Descendants of Cyrus

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by Thornton, Christopher;




  Descendants of Cyrus

  Travels through Everyday Iran

  Christopher Thornton

  Potomac Books

  An imprint of the University of Nebraska Press

  © 2019 by Christopher Thornton.

  Potomac Books is an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press.

  Cover designed by University of Nebraska Press; cover image © Christopher Thornton.

  All other photos courtesy of the author.

  All rights reserved.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Thornton, Christopher, author.

  Title: Descendants of Cyrus: travels through everyday Iran / Christopher Thornton.

  Description: Lincoln: Potomac Books, an imprint of the University of Nebraska Press [2019].

  Identifiers: LCCN 2019009201

  ISBN 9781640120372 (cloth: alk. paper)

  ISBN 9781640122703 (epub)

  ISBN 9781640122710 (mobi)

  ISBN 9781640122727 (pdf)

  Subjects: LCSH: Iran—Description and travel. | Thornton, Christopher—Travel—Iran.

  Classification: LCC DS259.2 .T48 2019 | DDC 955—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019009201

  The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  I am an Iranian. A descendant of Cyrus the Great. The very emperor who proclaimed at the pinnacle of power 2,500 years ago that “he would not reign over the people if they did not wish it.” And [he] promised not to force any person to change his religion and faith and guaranteed freedom for all.

  —Shirin Ebadi, Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, 2003

  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  1. Tehran: Two Tales from One City

  2. Tabriz: Seat of a Revolution

  3. The Caspian Shore: Rice and Spice and Other Things Nice

  4. Mashhad: Shrines of All Kinds

  5. Kermanshah: Kurdish Lands and Warrior Kings

  6. Hamedan: City of the Jewish Queen

  7. Kashan: Court of the Qajars

  8. Abyaneh: Heading for the Hills

  9. Esfahan: Bridges to Everywhere

  10. Yazd: Land of Fire and Ice

  11. Persepolis: Shadow of an Empire

  12. Shiraz: Of Senses and Sensibilities

  Illustrations

  1. Chocolate Tower

  2. Golestan Tiles

  3. Imanzadeh Saleh Shrine

  4. Kandovan

  5. Kermanshah Reliefs

  6. Golden Iwan

  7. Entrance to the mausoleum of Ayatollah Khomeini

  8. Fruit vendor, Qazvin

  9. Golestan Courtyard

  10. Fin Garden

  11. Ferdowsi Tomb

  12. Imam Mosque, Esfahan

  13. Children at Naqsh-e Jahan Square

  14. Couple

  15. Dome of Soltaniyeh

  16. Road from Chalous to Tehran

  17. Carpet merchants

  18. St. Stepanos Monastery

  19. Blue wall

  20. Bridge sunset

  21. Azadi Tower

  22. Shopping street

  23. Tomb of Hafez, Shiraz

  24. Imanzadeh Hossein Mausoleum

  25. Christmas tree

  26. Façade of Sarkis Cathedral

  27. Restored Tabatabaei house

  28. Restored bathhouse

  29. Rooftops of Masouleh, Gilan Province

  30. Traditional farmhouse

  31. Mullah

  32. Relief sculptures

  Acknowledgments

  First of all, I’d like to express great appreciation to all of my Iranian friends for the enthusiasm, support, and advice they offered from the start of this project. This also includes the people of Iran, whose warmth and hospitality I was so fortunate to receive on my three trips to the country, and all of whom I consider friends-at-large. They convinced me of the merits of this book and its message—that there is another side of Iranian history, culture, and society that the world outside of Iran needs to be aware of, in order to bring greater understanding to the political differences of today. Then there is the editorial staff at Potomac Books—Tom Swanson, Ann Baker, and the rest of the team—who also recognized the merits of the book and had the necessary experience and professionalism to see it through to completion. This includes Virginia Perrin, the copy editor, who toiled over the manuscript with the meticulous care needed to catch slight inconsistencies in spellings and terminology that my glazed eyes could no longer identify. A very special thanks goes to my Iranian content editor, who supplied invaluable suggestions and corrections to the fine points of Persian history, culture, and language. Finally, let me not forget my agent, Erik Hane, the catalyst for this entire effort. Had he not recognized the value of the book and relentlessly gone about finding a publisher, none of the rest of us would have had much to do these past many months.

  Editorial note: Transliterations from languages that don’t use the Latin alphabet can often be messy, and Farsi, particularly, poses special challenges. With that in mind, every effort was made to settle on Latin spellings that most closely represent the original Farsi terms and pronunciations. If any of these cause an affront to Persian linguists, I can only express my sincerest regrets.

  1

  Tehran

  Two Tales from One City

  There is not a single school or town that is excluded from the happiness of the holy defense of the nation, from drinking the exquisite elixir of martyrdom, or from the sweet death of the martyr, who dies in order to live forever in paradise.

  —Etalaat newspaper, in the aftermath of the Iran-Iraq War

  In a scene near the beginning of the film Argo, about the rescue of the U.S. diplomats held hostage at the beginning of the Islamic Revolution, there is a shot of the Tehran skyline with a backdrop of the snowcapped Alborz Mountains. It is reminiscent of similar shots of Boulder, Colorado, set against the panorama of the American Rockies. Like the Rockies, the Alborz are suffused with mythology, which would be expected of any natural feature in an ancient land. According to Indian philosophy, all of the continents were connected by a single mountain range. Ancient Persian thinkers took this a step further, believing that the Earth’s mountains rose from a round, flat plain, and beneath the surface they were linked together like plants joined at their roots, and this union formed a unifying force. Above ground the mountains were drawn together by a single peak. In the case of the Alborz this would be Mount Damavand, at 15,312 feet the highest in the Middle East. Some historians believe that this line of thinking paved the way for Zoroastrianism and the concept of monotheism.

  The shot from Argo, and any of Tehran that feature the backdrop of the Alborz, as most do, is an apt metaphor of life in Iran today. One only needs to imagine the mountains as the Islamic regime: It is a looming fact of daily life, always present and never to be ignored. At times it may seem to disappear, just as the mountains are occasionally shrouded by the Tehran smog, but always it returns, as fixed and immobile as the mountains themselves.

  The mountains have been a fixture of the landscape longer than the city they tower over. Tehran is not one of the great capitals of the Middle East, like Cairo, Damascus, and Baghdad. As Middle Eastern cities go, Tehran is an upstart. Until the end of the first millennium the dominant city south of the Caspian Sea was Rey, or Raghes in its ancient form. But Rey was not meant to last. It was attacked, destroyed, and rebuilt after invasions by the Arabs in the seventh century and the Turks in the eleventh. In the thirteenth century the Mongols provided the death blow, razing the city and slaughtering most of the residents. Nearby Tehran, previously k
nown only for agricultural production, primarily pomegranates, became a convenient alternative for urban settlement. It slowly grew into a small city, and by the sixteenth century it became an important administrative center of the Safavid dynasty. In 1796 Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar chose to make it his capital.

  To say that Persian rulers have been fickle in their choice of capitals is an understatement. Tehran is the thirty-second in the history of the empire. Agha Mohammad Khan’s reasoning, like that of his predecessors, was strategic. Tehran was close to the Caucasus region, then under Persian rule but threatened by imperial Russia, and it was a safe distance from an aggressive Ottoman Empire to the northwest. Also, by choosing Tehran as his capital he stayed clear of the regional rivalries in Shiraz and Esfahan and local leaders who might rebel against him. Tehran was, in many ways, a safe pick.

  In 1850 the city had only eighty thousand inhabitants, but in 1878 a new plan expanded the city walls, and in the 1920s and 1930s Reza Shah Pahlavi rebuilt the city in quasi-European style, cutting wide boulevards through dense neighborhoods and laying out streets in the grid pattern copied from the Europeans. New buildings combined Western and traditional Persian designs, as Iran began to look westward for cultural influence. The modernization trend accelerated under Pahlavi’s son, Mohammad Reza Shah, who aimed to tilt Iran further westward. New universities and research centers opened, again mimicking European architectural styles but with a hint of Persian classicism. Tehran became the capital of not only the Iranian government but a thriving cultural scene. The population swelled.

  This is the Tehran that greets visitors today—along with the backdrop of the Alborz Mountains. The circumstances of my first visit were unique. It was June 2009, a few days after the contested election that saw firebrand hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad returned to power through what many still believe were rigged voting results. Within hours of hearing the election results protestors poured into the broad avenues and squares that Reza Shah had built, waving placards that demanded, “Where is my vote?” Forces of the Revolutionary Guard and riot police were dispatched to intimidate dissenters, but the dissenters were not to be intimidated.

  A little background on travel to Iran: Americans, Canadians, and citizens of the United Kingdom are not allowed to wander freely in the country. They must be accompanied by a licensed tour guide, and their visas and itineraries must be approved by a special office within the foreign ministry. New arrivals are met at the airport by their assigned guide, and I was greeted by mine—Sohrab—who had driven up to Tehran from his home in Shiraz the day before. But he almost didn’t make it. He spent most of the night at a police station, after being stopped at a checkpoint that had been set up to keep the ranks of protestors from growing. Once he produced the documents proving that he had been appointed as my guide for the next two weeks he was allowed to leave, but only after these were verified by the foreign ministry, when the office opened in the morning.

  Sohrab was a self-described “cool guy” who had a wife and two sons, but “I play around,” he acknowledged, with casual bravado. He had lived in the U.S. for ten years, first in Florida, where he earned degrees in business and computer technology, and then in San Jose, California, working in the IT industry and riding his Harley-Davidson through the hills of Silicon Valley. “Illegal” CDs—John Coltrane, Chet Baker in Tokyo—rattled in the side-door pocket of his Volvo sedan.

  He asked: Did I want to go straight to my hotel, or was I ready to start sightseeing? The question was a nonstarter. I wanted to plunge right in, and so we did. Our first stop was the most significant symbol of cultural, social, and political life in Iran today. It was the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini, conveniently situated, for arriving visitors, on the highway that connects Imam Khomeini International Airport with the center of Tehran. At night the brilliantly lit, garish green dome is the brightest beacon on the road, a draw for the Shiite faithful and those who still revere Khomeini as their spiritual guide and political prophet, one sent by God to guide the Iranian nation back onto a heavenly path and away from the more secular-minded rule of Mohammad Reza Shah.

  Khomeini’s true believers are regular visitors to the shrine, and their cars nearly filled the parking lot when we pulled in. A mural-size painting of Khomeini and current supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei stretched across the entrance. We passed through a series of brightly lit prayer halls with pilgrims lounging, while others sat cross-legged on the thick carpets as they flipped through dog-eared Qurans. Others drowsed in the sleepy hours of midafternoon, combining their midday nap with a moment of spiritual reverie. Finally we reached the room that contained the bier of Khomeini. It was brightly lit but far more modest than I expected, just a single bier elevated a few inches from the ground and draped with a gold and green cloth.

  The faithful, sitting propped against the wall and sprawled on the carpet, paid no attention to me, which was deeply satisfying. I didn’t want to be a spectacle, just another invisible visitor passing through, as thousands did each day. A few restless eyes were directed my way, but they soon returned to the Qurans spread across their laps or the bier of Khomeini. What was surprising was that there was no buildup, no air of ceremonial suspense in the approach to the final resting place of arguably the most influential Shiite leader of modern times. Politics aside, the small room represented the common touch that enabled Khomeini to connect with the common people. After a few minutes Sohrab and I wound our way back through the prayer halls and back to the entrance that led to the parking lot and twenty-first-century Tehran.

  Sohrab asked again, Did I want to head to the hotel? He was not prodding or pushing, just expressing classic Persian hospitality. Still, again my answer was no—better to see the city in full swing, protests or not. It might take a little doing, Sohrab said, to wind our way around the streets and squares where demonstrations were taking place, which may or may not be blocked. And there was no way to know what was the easiest path through the city because the internet and mobile phone network had been cut. We’ll find a way, I told him, and we did, first to the Abgineh Museum, housed in a nineteenth-century villa on Tir Street. Also known as the glass museum, the Abgineh could become a tragic mountain of shattered shards if a major earthquake were to strike this part of Tehran. Fortunately, this has yet to happen, so the collection of glasswork and ceramic ware, with some items dating back nearly a thousand years, stands secure on shelves and shielded within protective display cases for visitors to ogle. After gazing at the glass, there is the building itself, where a red-carpeted circular staircase connects the floors where former salons and reception rooms have been converted into exhibition halls. After touring the interior of the building one can wander in the surrounding garden, which offers no radiant glasswork or nineteenth-century décor but neatly kept lawns and towering greenery that create a rustic retreat in the center of the city.

  Next was the National Jewels Museum—if we could get there, Sohrab said—and we did, after being rerouted a few times to keep us away from political trouble, or potential trouble. This meant being stuck in a traffic jam or two, but that is the smoothest of smooth driving in downtown Tehran.

  Adjacent to the Central Bank of Iran, the Jewels Museum is a bombproof, heavily armed, guarded vault that contains more emeralds and sapphires, rubies and diamonds, than any single pair of eyes has ever seen, piled in pyramids within bulletproof display cases. Nowhere in Iran is the wealth of the Persian Empire more ostentatiously displayed, and nowhere is the contradiction between the Iranian past and present so vividly on display. The visitors—Iranian, Western, Asian, and others—pause to gape at the piles of jewels and the wealth they represent, but the message is a mixed one. From one perspective they stand for the enormous wealth that the empire accumulated all the way through the final Pahlavi dynasty. From another they illustrate the material self-indulgence of the monarchies that culminated in the Pahlavi dynasty, which the Islamic Revolution aimed to end, to return Iran to “the path to God.” These included thirty diamo
nd-studded tiaras, shields and swords encrusted with jewels, and the showpiece of the collection, the Koh-i Noor diamond, one of the largest in the world. It was Mohammad Reza Shah who brought them to the attention of the world by trotting them out at state functions and other formal ceremonies, raising the question of whether they were meant to reflect the glory of the Iranian nation or the monarch himself. And it was this creeping perception of megalomania that contributed to his downfall.

  With all the commotion out on the street, it was a day for museum hopping. On our way north we had stopped at the Museum of Reza Abbassi. On display were ceramics and metalwork, tiles and silver coins from the ancient Achaemenid period, textiles and jewelry, a golden rhyton from the seventh-century dynasty—in other words, the treasure trove of an attic labeled “Persian history,” dusted off, and scattered through the museum’s floors. But the galleries had few visitors. The locals were trying to catch what bits of news they could, and most of the tourists who had not fled the country were staying close to their hotels. Sohrab and I had almost free run of the place, until an itchy guard appeared to tell us that the museum was closing—early.

  It was edging past midafternoon but time enough for another stop, if we could zigzag around the blocked-off streets. We did, and pulled up in front of the National Carpet Museum, with enough time for a peak before closing. Sohrab dropped me off at the entrance, and I began wandering through the two floors of kilims and gabbehs, soumaks, and souzanis, some recently woven, others hundreds of years old, classic works whose age only added to their value.

  Probably no craft art is more associated with Iran than the production of carpets, and a finely woven Persian carpet will fit more snugly into the category of art than craft. The best take not weeks or months but years to produce, and families purchase them not only to provide decoration for the house but to serve as investments that will appreciate in value if they are well looked after. I was getting a short course in the history of carpet making just by reading the display cards propped around the museum: about the variety of knots that go into the weaving; the source of the colors that produce the natural dyes; the many styles of carpets that result, from ghali to ghalitcheh, zaronim to sedjadeh, kelleghi to kenareh; and the regions of Iran that have developed their own patterns—Kerman and Khuzestan, Tabriz, Mashhad, and Esfahan, Shiraz, Kashan, and Qom—much like wine regions of France that have cultivated their own vintages. But then the visit was cut short.

 

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