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Pakistan’s Parsi community shrinks as youth make ‘difficult decision’ to migrate

Many young and skilled Pakistanis want to leave a country wracked with political uncertainty, security challenges and a struggling economy

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Garbage pickers sort waste strewn around the corner of the formerly clean and tidy Sohrab Katrak Parsi Colony, which was nearly deserted by its original inhabitants, in Karachi. Photo: AFP

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

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.

Elisha Amra shows a corner of her grandparents’ home with photos of their prophet Zoroaster and ancestral family members, in a Karachi enclave reserved for Zoroastrians. Photo: AFP
Elisha Amra shows a corner of her grandparents’ home with photos of their prophet Zoroaster and ancestral family members, in a Karachi enclave reserved for Zoroastrians. Photo: AFP

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.

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