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Religious minorities enjoy peace in Iran

Thomas Meram

Archbishop Thomas Meram of Assyrians, Chaldean and Catholics minorities living in Orumiyeh, the capital city of West Azarbaijan province has said that the peace Iran has provided for religious minorities is exemplary.

Speaking in a church ceremony to mark the birthday of Jesus Christ (Peace Be upon Him), the Archbishop regretted the religious conflicts which have gripped regional countries.

He said he was happy that he lived in a country where the religious minorities live in full peace thanks to the wise leadership of the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

Shushtar Historical Hydraulic System in photos

Shushtar Historical Hydraulic System

Shushtar Historical Hydraulic System is an island city from the Sassanid era with a complex irrigation system. Located in Khuzestan Province, the site was registered on UNESCO’s list of World Heritage Sites in 2009, as Iran’s 10th cultural heritage site to be registered on the United Nation’s list.

The site dates back to the time of the Achaemenid king Darius the Great in the 5th century BCE. It involves two main diversion canals on the Karun River, one of which, Gargar canal, is still in use providing water to the city of Shushtar via a series of tunnels that supply water to mills.

The system forms a cliff from which water cascades into a downstream basin and enters south of the city enabling people in Shushtar to plant orchards and create farms over an area of 40,000 hectares.

The following are the pictures Tasnim News Agency released on December 22 of the historic water system in southwestern Iran:

 

Iran’s economy grows 4 percent in six months

iran-central-bank

Iran’s economy has grown four percent in the six-month period since the start of the current Iranian calendar year (March 21, 2014(.

The Central Bank of Iran (CBI) on Wednesday released its latest economic data, which shows a 4.0 percent growth in the first half of the Iranian calendar year, IRIB News reported.

“The initial and preliminary calculations of the Department of Economic Accounts suggest that the country’s gross domestic product (GDP)… has reached 1.022 trillion rials ($ 37.779 billion) which shows a positive 4.0-percent growth compared to the similar period last year,” the report said.

It added that Iran’s GDP in the Iranian calendar year beginning on March 20, 2004, which was used as the baseline for the new calculations, stood at 983.253 trillion rials ($ 36.318 billion.(

The latest economic statement means that Iran’s economy has officially emerged out of two successive years of recession and stagflation.

The CBI announced in September that Iran has attained positive growth for the first time in two years. Wednesday’s report, however, is the first detailed statement proving that Iran’s economy has experienced growth.

Meanwhile, President Hassan Rouhani announced on Wednesday that his government has managed to “curtail inflation from 40 percent down to 17,” according to ISNA News Agency.

In a speech in the eastern city of Birjand, Rouhani said an era of economic revival has begun in Iran.

Seminary official and students weigh in on a TV series about clerics

Parde Neshin Movie

On December 22, Khorasan, a daily, ran a report on a recently-aired primetime TV series on Iran’s Channel One whose main characters were seminary students. The drama which had a high viewership raised questions among members of the public about how realistic the series was in depicting the lifestyle of seminary students. The following is a partial translation of what the daily carried about the series:

To get a better understanding of how seminary students live, we held an interview with Hojatoleslam Mohammad Javad Nezafat, the director of Hazrat Mahdi Seminary School which opened 36 years ago and has a lot in common with the seminary portrayed in the series.

“Seminary students lead a simple and unassuming life. Unfortunately, our younger generation only gets familiar with clerics through TV and political wrangling. Therefore it is unable to establish close relationships with them,” said Mr. Nezafat.

Recalling the movies made about the lifestyle of seminary students and clerics, he said, “Over the past two decades, remarkable efforts have been made. However, I believe that they are not enough. Movies like “Under the Moonlight”, “Gold and Copper” and “Pardehneshin” – a reference to those whose lifestyle might be a mystery to others – have tried to depict the lifestyle and concerns of a seminary student in a different manner,” said the top seminarian.

When asked as to what extent the series has succeeded in portraying the reality of a seminary student’s life, he said, “In many areas, the series has moved in the right direction, has not blown things out of proportion and reflected reality to a large extent. Although it has failed to depict the loneliness of the clerics who have utterly devoted their lives to efforts to appease God, by and large, it has been better than the previous movies.”

Stating that Iranians still have faith in clerics at heart, Hojatoleslam Nezafat added, “I think our people still have great confidence in clerics, but some misunderstandings and a lack of insight have caused others to think otherwise. In my opinion, both clerics and the public should take their share of the blame for the emergence of such misunderstandings. Nonetheless, one should not be unmindful of the role that our enemies have played.

“I hope TV movies which are made based on more in-depth research into the lives of seminary students will offer more insight into the role of clerics in society,” he concluded.

Also, we paid a visit to a seminary school which at first glance might not be similar to the one depicted in the series. There we came across young students who were busy with their books. There was also another group of students who had huddled to discuss local and international matters. What was interesting about their gathering was the evident bond between the seminary and high-tech products such as tablets and laptops.

In our chat with Mohammad, a seminary student, he said, “Seminary students live like ordinary people. I believe the picture presented of seminary students in some movies and TV series is divorced from reality. I should say clerics are depicted as individuals suffering from tunnel-vision.

“In our movies, clerics and seminary students are usually portrayed as people who only take part in congregational prayers or are in quest of spirituality. Whereas, we lead a normal life; we have fun and a sense of humor and we make mistakes like others. In some movies, we see that a seminary student does not have close relationship with his family at all or that he cannot communicate with strangers. However, the factual aspects of seminary students’ lives are something else.”

Seyyed Ahmad Abdollahi , who joined the seminary school after getting his first university degree, said, “Seminary students go through a lot in life. For instance, a student here has to do preliminary courses for ten years before taking advanced courses for another eight years. A seminary student’s life should be founded on simplicity and piety.”

He said, “In the series, a good image has been presented of clerics. However, I most like the progressive stages in the life of Baratali [a character in the series who is faced with the dilemma of accepting to work for his fiancée’s father, who is aging and has a small workforce, and carrying on his studies at the seminary and getting the clerical robe. Throughout the series, Baratali dedicates a great deal of time to helping his friends out of the problems they are dealing with. In practice, he cannot help the father of the girl he is in love with, nor does he frequently attend classes at the seminary school. His indecisiveness about his future coupled with his eventful life makes viewers interested in finding out what will come next]. I am of the opinion that the facts about the lives of seminary students can be explored through a look at Baratali’s life.”

Mohammad-Sadegh, another student at the seminary school, said, “Probably it is not known to the public what a difficult life a seminary student leads. Such difficulties include studying nonstop and living on minimum pay we get. It might strike you as surprising if I told you that some students are only paid around $165 a month after finishing a decade-long program here. I must say that it should not be viewed as a job; in fact it is a duty. ”

 

Iranian Army’s massive war game gets underway

wargame

The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Army forces started a large-scale maneuver on Thursday morning.

Dubbed “Muhammad Rasullullah” (Muhammad, the messenger of God), the massive military exercises began with the participation of units from the Army’s Ground Force, Air Force, Navy, and Air Defense.

The Army’s war game will continue for a week (until December 31) in a large area of 2.2 million square kilometers, stretching from the northern Indian Ocean (10 degrees latitude) to the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf and in the southern Iranian provinces of Sistan and Baluchestan and Hormozgan.

On the first two days of the drills, the focus will be on displaying the capabilities and agility of the Ground Force units in deployment, preparation and construction of defensive positions.

Over the past few years, Iran’s Armed Forces have held several military drills.

The Islamic Republic has repeatedly assured other nations, especially its neighbors, that its military might poses no threat to other countries, stating that its defense doctrine is based on deterrence.

Perils of holy ignorance

Mostafa Mohaghegh Damad

Decades separate the release of Distortions of Ashura by Martyr Morteza Motahari and The Disaster of Holy Ignorance by prominent scholar Mostafa Mohaghegh Damad. No doubt, things were different when these two books came out, but the two scholars seem to have tried to push the same point: When ignorance and superstition engulf the truth, scholars who are in quest of justice cannot remain silent. The following is the translation of an interview Ketab-e Hafte-ye Khabar (News Week Book) published in its December 13 issue with Ayatollah Mostafa Mohaghegh Damad on the so-called holy ignorance, its typical forms and the harms it causes:

The release of The Disaster of Holy Ignorance which is on its second reprint already is the reason why we’re conducting this interview. Would you tell us what you mean by holy ignorance?

I believe ignorance is the greatest anguish a person, or a society for that matter, can experience. No fire is more consuming than ignorance. “It is the fire of Allah, kindled, which leapeth up over the hearts [of men].” These Koranic verses [which are said of people who mistakenly assume that their wealth will save them] refer to the same thing.

The fact of the matter is that ignorance comes in different shapes and forms. What was mentioned already is only one form of ignorance. Ignorance can be good, too. That someone knows that they lack knowledge [in a certain area] is an example of such ignorance.

In fact, such ignorance can be quite positive. Many sciences have developed on the back of such ignorance. In the absence of such ignorance, great scientists such as Avicenna and Farabi, and schools of thoughts would not have emerged. It is such ignorance that pushes humans forward and lands them on the path to progress.

The tormenting ignorance I have likened to a consuming fire [in the book] is the kind of ignorance of which individuals are unaware. In fact they assume they know and view themselves as knowledgeable, whereas in reality they are ignorant. That is the kind of ignorance that consumes individuals and society and wreaks havoc.

Such ignorance becomes most devastating when it has an aura of holiness attached to it. According to Koranic verses, individuals the holy book and the Prophet dealt with were mostly suffering from this kind of ignorance.

In response to your question as to what I mean by holy ignorance, I have to say I believe such ignorance is built on what is viewed as value by some. But, I describe it as more of an idea than value. So the kind of ignorance that is based on ideology is holy ignorance.

Talking about ideology, the most common definition of ideology is a set of beliefs. Is that what you have in mind, or you have a different interpretation?

Well, the Arabic word for belief comes from a verb which means to close. When you close your mind, you develop a belief. For example, in daily life, when a travel agent tells you that a certain list is closed, s/he means that no more items can be added to it.

When someone closed their mind, they no longer admit new items. That is where ignorance takes shape. The upshot would be holy ignorance when those beliefs are placed in a theocratic context. Those who are suffering from such ignorance shut out new ideas.

For instance, if you replace ‘I firmly believe’ with ‘I assume’, you are set to hear opposing thoughts, get involved in dialogue and remain open to movement [change]. When an individual embarks on thinking, they become dynamic and might land on the path that leads to Him [God].

Such individuals view joining the Infinite Being [God] as the final destination, so they tap into their knowledge to take one step at a time toward God. But when you say you firmly believe, you are implying that you are above making mistakes.

Does that result in the individual’s refusal to get involved in dialogue and, as they say, ossification?

That is true. The holy Koran makes mention of such ossification too. […] It describes the hearts of such individuals as sick and made of stone. In another chapter of the holy book the word Zalim [literally oppressor] which originally comes from the Arabic word for darkness has been used. […]

The Koran also makes mention of believers. By believers the holy book means those who have no prior stance on an issue and are set to hear out different ideas and thoughts on it. When someone firmly believes what they have achieved is their ultimate goal, and views their achievement as a red line, the Koran can no longer convince them.

In the holy book, it is also said, “Thou canst make the dead to hear, nor canst thou make the deaf to hear the call….” The Koran uses terms such as sick heart, stone-hearted, blind, deaf, and sick in defining these individuals. To be able to be addressed by the Koran, they should not have ideas which are set in advance. […]

I believe, I may be wrong though, that in Koranic terms faith is based on knowledge. Faith is not a state, nor is it a level beyond which is unimaginable. It is an act. It might sound grammatically wrong, but one must [practice] faith forever.

The Koran makes mention of faith on many occasions. In fact, faith is a dynamic concept. “Those who believe and obscure not their belief by wrongdoing, ….”

In this Koranic verse, wrongdoing does not mean oppression, rather, it means narrow-mindedness.

We need to remain dynamic at all times to promote our faith which improves step by step. That happens when someone has assumptions rather than firm beliefs. Ironically, some Muslims have closed minds, and are sick at heart. The holy Koran describes them as dangerous.

“And We reveal of the Koran that which is a healing and mercy for believers though it increases the evil-doers in naught save ruin.”

The Koran places those who resort to the holy book in two categories. One group for whom the holy book serves as a healer, and the other who are chronically ill at heart. The second group does not benefit from the book. The Koran itself states that they suffer more. In other words, they would be better off if they stayed away from the holy book.

That is why the crimes committed following the dawn of the Islamic era are much worse than those of the pre-Islamic period. The book this interview centers on takes an analytical look at Ashura [the day Prophet Muhammad’s grandson was martyred], a disaster which was unprecedented during the Era of Ignorance [pre-Islamic era on the Arabian Peninsula].

During the Ignorance Era, they would not slaughter babies and they would not let horses trample on dead bodies. All those crimes were committed in the name of religion. Who were to blame for all this? A handful of them such as Amr ibn Sa’ad might have committed those crimes because they wanted power. For instance, Sa’ad wanted to become the ruler of Rey.

But Shemr did not commit the heinous crimes he committed in hopes of securing wealth or power. Shemr ibn Thul-Jawshan was a believer in the true sense of the word. He was a faithful individual who killed Hussein ibn Ali [the grandson of the Prophet] to secure God’s satisfaction.

On the eve of this past Ashura, speaking at Martyr Motahari School, Ayatollah Emami Kashani, who has spent a long time poring over Hadith [religious sayings], talked about an important question. When Shemr took the severed head of the Master of Martyrs [Imam Hussein] to Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad, he was asked whether he had severed the head himself.

When Shemr said the answer was in the affirmative, Ibn Ziyad asked him about his last conversation with Hussein ibn Ali. In response Shemr said, “When I put the dagger to his throat I said, ‘I am going to kill you now. You will soon experience the torment of the Fire.’ In response Hussein ibn Ali said, ‘I will soon join my grandfather [Prophet Muhammad]. You are the harbinger of paradise.’”

As you see Shemr did not do what he did to climb the caliphate ladder. Evidence suggests he was not the kind of person who would report such a thing to get his hands on a higher position. He believed that the Islamic government of Yazid was legitimate and that the defection of Hussein ibn Ali was illegitimate and worthy of punishment.

He viewed Hussein ibn Ali’s refusal to pledge allegiance to a legitimate theocracy as a ticket to Hell. Hussein was unable to convince Yazid, because the latter had a closed mind and was suffering from what I call holy ignorance.

According to a story mentioned in Al Ghadir [a twenty-volume book written by Allameh Amini] after the uprising of Karbala [which led to the martyrdom of Imam Hussein] a person told Ibn Abbas that after circumambulating the Kaaba he found out that there was a blood stain on his abaya, apparently from a dead mosquito. He was wondering whether he had to repeat the ritual because of the blood stain.

‘Since you learned about the blood stain after circumambulating [the Kaaba] was over, you don’t have to repeat it,’ Ibn Abbas told the man before asking him to identify himself. The man identified himself as Shemr ibn Thul-Jawshan. In reaction, Ibn Abbas said, ‘Shame on you. You have severed the head of the grandson of the Prophet. Now you are worried about a blood stain on your clothes?’

In response to those comments Shemr said, ‘Ibn Abbas, I never expected you to say something like that. [In killing Hussein ibn Ali] I fulfilled my religious duty and acted in keeping with the orders of my leader Yazid ibn Muawiyah.

‘I did what I did to preserve a legitimate religious government. Hussein had defected. He was refusing to swear allegiance. He was stoking sedition and I stopped it.’

Those comments show that Shemr was far from repentant after what he did in Karbala. There are some ignorant people who change after a crime they commit. After the assassination of Morteza Motahari, who was my professor, I saw one of the individuals involved in his assassination at Evin Prison. I asked him why he killed my professor. With his head still bowed as he read verses from the holy Koran, he answered, ‘For the sake of God.”

I have doubts about Ibn Muljamal-Muradi [who killed Imam Ali, Prophet Muhammad’s son-in-law]. When he was taken to Imam Ali [who was in deathbed after being stabbed by Ibn Muljam], Ali asked him whether he had been a bad leader for him, whether he had failed to help him and whether he had harmed him? ‘Why did you do this to me?’ In response Ibn Muljam recited a Koranic verse. “…Canst thou rescue him in the Fire?”

By reciting that line, he seemed to have realized how sinister an act he had committed. He was fatalistic. By reciting what he recited, he implied that he was suffering from holy ignorance; that Ali was unable to rescue him from the Fire; and that Ali had been unable to influence him through his words. They confirm my suggestions that you cannot lead a person who is suffering from holy ignorance to the right path.

You could say they slam shut the door to dialogue and insist on their ossification.

You could never force Bin Laden to change. That holds true about Abu Bakar al-Baghdadi too. Upon returning from a pilgrimage visit to holy sites in Iraq, Ayatollah Emami Kashani said, ‘A young man was arrested in Iraq for trying to set off his suicide vest among a crowd of Shiites. In custody, the would-be suicide bomber was asked why he was crying.

The answer he produced is worth pondering. ‘I am not crying because of being arrested. By foiling this suicide mission, you prevented me from joining Prophet Muhammad. I was only five minutes away from him,’ he said.

As far as I understand, you are saying an orthodox interpretation of religion and failure by those in power, even if it is well-intentioned, to allow others to present their own interpretations are the root causes of holy ignorance?  

Among other places the roots of holy ignorance should be sought in brainwashing. The holy Koran has described as weak those who have been brainwashed. “Lo! As for those whom the angels take (in death) while they wrong themselves, (the angels) will ask: In what were you engaged? They will say: We were oppressed in the land. (The angels) will say: Was not Allah’s earth spacious that ye could have migrated therein? As for such, their habitation will be Hell, an evil journey’s end.”

I believe religion is the best means for human progress. It brings humans and truth-seekers closer to God. The holy Koran describes religion as a double-edged sword. If a person develops a correct understanding of it, s/he approaches God. If their understanding of religion is incorrect, they land in the worst of places. Mowlana has written some lines in this regard.

Since many have been misled by [what they understand from] the holy Koran

The holy book is like a rope by which some are likely to go deep into the well

The rope is not to blame for your falling into the well, oh you the opposed!

You remain down there [in the well] for you do not ever dream of coming out.

What is the right mechanism to keep holy ignorance at bay?

In order to lift yourself up, first you need to find the source you want to join. Then as Hafiz puts it you need to seek advice from real truth-seekers.

O holy bird! (the perfect Murshid) thy blessing the guide of my path, make;

For, to our goal, long is the Path; new to journeying, am I.

For us, the Shiites, the infallible household of the Prophet are a boon. They provide us with the best of advice. What would Imam Hussein do if he were in our shoes now? What advice would he dispense? We need to get involved in hypothetical conversations with Imam Hussein.

I don’t buy arguments that Imam Hussein fought because he defected. He insisted on the right thing by refusing to swear allegiance to Yazid. He and his family made the ultimate sacrifice so that he would not support the illegitimate rule of Yazid.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 25

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

The front pages of Iranian newspapers on Thursday were dotted with comments of senior officials. In a speech in Birjand, the provincial capital of South Khorasan, President Rouhani defended the performance of his government and said the economy is back in positive territory. In Tehran, the judiciary chief dismissed allegations of mass, secret executions in Iran as fabrications. His comments came in response to a recent adoption of an anti-Iranian rights resolution at the UN General Assembly. In Baghdad, the top parliamentarian told the Iraqi president that Iran stands by the Iraqi people as they try to get rid of terrorists. And last but not least, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, in a letter to his counterparts around the world, said Iran agrees to just proposals, but won’t cave in to illegitimate demands.

 

Abrar: “The anti-IS coalition is not working miracle,” said the Iranian parliament speaker at a meeting with the Iraqi president.

 

Abrar newspaper 12 - 25


Abrar-e Eghtesadi: A number of MPs have floated the idea of a twofold increase in cash subsidies offered to low-income families.

Abrar-e Eghtesadi: “Iran’s economy posted 4 percent growth in the first half of the year [started March 2014],” reported the Central Bank of Iran.

Abrar-e Eghtesadi: A Belgian trade delegation will pay a visit to Iran.

 

Abrar eghtesadi newspaper 12 - 25


Aftab-e Yazd: Some law enforcement missions have been put on hold due to budgetary problems.

Aftab-e Yazd: The number of divorces in Iran has posted an 8.2 percent increase [in the first nine months of the year].

 

Aftabe yazd newspaper 12 - 25


Donyay-e Eghtesad: “Too much interest in continued sanctions [against Iran] has created an obstacle in the way of clinching a nuclear deal,” the Iranian top diplomat said in a letter to foreign ministers of several countries.

 

Donyaye eghtesad newspaper 12 - 25


Ebtekar: In a letter to his counterparts around the world, the Iranian top diplomat has said, “Tehran won’t give in to illegitimate and humiliating demands.”

Ebtekar: President Rouhani has defended the performance of his government during its 16 months in office. “Economy has grown at a 4 percent rate in the first half.”

 

Ebtekar newspaper 12 - 25


Ettela’at: “Removal of sanctions should be at the center of any deal between Iran and P5+1,” said Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in a letter to his counterparts around the world.

Ettela’at: “Iran stands by Iraq in the fight against IS,” Speaker of the Islamic Consultative Assembly Ali Larijani told Iraqi President Fuad Masum.

 

Ettelaat newspaper 12 - 25


Hemayat: American-style human rights; the killings of black men at the hands of police continue.

 

Hemayat newspaper 12 - 25


Javan: “Allegations that women’s rights are trampled in Iran are threadbare fabrications,” said Judiciary Chief Ayatollah Sadegh Amoli Larijani.

Javan: Saudi Arabia seems content with the $300 billion in losses it has suffered as a result of a recent freefall in crude prices!

 

Javan newspaper 12 - 25


Jomhouri Islami: “Iran’s crude production increased by 165,000 barrels in the 30 days to September 22, 2014.

Jomhouri Islami: The Iraqi president has said at a meeting with Ali Larijani that Iran was the first country to support Baghdad when IS terrorists launched an assault on his country.

 

Jomhorie eslami newspaper 12 - 25


Kaenat: The Iranian intelligence minister has said three IS members have been arrested in Iran.

 

Kaenaat newspaper 12 - 25


Kayhan: The Iranian parliament speaker, in Baghdad on a state visit, called for closer cooperation between Iran and Iraq in response to Saudi oil plots.

 

Kayhan newspaper 12 - 25


Mardomsalari: IS terrorists have shot down a coalition fighter jet, taking its Jordanian pilot captive.

Mardomsalari: “Iran accounts for some 85 percent of opium seizures around the world,” said the deputy chairman of Iran Drugs Control Headquarters.

 

Mardom salari newspaper 12 - 25


Resalat: “Some [Iranians] are joining the enemy in questioning the usefulness of nuclear technology,” said the Iranian judiciary chief.

 

Resalat newspaper 12 - 25


Shahrvand: “The number of people who die of [over-consumption of] salt is more than those who die of heroin. As many as 47 million Iranians have an unhealthy diet,” said the Iranian deputy health minister.

 

Shahrvand newspaper 12 - 25

 

The gum-chewing that set tongues wagging

Gum

Jomhouri Islami, a daily, has denounced as undiplomatic the gum-chewing of a diplomat accompanying Iran’s representative to the United Nations. The official’s manners became a target for the daily’s ridicule after he was shown chewing gum in a news bulletin on Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting.

Alef, a news website, also filed a concise report on the controversial gum chewing on December 22. What prompted IFP to translate the Alef report were the comments that the viewers of the website posted in reaction to the news. The following is the translation of a dozen of such comments:

  • Chewing gum can partially relieve indigestion. It can even help those who suffer from bad breath! I don’t know much about this case, but in some cases chewing gum is prescribed by doctors.
  • The Government of Prudence and Hope and its foreign minister are champions of diplomacy; take it easy!
  • My dear friend, it has always been wrong to point a finger of blame at someone for someone else’s wrongdoing. I want to ask you a question: if your child takes a misstep, is it right for others to blame his mistake on you?
  • It’s no big deal, it’s much better than the government that ushered in inflation and high costs of living; the government whose diplomacy prompted the world nations to turn their backs on Iran!
  • At present, we are not at the pinnacle of dignity either. Prices are not falling, nor does our envoy to the UN deliver glorious speeches on a daily basis!
  • The diplomat that represented the government you favor [Ahmadinejad’s] went to a swimming pool [abroad] full of men and women.
  • They were probably rooted in cultural differences!
  • Gum could be chewed in the presence of the enemy to lampoon them!
  • As long as they don’t bring sanctions on the nation, chewing gum would be much better than discussing pointless philosophical matters in official meetings and bringing about sanctions on Iran.
  • Where did they poach this guy to be sent to the United Nations?!
  • They [officials] must have wanted to denounce [UN] resolutions as “worthless torn pieces of papers”. Of course how biting the resolutions are becomes clear later!
  • Chewing gum at official meetings by officials is a sign of bad manners. Politicians and their associates should be taught by experts in social and political etiquette. Such training is offered in America and Europe.

Rock castle of Sirjan in Kerman Province in photos

Rock castle of Sirjan

Qaleh Sang (rock castle) of Sirjan which dates back to the Sassanid Era, 224-651 CE, is located 7km southeast of Sirjan, Kerman Province in southern Iran. This castle has been registered as one of Iran’s national monuments.

The following are photos of the ancient castle Mehr News Agency posted on its website on December 20:

 

 

Ali Larijani: Iran will continue to back Iraq in anti-ISIL fight

Iran-Iraq-Larijani

Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani says Tehran will continue to support Iraq in its fight against the ISIL militants.

In a meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi in Baghdad on Wednesday, Larijani expressed hope that certain countries, whose policies have spread terrorist activities in the region, would change their approaches.

The Iraqi premier, for his part, commended Iran’s full support for his country in the battle against terrorism and said Tehran has stood by the Iraqi nation in difficult times.

He added that cooperation between the Iranian and Iraqi nation would lead to a bright future for the two countries and the entire region.

The ISIL terrorists control some parts of Syria and Iraq and are engaged in crimes against humanity in the areas under their control.

Since late September, the US and its allies have been conducting airstrikes against ISIL inside Syria without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate.

Washington has been also carrying out similar air raids against ISIL positions in Iraq since August. However, the raids have so far failed to dislodge ISIL.