Justice for All

The Motto of the Theology State in Iran

The Motto of the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI), it is better to be feared than to be loved. The IRI is using Iron Fist by utilizing Machiavelli doctrine of Fear, Fraud and Force to rule Iran.

Think Independently, and freely because you are a free person.




Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Islamic Fundamentalism and the Sex Slave Trade in Iran

Donna M. Hughes

Professor & Carlson Endowed ChairWomen’s Studies ProgramUniversity of Rhode Island
A measure of Islamic fundamentalists’ success in controlling society is the depth and totality with which they suppress the freedom and rights of women. In Iran for 25 years, the ruling mullahs have enforced humiliating and sadistic rules and punishments on women and girls, enslaving them in a gender apartheid system of segregation, forced veiling, second-class status, lashing, and stoning to death.

Bhutto puts Pakistan's Musharraf in fix over army

Zeeshan Haider, ReutersPublished: Monday, July 30, 2007

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - President Pervez Musharraf's secret rendezvous with former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in Abu Dhabi last week has left Pakistan guessing what kind of an alliance is being hatched with elections months away.

Local Afghan ranks too thin to take on Taliban


PAUL KORING
From Tuesday's Globe and Mail
July 31, 2007 at 8:30 AM EDT

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — Afghan soldiers are tough, brave and willing to fight, say Canadians who have watched them take on the Taliban. The proof is grimly evident in the surgical ward at the main NATO base hospital where wounded Afghan soldiers fill nearly every bed. But what they have in courage they lack in numbers, which argues that the Afghan National Army is far from ready to take over the battle against the Taliban from Canada and its allies. There will only be 1,400 fully trained – and still woefully under-equipped – Afghans ready for battle by the time fighting season begins next year, according to officials here. That's up from roughly 500 available last fall, thanks to a ramped-up training program, say Canadians shaping the effort, and the army is vastly improved. Soldiers with the fledgling Afghan National Army take a break from their duties this month in Ma’sum Ghar, about 25 kilometres west of Kandahar. (Finbarr Still, even that is far from a fighting force capable of replacing the combat punch of the heavily armed Canadian battle group with its tanks, artillery, night-fighting ability and tight integration with helicopter gunships and fighter-bombers capable of raining death from the skies. And it's far short of the 3,000 combat-ready Afghan soldiers that Defence Minister Gordon O'Connor predicted would be operational early next spring.
Even as the Afghan forces grow in numbers and fighting ability, they still have no armoured vehicles, no body armour, sometimes no helmets, no artillery bigger than mortars and no way of calling in air strikes. They fight with worn Kalashnikovs and drive around in open pickup trucks.
“They are making great progress,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Wayne Eyre, who heads Canada's 70-soldier Operational Mentor Liaison Team (OMLT), attempting to transform Afghan soldiers deployed in Kandahar into combat-capable formations that will eventually supplant the heavily armed foreign forces now leading the fight against the Taliban. “These guys can fight – it's almost a joy to watch them fight their way through enemy positions,” Lt.-Col. Eyre recounts front-line Canadian commanders as saying. The ANA – at least that part of it that most concerns Canadians – has come a long way since last fall. Then, a single, under-strength kandak (an Afghan infantry battalion) with perhaps 500 soldiers – although about one-third of them would be absent, usually visiting their homes halfway across the country – was the sum total of the Afghan National Army in Kandahar province.

Since then, teams of Canadian trainers embedded with and fighting alongside the Afghans, coupled with close pairing of small Afghan units and elements of the Canadian battle group, have transformed that kandak into what Brigadier-General Tim Grant calls the “best Afghan battalion in the entire Afghan army.” Trouble is, there's still only one fighting infantry kandak in Kandahar. Another, consisting of raw recruits who have just finished basic training, will deploy in a few weeks. The brigade's third infantry kandak doesn't yet exist. However, on the plus side, both the combat support and logistics kandaks needed to round out the brigade are functioning.
If Canada (and other NATO nations) have a viable exit strategy in Afghanistan, then marching home with honour will mean leaving behind an ANA capable of sustaining a peace and winning the hearts and minds of ordinary Afghans. “We're not going to win this war by sending out the battle group to kill five or 10 Taliban who can be replaced by five or 10 more,” said Lt.-Col. Eyre. Ultimately, winning the counterinsurgency requires the Afghan security forces to win the trust and support of the people and cut off the Taliban's lifeblood of support in the hinterlands.
So far, building that ANA is a campaign of much promise, modest success and a long way to go.
Much of the progress may seem mundane, but it's vital to developing a capable army. Afghan units fighting alongside the Canadians in Kandahar now organize and provide their own convoys, plan their own (small) operations and are slowly integrating the combat support and logistics elements. “The new leadership is good. … They understand the fundamentals of fighting a counterinsurgency, including the importance of keeping the population on side,” Lt.-Col. Eyre said. A tiny case in point. Last week, a young Afghan officer stopped his soldiers from stealing grapes from a farmer's vines in Panjwaii. Without that sort of discipline, the ANA would be just another armed band roaming the countryside. “They are now at the point where they are initiating, planning and executing their own operations, with Canadians only providing indirect support and things like casualty evacuation,” Lt.-Col. Eyre said. Meanwhile, the AWOL (absent without leave) rate has dropped from a stunning 30 per cent to a still-intolerable – by NATO standards – but much better 10 per cent. But the process will be gradual and it will be years before the Afghan army – even under the most optimistic of predictions – can project the kind of combat punch provided by 40,000-plus NATO troops backed by the world's most sophisticated warplanes.

Canada has ramped up its training effort. More than 130 officers and soldiers will be assigned to the OMLT during the current rotation based on the Van Doos battle group. That's up from 70 in the current OMLT. Still, that's only a fraction of the 1,000-soldier-plus Canadian battle group. However, deployed Canadian units will work alongside, and, it is hoped, in support of Afghan units. “2008 will be the transition year,” predicts Lt.-Col. Eyre. “I'd like to see them in the lead by the summer of 2008.”

Monday, July 30, 2007

Identification of 400 Archaeological Sites in Mazandaran Province

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Researches conducted by 16 teams in an attempt to prepare the archaeological map of Mazandaran province has resulted in identification of 400 historical sites just within the first week of this project. It is anticipated that the number of historical sites in this Iranian northern province would reach to 10,000 until the completion of the project.

Friday, July 27, 2007

Christian Pilgrimage To Iran For St. Thaddeus

Even under the oppressive mullahocracy of the IRI, something like this pilgrimage can take place. Iranian traditions of respect and hospitality never cease to amaze me.

Posted by Caesar Warrington

Petition: Condemning the Death Sentences

To: Amnesty International,Reporters without Frontiers,Human Rights Watch,European Union Dear Friends and Colleagues, This is the second petition in support of Adnan Hassanpour and Hiwar Boutimar. The Text has been amended in an effort to improve the ease of read in English. We would like to thank all of you who signed the original and ask you to kindly revisit the petition and continue your support by signing this amended text.

Discovery of Second 5000-Years-Old Inscription in Western Iran

LONDON, (CAIS) -- The second ancient inscription which was carved on rock in Kaftarlou hill have been discovered in Akhtarabad region in Shahriyar plain located in Iranian western province of Kordestan. Due to the similarity of this writing with those previously found in Susa clay stamps and Jiroft’s inscription, experts estimate that this newly discovered geometrical inscription must have dated back to at least 5000 years ago.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Achaemenid Palace in Bolaghi Valley to be Restored

LONDON, (CAIS) -- During a salvation project, Parse Pasargadae Research Centre is determined to restore an Achaemenid palatial construction denoted to Darius the Great which was discovered by Franco-Iranian joint archaeology team in Bolaghi Valley.

Korean Archaeologists in Search of Stone Age in Gilan

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Based on an agreement between Iran’s Archaeology Research Centre, head the committee of Asia-Pacific Regional Organization of ICOM, the Palaeolithic areas of Gilan province will go under research.

Sasanian Wine Production Workshops to be Submerged under Sivan Waters

LONDON, (CAIS) -- The unique wine production workshops belonging to Sasanian dynastic era (224-651 CE) will be submerged without being transferred to another place. The wine production workshop, which is the most complete in its own kind ever found in Iran-proper, was discovered during the second season of archaeological excavations conducted by Iranian-Polish joint team in Bolaghi Valley.

Human Rights Travesty

By Kenneth R. TimmermanFrontPageMagazine.com July 23, 2007If human rights abuses were ranked like baseball careers, Iran’s ruling clerics and the mighty midget they’ve installed as president would deserve honored places in the 21st Century’s Hall of Shame.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Capital Punishment in Iran

http://sarbazevatan.multiply.com/video/item/73

U of T student to get apology for email

Cabinet office at Queen's Park will apologize to job applicant who was referred to as `the ghetto dude'.

http://www.thestar.com/News/article/238572

The riddle of Iran

“THE Iranian regime is basically a messianic apocalyptic cult.” So says Israel's once and perhaps future prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu. If he is right the world is teetering on the edge of a terrifying crisis.

http://www.economist.com/opinion/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=9514293

Book Review: Marina Nemat's PRISONER Of TEHRAN

Author Marina Nemat gives us a first hand account of what it was like to live through the early years of Iran's Islamic Revolution and her ordeal as an inmate at the notorious Evin Prison (where nightmares are born and, nurtured on the souls of human beings, flourish in perpetuity).

It is the story of so many of the innocents in so many of the revolutions throughout modern history: In 1982, Marina Moradi-Bakht, a 16 year-old Christian girl of Russian background, was arrested by the Revolutionary Guards on suspicions of counter-revolutionary activity. Alerted by a list from her school's newly appointed ideologue principal, the Guards took Marina and several of her girlfriends to Tehran's Evin Prison. There Marina was beaten, questioned and sentenced to death. If not for the intercession of Ali Moosavi, one of the Guards at Evin who had become infatuated with her, Marina would be dead today. Ali used his family's connections to Khomeini to have the girl's sentence reduced to life imprisonment. In return for his help Moosavi would demand conversion to Islam and marriage from Marina, compelling her with threats to her family and her friend (and true love) Andre.

The ordeal this abused and exploited child was forced to endure is told in chapters alternating with others that describe her life prior to the revolution. In those alternate chapters she recalls her life as precocious but slightly introverted girl, living with a self-involved mother and an even more emotionally distant father. Marina had the misfortune of losing those few who deeply loved and cared for her: such as her doting Russian grandmother who passed away, and her first boyfriend Aram who was killed during a demonstration against the Shah. Indeed, she admits the irony of finding in Ali's family the warmth and closeness she never experienced from her own. Until meeting Andre, Marina was a lonely girl whose only outlet was in books and stories.

Marina's book documents the suffering of those who are often the most abused and exploited in conflicts: the women and the children. At a time when Marina and her friends should have been daydreaming the universal wishes and fantasies of all teenaged girls, they instead were being beaten and raped, tortured and murdered.

What is most extraordinary about Marina Nemat's story is its testimony to the brutalization and dehumanization of both aggressors as well as victims under the fanaticism of ideological revolution - and despite the Islamic Republic's theological wrapping, it is all about politics and ideology. She is very fair and understanding to the memory of Ali Moosavi. Marina writes of his own three years spent in Evin as a prisoner during the time of the Shah. She writes about his frustration for not being able to save the girls from the sadism of some of his colleagues. Marina has the honesty to show us the humanity in this flawed and troubled man, who was eventually himself betrayed by the evil into which he had naively put his faith and service. I further appreciate the way Marina portrayed Ali's family; she remember's Ali's father as a man of honor and principles, who welcomed her -and would later protect her- as if she were his own child.

Marina Nemat isn't another "Persian Princess" inviting you to her own pity party. Nor is she like Betty Mahmoody, distorting perceptions of Iran and Iranians for selfish melodramatic effect. To the contrary, Ms. Nemat has much love for her fellow Iranians, as she writes of their struggles to hold onto their dignity while enduring one of the most oppressive regimes existing today. I strongly recommend this book.


Caesar Warrington

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Father of the Iranian revolution

We just don't get it. The Left in America is screaming to high heaven that the mess we are in in Iraq and the war on terrorism has been caused by the right-wing and that George W. Bush, the so-called "dim-witted cowboy," has created the entire mess.


http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1181813077590&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FPrinter

Interview With Manouchehr Mohammadi By Elham Sataki- 18 Tir

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxNd_dqIA2U

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Esfahan-Shiraz Railroad still Poses Threat Naqsh-e Rostam

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Farmers in Hajiabad village in Fars province have offered to sell their farmlands near the historic site of Naqsh-e Rostam to the Office for the Esfahan-Shiraz Railway Project.

Sasanian City of Gundishapur still under Farmers Ploughs

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Farmers are still working on the land under which the Sasanian city of Jondishapur is buried. Jondishapur (Gundishapur), was one of the oldest academic establishment in the world located near modern city of Dezful, Khuzestan Province in southwestern Iran.

1600-Years-Old Kenar-Siyah Fire Temple Demolished

LONDON, (CAIS) -- A Sasanian Char-Taqi (Chahār-Tāqiī - a term referring to the form of the pre-Islamic Zoroastrian fire temples; a domed square with an opening on each side and no doors) known as Kenar-Siyah as well as Jareh along with its annexations were destroyed six months ago in order to build a road by the Islamic Republic, according to a report by Persian service of ISNA, reported on Tuesday.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Iraq expects new round of U.S.-Iran talks soon

Mariam Karouny
Reuters

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iranian and U.S. envoys will soon hold talks in Baghdad to discuss security in Iraq, following up on a landmark meeting in May, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari said on Tuesday

Iranian TV Shows Two Detained Iranian-Americans

July 16, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Iranian state television aired footage today of two Iranian-American scholars detained in Tehran on charges of acting against national security.

They are the first public images of Haleh Esfandiari and Kian Tajbakhsh to have appeared since their detentions in May.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Poll: Iranians want democracy, nuclear inspections

(CNN) -- Most Iranians support nuclear inspections, a democratic government and normal relations with the United States, a poll by a U.S.-based organization has found

Discovered Parthian Artefacts from Guri-Kohneh Mound is being Classified

LONDON, (CAIS) -- The material cultures recovered from Guri-Kohneh Mound in Sisatn va Baluchestan province is being classified and catalogued by the experts from Iran’s Archaeological Research Centre, announced by Reza Mehrafarin, director of archaeological research in Guri-Kohneh.

Dissatisfaction with Bistun's Current Statues

LONDON, (CAIS) -- It is one year since UNESCO has added the historical site of Bistun to the World Heritage List, and the authorities in Iran have done nothing to protect the site and improve its status.

“Following the registration of the monument on the global heritage list, it was expected that better conditions would be available for tourists and the services offered at the site should be befitted for a monument of international standing,“ said Noureddin Farzadipour, the district governor of Bistun.

Iraqi Interrogations : Terrorists tell all; jihad

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AtREe9teYk&NR=1

British Arabism and the bombings in Iran

By Mahan Abedin and Kaveh Farrokh
Following the recent bomb attack in Ahwaz and the riots and bombings in late spring, the Iranian government, as well as other sections of Iranian society both inside and outside the country, has pointed an accusing finger at the United Kingdom.

Discovery of an Iron Age Cemetery in Semnan

http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2007/July2007/15-07.htm

LONDON, (CAIS) -- Archaeological excavations behind Kalpush Dam in Semnan province led into discovery of a unique cemetery dating back to Iron Age II (1350 to 550 BCE) with earthen graves.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

U.S. security czar's remarks irk business leaders

July 12, 2007
Jered StuffcoCanadian press

A pointed warning from the czar of homeland security in the United States about the threat of a revitalized Al Qaeda launching an attack from Canada fosters uncertainty which could damage cross-border trade, Canadian business leaders said Thursday.

Iran Iran..beautifull iran

Enjoy nice Persian song by azetube

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btbs9VmYSFI

Cyrus Marvasti

Dear Professor Farrokh,

Thank you for educating me with clear description of Professor Bernard Lewis Evil dirty plan and the danger which is facing Iranian nation with more bloodbath ….. With such a dirty plan, Professor Bernard Lewis and his sick followers should be given Nobel Prize for “The Most Evil Minds in History” who are indirectly responsible for some of the bloodbath in past 30 years. It is natural that Super Powers and Economy Hit Man (EHM) strategists, intelligence community create many dirty plans for the day other options do not work. I am not afraid of these dirty plans in the achieve of … however I have become very concerned because in past 30 years elements of Professor Bernard Lewis Evil plan and Blood Oil had been implemented by G8 leadership and created this big Islamist mess, Iraq, Iran ….. Who is paying for this mess?

American Tax payers, Iranian People Blood and Oil (Iraqi, Afghani …), Ordinary Israelis people are paying high price for dirty games, traps against American National interest, Iranian People National Interest and Israelis People National interest with the biggest looser in this game Iranian people. On the other side of equation, the biggest Winners are EU3, Japan, China, …. some of Oil Companies… religious fanatics of all kind, Bankers in UK …. And some of university dirty researcher who are milking US government….

If everyone accepts, I am requesting for discussion and brain storming session to diffuse these Evil plans with better strategy that might move us in the right direction with minimum bloodshed. You as one of our top Iranian Historical Scholar who has done excellent research, and initiated this discussion might consider to come up with initial draft of your proposal and recommendations for review with focus on What to Do With Middle East Complex Mess By Sick Minds Of Our Time? , and provide some kind of direction for short term (next 6 months) Plan of actions and Long Term plan?
I am sharing with you some of the data that I have heard from different sources that readers of this Email might consider it as useful to know:
1- 10% of Iranian Army is supporting Islamist Mafia Mullahs (Tazi) and 90% are against them.
2- 30% of Revolutionary Guard is supporting Tazist
3- 50% of Militia is supporting Tazist
4- Assume over 95% of Iranian people are considered as Anti Tazi and the Islamist regime. The regime has no real public support (Islamist regime must go.) . The only reason the regime survive today is their control over Oil Money and ability to pay highly to their thugs and supporters (5%).
5- Estimated 100 of 4 Star and 5 Star US Generals are not in favour of any kind of plan similar to Bernard Lewis Evil plan, they know better than this ….
6- Republican Party is splitting and Washington leadership is kind of chaos
7- President Bush???
8- Israelis Generals and Security Forces???
9- The biggest unity factor between Iranians, American Elites, and Israelis is the Secularism.
10- Majority of New generation Israelis and youth are not religious and don’t have the scars of second world war and they are moving towards more Secularism ….
11- For first time over 70% of American people were angry with both parties in 2006 and currently this number is growing very fast….
Watch Entry 48 of 970 Question
Or Please Watch Small Selected 30 Seconds Video Clip Questions By Public Regarding Foreign/Domestic Policy
Or Browse some of 917 Video clips http://www.youtube.com/contest/DemocraticDebate
Due to the facts that we can not rely on any data coming from Fear Society like Iran, unless there is a very good test case for it therefore we should focus more on our best judgement and what we the people in the grass root of society (300 million American, 200 million Iranian and Israelis) might Agree and WANT in more practical model and force Free system to submission .

Internet has changed many equations and it is often said that information is the cornerstone of Secular Democracy, Human Rights, Freedom and Free Society. For the first time in the history, Internet provides the kind of environment that allows users to make the informed decision based on facts and receive information from many different information sources.

Unleash the Iranian Opposition[, the Mujahedeen-e Khalq]

Submitted by Caesar Warrington,
Jul 11, 2007 at 10:11
During the Iran-Iraq War this group fought for Saddam Hussein. The Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) has the blood of its own people on its hands. Furthermore, what is the attraction that the United States and Israel have for a bizarre syncretistic outfit like the MEK, who combine Islamist philosophy with Marxist Ideology? Are we going to continue making the same mistakes in this region over and again, always feeling we must choose the "lesser of two evils? The Iranian people want nothing to do with this organization - and neither should we.


http://www.danielpipes.org/comments/103447

Professor Bernard Lewis


To appreciate the danger facing Iran's integrity, we need to look back chronologically - before the overthrow of the Pahlavi regime. There have been detailed plans to dismember Iran - concrete ones go back to 1937. That is when the British intelligence and Military Staffs were ordered to draft an invasion plan of Iran with an aim to dismembering Khuzistan. While the details of these plans and how they progressed are beyond the time/space constraints of e-mail, allow me to highlight a few points (with some references):

Professor Bernard Lewis (photo below) is an octogenarian expert of the “Middle East” (itself an invented geopolitical term). Lewis is indeed a “master” scholar and expert on the Turks, Iranian and Arabs (see sample of his books in references). And herein lays the tragedy: Lewis wields his treasure trove of knowledge as an engine of destruction. Few have ever heard of “The Bernard Lewis Project”.
Professor Bernard Lewis
Professor Lewis first unveiled his project in the Bilderberg Meeting in Baden, Austria, on April 27-29, 1979 (see the only photo available of a Bilderberg Conference – 1954 photo). He formally proposed the fragmentation and balkanization of Iran along regional, ethnic and linguistic lines especially among the Arabs of Khuzestan (the Al-Ahwaz project), the Baluchis (the Pakhtunistan project), the Kurds (the Greater Kurdistan project) and the Azerbaijanis (the Greater Azerbaijan Project)[

Bilderburg Confernece in 1954
Dreyfus and LeMarc (19179, p. 157) provide a very succinct summary of the plan’s methodology:
“According to Lewis, the British should encourage rebellions for national autonomy by the minorities such as the Lebanese Druze, Baluchis, Azerbaiajni Turks, Syrian Alawites, the Copts of Ethiopia, Sudanese mystical sects, Arabian tribes…the goal is the break-up of the Middle East into a mosaic of competing ministates and the weakening of the sovereignty of existing republics and kingdoms…spark a series of breakaway movements by Iran’s Kurds, Azeris, baluchis, and Arabs…these independence movements, in turn would represent dire threats to Turkey, Iraq, Pakistan and other neighbouring states.”
Robert Olson (2002, esp. p.108-158) has provided a surprisingly candid and sober assessment of the Greater Azerbaijan Project. He has provided a detailed assessment of how the intelligence and military agencies of Turkey, USA and Israel have set up bases and networks in Northern Iraq, Eastern Turkey and the Republic of Azerbaijan (esp. Nakhchivan) to broadcast anti-Iran hate propaganda into Iranian Azerbaijan. There is in fact a foreign-funded anti-Iran separatist radio station known as the Voice of Southern Azerbaijan (VOSA).
The Bernard Lewis Plan has been officially endorsed by the Pentagon Below is a revised map of Iran and the so-called "Middle East" as proposed by Ralph Peters (source: Peters, R. (2006). Blood Borders: How a better Middle East would Look. Armed Forces Journal, June Issue.
Note the potential for conflicts between "Greater Azarbaijan", "Greater Kurdistan" and Armenia - seperatist Kurds and Azaris are already bickering over Iran's West Azarbaijan province.
As is evident, the so-called "Peters Map" is simply another version of the Bernard Lewis Plan.
The relationship between VOSA and the Rashet Bet radio station (see photo below) of Israel was first reported by independent reporter Nick Grace. The report is available on the Clandestine Radio Intel Website (see Web references). Excerpts from his report are as follows:
“…According to monitor Nikolai Pashkevich in Russia, "when I tuned in my receiver to this channel I found an open carrier with 'Reshet Bet... on the background and then VOSA signing on" (CDX 180). Rashet Bet is, of course, a news service of Israel Radio. The German Telecommunications department has also pinpointed VOSA's location to be somewhere around Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia (BCDX 351.)…VOSA is clearly supervised and arranged by Israel's intelligence agency: the Mossad…”.
Rashet Bet radio
Olson also reports of sophisticated telecommunications equipment mounted on specialized vehicles that regularly drive inside Iranian territory, beam propaganda (presumably on video and radio) and retire across the border once their programs are concluded. Below left is a photograph of the latest military spy communications truck, the SmarTruck II - note state of the art communications panels inside the vehicle (below right photo):

SmarTruck II
The main role of VOSA-Rashet Bet and the SmarTruck II vehicles are to target Iranian Azerbaijanis with false and provocative information, mainly as narrated by Mr. Chehreganli and Dr. Brenda Shaffer (see item 4).
Olson has also reported of a plan to station western (American) heavy military equipment (e.g. tanks, missiles) in the Republic of Azerbaijan. The Moscow News report on September 26, 2005, has also reported of such assistance taking place (Web References).
CIA operative, Reuel Marc Gerecht’s book, “Know Thine Enemy” (see Edward Shirley) neatly encapsulates current geopolitical objectives in Iranian Azerbaijan and Iran as a whole. Note the following review by Jason Athanasiadis in the Asia Times (Apr 29, 2005):
Gerecht …mulls over … cultivating high-ranking Azeris to inciting separatist Kurds …he sheds valuable light on how an intelligence professional might approach the dismemberment of a hostile country. "I continuously scripted possible covert action mischief in my mind. Iranian Azerbaijan was rich in possibilities. Accessible through Turkey and ex-Soviet Azerbaijan, eyed already by nationalists in Baku …Iran's richest agricultural province was an ideal covert action theatre." [Jason Athanasiadis, Stirring the Ethnic Pot, Asia Times On-line, Apr 29, 2005 –see Web references]
Professor Michel Chossudovsky, of the University of Ottawa. has provided the following assessment:
“Washington has been involved in covert intelligence operations inside Iran. American and British intelligence and Special Forces (working with their Israeli counterparts) are involved in this operation… Targeting Iran … broadly serves the interests of the Anglo-American oil conglomerates, the Wall Street financial establishment and the military-industrial complex…The announcement to target Iran should come as no surprise. It is part of the battle for oil…In Baku, Azerbaijan Rumsfeld was busy discussing …the stated short term objective …to "neutralize Iran". The longer term objective under the Pentagon's "Caspian Plan" is to exert military and economic control over the entire Caspian Sea basin, with a view to ensuring US authority over oil reserves and pipeline corridors.”
[Michel Chossudovsky, Planned US-Israeli Attack on Iran, in Global Research Publications On-line, May 1, 2005]
Rumsfeld’s goal to “neutralize Iran” is actually a description of Olson’s prediction of the intended “Right-sizing of Iran” (p.236) – destroying Iran as a sovereign state and erasing its Persian heritage.
The formation of a Greater Kurdistan for example, may potentially lead to the disintegration of not only Iran, but Turkey, Iraq and Syria. The formation of a Greater Azerbaijan would eliminate a significant portion of Iran’s industrial base, geography, and demography.This would in turn encourage a pan-Kurdish separatist movement encompassing Iran, Turkey and Syria, leading to the break-up or diminution of those states. As noted by Engdahl (p.171), the Bernard Lewis Plan endeavors to:
“…promote the Balkanization of the entire Muslim Near East along Tribal and religious lines. Lewis argued that the West should encourage autonomous groups such as the Kurds…Ethiopian Copts… Azerbaijanis…the chaos would spread in…an “Arc of Crisis”… ”.
But allow me to show you more references...
There are indications that the Iran-Iraq war may have been part of the larger Bernard Lewis plan. Iran was to be invaded with the specific purpose of carving it up into small mini-states.
Direct evidence of the British origins of the Iraqi invasion plan was reported in The New York Times newspaper early in the war (See article entitled "British in 1950, Helped Map Iraqi Invasion of Iran" by Halloran, R. in The New York Times, Thursday, Oct.16, 1980.). Interestingly, this report was ignored by the mainstream press and media. Allow me to summarize the main points of this report:
(1) A detailed invasion plan had been prepared for the Iraqi armed forces in 1950 by the British Military advisors for Iraq, a full 30 years before the invasion of Iran by Saddam Hussein.
(2) The main draft of the plan had been in preparation by the British since 1937. The main axes of advance detailed in the plan corresponded exactly to the Iraqi invasion of Iran on September 22, 1980.
(3) The main objective of this war plan "…called for Iraqi forces to occupy Khuzistan province and then negotiate an armistice with the Iranian government that would include the relinquishment of the province to Iraq…also liberate the Arab-speaking people living in Khuzistan". Significantly, successive changes in the Iraqi government over the next thirty years did not alter the major objectives of the British plan; these were simply updated as time progressed.
The British plan for Iran's invasion indicates that even before the Bernard Lewis Plan was unveiled in the Bilderberg Conference, detailed British plans for eliminating Iran as a state have been in place long before the 1979 revolution in Iran. My upcoming book/chapter explains in detail the role of Israeli, US and MI6 services who are working to ignite ethnic conflict in the Caucasus and Iran. I also have first-hand references regarding the arrest of 2 MI6 agents who were attempting to pour cyanide into the Baku water treatment system - this would have killed untold numbers of people. Evidently the attempt was to stage a "terrorist attack" and blame it on perhaps Iranians, Armenians, etc. I certainly am NO SUPPORTER of the IRI - esp. with its irrational policies of idolizing Palestine, working to diminish Iran's history before Islam (e.g. the railway through Tagh e Bostan; Sivand & Cyrus' tomb, etc.), publishing anti-Iran books (e.g Pourpirar, pan-Turkists literature, etc.) and setting up numerous anti-Iran websites, etc.

What is clear is that the IRI's Arabist policies and the ideology of sacrificing Iran for theocratic ideology (and Palestine) has not only provided a golden opportunity to mobilize world opinion not just against the current regime, but against the very territorial integrity, culture and historical legacy of Iran. Assaults on Iran;'s heritage go a long way back - the first attempt to change the name of the Persian Gulf goes back to 1930 when a British newspaper suggested changing the name to "The Gulf of England" - the tactic has been to re-name the Persian Gulf as "Arabian Gulf" since the 1930s (Sir Charles Belgrave who "invented" Bahrain - just as Getrude Bell "invented" the country of "Iraq" complete with a fabricated history in an anti-Iranian fashion).

HOWEVER please let us not lose site of the fact that even if the IRI were removed, the plan to dismember Iran will not disappear - this has been in place long time before the IRI. The main issue is petroleum: they do not care who sits in Tehran (Crown or Turban) - they do not like Iran as a geopolitical force - it is too large in population and potential military/economic strength. Such an Iran (whoever is in charge politically) is seen as inimical to petroleum interests in the Persian Gulf as well as the growing Caspian Sea projects (which they now call "the second Persian Gulf").

Constant political debates amongst ourselves (monarchist, Islamist, leftist, etc.) has put Iranians to sleep to a mortal threat to Iran's existence - there is a huge crocodile with its mouth gaping open - its "teeth" are the support of sepetratist movements. We need to realize that this is the same crocodile that is now shedding crocodile tears for us Iranians in the name of "human rights". There is no question of Iranians' human rights - but in a legitimate fashion - not as advocated by the puppets of the petroleum establishment. Let us not forget that we Iranians - under the leadership of Sattar Khan and Bagher Khan, our heroes of the true Azarbaijan of Iran - set up the region's FIRST democratic movement a century ago. It was overthrown at the insistence of the British and the Russians (again I can provide numerous references - but a good one is Chaqeri - again I plan to publish these findings). When these "lobbies" speak of "human rights" for Iranians, I must confess that I do get somewhat thoughtful. As we speak, there are attempts to support the MEK - the same organization that gunned down US citizens, supported Saddam Hussein;'s invasion of Iran and helped Saddam brutally put down the Iraqi Kurds.

Best regards
Kaveh Farrokh

Friday, July 13, 2007

Mahasti Sings Cheshm Be Rah For Shah Of Iran

His Majesty Crown Prince Reza PAHLAVI Heir to Throne of Iran was born on October 31st, 1960 in Tehron, Iran.

As Mahasti is singing a song that He was born on month of Abon 09th or October 31st at south of Tehron, happiness of all Iranian people, every is illuminate, Prince, Prince, ... all nations need kings...Reza Pahlavi from Molavi neighborhood, waiting for a day to become the king, asking our God to forgive us for making a mistake...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CwfGZ2-xwM

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Harper's resumption of Canadian aid to Fatah repeats past mistakes

For Immediate Release
12 July 2007

Ottawa, Canada - According to published reports, Prime Minister Stephen Harper is expected to announce a resumption of aid to Palestinians President Mahmoud Abbas when he meets with Jordon's King Abdullah this week.

"If the Prime Minister resumes funding to Abbas and his Fatah Party, it will be a repetition of past mistakes," said Alastair Gordon, President, Canadian Coalition for Democracies. "We hope that Prime Minister Harper recognizes the connection between Mahmoud Abbas and the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade, a designated terrorist group in Canada, the connection between Abbas' Fatah party and specific acts of terrorism, Fatah's rampant corruption that has diverted aid destined for the Palestinian people to Fatah leaders, Fatah's targeted killing of Arabs who cooperate with Israel, and Fatah's failure to end PA-sanctioned hate and incitement against Israel and Jews."

The Canadian Coalition for Democracies has called for a resumption of aid to the Palestinians when the following conditions have been met: (1) the Palestinians have removed all hate and incitement against Jews and Israel from their education system and controlled media, (2) the Fatah/PLO and Hamas charters have been changed to eliminate the call for the destruction of Israel and the de-legitimization of Israel and Jews, (3) militants have been disarmed, and (4) all acts of terrorism against Israel have ended for a period of at least two years, with the understanding that any resumption of terror will immediate end the flow of aid. Prime Minister Harper must not accept any declarations of convenience from Fatah or Hamas - only meaningful action will be believed.

"If a Canadian citizen were to send money, directly or indirectly, to the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade, he or she could be charged and imprisoned under our anti-terror legislation," added Gordon. "Yet in 2003, Fatah asked the leaders of the al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigades to join the Fatah Council, recognizing it officially as part of the organization. Our government should not be forcing its citizens to fund an illegal terrorist entity or its sponsors."

-30-
For more information, please contact
Naresh Raghubeer, Executive Director 613-216-2095

Al Qaeda has rebuilt itself: intelligence report

Updated Wed. Jul. 11 2007 6:59 PM ET
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- U.S. intelligence analysts have concluded al Qaeda has rebuilt its operating capability to a level not seen since just before the 2001 terrorist attacks, The Associated Press has learned.

A Message Board Dedicated to the Discussion of Iranian History

http://www.freepowerboards.com/iranianforum/portal.php

An interesting forum where one can find discussions on anything from the Indo-European migrations to the history of the modern Iranian military to an interesting article from Dr. Kaveh Farrokh discussing the gross inaccuracies of the recent movie "300."

Free Keyvan Rafiee after one year of Imprisonment!

In the Name of Freedom, Everyone has the right either as an individual or as part of a group to work towards human rights within, and for their country as well as internationally. It has been exactly one year since the illegal arrest and imprisonment of Keyvan Rafiee, the National Spokesperson for Human Rights Activists in Iran. However not only has the Islamic Regime prevented Mr. Rafiee's freedom by not allowing him to post bail and by postponing his trial on numerous occasions, but they have also increased pressure both on Mr. Rafiee and his family. Mr. Rafiee was arrested in Tehran last year on the 7th anniversary of July 9th 1999 pro-democracy student demonstrations (18 Tir). Prior to his arrest he had been threatened a number of times by the Intelligence Ministry Officials, both by telephone and in person. Mr. Rafiee has spent more then 200 days in solitary confinement and as a result of this cruel and inhuman punishment went on a hunger strike on three different occasions suffering a number of serious illnesses as a result. Both the United Nations and The European Union have shown concern for his health and well being and have asked for his unconditional freedom in public statements. Yet after one year of imprisonment, there is still no verdict regarding Mr. Rafiee's "crimes". In fact his trial and verdict have been postponed on a number of occasions for unknown reasons. In the past year Mr. Rafiee has not been able to see his lawyer even once, and his lawyer has not been allowed to attend at any court appearances. The Intelligence Ministry and the Revolutionary Courts are planning to convict him for taking part in last years July 9 th student demonstrations as well as taking part in a demonstration on International Workers Day. Most recently he was able to visit with his family for the first time after one year, although Evin Prison Officials did not want this visit to take place and made them wait for almost four (4) hours before they were able to visit for 30 minutes. Human Rights Activists in Iran condemn threats made against Keyvan Rafiee as well as his illegal arrest and d detention and demand his immediate and unconditional release. -- Human Rights Activists in IranEmail : Hra.iran@gmail.comWeb site : www.hra-iran.blogfa.com

Crime Against Humanity

Dear Right Honorable Prime Minister of Canada Stephen HARPER.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070711.RTERRORISM11/TPStory/Business

It has been clear and crystal that Canada has become an economic base for Hezbollah terrorist organization since 1998. Now, it has been revealed to everyone that Canadian Multinational Corporate like “Petro-Canada and Precision Drilling Trust, Vancouver-based Lundin Mining Corp., and Mississauga-based YM BioSciences Inc.” are violating United Nations sanction, and making business deals with the Islamic Republic of Iran. Also, the Islamic Republic of Iran has a long history of violating Human Rights in Iran and outside of Iran.

All in all, only people with lack of morality would associate with murderers of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Obviously, above Multinational Corporate and Canada do not mind Human Rights Violation in Iran and outside of Iran.

Any person with any shred of morality would not vote at any level of government. Why should any one trust these politicians when they are talking part in Human Rights Violation in Iran and outside of Iran? Kindly be advice that a petition will be draft.

Critics decry U.S. watchdog's terrorism list

NORVAL SCOTT

July 11, 2007
CALGARY -- A list of companies that the U.S. securities regulator believes are operating in countries that Washington says sponsor state terrorism is arbitrary and incomplete, critics say.

Toronto to host Iranian art show

An exhibition titled Six weeks of Iranian Art will be held at the Headbones Gallery in Toronto, Canada presenting the Iranian culture. The event slated for July 15 to August 27, 2007 will feature a rich variety of Iranian artworks, as well as live performance of Persian music and theatrical shows.

Jordan wants PM to push for peace

MARK MACKINNON
July 12, 2007
AMMAN -- The West needs to "wake up" and understand that without a rapid and fair solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the world is headed toward decades of more violence and extremism, Jordan's King Abdullah II said, ahead of a visit to Canada that begins today.

Another Daniel Pipes Zinger

http://www.danielpipes.org/article/4747

It is almost comical that a man such as Daniel Pipes, who epitomises the word "neo-con" in all of its pejorative connotations, cannot stop gushing for the Mujahedeen-e Khalq (MEK). Pipes, the bonafide right-wing-think-tanker and buddy of conservo-crank David Horowitz (FrontPageMag.com), offers nothing but praise for the MEK, a cultic organization that is a bizarre hybrid of Islamist and Marxist ideologies. Now the last time I checked these two particular 'isms' weren't very popular with right-thinking, all-Americans like Danny Pipes. Yet he wants to inform us that since the MEK's Maryam Rajavi spoke to a crowd of 20,000 Iranian emigres who were otherwise engrossed in getting there dance on at some Persian rave in Paris recently, this is the organization deserving American support as a viable opposition group to the present regime sitting in Tehran.

Pipes writes flippantly about the MEK being categorized as a terrorist organization (calling the MEK's place on the terror list a "sop to the [Iranian] mullahs"). He also was obviously quite turned-on by the "pretty girls in (for them, daring) Western clothing." It seems that for some like Danny here, as long as any Iranian/Arab/Muslim/Pakistani groups (to guys like Pipes they are all the same really) have hot girls showing lushly thick dark hair and their curvy bodies then those are the good guys. Pipes also made it a point to remind us that "Rajavi's in-depth analysis mentioned neither the United States nor Israel." But isn't that the way you're supposed to treat silent partners, Mr. Pipes?

Seriously, however, the Mujahedeen-e Khalq is a terrorist organization. The red dye of its banner has the blood of innocent Iranians in it. During the 1980-1988 Iran-Iran War, the MEK were allies of Saddam Hussein, aiding him in his attempts to carve chunks out of their own Iranian homeland. No true Iranian patriot can have the slightest respect for the MEK.

Posted by,

Caesar Warrington

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Human Rights Abuses Inside the MKO Camps

The Mojahedin Khalq Organization (MKO) is an armed Iranian opposition group that
was formed in 1965. An urban guerrilla group fighting against the government of
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, it was an active participant in the anti-monarchy struggle that
resulted in the 1979 Iranian revolution.1

Labour children in Iran

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVJgeSOHW6k

Despite UNESCO's Warnings, Islamic Republic's Polymer Company Insists to Remain in Bistun Plain

LONDON, (CAIS) -- While UNESCO has asked Islamic Republic’s Polymer Company in Kermanshah to be removed to another location in order to prevent placing Bistun’s world heritage site in the danger list – but the company is not ready to meet this demand.

One Year Gone and Tarisha Temple is still Covered with Vandals' Paints

LONDON, (CAIS) -- While more than one year has passed since Eshkaft-e Salman otherwise known as Tarisha Temple, was found vandalised with paint, nothing has been done so far for removing paint from the body of the biggest Elamite cuneiform inscription.

http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2007/July2007/10-07-one.htm

Stop the Repetition of Jiroft’s Tragedy in Milagerd

LONDON, (CAIS) -- According to Malekzadeh, after Grishman excavations, evidence of gray clay culture was identified in other historical sites of Iran’s central plateau as well.

Milajerd is the most southern Iron Age site in Iran’s central plateau which dates back to 1250 to 880 BCE and is called as a piece of cultural puzzle of this epoch by archaeologists.

Boosting Terror in the West Bank

By P. David HornikFrontPageMagazine.com July 10, 2007
Predictions that the scenes of intra-Palestinian savagery from Gaza would cause a decline of Palestinianism were of course premature. The Israeli cabinet has now voted to release 250 jailed Fatah terrorists “without blood on their hands” in a “gesture” that Prime Minister Ehud Olmert promised in his recent meeting at Sharm el-Sheikh in the Sinai with Mahmoud Abbas, Hosni Mubarak, and Jordan’s King Abdullah.

Monday, July 09, 2007

Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei Associate: Bahrain Part Of Iran

The editor of the Iranian daily Kayhan, Hossein Shari'atmadari, who is close to Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, harshly attacked the Gulf countries because their representatives claim that the three islands of Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb, and Abu Moussa belong to the U.A.E., not Iran.

Pasho Pasho; Rise-Up, Rise-Up

http://youtube.com/watch?v=KfL75uHS5r8

To see God in meditation with Lisa Gerrard

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJEWMfndJZs

Israel’s Brenda Schaffer is working around the clock to distort Iranian history

Iran’s weakening position is to have direct bearing on Armenia’s future. Israel’s Brenda Schaffer is working around the clock to distort Iranian history in order to justify pan-Turkist attempts at disintegrating Iran and further isolating Armenia. The momentum in Baluchistan is also building up. See video below.

The Fifth Column Left Rushes to Defend Iran

The day after the United States celebrated its Independence, two American soldiers were killed in south Baghdad by an explosive projectile provided to Iraqi insurgents by Iran; in June, NATO officials caught Iran shipping heavy arms and C4 explosives to the Taliban in Afghanistan; earlier this year, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called for the annihilation of Israel. With these facts, there can be little doubt about Iran’s virulent intentions. However, as the evidence against the Islamic Republic mounts, so are the groups speaking out in its defense, and now those same people who so fervidly defended Saddam’s Iraq are once again working to protect another unholy terror.

al-Qaeda Warns Iran...

al-Quaeda leader in Iraq, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, is offering an ultimatum to the IRI:

End support to Iraq's Shiites within two months or prepare for war inside Iran's borders.
al-Baghdadi also warned Sunnis and Arab countries to cut their ties with Iran within this two month period.

http://www.albawaba.com/en/countries/Iran/214889

Can things get anymore complicated in this mess?

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Arash Sahami Documentary Receives Award From Amnesty International

Arash Sahami receives well-deserved praise from Amnesty International for his undercover video of the execution of a teenaged Iranian girl.

16-year-old Atefah Sahaaleh was executed in the Iranian city of Neka for "Crimes Against Chastity," on August 15, 2004.

http://cityboyblog.com/2007/07/05/iranian-human-rights-film-wins-amnesty-international-award/

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/5217424.stm

Would Howard Baskerville Be Into Paris Hilton?

My dear friend who dedicates himself to this blog and to the cause of a free and democratic Iran asked me to post some things here from time to time. He would like others to read the opinions of Americans, like myself, who sympathize with the struggles of the Iranian people. Graciously he calls us the "Modern Baskervilles."

While I am honored and flattered by such a designation, I also know that I am not deserving of it. Howard Baskerville was a great idealist of a man, who took to love and defend the Iranian folk with his life. I, on the other hand, am just another guy with opinions and viewpoints - something of which we're too much in abundance of nowadays.

But I do have to ask myself: Are there any "Modern Baskervilles?" Are there any young and idealistic American men and women who look at the faces of their Iranian cousins, see the anger and frustration, and want to do something -anything- to help? What has happened to this naive but commendable spirit, once so commonly found in Americans? Do my fellow Americans even care?

In the last week of June Iranians reacted to their government's mis-management and overall incompetence by taking over the gas stations, they followed this up by looting the stores which flaunt in their faces items that we here take for granted, but that they cannot afford. Most important of all, however, was the subsequent fires which lit up various government buildings. Such actions were explicit declarations against the theocratic regime and its greedy mullah/apparatchiks.

Where were the Western media to report to us this outbreak of violence and destruction from the Iranian people who simply cannot tolerate anymore this regime which has been smothering them, starving them, and killing them for almost 30 years? Where were the news reporters and talking heads analyzing this explosion literally burning up the summer streets of Iran's cities? Where were they?

Paris Hilton.
Yes, that's right, Paris Hilton.

Fox and CNN were focused upon their darling Paris Hilton. Giving us dumbed-down Americans around-the-clock coverage on the sugary blonde confection's adventures into the California penal system, her newfound religious awakening, the tears on her billionaire parents' faces, and every burp and fart coming out of the Hilton family, ad nauseum.

Perhaps I shouldn't ask such questions. I should know better.

In 1999, when brave Iranians literally screamed "Enough!" and fought the police (and their basiji auxiliaries), only to be beaten down, and murdered or thrown into the sinkholes that are Iran's prisons, there was barely a mention from the American media giants. Americans back then didn't get to see the tears of true anguish and fear on the faces of Iran's mothers and fathers for their sons and daughters. And we didn't get to see anything like it now. We were too engrossed in finding out Ms. Hilton's favorite Biblical passage and what of life's lessons she has now learned.

But take notice... Paris Hilton is -for now- no longer in the news (and that Anna Nicole crisis hopefully seems to be resolved). So Fox is back again with its daily quotes from Ahmadinejad; reporting his every demented utterance, his every dire wish of death and destruction (don't forget the chaos) to America and Israel coming forth from his perpetually smiling, bearded face.

Take notice too that the analysts from the right-wing think tanks and their Israeli colleagues on Middle Eastern affairs have returned to cable news and talk radio reminding us about this (next) "New Hitler," simultaneously scaring soccer moms and pumping up the balls of armchair warriors across the land for the imminent nuclear holocaust, courtesy of Iran - that (next) "country that so parallels the rise of the Third Reich."

There will not be any new Baskervilles or Shusters. Most likely there won't be anything coming from America but drummed-up hysterical fear and bigotry from an otherwise uninterested public that finds itself distracted by missing runaway brides, TV actors who use the word "faggot," and -of course that perrenial favorite- dysfunctional blonde bimbos.

Posted by,

Caesar Warrington

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Crown Prince Reza PAHLAVI Heir to Throne of Iran's Message for 18 Tir

پيام رضا پهلوی
بمناسبت سالگرد جنبش ١٨ تير
١٨ تيرماه ١٣٨۶
هم ميهنان عزيزم،
جنبش دانشجويی ايران به راستی يکی از پُر آوازه ترين و سرنوشت ساز ترين جنبش های
دانشجويی در جهان است. نه در برلن ونه در پاريس، نه در سئول ونه در پکن، در هيچ کجا نمی
توان يک مشابه آن را يافت.
چنانچه اين جنبش با جنبش های ديگر در آميزد و به روستاها و کارگاهها سرايت کند، چنانچه
انديشه و کار دست اتحاد به هم رسانند، بنياد ساختارهای استبداد دينی را دستخوش لرزه ای مرگبار
خواهند کرد.
آن روز که جنبش دانشجويی پُر افتخار ايران با خيل عظيم بی کاران و رنجبران شهر و روستا پيوند
برادری زند، نظم مردمی، نظام ضد مردمی اصول گرايان و مهرورزان و اصلاح طلبان و دلالان دين
فروش را به سوق فرو پاشی خواهد کشاند.
نظم نوين مردمی را بايد از پايه سامان داد و آن پايه جز خود مردم و نياز های حياتی آنان، جز کارگر
و جز دهقان، جز رنجبران فکری و جسمی شهر و روستا نيست. در اثر مراوده و تبادل زندۀ اطلاعات
با اينان است که واحه های نظام مردمی يکی پس از ديگری شبکه آسا سراسر ايران را خواهد
پوشاند. حاکميت مردم را با يد با بر پايی نظامات مقبول و سامان دادن به واقعيت های نوين اجتماعی
بر تارک تاريک اند يشان و وا پس گرايان، به ضرب نيروی توانای نمونۀ بر تر، تحميل کرد.
آری، دموکراسی وارداتی نيست! دموکراسی، يعنی سامان دادن به کار مردم به دست مردم و برای
مردم. و اين، آن پرچمی است که شما دانشجويان بايد بر د وش بکشيد و به ميان مردم ببريد!
برای شما عزيزان، که از زندان و شکنجه نمی هراسيد و جانانه و بی پروا ايستاده، از حق تعيين
سرنوشت ملت ايران تا پای جان د فاع ميکنيد، آرزوی پيروزی دارم.

خداوند نگهدارايران باد

رضا پهلوی

P.O. Box 341907 Bethesda, MD. 20827, U.S.A.
Tel: 301-765-7007 Fax: 301-765-7009
iran@rezapahlavi.org www.rezapahlavi.org

Thursday, July 05, 2007

How to Defend Pure Divine Motherland of Iran Against Evil Occupier Force in Iran?

Now days, Iranian people are seeking new means to defend Iran and Iranian people against the theology state in Iran. Recently, one blogger came with an innovative idea of mobilizing Iranian people globally. All other bloggers have to do just to post the symbol of rejecting the theology state in Iran on their blogs, and automatically the assign blogger is enrolled in their program. So, just do not sit their and waste your valuable time, go and click on the image of no the mullahs on your left side of this blog which directs you to campaign headquarter and join the just cause against unjust ruler of the theology state in Iran.

Proclamation of Known Remnant of 18 Tir/July 09th, 1999

Eight years have passed since plain clothed police officers attacked and invaded the student dormitories at Tehran University. During that night Ezat EBRAHIM NEJAD and tens of other students were murdered at the hands of Iranian Regime’s barbaric agents. Thousands of student activists were arrested and subjected to most brutal tortures imaginable. Manouchehr Mohammadi a student activist and a freedom fighter lost his younger brother Akbar Mohammadi, under torture in Evin prison. Eight years later I am still in prison in relation to my activities during the July 9, 1999 (18 Tir) student demonstrations.
Eight years ago without having committed any crime, without a lawyer, and without due process I was sentenced to 8 years of imprisonment. After having served 4 years, and without any request on my part, I was pardoned by the Supreme Leader and released. I was released exactly 43 days after my mother death. While my mom was ill I had requested to visit her briefly in the hospital on her death bed and later when she passed away I requested to attend her funeral, however both my requests were denied.
I was re-arrested shortly after my release once without any evidence and solely for my human rights activities. The Intelligence Ministry decided I was not deserving of the pardon and I must serve the remaining 4 years of my prison term as well as be sentenced to 74 lashes on my back. It is unfair that my back must pay the price for my mind and my hands. On this 8th anniversary of July 9, 1999 (18 Tir) Demonstrations, besides keeping the memory of that day alive and remembering what happened to the innocent students, I ask all human right activists and organizations to identify and remember all student activists who have become faceless and forgotten in Iranian Prisons, and take the steps necessary to help them.
Viva Iran
1386-4-12
Behrouz JAVID TEHRANI
Last Known Survivor of 18 Tir 1378
Reproduce
Engineer Sadiq NAGHSHKAR
Speaker for Political Prisoner of Iran

13 years old Iranian warrior fights against

The IRI would brainwashed children. Then, the IRI would deploy children to battle field.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4704218419337837611

Moshiri is a liar and has no credibility

Dear readers:

Today we are living in hell because there are bad apples among us that they misinform everyone about historical facts, and causing internal conflict among us. Kindly take 4 mintues of your valuable time and listen to Mr. Moshiri that how he is distorting historical facts.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNytc40INeo

Did Shah and Savak invented term Marxist-Islamic? No
Did not left wing parties adopted arm struggle policy? Yes because they believed by removing one component of a system, the whole system would collapse eventually.

Thank you all

Video - New English-language Iranian satellite station wipes Israel from website

The Islamist regime in Iran launched today its first 24-hour, satellite and internet-based English-language “news” channel, Press TV, in the presence of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Ezzatollah Zarghami, president of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB).
Based in Tehran, Press TV claims it has 26 correspondents “located in the world’s most strategic places”. It is carried on frequencies available in Europe and the Americas. Its website is registered to al-Alam, the Iranian regime’s Arabic-language news channel also provided by the Iranian state broadcaster IRIB and known for advocating that “Jihad against the Jews is the only option”, or advising Muslims to read the infamous antisemitic forgery the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
Press TV is staffed by Iranian and Western reporters, including what appears to be a large number of Britons. Its many women reporters, whether Iranian or not, all appear to be hijab-clad.
A sampling of the news channel’s programming suggests its goal is to build support for Iran’s radical Islamist political agenda by wrapping it in an “anti-imperialist” and “ anti-war” package suitable for Western audiences.
Indeed, speaking at its official launch ceremony, Ahmadinejad was hopeful the new state-controlled channel would cater to the needs of “those who seek perfection and global peace”, “stand beside the oppressed nations of the world”, offer an “accurate” image of Islam and Iran, and expose the “propaganda news networks of mankind’s enemies” in reference, presumably, to the Zionist-dominated media in which antisemitic cranks such as Ahmadinejad and his anti-imperialist fellow-travelers believe.
Already before its official launch, Press TV began reporting ludicrous items from the syro-iranian axis propaganda mill, such as an alleged foiled plot to kill Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah planned by Fatah, Saudi Arabia and Israel, no less.
In step with the Iranian revolution’s longstanding objective of annihilating Israel, Press TV wiped Israel from its feedback contact form, which otherwise allows users wishing to comment Press TV programming to identify their country of origin or residence. The list includes every other possible country, real or imaginary, such as one state called “Palestine”.
An egregious human rights offender where liberty of the press is inexistent as Tehran regularly shuts down reformist and pro-democracy media outlets and jails journalists who do not toe the line of the theocratic regime, the Islamic Republic of Iran bets it can act as a counterweight to the free press of the West.
Not a foolish bet considering the West has its share of useful idiots who consider the Muslim Brotherhood-dominated al-Jazeera to be a reliable news source.
View Press TV report on its inauguration:

Pakistan mosque leader calls for surrender

The captured leader of hundreds of radical Islamic students holed up in a besieged mosque in the Pakistani capital urged his followers on Thursday to surrender to authorities or flee. Religious followers walk on their way to surrender outside the Lal Masjid mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Thursday. (Anjum Naveed/Associated Press) Head cleric Maulana Abdul Aziz, who was captured Wednesday by government security forces while trying to escape from Islamabad's Lal Masjid mosque, also told state television that nearly 1,000 people were still inside the mosque and would not be able to hold out for long. Aziz said that as many as 700 women and about 250 men remained inside the mosque compound and an adjacent women's seminary, some armed with more than a dozen AK-47 assault rifles provided by "friends."

"If they can get out quietly they should go, or they can surrender if they want to," he said, still dressed in a burqa. "I saw after coming out that the siege is very intense.… Our companions will not be able to stay for long."Officials said over 1,100 militants had given up and more emerged early Thursday as police using loudspeakers appealed to those remaining inside to surrender under an amnesty offered by the government.

"We have no militants, we only had students. If somebody came from outside, I have no information on that," he said, also denying his previous vow to launch suicide bombers in event of a government attack on the mosque. Despite Aziz's apparent appeal for a peaceful end to the standoff, gunfire erupted around the mosque after a noon deadline demanding a total surrender passed. Four helicopters hovered over the area, while authorities barred journalists from getting near the mosque.

The Pakistani army surrounded the mosque Wednesday, a day after at least 16 people were killed in clashes between security forces and armed activists from the mosque, whose clerics have defied the government for months with a drive to impose Taliban-style Islamic law in the city.
In recent months, Aziz and his loyal clerics have challenged the government of Gen. Pervez Musharraf by sending students of the mosque to kidnap alleged prostitutes and police in an anti-vice campaign.

Iranian Identity Under Fire: An Argument Against the Use of the Word ‘Farsi’ for the Persian Language

http://www.cais-soas.com/CAIS/Languages/persian_not_farsi.htm
The term Persian has been used in the English language for over five hundred years: to describe both a nation with 7000 years of archaeological history, and also the language that nation has used since the rise of the first Persian Empire, the Achaemenids.

Unfortunately however, the word ‘Farsi’ is increasingly and incorrectly being used to describe the Persian language. This paper outlines the linguistic and cultural context of Persian, as well as exploring the potential motivations of those promoting the incorrect usage of the word ‘Farsi’.

It explains clearly how the use of the word ‘Farsi’ instead of Persian voids important historical and cultural associations for the Iranian nation, with its long history of civilisation, and how it can therefore be seen as an insult to the heritage of Iran.


LINGUISTICS

Persian is described linguistically as an Indo-European language. It is a member of the Western Iranian branch of the Iranian languages, which are themselves a subgroup of the Indo-Iranian (or Indo-Aryan) family of languages. As such, Persian is distantly related to the vast majority of European languages, including English.

Over the past three millennia, it has developed through three distinct stages: Old, Middle and New Persian.


Old Persian
Old Persian and Avestan are the two most prominent members of the Old Iranian languages.

Avestan is categorised as an Eastern Iranian language, and was spoken in northeastern and eastern Iran from the second half of the second millennium BCE (Old Avestan) down to about the beginning of the Achaemenid period (Younger Avestan)[1]. It is also the language of the sacred texts of the Zoroastrian religion. The Gathas or metrical sermons of the prophet Zarathushtra were composed some time in the second millennium BCE in Older or Gathic Avestan. Later texts are recorded in Later or Younger Avestan, which constitutes a subsequent and distinct linguistic phase[2], which is more similar to the language of the oldest Old Persian inscriptions than to Old Avestan[3]. Old Avestan is very close to Old Indic Rigveda and as such is a very archaic Indo-European linguistic type[4].

Old Persian was the vernacular tongue of the Achaemenid monarchs[5], but had already been spoken for a few centuries prior to the rise of the Achaemenid dynasty[6].

Old Persian script was called Aryan (OP. ariyā) by the Achaemenids. It is largely known from an extensive body of cuneiform inscriptions – especially from the time of Darius the Great (r. 522-486 BCE) and his son Xerxes (r. 486-465BCE)[7]. However, some scholars believe that Aryan was invented by the first Iranian dynasty, the Medes (728-550BCE), and then adopted by the Achaemenids as the imperial script[8].


Middle Persian
Middle Persian is one of the Middle Iranian languages. The two major languages in this group are Arsacid Pahlavi (also called Parthian and Northwest Pahlavi[10]) and Sasanid Pahlavi (or Southwest Pahlavi and, more commonly, Middle Persian). The term Pahlavi is a noun derived from the adjective Pahlav[11], which is the equivalent of the Old Persian word Parthava meaning ‘Parthian’[12].

Arsacid Pahlavi (Parthian) was the official language of the Arsacid dynastic empire (248BCE-224CE)[13]. It is also preserved in a large body of Manichean texts, which provide evidence for its continuation in Central Asia right up until the 10th century[14].

While Arsacid Pahlavi is categorised as a dialect within the Northwestern subgroup of Iranian languages, it retains many archaic Eastern Iranian features – probably because the founders of the Arsacid dynasty, the Parni tribe, were originally speakers of a Northeastern Iranian language similar to Scythian[15]. Parthian has no known direct linguistic ancestor[16], but is closely related to the other major Middle Iranian language, Sasanid Pahlavi / Middle Persian.

Middle Persian was a successor to, and derived directly from, Old Persian. It has a multiplicity of Southwestern Iranian features. Gradually developing into a distinct idiom after the reign of Emperor Xerxes[17], it became the official language of the Sasanid Empire (224-651CE) and as such was utilised in a noteworthy literature of Zoroastrian and also Manichean texts. Following the Arab invasions of Iran in the seventh century it developed into New Persian.


New Persian
New Persian, or Persian for short, is categorised as one of the Modern Iranian languages, along with Kurdish, Baluchi, Pashto, Ossetic and number of other languages. It can be considered as having two phases: classical and modern – although both variants are mutually intelligible[18].

The period after the Arab conquest is described by Iranian scholars as the ‘Two Centuries of Silence’. There is no inscriptional or textual evidence for New Persian and only very scanty indications for the continuing use of Middle Persian. However scholars consider it unlikely that Iranians deserted their mother tongue and only cultivated Arabic[19]. The lack of any literary evidence from this period will certainly have been compounded by the destruction of Iranian libraries by the Mongols under Genghis Khan and his successors – and there may also be other reasons unknown to us[20].

The subsequent ‘Persian renaissance’ was marked by the advent of Classical Persian. This emerged in Khorasan in eastern Iran[21] and so was strongly influenced by Eastern-Iranian linguistic elements[22]. Arabic also had a major impact: with large numbers of loanwords, increasing palatalisation and also the inclusion of some grammatical elements. A modified version of Arabic script was adopted and some letter changes were made. For the purposes of this paper, the most important of these was the use of /F/ for /P/. As Arabic has no /p/ phoneme, the area of Pārs, the Iranian people who originated there and their language came to be described by natives as ‘Fārs’ and ‘Fārsi’.

After these linguistic changes, Persian then remained essentially unchanged until the nineteenth century. At that time, what is now called Modern or Standard Persian developed from the Tehrani vernacular – following the adoption of Tehran as the capital city of Iran by the Qajar s in 1787.


NOMENCLATURE

The name Persian derives from the province of Pārs (modern Fārs) in southwestern Iran. This was itself named after the Persian tribes of Indo-European nomads who migrated, along with some other Iranian peoples, from territories east of the Caspian Sea onto the Iranian plateau in the middle[23] or later part of the second millennium BCE[24].

The Persians settled in the mountain country rising over the northeast side of the Persian Gulf and enclosing the high basin in the west in which Persepolis and Shiraz are situated[25], some time between the seventh and ninth centuries BCE[26]. The name survived as Fārs[27]. This region then became the birthplace of two Persian dynastic empires – the Achaemenids (550-530 BCE) and the Sasanids (224-651CE) – as well as the cradle of the Persian language.

Achaemenid Persians called their language (Old Persian) Pārsa and the Greeks followed this in naming it Persis. From then on, other nations have predominantly named Persia and Persian using words based on the root Pārs-[28].

For example, the English use of the word ‘Persian’ has a five hundred year history[29] and is derived from the Latin Persianus, itself drawing on the Greek Persis. Similarly, the French word is Persane, the Germans use Persisch, the Italians Persiano and the Russians Persiska.

As outlined above, Persian only came to be described as ‘Fārsi’ by natives of Iran following the P/F letter substitution associated with the Arab conquests.


SAME LANGUAGE, DIFFERENT NAMES

Persian is the language of at least 110 million people worldwide – sixty to seventy million of whom are mother-tongue speakers. The most substantial populations are in Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan, but there are also significant numbers in neighbouring countries[30],[31]– including Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Turkey and the Caucasus[32] – and also in the Persian Gulf states[33]. In addition, since the 1979 revolution, emigration from Iran has led to the creation of Persian-speaking diaspora communities in many countries worldwide, especially in the United States, Europe, Canada, Australia and Israel. The largest urban community of Iranians outside Iran is now in the Los Angeles area[34].

All these populations use regional versions of Persian with different proportions of non-Persian loanwords[35] and slightly different pronunciations[36] compared to the Persian spoken in Iran[37]. Some of the alternatives have different local names: Tajiks call their Persian Tojiki, while Afghans often use the word Dari[38].

However, unlike Arabic, all the alternatives are mutually comprehensible. Contrary to the views of some academics and institutions, they are the same language.

The Cultural Heritage News Agency of Iran explains why the versions of Persian have at least a strong a claim as those of Arabic to be considered as one language[39]:
“Some mistakenly believe that, in English, the official language of Iran should be called Farsi, while the language spoken in Tajikistan and Afghanistan should be called Dari, and Persian should be utilised to refer to all of them. However, the difference between the Persian spoken in Iran, Afghanistan, or Tajikistan is not significant or substantial enough to warrant such a distinction and classification. Consider the following case: an Egyptian and a Qatari engage in conversation in Arabic. They will encounter a great deal of difficulty in comprehending each other. Despite this fact, the language used in their conversation is referred to as Arabic . . On the other hand, Iranians, Tajiks and Afghans can converse in Persian and easily understand each other. Why, then, should their dialects be classified separately and referred to by different names?”

Despite this, however, some academics and academic institutions are treating the Persian spoken in Iran and elsewhere as separate entities.

Professor Michael Hillman from the University of Texas, for example, whilst lecturing at the ‘Fifth Biennial Conference on Iranian Studies’, assumed that ‘Farsi’ and Tajiki are dialects of Persian[40],[41]; while undergraduates at Emory College in US are taught ‘Farsi’ as one variety of Persian[42]. Even the Faculty of Oriental Studies at Oxford University, who have been teaching Persian since the seventeenth century – and who therefore really should know better, now describe Tajik as one of the ‘branches’ of Persian[43].


THE PERSIAN LANGUAGE AND IRANIAN IDENTITY

The rich legacy of the Iranian nation – that is, Iranian identity at its most fundamental – is defined by, and intertwined with, the Persian language.

Professor Ehsan Yarshater, editor of Encyclopaedia Iranica, affirms this eloquently[44]:
“Persia has cherished and preserved against all odds . . the shared experience of a rich and rewarding past. It finds expression primarily through the Persian language, not simply as a medium of comprehension but also as the chief carrier of the Persian world view and Persian culture. The Persian language . . is a reservoir of Iranian thought, sentiment and values, and a repository of its literary arts. It is only by loving, learning, teaching and above all enriching the language that the Persian identity may continue to survive”.

A key element in the history of Persian language and culture, within the discourse of Iranian history, is the struggle between Arab-Islamic and Iranian-nativist identities[45]. This is not to say that Persian has not contributed to Islam: on the contrary, Persian played a major role in the propagation and spread of the religion in the Indian Sub-Continent, Central Asia and even as far as China and the Far East[46].


Regional and European perspectives on PersiaN

The above concentrates on Iranian and Middle Eastern perceptions of Persian. Looking further afield, there is a long tradition of valuing Persian language and culture: “At its height, [the Persian language] stretched from the Aegean in the West to Sinkiang and the Bay of Bengal in the East and from the Russian steppes in the North to the Indian Ocean in the South”[47].

Persian, in what Arnold Toynbee has called the ‘Iranic Society’[48], was the administrative and literary language of the Ottomans and of Mughal India[49],[50]. All medieval histories of India are written in Persian[51] and under British rule, for the English who aspired “to high office in India, knowledge of Persian was desirable”[52]. Indeed, until 1834, it was the medium of all official correspondence in India[53].

Taking a more purely European view, the Persian epic stories were first brought back to France by the Crusaders[54]. Wolfram von Eschenbach then translated versions into German by around 1180[55]. Presenting what became known as the Parsifal Legend, Eschenbach “utilized several Persian legends dating from about 600. By transmuting the sacred personages of the original legends into romantic knights, he modernized the tales for his own time. For this modernization he took as model a grand epic from the end of the eleventh century, the Barzu-Nama, the story of a knight named Barzu”[56].

However, it was not until the reign of the Safavid dynasty (1507-1702) with their increasingly international commercial and political links, that any Europeans began to learn about Persian literature in any depth[57]. The earliest extant reference to Persian literature in English seems to be from the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. In The Arte of English Poesie (1589), George Puttenham gives four Persian poems in translation[58].

The 17th century German Orientalist Adam Olearius then played a significant role in popularising knowledge about Iran, following his visit there in 1633 as secretary to the ambassador of Frederick III of Schleswig-Holstein[59].



PERSIAN NOT FARSI

As well as being a linguistic nonsense, it has culturally undermining effects to use the word ‘Farsi’ rather than ‘Persian’.

Linguistically, it is widely accepted that native speakers and foreigners use different words to describe the same language. Alex Bellem from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, observes[60]:
“If we insist on 'Farsi' then shouldn't we insist also on ‘Türkče’ or ‘Español’ or ‘Elinici’,, and so on? Since it is accepted in linguistics as natural that non-native words are adapted to conform to the phonology of the borrowing language (perhaps via an intermediate 'conveyor' language), can we object to 'Persian' on linguistic grounds?”

Joseph Bell, Professor of Arabic and Middle-Eastern Languages and Cultures at the University of Bergen in Norway is stronger in his condemnation[61]:
“No one would seriously consider substituting Deutschland for Germany, or Deutsch/Deutscher for German in English. ‘Deutschland’ exists, of course, in English, but with connotations for which a high price was paid . . But to use the word [Farsi] as the normal term for the national language of Iran has to be classified as one of the greatest affronts to great cultures in our time.”
He goes on to examine the negative cultural implications of the usage of this term[62]:
“Saying Farsi instead of Persian robs the language and the culture of all the sense of splendor the name Persian has taken on in western languages through two and a half millennia of war, trade, religious and cultural influence, and other forms of confrontation or subtle interaction”.

This is underlined by the Academy of Persian Language and Literature (Farhangestān-e Zabān va Adab-e Fārsī) in Iran which clearly advocates the use of the word ‘Persian’ not ‘Farsi’[63]:
“Persian has been used in a variety of publications including cultural, scientific and diplomatic documents for centuries and therefore it connotes very significant and cultural meanings. Hence changing Persian to Farsi is to negate these important established precedents. Changing Persian to Farsi may give the impression that it is a new language, and this may well be the intention of some Persian users.”

Hossein Samei, Linguistics Professor at Emory University in Atlanta, argues that[64]:
“Persian, alongside the name of a language, may be used as an adjective for the other aspects of our history and culture. For example, we can speak about ‘Persian Literature’, ‘Persian Gulf’, ‘Persian Carpet’, ‘Persian Food’. In this way, ‘Persian’ may be [seen as] a common concept and function as a link between all aspects of Iranian life, including language. ‘Farsi’ does not have such a characteristic”.

Franklin Lewis, Professor of Persian Language & Literature at University of Chicago, reaffirms[65]:
“As there is no such thing as Farsi carpets, Farsi literature, Farsi cats, Farsi food, etc., it seems rather ridiculous to use this English neologism as a general adjective for the language”.

Hossein Nasr, Professor of Persian literature at George Washington University in the US, asserts that[66]:
“The synthesis of Persian culture has not changed with the Iranian revolution . . . classical Persian culture, philosophy and religious thought are still intact . . ”.
He also suggests that:
“Persians are aware of their uniqueness in the Islamic world”.

The use of the word ‘Farsi’, however, dilutes this distinctive quality and undermines Iranian culture.

Kamyar Abdi, Professor of Anthropology at Dartmouth College in the US, emphasises the importance of the Persian language and its association with Iranian national identity and unity[67]:
“Perhaps the most vital factor in this cultural continuity and the hallmark of Iranian national identity is the Persian language. Having been used in Iran at least since the time of Achaemenids in the sixth century B.C.E., the Persian language has assumed a distinctive Iranian character and become intertwined with Iranian national identity and unity. Not surprisingly, in recent times the Persian language has been one of the most important contexts in which Iranian nationalism has flourished”.

Professor Ehsan Yarshater, the Editor of Encyclopaedia Iranica, hammers the point home[68]:
“[The word ‘Farsi’] has no foundation in the English language and its relationship to the identity of Iranian civilisation and culture – as reflected in phrases such as ‘Persian literature’, ‘Persian art’ and ‘Persian poetry’ – is not at all clear . . .As well as the linguistic points, when the word Farsi is used in English for the Persian language, it ignores all the positive cultural connotations of the word Persian.”



WHO IS PROMOTING THE WORD ‘FARSI’ AND WHY?

Some of those using the word ‘Farsi’ may be ignorant or have misunderstood. A Wall Street Journal editor, for example, naively surmises[69]:
“Supporters of the name Iran prefer calling the language Farsi, it seems, while the supporters of the historical name Persia prefer Persian”.

Professor Geoffrey Lewis tries to be charitable[70]:
“. . hard though it is when dealing with the Farsi-merchants. Some of them probably use the term because they feel uncomfortable with the seemingly fuddy-duddy ‘Persian’ and are deterred by some spark of good sense from calling the language of Persia ‘Iranian’. For that is a family name which covers many other languages besides Persian”.

Professor Bell asserts that the problem is lack of knowledge and respect[71]:
“If we know a people well enough to respect them, we will not tamper with the corrupt forms of their names, their place names, and the names of their languages. It is only when we do not have sufficient respect that we yield to the urgings of the mapmakers and revert to the ‘native’ form.”

Considering those who may have other reasons, however, there are three main groups worthy of further discussion: those in the West; Islamic fundamentalists and pan-Arabists; and, perhaps most worryingly of all, the Iranian diaspora.


Those in the West
Professor Franklin Lewis reflects that[72]:
“The term "Farsi" began to creep into English in the 1960s, mostly as a result of foreigners in Iran hearing it from native-speakers who, presumably, did not know English well enough to know that the English name of their language had always been Persian.”

Then an Iranian commentator blames the western media[73]:
“. . [during the 1979 Revolution] a bunch of western journalists who didn't speak the language were sent to Iran to report about the revolution. Using this exotic word ‘Farsi’ instead of Persian might have made the impression that they knew what they were talking about, which very often they didn't. I was just a teenager at that time, but I still remember. In most cases they were hanging out in the Hotel ‘Marmar’ and drinking beer, then reproducing bar gossip as authentic reports from the heart of the revolution.”

Frances Pritchett, Professor of Modern Indic Languages at Columbia University in the US believes that the use of the word ‘Farsi’ was further propagated by Urdu-speakers living in West[74]:
“All my Urdu-speaking friends refer to Persian as ‘Farsi’, which is its Urdu name; they tend to transfer that name into English quite naturally. I picked up the habit directly from them”.

Now the habit is becoming institutionalised at the highest levels. The Guidelines for UK Government websites[75] as well the British Embassy in Tehran[76] currently describe Persian as ‘Farsi’.

The BBC, with its long-established ‘BBC Persian’ radio service, is launching a range of TV channels for the Middle East in 2008. This includes a Persian language service which is to be called ‘Farsi TV’. Interestingly, the Arabic counterpart is named as Arabic TV – rather than ‘al-Arabiat TV’. Many Iranians still remember the partisan posture taken by the BBC in both 1953 (supporting the coup against Dr Mossadegh’s democratically elected government[77]) and also in 1979[78] (as what became widely known as the ‘Ayatollah BBC’[79]). With these events in mind, it is difficult to interpret the BBC’s choice as anything other than a conscious decision.

Across the Atlantic, despite the US Library of Congress Standards recommending the use of the word ‘Persian’[80], ‘Farsi’ is used in the United States for Security Initiative Programmes of language teaching[81],[82],[83] as well as in other official documents and websites[84],[85].

American usage of ‘Farsi’ instead of Persian has not only has created confusion, but even suggests division amongst Persian-speaking peoples. For instance, according to the CIA’s ‘World Fact Book’, the language of Iran, Afghanistan and the UAE states as Persian, while Bahrainis’ speak ‘Farsi’[86].


Islamic Fundamentalists and Pan-Arabists in Iran
On the other side of the ideological divide, things are not very different. In post-revolutionary Iran, news agencies[87], English language journals[88], textbooks issued by the Ministry of Islamic Culture and Guidance, and resources for foreign tourists often refer to Persian as ‘Farsi’.

Since the coming of theocratic regime to power in Iran, the regime leaders have dedicated significant resources to restructuring Iranian culture and values. Iranians are now vigorously-encouraged to choose Arabic/Islamic names for their children[89], and a large number of Iranian names have been outlawed[90]. Many pre-Islamic historical and archaeological sites have been devastated under the cover of development projects: destroyed as part of highway[91] and railway track construction[92]; contaminated irreparably by chemical factories[93]; undermined by nearby hotels[94]; obliterated as part of mining[95]; or submerged beneath dam reservoirs[96]. There have even been threats to bulldoze Persepolis[97]. In general, pre-Islamic Iranian heritage has been downplayed and undermined in favour of the promotion of Islamic culture[98], the Islamic way of life, and above all the Arabic language. There have even been systematic attempts to change to ‘Farsi’ the name used in the international community for the Persian language – as a political statement[99].

Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic regime, publicly made no secret of his contempt for pre-Islamic Iranian culture – deriding everything Iranian from Noruz to the Persian language. According to Roya Hakakian[100]:
“. . [Khomeini] made no secret of his contempt for the non-Muslim dimensions of Iranian life. He injected Persian with so many Arabic words that it confounded the ordinary listener, something for which he compensated by repetitiveness.”

This attitude was mirrored in the views of many other prominent members of the Islamic regime. Although the Friday Sermons organised by the Islamic Republic say little about the Persian language – indicating its perceived relative lack of importance – a detailed and explicit statement was made in 1981 by Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani in his role as the Islamic Republic’s Chairman of the Expediency Discernment Council. On that occasion, he linked the fate of the Persian language directly to that of Persian nationality: in his view of the future, both shall vanish[101]:
“. . we believe that the future [is] Arabic, not Persian . . on the day the united Islamic government is established, certainly its language cannot be anything but Arabic”.

Some senior regime members are less negative – at least in their words, if not in their actions. Ali Khamenei, then the state President and the current Spiritual Leader of the Islamic Republic, emphasised the importance of the Persian language in 1988 in a speech entitled “The Greatness of the Persian Language and the Necessity of Protecting it” [102]. He spoke about:
“[the] revolutionary duty to promote the national language, and [how] that national language constitutes the most important and original determinant of cultural identity for any nation”.
He then asserted the past and present international importance of the Persian language in the Islamic world, and especially in India and Central Asia, concluding that:
“[Today,] Persian is the language of true . . and revolutionary Islam”.

More recently, various Islamic commentators have been somewhat less committed to the Persian language. For example, in 2003, Naser Pourpirar[103] demanded that the national language of Iran should be replaced with Arabic[104]:
“It is very unfortunate that we cannot put the Persian language aside and replace it with the language of Qur’an. However the future of Iran is at the hand of Islamic Unity. Spreading the Arabic language among Iranian youths and incorporating it more seriously into the education system . . can make a foundation for such Islamic Unity.”
Pourpirar has a startling range of views – including that the Parthian and the Sasanid dynasties are baseless fabrications by Jewish-Orientalists and that the indigenous peoples of Iran were wiped out by the ‘savage Slavic’ Achaemenids so that Iran was then free of human settlement until the Muslim Arabs arrived. He is however recognised as a scholar by the Islamic regime, who quote extensively from his written work.

Ghahreman Safavi is another of the Islamic Regime’s new breed of scholars. He is based in the UK and presented a paper on ‘Iranian identity’ in 2004 at SOAS. This consistently used the word ‘Farsi’ – although unfortunately always inaccurately[105]:
“Old Farsi is a branch of [the] Avestan language . . [and the] Avesta has been written in Iranian language (Ancient Farsi) . . [while] New Farsi, which is Dari Farsi . .”.


The Iranian diaspora
Perhaps most worrying, however, is the use of the word ‘Farsi’ by some Iranians, especially in the diaspora. It is difficult to understand why they might, however inadvertently, allow themselves to contribute in this way to the denigration of Iranian cultural achievements.

Professor Yarshater writes about[106]:
“. . the Iranians living in the USA, when they answer questions about languages that they know in their application forms for jobs or university courses. I suspect that they even feel gratified to think that ‘the known word of Farsi’ can now be used in the English language. If only they knew that by using the word ‘Farsi’ . . they find themselves damaging irreparably the fame and cultural status of Iran.”

A number of Iranian academics now use the word ‘Farsi’ to refer to Persian in their English publications[107]. For example, Dr Mohammed Chaichian, Professor of Sociology at Mount Mercy College, discusses the question of cultural identity in first generation Iranians – always using ‘Farsi’, and thereby himself diminishing that identity[108].

Professor Franklin Lewis reflects on the snowball effect that this has when the media get involved[109]:
“The media has accelerated and canonized [this] process with the spread of the Iranian diaspora around the English-speaking world, especially, perhaps in North America”.

For those Iranians in French-speaking countries, the use of the word ‘Farsi’ for the Persian language is incidentally doubly incongruous since it sounds indistinguishable from the word ‘farci’, or ‘stuffed’[110].

Some diaspora Iranians have, however, at last woken up to the problem and are now proposing action. A contributor to Persian Gulf Online comments that[111]:
“The significant point which unfortunately seems very difficult to get through to the Iranian Diaspora, specially those residing in the United States – by far the biggest and potentially most influential group of Iranian émigré community – is that by keeping the term 'Persian', we help preserve a 'CONTINUITY' which is an important cultural necessity.”
He suggests that:
“We cannot preserve the best in our culture unless we are prepared to take care of it. I believe we Iranians have succeeded in confusing everyone about our identity and culture, ourselves included. We have diluted our identity by overeducating foreigners. We are so eager to defend the Iranian image outside of Iran that we have created confusion about the name of our country, the name of our people, the name of our seas and the name of our language.”


IN Conclusion

Dr John Perry, Professor of Persian Language at the University of Chicago, emphasises the importance of language for a nation[112]:
“Of all man's cultural badges, that of language is perhaps the most intimately felt and tenaciously defended”.

Sadly, it seems that sizeable numbers of Iranians are not yet defending their cultural heritage stalwartly enough.

Of course, it may still not be too late – even though warnings were being issued over twenty years ago. Professor Geoffrey Lewis, from Oxford University, was outraged in 1984 by the inappropriate use of the word ‘Farsi’[113]:
“It may still not be too late to put an end to the grotesque affectation of applying the name ‘Farsi’ to the language which for more than five hundred years has been known to English-speakers as Persian.”

Yarshater adds his full intellectual weight:
“We should, in order to protect our literature and ancient cultural credibility in the West, strictly avoid using the word ‘Farsi’ and instead use the same old and well-known word of ‘Persian’. We should realise that the usage of the word ‘Farsi’ instead of ‘Persian’ acts against our national interests”.

In conclusion, using the word ‘Farsi’ for Persian in any Western language, and in particular English, is a linguistic nonsense. Additionally, it undermines all the positive cultural connotations of the word ‘Persian’ for modern Iran and adds to the recent media portrayal of Iran as a strange and distant society[114].

To use the word ‘Farsi’ instead of ‘Persian’ is an insult to the Iranian peoples and their culture and “one might even venture to say uneducated”[115]. It is “one of the greatest affronts to great cultures in our time” [116].




Bibliography given in the text (footnotes)



NOTES:
[1] Prods Oktor Skjærvø, An Introduction to Old Persian (2005), http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~iranian/OldPersian/opcomplete.pdf; retrieved June 28, 2007.
[2] Ronald G. Kent, Old Persian Grammar, Texts, Lexicon, 2nd rev. ed., American Oriental Society, New Haven, (1953). P. 6.
[3] See idem, An Introduction to Old Persian (2005), http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~iranian/OldPersian/opcomplete.pdf; retrieved June 28, 2007.
[4] Ibid.
[5] See idem, Old Persian Grammar, Texts, Lexicon, 2nd rev. ed., American Oriental Society, New Haven, (1953). P. 6.
[6] See idem, An Introduction to Old Persian (2005), http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~iranian/OldPersian/opcomplete.pdf; retrieved June 28, 2007.
[7] See idem Old Persian Grammar, Texts, Lexicon, 2nd rev. ed., American Oriental Society, New Haven, (1953). p.6.
[8] M. Dandamayev and I. Medvedskaya, “Media”, Encyclopaedia Iranica Online, (January 6, 2006), http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/ot_grp10/ot_media_20060106.html; retrieved June 28, 2007.
[9] See idem, An Introduction to Old Persian (2005), http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~iranian/OldPersian/opcomplete.pdf; retrieved June 28, 2007.
[10] See idem, Old Persian, “American Oriental Society (1953). p.6.
[11] Hermann Collitz, “World Languages”, Language, Vol. 2, No. 1. (Mar., 1926), p.6.
[12] See idem, Old Persian Grammar, Texts, Lexicon, 2nd rev. ed., American Oriental Society, New Haven, (1953). p.7.
[13] See idem, “World Languages”, Language, Vol. 2, No. 1. (Mar., 1926), p.6.
[14] Gernot L. Windfuhr, “Persian”, The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Archaeology in the Near East, vol. 4., American Schools of Oriental Research, Oxford University Press (1997) p. 293.
[15] P. Lecoq, “Aparna”, Encyclopaedia Iranica Online, http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/v2f2/v2f2a023.html; retrieved June 21, 2007.
[16] See idem, “Persian”, The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Archaeology in the Near East, vol. 4., American Schools of Oriental Research, Oxford University Press (1997) p. 293.
[17] Joseph Wiesehöfer, Ancient Persia, Tauris Paublishers, (1996), p8.
[18] C. E. Wilson, “The Formation of Modern Persian, the Beginnings and Progress of the Literature, and the So-Called Renaissance”, Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London, Vol. 2, No. 2. (1922), p.217.
[19] Ibid., p.116.
[20] Ibid. p. 222.
[21] “It was in the east, remote from the centers of Arabic culture and with large segments of the population (notably, the dehqāns, the Persian-speaking native aristocracy [. . ]) having no particular attachment to that culture, facilitated the rise of new Persian and its spread as the lingua franca of the region as well as encouraging literary composition in that language”, quoted from: J. S. Meisami, “The Past in Service of the Present: Two Views of History in Medieval Persia”, Poetics Today, Vol. 14, No. 2, Cultural Processes in Muslim and Arab Societies: Medieval and Early Modern Periods. (Summer, 1993), p.249.
[22] W. B. Henning, “Sogdian Loan-Words in New Persian”, Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London, Vol. 10, No. 1. (1939), pp. 93-106.
[23] T. Cuyler Young Jr., “Persians”, The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Archaeology in the Near East, vol. 4., American Schools of Oriental Research, Oxford University Press (1997) p. 295.
[24] Josef Wieshöfer, “Fars: History in Pre-Islamic Period”, Encyclopaedia Iranica Online, http://www.iranica.com/articles/v9f3/v9f393a.html#ii; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[25] J. M. Cook, “The Rise of the Achaemenids and Establishment of their Empire”, in The Median and Achaemenid Periods, The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, (1993), p. 238.
[26] See idem., “Persians”, The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Archaeology in the Near East, vol. 4., American Schools of Oriental Research, Oxford University Press (1997) p. 295.
[27] See idem., “The Rise of the Achaemenids and Establishment of their Empire”, in The Median and Achaemenid Periods, The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, (1993), p. 238.
[28] Named after an Iranian tribe settled in southwest Iran around 1500 B.C.E. In the Achaemenid inscriptions it was called Parsa, in Elamite Parsin, in modern Persian Fārs, and in Arabic Fars, or Fâris) — it became the general name of the whole country under the Achaemenid dynasty (550-330 B.C.E.).
[29] Lewis, G., “The Naming of Names”, Bulletin British Society of Middle Eastern Studies vol. XI., No. 2., p123.
[30] “Languages of Pakistan”, Ethnologue, https://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_country.asp?name=Pakistan; retrieved June 16, 2007.
[31] “Country Profile: Uzbekistan”, United Kingdom Foreign and Commonwealth Office, http://www.fco.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1007029394365&a=KCountryProfile&aid=1019745010121; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[32] “The modern southern Iranian languages include southwestern Persian (spoken in Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan); northwestern Baluchi (in eastern Iran, western Afghanistan, and south-western Pakistan, as well as UAE and Oman), and Kurdish (in north-western Iran, northern Iraq, and eastern Turkey); and numerous remnants of Median and Parthian dialects in central and northwestern Iran, and also northern Iran, and eastern Turkey” (Gernot L. Windfuhr, “Persian”, The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Archaeology in the Near East, vol. 4., American Schools of Oriental Research, Oxford University Press ,1997; p. 293.).
[33] The World Fact Book, CIA, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ba.html; retrieved June 11, 2007 – Also: - “Languages of Iraq”, Ethnologue, https://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_country.asp?name=Iraq; - “Languages of Oman”, Ethnologue, https://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_country.asp?name=Oman; -“Languages of Qatar”, Ethnologue, https://www.ethnologue.com/14/show_country.asp?name=Qatar; retrieved June 16, 2007.
[34] Persian Handbook, National Middle East Language Resource Center, http://nmelrc.org/handbooks/PersianHandbook.pdf; retrieved June 16, 2007.
[35] The Persian spoken in Tajikistan and Afghanistan have been “strongly influenced by classical Arabic and – to a lesser extent – old Mongolian and various Turkic dialects, all of which are non-Iranian languages”, but still fully comprehensible by other Persian speakers; (Homa Katouzian, “Problems of Political Development in Iran: Democracy, Dictatorship or Arbitrary Government?”, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 22, No. 1/2. (1995), p.16)
[36] The chief differences, however, lie in the spoken and especially rural colloquial forms (Eden Nab, “The Ethnic Factor in Soviet-Afghan Relations”, Asian Survey, Vol. 20, No. 3. (Mar., 1980), p.239.)
[37] Of course “Persian-speaking people of the Khorasan, Kerman, Fars, Isfahan, Tehran and the Caspian provinces have different accents or speak a dialect which is not understood by the others, but they have (and often take pride in) their own specific provincial identities, ranging from poetical genres and styles to local cuisines. Furthermore, the typical Isfahani's character is clearly distinct from the typical Shirazi's, despite the fact that both of these cities belong to the heartland of ancient Persia.”, quote from Homa Katouzian, “Problems of Political Development in Iran: Democracy, Dictatorship or Arbitrary Government?”, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 22, No. 1/2. (1995), p.15.
[38] Eden Nab, “The Ethnic Factor in Soviet-Afghan Relations”, Asian Survey, Vol. 20, No. 3. (Mar., 1980), p.239.
[39] ''Farsi or Persian'', Cultural Heritage News Agency (CHN), dated November 19, 2005, http://heritage.chn.ir/en/Article/?id=88; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[40] At The Fifth Biennial Conference on Iranian Studies (ISIS) 2004, at the University of Texas at Austin: http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/mes/faculty/profiles/Hillmann/Michael%20Craig; retrieved June 11, 2007.
[41] “Iranian Events”, 7Rooz,com, http://www.7rooz.com/archives/2004/05/fifth_biennial.html; retrieved June 11, 2007.
[42] Emory College, Office for Undergraduate Education, http://www.college.emory.edu/current/support/fame/pdf/students/ForeignLangauages.pdf; retrieved June 11, 2007.
[43] Faculty of Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, Information about Persian, http://www.orinst.ox.ac.uk/nme/persian_info.shtml; retrieved June 11, 2007.
[44] Ehsan Yarshater, “Persian Identity in Historical Perspective”, Iranian Studies, vol. 26, nos. 1-2 (1993): 141-142.
[45] “What is Persian?”, The Center for Persian Studies, University of Maryland (US)- http://www.languages.umd.edu/persian/persianlanguage1.php; retrieved June 14, 2007.
[46] Farhang Jahanpour, Western Encounters with Persian Sufi Literature, “Sufism” http://www.sufism.ru/eng/txts/western.htm; retrieved June 17, 2007.
[47] Ibid.
[48] Charles Issawi, “Empire Builders, Culture Makers, and Culture Imprinters”, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 20, No. 2. (Autumn, 1989), p.183.
[49] Richard C. Foltz, Sprituality in the Land of the Noble; How Iran Shaped the World’s Religions, Oxford (2004), p. 4.
[50] David O. Allen, “The State and Prospects of the English Language in India”, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 4. (1854), p. 35.
[51] “Persian”, Department of Persian Language, University of Mumbai, http://www.mu.ac.in/Department/persian.html; retrieved June 18, 2007.
[52] “First Asians in Britain: Their Social, Cultural and Political Lives”, Fathom Online, http://www.fathom.com/course/21701766/session4.html; Retrieved June 18, 2007.
[53] John Yohannan, “The Persian Poetry Fad in England, 1770-1825”, Comparative Literature, vol. 4, no. 2. (Spring, 1952), pp. 138.
[54] Max Unger and Theodore Baker, “The Cradle of the Parsifal Legend”, The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 18, No. 3. (Jul., 1932), pp. 430.
[55] Ibid.
[56] Ibid.
[57] See idem, Western Encounters with Persian Sufi Literature, “Sufism” http://www.sufism.ru/eng/txts/western.htm; retrieved June 17, 2007.
[58] A. L. Korn, “Puttenham and the Oriental Pattern-Poem”, Comparative Literature, Vol. 6, No. 4. (Autumn, 1954), pp. 289-303.
[59] Adam Olearius “The Travels of Olearius in Seventeen-Century Persia”, Excerpts from The Voyages and Travels of the Ambassadors, 1669, University of Washington, http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/texts/olearius/travels.html; retrieved June 18, 2007.
[60] Alex Belham, “1. Subject: Persian or Farsi response”, Arabic-L:GEN:Persian or Farsi responses, Wed, 16 Aug 2006, Listserv.Linguist.org, http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0608c&L=arabic-l&D=1&P=687; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[61] Joseph Bell, “Lacking Sense of Splendor”, Iranian.com, June 8, 1998, http://www.iranian.com/Opinion/June98/Language/#lack; retrieved June 15, 2007.
[62] Ibid.
[63] ''Report of 34th meeting on 7th of December 1992'', Farhangestān-e Zabān va va Adab-e Fārsī, Tehran (January 2000).
[64] Hossein Samei, “The proper name of our language is Persian”, Persian Gulf Online, http://www.persiangulfonline.org/research/propername.htm; retrieved June 09, 2007.
[65] Franklin Lewis, “3. Subject: Persian or Farsi response”, Arabic-L:GEN:Persian or Farsi responses, Wed, 16 Aug 2006, Listserv.Linguist.org, http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0608c&L=arabic-l&D=1&P=687; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[66] ''Aspects of Persian Culture'', The Library of Congress Information Bulletin Vol. 54, No.16 (September 4, 1995), http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9516/persia.html; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[67] Kamyar Abdi, “Nationalism, Politics, and the Development of Archaeology in Iran”, American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 105, No. 1. (Jan., 2001), p. 52.
[68] See idem, "Zaban-i Nozohur" Iran-Shenasi: A Journal of Iranian Studies, IV, I (Spring, 1992), 27-30; "Iran Ra dar Zabanha-ye Khareji Cheh Bayad Khand?" Rahavard: A Journal of Iranian Studies, V & VI, 20/21 (Summer & Fall, 1988), 70-75; and Nam-e Keshvar-e Ma Ra dar Zaban-e Engelisi Cheh Bayad Khand?" Rahavard, VIII, 29, (Spring, 1992), 22-26 (in Persian).
[69] Paul Martin, “Is Farsi verboten?“, Wall Street Journal Online, Vol. 20, No. 1, January 21, 2007, http://blogs.wsj.com/styleandsubstance/2007/01/21/vol-20-no-1; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[70] See idem, “The Naming of Names”, Bulletin British Society of Middle Eastern Studies vol. XI., No. 2., p123.
[71] See idem, “Lacking Sense of Splendor”, Iranian.com, June 8, 1998, http://www.iranian.com/Opinion/June98/Language/#lack; retrieved June 15, 2007.
[72] See idem, “3. Subject: Persian or Farsi response”, Arabic-L:GEN:Persian or Farsi responses, Wed, 16 Aug 2006, Listserv.Linguist.org, http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0608c&L=arabic-l&D=1&P=687; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[73] Nima M, “Western Journalists - Farsi: Bittersweet?” Iranian.cm, June 8, 1998, http://www.iranian.com/Opinion/June98/Language/#west; retrieved June 15, 2007.
[74] Frances Pritchett, “Sense of proportion - Farsi: Bittersweet?” Iranian.cm, June 8, 1998, http://www.iranian.com/Opinion/June98/Language/#keep; retrieved June 15, 2007.
[75] Guidelines for UK Government websites - Illustrated handbook for Web management teams, Archive of Cabinet Office (UK), http://archive.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/e-government/docs/resources/web_guideline_handbook/pdf/wgl_2-7.pdf; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[76] “Iran at a Glance”, British Embassy, Tehran, http://www.britishembassy.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1106073750790; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[77] CIA Report, “V. Mounting Pressure Against Shah”, p.24, Clandestine Service History, Overthrow of Mossadeq if Iran, Cryptom, http://cryptome.org/iran-cia/05.pdf; retrieved June 21, 2007.
[78] William Engdahl, “What really happened to the Shah of Iran”, A Century of War: Anglo-America Oil Politics and the New World Order, Pluto Press (2004), p.172 (Engdahl writes: “The British Broadcasting Corporation's Persian-language broadcasts, with dozens of Persian-speaking BBC 'correspondents' sent into even the smallest village, drummed up hysteria against the Shah. The BBC gave Ayatollah Khomeini a full propaganda platform inside Iran during this time.”)
[79] Hossein Shahidi, “Injaa landan ast: BBC Persian Service 60 years on”, September 24, 2001, The Iranian.com, http://www.iranian.com/History/2001/September/BBC; retrieved June 20, 2007.
[80] “Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages”, The Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/English_list.php; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[81] “National Security Language Initiative”, US Department of State , Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs, http://exchanges.state.gov/NSLI/fact_sheet.htm; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[82] “Department of Education” White House Website, http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2007/education.html; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[83] National Foreign Language Centre, University of Maryland, http://www.nflc.org/policy_and_strategy/language_and_national_security/q_and_a#3; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[84] Atifa Rawan, “Artemis Project”, Government Documents, The University of Arizona, Library, http://www.library.arizona.edu/about/libraries/govdocs/projects/artemisproject.html; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[85] US Department of Health and Human Services, http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/pdf/panflureport3.pdf and http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/individual; retrieved June 10, 2007.
[86] CIA, The World Fact Book, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ba.html; retrieved June 11, 2007
[87] “Farsi-Uzbekist an-Olympiad Farsi Language Olympiad exam held in Usbekistan”, IRNA, dated 29 April, http://www2.irna.com/en/news/view/line-16/0704292483235537.htm; - “Iranian publishers taking part in Abu Dhabi Int'l Book Fair”, IRNA, dated 03 April, http://www2.irna.com/en/news/view/line-16/0704036203183056.htm; - “Web-based Farsi addresses coming”, - IRIB News, dated January 14, 2006, Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting Service (IRIB) Online, http://www.iribnews.ir/Full_en.asp?news_id=205608; retrieved June 11, 2007.
[88] “Iranian literati invited to Tajik, Farsi speakers biennial”, Mehr News, date: 2006/09/03; http://www.mehrnews.com/en/NewsDetail.aspx?NewsID=375515; -“BBC to Launch TV Channel for Iran”, Iran Daily, dated October 11, 2006, http://iran-daily.com/1385/2684/html/art.htm#s180525; retrieved June 12, 2007.
[89] “We will replace Islamism with Iranism” Mar 13, 2006, SMCCDI, http://daneshjoo.org/article/publish/article_3371.shtml; accessed June 25, 2007.
[90] According to Austin Dacey, this policy had in fact a reverse effect on Iranians since a “. . lot of young Iranians are changing their Islamic names, like Mohammad, to Persian names. That can give you a very clear indication that they are turning their backs to Islam, rejecting a privilege of having the name of the prophet.” (See: Reading Madison in Tehran - The Next Secular Revolution, http://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?section=library&page=Dacey_25_4; accessed June 25, 2007)
[91] “Destruction a Sasanian Fire Temple in the Name of Development”, dated 11 August 2006, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/August2006/11-08-destruction.htm; -“Controversy Over Illegal Road Construction at Sasanian Hunting Ground Continues”, dated 02 July 2005, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2005/July2005/02-07-contraversy.htm; “Ancient Taq-e Bostan another Victim of De-Iranianisation Trend in Today Iran”, dated 06 October 2006, CAIS News, http://www.cais-soas.com/news/2006/October2006/06-10-ancient.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[92] “Kaaba of Zoroaster's Destruction Project Began by Iran's Taliban”, dated 01 December 2006, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/December2006/01-12.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[93] “Fresh Concerns over Irresponsible Construction Projects at Bistun”, dated 14 February 2006, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/February2006/14-02.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[94] “Hotel Construction Continues in Tarisha Heritage Site”, dated 22 December 2006, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/September2006/22-09.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[95] “Mine Explosions Destroying Sasanian ’Da va Dokhtar’ Fortress”, dated 27 December 2007, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2005/December2005/27-12-mine.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[96] “Sivand Dam in News”, dated from July 24, 2004 to April 17, 2007, CAIS News, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/Sivand/sivand_news.htm; - “Mullahh-Sadra Dam Begins Devouring 7000-Years of Iranian Heritage”, dated 03 July 2006, CAIS News, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/July2006/03-07.htm; -“Dam Inundation Forced Archaeologists to Abandon 7000-Year-Old Mehr-Ali Farsi Hill”, dated 05 November 2006, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/November2006/05-11.htm; -“Salman-e Farsi Dam Devouring Sasanian City in Southern Iran”, dated 04 April 2007, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2007/April2007/04-04.htm; -“Another Dam, another Danger to Iran’s National Heritage”, dated 22 December 2005, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2005/December2005/22-12.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[97] As just one example, Persepolis was threatened with bulldozing by Sadeq Khalhali, one of the most notorious clerics in Iran. However, the inhabitants of the nearby city of Shiraz set up barricades and risked their lives by laying down in front of the bulldozers – so saving the ancient site from destruction. Khalkali had intended to continue on to attack the mausoleum of Ferdowsi, as the greatest Persian writer of the greatest Persian epic, but was dissuaded by the strongly negative public reaction at Persepolis.
[98] “$250 Budget for Bistun' World Heritage Site”, dated 22 December 2006, CAIS, http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2006/December2006/22-12.htm; retrieved June 29, 2007.
[99] Kamran Talattof “Persian or Farsi? The Debate Continues ..” (December 16, 1997), The Iranian.com, http://www.iranian.com/Features/Dec97/Persian; retrieved June 21, 2007.
[100] Roya Hakakian, “Persian . . . or Iranian”, The Wall Street Journal Online, dated December 28, 2006, http://www.royahakakian.com/newsletter/WSJ_Persian_or_Iranian.html; retrieved June 14, 2007.
[101] Hashemi Rafsanjani, Friday Sermon dated January 08, 1982, quoted in: Ludwig Paul, “‘Iranian Nation’ and Iranian-Islamic Revolutionary Ideology”, Die Welt des Islams, New Ser., Vol. 39, Issue 2. (Jul., 1999), pp. 183-217.
[102] Azamat-e zabān-e fārsi va lozūm-e herāsat-e ān', Nashr-e Dānesh 8/4, Teheran 1988, pp. 5-8; quoted in: Ludwig Paul, “‘Iranian Nation’ and Iranian-Islamic Revolutionary Ideology”, Die Welt des Islams, New Ser., Vol. 39, Issue 2. (Jul., 1999), pp. 183-217.
[103] Naser Pourpirar is a former member of Communist Tudeh Party, who was expelled for theft from party’s fund, according to Nur ul-Din Kianuri (see: “Khāterāt-e Nūr ul-Dīn Kiānūri”, Etela'at Daily, Tehran SH/1372 – in Persian). According to Alirexza Nourizadeh, an Iranian journalist based in UK, Pourpirar was an interrogator with the Islamic Revolutionary Courts. who later proclaimed himself as a scholar. He believes a significant portion of Iranian history, including the Parthian and the Sasanian dynasties are baseless-fabrications by Jewish-Orientalists and Zionists. He also claims that Abu-Moslem-e Khorrasani, Babak-e Khorramdin, Mani, Mazdak and Zoroaster historical figures were invented by modern Jewish historians, and the Achaemenids were “savage Slavic people” which with the help of Jews of Susa massacred the indigenous people of ancient Iran who incidentally were Arabs, to the point that Iran was completely wiped out of human settlement until the beginning of Islam (See; Naser Pourpirar, “Haq va Sabr”, Official Weblog of Pourpirar, http://www.naria.blogfa.com; (in Persian) retrieved June 14, 2007)
[104] Naser Porpirar, Poli bar Gozašteh, Asnād va Natijeh, Kārang, Tehran (SH 1380). p. 259 (in Persian).
[105] G. Safavi, “Iranian Identity” dated January 15, 2004, London Academy of Iranian Studies Online http://iranianstudies.org/lectures/iranian%20identity.htm; retrieved June 15, 2007.
[106] Ehsan Yarshater, "Zaban-i Nozohur" Iran-Shenasi: A Journal of Iranian Studies, IV, I (Spring, 1992), 27-30; "Iran Ra dar Zabanha-ye Khareji Cheh Bayad Khand?" Rahavard: A Journal of Iranian Studies, V & VI, 20/21 (Summer & Fall, 1988), 70-75; and Nam-e Keshvar-e Ma Ra dar Zaban-e Engelisi Cheh Bayad Khand?" Rahavard, VIII, 29, (Spring, 1992), 22-26 (in Persian).
[107] Ali Mirsepassi-Ashtiani, “The Crisis of Secular Politics and the Rise of Political Islam in Iran”, Social Text, No. 38. (Spring, 1994), pp. 51-84.
[108] Mohammad A. Chaichian, “First Generation Iranians and the Question of Cultural Identity: The Case of Iowa,” International Migration”, International Migration Review, Vol. 31, no. 3., Autumn 1997, pp. 612-627.
[109] See idem, “3. Subject: Persian or Farsi response”, Arabic-L:GEN:Persian or Farsi responses, Wed, 16 Aug 2006, Listserv.Linguist.org, http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0608c&L=arabic-l&D=1&P=687; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[110] “Farci”, WordReference.com, http://www.wordreference.com/fren/farci
[111] Amir Rostam Beglie Beigie, “Farsi, is this a New Language?” Dated January 2002., Persian Gulf Online, http://www.persiangulfonline.org/articles/farsi.htm; retrieved June 12, 2007.
[112] John R. Perry, “Language Reform in Turkey and Iran”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 17, No. 3. (Aug., 1985), p. 295.
[113] See idem, “The Naming of Names”, Bulletin British Society of Middle Eastern Studies vol. XI., No. 2., p123.
[114] See idem, “Persian or Farsi? - The debate continues...”, December 16, 1997, Iranian.com http://www.iranian.com/Features/Dec97/Persian; retrieved June 26, 2007.
[115] See idem, “3. Subject: Persian or Farsi response”, Arabic-L:GEN:Persian or Farsi responses, Wed, 16 Aug 2006, Listserv.Linguist.org, http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0608c&L=arabic-l&D=1&P=687; retrieved June 19, 2007.
[116] Professor Joseph Bell has written this most eloquent statement of this fundamental issue and the problem of using the word ‘Farsi’ in “Lacking Sense of Splendor”, Iranian.com, June 8, 1998, http://www.iranian.com/Opinion/June98/Language/#lack; retrieved June 15, 2007.