Journal
Women’s Search for Justice
Today, with a hardline President like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the helm, there are ever more signs that for many religious and secular women in Iran, the revolution has failed to create the society they had hoped for. In December 2003, I went to Oslo, Norway to cover the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Shirin Ebadi, an Iranian human rights lawyer, who challenges the ruling clerics’ interpretation of Islam. This summer, Ebadi and other women’s rights activists lead a campaign to collect one million signatures from Iranian women and men calling for a change to Iran’s discriminatory laws. Politically active women are using non-violent means in their silent protest for change in Iran’s legal code.
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A Tribute to My Spiritual Warrior
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As I contemplated the writing of this book, I realized I was going through a time of great creativity, longing and yearning to express, to communicate, for I had grown beyond the suffering, pain and anguish of alienation. I was searching for my self through the lives of my ancestors. And through this quest, I came to know not only myself but also the commonality that runs through all traditions – American and Iranian - the concept of fairness and justice. I could not have made this journey was it not for the support and intellectual guidance of my mother.
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His Name is Saied
When my son Saied got home last night from dinner at McGarvey’s in Annapolis, he went on-line and saw that the product he has created was posted on apple.com. It was an electrifying moment At 22, Saied is a former Apple employee, most recently with the consumer marketing team at .Mac. in Cupertino where he traveled all over the world, teaching people how to sell .Mac and it worked. Before that he worked in Apple Stores and was number one in the company for metric sales of .Mac.
2007-01-04 08:36 AM(1) Comments
Iranian Satirist Takes On President Ahmadinejad
John Oliver Smith
For all our love and happiness, I thank John Oliver Smith. As the poet Rumi says: “The minute I heard my first love story, I started looking for you, not knowing how blind that was. Lovers do not finally meet somewhere, they are in each other all along.” It has been John’s unconditional love that has helped me stay focused in the creative aspects of my life.
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ABC features Jim Bakhtiar - All American Football Player 1957 UVA
Jahangir Razmi to claim Pulitzer Prize
In 1979, Jahangir Razmi took several photographs of a firing squad in Iran. One of those photos was published worldwide, and eventually earned the Pulitzer Prize in 1980 but the winner was annonymous. Now, after almost three decades, photographer Jahangir Razmi is claiming his prize. See the photos and listen to the NPR stories.
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Why I wrote this book
My children have asked me this question many times in the past two years. I tell them simply, “to be able to say my name is Iran.” I have been carrying this burden for almost three decades. I dropped my first name when I came to Brookline High School in 1980. The American hostages were still being held captive in Tehran and “Bomb Iran” was a common remark. For too long, the tumultuous events surrounding Iran have made me shy away from my full identity. But today, I have worked through my fears and replaced them with love. I won’t be confined by any one ideology. I am a product of my past—American and Iranian. I am proud to say “I am Iran”. Here are some other reasons why I wrote the book:
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