Members of the community met officials of the National Minority Commission (NMC) during their recent visit to the city and put forth their demand to have a waqf board-like body (that manages properties of the Muslim community) to regulate their properties across the country.
"It was a historic meeting of prominent community members with the NMC panel. All those present were satisfied with the proposals discussed with the NMC chairman. We are now preparing a list of the defunct Anjumans," Dinshaw Mehta, chairman of Bombay Parsi Punchayet, told PTI from London.
"We are very positive that our community will be assisted to a large extent within the legal parameters," Mehta said.
The NMC panel was on a two-day visit to Mumbai from March 27, where it met representatives of minority communities including Muslim, Parsi, Sikh, Christian, Jain and Buddhist.
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About 50 eminent Parsis met the NMC panel on the day two at the office of Bombay Parsi Punchayet (BPP), in presence of NCM chairman Naseem Ahmed and member Dadi E Mistry.
The community also wants the government to encourage universities to start courses on Zoroastrian studies that would cover the rich history and dying dialects of the community.
Incidentally, the BJP-Sena Maharashtra government has appointed a new chairman for the state minority commission, but relieved all other members from their posts.