By chance, the day following our arrival was Iran's "National Picnic Day" (13th day of the Persian new year), when everyone spends the day outside. The beautifully landscaped park adjacent to our hotel was crawling with families, many of whom had set up umbrella tents at an early hour; others were cooking lunch over camp stoves. As we strolled around cautiously, waiting to fend off denunciations as agents of the Great Satan, it suddenly dawned on me: it wasn't going to happen. Everyone we saw was outgoing and friendly. Frisbees were tossed, ping pong was played, chess games were under way, hookahs were smoked. Kids zipped around on in line skates, looking like kids at home; many played pick-up games of soccer. Fathers carried their children about on their shoulders. Mothers joined their daughters in kicking soccer balls about.
The next morning, our group of 35 assembled at the hotel. We met our American guide, a former U.S. ambassador, now affiliated with both Stanford and Harvard, who delivered five formal lectures during the days to come. We also met our local guide, Ali, an amazing source of good humor and knowledge. Ali not only was knowledgable about Persian history, religion, politics, culture, economics, and sociology -- but was a well-traveled man who also had a good background in American and European civilization. We spent the first couple of days in Tehran, visiting the National Archeology Musem, the former royal palace (including the throne room where the shah was coronated), and a museum of glass and ceramics. We also paid a visit to the crown jewels of the pre-Revolution era, which included whole stacks of emeralds, rubies, diamonds and pearls -- precious stones hauled back from India during the days of the Mogul Empire.
We made our final flight of the tour to the desert town of Kerman, from which we toured the ruins of an entire city constructed of red clay. We then drove to Yazd, the center of the remaining Zoroastrian community in Iran. We visited a Zoroastrian village, and its "fire temple," and also hiked to the top of one of two adjacent "towers of silence," where the bodies of the dead, until quite recently, were commended to the attention of vultures. The birds stripped the bodies to bare bones within a few hours, we were told, and the cleaned bones were then dropped into a deep pit and covered by lime as final interment. This information appealed strongly to certain adolescent strains in my personality.
The best was saved for last. From Shiraz we drove to Isfahan, the capital of Persia under the Safavid dynasty in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The city is beautiful, both architecturally and in its urban design. Like many of Iran's cities, it is rich in green, carefully maintained city parks. Located astride a river, its two halves are tied together by five historic and beautiful bridges. The enormous Maydan-e Shah (Royal Square) is enclosed on all four sides by uniformly designed buildings, interrupted by two very large, ornately tiled mosques. The town also has Iran's largest remaining settlement of Armenians; we walked through their part of town and visited an Armenian Christian church.
As one of our group noted, we saw virtually no homeless people or beggars. The only exception would be a few refugees from Afghanistan and migrants from Baluchistan. In general, Afghanis seem to play a part in the social ecology similar to recent immigrants from Mexico in our southwestern states.
Iran is a complex nation. Its people are warm and friendly, even as their Shi'ite faith teaches them the world is full of injustice. They are proud of their Persian heritage, but modern Iran is also home to Azeris, Baluchis, Afghans, Turks and Arabs. Its government is Islamic, one of the few theocratic states in the world, but it protects Jews, Christians, and Zoroastrians as "people of the Book." Iran lies on historic crossroads in the Middle East, and is at a crossroads itself. It may soon be a nuclear power. It's a country we can't ignore, and one worth knowing well.
In this post, I've tried to give an overview of the sights we saw and a few of my overall impressions. I plan to follow up with another post, soon to come, based on what I learned during the trip, giving my thoughts about religious and political problems in today's Iran, and Iran's place in the international picture. (Well, that sounds a bit pompous -- it will just be a post, not a treatise!)
Click here for a number of photos I've posted on Facebook.
Great writeup, Donny!
ReplyDeleteGlad you had a phenomenal trip. Looking forward to your next big trip!
Wow, sounds like an amazing trip!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to check out facebook now.
Juliana