Very interesting! I have been on several Zarathustrian temples in Iran and even in Yast and outside. I really was fascinated. My wife is Persian and I learned the language of Farsi. So it was much easier for me to speak with the Zoroastrians. What a great time in Iran! Many Greetings from Linz-Austria 🇦🇹 Europe! 😎👍🫡💪🏔🍺😺🍀🍀🍀🐺
There are lots of Zoroastrian people in India. The Parsi. They left Iran when the Arabs arrived and migrated to India. They are very successful in business and finance. HSBC bank was founded by a Parsi. They are very successful in India these days.
Yes, in Gujarat, Zoroastrians are beloved businessman/woman who do a lot for their communities, as in for Parsis and Hindus. Gujraties love Parsis, they have become one.
Parsis/ Zoroastrians comprised almost half of the population of Iran until the Safavid era when they were mass-murdered .The natives of provinces such as Kerman, Yazd, and Isfahan were called Gabri ( Zoroastrians ) about 300 years ago.
Mithroun That's not true., Persians were Monotheistic Zoroastrians with Ahuramazda as the only God, and altough Mitraism was the pre-Zoroastrian pagan faith of Persians with litterally the term ( Parsi ) as its fifth grade , but it became less relevant after the famious Persian revolt which was based on religious grounds since the Achaemenid dynasty of the Pasargadae clan were hard-core Zoroastrians and the Zoroastrian Mede soilders revolted against the Median king and joined Cyrus the Greats army . The Achaemenids only referred to Ahura Mazda as the only great God in their inscriptions, Xerxers even named the non-zoroastrians as the Daiva worshippers I the daiva inscription. However, during the ruling of Artaxerxes II ( Arsaces ),we see Mithra and Anahita back with equal statistus as Ahura Mazda in his famious stamp , where he is depicted worshipping Mithra ( lion/ sun ) and Anahita sitting on the lion. Once again Mithra was back in inscriptions at point and since Tirdades and Araxes of the Arcasid dynasty cla8med their ancestry from the line of Artaxerxes ( Arsaces Achaemenid) ,Mithra continued to be relevant next to Ahura Mazda . During the Sassanid era Zoroastrianism became the official religion of the court since they too claimed their ancestry from the Achaemenids but from the line of Darius II ,they were natives of Pars Satrapy and core Zoroastrians, they even tried to convert Armenians who were mostly Mithraists to Zoroastrianism but they failed and Armenia became the first christian country thats why Mithraism influenced Christianity as much as it did., however, most of our ceremonies, such as Nowruz , 4shanbeh suri , Sadeh etc etc are directly Zoroastrian rituals and based on monotheism .
@@Light_spot_ based on cyropaedia, cyrus practiced animal sacrifice with the guidance of clergies at the time so if these clergies were zoroastians this practice was against the very core of their beliefs bcos zoroaster was against animal sacrifice right? and if you havent noticed already iranians are really into animal sacrifice even today. one major event that iranians still uphold is the procession during muharam era which as you may witnessed during it animal sacrifice takes place alot and you might be surprised to know that this ritual is actually pagan and was indeed dedicated to mithra on the winter solstice which we call it shabe cheleh and long story short they believed mithra dies on this day bcos sun is on its lowest point in the sky and after three days he comes alive bcos earth simply goes back to its spring orbit and sun constantly comes up and the ceremony held for forty days when sadeh happens which means cheleh bozorg has ended and cheleh kuchak begins and that also ends with chahar shanbeh suri. finally when spring comes mithra is at last shining above sky and like a saviour saves everyone from harshness of winter. and thats why when someone dies in iran theres a sevom and haftom and chehelom which is the end of the mourning period
@Light_spot_ based on cyropaedia, cyrus practiced animal sacrifice with the guidance of clergies at the time so if these clergies were zoroastians this practice was against the very core of their beliefs bcos zoroaster was against animal sacrifice right? and if you havent noticed already iranians are really into animal sacrifice even today. one major event that iranians still uphold is the procession during muharam era which as you may witnessed during it animal sacrifice takes place alot and you might be surprised to know that this ritual is actually pagan and was indeed dedicated to mithra on the winter solstice which we call it shabe cheleh and long story short they believed mithra dies on this day bcos sun is on its lowest point in the sky and after three days he comes alive bcos earth simply goes back to its spring orbit and sun constantly comes up and the ceremony held for forty days when sadeh happens which means cheleh bozorg has ended and cheleh kuchak begins and that also ends with chahar shanbeh suri. finally when spring comes mithra is at last shining above sky and like a saviour saves everyone from harshness of winter. and thats why when someone dies in iran theres a sevom and haftom and chehelom which is the end of the mourning period
@Light_spot_ based on cyropaedia, cyrus practiced animal sacrifice with the guidance of clergies at the time so if these clergies were zoroastians this practice was against the very core of their beliefs bcos zoroaster was against animal sacrifice right? and if you havent noticed already iranians are really into animal sacrifice even today. one major event that iranians still uphold is the procession during muharam era which as you may witnessed during it animal sacrifice takes place alot and you might be surprised to know that this ritual is actually pagan and was indeed dedicated to mithra on the winter solstice which we call it shabe cheleh and long story short they believed mithra dies on this day bcos sun is on its lowest point in the sky and after three days he comes alive bcos earth simply goes back to its spring orbit and sun constantly comes up and the ceremony held for forty days when sadeh happens which means cheleh bozorg has ended and cheleh kuchak begins and that also ends with chahar shanbeh suri. finally when spring comes mithra is at last shining above sky and like a saviour saves everyone from harshness of winter. and thats why when someone dies in iran theres a sevom and haftom and chehelom which is the end of the mourning period
Very interesting! I have been on several Zarathustrian temples in Iran and even in Yast and outside. I really was fascinated. My wife is Persian and I learned the language of Farsi. So it was much easier for me to speak with the Zoroastrians. What a great time in Iran! Many Greetings from Linz-Austria 🇦🇹 Europe! 😎👍🫡💪🏔🍺😺🍀🍀🍀🐺
afarin be poshtekaret braye yadgirye farsi 👏🏻👏🏻🫸🏻🫷🏻
Yazd
This place was so Beautiful 😮 I'm shocked i haven't been there , i really gotta go see it for myself. Love the video From iran 🙏🏻❤️
2:32 The person who shared this music with you must have excellent taste...but beyond that your knowledge of timing in editing is also very good.
There are lots of Zoroastrian people in India.
The Parsi.
They left Iran when the Arabs arrived and migrated to India.
They are very successful in business and finance.
HSBC bank was founded by a Parsi.
They are very successful in India these days.
Yes, in Gujarat, Zoroastrians are beloved businessman/woman who do a lot for their communities, as in for Parsis and Hindus. Gujraties love Parsis, they have become one.
Fascinating
Parsis/ Zoroastrians comprised almost half of the population of Iran until the Safavid era when they were mass-murdered .The natives of provinces such as Kerman, Yazd, and Isfahan were called Gabri ( Zoroastrians ) about 300 years ago.
zoroastrianism never was wide spread in iran. most of our national ceremonies derived from mithraism
Mithroun That's not true., Persians were Monotheistic Zoroastrians with Ahuramazda as the only God, and altough Mitraism was the pre-Zoroastrian pagan faith of Persians with litterally the term ( Parsi ) as its fifth grade , but it became less relevant after the famious Persian revolt which was based on religious grounds since the Achaemenid dynasty of the Pasargadae clan were hard-core Zoroastrians and the Zoroastrian Mede soilders revolted against the Median king and joined Cyrus the Greats army . The Achaemenids only referred to Ahura Mazda as the only great God in their inscriptions, Xerxers even named the non-zoroastrians as the Daiva worshippers I the daiva inscription. However, during the ruling of Artaxerxes II ( Arsaces ),we see Mithra and Anahita back with equal statistus as Ahura Mazda in his famious stamp , where he is depicted worshipping Mithra ( lion/ sun ) and Anahita sitting on the lion. Once again Mithra was back in inscriptions at point and since Tirdades and Araxes of the Arcasid dynasty cla8med their ancestry from the line of Artaxerxes ( Arsaces Achaemenid) ,Mithra continued to be relevant next to Ahura Mazda .
During the Sassanid era Zoroastrianism became the official religion of the court since they too claimed their ancestry from the Achaemenids but from the line of Darius II ,they were natives of Pars Satrapy and core Zoroastrians, they even tried to convert Armenians who were mostly Mithraists to Zoroastrianism but they failed and Armenia became the first christian country thats why Mithraism influenced Christianity as much as it did.,
however, most of our ceremonies, such as Nowruz , 4shanbeh suri , Sadeh etc etc are directly Zoroastrian rituals and based on monotheism .
@@Light_spot_ based on cyropaedia, cyrus practiced animal sacrifice with the guidance of clergies at the time so if these clergies were zoroastians this practice was against the very core of their beliefs bcos zoroaster was against animal sacrifice right? and if you havent noticed already iranians are really into animal sacrifice even today. one major event that iranians still uphold is the procession during muharam era which as you may witnessed during it animal sacrifice takes place alot and you might be surprised to know that this ritual is actually pagan and was indeed dedicated to mithra on the winter solstice which we call it shabe cheleh and long story short they believed mithra dies on this day bcos sun is on its lowest point in the sky and after three days he comes alive bcos earth simply goes back to its spring orbit and sun constantly comes up and the ceremony held for forty days when sadeh happens which means cheleh bozorg has ended and cheleh kuchak begins and that also ends with chahar shanbeh suri. finally when spring comes mithra is at last shining above sky and like a saviour saves everyone from harshness of winter. and thats why when someone dies in iran theres a sevom and haftom and chehelom which is the end of the mourning period
@Light_spot_ based on cyropaedia, cyrus practiced animal sacrifice with the guidance of clergies at the time so if these clergies were zoroastians this practice was against the very core of their beliefs bcos zoroaster was against animal sacrifice right? and if you havent noticed already iranians are really into animal sacrifice even today. one major event that iranians still uphold is the procession during muharam era which as you may witnessed during it animal sacrifice takes place alot and you might be surprised to know that this ritual is actually pagan and was indeed dedicated to mithra on the winter solstice which we call it shabe cheleh and long story short they believed mithra dies on this day bcos sun is on its lowest point in the sky and after three days he comes alive bcos earth simply goes back to its spring orbit and sun constantly comes up and the ceremony held for forty days when sadeh happens which means cheleh bozorg has ended and cheleh kuchak begins and that also ends with chahar shanbeh suri. finally when spring comes mithra is at last shining above sky and like a saviour saves everyone from harshness of winter. and thats why when someone dies in iran theres a sevom and haftom and chehelom which is the end of the mourning period
@Light_spot_ based on cyropaedia, cyrus practiced animal sacrifice with the guidance of clergies at the time so if these clergies were zoroastians this practice was against the very core of their beliefs bcos zoroaster was against animal sacrifice right? and if you havent noticed already iranians are really into animal sacrifice even today. one major event that iranians still uphold is the procession during muharam era which as you may witnessed during it animal sacrifice takes place alot and you might be surprised to know that this ritual is actually pagan and was indeed dedicated to mithra on the winter solstice which we call it shabe cheleh and long story short they believed mithra dies on this day bcos sun is on its lowest point in the sky and after three days he comes alive bcos earth simply goes back to its spring orbit and sun constantly comes up and the ceremony held for forty days when sadeh happens which means cheleh bozorg has ended and cheleh kuchak begins and that also ends with chahar shanbeh suri. finally when spring comes mithra is at last shining above sky and like a saviour saves everyone from harshness of winter. and thats why when someone dies in iran theres a sevom and haftom and chehelom which is the end of the mourning period
خیلی دوستداشتنی هستید❤❤❤❤❤❤
❤❤❤❤
❤
💞
🙏💚🤍❤️🙏
😘
zoroastrianism sounds like persian platonism to me
Maybe Plato was influenced by them .
Zoroastrianism - 4000 yrs. Old
Plato 428 - 347 BC
@JamesStilson-pm5ik everything is possible
Alberto Angela, levate!
Rastrellone, thank you to be alive.
@@Monterojohoodboy grazie a te, davvero, tieni viva l'illusione di un mondo migliore possibile.
Dado, amigo, so happy to see you are enjoying life 🧬 my friend. Have a wonderful spiritual journey. See you soon. I'm in Varna for 20 days.
remember me when u get famouse🥹