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Category Archives: Iran

Saved by Beauty: a new book about Iran

03 Friday Jun 2011

Posted by Tea-mahm in Iran, Poetry, Shams-i-Tabriz, Sufi, Travel

≈ 1 Comment

On a Thursday  a couple weeks ago, Roger Housden launched his new book at the Marin bookstore  Book Passage. He shared the stage with Peter Coyote who asked him good questions. About 100 people turned out. Roger told the audience: “When I went to Iran I wanted to meet the creative people. Iran is 3,000 years old! Human rights, Sufi traditions of love and wisdom. I wanted to see how these were carried on in present day Iran.”

Roger Housden

Roger Housden has written a fine book.

Saved by Beauty, Adventures of an American Romantic in Iran is an elegant bridge between cultures. I read this slowly, tasting the literary flavors – not my habit, since I read quickly – even with poetry. I’m not into sappy “romantic” stuff. But this book is fresh and compelling. Unexpected. He is detained by Iranian Security. I mean really detained and questioned over and over. Scary.

There are gardens. “Paradise derives from the old Persian word for “garden,” pardis,” Roger writes. “So important was the garden in old Persia that when a new city was planned, the gardens would be planted before any foundations were laid.” You will want to read this chapter. He sketches the garden of Naranjastan in Shiraz with words that seem to be colored with artist’s pastels. Back in the hotel he checks in with the poet Rumi, whose book he carries on his journey. He opens to these words: Remember the proverb, Eat the grapes. /Do not keep talking about the garden./ Eat the grapes.

Some chapters are spicy. He is welcomed by Toufan, highly placed in the sophisticated Iranian film world. She is a woman who lived in L.A. for years, then moved back to Iran after her thirteen-year-old daughter suggested it. When Roger said he’d like to meet a Sufi Sheikh, she told him, “Sufism is all the rage here now… it has become fashionable with the upper classes the way Kabbalah has in the West because of Madonna.”
A friend in America gave Roger a jar of marmalade to take to her as an introduction. Toufan began the chain of connections that would bring him to the door of many creative and interesting Iranians.

She introduces Roger to the artist Haleh, who says: “Women in Iran today are breaking the hijab of expression, both politically and artistically. Women are expressing themselves now in every art form in a culture where they have been taught not to reveal themselves… And you know what gave them permission? The Revolution. The Revolution created a new form of language for foreign relations that was unapologetic, angry, and direct. That had never been known in Iran before…”

He travels around the country by himself and discovers Iranian Judaism, the Zoroastrians, and the Sufis. He savors the visual elixir of the heart of Isfahan – the Royal Mosque. He writes, “Isfahan is the Florence of the Orient, without the tourists.”

People, places, and a stunning experience that is life changing. He takes us along through the police interrogation. He emerges a changed man. “And yet, the very absence of my well-worn identity felt like a sudden breath of freedom: like taking off a tight fitting suit I had not even realized I was wearing.”

Saved by Beauty by Roger Housden, Broadway Books, Crown Publishing, 2011.

Azar Nafisi: Literature ~ imagination with no boundries

30 Wednesday Jun 2010

Posted by Tea-mahm in Azar Nafisi, Events, Iran

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Azar Nafisi

A while ago I went to hear a talk by Iran’s foremost woman writer living in the US today. Azar Nafisi. She is author of the international bestseller Reading Lolita in Tehran, and professor and the executive director of Cultural Conversations at the Foreign Policy Institute of Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC.

Her book, Reading Lolita in Tehran, has spent over 117 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.  It has been translated in 32 languages, and has won diverse literary awards… It mixes a book group studying literary masters and invasive  Iranian politics. It shows  a sophisticated, educated people who find themselves surrounded by strict Islamic laws; it brings the reader into women’s dizzying shift from wearing European dress to  a chador. Reading authors such as Nabokov become an expression of inner freedom. Azar has an on-line reading list: The Thousand and One Arabian Nights are there, along with Nabokov, Austen, Flaubert and Fitzgerald.

Marin Academy, where my sons attended high school, invited Azar Nafisi to speak in the Thatcher Lecture series on April 20. She talks quickly with a kind of urgency that is born in someone who understands how very fast one’s reality can shift; she is a speaker who wants to impress the audience with the preciousness of the freedom to share your truth, as you know it. She addressed a crowd of the students and their parents. The reading of literature was the vehicle of her message that night.

“One of the best things about books,” she said, “is the connections they make… readers and writers share the trait of curiosity.” She quotes Nabokov, “Curiosity is insubordination in its purest form.” She continues: “Insubordination is an everyday business. It’s posing yourself as a question mark. A good education strives to make us more restless about our world. Curiosity is the basis of this restlessness. Nothing in life is ordinary! Art, music, and poetry give us curiosity. Fiction gives us the ability to put ourselves in someone else’s shoes…. Literature brings us together. The novel is about the shock of recognition… how much we have in common!  The villain in fiction is the one who doesn’t listen, see, or be willing to change. Blindness is bad. Literature is always an act of discovery. We need to investigate. We live in a world that’s intellectually timid. Discover something that you don’t know! You need imagination in order to imagine a future that doesn’t exist.” Her subtext for me was to stay awake, and beware of how fast the powers-that-be can take away the freedom of an unaware people; keep your mind keen, practice intellectual bravery.

"Curiouser and Curiouser...." Alice

“Iran was ethnically diverse with many different religions and all of a sudden we had a Muslim world! Bereft of individuality, culture and religion. Iran is 3,000 years old and half of that time it was Zoroastrian, after the seventh century it changed to Islam. But we still celebrate the first day of spring, a Zoroastrian Holiday.”

I have been reading her new book, a brave memoir called, Things I’ve Been Silent About.  It grabbed me right away. She offers beautiful writing and the scenes of family life in Teheran during the time of the Shah. The book begins with: “Most men cheat on their wives to have mistresses.  My father cheated on my mother to have a happy family life” It is a deeply personal reflection and exploration of a young girl’s pain over family secrets and a mother’s lost life. The first half of the book is a wonderful fresh Alice-in-wonderland look at growing up. Then the political realities replace family life – as it did for many Iranians – and the book shifts gears. For those who have read Reading Lolita in Tehran, this is a very good next read. If you love books– you’ll savor Reading Lolita…<>

ResearchChannel – 2004 National Book Festival – Azar Nafisi. Click on this. It is a powerful video from of Azar speaking at the National Book Festival, 2004

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Tamam’s Links

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Links

  • Book: Physicians of the Heart the 99 Names of God – amazing book
  • Fred Chappell: short review
  • Gulf Coast Poems Poets for Living Waters
  • How a Poem Happens
  • Jamaica Osorio's website
  • Mari L'Esperance, poetry
  • Mark Doty, amazing poet read and listen to this poet
  • New Formalism Where is formal poetry today?
  • Oona and Maeve Granddaughters Oona Beatrix and Maeve Clementine
  • PoemShape Formalist Poetry
  • Poetry Out Loud! supporting the next generation!
  • Seven Pillars Book Review by Tamam Mother of The Believers by Kamran Pasha
  • Seven Pillars, POETRY poetry on Pir Zia’s blog/7 Pillars
  • Sufi Ruhaniat International Ruhaniat web site!
  • The Accidental Theologist Lesley Hazelton – a favorite writer and author…
  • The Sound Journal Tamam edits this Journal: NEW!
  • very like a whale good poetry reviews
  • West Marin radio show Sufism: The Heart of Islam, with Wendy McLaughlin

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