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Radicalism will return to the US and Europe (Part Two)

isis-control-map
isis-control-map

On October 12, Khabar Online posted an analysis of the current state of affairs in the Middle East followed by an interview with political science researcher Dr. Davood Feirahi which mainly revolves around the emergence of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and the crisis which has swept the region. A few days ago we posted part one of the interview on our website. The following is PART TWO of the translation of the interview conducted by saeid jafari:

Basically, why hasn’t a kind of acquiescence to and tolerance of others surfaced in the Arab Middle East and among different religious groups? Having faced many challenges, Europe finally stepped into the right path, but the Shiites and Sunnis have yet to control their intragroup conflicts, despite the fact that they have had numerous experiences. Today we can see that such conflicts have grown [between the Shiites and Sunnis] and have heightened a sense of otherness instead.

Religious conduct is not viewed as sophisticated only because it is religious, something whichcan be seen in the Middle East. The military system, municipalities, education [agencies] and governments in the region are engulfed by tension and are not developed, neither is the religious conduct.

Islam has yet to display a behavior like what happened between various religious groups in Europe and America, and to engage in dialogs which are intended to identify conflictive aspects of the religion. The bone of contention between the Shiites and Sunnis is not stronger than the rift among Catholics, Protestants and Orthodox Christians. One reveres the Pope as a saint and the other disbelieves in his sanctity, whereas Muslim differences are not as stark as Christians’.

Nonetheless, they began to work on their common ground and managed to carry on their debates. Unity among religious denominations is an idea which has failed to grow into something beyond an ideal, and its executive mechanisms have yet to be hammered out.

Therefore, each year we see several theatrical meetings between Shiite and Sunni clerics which end inconclusively. In other words, we have been unable to take even one step toward patching up our differences and as a result we see the literature of negation come to the fore in a tense society.

A process of religious convergence is what is direly needed in such countries, a process which should get three things done simultaneously to help religious development occur. One is for convergence within religion. The second aims to strengthen common literature among religions, something which hasn’t been appreciably successful. The Shiites and Sunnis have failed to take a remarkable step in this regard. When convergence with Sunnism is missing, those who opt for particularism would take the most out of the small holes [created due to the absence of convergence]. And the third is convergence among global religions.

The stunning point is that we can tolerate different religions, but our tolerance does not apply to the denominations of Islam. We have yet to receive training to live peacefully alongside each other. Online videos released by ISIL show that one Arab was enslaved by the militants for having a turbah [or Mohr which is a stone for prayers] in his home.

That’s why it should be said that the Middle East needs development of religious conduct more than any other places and as long as such development is nonexistent, the development of other sciences and technologies would touch off still more divisions and massacre, and would fail to preserve order.

Development of religious conduct, I think, is the Achilles’ heel of democracy in the Middle East. Any solution to this crisis would be a nonstarter unless society becomes more or less democratic. This won’t take place unless the religious conduct is developed, a cycle which is still conspicuous by its absence in the Middle East.

Consequently, we are a long time away from the stage at which we can talk about a type of religious convergence; there are some groups and voices which heed such a point, but they don’t have the needed tools at their disposal. For instance, when the tools are democratic, the democratic interpretations could smooth the way more easily, but when violence serves as a tool and a certain government resorts to violence to attack its opponents, naturally the opposition takes up arms to counter the government. Thus, when the government tries to justify its acts legally, the other side too takes advantage of religious tenets.

What Iraq went through when [former Prime Minister Nouri] al-Maliki was in power showed that as the government overlookedthe Sahwa, [the Sunni] Awakening movement(s), and even disarmed them, Mosul fell easily. As we know, Mosul is the place forces affiliated with the Baath Party hail from, and news streaming from the flashpoint city revealed that Mosul did not come under attack from the outside, rather it imploded.

It is interesting to know that people in Mosul joined ISIL and swelled its ranks. This indicates that wherever a government resorts to such tools, the opposing groups display such behavior. These groups had previously joined battle against Al-Qaeda, and the 70,000-plus Sahwa fighters pushed back Al-Qaeda, whereas Maliki back then was much weaker than now. At the time, the Sahwa movement and the like managed to force Al-Qaeda to retreat to Raqqa.

So this brings us to the conclusion that we need democracy, something which could be established through nothing but religious development. This is the most complicated part of the DNAof developments in the Middle East. Religious development is a must. In case religious reforms are not introduced and religious convergence is not practiced, regional conflicts will use religious wording and, above all, a negative picture – say the blackest in history – will be painted of Islam among other civilizations.

If so, nobody would ever look at this region as a place which has an idea to put forward and talk about. It would be regarded as a region which should be suppressed in order to stay calm, something which would authorize them to be permanently present in the Middle East. And when they are asked to leave the region, they respond, “What happened when we last left the region? Has the situation changed for the better or for the worse?”

 

What should be done to have development in religious conduct materialized?

The matter in question should be weighed from an expert’s point of view and not from a political perspective. By the latter I mean a perspective in which our analysis relies on antagonistic behavior and conflict. If you go down this path, you will be caught in the trap the enemy has set for you, and there will be no remedy.

In this region, events unfold based on how conflicts are dealt with. For example, Iran says ISIL is what the West has produced and the group is a problem of the West’s own making. ISIL militants claim that Iran is working hand in glove with the US.

Topics as such would inflame the conflicts. For starters, this phenomenon should be recognized as an internal disease of the world of Islam and we need to analytically study the true origin of such a disease. In fact, we cannot solve the problem through expressing strong antagonism.

It is no secret that Western countries have, knowingly or unknowingly, left their mark on this crisis, knowingly on the part of those who have created these currents to eliminate their rivals from the political scene, and unknowingly by those who have feared something and now pour down their bombs on this region unmindful of the fact that such measures bear no fruit. Quite the reverse, these measures will scatter the seeds of radicalism at a micro level. It is more than hard to fully control micro-radicalism from a political angle.

We have to admit that Westerners have left negative impacts on this phenomenon, whether intentionally or unintentionally. I would prefer to crack down on ISIL if I were given a mandate today to call the shots. But the crackdown seems to have more consequences.

This holds true, especially because these groups are smart; they do not gather all in one place so that you can readily drop bombs on them. The large number of bombs that have rained down on ISIL militants inflicted light casualties on the so-called Islamic State (IS). This demonstrates that ISIL has evacuated any location it presumes to be a likely target.

ISIL may fill their trenches with humans; they may fan out in cities and houses. So the death of an ISIL fighter could cost a number of civilians their lives. There will be collateral damage. And more importantly, convincing people who have lost their loved ones in these attacks is not an easy job. We need to start to work for a solution to this problem and we’d better tackle the issue like a firefighter who tries to discover the source of the blaze first.

Where do you think this fire originates from?

I think the source of fire is inside the Muslim community. Some events have taken place in the Muslim community where certain orientations have been adopted and these incidents have ignited the flames of the fire. Therefore, it would be of no use if you kill people, no matter how many of them. [If one is taken out] Nothing happens except for the emergence of a second Caliph succeeding the current IS caliph [Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi]. The ideology would live on until it erupts into flames somewhere else.

The source of this fire should be spotted, and here the source is a lack of democracy, authority and the absence of a channel through which opposing voices could be heard loud and clear. The case in point is when voices are silenced in a society; the muzzled critical voices would make themselves heard through the barrels of guns instead of airwaves.

This is all because of the security atmosphere failed states have created in society. The critical voices get disappointed by the governments’ case-by-case, slow-paced, reforms, and take aim at thecore principles of governments.

A person who kills himself is said to suffer from insanity, but when suicide is committed in strength, there should be a reason behind it. This reason should be established. Now that people in big numbers stage suicidal operations, something must be done about it.

You said that the only solution lies in efforts to bring in religious development and help religious denominations digest [the viewpoints of] each other. In some places like Lebanon different faiths and denominations are living together and have good ties with each other, but their country is always hit by some sort of unrest. Well, if religion offers the answer, why hasn’t it done so in Lebanon?

As far as Lebanon is concerned, one can say that this country has no serious problem if the problems Israel creates die down. Often times the crises Palestinians go through and the operations Israel mounts drag Lebanon into the conflict. The same thing has now happened in northern Turkey, something which is bringing the country’s Kurdish-held areas closer to a highly explosive point.

Let’s assume that the Associative Democracy is fragile in Lebanon, but it is, in any manner, much better than disorder. The fragility in question has something to do with those interferences. The Lebanese government has begun to turn the Hezbollah [Movement] into a political current, trying to incorporate it into the cabinet and maintain its own integrity. However, this did not occur in Iraq where the integration of the Sunnis into the government did not come true. In default of integration, the Sunnis were marginalized and took up arms.

It is true that Hezbollah is seriously under the influence of certain regional countries, but its national identity has been further highlighted ever since it has been given more political weight. So the convergence that exists between followers of different faiths and denominations in Lebanon amounts to deterrence. Big pains are said to have simple cures. One should not necessarily go after complex methods to treat great pains.

In Lebanon when a Shiite holds a gathering in which a Sunni and a Christian take part, he cannot celebrate the killing of Umar [a Sunni Caliph who took over after the demise of the Prophet]. In other words, the organizer lets go of his radical positions. The same thing holds true for the Sunnis. This way a mutual tie is established [between the followers of different beliefs]. This is very simple. These dialogs have helped Lebanon maintain its integrity to some extent.

Another example is Tunisia which successfully restored order in the post-Ben Ali period despite riots which were raging in the country. In Egypt, however, extremist moves by the Muslim Brotherhood that was overjoyed [about its victory] disrupted the affairs.

You mentioned that the Middle East is the focal point of the crisis, whereas we’ve heard in the news that the European and US nationals who have joined ISIL account for the bulk of the group’s fighters. The question is whether this crisis is really confined to the Middle East or a war has been waged affecting areas beyond this region?

I said a phenomenon has emerged which is called migration. Those immigrants, even if they are the third generation, show sympathy for the region. The further you go away from the center of religion, the more serious your religious prejudices would become. This has been proved empirically. It means that radicalism is seen in immigrant youth more than in local people, because they only see a very idealistic picture of what is not satisfactory in their place of living.

In like manner, an Iranian paints an idealistic image of the West in his mind which does not match the reality. Therefore, these young men look at the ideals through realities of the region and feel that they should do something to create a hub in the region.

When religious enthusiasm and youthful energies go hand in hand with social crises, the result would be a lot of uproar. Those people who are away feel that they should return to the region. When they are back, they treat locals as strangers, and not insiders. They argue that they should have done something if they had been true Muslims. They head for this region and resort to violence.

Given the current trend, we should wait to see the birth of a new group, even more violent than ISIL, in the foreseeable future just like today that we have seen the emergence of the so-called Islamic State which is far more radical than al-Qaeda.

It seems that violence will reach its extremity, but I believe that violence cannot curb radicalism. Some believe that the Westerners have created an atmosphere and a proper place allowing terrorists from Europe and the US to come to the region in order to destroy them all. This is the belief of those who say the US is to blame for ISIL.

Well, this fails to uproot a dangerous ideology and only some agents are eliminated, but that dangerous belief would take root in societies.    

That’s right. According to the supporters of this theory, this trend would at least delay the re-concentration of forces. Conversely, others are of the opinion that these are some tools to justify the 2011 decision, referring to the time when the Americans failed to build a consensus for attacking Syria.

Now such a trend can disrupt regional governments or cause the infrastructure of these systems to be badly damaged, at the minimum. To some, these groups are linked with MI6, Mossad, and the US intelligence agencies. They say the group continues to perpetrate violence to a predefined level and then interventions stop this trend. But this sounds to be based on conspiracy-based theories.

Another viewpoint says that what is going on is linked to the crisis in Saudi Arabia. Some argue that the radical forces that had gone to Afghanistan came back to Saudi Arabia after a national unity government was formed there and started to provoke a crisis. So Saudi Arabia tried to create a vacant region for them to keep them occupied.

Personally I think all these views could be the reason, but the fact is that the region is set for such a phenomenon. We need to find out where it comes from and review its effects.

Two brief reports on how the Iranian health sector is getting on

Iran-Crescent Society

Shahrvand, a newspaper run by the Red Crescent Society of the Islamic Republic of Iran, put two medical reports on its front page on October 21. What comes next is a partial translation of these two reports:

State-run hospitals have made a recovery

The Health Ministry has managed to push down healthcare costs paid by patients as much as 90 percent less than one year into Mr. Rouhani’s presidency. Not only have copayments for visits to doctors declined, but patients do not face any problems with health fees while being hospitalized.

“Copay in state-run hospitals and in medical facilities affiliated to the Health Ministry is as little as six percent in cities and four percent in rural areas for inpatient services. As for outpatient procedures, the copayment is 10 percent,” Deputy Health Minister for Treatment and Secretary of the National Health Evolution Plan Mohammad Haji-Aghajani told the daily.

Under new arrangements all those who pay a visit to state-run hospitals access a lot of services and those who are not insured will swiftly get insurance coverage upon arrival in a state hospital in less than an hour.

A new phase of a hospital owned by Iran’s Red Crescent Society opens in Dubai

A new 220-bed building of a hospital owned by Iran’s Red Crescent Society officially opened on October 20. Director of Iran’s Red Crescent Society Dr. Mohammad Farhadi, Iran’s Ambassador to the UAE Mohammad Reza Fayyaz, Director General of the Dubai Health Authority Essa al-Haj al-Maidoor and some other officials from the Supreme Council of Iran’s Red Crescent Society were on hand for the ceremony.

The new hospital building has 16 ER beds, an isolation room, an ER VIP, a well-equipped laboratory, three P.I.C.U beds, outpatient rooms, radiotherapy, M.R.I, C.T scan and endoscopy units, optometry and dermatology and infertility clinics, a dental center and several other stop-fungus-meds.com to provide excellent health services to the public.

The addition includes a center for analysis of genome, immunity and health, unique in the Persian Gulf states. The Dubai-based Iranian hospital also renders specialized pediatricsurgeries.

Planning for health promotion

At the inaugural, Dr. Farhadi highlighted efforts to recruit and engage elite scientists and researchers in health centers overseas in a bid to promote international cooperation in fulfilling humanitarian objectives in the region and said, “In today’s world, the core, humanitarian goal of national societies can only be attained through empathy, cooperation and exchange of views between nations.” […]

Two thousand patients are examined daily

Forty-three years ago when those in charge of the Iranian Red Crescent Society set up a small clinic in a deprived neighborhood of Dubai with the aim of providing humanitarian services to the disadvantaged, they would not have thought that the small clinic would one day turn into a 220-bed hospital.

The Public Relations Office of the society reported that 2,000 patients are examined by doctors in this hospital every day and aside from 600,000 Iranians who rely on the health services of this center, medical services of high quality offered in this hospital have to some extent gained the trust of Emirati people in Iranian doctors and health services in Dubai.

Promotion of health services is inevitable and the services presented by the Red Crescent Society of Iran have always helped Iran stand out in the region.

India to go ahead with investment in Iran’s Chabahar Port

Iran-India-chabahar
Iran-India-chabahar

With the political inhibitions of the previous government out of the way, India has chosen to push through with its plans to invest in the Iranian port city of Chabahar, Press TV reports.

Afraid of clouding relations with the United States, the previous administration of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh would not get the investment off the ground. However, the present government headed by Premier Narendra Modi cleared the move just a few months after taking office.

Iran’s Chabahar Port, located 72 kilometers (44 miles) west of Pakistan’s Gwadar port, holds immense strategic and economic significance for India. It is already connected to the city of Zaranj in Afghanistan’s southwestern province of Nimruz and can serve as India’s entry point to Afghanistan, Central Asia and beyond.

Trade ties between Iran and India have been witnessing a boom. According to Indian sources, the export of engineering items and services to Iran has increased dramatically.

In July, shipments showed an increase of around 140 percent, which amounted to $177 million. Last year, the figure only stood at $52 million.

Iran’s crude steel production exceeds 12m tons

Iran steel
Iran steel

Iranian steel-producing companies produced 12.06m tons of crude steel in the first nine months of 2014, showing a 6.59-percent growth compared with last year’s figure of 11.31m tons.

According to the latest statistics released by World Steel Association (WSA), China topped the list of crude steel producers in the period with 618m tons, wrote Sunday’s edition of ‘Iran Daily’.

At second to tenth places were Japan, the US, India, Russia, South Korea, Germany, Turkey, Brazil and Ukraine with 83.12m tons, 66.33m tons, 62.41m tons, 53.4m tons, 53.27m tons, 32.54m tons, 25.72m tons, 25.48m tons and 21.4m tons respectively.

In September, Iran produced 1.42m tons of crude steel, which is 7.28 percent higher than the August output of 1.33m tons.

Global steel production in September amounted to 134.42m tons, which shows a 1.45-percent rise compared with last year’s corresponding figure of 132.49 million tons.

WSA is the international trade body of the iron and steel industry. The association represents approximately 170 steel producers, including 17 of the world’s 20 largest steel companies, national and regional steel associations and steel research institutes.

Its members account for 98 percent of world steel production.

Iran not to shut down any nuclear facilities: Top negotiator

Iran-Araqchi
Iran-Araqchi

“All nuclear capabilities of Iran will be preserved and no facility will be shut down or even suspended and no device or equipment will be dismantled,” Abbas Araqchi, who is also Iran’s deputy foreign minister for legal and international affairs, said on Saturday.

“We will not retreat one iota from the country’s nuclear rights, but we are fully ready for transparency and confidence-building,” he said, adding that Iran will push ahead with “industrial-scale enrichment” of uranium to meet the country’s civilian needs.

Araqchi also repeated Iran’s call for the removal of all sanctions against the country, saying: “All sanctions should be lifted and the Islamic Republic of Iran will not accept even a single instance of sanctions to remain in place under a [final] comprehensive nuclear deal.”

The Iranian official’s remarks came in response to repeated demands from the West that Iran shut down the Fordow nuclear facility in central Iran.

Meanwhile, US Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman said on Thursday that the P5+1 group, which is negotiating with Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program, has offered the country ideas that are “equitable, enforceable and consistent” with Tehran’s desire for a civilian nuclear program, claiming that Iran would be responsible for any failure to reach a permanent accord over its nuclear work.

Iran and the P5+1 group of countries – Russia, China, France, Britain, the US and Germany – are in talks to work out a final deal aimed at ending the longstanding dispute over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear energy program as a November 24 deadline approaches.

Sources close to the Iranian negotiating team say the main stumbling block in the way of resolving the Western disputes over Iran’s nuclear energy program remains to be the removal of all the sanctions imposed on Iran and not the number of centrifuges or the level of enrichment.

Tehran wants the sanctions entirely lifted while the US, under pressure from the pro-Israeli lobby, insists that at least the UN-imposed sanctions against Iran should remain in place.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Oct. 25

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

News about the funeral procession of Ayatollah Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani, who passed away in Tehran on Tuesday October 21 after he went into a coma on June 4 due to a major heart attack, appeared on the front pages of most Iranian dailies on Saturday. Ayatollah Mahdavi Kani, who presided over the Assembly of Experts, was laid to rest in the Shah Abdol Azim Shrine in Rey, a town on the southern edge of the capital. The stellar performance of Iranian athletes in the Asian Para Games who finished fourth in the overall standings was also among the top stories of the day. Another story which drew a lot of attention was a final report released by the government about the controversial scholarships granted by the previous government to individuals who did not meet the required standards.

Abrar: “Mortar fire is exchanged along the border of Iran and Pakistan.”

 

Abrar newspaper 10 - 25


Afkar: “We welcome any mutual cooperation with regional countries, including Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other Muslim nations to effectively combat terrorism and extremism,” said Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

Afkar: “Iran’s Navy Commander Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari and Chinese Defense Minister Chang Wanquan hold talks in Beijing.”

 

Afkar newspaper 10 - 25


Arman-e Emrooz: “As few as 54 people owe almost $2 billion in overdue debts to Bank Melli Iran,” Managing Director of the bank Abdolnasser Hemmati said.

Arman-e Emrooz: “Elimination of political parties, and [concepts such as] thinking is impossible,” said President Rouhani.

Arman-e Emrooz: “Rakhshan Bani-Etemad, a renowned Iranian female director, appeared on the red carpet at Abu Dhabi Film Festival.”

 

Arman newspaper 10 - 25


Asia: “German journalist of Iranian descent Golineh Atai was awarded Hanns- Joachim Friedrichs-Preis, a prestigious journalism award in Germany.

Asia: “Iran’s cooperation in Qatar World Cup 2022. Based on negotiations between Iran’s ministers of trade and economy with their Qatari counterpart, Iranian firms and contractors in different fields will be welcome to help implement some projects in Qatar.”

 

Asia newspaper 10 - 25


Asr-e Rasaneh: “A team of French automotive experts is to arrive in Iran,” Managing Director of Iran Khodro Industrial Group Hashem Yekke Zare said.

Asr-e Rasaneh: “Plans are being devised to raise the country’s oil storage capacity by 32 million barrels.”

 

Asre resaneh newspaper 10 - 25


Bani Film: “Dubai Sport, a UAE-based TV station, has offered over $80 million to get the rights to broadcast Iranian [Premier League] football matches.”

 

Bani film newspaper 10 - 25


Ebtekar: “European tourists arrive in western and southern Iran.”

Ebtekar: “Mohammad-Taghi Mesbah-Yazdi, a member of the Assembly of Experts, was conspicuous by his absence in the funeral procession of the late Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani.”

 

Ebtekar newspaper 10 - 25


Eghtesad-e Pooya: “Iran’s mining sector has its sights on attracting foreign investment to the tune of $3 billion each year.”

 

Eghtesade puya newspaper 10 - 25


Etemad: “A final report has been released on investigations into whether or not those granted scholarships during the second term of Ahmadinejad met the required standards. Based on the report, as many as 3,772 individuals were given scholarships without passing the required examination; the scholarships of 840 university students have been rescinded and they will have to pay their tuition fees if they are willing to carry on their education; another 36 have been banned from education and will have to pay back all the fees spent on their education, grants of 23 who used the benefits dedicated to the families of those who lost limbs or lives to the war were cut off. A list of instructors – 448 in total – has been sent to their universities for a final decision in their case. A final decision in the case of 729 students has been put on hold due to its potential political ramifications.”

Etemad: “Tehran in business with Boeing; for the first time [since the Islamic revolution]; Iran has bought plane spare parts from Boeing.”

Etemad: “Rouhani has a great deal of patience; some are outraged by the accomplishments of the government,” former Tehran Mayor Gholamhossein Karbaschi said.

Etemad: “Tehran weather has reached an alarming stage; particles coming from desert-like sprawling expanses of land encircling the capital coupled with diesel fumes have darkened Tehran’s skies.”

 

Etemad newspaper 10 - 25


Ettela’at: “Iran finished fourth in the 2014 Asian Para Games in Incheon, South Korea.”

Ettela’at: “A cloud-seeding initiative will be implemented in Tehran.”

Ettela’at: “President Rouhani has urged the speedy identification [and arrest] of those behind recent acid attacks in Isfahan.”

 

Ettelaat newspaper 10 - 25


Farhikhtegan: “Former President Mohammad Khatami and Chairman of the Expediency Council Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani have paid bedside visits to Ayatollah Yousef Sannei, a former prosecutor general who is hospitalized in Tehran.”

 

Farhikhtegan newspaper 10 - 25


Iran: “Visiting Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance Ali Jannati has met with the Emir of Kuwait.”

Iran: “Iranian athletes bagged 120 medals in the Asian Para Games in Incheon.”

 

Iran newspaper 10 - 25


Iran Daily: “German official: Sanctions inflict heavy losses on West.”

 

Iran daily newspaper 10 - 25


Jahan-e Eghtesad: “The number of checks bounced has seen a 43-percent rise.”

 

Jahane eghtesad newspaper 10 - 25


Javan: “Tatbir [Striking oneself with a machete which causes blood to flow as a practice in remembrance of Imam Hossein] either performed in public or privately is forbidden,” read a religious edict issued by the Supreme Leader ahead of the mourning ceremonies in Muharram.

 

Javan newspaper 10 - 25


Jamejam: “Iranian artworks fetch almost $4 million at the Christie’s 2014 Dubai Auction.”

 

Jame jam newspaper 10 - 25


Jomhouri Islami: “An aid package to help those suffering from refractory diseases will be implemented soon; although co-payment by patients in state-run hospitals is about seven percent, many patients still cannot afford it,” said the health minister.

Jomhouri Islami: “IS has suffered its heaviest defeat in Iraq.”

 

Jomhurie eslami newspaper 10 - 25


Kayhan: “A cross-dresser who was trying to incite violence in rallies against recent acid attacks in Isfahan has been arrested.”

 

Kayhan newspaper 10 - 25


Payam-e Zaman: “Ebola can possibly find its way to the country; an equipped laboratory has been set up to contain the likely outbreak of the disease,” said the health minister.

 

Payame zaman newspaper 10 - 25


Resalat: “A historic farewell to Ayatollah Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani, a revolutionary figure.”

 

Resalat newspaper 10 - 25


Shahrvand: “Iranian athletes fell short of one gold medal to secure third berth in the Asian Para Games.”

Shahrvand: “In securing development, recruiting new volunteers is the objective of Iran’s Red Crescent Society,” said the head of the society.

 

Shahrvand newspaper 10 - 25


Sharq has quoted Mohammad-Taghi Mesbah-Yazdi, a member of the Assembly of Experts, as telling those who seek to prevent vice, “It’s imperative to avoid acts that stoke tensions.”

Sharq: “In a chat with the daily, those active on the political front threw their weight behind strategies devised by former President Mohammad Khatami.”

 

Shargh newspaper 10 - 25


Tafahom: “Iran tops the list of regional nations with lowest tourism costs.”

 

Tafahom newspaper 10 - 25


Tehran Times: “China says seeks closer military ties with Iran.”

 

Tehran times newspaper 10 - 25

 

Iran’s Hashemi calls on Riyadh to overturn Nimr’s death ruling

Iran-official-Hashemi
Iran-official-Hashemi

In a Saturday message to Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz, Chairman of Iran’s Expediency Council Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani said that a repeal of the verdict will “disappoint” those seeking to sow discord among Muslim sects and will further strengthen Shia-Sunni bonds.

“It is expected that at this juncture [in the Middle East region], where seditions are targeting the very essence of the Islamic Ummah, the reversal of the death sentence would result in the settlement of challenges in the Muslim world”, the message said.
On October 15, Nimr was sentenced to death at the Specialized Criminal Court in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. In reaction to the sentence, people took to streets in the city of Qatif in Eastern Province to condemn the move.  There have also been demonstrations in other countries.

The senior Saudi Shia cleric, who was attacked and arrested in July 2012, is accused of delivering anti-regime speeches and defending political prisoners.

On Friday, a senior Iranian cleric warned Saudi Arabia against executing the death sentence.

“We warn Saudi Arabia… that this government will pay a heavy price for a [possible] execution of a Shia cleric,” Ayatollah Mohammad Ali Movahhedi Kermani told worshippers at the weekly Friday prayers in Tehran.

Human rights activists say the sentence issued for Sheikh Nimr was politically motivated.

Amnesty International has denounced the verdict, calling it “appalling”.

Harvesters pick berberis in Iran, enjoying the fruits of their labor

Harvesters pick berberis in Iran

It is harvest season in Iran where pickers are all out in the open to pick berberis. Pickers find it somewhat difficult to collect berberis thanks to their thorny shrubs, but it is a labor of love for many.

Berberis vulgaris are the evergreen shrubs found throughout the temperate and subtropical regions of the world. Iran is the title holder when it comes to berberis cultivation. It accounts for almost 95 percent of the berberis produced around the world.

The berberis, which has dark red to violet foliage, is edible and rich in vitamin C. The dried fruit of the plant which is called Zereshk in Persian is widely used in cooking, giving a tart flavor to food. It is also used for medicinal purposes.

The following are beautiful images Fars News Agency placed on its website on October 22 on the harvest of berberis in a town in South Khorasan province:

 

Iranian woman Reyhaneh Jabbari hanged over murder

Reyhaneh-Jabbari
Reyhaneh-Jabbari

Iranian woman Reyhaneh Jabbari has been executed inside a prison near the capital Tehran after she was convicted of murdering a man in a criminal case seven years ago.

Reyhaneh was hanged in the early hours of Saturday after being found guilty of killing Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi in July 2007.

The 26-year-old woman has confessed to the murder claiming that she had stabbed the man to death to defend herself against attempted rape, but her claims were rejected based on further investigations and crime scene evidence.

Jabbari’s execution was halted earlier this month in order to give her lawyer more time to convince the victim’s family to pardon her.

Under Islamic law, a convicted murderer is put to death if the victim’s family demands execution.

How can one be an Iranian? How can one not be an Iranian?

Iran in Earth
Iran in Earth
Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob
Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob

Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob, a prominent Iranian historian and author was born on March 19, 1923 in Borujerd, western Iran. Before being admitted to Tehran University in 1945 to study Persian Literature, he taught at schools of his hometown. Ten years after admission into the capital’s flagship university, he received a Ph.D. under the supervision of Badiozzaman Forouzanfar. In 1956, he began to teach Islamic History, History of Religion, and History of Sufism courses at Tehran University.

He also taught arts courses in Tehran before moving abroad where he held faculty positions, among other places, at prestigious universities such as Oxford, Sorbonne, Princeton, and University of California. He penned several books on literature as well as on Persian and Islamic history and translated several others. Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob passed away on September 15, 1999 in Tehran at the age of 78. To mark the anniversary of his demise, Etella’at newspaper published an article this unforgettable literary figure had penned. The following is the translation of the article in its entirety:

Almost 200 years ago during the Age of Enlightenment in Europe, prominent French author and philosopher Montesquieu used an extremely sarcastic language, which was a fixture of his Persian Letters, to prompt Parisians, astonished by the strange stories involving Rica and Usbek, to curiously ask each other “How can one be an Iranian?”

When the nonchalant Parisians put down the book, their curiosity which was likely to have been a product of their imagination, slipped away too. The thousand-plus unanswered questions Montesquieu had in mind about the chaotic times he lived in seemed to push that question into the sideline. I came across the same question during a French literature course in school; I have since thought about an answer again and again.

How can one be an Iranian? No doubt, ethnicity and race are not the determining factor in being an Iranian. Since the reign of Achaemenians, many different ethnic groups including Persians, Scythians, Turanians, Greeks, Arabs and Tartars have mixed in this land and the idea of having a pure Iranian race now sounds childish. Still the generations that have emerged as a result of their intermixing have all lived in Iran and for Iran. And even if they had pure blood circulating in their bodies, they could not have been any more Iranian.

Although language plays an undeniable role in the evolution of Iranian character, assumptions that residents of this land are Iranian simply because of a language which is free of borrowed words would be nothing but a dream. The fact that some Iranians frown on the use of foreign words may stem from their patriotic zeal, but their insistence [on declaring Farsi off-limits to foreign words] is bound to limit our linguistic maneuverability and deprive our culture of what it has achieved over the centuries.

The fact of the matter is that the pinnacle of our Islamic culture which came before the Mongol invasions and conquests was mostly Iranian. One cannot simply build on the fact that a language has been influenced by a foreign language to suggest that itis far from being a source of pride.

Throughout this period, Iranian culture has been a jewel in the crown of Islamic culture. And the presence of some Koranic words in Farsi is proof that Iranian culture has had spiritual influence in the world of Islam. It could have been impossible for Iranian culture to sweep the entire world of Islam from the Ottoman Empire all the way to the Indian Subcontinent and not borrow a number of Arabic words that have been used in the holy Koran.

Can you think of one language which has been as exposed as Persian to foreign words and has maintained its purity? In everything which is described as Iranian heritage and Iranian culture, there are traces of other ethnicities, but this has not compromised the integrity of the Iranian heritage.

 

Iran’s role in the world civilization

 

Taj Mahal
Taj Mahal

The world civilization owes Iran a debt of gratitude big enough to immunize it against any doubt about the integrity of Iranian culture, both before and after Islam. Humanity is indebted to Iranian culture when it comes to literature, arts, morality and religion.

In literature it is not just fable that owes Iran a debt of gratitude. Goethe, André Gide and almost all prominent writers of other genres such as Romanticism and Parnassism have learned a thing or two from Iranian poetry, drama, and storytelling.

As far as music is concerned, Iran left an indirect impact on European music through Arabic music. In architecture, the Iranian role in bringing together the dreams of the east and west was conspicuous even before the emergence of Islam. Researchers believe that in the absence of Iranian architecture, the Byzantine architecture would not have made so much progress. (1) During the Islamic period, Taj Mahal, this marble mausoleum, which symbolizes the peak of artistic talent, was partly built by architects who had received training in Iran.

The religion and ethical standards Iran has introduced to the world are of great importance too. In a world where ethical ideals of Assur and Babylon had promoted savagery, the constant struggle between good and evil in which human tendency toward the former would be viewed as contribution to building a virtuous world amounted to an ethical revolution for the entire humanity.

Centuries before the emergence of Christianity, Mithraism turned fraternity among humans into the cornerstone of the bond among its followers. The idea of integrating major faiths, which seemed elusive even as recently as during the monarchy of Nader Shah and Akbar Shah, was very close to materialization under [Prophet] Mani.

In promoting Islam, Iranians strove as much as other Muslims did. Nowhere did Islamic mysticism manifest itself more concretely than in the works of Attar, Mowlana and Hafiz. The investment Iranians made in the global culture market was big enough to create unprecedented credit for Iran in spiritual transactions on the international stage. It is true that Iran owes the world a lot for helping it build a magnificent heritage; what Iran has offered the world in return is so significant that its absence will definitely interfere with the way the world handles things.

 

From dream to reality

No doubt, just like a civil society, no member of the international community can play in the real world the role of an imaginary castaway like Robinson Crusoe and serve as a jack of all trades and view itself as totally independent of others. In a world where all nations are linked through a visible or invisible chain, Iranians cannot limit themselves to their past and keep dreaming of reviving the Achaemenian and Sassanid dynasties.

In the past, Iranian culture has borrowed positive elements from other cultures and has in return lent them valuable things. This tradeoff which manifests Iranian flexibility and zeal has lent its culture an air of integration, linking it with eastern and western cultures.

But Iranian culture has a noble human element that symbolizes its spirit. It is thanks to this human element that Iranian culture finds its way into other cultures, and even soothes the aggressor and helps blend it in itself. This human element has been so delicately built into each and every Iranian custom that identifying and separating it is now difficult.

Iranians are Iranian without having to be a supermarket of jealously and deception like Usbek in Montesquieu’s Persian Letters; without being as abased and foxy as James Morier’s Hajji Baba and without being infatuated with the West in every aspect of life like the protagonist of Jafar Khan has returned from Abroad. In the absence of literature, natural delicacy, flexibility and intellectual tolerance and without their historic quest for justice, Iranians won’t be Iranian.

It is true that the level of Iranian politeness and delicacy might at times verge on flattery which is typical of slaves. But morphologically speaking, the shamelessness and promiscuity that have come to our land along with infatuation with the West can be a legacy of the snatch-and-run attitude of the cavemen. Tolerance might be at odds with the totalitarianism which is in practice in many modern societies. In the past the same practice helped create a vast empire for Cyrus and failure to uphold the same principle played a role in the defeat the empire suffered at the hands of Alexander.

 

Justice and tolerance

 

PerspolisJustice and tolerance were just like two wings that helped Iranian culture fly to the pinnacle of humanity in the past. As Herodotus has put it Deioces, the founder of Iranian monarchy, came to power just because he upheld justice which also played a role in ideology. Ahura Mazda was a judge and an advocate of justice and his resurrection day was meant to uphold justice.

In Iranian mythology, Zahhak and Afrasiab, who symbolized injustice and deviation from the path of Ahura Mazda, are said to be Aneran – which means non-Iranian. Because of the injustice they did to fellow humans, they are not viewed as Iranians by those who have created those myths. Justice and tolerance which Zahhak and Afrasiab have disregarded are the principal components of Iranian culture.

The first Iranian empire which was founded by Cyrus had a constitution which enshrined tolerance and respect for the viewpoints of others. I have described it again and again as Cyrus-style tolerance. Thanks to the same tolerance, the Greeks were given a chance to make their presence felt in the Achaemenian land. As a famous Greek Philosophy historian (2) says what had been banned by Athenian narrow-mindedness came into existence in Ionia, part of Achaemenian territory where the earliest Greek philosophy books were written. One should credit the proverbial Iranian tolerance and respect for the viewpoints of others for that.

Thanks to inevitable incidents, this spirit of justice and tolerance did not materialize, but it remained a pillar of Iranian culture in the post-Islamic era. That Shiites supported the administration of justice as a pillar of faith caused a rift between them and Sunnis. Besides, books on literature, morality and politics praised justice as the loftiest of causes.

As for tolerance, the impact was so huge that mystic figures described the differences among religions as a war of words and Hafiz said the war involving 72 nations was only an excuse. The conflict erupted because they failed to identify the true path and thus opted for myth. Centuries before Sartre and Russell, our mystic figures objected to war. In a world where Christians formed an alliance with Mongols to kill Muslims, Sa’di said, “All humans are members of one frame.”

Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob
Abdolhossein Zarrinkoob

If Iranians have had an opportunity to offer something to the rest of the world, it has come at a time when justice and tolerance have prevailed in their society. For instance, at a time when Medieval Tartar justice was in place and these two elements were absent from Iranian society, colorful flatteries which were designed to deceive the fool came in the form of qasidas by Farrokhi, Anvari and Zahir. Mystic concepts which fill Iranian poetry with lofty humanitarian concepts came from scientific forums and Khanqahs [places for spiritual retreat and character reformation of Sufis] which provided shelter to justice and tolerance when they were in trouble.

It is true that at some stages in history like during the reign of Anushirawan, supporters of Mazdak, [who was a Zoroastrian prophet] were mistreated. Those things happened when justice and tolerance were somewhat forgotten. But radical approaches were not in line with the spirit of Iranians, and scholars of the past never willingly approved of such stupid measures and injustice. These rash measures pale in comparison with the relatively sustainable moderation of Iranians.

Those who are familiar with different aspects of human nature in dramatic situations definitely know that the most moderate of individuals go through critical moments too. Sudden excitements of a moderate soul do not take away his/her justness, similarly fleeting episodes of immoderation in the long history of an ethnic group are no proof that it does not believe in the principles of justice and tolerance.

Iranian culture has a language whose integration of a number of non-Persian words with Dari lends it dynamism and makes it unforgettable. It is true that this language is not pure. Does the fact that individuals such as Abu Moslem, Shah Abbas and Nader Shah were partly Arab and Tartar make us doubt their being Iranian identity?

The language Hafiz, Sa’di, Khayyam and Mowlana employed was the true language of Iranian culture. Inclusion of a number of non-Iranian words in this language will do nothing to diminish our interest in it. It is said that when British Orientalist Edward Browne came across a scientist who could speak Farsi, he’d set aside any other language. “We need to speak in Farsi, because when you speak that language you feel your language is more humanistic in nature.” Don’t the Iranians who speak in foreign languages with their children or those who write in English in workshops and hospitals feel ashamed when they hear this quote from Edward Browne?

 

A closer look at Iran’s past  

When I think about Iran’s past, I take pride in the fact that the Iranians have not killed fellow humans or destroyed the world in the name of religion or freedom; in the fact that they have not massacred the residents of territories they have captured; in the fact that they have not enslaved their enemies; in the fact that they have offered shelter to the Greeks and have accommodated Armenians; and in the fact that they have freed Jews and their prophets from captivity in Babylon.

I also take pride in the fact that they have not launched Crusades and have not held Inquisition hearings; in the fact that they have had nothing similar to Saint-Barthélemy and have not used guillotine to behead their opponents; in the fact that they do not view gladiator fights or bloody games involving angry bulls as entertainment; in the fact that they have not uprooted native Americans and have not pushed Boers to the edge of extermination; in the fact that they have not developed torture machines to frighten their opponents; and in the fact that if there were some horrible punishments in practice during the reign of certain Sassanid kings, they have always looked at them as evil phenomena. The fact that unlike other old nations Iranians have not exhibited moral defects gives me a sense of calm and pride.

 

How can one not be Iranian?

If the question of Montesquieu and curious Parisians is once again posed to me – How can one be an Iranian? – I have a clear-cut answer; one which comes in the form of a question itself: How can one not be an Iranian? I believe the new generation and the ones that follow to see the continuity of Iranian culture and history can proudly produce the same answer. To do that they need to hold on to this moral and human element that already exists in Iranian culture. Besides, at a time when lofty human goals are tumbling, we need to make as much effort as possible to keep hopes alive that Iranians in the future will remain as impeccable as those who have lived in the past.

However, if the day comes when the intervention of modern-day figures limits the dynamism of our language and deals it a blow, when our delicate literature gives way to violence and compassion-free, shameless behavior, when our quest for justice is replaced with revengeful savagery, when Cyrus-style tolerance is replaced with censorship of ideas, when our love of good is supplanted with selfishness, when the curiosity of Parisians is coupled with discontent and indignation and the same question – Iranian? How can one be an Iranian? – is bitterly asked, I hope that the tone of those who ask this question is full of praise for those who love Iran.

 

(1). Talbot Rice, “Persia and Byzantium” in “Legacy of Persia” 85.

(2). Zeller, “Outlines of the History of Greek Philosophy” 1955/23.