Parsiana magazine to publish its last issue in October
Parsiana magazine to publish its last issue in October

After 60 years, Mumbai’s ‘Parsiana’ to print its last issue in October

Parsiana chronicled the essence of the Parsi community.
Published on
2 min read

For six decades, the arrival of a new Parsiana magazine was a ritual in Parsi homes in Mumbai. More than just newsprint, it was a thread connecting a small, scattered community, a chronicle of its triumphs, debates, and identity. This October, that thread will snap, as one of India’s oldest community magazines publishes its final issue, marking the end of an era.

Over the years, it became a vital platform for the Zoroastrian diaspora, connecting a dwindling and scattered community.

From one rupee to a fortnightly voice for Parsis

Founded in 1964 by Dr. Pestonji Warden, Parsiana first entered the world as a modest monthly newsletter dedicated to Mumbai's Parsi community. Its journey took a decisive turn in 1973 when Jehangir Patel, a Yale-trained political scientist, purchased the publication for a single rupee.

Under Patel’s bold direction, the magazine quickly grew into a respected fortnightly, unflinching in its coverage of delicate issues like rising divorce rates, interfaith relationships, and the gradual decline of the Parsi population. Its pioneering 1987 decision to accept interfaith matrimonial advertisements ignited fierce debate, but also opened critical conversations within the community.

Ironically, the very challenges the magazine reported on, an aging community and a shortage of new voices, have now led to its closure. With Patel, now 80, and most of the veteran staff retiring, there’s no successor to continue the legacy. Despite its considerable influence, declining subscriptions, financial difficulties, and the changing media landscape have sealed its fate. Housed in a crumbling neo-Gothic building in Mumbai's Fort area, Parsiana will print its final issue in October 2025, marking the end of an era in community journalism.

A final dispatch from Fort

For the global Parsi community, Parsiana was more than a magazine, it was a common hearth around which a dispersed diaspora could gather. Its closure extinguishes that flame, leaving not just silence, but a profound void where once echoed the vibrant debates, shared stories, and the very heartbeat of a community navigating its future. The end of its six-decade run is a quiet farewell to the trusted narrator of their lives.

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