Towers of Silence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A late 19th century engraving of a Zoroastrian Tower of Silence in Mumbai.
Enlarge
A late 19th century engraving of a Zoroastrian Tower of Silence in Mumbai.

The Towers of Silence (also dakhma or dokhma or doongerwadi) are circular raised structures used by Zoroastrians for exposure of the dead.

Contents

[edit] Introduction

Zoroastrians consider a dead body - as also cut hair and nail-parings - to be nasu, unclean. According to tradition, the purpose of exposure is to preclude the pollution of earth or fire (see Zam and Atar respectively). Corpses are therefore placed atop a tower and so exposed to the sun and to birds of prey. Bodies are arranged in three rings: men around the outside, women in the second circle, and children in the innermost ring. The ritual precinct may only be entered by a special class of pallbearers. Once the bones have been bleached by the sun and wind, which can take as long as a year, they are collected in an ossuary pit at the center of the tower and/or are eventually washed out to sea.

This form of ritual exposure was very likely inherited from the Magi,[1][2] following the arrival of Zoroastrianism in Western Iran, but probably did not become common practice until the present era. In Zoroastrian doctrine, the practice is only attested in the Vendidad, a Magi[1][2] (or Magi-influenced) composition of the Parthian (141 BCE-224 CE) and Sassanid (226-651 CE) eras. Because the Vendidad is structured as a question-and-answer session between Zoroaster and Ahura Mazda,[3] it is frequently supposed that the injunctions of the Vendidad reflects Zoroaster's own philosophies. In practice however, the funerary traditions of the ancient Zoroastrians is unknown, but as has been judged from burial mounds[4] and from the tombs of the emperors such as those at Naqsh-e Rustam, it is likely that they were interred. According to legend (incorporated by Ferdowsi in the Shahnameh), Zoroaster is himself interred in a tomb at Balkh (in present-day Afghanistan).

[edit] In Greater Iran

In the Iranian Zoroastrian tradition, the towers were built atop hills or low mountains in desert locations distant from population centers. In the early twentieth century, the Iranian Zoroastrians gradually discontinued their use and began to favor burial or cremation. Exposure of the dead was banned by the Iranian government in 1970.

[edit] On the Indian subcontinent

Following the rapid expansion of the Indian cities, the squat buildings are today in or near population centers, but separated from the metropolitan bustle by forest gardens. In Parsi Zoroastrian tradition, exposure of the dead is additionally considered to be an individual's final act of charity, providing the birds with what would otherwise be destroyed.

In the past several decades, the population of birds of prey on the Indian subcontinent has greatly declined, in equal parts due to a) increasing pollution, b) growth of the cities such that the natural habitat of the birds was destroyed, and c) diclofenac poisoning of the birds following the introduction of that drug for livestock in the 1990s[5] (diclofenac for cattle was banned by the Indian government in 2006). The few surviving birds are often unable to fully consume the bodies.[6] Parsi communities in India are currently evaluating captive breeding of vultures and the use of "solar concentrators" (which are essentially large mirrors) to accelerate decomposition.[7]

The right to use the Towers of Silence is a much debated issue among the Parsi community (see Parsi for details). The facilities are usually managed by the anjumans, the predominantly conservative (usually having five priests on a nine-member board) local Zoroastrian associations. In accordance with Indian statutes, these associations have the domestic authority over trust properties and have the right to grant or restrict entry and use, with the result that the anjumans frequently prohibit the use by the offspring of a "mixed marriage", that is where one parent is a Parsi and the other is not.

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

*   Boyce, Mary (1979). Zoroastrians: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-41523-903-6.
  1. ^ a b Zaehner, Richard Charles (1956). The Teachings of the Magi:A Compendium of Zoroastrian Beliefs. London/New York: George Allen & Unwin/MacMillan.
  2. ^ a b Zaehner, Richard Charles (1961). The Dawn and Twilight of Zoroastrianism. New York: Putnam.
    Portions of the book are available online.
  3. ^ Darmesteter, James (trans.). Zend-Avesta, Vol. 1 of 3. In Müller, Friedrich Max (ed.) (1880). SBE. Oxford: OUP.
  4. ^ Falk, Harry (1989). "Soma I and II". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (BSOAS) 52 (1).
  5. ^ Adam, David. "Cattle drug blamed as India's vultures near extinction", Guardian Unlimited, 31 January, 2006.
  6. ^ Swan, Gerry et al. (2006). "Removing the threat of diclofenac to critically endangered Asian vultures". PLoS Biology 4 (3): e66.
  7. ^ Srivastava, Sanjeev. "Parsis turn to solar power", BBC News South Asia, 18 July, 2001.

[edit] Further reading

In other languages