Berliner Boersenzeitung - Pakistan's Parsi community dwindles as young migrate

EUR -
AED 4.324133
AFN 78.157457
ALL 96.380399
AMD 449.156435
ANG 2.108082
AOA 1079.707922
ARS 1708.376893
AUD 1.752917
AWG 2.119677
AZN 2.006313
BAM 1.95298
BBD 2.371775
BDT 143.902177
BGN 1.955017
BHD 0.444321
BIF 3482.570496
BMD 1.177435
BND 1.511917
BOB 8.155188
BRL 6.527745
BSD 1.177599
BTN 105.800204
BWP 15.479579
BYN 3.437236
BYR 23077.71732
BZD 2.36837
CAD 1.61079
CDF 2590.356452
CHF 0.929214
CLF 0.02719
CLP 1066.642572
CNY 8.275604
CNH 8.246852
COP 4352.975558
CRC 588.150597
CUC 1.177435
CUP 31.202016
CVE 110.105986
CZK 24.242911
DJF 209.254133
DKK 7.471298
DOP 73.813399
DZD 152.737266
EGP 55.99151
ERN 17.661518
ETB 183.214625
FJD 2.671839
FKP 0.871688
GBP 0.872174
GEL 3.161459
GGP 0.871688
GHS 13.101024
GIP 0.871688
GMD 87.723409
GNF 10292.136168
GTQ 9.021971
GYD 246.363158
HKD 9.150728
HNL 31.040172
HRK 7.536646
HTG 154.187324
HUF 386.909506
IDR 19748.285623
ILS 3.759113
IMP 0.871688
INR 105.739868
IQD 1542.672084
IRR 49599.431135
ISK 148.039301
JEP 0.871688
JMD 187.838725
JOD 0.834848
JPY 184.356862
KES 151.830639
KGS 102.937263
KHR 4720.163129
KMF 492.168057
KPW 1059.6911
KRW 1698.249636
KWD 0.361661
KYD 0.981379
KZT 605.235922
LAK 25485.086391
LBP 105452.458482
LKR 364.533543
LRD 208.428104
LSL 19.598596
LTL 3.476659
LVL 0.712219
LYD 6.372796
MAD 10.743984
MDL 19.754387
MGA 5385.199863
MKD 61.559944
MMK 2472.719656
MNT 4189.093957
MOP 9.432538
MRU 46.631655
MUR 54.150661
MVR 18.191809
MWK 2041.94237
MXN 21.0888
MYR 4.766848
MZN 75.250287
NAD 19.598596
NGN 1708.563955
NIO 43.337412
NOK 11.785418
NPR 169.280526
NZD 2.017192
OMR 0.452936
PAB 1.177594
PEN 3.962577
PGK 5.085655
PHP 69.127624
PKR 329.871502
PLN 4.215275
PYG 7980.474654
QAR 4.292301
RON 5.092527
RSD 117.392439
RUB 93.026079
RWF 1715.115758
SAR 4.416208
SBD 9.600085
SCR 17.031368
SDG 708.231214
SEK 10.782833
SGD 1.511948
SHP 0.883381
SLE 28.346782
SLL 24690.218261
SOS 671.826899
SRD 45.137547
STD 24370.518102
STN 24.464668
SVC 10.304119
SYP 13020.528837
SZL 19.582719
THB 36.583326
TJS 10.822025
TMT 4.132795
TND 3.425952
TOP 2.83498
TRY 50.438357
TTD 8.010397
TWD 36.965602
TZS 2908.263751
UAH 49.678255
UGX 4250.860936
USD 1.177435
UYU 46.023533
UZS 14192.503285
VES 339.20575
VND 30955.931942
VUV 142.083494
WST 3.283407
XAF 655.00826
XAG 0.014866
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.182076
XCG 2.122335
XDR 0.815866
XOF 655.011038
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.759698
ZAR 19.625523
ZMK 10598.328156
ZMW 26.583495
ZWL 379.133447
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.11

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    77.64

    +0.19%

  • BCC

    0.4200

    75.13

    +0.56%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.05

    +0.17%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.26

    0%

  • BTI

    0.0300

    57.27

    +0.05%

  • RIO

    1.3500

    82.24

    +1.64%

  • AZN

    0.4500

    92.9

    +0.48%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    49.08

    +0.24%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.09

    +0.3%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    15.5

    -0.19%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    41.11

    +0.05%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    13.12

    +0.15%

  • BP

    -0.0400

    34.27

    -0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

Pakistan's Parsi community dwindles as young migrate
Pakistan's Parsi community dwindles as young migrate / Photo: Asif HASSAN - AFP

Pakistan's Parsi community dwindles as young migrate

From a gated community for her Zoroastrian faith in Pakistan's megacity Karachi, 22-year-old Elisha Amra has waved goodbye to many friends migrating abroad as the ancient Parsi community dwindles.

Text size:

Soon the film student hopes to join them -- becoming one more loss to Pakistan's ageing Zoroastrian Parsi people, a community who trace their roots back to Persian refugees from today's Iran more than a millennium ago.

"My plan is to go abroad," Amra said, saying she wants to study for a master's degree in a country without the restrictions of a conservative Muslim-majority society.

"I want to be able to freely express myself", she added.

Zoroastrianism, founded by the prophet Zarathustra, was the predominant religion of the ancient Persian empire, until the rise of Islam with the Arab conquests of the seventh century.

Once the Parsi community in Pakistan had as many as 15,000-20,000 people, said Dinshaw Behram Avari, the head of one of the most prominent Parsi families.

Today, numbers hover around 900 people in Karachi and a few dozen more elsewhere in Pakistan, according to community leaders, many staying together in compounds like where Amra lives.

She acknowledges her life is more comfortable than many in Pakistan -- the Parsis are in general an affluent and highly educated community.

But says she wants to escape the daily challenges that beset the city of some 20 million people -- ranging from power cuts, water shortages and patchy internet to violent street crime.

"I'd rather have a life where I feel safe, and I feel happy and satisfied," she said.

Zubin Patel, 27, a Parsi working in e-commerce in Karachi, has seen more than two dozen Parsi friends leave Karachi for abroad in the past three years.

"More than 20-25 of my friends were living in Karachi, they all started migrating", he said.

- Derelict homes -

That is not unique to Parsis -- many young and skilled Pakistanis want to find jobs abroad to escape a country wracked with political uncertainty and security challenges, a struggling economy and woeful infrastructure.

The number of highly skilled Pakistanis who left for jobs abroad more than doubled according to the latest figures from the Pakistan Economic Survey -- from 20,865 in 2022, to 45,687 in 2023.

Parsis are struggling to adjust in a fast-changing world.

The religion, considered among the oldest in the world, forbids conversion and mixed marriages are frowned upon.

"There is a better chance to find a Zoroastrian partner in Canada, Australia, UK and America than in Pakistan," said Avari, who heads of a chain of hotels.

He points out that Parsi population of Toronto is some 10 times greater than Karachi.

Avari, 57, said that a wave of Parsis left Pakistan during the hardline military rule of Zia-ul-Haq in the 1980s, who enforced a programme of Islamisation.

Since then, Islamist violence has targeted religious minorities, and while Parsis say they have not been targeted, they remain wary.

He suggested the community's high levels of education and Western outlook to life meant many eyed a future abroad, while for those who do stay, family size is shrinking.

"Couples are more interested today in looking after their career; they are not interested in family," he said.

"When they do get married, they will have one child -- and one child is not enough to make a positive impact on the population."

Parsi members were among the pioneers of the shipping and hospitality industries in Karachi, and the city's colonial-era historic district is dotted with Parsi buildings including hospitals and schools.

But as the community declines, many buildings have crumbled, with as many as half the homes in elegant tree-lined streets of the century-old Sohrab Katrak Parsi Colony lying abandoned.

- 'Difficult decision' -

For many among the younger generation, the only pull left keeping them in Pakistan is their ageing relatives.

Patel, the e-commerce worker, said he would leave if he could.

"It would be a difficult decision," he said. "But if I have an opportunity which would give my parents ... a healthy lifestyle, then I'd obviously go for it".

Amra, who visits her 76-year-old grandfather almost daily, worries that her parents will be alone when she leaves.

"You have to figure out a way, eventually, to either bring them to you or come back," she said.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)