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Several of the Film Advisory Board’s members, including its first chairman, J.B.H.

Wadia were willing to


make films that supported British war aims. The Parsee family of Pestonjee Bomanjee Wadia had been
connected for centuries with western Indian shipping and had four vessels of it’s own in the opium trade.

Prominent families from Mumbai’s past, names that adorn today’s famous institutions such as the
Wadia’s, Tata’s, Jejeebhoy’s, Readymoney’s, Cama’s and Sassoon’s sold opium to China through the
British. By the end of the nineteenth century, when the opium trade went bust, cotton from India’s
western state of Gujarat, which had already developed strong trade links with Canton profited. The
Paris’s ploughed profits from the trade with the Chinese back into India, setting up several schools,
hospitals and banks. Historical records prove that some of India’s prominent Parsi traders at the time,
were founders of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) founded in 1865.

TATAS TATAS OPIUM AGENTS OF ROTHSCHILD IN MUMBAI

DruvSeptember 19, 2012 at 9:34 AM

http://ajitvadakayil.blogspot.in/2012/09/will-india-be-banana-republic-walmart_18.html

Also sir, Adi Godrej has become the president of CII to help the Zionist have better control
over all the business within India

But you already know that?

I tried to become the member of CII few years ago to understand the manipulation but it seems
its better not to be part of the system.

You probably already know but the Ancestor of Abram was Nimrod who is the same as
Zoroaster ( Asura ) he vowed to take revenge on God for destroying his people which is why
Abram was born through him.

Below picture Director of tata JJ Irani with Lady Evelyn Rothschild.  Tata was the Opium agents
of Rothschild.  Old nostalgia?

Below picture Director of tata JJ Irani with Lady Evelyn Rothschild.  Tata was the Opium agents
of Rothschild.  Old nostalgia?

Tata the Opium agents of Rothschild in Bombay had sent huge amount of
money to Gandhi, for the pomp and show soon to unfold. The railway station
was decorated and even the British joined the grand reception fit for King
George.

Tata the Opium agents of Rothschild in Bombay had sent huge amount of
money to Gandhi, for the pomp and show soon to unfold. The railway station
was decorated and even the British joined the grand reception fit for King
George.

Parsee Sir Pherozeshah Mehta, KCIE (August 4, 1845 - November 5, 1915) was a leading lawyer of
Bombay.  His political ideology was, as was the case with most of the Parsees of his time was friendly to
the British Crown's sovereignty--and most of them had made their fortune by being opium agents of
Rothschilds. Punch into Google search THE DRUG RUNNERS OF INDIA- VADAKAYIL. 

PARSIS PARSIS RICH BY SELLING OPIUM TO CHINA

http://www.thechinabeat.org/?p=3845

http://www.thechinabeat.org/?p=3845

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The China Beat

Blogging How the East Is Read

October 5, 2011 in China Around the Globe by The China Beat

By Julia Lovell
Indian memories of the opium trade were also, I detected, tinged with a
degree of guilt. It’s well established that although private British traders got
rich on selling opium to China, so did some Indian merchants—and especially
Mumbai Parsis. They provided credit for British businessmen; they built ships
for the trade; and sometimes they sailed them themselves. A Parsi opium
trader in one of Ghosh’s novels expresses their actions pragmatically:

If you look closely enough at the windows of the Bai Avabai Framji Petit Parsi
Girls High School in Mumbai, you’ll find an image of an Indian opium clipper
inlaid in stained glass. HMS Cornwallis, the ship on which the Treaty of
Nanjing was signed, was built in a Parsi yard. An elderly Parsi man
approached me after one of my talks: did I think it would be a good idea if
leading members of the Parsi community organised themselves into an
official delegation to apologise for India’s role in the opium trade? Would that
make things better, would it clear things up between China and India?

Indian memories of the opium trade were also, I detected, tinged with a
degree of guilt. It’s well established that although private British traders got
rich on selling opium to China, so did some Indian merchants—and especially
Mumbai Parsis. They provided credit for British businessmen; they built ships
for the trade; and sometimes they sailed them themselves. A Parsi opium
trader in one of Ghosh’s novels expresses their actions pragmatically:

If you look closely enough at the windows of the Bai Avabai Framji Petit Parsi
Girls High School in Mumbai, you’ll find an image of an Indian opium clipper
inlaid in stained glass. HMS Cornwallis, the ship on which the Treaty of
Nanjing was signed, was built in a Parsi yard. An elderly Parsi man
approached me after one of my talks: did I think it would be a good idea if
leading members of the Parsi community organised themselves into an
official delegation to apologise for India’s role in the opium trade? Would that
make things better, would it clear things up between China and India?

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