It’s where history meets hearty Parsi cuisine. Udvada, a coastal town about 200km north of Mumbai and
The three-day festival, organised by the Foundation for the Development of Udvada and the Udvada Samast Anjuman, includes heritage walks, Parsi skits, religious lectures, youth competitions and a treasure hunt. On the last day, if all goes as planned, business tycoon Ratan Tata will be felicitated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The PM is expected to attend because the festival was his brainchild. “When the prime minister was the chief minister of Gujarat and visited Udvada, he said that there should be a festival to attract Parsis from across the world,” recalls high priest and FDU chairman Dasturji Khurshed Dastoor. “That was his vision because he wanted to portray Udvada as a place of religious harmony and tolerance.” During the heritage walk, participants will get to see Portuguese inscriptions dating back to 1714, the redeveloped bungalow which housed the Iranshah before the Atash Behram (Parsi temple) was constructed and the homes of the nine priestly families of Udvada. In the early 2000s, Udvada was declared a heritage precinct because of its 200-odd Gujarati Pol houses, old wells and narrow streets. Today, most Parsis visit only to pray at the Iranshah and tuck into pulav daar and boi (fish) at the famous Globe Hotel. By late afternoon, families are already on their way back home. Young Parsis have been deprived of the joys of freshly churned doodh nu puff or playing on the rocky beach. Dastoor hopes to reverse this trend. “I want the youth to feel the pulse of the place,” he says. Click Here for the full story