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PARSEE FESTIVALS AND OBSERVANCES.
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constantly cast ashes or cut-straw upon her head, in token of griet. These pass round in a circle, accompanied or followed by a company on foot who beat upon their breast, crying, "Hi Hossein! Hai Hossein!" Sometimes, a person represented in a dying state, his body covered with wounds and blood, and darts and daggers run into it, is carried about in procession. It would seem that this festival is now celebrated with less effort and effect than form rly. It is entirely disapproved by the Suuis.
PARSEE.
A
Parsees originally came from Prsia, where they were once the ruling nation. The Persian Empire was extended in their time from th Mediterranean to the Irdus, from the Jaxartes to Arabia and the confines of Egypt. They had also extended their conquests into Indi.
ets into Indi. But after the overthrow of their last monarch, Yez lezerd III., by Caliph Omar, Persia became a prey to the Arabs and Turks, who exercised a most tyrannical sway with the view of converting Parsees to the Moslem Faith. To escape religious persecution and oppression at the hands of their Mahomedan conquerors, a very large number of Parsees fled from their mother country, and about the eighth century took refuge at Sanjam, in West rn India, where Hindoo idolatry and polytheism were prevalent. Parsees, however, clung to their own rites and ceremonies and preserved monotheism wherever they went and in whatever position their lot was cast. From Saujam they dispersed themselves into small knots over the whole of Guzerat, and we find them occupying responsible positions under the sway of the Delhi Moguls, and also under the Portuguese Government at Bombay. They had been rendering material assistance, both pecuniary and mercantile, to the Honour- able the East India Co. at Surat. Surat had, however, to yield its commercial importance to Bombay, which, being the principal seaport of Western India, afforded peculiar advantages for the development of commerce, in which the Parsees have taken the leading part. To the shores of China they were the first to migra e in 1756, and for more than a hundred years Parsee firms have been carrying on a thriv ́ng trade in Canton, Macao, Hongkong, and Shanghai. With Bengal, Pegu, Rangoon, Madras, and the Malabar coast they also began to trade in rice, timber, &c. at an early date. Under be fostering care of the British they soon extended their trade with England in cotton, picce goods, and other staples. The particular characteristics of the community ar, devout loyalty, love of truth and constitutional justice, libe- rality, and mercantile enterprise. These have led to their rapid dev lopment from a state of obscurity and poverty into opulence and social and political importance. The liberality of t'e Parsees is proverbial. From the year 1803 we find them contributing to subscriptions raised in England; as in the memorial fund of William Pitt, the testimonial to Dr. Jenner, the weil known discoverer and propagator of vaccination, the London Patriotic Fund of 1804, the Marquis of Cornwallis Memorial Fund of 1806, and the London Hospital Fund of 1808 and several others, without needlessly entering into a description of the way in which they have always stood forward during the last fifty years in the cause of suffering humanity.
The Parsees of India are divided into two sec's-the "Shanshahis" or "Rasmis," and the "Kudmis" or "Churigars," the former of whom constitute the larger portion of the race. This division originated only about a hundred and fifty years ago, when a learned Persian priest, named Jamasp, arrived in India, and found that his co-religionists differed from their brethren of Iran in their calculation of time by a full month, and in other minor points relating to their "Liturgy." Serious disputes arose in consequence, which ended in the formation of the two sects, the Shanshahis adhering to their own views, and the Kudmis adopting the opinions imported by Jamasp, thus agree ng with their Persian brethren. Notwithstanding this division, no estrangement exists between them in their social intercourse. Th difference lies only in their computation of time, and in some slight variations in their form of prayer. Intermarriage is allowed, as well as admission to each other's places of worship.
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The festivals of the Parsees are celebrated with little or no outward pomp. Their holidays are mostly occupied in prayers in the morning, and festivities and rejoicing
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