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Maryam Firooz Iranian Femiist Died 3-12-2008
After 8 years of jail in Evin Prison, she finally died on March 12.2008 in her Tehran apartment where she had been under house arrest for the past 17 years. ای وای "مریم" ما خدیجه مقدم- (کانون زنان ایرانی) مریم فیروز را نسل جوان ایران به خوبی نمی شناسد، حق هم دارد، چون او از سال 1361 تا 1369 در زندان های جمهوری اسلامی ایران بود و بعد از آن هم در حبس خانگی، تا چهارشنبه 23 اسفند 1386 خورشیدی، که در زادگاهش، مظلومانه و غریبانه چشم فرو بندد و بدون هیچ تشییعی به خاک سپرده شود. ایجاد تشکیلاتی مخصوص زنان ( تشکیلات دموکراتیک زنان( انتشار مجله جهان زنان تحمل 8 سال زندان و شکنجه های جسمی و روحی از هفتاد سالگی ایستادگی و اعتراض در زندان به عدم رعایت حقوق اش تحمل حبس خانگی به مدت 17 سال تحمل داغ عزیزان و... مریم فیروز، یکی از فیمینست های بسیار شجاع تاریخ جنبش زنان ایران است و نامش هیچگاه فراموش نخواهد شد . او امروز را به روشنی می دید که هر گاه زنان باسواد و آگاه شوند ، خود حق شان را خواهند گرفت و مطمئنم با همه بیماری و کهنسالی ، صدای رسای جنبش زنان ایران را شنید و از دنیا رفت. و در یکصدمین سالگرد 8 مارس در 12 مارس 2008 چشم از جهان فروبست و پیوند خود را با تاریخ جنبش جهانی زنان مستحکم تر کرد. http://www.peiknet.com/1386/hafteh/101/40moghadam.htm ---------------------------
Crackdown: Feminist Iranian Girl Protest
Example of Human Rights Abuse under Islamic Republic Regime of Iran. Feminist Iranian Girl Protesting the un-Iranian Islamic Dress Code is Arrested by the Moral Police and Hauled Away. She screams saying I do not want to go with you.
Zarafshan Interview about .Salehi Arrest
Iranian Political Activist Mr. Zar Afshan Interviewed Visit http://avayedigar.com/ for more information and latest updates Iranian Political Activist Mr. Zar Afshan who was recently released from the infamous Evin prison is interviewed about Mr. Salehi's arrest by the Iranian Secret Police. An expanded Audio Only version of this report: http://avayedigar.com/Audio/Mahmood_Salehi.mp3 Basic Translation: Mr. Zar Afshan is warning the Islamic Republic rulers about how their tyranny will be opposed and resisted and destroyed by the Iranian nationalists. Islamic Secret Police can arrest, torture and execute hundreds of thousands of Iranians, but we will not stop resisting or seeking our “democratic rights” and “freedom of thought”. This interview was conducted at Section 33 of the Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery outside Tehran, Iran where hundreds of political victims and prisoners are buried. Mr. Zar Afshan reminds the Islamic Republic that just like these dead prisoners who are now buried in Section 33, there are millions more ready to take up their place and fight for their freedom and inalienable rights. History has proven that dictatorships cannot be sustained forever, just like many other examples that we have seen in our own history as well as others.
Hamvatan Sarbazane Vatan
به نام یزدان پا ک با درود به ملت بزرگ ايران : آزاد زنان ،آزاد مردان، پسران و دختران ايران زمین با گذشت ٢٨ سال از عمر رژيم وا پس گرای جمهوری اسلامی، و با پرداختن سنگين ترين هزينه های ملی ، امروز ايران ما در يکی از تيره ترين روزگار تاريخ خود به سر می برد، رهاورد ٢٨سااله رژيم جمهوری اسلامی برای همه ايرانيان در ٢ عرصه داخلی و خارجی،مجموعه ای از درد ها وگرفتاری هائیست که همه ما در ۳ دهه گذشته در کنار هم تجربه کرديم. نام گروه: سربازان وطن http://sarbazevatan.multiply.com/ sarbazan.vatan@gmail.com تماس با ما و فرستادن خبر پاینده ایران پیروز ملت ایران Source: http://sarbazevatan.multiply.com
BePa Khizim HamMihan- countrymen Riseup
زمين زخميست و اندکی ديگر به پايانِ سومين دهه ای که ميهن از درد، خون ميگريد و پيکرش زيرِ چماقِ استبداد و شمشيرِ تازی در عذاب است، نمانده. چه بايد کرد؟!!! زخمها را مرحم گزاريم و آن خاکِ پاک را دوباره ببوسيم و يا با بيتفاوتی ، ماندنِ اين حکومت را باعث شده و عفونی شدنِ اين زخمها را شاهد باشيم. هم ميهنان، امروز روزيست که بيتفاوتی، از بزرگترينِ گناههاست؛ امروز روزيست که هيچ عذری برای چشم بستن و گوشه نشينی، موجه نيست ؛ امروز روزيست که که اگر بپا نخيزيم، در جنايتهای اين عمامه داران شريک خواهيم بود. باز ميگويم، امروز روزِ انتخاب است، يا قيام و يا شراکت در جنايت؛ ما سپرها را آماده کرده ايم و پرچمِ ها را بدست گرفته ايم، ولی بدونِ شمايی که بايد سربازانِ اين قيام باشيد، سپرها و پرچمها دوباره بزمين خواهند افتاد. پس بپا خيزيد، همه با هم بپا خيزيم؛ ميهن در انتظارِ آزاديست. سپرها را ميندازيم و پرچمها برافرازيم خدا اکنون کنار ماست و ميهن، بيقرار ماست بس است شيون، بس است نفرت، بس است درد بس است درد وُ ذلالت وَ طبِ سرد بس است شبهای سردِ خانمان سوز بس است فتوای ملايان منحوس به ميهن، نورِ کوروش را فشانيم چو ما، آزادگی را پاس دانيم جبهه نجات - عبدالرضا حيدری با سپاس از ارشان و دیگر یاران Source: http://sarbazevatan.multiply.com
Iranian Student Bijan Sabagh kidnapped
فیلم ربوده شدن بیژن صباغ دانشجوی دانشگاه مازندران Iranian Student Bijan Sabagh being kidnapped by the Iranian Secret Police in Mazandaran province, Iran. دوشنبه، 27 فروردین ماه 1386 برابر با 2007 Monday 16 April ورود نیروهای امنیتی به داخل دانشگاه مازندران گزارش دریافتی: نیمه شب گذشته نیروهای امنیتی با حمله به داخل دانشگاه 14 نفر از دانشجویان متحصن را ربوده و به مکان نامعلومی منتقل کردند. هم زمان یکی دیگر از دانشجویان نیز از درون خانه اش ربوده شد . تا این لحظه از این 16 دانشجوی ربوده شده هیچ خبری در دست نیست. در این لحظه که این خبر منتشر می شود دانشگاه مازندران مملو از نیروهای امنیتی و اطلاعاتی است که تمامی دانشجویان را به شدت زیر نظر دارند. also on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjfzlTP4a3g
Iranian song: Zolf Bar Bad
Iranian song: Zolf Bar Bad (Hair in the Wind) Song by: Mohsen Namjoo WWW.NamjooMusic.com This a modern rendition of an old Persian poem (hundreds of years old). It is about lovers distance and how the girl uses her hair to capture the guy and guy complains joyfully and tells the girl, don't twirl your hair, do not drink any wine and don't become the candle that gives warmth and light to the darkness of his absence. I believe it was filmed in Iran and it shows a rainy day in Tehran, with wet buildings and streets, flat rooftops, where the lovers signal each ohter to come down and meet :) Of course before cell phones! Mr. Namjoo (singer) is a unique artists capable of weaving modern, ancient, sacred sounds and songs into a true form of a Persian Carpet through his instruments and fantasticly trained voice.
Ski Vacation in Iran (Axis of Evil)?
Discover a Hidden Gem & Make New Friends If you want to ski somewhere with powdery snow and several downhill areas but inexpensively, go to Iran. Amaze yourself and see what you cannot see through the Media lens. Lots of fun! It is very safe and economical with all the amenities available in Europe or America. The ski season in Alborz mountains is usually from mid January to about the end of March. In some other parts of the country ski season can be longer as late as mid May. There are a few skiing areas in the Alborz mountains. Below are resorts that are near Tehran. Dizin Resort is the most famous resort near Tehran. It sits at 3,800 meters and includes hotel, tennis court, children's playground, hiking, cycling, and horseback riding. Shemshak Resort located about 60 Km (37 miles) from Tehran sits at 3,600 meters (11,800 ft) , with a vast ski area and hotel. Along with Dizin, Shemshak is preferred by experienced skiiers Darband Sar - 56km north-east of Tehran and Danbansar Resort near Shemshak are for less experienced skiers. Cross country skiing is available at Mt. Damavand. Restaurants are available at the resorts. Some ski areas have guest houses or hotels. Check with your tour guide, your hotel or directly from resorts about rules and dress code. Related Web sites: Iran Ski Federation Website http://www.skifed.ir/history.htm http://www.magic-carpet-travel.com/itineraries/ski.html http://www.bestirantravel.com/culture/ski.html
Persian Empire Engineering Part 5
Persian Empire (today called Iran) - Engineering Part 5 The Persian Empire was a series of historical empires that ruled over the Iranian plateau, the old Persian homeland, and beyond in Western Asia, Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Persian empire has become what we know today as Persia or more commonly, Iran. The most widespread entity considered to have been a Persian Empire was the Achaemenid Empire (648–330 BC) — famous in antiquity as the foe of the classical Greek states — a united Aryan kingdom that originated in the region now known as Pars province of Iran. It was formed under Cyrus the Great, who overthrew the empire of the Medes, and conquered the entire Middle East, including the territories of the Babylonians, the Phoenicians, and the Lydians. Babylonia was the only part of the Assyrian empire that had not been conquered by Cyrus' Mede grandfather, Astyages. Cyrus' son, Cambyses, continued Cyrus' conquests by conquering Egypt. Most of the successive states in Greater Iran prior to March 1935 are collectively called the Persian Empire by Western historians. Historical Timelines Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) Hellenistic Persia (330 BC–250 BC ) Parthian Empire (250 BC–AD 226) Sassanid Empire (226–651) Islam and Persia (650–1037) Turkic rule (1037–1219) Mongols and their successors (1219–1500) Safavid Dynasty (1500–1722) Persia and Europe (1722–1914) World War I and the interbellum (1914–1935)
Persian Empire Engineering Part 4
Persian Empire (today called Iran) - Engineering Part 4 The Persian Empire was a series of historical empires that ruled over the Iranian plateau, the old Persian homeland, and beyond in Western Asia, Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Persian empire has become what we know today as Persia or more commonly, Iran. The most widespread entity considered to have been a Persian Empire was the Achaemenid Empire (648–330 BC) — famous in antiquity as the foe of the classical Greek states — a united Aryan kingdom that originated in the region now known as Pars province of Iran. It was formed under Cyrus the Great, who overthrew the empire of the Medes, and conquered the entire Middle East, including the territories of the Babylonians, the Phoenicians, and the Lydians. Babylonia was the only part of the Assyrian empire that had not been conquered by Cyrus' Mede grandfather, Astyages. Cyrus' son, Cambyses, continued Cyrus' conquests by conquering Egypt. Most of the successive states in Greater Iran prior to March 1935 are collectively called the Persian Empire by Western historians. Historical Timelines Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) Hellenistic Persia (330 BC–250 BC ) Parthian Empire (250 BC–AD 226) Sassanid Empire (226–651) Islam and Persia (650–1037) Turkic rule (1037–1219) Mongols and their successors (1219–1500) Safavid Dynasty (1500–1722) Persia and Europe (1722–1914) World War I and the interbellum (1914–1935)
Persian Empire Engineering Part 3
Persian Empire (today called Iran) - Engineering Part 1 The Persian Empire was a series of historical empires that ruled over the Iranian plateau, the old Persian homeland, and beyond in Western Asia, Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Persian empire has become what we know today as Persia or more commonly, Iran. The most widespread entity considered to have been a Persian Empire was the Achaemenid Empire (648–330 BC) — famous in antiquity as the foe of the classical Greek states — a united Aryan kingdom that originated in the region now known as Pars province of Iran. It was formed under Cyrus the Great, who overthrew the empire of the Medes, and conquered the entire Middle East, including the territories of the Babylonians, the Phoenicians, and the Lydians. Babylonia was the only part of the Assyrian empire that had not been conquered by Cyrus' Mede grandfather, Astyages. Cyrus' son, Cambyses, continued Cyrus' conquests by conquering Egypt. Most of the successive states in Greater Iran prior to March 1935 are collectively called the Persian Empire by Western historians. Historical Timelines Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) Hellenistic Persia (330 BC–250 BC ) Parthian Empire (250 BC–AD 226) Sassanid Empire (226–651) Islam and Persia (650–1037) Turkic rule (1037–1219) Mongols and their successors (1219–1500) Safavid Dynasty (1500–1722) Persia and Europe (1722–1914) World War I and the interbellum (1914–1935)
Persian Empire Engineering Part 2
Persian Empire (today called Iran) - Engineering Part 2 The Persian Empire was a series of historical empires that ruled over the Iranian plateau, the old Persian homeland, and beyond in Western Asia, Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Persian empire has become what we know today as Persia or more commonly, Iran. The most widespread entity considered to have been a Persian Empire was the Achaemenid Empire (648–330 BC) — famous in antiquity as the foe of the classical Greek states — a united Aryan kingdom that originated in the region now known as Pars province of Iran. It was formed under Cyrus the Great, who overthrew the empire of the Medes, and conquered the entire Middle East, including the territories of the Babylonians, the Phoenicians, and the Lydians. Babylonia was the only part of the Assyrian empire that had not been conquered by Cyrus' Mede grandfather, Astyages. Cyrus' son, Cambyses, continued Cyrus' conquests by conquering Egypt. Most of the successive states in Greater Iran prior to March 1935 are collectively called the Persian Empire by Western historians. Historical Timelines Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) Hellenistic Persia (330 BC–250 BC ) Parthian Empire (250 BC–AD 226) Sassanid Empire (226–651) Islam and Persia (650–1037) Turkic rule (1037–1219) Mongols and their successors (1219–1500) Safavid Dynasty (1500–1722) Persia and Europe (1722–1914) World War I and the interbellum (1914–1935)
Persian Empire - Engineering Part 1
Persian Empire (today called Iran) - Engineering Part 1 The Persian Empire was a series of historical empires that ruled over the Iranian plateau, the old Persian homeland, and beyond in Western Asia, Central Asia and the Caucasus. The Persian empire has become what we know today as Persia or more commonly, Iran. The most widespread entity considered to have been a Persian Empire was the Achaemenid Empire (648–330 BC) — famous in antiquity as the foe of the classical Greek states — a united Aryan kingdom that originated in the region now known as Pars province of Iran. It was formed under Cyrus the Great, who overthrew the empire of the Medes, and conquered the entire Middle East, including the territories of the Babylonians, the Phoenicians, and the Lydians. Babylonia was the only part of the Assyrian empire that had not been conquered by Cyrus' Mede grandfather, Astyages. Cyrus' son, Cambyses, continued Cyrus' conquests by conquering Egypt. Most of the successive states in Greater Iran prior to March 1935 are collectively called the Persian Empire by Western historians. Historical Timelines Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) Hellenistic Persia (330 BC–250 BC ) Parthian Empire (250 BC–AD 226) Sassanid Empire (226–651) Islam and Persia (650–1037) Turkic rule (1037–1219) Mongols and their successors (1219–1500) Safavid Dynasty (1500–1722) Persia and Europe (1722–1914) World War I and the interbellum (1914–1935)
Shah of Iran's Will read by Queen Farah
HIM M.R. Pahlavi. Shah of Iran's last Will read by Queen Farah after his passing.
Pasagardae - Persepolis - Takht-e-Jamshi
Iran, Pars Province, Near Shiraz Ancient Iranian Site: Takht-e-Jamshid Pasagardae - Persepolis (also spelled as Pasargard - Perspolis) Seat of the Persian Empire Destroyed by Alexander the Great
I love Both Countries- USA and Iran - 3
I love my Both Countries- USA and Iran Story of one Iranian-American. I love my Both Countries- USA and Iran
I love my Countries- USA and Iran - 2
Story of one Iranian-American. I love my Both Countries- USA and Iran part 2
I love my countries- USA and Iran - 1
I love my Both Countries- USA and Iran - part 1 Story of one Iranian-American.
Another Perspective on Iran - 3 Peace
Another Perspective on Iran- Who are Iranians? Iranians People Like Us who only want Peace With so much negative and false news about Iran, it is useful to see Iran through the eyes of Iranians, a land of many contrasts, beauty, immense cultural heritage and a deep sense of nationalism that has nothing to do with the government produced ad portrayed revelotionary Iran. The Mullahs in Iran portray Iran as a highly religious and reveolutionary country and pretend that they enjoy the support of 100% of Iranians. Don't be fooled by the Rent-a-crowed false Kodak moments that the Islamic Regime creates. Just likie North Korea Iran is a nation hijacked by a religious minority that has nothing to do witeh the true Iranian culture and hreritage, in fact the Mullahs dislike and hate Iranian culture and language, that is why they have been working hard to destroy historical sites and Persian language.
Another Perspective on Iran - 2
Another Perspective on Iran- Who are Iranians? With so much negative and false news about Iran, it is useful to see Iran through the eyes of Iranians, a land of many contrasts, beauty, immense cultural heritage and a deep sense of nationalism that has nothing to do with the government produced ad portrayed revelotionary Iran. The Mullahs in Iran portray Iran as a highly religious and reveolutionary country and pretend that they enjoy the support of 100% of Iranians. Don't be fooled by the Rent-a-crowed false Kodak moments that the Islamic Regime creates. Just likie North Korea Iran is a nation hijacked by a religious minority that has nothing to do witeh the true Iranian culture and hreritage, in fact the Mullahs dislike and hate Iranian culture and language, that is why they have been working hard to destroy historical sites and Persian language.