Source: Electric New Paper, Singapore
No vultures, no mountains, no sky burial
In the third of our series on smaller ethnic groups here, we feature the Parsis. NG TZE YONG reports
August 19, 2005
WHEN a Parsi dies, the body is left on high ground for vultures to devour.
Parsis believe that burying the dead pollutes the earth. And that by feeding the bodies to birds, they are returning to nature in a better way.
In Singapore, however, sky burial is not practised, as there are neither wild vultures nor mountains to leave the corpses on.
Parsi Singaporeans bury their dead in a Choa Chu Kang cemetery.
The body is placed in a concrete coffin to prevent contact with the earth.
In 2007, the land on which the Parsi cemetery stands, located close to a military training area, will be acquired by the Government. The cemetery will be relocated across the road.
Not that it matters that much. Cremation has slowly gained acceptance among the Parsis here.
Parsis, most of them traders, started arriving here from India at the beginning of the 20th century.
A wealthy Parsi businessman, Mr Navroji Mistri, donated nearly a million dollars in 1953 to build a paediatric wing at the Singapore General Hospital.
Mistri Road was named after him and Parsi Road after the community. Both roads are in the Tanjong Pagar area.
Today, there are fewer than 200 Parsi Singaporeans, and maintaining the Parsi identity has been a challenge.
Their religion, Zoroastrianism, is more than 3,000 years old.
Parsis worship in temples where fire burns day and night on a round tray placed on a large urn, constantly tended with sandalwood by priests. There is also an inner sanctum, which the priest alone enters, to conduct rituals.
There is no Fire Temple in Singapore, and Parsis worship in their homes.
They light an oil lamp and say the prayers themselves.
The community has one part-time priest who works as an administrator in a trading company.
'It is completely different,' said Madam Navaz Dastur, a housewife.
Unlike most religions, there is no conversion in Zoroastrianism. When a Parsi woman marries outside the community, her children cannot be Zoroastrian. When a Parsi man does so, his wife cannot become one either.
'For us, it is either sink or swim,' said Madam Dastur.
The Parsi Zoroastrian Association in Singapore organises monthly gatherings for members to play tennis or go bowling together. Twice yearly, the community celebrates major religious festivals together.
'The biggest challenge for us is to make sure we remain one big family,' said Mr Russi Ghadiali, president of the association.
It is a struggle to keep the youth interested in their heritage.
Young people go for these activities but, Madam Dastur joked, 'often only under duress'.
They identify themselves strongly as Parsis, but do not understand Farsi, the original language of the Parsis.
At the same time, the Parsi population is ageing. Almost one-third are reaching the age of 50.
Most Parsis here have sent their children to local schools.
Mr Ghadiali's daughter, Kharmayne, went to St Margaret's Primary School and Raffles Girls' School.
She was also a national gymnast, representing Singapore in the Asean School Games from 1988 to 1990 and in the SEA Games in 1991.
'As a young Parsi, there are a lot of avenues out there for one to reconnect with one's heritage,' said Ms Kharmayne Ghadiali, 29, a human resource consultant. But she sees herself as a Singaporean first.
'If you want to go to a second level, then I would tell you I am also Parsi,' she said.
'In any case, you really can't just say you are Singaporean, period.
'Singaporean identity is a combined identity. You need to say you're also Chinese, Malay or Indian.
'To really be Singaporean, you need to be something else as well.'
>tzeyong@sph.com.sg