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Posts categorized "Iran, The society"

December 10, 2007

End of Fall in Tehran

We are still in Iran but finally things are getting more clear and we hopefully be able to return to Libya soon. December is a short working month and this delay is going to be costly for me in closing yearly targets. In the past few weeks while waiting for the passport translation issue to get resolved, I did some reading and listening and did it mostly through my brother's extraordinary collection of thousands of DVD movies and his jaw dropping stack of collected music.
Apart from the delay, things have been good. Tehran is showing autumn in full form...trees have already shed most of the leaves, mountains have snow cap and the wind says it all.
Coming back to Iran gave us a good opportunity to catch up with our friends. A lot is changing in our community of friends and former colleagues. My former boss and his wife left Iran to India for their next work assignment. They spent 2.5 years here and loved it. I have rarely seen such an adventurous couple and they are really unique in seeing a good thing in everything. Another friend is moved by the company to the UK, another one is going to the U.A.E. When we went to Libya, two of our other friends went to Thailand. Yet one another left for his studies to Canada. We are so dispersed in the world! and that is the beauty of it I suppose.
We will be leaving and will miss the first snowfall in downtown. It happens sometimes well before winter and that is when you truly feel falling for the end of fall.

November 15, 2007

Visiting Iran

It is more than a week since I started a little vacation in Iran. I stayed off-line most of the time enjoying a sweet reunion with family members. It was the longest time outside of Iran, the past 7 months! It was not so long compared to some people who come back after years living abroad but was long enough for me to miss the delicate feeling, the strange sense and the unknown flavour of being in Iran. It was not just about being homesick but a mysterious combination of memories that dragged us to a short vacation back home. Well, add to that the necessity for spending the travel allowance allocated to me for the year 2007 before it gets perished into 2008!

Not much is changed in Iran since the time we left. There is a new bank note of 50,000 Rials is in circulation (around 5.5 US$), a vivid sign of a major concern of the population: “High Inflation”. Fuel usage is now rationalized. The price is still low but there is an allotment for each car and that is controlled via a dedicated smart card. As always, I paid a visit to a major IT mall. I was happily surprised seeing more and more apple products in the shelves, ipods and iphones were everywhere and many shops were selling iMac and MacBooks. None of them are real official resellers I guess but this has been the case for a long time for American products. For ordinary people, there is no such thing as embargo, only that they could earn more if the country was open and I am not sure if many of them realize that.

We are spending most of the time with family and friends yet I am finding a quality time to catch up with some of the books that I left reading and audiobooks that I gathered and did not listen to.

September 01, 2007

Rageh Inside Iran

               
 
          

This is truly a fair report compared to many reports I have happened to see from foreign journalists inside Iran. A reporter who talks about life in Tehran in a unique approach and wisely covers many different angles of this complex city. This is the city in which I am grown up and it was a nostalgic feeling watching this video. Rageh Omar did a much better job than permanent BBC correspondents in Iran. It is a lengthy video but is a good watch.

This is the tag of this video on Google Video:
"Rageh Omaar embarks on a unique journey inside what he describes as one of the most misunderstood countries in the world, looking at the country through the eyes of people rarely heard - ordinary Iranians.

It took a year of wrangling to get permission to film inside Iran but the result is an amazing portrayal of an energetic and vibrant country that is completely different to the usual images seen in the media."

August 03, 2007

The Lost Innocence

They call them rapists, murderers, drug dealers...call them whatever...what is happening in Iran? In a matter of few weeks, I heard a lot of news and saw many photos and videos about public executions in various parts of the country. No comments about things they did and whether these fellows deserved to be executed or not. Some people say execution is not fair at all, some say the opposite...and Iranian justice system says eye for the eye...let's say we agree to this point but why killing someone in front of others? why?

Public execution is the most bitter thing that can happen in a society and sadly, I saw a little kid in one of the pictures in the scene of an execution. What is the price of her innocence? it is indeed easy to destroy things but no one will leave the scene of the execution thinking about things he/she learned for life...they may cut a bad tree in hope of a better plant to rise from the same land but by poisoning the soil, only death grows...:(

July 23, 2007

Will you let it go?

It is like an epidemic feeling. When I was inside Iran, reading blogs of Iranians living outside, I could feel a certain degree of exaggeration or if not, an elevated level of sensitivity towards unpleasant political and social news in Iran. Now that I am rather outside, I guess I am getting covered by the same shadow.
The pathetic habit of media in bringing all the ugly in front of me makes this shadow much darker and more scary. Will Iran ever become what we are hoping for her to be? and what are we hoping for anyway? under the shadow, in the darkness, in search of what we are moving our hands so desperately.

Sadly, Iranian government is like an angry gangster that always avenges its owns citizens. They claim they are "Islamic" but they act so harsh to people. If you are an intellectual, you are a spy, if you are a cleric who does not like them, you are "diverted". If are young and want to be just young, you are "made fool by the enemy". I do not want to generalize and be like those who give a picture of Iran as if it is hell...it is not...but the government should just let people live as they want...they can not suffer from economic disasters AND more sanctions AND threat of war AND social restriction AND ban in normal stuff AND censorship AND lack of freedom of speech AND political limitation and and... will you please let it go in one area at least?

While I am getting more into work these days, too busy to write, Mrs.Behi is busy writing. Today she wrote about what she would be involved with if we were in Tehran (read her insights here).

Perhaps I should just give up nagging for the moment. We have rented new movies that we want to watch and it is 10:30 p.m after a long day. I need to go back to Mrs.Behi and did you know how cute she was when she was little? see this

July 17, 2007

Tehran

Link: TEHRAN. I miss you...This is a good photo collection...

July 16, 2007

Physics competition in Iran

Link: Updates from the International Competition

This blog is a sort of updating pad written by members of the American team participating in the international physics Olympiad in Esfahan, Iran. It is always good to read the accounts of foreign guests to Iran. Here are some photos from the opening ceremony. Iranian students have always been among the tops of such Olympiads....I heard that almost all those who won medals are now studying outside of Iran and will probably stay there...pity. Anyway...all the best for the Iran team :)

July 04, 2007

Great Expectations

Two and a half years after Bam Earthquake in Iran (Google image link) ..there are people still living on the wreckage of what used to be their homes. I came across this blog where the new post is about three short letters from Bam Children to GOD...I try my best to translate as close as possible.

- Hello dear merciful GOD. I hope you hear me. Dear merciful GOD, please forgive the people of our city, I apologize to you on their behalf. Please forgive our wrong doings dear merciful GOD. You made us wanderers of the desert and made us to live in tents. Dear GOD. each night, the horrible sound of the earthquake can be heard. Bye. (By a 12 year old)

- Dear GOD, I have one wish. Please build "Bam". Bam is too hot and the nights are too cold. If we were in our house, we could have had the heater on during the night and during the day, the air cooler was on. (By an 11 year old)

- Dear GOD, I ask you to cure me as soon as possible so that I can east something. Dear merciful GOD, please make us also rich. Dear GOD I really like that my mother could have bought the refrigerator today. (A 9 year old).

June 27, 2007

The Pirates of Petrol

Petrol is outrageously cheap in Iran and I think it makes perfect sense not to subsidize it to the level that it is. It is ridiculous for a giant oil exporter to spend so much money importing petrol while so much of it gets into hands of smugglers who pass it to neighboring countries or gets burnt by old, inefficient cars. Rationalizing the crazy level of internal consumption should have done so long ago....

Knowing that the subject of the above paragraph is Iran, can automatically suggest that things would not be as simple as they should...petrol price is such a sensitive issue that all previous governments did not dare making any drastic increase...they feared what happened in Tehran last night (see pictures).

First of all, I do not understand the Iranian mob! so you collected some more liters of cheap petrol, that means a couple of more kilometers!! and burning petrol pumps! who are they punishing? but at the same time, it is so much to expect from the middle-class and bottom level of Iranian economy to bare this after such a dreadful decline in the economy and the level of unemployment and inflation...and now  shadow of more sanctions...but it is not a big deal...I am sure Iranians will get used to it...I am sure many of my fellow countrymen will consider selling their 1970's monstrous Chevrolet Blazers! or think twice before wandering around the streets Thursday nights...

Instead of global slogans against other countries and spending billions for second hand Russian nuclear plants, shall we make some more refineries? first things first...


May 22, 2007

Where is MY dignity?!

From Mrs.Behi: It’s been more than one month that I am here in Tripoli, a city with a beautiful side of the sea, the ancient Roman ruins that while walking in its area I was trying to imagine the time of the Roman Empire here, the buildings with the Islamic architecture which you can still see the Italian colony’s traces in some of its areas…

Here in Libya I haven’t seen a couple walking in the street hand in hand. It seems to me as if taking this simple act of closeness feels very strange to them! And also you can rarely see any woman at night in restaurants with their friends or families, actually the atmosphere is kind of closed compared to Iran, but there are many nice things to do and to enjoy here, as I can say I loved living here so far.

Any way, these days I read in the news and some Persian blogs about this latest authority’s pressure on Iranian women’s Hijabs. Head-scarf has always been a sensitive topic in Iran and has been considered as a symbol of spirituality for Iranian women but in my opinion this does not really worth this much concern while there are tons of much more important things to think for a person in order to keep her spirituality alive and be a GOOD person instead of only focusing on covering some HAIRS!

… Here in Tripoli, there is no strict or official rule for this subject, so they are free to choose and wear whatever they want, but as I’ve been seeing, the majority of women apply Hijab in a way that they cover all of their hair but you can see various kinds of dress and all of them have one thing in common which is, you don't see any part of their bodies being revealed. They are covering themselves exactly according to Ghoran’s words but many of them don’t have any problem with wearing the very tight dresses! I guess it’s because there was no specific mention in the holy book about this part! 

Apparently,there is no distinction line or hard feelings between the group who apply it and the people who don’t … and see what is happening in Iran, there is a strict governmental rule for this subject, no matter what do you really believe, You have to obey it because you live in an Islamic country with so many valuable Islamic rules! You always can see women who are trying to escape from this rule by not applying it in a perfect way"according to the Islamic government", and you can always feel the cold invisible wall between those women who really like to apply it and the ones who don’t, you can see the ridicules categorization that always is taking place from the majority of people like:
1.You cannot be a spiritual person while you are not covering your hair, they just don’t come together, so you cannot be a part of my party.
2. You cannot be an open-minded person while you’re applying Hijab, so you cannot be a part of my party.

So, you cannot be accepted as who you really are and in one word you cannot be just YOU…