Brun pav. However, take the same ingredients and overcook it and you will not get Akoori but Bhurji which tastes rubbery and dry. Similarly, if you overthink a decision for too long you are going to ruin it. Instead, remember to combine what knowledge you have, think over it a bit and then just take action!

      Poached Eggs — While a lot of people like eating poached eggs, many are scared of cooking them because you have to be so gentle with it. Don’t be scared to be gentle and tread lightly when the situation demands it son because the rewards are always proportionate to the risk taken.

      Salli per Eedu — I make Sali per Eedu the same way for you as my mummy did and she uses the same recipe her mummy did. There is value in experience and doing things the traditional way. In a world that is fast changing it is easy to discount tradition for ancient ideas but remember to question yourself on the reason why someone is still doing it the way they were 50 years ago before you go ahead and change for the sake of it.

      Cheesy Omelette — Did you know the first word you spoke was not Maa or Daa, but ‘Cheesh’ (I was so proud). A good cheese omelette needs only two things — cheese and eggs. Most days if you use a salted cheese you won’t even need seasoning! Remember, that the good things in life don’t need to be overly complicated. On most occasions if you have love and honesty by your side, you are sorted.

      Tarkari per Eedu — We Parsis have an innate ability to take any leftover vegetable, add an egg on top and turn it into an entire new dish. Be versatile like this dish because there are many different versions of the ‘perfect you’ and if you can keep tweaking and adjusting to whats needed, you will always be in fashion.

      Baked Eggs with Truffle Oil — Sometimes all you need is a small quantity of something special to make a common dish spectacular. Try to be this ‘Truffle Oil’ in life which adds a sparkle to the everyday hustle. All you need to do for this is think a little out of the box (and ofcourse then go ahead and implement it).

      Egg Curry — I am not a big fan of egg curry but your Mamaiji has spoken to me of many days as a child when her parents couldn’t afford meat and so dinner would be egg curry. Above I spoke of taking adding small amounts of ‘something special’ but sometimes even that is not needed and just a humble egg can also make an ordinary meal special. So, while fancy is great you don’t always have to wait for inspiration to strike, simple can also be good enough.

      Mayonnaise — There are two secret ingredients in a good mayo fresh eggs and lots of patience while the eggs emulsify with the oil and work their magic to create a creamy sauce. I know you may think me hypocritical by telling you not to overthink yet preaching patience. It’s important to not mix the two. Good things take time and if you have a dream you deserve to give your dream the benefit of time to come true.

      Chutney Eeda Pattice — When you’re old and in a job with kids of your own you may feel on occasion that life has become boring and mundane. At those times remember that you don’t need to make big changes but just add small elements of suprise. Just like finding a yummy piece of boiled egg inside a chutney pattice can spark a smile, spending some quality time with your kids outside the house or saying a few kind words to your wife may make a big difference. So before you go all out, just try a small surprise first.

      That’s all the gyaan I have for you today. I hope when you grow up you appreciate how difficult it is to write an entire letter on life lessons based on eggs and love your mom more for it. Until then, I part for today with the wise words of BawaTips, “When in doubt, break an Eedu on it”.

      A Persian Popinjay. A Review of the Film Bohemian Rhapsody

      $
      0
      0

      The Demands of the Narrative

      The film opens with a close-up of star Rami Malek’s eye, a circlet of pale blue-grey iris clearly visible around a wide black pupil. The actor probably chose to eschew the tinted contact lenses that would have given him Freddie’s chocolate eyes because he found them uncomfortable. But I like to think of this discrepancy in eye color, in retrospect, as an early warning to viewers. To have a chance of enjoying the film, you must accept that it’s not in any sense a faithful account. The directors play fast and loose with chronology, telling only partial truths about Freddie’s life and telling those slant. Events that took place over a number of years—the Live Aid concert; the breakup with his lover Paul Prenter; Freddie’s AIDS diagnosis—are concertinaed into a single sequence, for maximum dramatic effect.

      Article by Iona Italia |Aero

      hbz-freddie-mercury-1983-gettyimages-137452925This is history as written by the survivors. The narrative is skewed in ways that always depict the remaining band members, who were heavily involved in the project, in flattering ways. They are the good guys, the uebernerds who provide a foil to Freddie’s flamboyance. A couple of uncomfortable facts about them are omitted, most notably Queen’s tour of apartheid South Africa. The bandmates’ attitudes towards Freddie are shown as warm and familial throughout, while he frequently plays the prima donna. The truth was more complex. The film, for example, depicts Freddie breaking up the band to selfishly pursue a solo career, whereas in fact drummer Roger Taylor was the first band member to release a solo album, in 1977. (Freddie’s own solo LP, Mr Bad Guy, was not released until 1985). One of the film’s most touching scenes shows Freddie breaking the news of his recent AIDS diagnosis to his bandmates—in real life, he took over two years to confide in them after receiving the news. Possible tensions between the band members are mostly glossed over or attributed to the villainous influence of Prenter, the snake in Eden, the scheming royal favourite, Gaveston to Freddie’s Edward II.

      But, while film critics and hard-core Queen fans have mostly disliked the movie for these reasons, it’s been hugely popular among audiences: partly because of Malek, a gifted chameleon, whose interpretation of Freddie is exceptionally loving and tender, but mostly because the movie takes the raw material of Freddie’s life and edits and rearranges it into a masterful piece of storytelling. This is not biography: it’s myth. We might most fruitfully see it as one more reinvention of a figure whose life was full of them. Audiences love a good story. And this is a superb one.

      Identity As Performance

      “How difficult was it to portray someone from a different background?” one interviewer asked Malek. “Very, very difficult,” he answered. “Nowadays the ideal would be for someone of the same nationality [meaning, presumably ethnicity] to play the role.” Some critics have focused on the fact that Freddie was not played by a Parsi actor and his identity as an Indian Parsi, a Zoroastrian, was not sufficiently emphasized in the film. Indeed, his relationship with his parents appears to have been warmer in real life than that portrayed in the movie (his mother has reported that she went to all his early concerts and enjoyed cooking for the band members). But Freddie alluded to his Parsi heritage very seldom in interviews, though in 1985 he told David Wigg: “that’s something inbred, that’s part of me and I’ll always walk around like a Persian popinjay.” This quotation never appears in the film, but the movie does make a visual connection between the photograph of Elizabeth II on the wall of the Bulsara family home—Parsis are famous for an Anglophile fondness for the British royals—and, of course, the name of the band.

      But, in general, the film tells a different story and it’s one which we seem to have forgotten in this age of identity politics, in which we so often depict racial heritage as the most important element of a person’s being. The movie provides a salutary reminder that this has not always been the case: that belonging to an ethnic minority used to be less a badge of pride than something to be overcome. But not necessarily in order to conform to some majority culture, not to whitewash, pass or hide one’s roots out of shame. But to transcend such narrow categories as irrelevant.

      The film is saturated with imagery of self-transformation. In one early scene, Freddie’s mother shows his girlfriend Mary an album of baby photos, while the singer stands over his parents’ piano and loudly belts out happy birthday to me as he announces that he has changed his name by deed poll, from the traditional Parsi surname of Bulsara to the designation of the messenger of the gods, changing from fixed to quicksilver mobility in a symbolic apotheosis. “Did you know that Freddie was born in Zanzibar?” his mother informs his fellow musicians. But his sister corrects her. Freddie, she archly remarks, was “born in London—at the age of eighteen,” echoing the famous statement of French dramatist, Molière, who also changed his name when he became an artist: “Jean-Baptiste Poquelin was born in Paris. Molière was born in Pézenas.”

      Later in the film, the band is shown at a press conference, at which an increasingly disoriented Freddie is bombarded by hostile questions about his background, sexuality and private life. “Your parents are conservative Zoroastrians. What do they think about your lifestyle?” one journalist asks pointedly. “My parents died in a fiery wreck,” Freddie ad libs theatrically. On a literal level this is false, of course. But there is a symbolic truth to the dramatic fiction of the parents consumed by flames. A disproportionate number of classic novels depict protagonists who have been orphaned or whose parents are so self-absorbed or negligent as to have effectively abdicated their role. You won’t have many interesting adventures or be able to get up to any exciting mischief if your parents are watching over you. Nor can you create worthwhile art if you allow yourself to be bounded by their expectations.

      In these days of identity politics, being part of a minority ethnic group is often fetishized, not least by those who are part of it. Theories about staying in your lane and ideas that truth is informed by lived experience suggest that each person’s vision of the world is heavily dependent on where he or she is from. Your parentage is your fate: coloring every aspect of your experience, providing a lens through which to see the world. As such, it is a barrier which prevents us from ever truly communicating our experiences, except to those who share our narrow origins. But, rather than recognizing this as a handicap, we valorize it.

      One symptom of this is the way in which younger people from ethnic minorities are concerned about cultural appropriation. They don’t want people from the majority culture borrowing their culture’s dress, for example. The anger in some circles over the white teenager wearing cheongsam at her school prom, over pale-skinned pop stars in dreadlocks or bindis, the museum visitors trying out kimono, the vitriol directed at Erika and Nicholas Christakis, for suggesting that students might freely choose how to dress for Halloween—all of this results from a worldview in which how we present ourselves must authentically reflect our heritage.

      This ethos is inimical to a performer like Freddie. The glam rock artists with whom the boomer generation grew up rebelled against their roots, rejected conformity to any stereotype—chosen or imposed—and constantly reinvented themselves. The frontman of a glam rock band is his own canvas, his own creation. When we talk about David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust phase or his Heroes phase, we’re not describing simply styles of music. Dress, makeup, gestures, movements, hairstyles: these are all part of the artwork. Identity here isn’t something passively inherited, some birthright fenced about with boundaries to prevent others from trespassing. An artist of this kind cannot be daunted by prohibitions against cultural appropriation: he or she should seize upon anything that serves the purpose of self-expression. Every aspect of human culture should be up for grabs. The local is there to be transcended—even the planetary, as a rocket man, as Major Tom far above the world, as a supersonic Mr. Fahrenheit accelerating up to escape velocity.

      We can see a tiny example of this in one of the film’s early scenes, when Freddie, at the iconic London shop Biba, asks Mary if she has a pair of trousers in his size. “This is the women’s section,” she tells him, “so I don’t really know.” But then, after a pause, she adds, “But I don’t think it should matter, do you?” The scene then cuts to her surprising Freddie in the dressing room—“are you even allowed to be in here?” he asks—with a pencil-thin silk scarf to match his outfit and kohl to rim his eyes. We are tolerant of this kind of playful self-invention when it comes to gender. Male performers often appear androgynous or feminine in their self-presentation for obvious reasons: there are more prohibitions and taboos around male dress than female. The sartorial codes of modern masculinity are defined in terms of negatives: men don’t wear skirts or women’s slacks or eyeliner. Those restrictions are, to the artist, a challenge to be overcome. But we are far less forgiving of the overstepping of racial boundaries. When Rebecca Tuval compared transgenderism and transracialism in an article for feminist journal Hypatia, she was widely condemned. Gender expression is a free playground: but racial expression is a privilege, to exercise which we must present the correct bona fides.

      One aspect of Freddie’s self-exploration is inevitably tinged with tragedy in the film. Some critics have accused the moviemakers of homophobia because Freddie’s main same-sex relationship portrayed is with the devious, traitorous Paul Prenter, who is cast firmly and explicitly in the role of villain. In a dreamlike sequence, set to the music of “Another One Bites the Dust,” we watch as Paul leads Freddie through the dimly lit, leather-clad world of a gay club, an evil Beatrice to his Dante. Malek’s eyes are alive in this scene. He is a nervous Actaeon, uncertain whether he is hunter or stag, expressing everything through glances alone. Later, when Mary arrives at Freddie and Paul’s rented house in Germany and the camera pans over a table littered with pills and cocaine powder, Freddie tells her that “being human is a condition that sometimes requires a little anesthesia.”

      It’s impossible to avoid the associations that come with this portrayal of the rock star lifestyle and its constant search for new sensations, to fill a deep emptiness that cannot be assuaged that way. It’s impossible not to see Prenter as Mephistopheles and the gay sexual promiscuity as a Faustian pact, inevitably ending in premature death. But we need to differentiate here. The gay sex clubs seem sinister to us, not because of our homophobia but because of our foreknowledge. The scenes are pregnant with dramatic irony: we understand the tragic implications of the characters’ actions because we know of the existence of a deadly retrovirus, already quietly multiplying in blood and semen, soon to decimate the gay community. We see the Reaper walking among them. But they, we must remember, did not.

      The film never suggests that unhappiness is somehow the reality of being gay or, indeed, of being a rock star. Freddie feels lonely and isolated at this point in the film, trapped in a world in which his sexuality can be expressed only through empty and meaningless hedonism—but, crucially, he is wrong. As Mary points out to him, and as his later relationship with Jim Hutton confirms, in fact, he is loved. The movie will go on to prove it.

      The main body of the film is bookended by two references to Freddie as a Paki, the traditional British slur used to refer to South Asians. We see a teenaged Freddie unloading luggage from a plane at Heathrow. He stops to admire a suitcase dotted with stickers from many countries, a symbol of his longing for adventure. “Oi, Paki, stop holding up the line,” he’s told. And, much later, just before the Live Aid scenes which culminate the film, in the kiss-and-tell interview Paul Prenter gives on TV (in real life, this was a print interview with the Sun) we hear Freddie’s former lover describe him as “deep down inside just a scared little Paki boy.” It’s the ultimate betrayal. Not because of the racial insult itself but because of the way it limits and trivializes Freddie. To label is to dismiss.

      Bohemian Rhapsody ends with a magnificent set piece: Queen’s twenty-minute gig at Live Aid in Wembley Stadium. Malek is outstanding in this, inhabiting Freddie with spine-chilling accuracy, like someone possessed. Some critics have pointed out some obvious parallels with fascist theatrics: the packed arena, the crowds echoing Freddie’s voice, the unison stomping of feet and clapping of hands, the personality cult centered around the charismatic, mustachioed leader. But this is not fascism, though it draws upon the same human instinct that fascist leaders so often exploit—a Dionysian trance in which each individual feels she can transcend who she is, to become part of a greater whole. In fact, it’s the opposite of fascism. Fascism unites people around a shared identity tied to blood and soil. It appeals to people’s sense that they fit their nation, their race perfectly—whether because they are part of a mythical Aryan race and Germany and its surrounding countries are their natural birthright or because India is the sacred land of their Hindu ancestors and must be freed from foreign interlopers. “We’re four misfits, playing for other misfits,” Freddie tells their agent, John Reid, by contrast, when asked to define the band. It’s precisely this sense of non-belonging, of unplaceability, of outsiderdom that creates the appeal. “The people who feel they don’t belong,” Freddie explains to Reid, “we belong to them.” Categories and labels divide. But the search for an authentic, unique self that is sui generis is, paradoxically, the urge that unites the vast crowd as one.

      Aapro Farrokh, Our Parsi Boy

      Zoroastrianism was once the state religion of Persia but it was already in decline when, in the eighth century, the country was converted to Islam by the sword. A small group of Zoroastrians crossed the sea and found sanctuary in India, where they settled first in Gujarat and later chiefly in Bombay and became known as Parsis (Parsi describes the ethnicity; Zoroastrianism is the religion). There’s a beautiful origin myth associated with their arrival. Legend has it that the local Indian ruler told them that there was no room to accommodate them, showing them a clay vessel brimming with milk to illustrate how full the region already was. In response, the visitors’ head priest called for sugar and carefully stirred in two spoonfuls until they dissolved. “We will live among you, sweetening your society like the sugar in the milk,” he promised, “we will follow your laws, wear your garments, eat your food, so long as we can practise our religion.” It’s a story of integration, a literal symbolic melting (dissolving) pot.

      Freddie was arguably an exile three more times: before his birth, when his parents moved from India to Zanzibar; when he was sent back to India, to St Peter’s boarding school in Panchgani, at the age of around seven; and when his parents were expelled from Zanzibar, along with the other South Asian residents, and came to Britain when Freddie was eighteen.

      But, despite our peripatetic history, the rules of membership in the Parsi community are strict. You are a Parsi only if your father was one. You cannot convert to Zoroastrianism. You cannot lay claim to the ethnicity by marriage, adoption or even maternal inheritance. And non-Parsis are excluded from our agiaries (fire temples) and sacred wells, not allowed to live in our baugs (colonies). This tiny ethnic group has more fiercely policed boundaries than most.

      It’s especially tempting, then, for me, as a fellow Parsi, to claim some kind of ownership over Freddie, some special connection to him, some esoteric ability to understand, some kind of shared credit for his gifts. But that would be both irrational and narrow minded. The important thing about Freddie was not some arbitrary DNA he shared with a tiny population. The important thing was his appeal to our shared humanity. He can’t be contained within the fenced-off category of Parsis. As Malek puts it, he’s the representative of everyone who resists being categorized: “When you ask him in interviews, he often says I’m just me, darling, I’m me, no boxes, no labels. He’s fucking Freddie Mercury and that’s all that fucking matters.”

      Parsee General Hospital: Hong Kong couple may not invest Rs 162 cr in new hospital

      $
      0
      0

      Some community members say charity commissioner’s nod was not taken for deal.

      BD Petit Parsee General Hospital’s (PGH) bid to beat financial blues by opening a new hospital for all on its premises has hit a rough patch with a Hong Kong-based philanthropist couple saying they would withdraw their pledge of donating $22.5 million (around Rs 162 crore) if opposition to the project from within the community is not resolved.

      Global Health (P) Ltd, a Medanta Group company that was to operate, equip and manage the new hospital proposed to be built on a portion of the 10-acre Breach Candy property worth Rs 2,000 crore, has also said that it will terminate its agreement unless a resolution is worked out. A deadline of March 31, 2019, has been set to resolve the issues.

      66662008The project has been mired in a controversy ever since some members of the Parsi community and advocate Khushru Zaiwala moved the charity commissioner, seeking dismissal of the hospital’s managing committee for striking the deal with Medanta without taking the commissioner’s approval and making the details public.

      Homa Petit, president of the 106-yearold Petit General Hospital, said that Jal and Pervin Shroff of Hong Kong have informed the managing committee that that they will withdraw their offer of donating $22.5 million to the hospital if the internal issues are not resolved within March 31 next year.

      Trying to keep the deal afloat, Petit has made a fervent appeal to the Parsi-Zoroastrian community to not get swayed by some “misguided people in the community” and issued a five-page clarification about the agreement with Medanta.

      He said that that the multi-specialty hospital, proposed to be called Shroff Medical Centre, will be run by Global Health (P) Ltd for a secular use and will specially cater to cancer patients. In the process, the new facility will cross-subsidise the existing loss-making hospital.

      “No part of the land on which the new hospital is to be erected will be alienated but will continue as a community asset. Medanta will only have operating, equipping and management rights for the new hospital. Medanta shall have no rights to the new hospital building, nor the land. Medanta will pay a yearly annuity of Rs 12 crore for the first 30 years and if the period is extended, it will pay annuity of Rs 18 crore for the next 15 years,” the statement said.

      He further stated that they had taken legal advice to ensure that it does not breach the provisions of the Trust Deed/Rules and Regulations of PGH by entering into the new hospital project.

      “Three-four months ago, a few people from the community started raising questions about the viability of the new hospital project. They alleged that project was ill-conceived and costs were inflated. We made attempts to offer clarifications and shared with them details, including the financial aspects of the project. But some gentlemen started personal attacks on social media. We are contemplating appropriate action, including legal action, against them,” said Petit.

      When contacted, advocate Rayomand Zaiwala, son of Khushru Zaiwala, accused the managing committee of PGH of trying to transfer Rs 2,000-crore worth of prime Bombay Parsi Punchayat Trust property to a third party without even being the legally appointed trustees in the first place. “It did so without the permission of the Charity Commissioner and sealed a secret agreement with Medanta. But the Trust Deed of 1906 created by PGH founder Bomanji Petit, registered with the Charity Commissioner Office, clearly says that the hospital is a registered Public Charity Trust with the Bombay Parsi Panchayat Trust being its exclusive trustee,” he alleged.

      He further claimed that the committee tried to keep the transfer agreement a “closely guarded secret” for one year till it was leaked out recently by some “wellwishers”.

      Ironically enough, the Bombay Parsi Punchayat Trust has come out in support of the project. The Trust’s chairman Yazdi Desai told Mirror that they had been kept in the loop about PGH’s plan. “It will be a cosmopolitan, secular hospital. At present, PGH is running in losses and facing closure. This new hospital is needed to keep PGH alive. The Punchayat fully supports this project.”

      Freddie Mercury – The Early Years

      $
      0
      0

      In the countdown to the cinema release of Bohemian Rhapsody, this short film looks at the early years of Freddie’s life including his birthplace of Zanzibar, his schooling and first musical endeavours in India and his move to London. Directed by Simon Lupton. Freddie Mercury; lead singer of Queen and solo artist in his own right. Songwriter, musician, singer of songs, lover of life. Freddie majored in Stardom while giving new meaning to the word Showmanship. He left a legacy of songs that will never lose their stature as classics and will live on forever.

      Zoroastrian Association of California Celebrates 2nd Salgreh of their Atashkadeh

      $
      0
      0

      The 2nd Salgreh of Zoroastrian Association of California Atashkadeh was celebrated with great religious fervor on November 13th. The day started with Zerkxis Bhandara doing Chowk and with the Bui ceremony. In the evening a one kg pure Sandalwood Hama Anjuman Machi was offered to the holy fire which was followed by a Hama Anjuman Jashan performed by Ervads Zarrir and Zerkxis Bhandara, Jal Birdy, Minoo Katrack, Fariborz Shahzadi and mobedyar Maneck Bhujwalla.

      ZAC 2nd Salgreh pic 2After the Jashan a very informative and interactive talk on fire was delivered by Ervad Zarrir Bhandara which was simultaneously interpreted by Ervad Fariborze Shahzadi in Persian for the benefit of the Persian speaking crowd in which Zarrir explained the definition of energy showing the uncanny similarities with the characteristics of God. He explained that according to Physics energy can never be created or destroyed, has always been and will always be there, always moving into/ out of form and through the form.

      All these characteristics apply directly to God as well. He further extrapolated that the purest physical form of energy that the human eye can see- according to science- is fire and we Zoroastrians worship Ahura Mazda through fire. So, we can further deduce that God is energy and that our reverence to fire and various natural elements is further justified. Moreover, Zarir stated that the holy fire performs a dual function of being a receiver and a transmitter, which receives the energy from the eternal fire of Ahura Mazda and when a devotee stands in front of the fire he/she receives the blessings from the fire.

      Additionally, he explained the three different grades of fire and the consecration process of the same. ZAC’s president Mrs. Houtoxi F. Contractor thanked all the attendees and the priests, which was followed by a delicious dinner made by Reshma and Adil Rustomi and a birthday cake brought by Dr. Farhad Contractor.


      ZAC 2nd Salgreh pic 1


      Zoroastrians Soar at the 2018 Parliament of World’s Religions in Toronto

      $
      0
      0

      Two weeks ago, over 8000 people gathered in Toronto for the 7th edition of the Parliament of World’s Religions.

      The Zoroastrian flag was flown by under the aegis of the Federation of Zoroastrian Associations of North America (FEZANA). Zoroastrians participated as speakers at the Opening ceremony, Plenery Sessions, Taskforces, and more than two dozen panels and talks.

      Detailed reports of the participation can be read in upcoming issues of the FEZANA Journal, HAMAZOR Magazine and Parsiana.

      Below are some pictures that capture the participation at the Parliament.

      10 Indians in the 1920s-30s went on cycling expeditions; 7 succeeded

      $
      0
      0

      October 15, 1923 was yet another mellow Monday morning in Bombay, but the city’s central district of Grant Road was ablaze with blaring music. The erstwhile Bombay Weightlifting Club had organised a send-off for six of its young members — Adi B Hakim, Gustad G Hathiram, Jal P Bapasola, Keki D Pochkhanawala, Nariman B Kapadia and Rustom B Bhumgara — all of them Parsis in their 20s and readying for their cycling expedition around the world, a first such feat by Indians.

      28bgmcyclist3jpgWhat had inspired them to undertake this seemingly-impossible journey? “It was a public lecture at Bombay’s Oval Maidan in 1920 by a French man who had walked from Europe to India,” reminisces 75-year-old Rohinton Bhumgara. Rohinton is foggy about the name of the world-walker, who eventually died of malaria in Assam, on his way to South-East Asia. Says Jasmine Marshall, granddaughter of Adi Hakim, “There was an extraordinary zeal of adventure in my granddad. ‘Nothing is impossible’, he would often tell me.”

      Adi, Jal and Rustom pedalled 71,000 km over four-and-a-half years — at times in 60ºC, for days without food and some days without water, across pirate-infested territories and in swamp lands, through dense jungles and “up 6,600 ft amongst the terrible solitudes of the Alps”, avoiding the sea and traversing over most difficult routes, where no cyclists had been before. “We wanted to know the world more intimately and to acquaint the world with India and Indians,” they noted years later.

      Not all six completed the ride, though. Nariman returned home from Tehran “for personal reasons” after giving “us company for 5,000 miles”, and Gustad decided to make the US his home. Disheartened by this, Gustad’s close buddy, Keki sailed home from New York.

      On their expedition, the cyclists pedalled through Punjab and Baluchistan, crossing Prospect Point in Ziarat, 11,000 feet above sea level and in snow, reaching Iran and then Baghdad. Braving sandstorms, parched throats, temperatures over 57°C and saved from imminent death by Bedouins, they set a record by crossing the 956-km Mesopotamian desert from Baghdad to Aleppo in Syria, in 23 days.

      They sailed to Italy, rode over the Alps, across Europe, finally reaching Britain. Three weeks later, they sailed to New York. The threesome cycled 8,400 km across the East to West Coast over five months and boarded S S Tenyo Maru to Japan, a leisurely cruise after months of grilling rides.

      Continuing their journeys, they reached the ‘Hermit Kingdom’ of Korea — the first bikers to do so — and on to Manchuria and China. On their last leg, they cycled through Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Burma, North Eastern India, Calcutta and Southern India, returning to Bombay on March 18, 1928. They recalled being “surrounded by people who had come to receive us… and garlanded till we were buried in flowers” and hoped that their city would welcome “Scouter F J Davar, who is shortly due in Bombay on the conclusion of a similar enterprise.”

      Framroze Davar, 30, was to return home only in 1931. His was a far more adventurous, lengthier, and in-part, solitary journey for “rational curiosity”, beginning in January 1924, and totalling 1,10,000 km, 52 countries and five continents. The 30-year old did not compress his account in a single volume, as it could be “a book of geography gone mad”. He chronicled his arduous ride over the Andes Mountains in Cycling Over Roof Of The World (1929), risky passage through Sahara in Across The Sahara (1937) and crossing of the Amazon in The Amazon in Reality and Romance (1960).

      He had cycled more than 5,000 km entirely on his own, for 11 months! In Vienna, he met Gustav Sztavjanik, his cycling mate for the next seven years. The duo cycled through Western and Eastern Europe, rode over the Alps and Mont Blanc mountain, pedalled through parts of erstwhile Soviet Union, Baltic countries, Poland, and Scandinavia, including Lapland, and returned to France 18 months later, to sail to Algiers in Africa. They tortured themselves through the Sahara, counting 156 camel skeletons along the way, surviving eight sandstorms, and a malaria attack. After cycling through Africa for another six months, they boarded a ship from Dakar to Rio de Janeiro, to take on their next big challenge, riding over the mighty Andes. Six months and 2,700 km later, they reached Argentina from Brazil, and scaled the Andes up to a height of 5,200m.

      America was a relief. They got back to their saddles, cycling from the East to West Coast, lecturing and meeting dignitaries, including President Herbert Hoover and tycoon Henry Ford, before sailing to Japan. They sailed to Shanghai, cycled through Hong Kong, Singapore, Sumatra, Burma, Calcutta and Bombay on March 22, 1931.

      28bgmcyclist4jpg

      Luck and the exciting accounts tempted yet one more — and the last — group of cyclists, Keki J Kharas, Rustam D Ghandhi and Rutton D Shroff. “We were all thoroughly and hopelessly afflicted with wanderlust,” they wrote in Across The Highways Of The World (1939). Setting off from Bombay in 1933, they cycled through central and northern India, Punjab, Kashmir, Multan and Baluchistan (then a part of India).

      28bgmcyclist5jpg“In Afghanistan, we were marooned in the desert for three successive days and nights without either food or water and traversed on camel and donkey tracks; we were snow-bound in northern Iran; and were suspected as British spies in eastern Turkey,” they wrote in Pedalling Through the Afghan Wilds (1935).

      Keki, Rustam and Rutton cycled through Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Belgium, Britain, France, Spain, Switzerland and Italy. They sailed to Alexandria and pedalled “twenty-one months across Africa, from Cairo to Cape Town, a distance of 12,000 miles (nearly 20,000 km). We were fortuitously saved oftener than we can recall.”

      28bgmcyclist6jpg

      In 1937, the trio sailed from South Africa to Argentina and cruised through South and Central America until they reached Mexico and rode into USA from Texas. They spent a year cycling through the ‘New World’ and touching the borders of Canada. From USA, they sailed to Japan and cycled across Japan, China, Australia, Singapore and Burma, before reaching Bombay on January 29, 1942. In slightly less than nine years, Kharas, Ghandhi and Shroff had traversed 84,000 km, spanning five continents.

      28bgmcyclist7jpg

      Our Saddles, Our Butts, Their World is a photo exhibition of the cyclists, to be held in ReelsOnHeels, India’s First-ever International Festival of Films on Running, December 1 and 2, 2018 at Ravindra Bhavan, Margao, Goa, curated by former Mumbai-based journalist and now avid cyclist, Anoop Babani

      Explore the best from: thehindu.com

      Astad Deboo’s Astonishing Back-bends

      $
      0
      0

      The dancer is revolutionary in many ways, one being his ability to make his body do what he wants it to

      At 71, Astad Deboo has one hell of a back bend. In his new performance Liminal, and the forthcoming Interconnect, the dancer’s spinal column does a lot of work. “I am working much more with my back now, the aches and pains are there, everybody has them after a certain age. I work harder to keep myself fit now,” Deboo told me recently when we met, before performance of Liminal at Tamasha, an intimate, experimental performance space he specifically designed it for.

      Article by Sanjukta Sharma | The Voice of Fashion

      5bff84da6f544

      He said “being rejected” still motivates him, besides the innocent, inexplicable ecstasy of performing to grand musical designs on a stage, and the freedom of knowing that the body can still be moulded into

      his best tool of expression. The body does what we want it to, he said—you have to want it do something badly enough, and work hard at it.

      In an ageist society like ours, Deboo is a revolutionary. His creative idiom is still evolving, which essentially proves that each age group has its qualities and values. Why are people afraid of seeing ageing bodies? Because it reminds us that we will be unattractive or immobile after a particular age. The promise of being young is the stuff marketing dreams are made of—youth is the elixir that can cure all ills. It is also a deeply entrenched Indian view that age means “retirement” or rest or stillness and quietude. The superannuated man or woman is seen as homebound, not footloose. Deboo is constantly challenging that idea, and with spectacular obliviousness. In his mind, he is still making progress in a journey that speaks almost 50 years—2019 will be his 50th year as a dance professional. He is trying things he hasn’t done before. “It is still a solo ship. I still struggle to raise funds, to put on a show. Sometimes friends ask me why I am still pushy. That’s the only way I know,” he says.

      5bff84dc21eaf

      Japanese dancer Eiko Otake in her mid-60s continues to perform. Photo: William Johnston\eikoandkoma.org

      Interconnect is a collaborative piece with Rudra Veena virtuoso Bahauddin Dagar. Dagar, Pratap Awadh on the Pakhawaj and the vocals of Dhrupad singer Chintan Upadhyay create this piece with Deboo about the journey of a day on earth—from dawn to dusk. Liminal is a three-piece solo performance about anguish, loss and playfulness that celebrates the flourishes that he has mastered over 49 years. Deboo is sublime in it. His signature gestural language, with slow, extended movements of the limbs display muscular power, grace, rhythmic complexity, full-bodied passion and an astonishingly flexible lower back. He has nurtured his dance over years of travelling, collaborating (with Manipuri drummers, Korean and Carnatic musical ensembles, hearing-impaired children, dancers like the Japanese Yukio Tsuji and others), and as he says, “being rejected” by the arts establishment and not giving him enough funding or support.

      Deboo was the first Indian “modern dancer”, an artiste concerned with form, respectful of tradition and committed to universal values but with the ability to invent a distinctive style that transcends genres. The New Yorker dance critic Joan Acocella wrote about American dancer Mark Morris in her book Mark Morris, “He is a sort of car crash of personalities.” Our Deboo is somewhat similar—there’s a music scholar, a shishya (disciple) in the classical Indian dance sense, a Parsi, an anti-establishment artiste, a global aesthete all washed up into the same body. His hair cuts—usually spirals in back and grey, resembling hip-hop fashion, makes his very un-Indian in India. But the Kathak-inspired, fluid voluminous costumes are Indian in other parts of the world. According to his  plan, the costumes are designed in layers, usually with a diaphanous top layer with intricate embroidery or other work by Ahmedabad designer Archana Shah or the Mumbai brand Jade (Monica and Karishma). Each one is different, and sometimes Deboo goes austere—like in Liminal, where he wears a T-shirt and a pair of tights in one piece, and a flowing all-black garment which he can manoeuvre with his hands, making it integral to the movements of his hands.

      Journeys in his 20s across 32 countries gave him sharpness and independence. Emotionalism is central to his work.

      Airy leaps and jeté-like movements are less prominent in Deboo’s works now. But when he choreographs, he still goes the whole hog, he says. Kathak twirls and intricate Kathakali movements are integral, and he continues to use them with ease in his new works.

      5bff84dd61306

      Italian prima ballerina Alessandra Ferri’s comeback performance in 2016. Photo: Timothy A Clary\AFP

      Deboo, born in 1947, is in an exclusive club of dancers all over the world in supreme form well beyond their 50s: Alessandra Ferri, now 55, an Italian prima ballerina who made a comeback two years ago after she stopped dancing in her early 40s, American Carmen de Lavallade who performed until her early 80s, Swedish Mats Ek danced till he was 70, Japanese Eiko Otake in her mid-60s who continue to perform, American-Italian Simone Forti who danced till she was 80 and continues to be a choreographer with her troupe.

      There are no secrets to their enduring strength and creativity. It is the simple gift of knowing that age is a number and expressing through the body has nothing to do with how many wrinkles it has.

      Astad Deboo’s Interconnect will be performed at the Tata Theatre, National Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA), Mumbai, on 30 November. Tickets are available at Boookmyshow.com


      Body Politic is a fortnightly column about what social pressures, disease and disability can do to body image.

      Sanjukta Sharma is a Mumbai-based writer and critic, and former editor of Mint Lounge.

      Arzan Nagwaswalla Plays Cricket For Gujarat: First Parsi in Decades to Play at State Level

      $
      0
      0

      Parsis have played an important part in Indian cricket history.

      759284-arzan-nagwaswallaParsis were the first Indian side to visit England in 1886. And around 12 Parsis, such as Farrokh Engineer, Polly Umrigar, Nari Contractor, have played for the Indian cricket teams over the years. The last big name being India women’s captain Diana Edulji.

      There still exist a few Parsi clubs in Mumbai which play in the famous monsoon cricket Kanga League, but the Parsi cricketers are almost invisible on the cricketing scene.

      On Wednesday morning, one Parsi cricketer — Arzan Nagwaswalla must have made his community proud with a heartening bowling performance, representing Gujarat, that bamboozled Mumbai in their own den Wankhede Stadium.

      On a grassy pitch, Nagwaswalla not only came up with a five-wicket haul (5/78) but also seemed to indicate that it is not all over as far as cricketing legacy of the Parsis is concerned.

      Nagwaswalla was involved in a major batting Mumbai collapse after bringing three wickets down in two overs at 74 of Suryakumar Yadav, Armaan Jaffer and Aditya Tare even as the calls by his teammates of “Well bowled Bawa” went around. He completed his five wickets after dismissing Dhrumil Matkar after dismissing Mumbai’s crisis man Siddhesh Lad.

      “This is my first season and third Ranji match. I have played age group cricket for Gujarat and the performances there helped me in my promotion to the Ranji side,” said the 21-year-old cricketer.

      Nagwaswalla said he was nervous when he was handed over the new ball to bowl at the Wankhede. “It all evaporated after the first over. It was my first match on this ground, was a good wicket to bow on. I got the rewards for putting the ball on the right place.”

      The youngster has not played club cricket, but he has trained under former Ranji Trophy players. “There are no clubs. My village Umbergaon is on the border of Maharashtra. We had a few Ranji players at our players and I worked under them. I got interest and then the opportunities one after another.”

      Nagwaswalla isn’t aware if whether Parsi cricketers still play cricket in domestic circuit. “Mine is not a cricket background. I knew there were Parsi players, who played for India and I know some names. However, I don’t know about the current situation…who is playing or not.”

      “I am the youngest player in my town. Not many from my community are left back there and they have either moved to Mumbai or migrated elsewhere,” said Nagwaswalla, who idolises Zaheer Khan and Wasim Akram.

      Ranji Trophy: Arzan Nagwaswalla reconnects two Mumbai favourites

      It was only Arzan Nagwaswalla’s third first-class match to boot, and by the time he got his chance with the ball, fellow left-armer Roosh Kalaria had already knocked over the Mumbai openers with an impressive spell of seam bowling.

      arzan-nagwaswalla

      Arzan Nagwaswalla is the youngest member of the well-populated Parsi community in the village of Nargal, situated a few kilometers from the border town of Umbergaon in Gujarat. In fact, he’s the only one of his entire generation who’s stayed back. The rest, he reveals, left for the greener pastures of Mumbai a long time ago.

      Advertising

      Nagwaswalla’s reason to not follow suit was his cricket. It’s a sport that the left-arm medium-pacer had picked up at an early age from his elder brother Vispi. It’s a sport that his community once dominated and pioneered in the country before losing ground to such an extent that Parsis in cricket became a misnomer.

      Nagwaswalla’s decision to stay put paid dividends as he emerged rapidly through the junior ranks in Gujarat. And then on Wednesday, he landed up in a city, where Parsis incidentally once held major sway over what was their sport, to send back half the Mumbai batting line-up on Day One.

      Though the 21-year-old’s maiden five-wicket haul in first-class cricket did put the hosts in a spot of bother, it took a starry performance by all-rounder Shivam Dubey, another rare species—in an Indian cricket context anyway—to help Mumbai pull things back towards the end of the day.

      Advertising

      Dubey’s 128-ball 110, which came on the back of a seven-wicket haul last week against Karnataka, took Mumbai’s total to 297, a score that would count as competitive considering it languished at one stage on 74/5.The highest point in cricket for Nagwaswalla, Bawa to his teammates for obvious reasons, before his Wankhede performance came a couple of years ago, in Mumbai itself. It was when he won a slew of awards in the Late Maneck Golvala T10 cricket tournament, which were presented to him by Bollywood actor and fellow Parsi, Boman Irani.

      “I’m going to frame that picture in my house and will cherish this moment all my life,” he’d told the Parsi Times on that occasion. Running through Mumbai’s middle-order certainly is likely to challenge that “moment” in terms of significance, you would believe.

      It was only Nagwaswalla’s third first-class match to boot, and by the time he got his chance with the ball, fellow left-armer Roosh Kalaria had already knocked over the Mumbai openers with an impressive spell of seam bowling. There was movement in the air and off the Wankhede pitch, and Kalaria exploited it to the fullest, bringing the ball back in sharply to the right-handers.

      Nagaswalla started in a similar vein, but being slightly slower than Kalaria, didn’t create the same impact as Siddhesh Lad and Suryakumar Yadav steadied the ship. He then shortened his length smartly to have Yadav caught at fine-leg off an attempted pull-shot. Later in the day, he would use the short ball smartly to get rid of Lad—for a well-made 62—and Dhrumil Matkar following a strokeful 47. But his second and third scalps on Wednesday is what will stand out.

      They came in the same over, as he got Arman Jaffer and Aditya Tare, edging and getting caught in the slip region. He used the over-the-wicket angle and the subsequent away movement smartly to get both right-handers squared up, and it was this spell that broke Mumbai’s back.

      Then in walked Dubey. There’s a little bit of Yuvraj Singh in the tall left-hander’s batting style. It comes through in the accentuated back-lift, and the follow-through once he’s struck the ball, especially when straight down the wicket. It certainly shows up whenever he opens up his stance slightly and air-lifts the medium-pacers straight over the heads towards or over the sight-screen. Dubey did so repeatedly on Wednesday, despite the perilous position his team was in when he walked out to bat.

      Dubey had scored a century against Railways two matches ago, but that had come in less trying conditions.Here, the stroke-maker decided to stick to his guns, and keep playing his shots.

      And his aggression not only kept the scoreboard on the go, it also made the Gujarat bowlers change their lengths. Despite the ball still moving off the wicket, they now started bowling shorter, but unlike some of his colleagues,

      Dubey refrained from playing the pull shot, in his innings that was studded with six sixes, most of which came in the arc between long-off and long-on.

      The Lad-Dubey stand brought a semblance of stability to the Mumbai innings before captain Dhawal Kulkarni and Matkar provided enough assistance to Dubey as he powered through. Matkar’s assault, which included a couple of Dubey-esque straight sixes, threatened to help Mumbai edge ahead in terms of momentum.

      But it was Nagwaswalla who came back to put an end to it, on a day a Parsi dominated Mumbai in Mumbai, to rekindle one of Indian cricket’s oldest love affairs.

      JIYO PARSI: CARE OF ELDERLY DEPENDANTS

      $
      0
      0

      Our dear friend and mentor Dr. Shernaz Cama write in the Jame Jamshed newspaper

      46997553_2580949031915315_1233255955890700288_nThe Jiyo Parsi Scheme was set up to arrest the decline in our community’s population. However, over time, it has been realised that there’s no one direct method to solve our problem.

      In recent years, changes and additions have been made to the Scheme to best suit the community’s needs. Jiyo Parsi is not just an infertility treatment programme but a project that addresses the multiple socio-cultural concerns of the Parsi community in order to arrest population decline.

      The Jiyo Parsi Scheme acknowledges changes in our modern, progressive society. In an attempt to make family life easier and more harmonious, it has introduced three new components in the scheme:

      1. Support towards care of elderly dependants
      2. Creche/childcare support
      3. Honorarium for senior citizens who help young couples

      Like a developed nation, our community has an ageing demographic profile with a significant number of senior citizens. There is an extremely high dependency ratio seen in our community. While family structures, lifestyles and habits undergo change, what remains common across generations is the essence of a family and the love and values shared amongst a family and a community.

      There are many young couples who are using their time and resources to not only look after their parents but also, in some cases, extended family members, hence making invaluable contributions towards the overall health of the community.

      This is a responsible trend seen in the community and must be encouraged. Studies have shown that home care for the elderly can greatly reduce chances of dementia and other diseases that ail the aged.

      However, it is also important that such responsibility must not become a deterrent to having children. Very often, young couples are faced with the quandary of having to choose between looking after their elders and having their own children.

      In recognition of the contribution of young couples towards care of their elderly dependants, and to assist them in their emotional and financial responsibility, the Ministry of Minority Affairs will pay Rs. 4000 to couples per month per elderly dependant, in cases where this support will help add children in the family.

      The assistance will be provided to couples in their child bearing years who have elderly family members residing with them. This, we hope, will significantly increase the birth figures in the community while this Scheme is active.

      Please see the form in the Jam-e-Jamshed (dated November 25) and send it to the address supplied.

      You can also apply online: www.jiyoparsi.org.

      Viewing all 3374 articles
      Browse latest View live


      <script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>