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Feroze Gandhi’s grave lies forgotten

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Feroze Gandhi may be the patriarch of the Congress’s first family, but the party as well as his family members seem to have neglected his cemetery in Allahabad, now rechristened as Prayagraj.

As per records available with DNA, Congress president Rahul Gandhi last visited the grave of his grandfather way back in 2011.

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Inviting Rahul Gandhi to attend the Kumbh Mela in Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh Deputy Chief Minister Dinesh Sharma recently said that the leader should also visit the tombstone of his grandfather. He asked Rahul Gandhi to pray for the “soul” of this forgotten Gandhi. Sharma’s remarks came at a time when Rahul has been hopping temples and asserting his gotra.

The tombstone of Feroze, considered India’s original anti-corruption crusader, sits in a neglected state in a corner of the Parsi cemetery at Stanley Road on Allahabad-Lucknow Highway. It’s just miles away from Anand Bhawan, once the seat of Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.

Tourists visit Anand Bhawan, the ancestral home of the Gandhi-Nehru family, but anyone hardly goes to Feroze’s tombstone. The cemetery has nearly 100 Parsi graves.

DNA has found that Rahul has visited the tombstone just twice. It was during November 2011, in the run-up to the 2012 assembly elections, he had last paid homage. He had then stayed overnight at Anand Bhawan. Earlier, Rahul had visited the cemetery in August 2008 and was accompanied by his uncle Rustom Gandhi, aunt Shehernaz and a few relatives.

Rustom, son of Feroz’s eldest brother Fardiun, lives in Prayagraj. DNA tried to contact him, but he wasn’t available for comments. Sources said Rustom stays away from the limelight.

Rahul’s sister Priyanka Gandhi had visited the tombstone of her grandfather once – in 2009.

UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi too had visited the grave of her father-in-law once in 2001. During that visit, locals said, she had expressed “concern” over the “deteriorating condition” of the place. Four years later, she assured financial support to revamp the grave. But the beautification is yet to happen.

A caretaker named Brijlal has been tasked with the upkeep of the grave. “This is a tombstone of late Feroze Gandhi. He was a great man. His vanshaj (descendants) must visit the place frequently,” said Brijlal.

“He is not dead who lifts thy glorious mind on high to live in hearts we leave behind is not to die,” reads the epitaph on the tombstone. Feroze died of heart attack in Delhi on September 8, 1960. Before his death, he had insisted that he should be cremated as per Hindu rites.

His elder son Rajiv Gandhi, who was 16 at the time, had lit the funeral pier at Delhi’s Nigam Bodh Ghat. His wife Indira and father-in-law Jawaharlal Nehru were present.

After the cremation, the mortal remains were divided into three parts. The first part was immersed in Sangam, second was interred in the cemetery and the third was immersed in Haridwar. An Uthamna ceremony as per Parsi custom was held at Hotel Finaro in Allahabad.

Feroze’s original surname was Gandhy. But he was so inspired by Mahatma Gandhi that he had changed the spelling of his surname from Gandhy to Gandhi when he was a member of Vanara Sena wing of the Congress during the independence movement.

He was a member of the provincial government from 1950 to 1952. He won India’s first general elections from Rae Bareli in 1952 and was re-elected five years later. Feroze never shied away criticising the then Congress government led by Nehru on the allegations of corruption. He brought a private member’s bill in Parliament to allow the press to cover parliamentary proceedings. Press Club of India owes its building to Feroze Gandhi Trust.


A Parsi art historian rediscovers his heritage on a trip across Iran

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What do you mean you’re from New Zealand?” a shopkeeper in Mozaafarieh named Omid exclaimed. We were in the carpet quarter of Tabriz’s Grand Bazaar, and I had just told him that I was a Kiwi Parsi. “Look at yourself: you’re a son of Persia. Welcome home.” This was one of many similar reactions my Zoroastrian identity elicited in Iran. It made me teary, as I walked alone through the vaulted streets of the world’s largest covered bazaar.

By Areez Katki, elle.in

When I told my family I was going  on a month-long trip to Iran, the seat of Zoroastrianism, they seemed puzzled. All my life, I had railed against the community and its insular, patriarchal nature, especially in India, where its racial and ethnic exclusivity had brought it dangerously close to extinction. (In Auckland, where I grew up, Parsis are just one of several minorities they embrace). It has taken me over two fraught decades since I was ordained as a mobed (Zoroastrian priest), at age 10, to reconcile the Parsi and queer aspects of my identity.

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Zoroastrian women at Maryamabad Zoroastrian Colony, Yazd

But now I wanted to know everything there was to know about my community. In fact, I moved to Mumbai and began a project to immerse myself in learning about it, exploring Parsi myths, icons and practices. I’ve been using the medium of textiles for my work as an artist for approximately six years. More recently, through the framework of a personal journey, I’ve utilised craft skills such as needlework, which I inherited from the women in my family, in a hope to explore Zoroastrian identity through a more intimate, matrilineal perspective. The work will culminate in an exhibition at Malcolm Smith Gallery in Howick in February 2019, circling back to the suburb of Auckland, where I grew up. So, in an attempt to expand this odyssey trope, I decided to embark on a month-long solo road trip through Iran; I’d be the first person in my family to go back there.

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Church of Saint Mary, Urmia, West Azerbaijan

Tehran was a confusing place to start. On the surface, it was chaotic and bare; none of the glamour, cultural diversity or freedom of expression that once deemed it the Paris of the East had survived the Islamic Revolution of 1979. Since the overthrowing of a liberal Persian monarchy, human rights such as free speech and personal expressions of faith have been infringed upon. But then one enters little discreet pockets of Tehrani society where you might find a café where women have pushed back their mandatory hijabs, or see a couple kiss, laugh and hold hands. And the more young people I met, most of them progressive and vibrant thinkers, the more I learnt that these small gestures were all signs of passive resistance.

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Carpet weaving matriarchs, Kashan

Another such gesture is the adornment of the iconic Faravahar, in any shape or form, but most commonly as a pendant. The winged angelic symbol is a subtle reminder of a Zoroastrian Persia, which celebrated a brief revival during the  Pahlavi period (1925- 1979), but has been suppressed (yet not outlawed completely) since the revolution. It can be traced all the way back to the height of the Achaemenid empire (550-330 BC), which is still celebrated as the Golden Age of Persian history, when great citadels like Persepolis, Susa and Pasargadae were built by hired, not slave, hands for the first time in ancient history. Its founder Cyrus the Great wrote the world’s first bill of human rights. He was also the only gentile mentioned favourably in the Old Testament, for his humanitarianism and for protecting secularism during Persia’s reign over Europe and Asia. Entering sites like the mountain relief tombs at Naqsh-e-Rustam, Persepolis and  Pasargadae (where the tomb of Cyrus stands) were some of the most moving experiences for me. They were like great, imposing answers to what my nine-year old self had wondered about being Parsi. Pars (present-day Fars) is the region where Persepolis and its neighbouring archaeological sites are, and where the term Parsi comes from. A feeling of pride began to seep into me.

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A wall of pure silk yarn, Tabriz

I also spent a week in Yazd Province. It was there that I sought the guidance of local Zoroastrians, who still live there in small communities, and invited me to join their little gatherings around the village of Maryamabad. My friends Bahruz, a priest, and his son Navid, a real estate agent, made sure that I got in everywhere through the special entrances reserved for us. “This is your homeland,” Navid said to me at one point, “you should not have to hide it or pay to visit our sites.” Despite the oppression the community has faced over the last millennia— forced to flee (as my Parsi ancestors did), convert or practise Zoroastrianism secretly under a totalitarian republic after the Arab conquest in the seventh century—there is an immense warmth and grace to be found here.

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Hossain, one of the three Sohrabi brothers of Kashan, whose family has woven silk on these 500-year-old looms for generations

Chak Chak, also known as Pir-e-Sabz, is home to one of Zoroastrianism’s holiest mountain shrines, and  is one of several sacred shrines or ‘Pirs’ around Yazd. There is one family that still tends and guards it, with a devotion that astonished me, considering the remoteness and the rough living conditions they have to endure in order to do it, such as scarcity of water and electricity.

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Barberries, nuts and dry fruits at a bazaar, Tehran

Other Zoroastrian villages around Yazd provided incredible cultural insight, especially if one considers their status as the  birthplace of monotheism and the globally beloved paisley motif. The latter was derived from an Achaemenid stone tablet illustrating the holy cypress tree standing tall and evergreen, against the force of the northern winds. Villages like Cham, Abarkuh, Mubarakkeh still house sacred ecological shrines, each dedicated to a different earth, water or air deity and sanctified by a sarv, or cypress tree. In fact, the Sarv of Abarkuh is considered one of the world’s oldest trees at over 4,000 years. Standing under its grand 26-metre high canopy was an awe-inspiring experience unlike any other.

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Yazdi faloodeh, a delicate cold soup with rosewater and rice vermicelli

Iran was especially revelatory for me as a textile historian. I believe that my month there only scratched the surface of our rich craft traditions. In Yazd alone, I learned about sudreh and kushti weaving (the religious garments worn by Zoroastrians after their Navjote, or initiation ceremony), doozi needlework and handwoven Termeh textiles. Tabriz is known for its Grand Bazaar, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the carpet weaving capital of the world, whose rug  weavers and pashim (wool, in Farsi) spinners are famous. Closer to the north, Kashan was once the world’s centre for the silk trade. This is where I participated in jacquard weaving sessions at the Ancient Crafts Centre and documented the Sohrabi brothers weaving on their 500-year-old looms.

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Chak Chak, also called Pir-e-Sabz, is home to one of Zoroastrianism’s holiest mountain shrines

Carpets here also vary from region to region; my favourites were the West Azerbaijani tribal kilims: flatwoven by matriarchs and encoded with ancient Zoroastrian and Elamite symbols. Some of these icons are still visible in Susa (present-day Shush, the capital of Khuzestan province) where I braved 50-degree heatwaves and visited one of the world’s best-preserved Ziggurat pyramids at Tchogga Zanbil. It is a pre-Zoroastrian Elamite citadel that is also notably the first site in modern-day Iran to gain the UNESCO World Heritage Stamp). Such were my attempts to tie archaeology in with theological studies and textile practices. From what I could observe, learn and record, it was an intricate tapestry that I will spend the next few years of my life trying to understand and decode.

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Persepolis

Going on this self directed road trip let  me improvise as I went along. It gave me the freedom to stop anywhere between major sites and immerse myself in the culture—something Parsi pilgrimage tours seldom afford. The eight- to tenhour drives from province to province unfolded Iran’s diverse landscapes as we climbed the dry, jagged peaks toward Alamut and Behestan Castle in the Alborz Mountains and moved northward to Massouleh and Rasht, with lush green hills flanking the Caspian Sea. I listened to gently shifting dialects between West and East Azerbaijan, Kermanshah, Lorestan and Kurdistan, and noticed their delightful regional quirks, from hand gestures to dressing sensibilities.

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Farvahar bullion embroidery circa 18th century, Yazd

Among all the obscure sites that I had the privilege to visit, what wasn’t hard to find was the kindness of strangers. From simple directions  to the shoemakers’ quarter in Tabriz, an invitation to dine with a Kurdish family at Takht-e-Soleyman, a glass of chilled doogh (a fermented yoghurt beverage) at a dwelling in Kandovan, a bowl of fragrant olive parvardeh (a regional entrée of olives marinated in ground walnuts, pomegranate molasses and cardamom) from a stranger in Rudbar, or a kiss on my Farvahar pendant from a man in Susa.

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Tchogga Zanbil, Susa

Iran might be shadowed in troubling circumstances, but its people seem to be a unified passive force against the dying of the light. They illuminated the way for me to see how magnificent Persia once was, and could perhaps be once again someday. I came away with a much deeper appreciation, knowledge and understanding of my cultural heritage. As an art historian, textile practitioner, and really, just as a Parsi trying to find his place, there could be no greater gift.

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Sarv of Abarkuh, Yazd

Photographs: Areez Katki

Mumbai’s Parsi Dairy milks modern retail, with nostalgia and social media

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Once an iconic Mumbai landmark and cafe, the 102-year-old brand is reinventing itself

Article by Amritha Pillay | Business Standard

Parsi Dairy Farm, set up by Nariman Ardeshir in 1916 is redolent of an era when the city beat to a different tune. Set in the heart of what used to be Mumbai’s busy trade and market district, Kalbadevi, stories around the dairy are legion. Culinary anthropologist Kurush Dalal who is familiar with the history of the brand and the family that runs it recalls an anecdote that he heard his father tell. Newly settled in Bombay at the time, the senior Dalal was a bit of stickler when it came to dairy products and he was frustrated with the quality of milk that the city offered him. After repeated enquiries with local milkmen, one of them finally sent him off to Parsi Dairy Farm saying, “There is only one mad man in this city who sells milk without water mixed in it.”

But today, more than its fabled past, Parsi Dairy Farm is relying on modern retail and packaged nostalgia to win over a new generation of customers. Its products (curd, ghee, butter ice-cream among others) are available on Godrej’s Nature’s Basket and the Future group’s Foodhall, both premium retail channels known to stock gourmet brands. And the fourth generation of the Ardeshir family that owns the brand is also focusing on online channels and pursuing an aggressive social media strategy.

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“We are now concentrating more online,” said Bakhteyar Irani, the fourth generation of the Ardeshir family, who keeps a family tradition alive by being there at the café every day during peak business hours.

Packaging the past

The brand’s trademark authenticity will come handy in winning over new consumers say brand experts. “Legacy brands have a big advantage when it comes to food products and Parsi Dairy is a highly recognised legacy brand,” said Ambi Parameswaran, founder-CEO Brand-building.com.

Old timers in the city are familiar with the fanatic loyalty that its products once commanded. There used to be mile-long queues for its milk every morning and its curd and sweets sold out no sooner than they arrived. The brand hopes to leverage this and is sticking to the familiar blue and white colours in its new packaging and reinforcing the presence of the family in the café’s day-to-day operations.

“What worked for Parsi Dairy Farm is its ability to personalise and an obsession for quality. They owned a lab to test each barrel of milk delivered to them back in the 1980’s,” said Dalal. It was also alert to expansion opportunities. In the 1980s, they opened Princess Bhelpuriwala and Princess Kulfi House. These soon became the place for the best kulfi in town and most hygienic chat, Dalal recalls.

Riding into the future

Nearly 8-9 years ago, the brand tied up with Godrej’s Nature’s Basket as a retail partner. “We approached the dairy as we wanted to launch unique, artisanal, high quality products,” said Avinash Tripathi, associate vice president, Godrej Nature’s Basket. Today Parsi Dairy Farm features among the top 15 brands and contributes 2.5 per cent of the revenue accrued from the dairy business at Nature’s Basket. It has also teamed up with Foodhall and food delivery aggregator Swiggy.

Home delivery is not a new concept for the brand. “Throughout the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s,it has been delivering milk to various parts of the city, as far as Bandra, which was very impressive for those days. This milk was carried in a sealed aluminium can and government certified measuring jars, to ensure quality and fair quantity,” Dalal reminisces. The brand’s main outlet in Marine Lines in Mumbai flaunts pictures of these sealed canisters.

“Parsi Dairy has a strong brand recall among Godrej Nature’s Basket’s customers and our strategy will be to have consistent product availability of its range and continue innovating the range with time,” Tripathi said.

Parmeswaran holds out a word of caution. “The brand has been in decline and disrepair. If they can redefine the brand for the new generation, identify a few iconic products under their label then they can rekindle the old magic. It cannot be the same old story. They have to bring back a few old iconic products and give them a new livery,” he said.

The family says it is aware of the challenges at hand and Irani said, “We are working on our packaging to be able to sell fresh milk online.” He is also keen to build the brand’s social media presence, a team manages the Facebook page that highlights new launches and celebrity fan following (Ranbir Kapoor is a faithful customer).

While these steps have helped keep the spotlight on the brand and thwarted persistent rumours of a shutdown, brand experts and retailers say that given the growing clutter in the dairy market, Parsi Dairy needs to build a bigger national footprint for its brand. And that would make the brand truly future-ready.

Experimental Treatment Helps Maryland Woman Beat Lymphoma

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Our dear friend Dr. Pashna Munshi is part of the team that is working on this experimental treatment for Lymphoman.

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A Maryland woman who suffered a lengthy battle with stage-three non-Hodgkin lymphoma is now in complete remission after receiving a promising new treatment that uses a patient’s own cells to fight cancer.

Daisy Diggs, 67, is the first patient to do the CAR-T cell procedure at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital as part of a clinical trial.

Article By Aimee Cho, www.nbcwashington.com

Following her diagnosis in 2015, the mother of two and grandmother of four, developed several tumors. She tried chemotherapy for two years, but it never worked.

“Oh, the chemo was hard. It was hard to go through because I was always sick and feeling bad all the time,” Diggs said.

So Diggs decided to take a risk. She volunteered for the experimental CAR-T cell trial at MedStar Georgetown and began receiving it in the summer of 2018.

The treatment essentially used Diggs’ own immune system to fight the cancer.

CAR-T cells are made in a medical lab using a component of the patient’s white blood cells. The disease-fighting cells are “supercharged” and then infused back into the patient.

“The CAR-T cells are genetically modified to recognize specific antigens present on the tumor and, once infused, target the tumor like a missile,” Dr. Pashna Munshi, associate clinical director of the Stem Cell Transplant and Cellular Immunotherapy Program, said in a news release.

In only three months, Diggs’ tumors disappeared.

“Don’t have those down moments, always think positive because good things can happen,” Diggs told News4.

“You made history for us here, Ms. Diggs,” Munshi told her at her six-month check-in on Thursday.

Munshi informed Diggs that her cancer still shows no signs of returning.

“Her constant positivity has helped her really overcome the scary side effects of this kind of therapy,” Munshi said.

Diggs said she’s looking forward to spending more time with her grandchildren.

“I’m just so happy,” she said.

MedStar Georgetown said CAR-T cell therapy carries many possible risks including drops in blood pressure, high fevers, neurological problems and even death as the body reacts to major changes in the immune system.

The FDA has approved the treatment for some types of cancer.

Majority of Bombay Parsi punchayet trustees want chairman out

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Four of seven Bombay Parsi Punchayet (BPP) trustees have voted to file a no confidence motion against chairman Yazdi Desai for allegations ranging from protecting a non-Parsi trespasser to promoting his wife as a “shadow chairman”. The BPP is considered the largest private landlord in Mumbai, controlling around 5,500 community flats in Parsi baugs such as Cusrow Baug in Colaba.

Desai, who took over as chairman in 2011, said there is “no provision for a no confidence motion in trust law or in our trust deed”. In the absence of such a provision, trustees voted to file an application against Desai under Section 41(D) of the Maharashtra Public Trusts Act, 1950, which deals with the removal of a trustee if there is evidence of misappropriation of trust property, moral turpitude, or disobeying of lawful orders issued by the charity commissioner.

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“The trustees don’t know the meaning of 41(D),” said Desai, who has no plans to step down. “It’s only for a trustee who misuses trust property for personal gain and, in my case, there’s no such issue. This is just a threat.”

The vote was moved by trustee Noshir Dadrawala, seconded by trustee Viraf Mehta and supported by trustees Armaity Tirandaz and Xerxes Dastur. Trustee Kersi Randeria abstained while trustee Zarir Bhathena was absent when the vote was conducted.

“He was working completely against the interests of the trust and overruling board decisions and resolutions,” said trustee Viraf Mehta. “He was threatening BPP staff and signing MOUs on behalf of the BPP without the board’s knowledge and approval.”

Bhathena shared four main reasons for the no confidence vote: Desai registered a leave and licence agreement to industrialist Ness Wadia’s secretary with just his signature and without informing the other trustees; he wanted to offer a non-Parsi trespasser an ownership flat worth Rs 1.5 crore; he took control of a BPP function and instructed staff to invite only certain trustees; and his wife is privy to all BPP data without being an elected trustee.

Desai rebutted these allegations. He said the decision to allot a flat to Wadia’s secretary was agreed to by all the trustees except Mehta, who abstained; the BPP function was, in fact, a personal function for which he had borne all expenses; community members approach his wife because she is more helpful than Dadrawala; and the non-Parsi trespasser had already been offered a flat in Thane by the previous board of trustees, which is now undergoing redevelopment, and hence Desai offered her the Borivli flat in order to regain possession of the premium flat she currently occupies in Khareghat Colony.

The next step, according to Dadrawala, is that the trustees will take a legal opinion regarding the validity of the vote and figure out how to move ahead with Desai’s ouster. “We will also have to seek legal advice on whether we should remove him as chairman or as a trustee,” added Dadrawala.

This isn’t the first time that BPP trustees have resorted to filing a 41(D) application against a chairman. One was filed against former chairman Dinshaw Mehta in 2013 and Desai said another is pending against his son and trustee Viraf Mehta. Dadrawala, though, said that has yet to be voted on.

“A no confidence motion against a chairman is akin to the impeachment of a president,” said community blogger and activist Jehangir Bisney. “There needs to be solid grounds for it… A spat on social media between the chairman and another trustee cannot be the basis of the motion. Howsoever one may dislike the BPP Chairman, there must be fair play by following all laid down procedures.”

Jehangir Patel, editor of Parsiana, a community magazine, added, “This is more a question of Yazdi Desai’s autocratic style of functioning. He alienates people and does things that the others don’t like but I don’t think going to the charity commissioner resolves anything. It just drags on and on. The answer has to be arrived at outside of the courts of law and the charity commission.”

Tower of Silence out of bound for drones, aviation ministry to mark it as prohibited area

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The Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) has ruled against flying drones around Tower of Silence in Malabar Hills, where the Parsi community carries out last rites for their departed. The MoCA has also said that flying drones will not be permitted in 5-km radius of Mumbai Airport and 3-km radius of Juhu Airport.

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From December last year, the Central government started accepting applications from drone operators to obtain flying licence.

Article by Mehul Thakkar | DNA

There are three specific zones with regard to drone flying: the red zone, where flying is not permitted; the yellow zone, where the airspace is controlled; green zone, where there is no hindrance to flying, indicating automatic permission.

Of these, three locations in Mumbai have so far been proposed to have red zones, which includes the Tower of Silence. In the past, the Parsi community had opposed to the proposal of reducing the no flying zone’s radius from 1,852 metre to 500 metre; they also opposed to the flight pathway of under-construction Navi Mumbai Airport, which was passing above the Tower of Silence.

As a ritual, the Parsi community gives up the body of their dead to scavenger birds. This practice entails ensuring that the bodies are not exposed to any external aerial element except the sun. In Mumbai, the Tower of Silence is located in south Mumbai at Malabar Hills.

On the number of red and yellow zones marked in the city of Mumbai, the MoCA said in Lok Sabha earlier this week, “Two red zones of 5 km around the perimeter of Mumbai Airport and 3 km around the perimeter of Juhu Airport have been earmarked. One red zone will be marked around the Tower of Silence.”

The MoCA further informed that, “One yellow zone will be marked to identify controlled airspace around Mumbai Airport. Military installations will be notified by the Ministry of Defence and vital installations will be notified by the Ministry of Home Affairs.”

Further, the MoCA has also informed that a task force has been constituted by it to formulate a road map with implementable recommendations for the central and state government to leverage Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) technology. While applications are being accepted for drone license, the MoCA has also informed that no UAV operator permit has been issued till date.

Noshir Dadrawala of Bombay Parsi Panchayet said, “Air-space above the Tower of Silence has been a no fly zone for aircraft for decades; in my knowledge, we haven’t received any communication for drones from the government yet. Any kind of flying object means the same, no fly means no fly; it is good if it has been marked as a no fly zone for drones too, and we are glad the government is doing so.”

Ervad Freyaan K. Vimadalal of Houston ordained as Navar

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Parsi Khabar is happy to announce that the son of our dear friends Khushroo and Parynaz Vimadalal was ordained as a Navar this past week.

Ervad Freyaan K. Vimadalal was born in New Jersey USA and lived there till very recently when he and his family relocated to Houston a year and a half ago . Ervad Freyaan was ordained as a priest on Sunday, 13th January 2019 (roj Aneran, mah Amardad, 1388 Y. Z.). The Navar ceremony was performed by Ervad Aspandiar R. Dadachanji and Ervad Adil Bhesania at Vatcha Gandhi Agiary, Mumbai.

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Freyaan was taught his Navar prayers by Ervad Peshotan Unwala in Houston.

Freyaan continues in the priestly lineage going back three generations on both his Bapawaji and Bapaiji’s side. His father Khushroo is a priest  too and was an active board member of ZAGNY in New York and his kaka Nauzar is an active priest at ZAGBA in Boston.

With Freyaan as an inspiration, we look forward to his younger brother Darian following in his footsteps in the years to come.

Wishing young Ervad Freyaan hearty congratulations and best wishes for abundant good health, joy, success, happiness and many long years in the service of our glorious Zoroastrian religion.

From Persia with love: How an Empress transformed Iran with art

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From Persia with love: How an Empress transformed Iran with art

Dubbed “the Jackie Kennedy of the Middle East”, Farah Pahlavi built a world-class collection of modern art before she and her husband were exiled. Now 80, she reflects on her beloved country.

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Farah Pahlavi, Iran’s first and last Empress, in the late 1970s. “When you leave your land, your love, your belongings, it’s very sad,” she reflects now.CREDIT:GETTY IMAGES

Time was when Farah Pahlavi could paralyse parts of Manhattan merely through word of her presence. One time in the late 1970s, police on horseback struggled to hold back a crowd of baying demonstrators outside The Pierre, an aristocratic hotel by Central Park. On another occasion, the NYPD flooded midtown with more than 2000 officers, encircling the Hilton with what The New York Times described as a “shoulder-to-shoulder, 12-block show of force”.

Article by Nick Bryant | Sydney Morning Herald

Those were the days when VIPs would draw up in low-slung limousines to hear her speak: Henry Kissinger, Lady Bird Johnson, Nelson Rockefeller. That was an era when she counted triple-A celebrities among her friends and acquaintances: Elizabeth Taylor, Yves Saint Laurent, Andy Warhol. It was also a tumultuous, pre-revolutionary age when rival demonstrators thousands of kilometres away from Iran exchanged angry chants in the shadows of the skyscrapers: “Long live her majesty!” versus “Down with the Shah!” Now, though, visits from a former queen once dubbed “the Jackie Kennedy of the Middle East” go largely unnoticed. In early October, when I arrive at the luxury apartment building on the Upper West Side where she’s due to attend a late-afternoon reception, the doorman on duty looks at me bemusedly when I tell him I’m here to see “the Empress of Iran”

Farah Pahlavi was the first woman in the country’s 2500-year history to be bestowed with that title. She was adored, almost worshipped by many of her late husband’s subjects. But though the cheery woman who walks into the lobby still gives off a bright-eyed royal radiance, absent are any regal airs and graces. No longer is she trailed by men in dark suits mumbling into their sleeves, a far cry from the days when royal coaches paraded through the streets of Tehran flanked by a mounted guard of spear-carrying horsemen.

Nor is she extravagantly dressed. Pahlavi is wearing a thigh-length woven paisley jacket and camel trousers, her tawny hair gathered up in a bow, an unfussy outfit for a queen who in her palace heyday wore glamorous showstoppers by Givenchy, Dior and Valentino.

Upstairs at the reception, when an Iranian-American plastic surgeon approaches Pahlavi hesitantly, bowing his head in genuflection and then bending down to kiss her hand, she looks somewhat taken aback. Minutes later they are laughing, joking and reminiscing about their homeland with almost backslapping bonhomie. Turns out the doctor trained in Shiraz at what was then called Pahlavi University, an institution she helped found and the first in Iran to be based on the American model. His entire medical degree cost just a hundred bucks, he tells her to uproarious laughter, and thus he owes her an enormous debt.

Watching her humbly work the room, happily posing for photos – nobody asks Her Majesty for a selfie – one wonders how this genial grandmother could ever have been placed on a revolutionary death list. Then you sense this infectious charm, this natural empathy, this ease among her followers, was precisely the reason why. On the eve of her 80th birthday, Pahlavi is here to celebrate the publication of a new book. The power she once projected peers out from its cover: an iconographic portrait of her from the mid-1970s, taken through the lens of Andy Warhol’s Polaroid Big Shot camera. Iran Modern: the Empress of Art tells the story of one of the 20th century’s more unlikely cultural brokers, a woman who amassed the greatest collection of Western modern art anywhere outside of the US or Europe, starting with the Impressionists and ending with what were then contemporary greats such as Jackson Pollock.

“It’s beautiful, it’s fabulous, it’s a work of art in itself,” she says of this handcrafted limited-edition book that comes in a canary-yellow clamshell case. But inside is a story of exile, loss and heartbreak, of artistic triumph and tragedy. Once you learn the backstory, Warhol’s silk-screen rendering takes on a different meaning. One notices not just her charismatic dominion but also the sorrow in those kohl-rimmed eyes.

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Farah Pahlavi with Yves Saint Laurent in Paris, 1959.CREDIT:GETTY IMAGES

Farah Diba – the name Farah means “joy” in Persian– was a daughter not of the Persian aristocracy but rather Tehran’s middle class. Born in 1938, she was nine when her father, an Imperial Iranian Army captain, died, and she was raised by her mother, Farideh, “a very serious woman” who struggled financially but managed to send her daughter to private Italian and French schools. Farah was a bit of a tomboy, throwing herself into the girl-scout movement and captaining the school basketball team. “My god, I was 15, 16 with this short skirt,” she laughs, rolling her eyes exaggeratedly. “Compare that with what is happening [in Iran] now.”

As a child, she developed a love of art from leafing through the sketchbooks of her paternal grandfather, a good drawer who kept art journals, and on leaving school she went to Paris to study at the prestigious École Spéciale d’Architecture. Invited to a reception at the Iranian Embassy in 1959, she was introduced to Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who had first been crowned the Shah of Iran in 1941 and returned to power in 1953 following a CIA-backed coup. What were her first impressions? “He had beautiful eyes but sad eyes.” Why were they sad? “For his life. The pressure on him.” They provided a window on her future.

A courtship developed when she returned to Tehran for the summer. They were married in December 1959 in a ceremony at Tehran’s Marble Palace, where she wore a gown by Yves Saint Laurent and a two-kilogram tiara designed by jeweller to the stars Harry Winston. In keeping with Persian tradition, the bride remained silent when twice asked if she wanted to marry the Shah. Asked a final time, she said yes. Farah became his third wife. The first two had failed to provide him with a male heir. Ten months later she gave birth to a son, Crown Prince Reza, the first of the couple’s four children. The Shah was 40, she almost half his age, and her new role was overwhelming. “As a 21-year-old girl, I didn’t know what to do,” she recalls. “When the Shah asked me to marry him, he said, ‘As a queen, you will have a lot of responsibilities.’ I said, ‘Of course,’ but I couldn’t imagine the scale of it.”

In those early years, she was more Princess Diana than Jackie Kennedy. Visiting Iran’s impoverished towns and villages. Reaching out her royal hand to the needy. Setting up a community for lepers, leading blood drives and creating mobile libraries – these were sometimes mules that ferried books into the mountains. “In those days, my most important work was with the children, with the orphans, with the lepers,” she recalls. “I was travelling all over Iran, seeing what needed to be done.” It’s the stuff of a Queen of Hearts fable, but it also happens to be true.

In 1963, her husband launched the White Revolution, a reform program intended to bring modernity to the ancient kingdom, and also to lend his reign more legitimacy in the eyes of the peasantry. “Iran was going ahead in every way,” she says. “In the economy, industry, education, our relations with the rest of the world, in everything. Many dreams came true during that period.” Women’s rights were also given a boost in a 1963 referendum that ushered in female enfranchisement, and family protection laws which allowed wives to obtain divorces, raised the minimum age of marriage to 18, and granted mothers new custody rights. The Shiite clergy fiercely opposed this liberalisation program, pushed through with the iron fist of the regime, and a cleric by the name of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini became the figurehead of protests. Khomeini was exiled in 1964, but his insurgent followers were not so easily banished.

In 1967, partly to honour the women of Iran, the Shah elevated the status of his wife; a highly unusual move for a Muslim monarchy. In another opulent ceremony, in the Hall of Mirrors in Tehran’s Golestan Palace, Farah was crowned the Empress of Iran, or Shahbanu, the Shah’s consort. For the coronation ceremony she wore a long white satin Dior dress; the emblem of Iran was embroidered in gold into the cape. In a further promotion, she became the first woman to be named the Shah’s regent. It meant that if her husband died before their son, Crown Prince Reza, reached adulthood, she would take the throne until his 21st birthday.

No Iranian woman had ever occupied such an exalted position. To outsiders, it might even have looked like the flowering of women’s liberation in the Middle East. But the Shah could also be chauvinistic. In a televised cabinet meeting, he condescendingly scolded his wife for suggesting he promote more music across the land. “Why is this my concern?” he snapped, as if dismissing some lowly courtier. His misogyny also came to the fore in a 1973 interview with the Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci.

“Women count only if they are beautiful, graceful and know how to stay feminine,” he declared, like some medieval potentate. “You may be equal in the eye of the law, but not in ability … You have never produced a Michelangelo or a Bach. You’ve never even produced a great cook … You’re schemers. You’re evil. Every one of you.”

When the trailblazing American TV presenter Barbara Walters challenged the Shah about these comments in a prime-time interview in 1977, it made for excruciating viewing. “Do you think a woman could govern as well as a man?” probed Walters. There followed the most awkward of prolonged silences, a television eternity in which he visibly shrivelled before the camera. Eventually the shell-shocked Shah muttered: “I’d prefer not to answer that.” Then Walters turned to the Empress. “Say something, Your Majesty,” she implored. There was a gaping pause, and a frozen half-smile. “What can I say?” was her pained response.

I ask Pahlavi if her husband was really a modern man. “Very modern, very kind, really polite, with everybody,” she replies, with such a show of loyalty that it feels cruel to pose a Walters-style follow-up. As the staunchest defender of her husband’s memory, what can she say?

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The 1967 coronation ceremony in which Farah Pahlavi was crowned Empress of Iran. CREDIT:GETTY IMAGES

As a young queen, Pahlavi’s teenage fascination with building and architecture matured into a keen appreciation of fine art. She immersed herself in the local arts scene, lending her imperial imprimatur to events such as 1962’s Tehran Biennale, and not only supported the work of young Iranian painters and sculptors, but also displayed it in the royal palaces. In the late 1960s, she helped found the Shiraz Arts Festival for music, dance, drama, poetry and film, a bohemian fete intended to put Iran on the cultural map. In 1971, to mark the 2500th anniversary of the founding of the Persian Empire by Cyrus the Great, she staged a gala attended by Monaco’s Princess Grace and Prince Rainier, Ethiopia’s Haile Selassie, Yugoslavia’s Marshal Tito and the Philippines’ Imelda Marcos. So over-indulgent were the celebrations, some historians believe they provided a jewel-encrusted seedbed for the Iranian revolution.

Then there were the museums she created: to house Persian carpets, pre-Islamic ceramics, 19th-century Iranian paintings, Luristan bronzes and, what would become her crowning achievement, the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art. Originally, the museum was intended as a showcase for Iranian artists, but with the Shah’s regime awash with cash following the doubling of oil prices in 1973, Pahlavi’s artistic ambitions ballooned. Why not also make it the home to some of the world’s greatest modern and contemporary works, pieces she had long admired from afar? “It’s now or never to buy some of these things,” she told her husband, as she spearheaded a spending spree on the international art market, snapping up works by Wassily Kandinsky, Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko, Paul Gauguin, Roy Lichtenstein, Joan Miró, Edvard Munch, Edward Hopper, René Magritte and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, a triptych by Francis Bacon and one of Jackson Pollock’s most celebrated drip-paintings, Mural on Indian Red Ground. (She also tried to acquire Pollock’s Blue Poles, but the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra, with the backing of PM Gough Whitlam, outbid her.)

As well as being a patron, she visited and befriended artists: Henry Moore, Salvador Dalí, Marc Chagall. At a White House gala thrown by US president Gerald Ford, she met Andy Warhol, although the pop artist tried to avoid her for much of the evening, hurriedly moving from one stately room to another, through fear she would ask him to dance. “He wondered why this woman was running after him,” she says, laughing. Eventually she cornered him, and the conversation that followed persuaded Warhol to visit Iran in 1976. In between pool parties and caviar binges at the Tehran Intercontinental, Warhol took a portrait of the Empress that proved such a hit in the royal household that he returned to photograph the Shah.

Tehran’s Museum of Contemporary Art was inaugurated in 1977, with parkland once used by the military now dotted with sculptures by Henry Moore and Alberto Giacometti, and a Brutalist building dubbed an “underground Guggenheim” because of its spiral ramp that took visitors on a descent into its bowels. Here was hung what’s been called “the best modern art collection you have never heard of”: 200 or so works with a current-day value conservatively estimated at well over $US3 billion.

Less than two years later, the Shah was deposed in the Islamic Revolution, and the couple were forced into exile – in Egypt, Morocco, The Bahamas, Mexico and, briefly, the US, where president Jimmy Carter’s decision to allow the Shah to receive cancer treatment prompted the seizure of 52 American diplomats and staff at the US embassy in Tehran. “It was very, very hard to leave, especially when I saw the tears in the eyes of my husband,” Pahlavi remembers. “When you leave your land, your love, your belongings, it’s very sad. But I didn’t want to be negative. I didn’t want to lose my hope and positivity.” On the plane as they jetted towards Egypt, she immediately began writing morale-boosting letters to friends and supporters left behind.

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Farah Pahlavi with the Shah and their children in Switzerland, 1975.CREDIT:GETTY IMAGES

To this day, the size of the Shah’s fortune remains a mystery. When asked the vexing question of how much he managed to take out of the country, the exiled monarch claimed he left no richer than an average American millionaire. But the new revolutionary government calculated differently, launching a New York lawsuit in 1979 seeking $US36.5 billion it claimed he had plundered from the Iranian people.

Did the museum contribute to their overthrow? Opened on Pahlavi’s 39th birthday, with her cousin as the principal architect, it could be construed as a landmark to the Pahlavis’ extravagance. “Not at all. Not at all. Not at all. Not at all,” she says, vehemently shaking her head. “There was no reaction to the museum. It was for Iranian art, not just foreign art.”

As Islamic revolutionaries swept through the streets, curators at the museum tried to hide the collection from the mob, and succeeded in protecting most of it – although a Henry Moore bronze took a bullet. Years later, however, Pahlavi watched a French documentary that showed a Warhol portrait from her personal collection slashed with a knife. That must have been wounding? “I thought, ‘They’re stupid,’ ” she chortles. “If they’d have kept it, they could have sold it for a million dollars.”

With much of the gallery turned by the Ayatollah into a bunker-like vault, most of the collection was not seen for decades. In 1999 and 2005, some works were briefly put on display, long enough for photographers to capture Iranian women, shrouded in their hijabs, studying the abstract expressionist works. Long enough to have an impact. Afterwards, some of the women who toured the gallery made contact with Pahlavi. “I had tears in my eyes when I stood in front of the Rothko,” emailed one. “It’s really very touching for me. The seeds you plant with love and belief, they never die.”

Two years ago, as relations thawed between the West and Tehran following the landmark nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration and the EU, works from the collection were due to go on display in Berlin and then Rome. At the 11th hour, however, the Iranian authorities pulled out. “They’re all the same,” Pahlavi says of Iran’s supposedly reform-minded leaders. “Before, they were flogging people 200 times, now they are flogging people 45 times. Shall we say that’s good? It’s not.”

Pahlavi had planned to travel to Berlin from Paris, where she lives in an apartment overlooking the Seine decorated with contemporary Iranian artwork. Cancelling the trip must surely have added to the agony of being divorced from the collection she’d lovingly put together. “I’m not separated, in a way,” she says. “With those works, yes, but I go to art galleries with Iranian artists, painters and sculptors in Paris and New York. I listen to Persian music. So I’m in it. I’m not in Iran, but I am in it.”

Loss is a recurring theme in her life. Of her father. Of her husband, who in 1980 died of cancer in Egypt aged 60, 18 months after fleeing his homeland. Of her daughter, Princess Leila, who died from a drug overdose in London in 2001, aged 31. Of her second son, Prince Ali-Reza, who at 44 committed suicide in Boston in 2011. Of the country she has never returned to. Of her art.

Does it sadden her that so few people get to cast eyes on the collection? “No. What is most important is what has happened to my country. It’s not just one museum, there are so many other things. As I always say, I never lose hope for Iran.” At least the new book, put together by two Australians, Sydney writer Miranda Darling and London-based art adviser Viola Raikhel-Bolot, will bring many of the works to a new audience. The duo are also filming a documentary on Pahlavi’s life. “We all experience loss in our lives,” says Darling, “but she’s lived it on an epic scale. This is what makes her cinematic and interesting. She was a visionary.

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Pahlavi (centre) with her book’s authors, Miranda Darling (left) and Viola Raikhel-Bolot.CREDIT:VANISHING PICTURES PRODUCTIONS

Farah Pahlavi’s homeland is again in flux, with the economy floundering, the currency (the rial) plummeting, civil unrest on the streets and Iran targeted again as America’s number one global enemy. Polling suggests less than one third of Iranian-Americans support President Trump’s withdrawal from the Iranian nuclear deal, and his re-imposition of harsh sanctions. So what about Pahlavi, who has released statements in support of the protesters? “I hope he will continue to support the pursuit of the Iranian people for freedom,” she says of Trump. “But I don’t want Iran to be attacked. I don’t want that to happen.”

We talk about the hostility she encountered on earlier visits to New York City. “There were always people demonstrating against us, and they carried pictures of Khomeini and I was so astonished. I said, ‘My God, how come these people who shout for freedom and democracy have a portrait of a mullah?’

Those protests were so angry, I point out, partly because of the autocratic excesses of the Shah’s regime and the brutality of his hated secret police, the SAVAK, which used electric cattle-prods, acid, nail extractions, mock executions and even snakes to torture opponents. “I can’t deny that,” she says, nodding. “But my husband really did want to bring in democracy, but when people are not educated and not literate, it takes time.”

As the book party draws to a close, and many of the guests start heading for the door carrying signed copies of Iran Modern: the Empress of Art in specially designed tote bags, there’s an ear-piercing whistle. With a lusty blast from her lungs, and two fingers wedged into either side of her mouth, the Empress signals it is time to go. Around her assembles what’s more of a posse than an entourage: her young granddaughter, her daughter-in-law and a few well-heeled Iranian friends. And with that she steps out, anonymous again, into the rainy New York night.


The incredible history of the traditional Parsi Gara sari

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The timeless elegance of a traditional Parsi Gara is undeniable. Embroidered to life with photorealistic precision, the Gara sari is a unique member in the exhaustive variety of crafts found in the country. Predominantly worn by the Parsi community during weddings and special occasions, the exquisite Gara sari deserves not to be stashed away just for those big days. Vogue spoke to Ashdeen Lilaowala—one of the few creative minds carrying the legacy of the Gara forward—about the history of the embroidery, its evolution and the lesser known facts.

By Rujuta Vaidya, www.vogue.in

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Tell us about the origins of Gara

Gara embroidery came into our design lexicon at a time when the Parsis from India would travel to China for trade. They carried opium and cotton with them from India, which was bartered for tea in China. Tea as a commodity was gaining a lot of popularity in Europe and the British wanted to sell more tea in Europe. The Parsis quickly became rich trading with the British.

When they came back on their ships, they also brought back ceramics and various other antiques that were available in China. Legend says that one of the traders brought back a new kind of artistic embroidery, which was very realistic in its depiction of flora and fauna and was targeted to the European market. Eventually, it was commissioned as a five-and-a-half-metre sari for the traders from India. Earlier, the pieces that came in were fully embroidered, corner to corner, but then slowly the women started travelling to China too, and they edited them to have borders, blank spaces for tucking in, etc. The Parsi community had newly settled in Bombay, become quite rich, and now wanted a certain new look—and they adopted the Gara saris as their signature.

One of the famous designs was ‘Cheena Cheeni’, which depicts a Chinese man and a Chinese woman against a landscape of pagodas, bridges, plantations and people doing daily chores in China, carrying lanterns and other knick knacks—but these were things so exotic and unseen in India, that the design became a prized possession. They also brought back narrow borders that are called as ‘Kor’, and clothes for the children—the tunics were called ‘Jhablas’ and pants were called ‘Ghicha’. These were some of the different products that were coming via the trade.

Can you tell us a little more about other popular Gara designs?

We have quirky names for motifs. Apart from ‘Cheena Cheeni’, there is a polka-dotted motif is called ‘kaanda papeta’, which stands for onion potato. Polka dots were so common at one point, that they were jestingly compared to onions and potatoes for how readily available they were. Then there is a spin wheel motif, which the Parsis call a ‘Karoliya’, or a spider. We have a ‘Marga Margi’, which is a rooster and a hen and there’s a ‘Chakla Chakli’ too, which is a male and female sparrow.

During a research exercise, we found that there is a kind of rock formation on the sari that usually comes with a peacock perched on it—the motif is called ‘The Divine Fungus’. But when you tell a Parsi woman that there’s fungus on your sari, they (naturally!) don’t take it well. And we have seen borders with exquisitely embroidered bats as well. Indians are not fond of bats, and for Parsis, bats are equivalent to death—I’ve actually had customers tell me they’re not wearing the pieces again once I confirmed the embroidery denotes a bat, and not a butterfly, as they originally thought. We also have a sari in our recent collection called ‘Morning Glory’—it has a sun and a huge spread of birds, flora and fauna, so it is like a whole narrative about the sun being the element that manifests this abundance of flora.

How long does it take to make a Gara sari?

Depending on the density of the work, it can take anything from three weeks to two months. And when I say two months, I mean six to eight people working on one sari together.

What is the base fabric of the sari?

Even though the sari is covered in silk thread embroidery all over, it has a nice flow to it and can be draped well. The original fabric was called ‘Sali Ghaj’, which has very thin lines running through it.

Garas went out of fashion in the ’30s and were only revived in the ’80s. In Mumbai, they started using this thick fabric—Shamu satin and thick Crepe d Chine back then. Presently, we largely use crepe, but not georgette or chiffon—because the silk thread is hand-embroidered and these fabrics can’t take the weight of the embroidery.

You mentioned that the Garas went out of fashion. What do you think was the reason behind that?

One of the main reasons was that India had stopped trading opium with China. And then the Independence movement followed. Gandhi was asking people to shed these foreign textiles and wear khadi. I think when a trend has been around for 40-50 years, people eventually get bored with it. So they started wearing chiffon and georgette saris, because those fabrics were new at the time. Then, we were at war with China, which had become a Communist country by then, and at that time trade completely stopped.

What replaced the Gara for the Parsi women in that time?

Many women were wearing the georgette and chiffon that was being brought in from abroad, but the borders, which were attached, pretty much ran through and through over the years. Heavy Garas were saved for functions and occasions. In the ’60s and ’70s, there were saris made from glass nylon with sequin work on it—that was the popular look then.

You are one of the very few people who still does this. How do you keep challenging yourself?

For us, the biggest challenge was that we had the same inspiration as the original saris—there are lots of flowers and birds. It was then that we realised that we need to find distant points of interest. One of our collections was inspired by ceramics that came from the trade. The idea was to take the same motif and explore it on different fabrics. We did collections where we embroidered on net, and introduced different threads and materials. We use a lot of zari thread too, where we create the entire embroidery with the zari rather than just using it as an accent. You have to take elements and play with them—blow them up, reduce them, make them more graphic or modern, and churn out new collections each season.

But we also realise that our product is not seasonal. At the end of the day, it is something very classic, and can make for an heirloom that is handed down from a mother to her daughter. Once you have it in your wardrobe, you can wear it across seasons. In a sense it’s like a Kanjeevaram—it never goes out of fashion.

Are your artisans primarily people who have been doing this for years, or have you trained new people?

We have close to 140 people doing embroidery for us, but it isn’t necessary that they came in knowing Parsi embroidery. We have to push them and train them to make them realise the certain nuances of our craft. When we do birds in our embroidery, it’s not abstract, it has to be realistic—how the feathers move, how the beak is, how the eyes are. So that kind of training, how to mix colour, how to do shading so that it looks more realistic and lifelike, is needed. But they already know the technique of embroidery—in India that’s our biggest forte.

You maintain a good bank of your own culture’s history. What are some of your reference points?

Before I delved into starting my own label, I had researched Parsi embroidery extensively. I travelled to China and Iran, tried to find the routes and roots, see what the links are, what are the meanings of the motifs, and things like that. I have travelled across India and met various Parsi families, and I have a good bank of Garas that we have documented. We know the references quite well, but every now and then you get a new piece that makes you go,“wow, where did this come from?”. And considering I’ve been doing this for six years, people approach me themselves now. Also, when I travel to museums, I request to look into their archives—all of this becomes the starting point to a new collection.

How do you reach the younger customers?

I think with social media, you can share information in bits and pieces. You don’t have to write a thesis or go through a long, boring read—that way it’s very encouraging. I had recently posted items from our archive, like an old border, Gara and a jhabla, where we spoke about the relevance of those motifs in the caption—and that post did really well on Instagram.

There’s definitely an interest and a certain kind of excitement in the younger generation. We get a lot of young girls who now say that we want a Gara in our trousseau. There are many non-Parsi girls who are marrying a Parsi groom, or a Parsi girl marrying a non-Parsi boy, so they want to wear a lehenga with Parsi embroidery. We are adapting our technique into a modern context, and have been getting a number of enquiries from a much younger audience.

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Ailing Zubin Mehta to skip farewell U.S. tour with Israel Philharmonic

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Conductor Zubin Mehta will not join the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra on a U.S. tour that was to be his last here as orchestra leader, a step attributed to Mehta’s health by tour organizers who announced a replacement conductor Friday.

zubin_mehtaThe tour — six stops including concerts at New York’s Carnegie Hall on Feb. 3, West Palm Beach’s Kravis Center on Feb. 5 and Miami’s Adrienne Arsht Center on Feb. 6 — will continue with Yoel Levi at the podium in Mehta’s place, the organization American Friends of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra said in a statement.

The Indian-born and much-traveled Mehta, 82, one of the most celebrated conductors of the 20th Century, had intended the tour as part of a series of farewell concerts around his retirement from the Israel Philharmonic, which named him music director for life in 1981.

Before then, Mehta led orchestras in Montreal, Los Angeles and New York. He counted music luminaries such as Luciano Pavarotti and Ravi Shankar as friends and collaborators, and performances with Mehta were often major events unto themselves. He conducted the first Three Tenors concert, in Rome in 1990, and an emotional performance in the ruins of Sarajevo with the city’s hometown orchestra at the end of the Yugoslav Wars in 1994.

Mehta first announced his retirement plans in 2016. “The unexpected news of Zubin’s cancellation is an unfortunate turn of events, but we are grateful to Yoel for stepping in to conduct what we know will be a very exciting and uplifting U.S. Tour for the IPO,” said David Hirsch, board president of the American Friends organization.

Tracing the journey of a Parsi who brought French Revolution in Bombay

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A new book revisits the untold, illustrious life of a renowned academician, Zenobia Mistri, who steered a French revolution in Bombay

When the late Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, the former President of India and veteran scientist, said he wanted to be remembered as a “good teacher”, it might have seemed strange that a man with such a meritorious career, measured his worth so simply. “Teaching is a very noble profession,” he had said, “It shapes the character, calibre, and future of an individual.” London-based Shireen Isal would relate to these words, more so. Nothing otherwise can explain the 72-year-old’s dogged determination to pursue the story of her French teacher nearly 20 years after her death, and self-publish a book on her, titled Zenobia Mistri: A Teacher Par Excellence. The book, which released this month, is now available at the Parsiana Bookshop in Fort, as well as on their website (parsiana.com).

Article by Jane Borges | Mid-Day

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Shireen Isal, who pursued her Bachelor’s degree in French from Elphinstone College, says Mistri became her tutor, setting the stage for a career as impresario to several Indian classical musicians in Paris. Pic/Bipin Kokate

Few would know that Mistri – she was the first Indian woman to be admitted to the Institut de Civilisation Indienne’, Sorbonne University (renamed ‘Institut d’études indiennes’ in 2000 and, since 1973, attached to the ‘College de France’) in 1931, for a Doctorat d’Université’ in French – was one of the most renowned teachers of French language and literature in mid-20th-century Bombay.

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A young Zenobia Mistri during her ten-year tenure at the Sardar Dastur Nosherwan Girls High School in Pune. Pic Courtesy/The Sardar Dastur Nosherwan Girls High School

Mistri passed away in 1998, but it was only in 2015 that Isal felt the need to piece the career of her teacher, together. Hailing from a middle-class, conservative Parsi family and living in an era, when girls were married off in their teens, it was quite extraordinary for Mistri to complete her Bachelor’s from St Xavier’s in Bombay, and then travel to study in Paris, in the 1930s. “It was unheard of. She had the grit and determination to do what other girls weren’t even allowed to think of,” says Isal.

And given her profound love for the language, Mistri made it her mission to teach other girls after she returned to the country – first, at Sardar Dastur Nosherwan Girls High School in Pune for nearly a decade, and then, as a private tutor in Mumbai. “Her teaching career spanned nearly 50 years,” says Isal, , who is currently on a brief visit to her home city.

It was, however difficult to retrace this illustrious journey. “Even her close family members and friends didn’t know much – may be, because she spoke so little about herself,” says Isal, who has been making annual trips to Mumbai for the last couple of years, to fit the missing puzzles of Mistri’s life.

Isal began with a blank slate, knowing nothing – not even the fact that Mistri, who traced her roots to the Bamboatwalla family, was born in Karachi, Pakistan. The fact only emerged when a friend “Googled” Mistri’s name online. “My friend found an extract from her thesis, which appeared in a journal of a French association in 1933. The preface to this extract mentioned that she came from Karachi,” she says. “It’s after this that I started putting out advertisements in Parsi publications, mentioning that I was doing research on Zenobia and would appreciate any help. I had put up a similar query on a website called The Missing Parsi. Zenobia’s cousin happened to read it, and wrote to me. From her, I got the entire family tree.”

Mistri, says Isal, is likely to have come to Bombay when she was all of 16, in the year 1914, along with her parents and four sisters. Her father, Jamshedji Bamboat, died somewhere in 1930, and Isal has managed to document this through a letter that Mistri wrote to renowned indologist Sylvain Levi, who would become her future professor in France. The family barely had the funds to make ends meet, but Mistri managed to secure herself a scholarship of R8,000 from Sir Ratan Tata Trust.

It’s here that she may have met her future husband, Pirosha Mistri, the secretary of the trust, who was a widower and around 20 years her senior. They married several years later in 1947, and settled in Bombay. Isal was introduced to her in the late ’60s, through a family friend after she, on a whim, decided to major in French while pursuing her Bachelor’s.

The book opens with a beautiful episode that the writer recalls from her last meeting with her favourite teacher, who was then bed-ridden and in her nineties. “It had been a while since she had spoken or responded to her surroundings, for fatigue and listlessness had all but taken over. But when we came upon the idea of speaking to her in French, my beloved French teacher’s eyes lit up and she burst into a song – a French one, of course! – following it up with the French national anthem, sung impeccably to boot,” she writes. Remembering it now, Isal says, “She was the real ambassador of France.”

Vada Dasturji Khurshed Dastoor Clarifies Incorrect News Coverage Re: ‘Parsi Priest’s Suggestion To Sell Agiary Is Opposed’

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A news item up has been published in Hindustan Times of 16th January, 2019, under the heading, ‘Parsi Priest’s Suggestion To Sell Agiary Is Opposed.’ As is the practice, certain misguided elements, especially a father and son duo, have made it their business to create confusion and create acrimony and bitterness in the community by resorting to half-truths.

In this particular matter, the comments made by me have been given an unfair and unwarranted slant, by not reporting the full facts. It is a fact that I mentioned at the recent meeting of the Global Working 06_Vada-Dastur-Khurshed-768x384

Group that the Fire temple at Fort, known as Gamadia Agiary, being in dilapidated condition, would be better if the same would be sold and funds used for welfare of Mobeds. What has however, very conveniently been left out, is that I also suggested that  Trustees of both Gamadia Agiary at Fort and Shapurjee Fakirji Jokhi Agiary at Napean Sea Road being the same, the fire of Gamadia Agiary should be shifted to the Jokhi Agiary and enthroned in a separate room on the same lines as has already been done at Lonavala.

This comment was made by me in view of the fact that BPP have publicly appealed for funds to be raised for the repairs and renovation of the Gamadia Agiary at Fort which has very limited footfall. Rather than spending funds on carrying out repairs and renovation to a structure that has limited footfall, wouldn’t it make more sense to dispose the property at market rates and utilize the amount for the welfare of our Mobeds, especially our young, full-time Mobeds who have been tending to the holy fires at various Agiaries, earning far less that their peers working in different organisations?

It is my considered view that it does not make any sense at all to spend on repairs and renovations on an Agiary having very limited patronage, and that too in a business locality, where there is a surfeit of Agiaries, where excepting one or two, the footfall in the others too is minimal.

What I made was a suggestion, keeping in mind that it is important to ensure that our Mobeds are well remunerated, the decision of what to do or not do is that of the Trustees of the two Agiyaries. I shall continue to advice and act on what I believe to be in the interests of our Mobeds, notwithstanding the misinformation that rabble rousers and others of the ilk of the father and son duo may resort to in the future.

Dasturji Khurshed Kekobad Dastoor,
High Priest – Iranshah,
Member (Zoroastrian), National Commission for Minorities

Originally printed in the Parsi Times

WZCC kicks off funding initiative for young Parsi entrepreneurs

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Parsis offer interest-free loans, flexi pay options to its young entrepreneurs

A year ago, Parsi community came together to encourage young entrepreneurs and new start-ups and founded a programme to help deserving candidates with interest-free loans and a flexible payment schedule.

Article by Payal Gwalani | Mumbai Mirror

67632700The India chapter of the World Zarathushti Chamber of Commerce (WZCC) tapped high net-worth individuals from the community and founded the scheme that already has three winners who are set to get Rs 25 lakh in funds each.

They will have the option to repay the interest-free loan within a span of five years depending on their business model.

“The entrepreneurship scheme is a joint attempt of WZCC and World Zoroastrian Organisation (WZO) Trust Fund. As a community, we have never believed in asking for reservations or quota. So, this is our way to encourage youngsters to be enterprising, and contribute meaningfully to the community as well as the country,” WZCC India president Captain Percy Master told Mirror.

Before being selected, the interested entrepreneurs had to go through a rigorous three-stage process spanning five months, which included their businesses being scrutinised minutely and personal interviews with the business advisory committee.

The committee comprised ten industry leaders from the Parsi community in various fields.

“Our emphasis was to select businesses that are most likely to survive among the challenges of the modern world,” said Captain Master.

One of the three recipients, 41-year-old Cyrus Pithawala, started his shipping container handling firm in 2017 from an empty yard in Surat.

“The best part of the experience, other than getting the necessary funding, was being mentored by veterans from the industry who also helped me network and cut costs,” said Cyrus, adding that he would like to return the favour to the community not only by donating to the fund but also by mentoring other youngsters in the industry.

Another recipient Dr Murzban Karai, 51, who started his manufacturing firm in Mahad MIDC in 2005 said, “I needed the funds for the expansion of my factory which produces laser grade dyes and speciality chemicals. I am happy that any entrepreneur from the community can tap into funds from the chamber.”

First-time entrepreneur and the youngest of the lot, 26-year-old Urvakhsh Tavadia had dreamt of floating his own business ever since he was in college.

“Despite getting a job in the US, I came back so that I could start something of my own, which I did in 2016 with the help of my father.” Tavadia manufactures lithium-ion batteries for e-vehicles.

“It is a fantastic endeavour by the chamber as many young people have great ideas, but have difficulty finding funds.”

A Tribute to the Feriyas

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Feriyas is a colloquialism from Feriwalla, Gujarati for someone who takes a ‘Fero’, a round of some place. During the struggle for Indian Independence, people used to have Prabhat Feri, a small early morning procession that went around singing patriotic songs, raising the Indian flag and reminding people about Independence struggle.

From time to time we invite readers to contribute. This article is by Havovi Govadia.

Aerial view of a man pushing a vegetable cart in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India

For any Parsi living in a Baug or Colony, Feriyas are the lifeline… a means of availing everything from ghee to mutton to getting stoves repaired at the doorstep….all one had to do was clap loudly and call and a relay would start and end with the vendor at your doorstep!

Ferias can be divided roughly into 2 categories; those who advertised their ware with quaint calls that became their trade mark and others who did not call but had a select clientele whose requirements they fulfilled daily, weekly or monthly. The callers were certainly more interesting. If one heard them casually, you had no idea what they were selling. But their loud calls to announce their wares or services were unique to them and hence one knew that the vegetablewalla had come or the panirwalla was calling out or to take out your shoes for repair since the cobbler was taking his fera.

Bombay had practically no season to boast of. We knew that winter was upon us when the call “doodh na puff / ghas ni jelly lev” (sweetened milk in a tall glass with froth in half the glass) was heard, since doodh puffs were sold only in winters. Ramo, a tall man in white kurta and dhoti carried “doodh na puff/jelly” in a huge tray with compartments. He got only limited number of glasses daily so some days he started selling from the outside blocks and some days from the farthest blocks. He collected the glasses and money later on. In summers, post dinner, the last guy to call out was Ramo selling milk kulfi. Did they not melt in the Bombay heat? No, the kulfi in cone shaped aluminum containers were packed tight with ice and salt in a huge double cane basket. We had to give him our quarter plates on which he would slide out the kulfi for just 4 annas (25 p.). Ramo’s son continued to be called ‘Ramo’ and continued his father’s tradition till alas choco-bars reduced his business.

Early morning, Parsi Dairy Farm Milk vendors came in their uniforms carrying milk containers with taps. They had their set clientele who bought a predetermined amount of milk in exchange for coupons, which had to be bought and paid for at the beginning of the month. When the government milk scheme started, the boys left half litre milk bottles again at the door step of their set clients. In the ensuing years the glass bottles were replaced by plastic milk pouches.

Then it was the turn of the bread walla, Bansi, who, as children, we thought was so called, because he sold buns, bringing the typical Bombay ‘pav’ now famously called ‘pav-bhaji’ bread. One ‘laadi’ had 12 small breads and each family bought according to their breakfast needs. The ‘bruns’ (breads with hard outer crust) were very popular too. Bruns was the standard breakfast at our house with Polson butter (before the advent of Amul and Britannia) and jam and thick cream which was removed from the Parsi Dairy Farm milk.

The flower vendor Tulsi came with flower garlands, leaving “haar pudi” in the stoppers of our house. At the end of the month he came to collect his monthly bill when he was given instructions to bring extra garlands if any birthdays fell in the next month. He had a Parsi calendar in his shop with important festivals and roj marked in red since he knew he had to order extra flowers during those days. This walking computer hardly made any mistake in delivering whatever had been asked for.

The mornings started with various vegetable vendors who called out, the salt seller who came in a bullock cart, broom sellers who called out “jhadoo ghai jhadoo”. The ‘Dehnu chai fudinawalli’ was in great demand. She sold mint, spear mint and lemon grass which she claimed came from Dehnu and which most Parsis added to fortify their cuppa to keep cough and colds at bay. Sometimes she brought round red radish or salad leaves which were in demand too.

The tinkling of a certain bell sent parents of children who suffered from whooping cough scurrying. This was the guy who brought the ‘gadheri’ or an ass, whose milk was considered a magical cure for whooping cough.

Then came the shriveled old chunawalli who sold the powdered chalk used for making colourful ‘chowk rangoli’. Her call was a series of undecipherable sounds.

Then the much awaited fisher mongers descended one after another calling out the type of fish they were selling that day. One was spoilt for choice –

The variety included pomphrets, prawns, surmai, bombil (Bombay ducks), bangra (mackerel) etc. etc. They knew Parsi tastes and brought only those fish which would be sold off fast. The most popular among them was ‘Mavshi’ and her fat pock-marked husband with the catch of the day. Mavshi would be dressed in her cotton saree tightly tucked between her ample buttocks and her husband would be wearing a ‘Vashti’, a lungi-like triangular cloth tied around the waist and worn with a shirt. Just one call of ‘Machheeee’ was enough to get the ladies of a whole building of 40 flats turn into a rapid action force. There would be much haggling and bargaining interspersed with gossip and good humoured ribbing, till both sides felt satisfied with the deal. Once bought, the fish would be cleaned by the fish mongers all the while with an exchange of some news.

There was Bade Miya or Chacha, a Muslim goswalla who delivered meat early morning and came for the payment at 11am, when he took the next day’s order. His huge bag would be packed with packets of ¼ and ½ kgs. mutton wrapped in newspaper. This made it easy and convenient to fulfill the clients’ orders without wasting time. He even knew better than us kids, the four anrojas or the days when Parsis did not eat meat. At times he had to listen to complaints of meat which was not soft – “Bara gosh to nai laya?” he would be admonished (did you get beef meat?). He would act suitably offended and scandalized at that thought, since he knew that Parsis did not eat beef. The offals like brain and liver were sold separately by another man who called out “kaleji/bhejawalo”. Needless to say in the Parsi Colony where hundreds of tenants lived, these men managed to sell off everything. It was a win-win situation for all.

Next there was the omnipresent egg seller, who did not really call out but went from door to door saying “eedawallo”. He was a swarthy Maratha who sold his wares in a quaint round basket and inspected each egg by making a tube of his fist and peering through it. In those pre-fridge days he even exchanged the rotten eggs if evidence was produced! The changing times brought a Parsi gentleman who had started the business of selling eggs. He came in a big van once a week and blew his horn loudly. His eggs were cheaper so all the ladies would trundle up with vessels to buy their supply for a week.

Then came the fruit wallas, rustic Marathas with orange turbans, and’ tilaked’ foreheads. They sold the seasonal fruits. But Gulub, the banana seller came every day. He not only had his set clientele who needed bananas everyday but also the ones who bought once in a while. After his round of the colony he would sit out and sell bananas.

There was “Junna Kapda lai ne vasan apvawalooaaarrrgh” whose call ended with a belch-like sound, the guy who exchanged old clothes for vessels and came along with a fellow who carried a heavy load of vessels and walked very slowly. Old clothes were exchanged for brand new aluminum vessels and later stainless steel. I believe now the trend is to exchange with non-stick cookware.

One need not go out to buy even cloth for curtains, nighties, koro satin and long cloth for pyjamas etc. since even these were available at your doorstep. There was an old Chinese man who came to sell patchwork bed sheets, pillow covers, cushion covers. He would talk in a funny accented Hindi with all the ladies, coaxing them to buy. He had picked up many Gujarti words too which always came in handy to build a rapport with his customers. The “Rangaro” or dyewalla came once in 15 days. If you wanted anything dyed or darned, you waited for him. He got a shade chart for you to choose the colour from and brought back your dyed sari after 15 days.

And who can forget the brassier walla, who without saying ‘the B word’ called out “bar, anna, bar, anna, chalo, One-four”…. had the ladies calling him, but always with other female friends around. Believe it or not regular bras were available at 12 annas equivalent to 75 paise and deluxe ones at Rupee 1 and 4 annas (roughly Re.1 and 25 paise). He was immortalized by Bomi in the game of housie in the colony when number 14 was called, calling out ‘vun phor’ exactly the way the vendor did…

“Junni kasbi kor vechati laisu” (will buy old silver/gold thread borders) was a cry I heard practically every day. In the 50s and 60s garas and kor had gone out of fashion. Nylon had been invented and nylon saris and material were a rage. Alas, so many priceless and beautiful heirlooms were sold off for a

pittance during this time.

In those days when food was cooked either on primus stoves or on wood and coal, primus chula repairwalo was much in demand. He used to say “chulaaaa lo” and his call would bring out various ladies who daily had some work lined up for him. He would clean and service the primus as well as change some faulty parts.

All these were interspersed with the twang of the pijaro, the guy who with his quaint contraption went twang, twang, twang and rejuvenated old mattresses… He would remove the cotton from the old mattresses, fluff it up with his contraption and refill the fluffed cotton in another brand new cover.

These ferias came once in 15/20 days.

Ladies called takiwalli, who were supposed to be from the Wagri community and who wore saris without blouses, came to mark the grinding stones on which masalas were ground. They would mark the big grinding stones which had become smooth due to use, with some primitive tools; so that ginger, garlic and other curry masalas would be ground to a fine paste.

The kalaiwallas came to nickel the bronze vessels. Cooking in bronze vessels created toxins making some food cooked in these vessels poisonous. The nickel coating made bronze vessels safe for cooking. The plain steel knives needed sharpening and an old man came with a wheel to sharpen them.

With the advent of fancy sleeping mattresses made from coir and rubber, and knives that do not need sharpening at all or the mixer and grinders which have revolutionized cooking, the new generations have probably never heard of these ferias. The whole style of living has changed and alas these people with their unique tools are no longer needed.

By mid day the stream petered out since no hawkers were allowed during siesta time between 12 and 3 in the afternoon.

From teatime onwards, the new lot of ferias brought in more exciting ware. There was the rough and ready Bhavnagri sev, ganthia wallo who came only on Tuesdays and Friday so you had to stock up for the week. Late evening saw some sundry ‘feriwalla’ the bhelwalla or the narielpanniwalla.

On special days and Zorastrian festivals came a Parsi gentleman in a black coat and tall black cap, who brought along an assistant who pushed a 3-wheeled cart, from which he sold sandalwood, loban incense, kakra, agarbatti and tacho, Kolah’s vinegar and homemade dhansak masala. He too had a high pitched inimitable call.

If one of the feriwallas failed to appear at the designated time on the designated day he was sorely missed with mumblings of ‘ Marere muo, kahn gayo?? (beyond translation)…such was the nexus between the ladies and the ferias…of mutual respect and friendly dependence.

With more women going out of the house for work, a different set of feriyas have started coming. It is now the age of ready mades; so now you have the lady who comes to sell readymade rotis, cutlets, or dhanshak in foil boxes. Some sell Parsi goodies like “daar ni pori” or “khajur ni ghari” since these are hardly made at home now due to lack of time. The cotton pinjaras, kallaiwallas, takiwalli, stove repairers have disappeared from the scene. The kasbi kor buyer is hardly to be seen since thankfully people have realized the value of these heirlooms. Bade miya unfortunately was killed during the 1993 riots. Change it is said is the only constant.

Havovi Govadia is a 65 years old grandmother of 3.  She was born and brought up in Mumbai and shifted to Nagpur after marriage.  Was working in Empress Mills (first Tata enterprise) till it shut shop in 1987.  Working now as an independent financial adivsor. 

Havovi wrote scripts, directed and staged plays and various tableaux on Zarthushtra, Parsi fashions through the ages etc. mostly to acquaint the younger generation of their rich heritage from 1980 till about 2000 for the Nagpur Parsi Gymkhana. 

Havovi started writing these little anecdotal stories at the insistence of her niece who is now 10 years old and living in USA and who was keen to know about her grand parents whom she would never meet and those days when “you and my Dad were little”.

Dinyar Contractor Awarded 2019 Padma Shri Award

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The brilliant theater legend Dinyar Contractor has been awarded the Padma Shri Award by the Goverment of India in 2019. The awards announced on the eve of the Republic Day are a testament to Dinyar’s contribution to theather and to Parsi and Gujarati theater specifically.

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From wikipedia…

Dinyar Contractor is a stage actor, comedian and Bollywood/Tollywood actor. He acts in Gujarati theatre and Hindi theatre, as well as Hindi movies. He started acting at school and began his professional career in 1966. He started working on television programs with Adi Marzban when Mumbai Doordarshan launched the DD-2 channel in Mumbai with Aao Marvao Meri Saathe, a Gujarati program.

More about Dinyar Contractor

Dinyar Contractor, the famous multi-talented personality, was born on 23 January 1946. He was not only an excellent actor but also a successful stage performer and a great comedian. Dinyar is also acclaimed as a renowned theatre artist. He acted in various Gujarati as well as Hindi theatres. Later on, in 1966 he started working in Hindi films and impressed everyone with his witty acting skill.

When Mumbai Doordarshan launched their DD-2 channel, it became one of the most prominent hits. That time this Parsi actor started acting in Gujarati program named Aavo Mari Saathe. Another renowned Parsi theatre artist Adi Marzban also joined him in this program which was exceptionally loved by the audience. Apart from that, no one can forget his magnificent acting in the films Chori Chori Chupke Chupke, Baadshah, 36 China Town, Khiladi and a lot more. Sometimes he appeared on the screen as a Principal, sometimes a Casino Manager or a servant. But every time he proved his versatility in front of the Indian audience. Now, this 71 years actor is much famous for his hilarious performance as Sodhi’s Father-in-Law in Taarak Mehta Ka Ooltah Chashmah.


Cyrus Meher-Homji awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM)

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Cyrus Meher-Homji, General Manager, Classics and Jazz, Universal Music Australia is among those awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) today as part of the Australia Day 2019 Honours List.

CYRUS-MEHER-HOMJI

Awarded for his service to the performing arts, particularly through music, Meher-Homji’s honour is approved by the Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, representative of the Australian monarch, Queen Elizabeth II.

Article by Poppy Reid

Since joining Universal Music Group in 1998 as Marketing Manager for PolyGram Classics & Jazz, Meher-Homji has been integral in the growth of UMA’s Classics & Jazz department, recently expanding its activities into presenting live concerts, with UMA’s first festival to be held in September 2019.

The creator of Soundscapes, a music magazine with international circulation from 1993–1998 Meher-Homji is also the author of several entries on pianists in the second edition of the 29-volume musical encyclopaedia The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians as well as The Oxford Companion to Australian Music.

His written works include books and music journals about Percy Grainger, Eileen Joyce, Julius Katchen and Noël Mewton-Wood, and contributions to a series of magazines and newspapers, including Gramophone, Classical Record Collector, International Record Review, International Piano Quarterly, Limelight and The Australian.

He has also acted as executive producer for recordings by Greta Bradman, Rosario La Spina, Emma Matthews, Sol3 Mio and the Orava Quartet, and is one of the founding board members of the Joan Sutherland and Richard Bonynge Foundation.

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Cyrus Meher-Homji with Maestro Zubin Mehta in 2008, celebrating one million album sales in Australia for Mehta

His efforts have placed classical music front and centre to keep the works’ rich history alive. In 1999 he founded the Eloquence (Australia) label devoted to reissuing key recordings from the rich heritage of Decca and Deutsche Grammophon and in 2008 Meher-Homji launched his own television program, Good Listening, which continues to broadcast on SBS and Foxtel networks (in Australia), giving classical music regular television coverage.

Meher-Homji trained as a concert pianist in Perth, Sydney and London, and holds a Master’s degree in musicology.

Meher-Homji said:

“I am deeply honoured to have been awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia. Professionally, there has never been a more exciting time to be working with classical music and jazz, and with the opportunities for the parallel universes of curation and rediscovery; what was once termed as ‘niche’ finally gets the chance to escape those self-imposed chains and be recognized for what it really is: music for all to enjoy.”

Sir Lucian Grainge, Chairman and CEO of Universal Music Group, said:

“There are few people in Australia, or the world for that matter, who have done as much as Cyrus to advance jazz and classical music and bring these essential and important art forms to even greater audiences.  On behalf of all your colleagues at Universal Music, our heartfelt congratulations.”

George Ash, President of Universal Music Asia-Pacific, said:

I have known Cyrus for most of my career and if anyone is deserving of this incredible accolade it is Cyrus; he is a tireless champion for the arts, for artists and for the development of culture via the creative process that is music. On behalf of all of us at Universal Music Australia and our wider family I want to express our heartfelt congratulations to Cyrus on this very special recognition of his immense contribution to the people of Australia. It is an absolute honour for us all to be part of your life, Cyrus.”

André Rieu added:

“After having searched for twenty years for someone in the vast world of record companies who would understand what I was doing, I can say that finally, in Australia, I found a real treasure named Cyrus Meher-Homji. Not only did he understand and love our music, but his unflagging dedication meant that our recordings dominated the top of the charts (and stayed there) and that we quickly developed an enormous audience for our music. So, dear Cyrus, I thank you from the bottom of my heart for all you do for us, wish you the very best and congratulate you on your well-deserved honour of the Medal of the Order of Australia.

Dr. Bomsi Wadia: The only Indian to have participated in London to Sydney Marathon rallies

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50 years after the first London to Sydney Marathon took place, Dr. Bomsi Wadia says, “It was one of the most memorable adventures of my life. I loved it so much, that I even took part in the 1977 event. In the first one in 1968, my teammates were Farokh Kaka and K Tarmaster. All of us were amateurs and all I had was my love for cars and long drives. I also thought myself to be a skillful driver, but I was nowhere close to those international professional champions.”

Article by Bob Rupani | Overdrive

Prod Dr. Wadia and he eagerly adds, “When it became known that I was keen to participate in the world’s biggest motoring adventure ever, one of my patients gifted me a Ford Cortina Lotus MKII. Back then it was one of the most popular cars for competition and I got mine prepared in the UK itself and left it to the experts to decide what to do. The only thing I insisted on was thatthe car be painted red, my favourite colour. As many as 20 participants had opted to drive Cortinas in the rally, and the competition number I was allotted was 81. At the start in London, we had many Indians, mainly Sikhs and Guajaratis cheering for us and giving us a warm send-off.”

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Air India flew Dr. Bomsi Wadia’s Lotus Cortina for the start of the London to Sydney Marathon

Dr. Bomsi Wadia was one of India’s leading and most respected gynaecologists at that time, and by all accounts did fairly well in the 1968 event. He and his team-mates did not have any support crew or big backing. They carried whatever they needed in the car itself and if they needed any mechanical assistance, they approached local mechanics wherever they found them.

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Dr. Bomsi Wadia and Suresh Naik, at the inaugural Himalayan Rally in 1980

Dr. Wadia’s team maintained a respectable pace, though they never really rivalled their seasoned competitors. Some of the best drivers in the world were fighting fiercely for every minute and the leadership position changed often. Shortly before the Khyber Pass, Wadia’s Lotus Cortina ran into serious mechanical problems. By the time they got it fixed with the help of some locals, too much time had been lost. Dr. Bomsi Wadia did drive up to Bombay his home city, but sadly he was out of the competition and could not board the ship to Australia. But being the great sportsman that he is, he stood on the docks at Ballard Pier and helped other participants load their cars for the journey across the sea to Australia. He shouted instructions at the loaders in Hindi, spoke to the customs staff and ensured everything went smoothly for the others.

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Dr. Bomsi Wadia met the late Prime Minister Indira Gandhi at the Himalayan Rally

This was appreciated by almost all the competitors. In fact many of them are known to have said that their Indian experience was unforgettable. They fondly recall the massive crowds, the cows, the biggest ever public reception in Indore, the many parties in Bombay including some fun ones at the Royal Yacht Club and Taj Mahal Hotel, and the resourceful mechanics who helped fix many a difficult problem.

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Dr. Wadia’s Lotus Cortina that took part in both the 1968 and 1977 London Sydney Marathon’s still survives

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We at OVERDRIVE are very keen to save Dr. Wadia’s historic rally car

Dr. Bomsi Wadia’s Lotus Cortina was to be sent back after the event. But he had grown fond of it and applied for permission to the Collector of Bombay to keep it. Permission was fortunately granted and later when it was announced that the second London to Sydney would be run in 1977, Dr. Bomsi Wadia decided to take part again. Air India stepped forward to help and flew the same Lotus Cortina to London for preparation. This time, his teammates were Adi Malgham and Suresh Naik, both very fine car tuners capable of fixing most problems. Despite this, they were sadly forced to drop out in Iran.

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The engine and gearbox are all there, and this former rally car can be still restored to all its glory

Soon after in 1980, the first ever Himalayan Rally was held and Dr. Bomsi Wadia participated in a Toyota Celica GT that had again been gifted to him by a patient. His co-driver was Suresh Naik and Dr. Wadia also met the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi at the Himalayan.

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Dr. Bomsi Wadia

But what of the Lotus Cortina? Well, as you can see in the photographs published here for the first time ever, it still survives and is very much in our country. Almost the entire body is intact and both the engine and gearbox remain in the car. Due to Dr. Wadia’s advancing age and several health related issues, he has been unable to really care for it and the neglect and passage of time have taken its toll on this illustrious Cortina. But it can still be saved and restored to all its glory. It will of course require a fair bit of money and lots of dedicated work. But it can be done. I am very keen to see this car brought back again to life and we at OVERDRIVE are willing to commit ourselves to this project. But we need support. In case you are willing to help, please contact the author at
bob@overdrive.co.in.

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Bob Rupani, Consulting Editor, OVERDRIVE with Dr. Bomsi Wadia

Parsi community gets partial relief; metro station to shift away from fire temple

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In a partial relief for the Parsi community, the Metro Rail Authority on Monday informed the Supreme Court that it will shift the Kalbadevi Metro III station 20 metres away from the nearest boundary wall of the Wadia Atash Behram (Fire Temple).

Manthank Mehta | Times of India

MumbaiWadiaji

The Atash Behram situated at the Princess Street junction in south Mumbai, is one of the eight in India, and was consecrated in 1830.

The earlier location of the station box was very close to the fire temple with an overlap of 2 metres. Last year, some community members led by structural engineer Jamshed Sukhadwalla had dragged the metro rail to court, opposing its plan to dig a tunnel underneath the temple.

However, the court had permitted the metro to take the tunnel up to 3.5 metres inside the premises. The court directed it to take precautionary measures to ensure the structure would not disturbed.

“I am pleased at the stand taken by MMRC to reduce the entry-exit box at the south end of the metro station. The problems created by some of our High Priests in November 2017 have now been set right,” the main petitioner Jamshed Sukhadwalla said on Monday.

In an affidavit filed before the Supreme Court, Mumbai Metro Rail Corporation Ltd (MMRCL) stated, “Taking into consideration the non-availability of some of the private land pockets, the excavation box A of Kalbadevi station has been shortened by approximately 22 meters. As a result, the box is now 19.8 meters away from the nearest boundary of the Wadia Atash Behram from the earlier distance of 2.2 meters overlap and temporary secant pile is now 18.3 meters away from the nearest boundary of Wadia Atash Behram.”

The affidavit further stated, “This has resulted in changes in further internal planning the space. The NATM part and platform locations have been modified accordingly by shifting them northwards suitably. The back of house facilities earlier proposed in Box A are now accommodated at lower/platform level will have to be built as per NATM works.”

According to the report on the Method of Construction of Kalbadevi Station near the Wadiaji Atash Behram placed before the supreme court, the MMRCL said “Preference will be given to mechanical breaking of rock. However, if unavoidable, controlled blasting will be resorted to.”

The report has been prepared by Maple-led consortium, who the general consultant for Metro Line 3.

On the water levels in Wadia Atash Behram, the report said, “In case of any construction related draw down of water levels in the well is observed, recharge of ground water shall be initiated through the six number of recharge wells in the vicinity of Wadia Atash Behram”.

On Monday, senior advocate Fali Nariman and Zerick Dastur appeared for the petitioners in the apex court.

Ervad Zal Darius Mody Ordained as Navar

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Ervad Zal Darius Mody was recently ordained as a Navar on December 20, 2018, Roj Khordad, Mah Amardad, in memory of his grand uncle Ervad Sorab Hormusji Mody.  Zal was taught his Navar prayers by his grandfather Ervad Keki H. Mody and guided and mentored for his Navar initiation by Ervad Keki Ravji at the Cama Baug Agiary in Mumbai. 

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Zal (11) attends Chapman Elementary School in Cheshire, Connecticut. Zal is the son of proud parents Tinaz and Darius Mody, brother of Jehan Mody and beloved grandson of Rupy and Lovji Hakim of New York and Diane and Ervad Keki Mody of Connecticut. Zal thoroughly enjoyed his experiences both culturally and spiritually on his first trip to India.

Zal and his parents and grandparents are members of the Zoroastrian Association of Greater New York (ZAGNY)

Wishing young Ervad Zal hearty congratulations and best wishes for abundant good health, joy, success, happiness and many long years in the service of our glorious Zoroastrian religion.

145-year-old Parsi agiyari in Rajkot battered by encroachments

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The only agiyari (fire temple), holy place of worship for Zoroastrians or Parsis in Rajkot, has been battered by encroachments from nearby residents, causing irreparable damage to the 145-year-old structure.

67812377According to trustees Rajkot Zarthosty Anjuman Trust that manages the agiyari, despite their representations to the Rajkot Municipal Commissioner and district collector, there has been not action against the encroachments.

Kushman Tamboli, secretary of the trust said they were helpless against nuisance from nearby residents, who have allegedly constructed illegal toilets and other structures on the agiyari’s outside walls.

“Illegal construction and encroachment on public street adjacent to the agiyari have come up over the years. Despite objection, illegal toilets have been constructed touching the outer boundary walls of the agyari. The waste from the toilets are directly affecting water in our well,” said Tamboli.

According to Tamboli, the well is essential part of a the agiyari and the water from it is used to perform religious rituals. The well water has been polluted and become unfit for human consumption due to sewage water from illegal toilets, he added.

Tamboli has also alleged that some people living near the agiyari were threatening the trustees for raising the issue with civic authorities. When TOI team visited the agiyari some of the residents objected to them taking pictures.

There are only 13 Parsis of four families living in Rajkot currently.

When contacted Rajkot municipal commissioner Banccha Nidhi Pani said, “We will soon take action against illegal construction if any and try to solve the sewage problem.”

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