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Good Deeds: Parsi trusts from ‘the womb to the tomb’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2018

LEILAH VEVAINA*
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Munich, Germany Email: vevaina@mmg.mpg.de

Abstract

Parsis (Indian Zoroastrians), a small traditionally endogamous group, are well known in India for their philanthropic giving. The Parsis of Mumbai are beneficiaries of hundreds of Parsi public charitable trusts today, and this article will show how trusts, as particular forms of giving, establish perpetual communal obligation connecting the past and present. It will show how the circulation of personal assets through customary inheritance within a family is replaced by the trust with the circulation of communal obligations in perpetuity. While this mechanism of giving has a marked endurance, what has changed is what constitutes ‘the good’ within these deeds. Moving away from traditional philanthropic practices of subsidizing education, medical care, and welfare to the poor, the focus of giving has shifted to the pursuit of communal reproduction, both biological and social.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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Footnotes

I would like to thank Sumathi Ramaswamy and Filippo Osella not only for considering my work for this special issue but also for their insightful critiques and suggestions. I would also like to thank Erica Bornstein, Peter van der Veer, and my colleagues at the Max-Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity for their comments and critiques. I thank my various interlocutors in Mumbai for their time and patience with my never-ending questions. Tim Rosenkranz deserves special thanks for his close readings, advice, and support.

References

*1 Denotes that the person's name was changed to protect their confidentiality. Other persons named in the text have explicitly given consent or are public figures.

2 This article will use Bombay to refer to the city before 1995 when its name was officially changed to Mumbai.

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26 The settlor of a trust no longer pays taxes on those assets, as he or she is completely divested of them.

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33 R. Birla, Stages of Capital, p. 107.

34 M. Sharafi, Law and Identity, p. 9.

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40 While the common orthography in English is panchayat, I reproduce the spelling usage of the institution itself.

41 A very fruitful avenue of future research on charities would be to follow in the line of scholars like Matthew Hull who have analysed the constellation of authority and practice of South Asian bureaucracies, their paper forms, and the effects of professionalization. See Hull, M. S., Government of Paper: The Materiality of Bureaucracy in Urban Pakistan (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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45 For more on this case and its ramifications see M. Sharafi, ‘Judging Conversion to Zoroastrianism: Behind the Scenes of the Parsi Panchayat Case (1908)’, Parsis in India and the Diaspora, pp. 159–180.

46 The 1908 case Petit v. Jeejeebhoy and Kanga v. The Funds and Properties of the BPP (Bombay High Court, Appeal 256 of 2010) are just two examples of cases brought to court to interpret and delimit the functioning of the trust.

47 See M. Sharafi, Law and Identity, for a fascinating and thorough analysis of legislation and case law in the colonial period and their relationship to the formation of Parsi communal identity.

48 In states with a Charity Commissioner, all public charitable trusts are required to register their deeds, file annual audit reports, and get special permissions if any changes to their structure or their holdings occur.

49 During my fieldwork there were two Parsi trust cases being reviewed by the Indian Supreme Court. Kanga v. BPP was settled through mediation, and Gupta v. Pardiwala (Gujarat High Court, Special Civil Application 449 of 2010) is still pending review.

50 Birla, Stages of Capital, p. 105.

51 Cusrow Baug, Ness Baug, Rustom Baug, Jer Baug, Nowroze Baug, with 1545 flats in total.

52 Trust Settlement—The Nowrosjee Nusserwanjee Wadia Trust Buildings for Parsees. 16 August 1916, p. 3.

53 Trust Settlement—The Rustomji Nowrosjee Wadia Trust Building for Parsees. 10 November 1921, p. 5.

54 The Nowrosjee Nusserwanjee Wadia Trust Buildings for Parsees. 16 August 1916, p. 16.

55 Sir Ness's son, Neville Wadia, was given a Navjote and ‘converted’ back to Zoroastrianism (not without controversy) late in his life. He was married to Dinah Wadia, the daughter of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, and spearheaded the success of The Bombay Dyeing Corporation, one of India's largest textile concerns until his death in 1996. See Hinnells, J. R., The Zoroastrian Diaspora: Religion and Migration: Religion and Migration Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), pp. 129135CrossRefGoogle Scholar

56 Ibid., p. 66.

57 Directory of Public Trusts: Greater Bombay and Bombay Suburban District, Section-C, Parsi, Charity Commissioner Maharashtra.

58 This is common use of the word ‘cosmopolitan’ at least in Mumbai, meaning for all communities. For example, a residential building, which houses all communities is known as a ‘cosmopolitan’ building. Trust managers I interviewed used this distinction to describe the intended beneficiaries of their trusts.

59 For example, the various schools and colleges endowed by Sir. Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy, C. J. Readymoney's large endowment to Bombay University, and various Tata scholarship funds. See the appendices in Hinnells, ‘Flowering of Zoroastrian Benevolence’, for the numerous listings.

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63 B. Karkaria, ‘Why is India's Wealthy Parsi Community Vanishing?’, BBC News, 9 January 2016, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-35219331, [accessed 20 December 2017].

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65 See Hinnells, Zoroastrian Diaspora, for a comprehensive overview of various diaspora communities across the world.

66 The effect of intermarriage for Parsi women's communal membership is varied in the diaspora and even in India today. The community in Mumbai remains the strictest or most orthodox in their exclusion of intermarried women and their children.

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72 Marzban Hathiram quoted in V. C. Sekhar, ‘No Room for Unwanted Neighbors’, Times of India (Mumbai edition), 25 April 2005.

73 N. Bharucha, ‘3125 new flats for Parsis on the anvil’, Times of India (Mumbai edition), 29 July 2009.

74 For more analysis of the trust's new real estate development projects, see Vevaina, L., ‘Good Thoughts, Good Words, and Good (trust) Deeds: Parsis, Risk, and Real Estate in Mumbai’, in Handbook of Religion and the Asian City: Aspiration and Urbanization in the Twenty-First Century, ed. van der Veer, P. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2015), pp. 152167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

75 This redistribution of attention and funds did not go without controversy, and several suits brought forth by self-defined ‘watch-dog’ groups took the BPP to court over what they claimed were mismanagement of charitable funds.

76 The opaque criteria as well as the high value of these flats make corruption allegations almost endemic to the system of allotment. A formal investigation was underway in 2014 as Rupees 210,000 were uncovered in the cupboard of the BPP CEO who had recently died. Allegations also circulate frequently in the Parsi press and conversation about individual trustees, and how much they have to gain from favourable flat allotments.

77 Bornstein, Disquieting Gifts, p. 63. See also Parry, J., ‘The “Crisis of Corruption” and “The Idea of India”’, in Morals of Legitimacy: Between Agency and System, ed. Pardo, I. (New York: Berghahn), pp. 2757.Google Scholar

78 Birla, Stages of Capital; Singh, ‘Zamindars’ and ‘Forum Shopping’; Beverly, ‘Property, Authority and Personal Law’; Sharafi, Law and Identity; Kozlowski, Muslim Endowments and Society, and Basu, S., She Comes to Take Her Rights: Indian Women, Property and Propriety, SUNY Press, 1999Google Scholar.

79 A. Singh, ‘The Divergence of the Economic Fortunes of Hindus and Muslims in British India: A Comparative Institutional Analysis’ (PhD Dissertation, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, 2008).