Phiroz Mehta
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Phiroz Mehta | |
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Born | Phirozshah Dorabji Mehta 1 October 1902 Cambay, Gujarat, India |
Died | 2 May 1994 London, England | (aged 91)
Occupation | Pianist, Author, Lecturer |
Nationality | British-Indian |
Notable works | Early Indian Religious Thought, Zarathushtra: The Transcendental Vision, The Heart of Religion, Buddhahood |
Website | |
beingtrulyhuman |
Phirozshah Dorabji Mehta (2 October 1902 – 2 May 1994) was an Indian writer, lecturer (primarily on religious topics), and pianist. His other academic interests included subjects such as astronomy, poetry, and philosophy.
Early life
Mehta was born to Parsi Zoroastrian parents in Cambay, Gujarat, India.
Education
After his schooling at Royal College, Colombo, he won a scholarship to Trinity College, Cambridge where he studied Natural Sciences and History. Due to the lack of a birth certificate in his home state of Gujarat, he was not allowed to apply for the scholarship.[1] Although the matter was brought before the House of Lords, no grant was ultimately provided. However, through private sponsorship, he eventually obtained the necessary funding and was able to begin his studies. Unfortunately, during his last year at Cambridge, he fell ill and was unable to finish his academic pursuits. Twenty-six years later, after studying intensively for only ten weeks, he took the final exam in history and was awarded his master's degree.
Pianist
From 1924 until 1932 he studied the piano with the world-renowned pianist Solomon, giving recitals in India and Britain. Due to illness, he was unable to follow his chosen career as a concert pianist and piano teacher. The conductor Zubin Mehta was one of his early piano pupils.[2]
Philosophy
He devised his own system of physical education to promote health and self-expression through rhythmic movement and breathing and taught this method for fifteen years. People as diverse as C.B. Fry, the England cricket captain, and Douglas Kennedy, president of the English Folk Dance and Song Society, came to him for lessons.
From early childhood, Phiroz Mehta had a burning interest in religion and philosophy and he was closely involved with the Theosophical Society for many years. At the age of 16, he was running the Colombo branch.
In 1956 his first major book, Early Indian Religious Thought, was published. It was not however until 1976, after extensive study, research, and travel in India that he completed The Heart of Religion, a profound study of the essence which is common to all religious experience. During these years a frequent visitor to his south London home, Dilkusha, for advice on Eastern religions was Fritjof Capra, author of The Tao of Physics et alia. He subsequently published three more books, Zarathushtra (1985), Buddhahood (1988), and Holistic Consciousness (1989).
During his lifetime he gave over three thousand lectures on religion and Indian culture to learned societies, university students, schools, and conference centres in England, the Netherlands, Germany, India and at his London home, Dilkusha.
Phiroz Mehta always insisted that he was not to be regarded as a guru or as a leader of any movement but essentially as a fellow student. He regarded every person as being unique, discovering truth through his or her own way of life.
Bibliography
- Early Indian Religious Thought (1956)
- The Heart of Religion (1976)
- Zarathushtra: The Transcendental Vision (1985)
- Buddhahood (1988)
- Holistic Consciousness (1989)
Posthumous publications
- Insight into Individual Living (1995)
- The Oakroom Talks on Buddhism (1998)
References
- ^ Mehta, Phiroz; Snelling, John (1988). Buddhahood. Element Books Ltd. pp. 156–160. ISBN 9781852300555.
- ^ "Phiroz Mehta — Being Truly Human". beingtrulyhuman.org. Retrieved 2022-06-21.
External links
- Being Truly Human - The archived website of the Phiroz Mehta Trust, a former UK Registered Charity
- 1902 births
- 1994 deaths
- Writers from Gujarat
- People from Anand district
- People from British Ceylon
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Alumni of Royal College, Colombo
- Parsi people
- Gujarati people
- Sri Lankan people of Indian descent
- Sri Lankan Zoroastrians
- English-language writers from India
- Indian religious writers
- British people of Indian descent
- British people of Parsi descent