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Dear Readers:
For pleasure of your reading, I hope this is
informative.
Many
readers have asked me about the Causes of the fall of
Zoroastrian Iran - The causes are many and can not be
dealt within a short article, but I will try to give a
brief summary which is particularly important for our
Zoroastrian children.
The
Byzantine Emperor, Heraclius struck the first blow to
weaken the Zoroastrian Sasanian Iran. He defeated the
Persians in 622 AD and in 627 AD he invaded Atropatene (Azerbaijan)
and destroyed the Great Fire Temple and entered the
Tigris provinces. Chosroes Abarvez or Parviz 'the
victorious' attempted to resist him but before he could
do so he was treacherously murdered by his son Shiroe
who took the name of Kavadh and ascended the throne as
Kavadh II (Qobad) in 628 AD. Shiroe was born out of
Chosroes' marriage to a Christian Princess, Shirin. This
regicide was the beginning of the end of Zoroastrian
Iran. It is interesting to note that Chosroes Parviz had
succeeded in extending the frontiers of the Sasanian
Empire almost to the limits of the Achaemenid Empire,
but at the critical juncture he was betrayed by his son.
It is
an irony of fate that Kavadah II who murdered his father
to come to the throne died within a year in an epidemic
and succeeded by his infant son Ardashir III who was
assassinated by Shahrbaraz, a General of the Persian
Army who seized the throne, in turn being murdered
during his reign of two months. Anarchy set in and
resulted in the succession of short-time rulers,
Yazdegerd, the son of Shahriyar, and grand-son of
Chosroe was found in Istaker fire-temple and he came to
the throne in 633 AD. He became the last Sasanian King.
A perfect scenario was in order for the tribal savagery
of united Arab Bedouins to cast the final blow.
The
prolonged exhausting hostilities reduced the might and
power of both Iran and Byzantium, opening the door for a
newly emerging force from the Arabian desert to
challenge both the states and religions. After several
encounters, the fate of the Sasanian Empire was sealed
in the battle of al-Qaadisiyah (636/637 AD) on the
Euphrates canal, near al-Hirah where to make matters
worse, Rustam, the Sasanian Supreme Commander-in-Chief
was killed. Ctesiphon, the Sasanian capital with all its
vast treasures was now at the mercy of the victorious
Arabs. Yezdegerd fled to Media and with the help of his
Generals organized new resistance and the last battle
was fought at Nehavand (642 AD), south of Hamadan which
finally put an end to all hopes of regaining the Empire.
This was the beginning of the darkest age of
Zoroastrianism. Yezdegerd sought refuge in one province
after another until at last in 651 AD, he was
assassinated near Merve by a miller for his jewels clad
sword.
With
the fall of the Empire, the fate of its religion was
also sealed.
It is
necessary to grasp the background of the emerging force
of the Arabs to understand what made them achieve
victories over one of the mightiest Empires in history.
The prophet Muhammad had made Medina, his adopted city
and Mecca, his birth place, centers of an Arabian
movement that Muslim Arabs developed into a world wide
movement by the conquest of Iran. Arab tribalism beyond
urban fringes was less easily broken than idols. It was
embedded in the desert sparsity that led to warfare and
careful counting of a tribes' male offspring. After
Mecca and Medina became Muslim, it was necessary to
secure allegiance of all the other desert Arab tribal
people. In the process of doing this, wars over water
holes, scanty pastures, men-at-arms and camels were
enlarged into international campaigns of expansion.
The
vulnerability of Sasanid Zoroastrian Iran assisted the
expansionist process. As noted when Yazdegerd III, the
last Zoroastrian Sasanian sovereign came to the throne
in 632 AD, the year of Muhammad's death, he inherited an
empire weakened by Byzantine wars and internal
dissension. After the sad end of the Sasanids, century
after century Zoroastrian faith was persecuted in Iran
and little by little it vanished, except for a few
surviving adherents who remain to the present day in
Yazd and a few other places. Other Zoroastrians
emigrated to western India where they are now
concentrated in Bombay (Mumbai). These Parsis (Persians)
(Note: in the six century BC, the Persians were referred
to as 'Parsa". It became 'Parsik' in the Pahlavi
literature and 'Parsi' in the later Sasanian times) have
preserved their sacred writings by carefully creating
hand written manuscripts and faithfully following their
religious tenants so also those who remained behind in
Iran, preserved their ancient faith till the present
times.
Presently
some Parsis and Iranian Zoroastrians (after the fall of
the Shah) have migrated to Western countries to better
their prospects. They both are facing bravely new social
and family values and their children may be at great
risk of being assimilated ethically and culturally into
the major religions of the West. But they do not have to
fear for the worst, as the present trend towards better
understanding of their religion together with
inheritance strength of Zoroastrianism will give them no
cause of concern in keeping their faith intact.
With
kind regards,
Dr.
Pallan R. Ichaporia. |