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Acts of faith
Updated On: 17 September, 2019 12:00 AM IST | | Dalreen Ramos | Dalreen Ramos
A series of lectures by archaeologist Rukshana Nanji explores the arrival and integration of Christians, Muslims and Parsis in early medieval India

Glazed pottery from the excavations at Sanjan, dating to the 9th century CE. It is a trade ceramic of the early Medieval period and is found at most port sites in the Indian Ocean with Persian and Arab trade contacts. The Turquoise glazedware jar fragment
In the 21st century, while we equate the importance of religion with the number of concrete structures being built, archaelogist Rukshana Nanji goes back to simpler times. It-s the early medieval period — circa 7th to the 13th century — and being part of the Christian, Muslim or Zoroastrian community in India didn-t imply being treated as alien to the subcontinent. It means arriving, settling and making the country your home, in the truest sense of the word. "You-re looking at monotheistic religions integrating into a polytheistic country. Hailing from West Asia, they arrive via sea and settle by the ports. And the Indians welcome them. So, it wasn-t about religion as much as it was about culture," Nanji tells us, giving a gist of a series of lectures she will present at The K R Cama Oriental Institute this week.
As part of the Government Research Fellowship Lectures, Nanji-s paper is titled Ancient Shores, New People: The Arrival and Integration of Christians, Muslims and Parsis in Early Medieval India. Starting tomorrow, she will deliver three lectures — The Cross on the Coast: A brief Overview of the Christian Presence in Indian Ports chaired by Dr Fleur D-Souza, The Crescent and the Sea: The Arrival of Islam on Indian Shores chaired by Dr Mariam Dossal and The Flame in India: The Migration and settlement of Parsis in India chaired by Jehangir R Patel. The papers took about eight months to complete and the idea germinated from Nanji-s research work at Sanjan on the Parsi community.
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