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Among the many stories of encounters between different cultures the meeting of Zoroastrianism and Islam may be one of the most dramatic. After many centuries in which it was the dominant religion of the ancient Iranian states and after having achieved the status of official religion in the Sassanid empire (224-651), Zoroastrian teaching was practically driven from its homeland and replaced by the religion of Muhammad. The number of Zoroastrians in modern Iran today does not exceed forty thousand. Between the eighth and tenth centuries some of the followers of Zoroastrianism left Iran for India, where today there are about one hundred thousand, known as Parsi. There are small communities of Zoroastrians in other parts of the world (e.g., Pakistan, Canada, the United States, Great Britain, and Australia), and the total number worldwide is reckoned to be less than 120,000.1 It is difficult to describe the fate of Zoroastrianism more precisely than was done by James Darmesteter in 1879 in his Introduction to the translation of the Zend-Avesta:2 "As the Parsis are the ruins of a people, so are their sacred books the ruin of a religion. There has been no other great belief in the world that ever left such poor and meager monuments of its past splendor."3
What caused this virtual "extinction" of Zoroastrianism? It is quite common to put the entire blame on Islam. However, the truth is not so simple, and a onedimensional explanation is not satisfactory here. There were, in fact, a number of causes, and I would like to point out some that, in my view, are of greatest significance.
The first direct encounter of the two cultures took place soon after the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632. The first Caliph, Abu Bakr, who became the head of the Muslim umma, initiated the expansion of Islam beyond the borders of the Arab world to include the lands of Sassanid Iran. In 635 Muslim forces won a decisive victory at al-Qadisiya over the armies of the last Shahinshah, Yazdergerd Ill. In 637 they seized the capital of the Sassanid state, Ktesiphon. It took almost fifteen years to put an end to the independence of Zoroastrian Iran and to incorporate the latter into the Arab Caliphate by 651.
Yet,...