Zoroaster

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This article is about the prophet. For the Italian rock music album, see Zarathustra

Image:Zartosht.jpg

Zoroaster (Persian: زرتشت, Gujarati:ઝરથુશ્ત્ર) was an ancient Iranian prophet who preached in Bactria and the founder of Zoroastrianism, which was the national religion of the Sassanian dynasty of the Persian Empire, and played an important role in the earlier Achaemenean and Parthian regimes. The original form of his name was Zarathushtra (Zaraθuštra), but he is usually known in English as Zoroaster (after the Greek version, Ζωροάστρης, Zoroastres). In Persian the name takes the form of Zartosht.

Zoroaster is generally accepted as a historical figure, but efforts to date Zoroaster vary widely. Scholarly estimates are usually roughly near 1700 BC. Others, however, give earlier estimates, making him a candidate as the founder of the earliest religion based on revealed scripture, while still others place him in the 6th century BC, which would make him contemporary to the rise of the Achaemenids.

==Name==Template:Zoroastrianism The name Zaraθ-uštra is probably a Bahuvrihi compound in the Avestan language, of zarəta- "old" and uštra "camel" (Modern Persian oshtor) , translating to "having old camels, the one who owns old camels". The first part of the name has also been translated as "yellow" or "golden", from the Avestan zaray, (Modern Persian zærd) giving the meaning "[having] yellow camels". A more romantic, but inaccurate, translation of the name, in the past has been "[bringer of the] golden dawn", based on the mistaken assumption that the second part of the name is a variant of the Vedic word Ushas meaning "dawn". This last translation seems to have derived from a desire to give a more fitting meaning to the prophet's name than "owner of feeble camels." [1]

Contents

Zoroaster in History

Estimates for the lifetime of Zoroaster vary widely, depending upon the sources used.

  • Archaeological evidence is usually inconclusive for questions of religion. However, a Russian archaeologist, Victor Sarianidi, links Zoroaster to ca. 2000 BC based upon excavations of the BMAC (Asgarov, 1984). The Iranian religion is generally accepted to have had its roots in the 3rd millennium BC; but Zoroaster himself did already look back on a long, religious tradition.
  • Linguistic analysis of the Gāthās, the only texts directly-connected with Zoroaster, and comparison with other known Indo-Iranian languages, especially Sanskrit, can only give rough estimates, generally dating Zoroaster to around 1700 BC.
  • The historical approach compares social customs described in the Gāthās to what is known of the time and region through other historical studies. Since the Gathas are very cryptic, and open to much interpretation, such a method can also only yield very rough estimates. Gherardo Gnoli gives a date near ca. 1000 BC.
  • Other scholars have been arguing even later dates, now widely-rejected. Darmesteter reports 100 BC; "before 458 BC" is cited by H.S. Nyberg in Die Religionen des Alten Iran (1938).

Life

What we know of the life of Zoroaster is from the Avesta, the Gāthās, the Greek texts, oral history (which is a significant method of teaching in the tradition), and what can be inferred from archaeological evidence.

The 13th section of the Avesta, the Spena Nask, the description of Zoroaster's life, has perished over the centuries. The biographies in the seventh book of the Dēnkard (9th century) and the Šahnāma are based on ealier text which are no longer extant.

It is fair to say that Zoroaster lived in the northwestern area of ancient Persian territory. The Greeks refer to him as a Bactrian (present-day Afghanistan) because this is where he preached his religion after leaving his homeland, a Median for his father was from Atharpatan or a Persian because his mother was from Ragai about 3-5,000 years ago. His wife was named Hvōvi, and they had three daughters, Freni, Pourucista and Triti, and three sons, Isat Vastar, Uruvat-Nara and Hvare Ciθra. His mother was Dughdova; his father was Pourushaspa Spitāma, son of Haecadaspa Spitāma. His illumination from Ahura Mazda came at age 30. His first converts were his wife and children, and a cousin named Maidhyoimangha.

The Greek writers recount a few points regarding the childhood of Zoroaster and his hermitic life-style. According to tradition, and Pliny's Natural History, Zoroaster laughed on the day of his birth, and lived in the wilderness. He seems to have enjoyed exploring the wilderness from a young age. Plutarch compares him with Lycurgus and Numa Pompilius (Numa, 4). Dio Chrysostom relates Zoroaster's Ahura Mazdā to Zeus. Plutarch, drawing partly on Theopompus, speaks of Zoroastrianism in Isis and Osiris.

Here, he is a mortal, empowered by trust in his God, and the protection of his allies. He faces outward opposition, and unbelief and inward doubt. These human qualities support a historical Zoroaster, despite a lack of historical detail. The Gāthās are poetic admonitions and prophecies, cast in the form of dialogues with God and the Aməa Spəntas "Immortals" (Pahlavi Amahraspandān). However, they seem to contain allusions to personal events, over-coming obstacles in life imposed by competing priests, and the ruling class. He had difficulty spreading his teachings, and was even treated with ill-will in his mother's hometown (an exceptional insult in his culture and time).

It is important to note the differences between the Zoroaster of the later Avesta and the "Zoroaster" of the Gāthās. In the later Avesta, he is depicted wrestling with the Daēva or "evil immortals" (Pahlavi Dēwān), and, in a story that may have inspired a remarkably similar account of Jesus in the New Testament, is tempted by Ahriman to renounce his faith. (Yasht, 17,19)

The historical Zoroaster, however, eludes categorization as a legendary character. The Gāthās within the Avesta make claim to be the ipsissima verba of the prophet. The Vendidad also gives accounts of the dialogues between Ahura Mazda and Zoroaster. They are the last-surviving account of his doctrinal discourses, presented at the court of King Vištaspa.

Zoroaster in Historical Context

Textual evidence regarding the birthplace of Zoroaster is conflicting. Yasnas 9 & 17 cite Airyanem Vaējah, "Homeland of the Aryans" (Pahlavi Ērān Wēj), on the Ditya River, as the home of Zoroaster, and the scene of his first appearance. The Būndahišn or Creation (20, 32 and 24, 15) says the Dhraja River in Ērān Wēj was his birth-place, and the home of his father. This same text identifies Ērān Wēj with the district of Arran on the river Aras (Araxes), close by the north-western frontier of the Medes. According to Yasna 59, 18, the zaraθuštrotema, or supreme head of the Zoroastrian priesthood, had his residence in Ragha at a later (Sassanian) time. The Persian Muslim writer Shahrastani endeavours to solve the conflict, by arguing that his father was a man of Atropatene, while the mother was from Rai.

According to Yasnas 5 & 105, Zoroaster prayed for the conversion of King Vištaspa. He then appears to have left his native district. Yasnas 53 & 9 suggest that he ventured to Rai, and was unwelcome. Eventually, he met Vištaspa, king of Bactria. In the Gāthās he appears as a historical personage.

The court of Vištaspa included two brothers, Frašaōštra and Jamaspa; both were, according to the later legend, viziers of Vištaspa. Zoroaster was closely-related to both: his wife, Hvōvi, was the daughter of Frashaōštra, and the husband of his daughter, Pourucista, was Jamaspa. The actual role of intermediary was played by the pious queen Hutaōsa. Apart from this connection, the new prophet relied especially upon his own kindred (hvaētuš). His first disciple, Maidhyoimaōngha, was his cousin; his father was, according to the later Avesta, Pourušaspa, his mother Dughdova, his great-grandfather Haēcataspa, and the ancestor of the whole family Spitama, for which reason Zoroaster usually bears this sur-name. His sons and daughters are repeatedly mentioned. His death is not mentioned in the Avesta; in the Šahnāma, he is said to have been murdered at the altar by the Turanians in the storming of Balkh.

Placing the date of King Vištaspa is difficult. Antiquated sources suggest Vištaspa was Hystaspes, father of Darius I. Hutaōsa is the same name as Atossa; who apparently was queen consort to Cambyses II, Smerdis and Darius I. The matriarchal name is the only link to the Achaemenidian lineage.

According to the Book of Arda Viraf, Zoroaster taught an estimated 300 years before the invasion of Alexander the Great. Assyrian inscriptions relegate him to a more ancient period. Eduard Meyer maintains that the Zoroastrian religion must have been predominant among the Medes; therefore, he estimates the date of Zoroaster at 1000 BC, in agreement with Duncker (Geschichte des Altertums, 44, 78). Zoroaster may have emanated from the old school of Median Magi, and appeared first among the Medes as the prophet of a new faith; but met with sacerdotal opposition, and turned eastward. Zoroastrianism then, seems to have acquired a solid footing in eastern Iran, where it continues to survive in dwindling numbers.

Date of Zoroaster

One of the most important, and dividing, of all issues regarding the Persian history is “the date of Zoroaster”, that is the date when he lived and composed his Gathas. Different sources ranging from linguistic evidence to textual sources and traditional dates have been used by various scholars to determine the date of Zoroaster. Accordingly, any date from the 6th century BC to 6000 BC has been suggested, although some with more merit than others. Here we shall look at the most prominent of these arguments.

A point of view held by many 19th century scholars, among them Taghizadeh and W. B. Henning and continued by Gnoli among others, is what is known as “the Traditional Date of Zoroaster”. This date, which was suggested in the Sassanian commentaries on the Avesta (Bundahišn), gives the date of Zoroaster's life as “258 years before Alexander the Great”.

However, from an early time, scholars such as Bartholomea and Christensen noticed the problems with the “Traditional Date”, namely the linguistic difficulties that it presents. As we know, Zoroaster himself composed the eighteen poems that make up the oldest parts of the Avesta, known as “the Gathas”. The language of the Gathas, as well as the text known as “Yasna Haptanghaiti” (the Seven Chapter Sermon), is called “Old Avestan” and is significantly different and more archaic than the language of the other parts of the Avesta, “Young Avestan”. On the other hand, Old Avestan is very close to the language of the Rig Veda (known as Vedic Sanskrit). The closeness in composition of Old Avestan and Vedic is so much that some parts of the Gathas can be transliterated to Vedic only by following the rules of sound change (such as the development of Indo-Iranian “s” to Avestan “h”). These similarities suggest that Old Avestan and Vedic were very close in time, probably putting Old Avestan at about one century after Vedic. Since the date of the composition of the Rig Veda has been put at somewhere between the 15th century BC to the 12th century BC, we can also assume that the Gathas were composed close to that time, at sometime before 1000 BC.

Furthermore, a look at the Gathas and their composition shows us that the society in which they were composed was a nomadic society that lived at a time prior to settlement in large urban areas and depended greatly on pastoralism. This would stand sharply apart from the view of a Zoroaster living in the court of an Achaemenid satrap such as Wištaspa. Also, the absence of any mention of Achaemenids or even any West Iranian tribes such as Medes and Persians, or even Parthians, in the Gathas makes it unlikely that historical Zoroaster ever lived in the court of a 6th century satrap. It is possible that Zoroaster lived sometime in the 13th century BC to the 11th century BC, prior to the settlement of Iranian tribes in the central and west of the Iranian Plateau.

Zoroastrian teachings

The teachings of Zoroaster are presented in seventeen liturgical, texts, or "hymns", the yasna which is divided into groups called Gāthās.

If basic precepts of Zoroastrianism are to be distilled into a single maxim, the maxim is Humata, Hukhta, Huvarshta (Good Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds).

A cosmic struggle between Aša "The Truth" (Pahlavi Ahlāyīh) and Druj "The Lie" (Pahlavi Druz) is presented as the foundation of our existence. This is often related to a struggle between good and evil in a Western paradigm. This may also be conceptualized as a battle between Darkness and Light. The two opposing forces in this battle are Ahura Mazdā (Ohrmazd) (God) and Ahriman (The Devil). In the yasnas, Zoroaster refers to these forces as "the Better and the Bad."

Zoroaster describes Ahura Mazdā in a series of rhetorical questions, "Who established the course of the sun and stars? ... who feeds and waters the plants? ... what builder created light and darkness? Through whom does exist dawn, noon and night?" (Yasna 44, 4-6).

  1. Vohu Manu, Pahlavi Wahman, "Good Mind": the principle of the good
  2. Ašəm, afterwards Ašəm Vahištəm, Pahlavi Ardwahišt: "Right": truth and the embodiment of all that is true, good and right, upright law and rule (ideas practically identical for Zoroaster)
  3. Xšaθra- Vairya-, Pahlavi Šahrewar: "Best Rule", the power and kingdom of Ahura Mazdā and guardian of metals
  4. Spɚnta- Ārmatay-, Pahlavi Spandarmad, "Holy Thought": the female immortal of the earth
  5. Haurvatat: "Perfection"
  6. Amərətatāt, Pahlavi Amurdād: "Immortality", the guardian of food and plants.

Other prominent immortals are Geush Urvan, defender of animals, and Sraōša, Pahlavi Srōš "Obedience".

Important as western paradigms are, it must be remembered that the oriental nature of these concepts suffers under them. It is apparent that, as with Chinese thinking, absolutism is not being exhibited here. The truth and the lie as foundational concepts assymptotically approach the human consciousness of reality. There is no cosmic struggle but merely a human struggle from the lie to the truth, and this it must be pointed out is a journey from one approximation to another. Hence the designation of the bad and the better.

For example : Newtonian physics under this conception would be a lie as Einsteinian physics would be the truth. One can readily sense why bad and better are better expressions of Zoroaster's descriptions than the absolutist truth and lie.

Zoroaster in the Bahá'í Faith

Bahá'ís believe that Zoroaster was a "Manifestation of God," or one in a line of prophets who have revealed the Word of God progressively for a gradually maturing humanity. In this way, Zoroaster shares an exalted station with Abraham, Moses, Buddha, Krishna, Jesus, Muhammad, the Báb, and the founder of the Bahá'í Faith, Bahá'u'lláh. However, the Central Figures of the Bahá'í Faith caution believers that, as is the case with many Manifestations, few if any teachings of Zoroaster that have survived to the modern age can be authenticated, and any contradictions between the teachings of the Manifestations are ascribed to later corruptions or the differing needs of the age and culture. Shoghi Effendi, the Guardian of the Faith, wrote that Bahá'u'lláh fulfilled the Zoroastrian prophecy of the return of the Sháh-Bahrám: "To Him [Bahá'u'lláh] Zoroaster must have alluded when, according to tradition, He foretold that a period of three thousand years of conflict and contention must needs precede the advent of the World-Savior Sháh-Bahrám, Who would triumph over Ahriman and usher in an era of blessedness and peace." `Abdu'l-Bahá, one of the Bahá'í Faith's Central Figures, said that Zoroaster lived roughly 1,000 years before Jesus.

Zoroaster in the West

Zoroaster was known as a sage, magician and miracle-worker in post-Classical Western culture, though almost nothing was known of his ideas until the late eighteenth century. By this time his name was associated with lost ancient wisdom and was appropriated by Freemasons and other groups who claimed access to such knowledge. He appears in Mozart's opera Die Zauberflöte under the variant name "Sarastro", who represents moral order in opposition to the "Queen of the Night".

Enlightenment writers such as Voltaire promoted research into Zoroastrianism in the belief that it was a form of rational Deism, preferable to Christianity. With the translation of the Avesta by Abraham Anquetil-Duperron, Western scholarship of Zoroastrianism began.

Thus Spake Zarathustra

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In the nineteenth century, the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche used the name of Zarathustra in his seminal book Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spake Zarathustra). Nietzsche fictionalizes and dramatizes Zarathustra toward his own literary and philosophical aims, presenting him as a returning visionary who repudiates the designation of good and evil and thus marks the observation of the death of God. Nietzsche asserted that he had chosen to put his ideas into the mouth of Zarathustra because the historical prophet had been the first to proclaim the manicheic opposition between "good" and "evil", by rejecting the Daeva (representing natural forces) in favor of a moral order represented by the Ahuras. It was this act that Nietzsche proposed to invert. Beyond Good and Evil, however, does not mean "beyond good and bad", as he warned in this work.

Richard Strauss's Opus 30, inspired by Nietzsche's book, is also called Also sprach Zarathustra. Its opening theme (corresponding to the book's prologue) was memorably used to score the opening sequence of Stanley Kubrick's movie 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Contemporary views

Zoroaster was ranked #93 on Michael H. Hart's list of the most influential figures in history.

President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmonov successfully encouraged UNESCO to declare 2002-2003 the third millennium since Zoroaster's birth, and in his book, The Tajiks in the Mirror of History, he claimed that Zoroaster was a Tajik from Bactria. While Tajikstan is majority Muslim, Rahmonov states in his work:

"Many principles of the Zarathushtrian religion have left a deep imprint on the [Tajik] people's mind. The habit has been preserved prohibiting the killing of animals when they are pregnant and the cutting of trees in blossom. Water, earth and fire have to be protected from any impurity. The fumes of some fragrant herbs are still used to keep away sickness and the force of evil.
These and many other examples give evidence that in every Tajik house we may find trace of Zarathushtra's teachings.
Let us hope in the new millennium, the Tajik people will continue to live under the spiritual guidance of Zarathushtra, the prophet of truth and light."

In fact, there is a growing interest in Zoroastrianism, not just in Tajikistan, but throughout the former Soviet Central Asian countries -- all of which are formerly Zoroastrian areas, and which readily acknowledge "Zoroastrian culture" as part of their heritage.

This nod to Tajikistan from UNESCO then gave rise to an extraordinary show of support by Zoroastrian organizations worldwide, resulting in hundreds of large and small commemorative events to celebrate the declared anniversary-- from Dushanbe to Tehran, to Mumbai, to New York, to Vancouver. UNESCO's secretary-general delivered several speeches and texts cementing UNESCO's support for this worldwide collaboration.

Bibliography

See also

External links

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