GAZA

Stop the bloodshed

Interview with Hossein Shahidi

07-Jan-2009 (14 comments)
The beginning of this war was remarkably similar to the July 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon, when you asked me a similar question. At that time, the Lebanese Hezbollah had captured two Israeli soldiers and killed several others and this was said by many to have been the cause of the war. I said then that tension had been rising between Hezbollah and Israel for some time and a flare-up had been inevitable. What I would add now is that both the Lebanon and the Palestinian people have been at war with Israel since the partition of Palestine and creation of Israel in 1948. While the Fatah movement has recognised the state of Israel, other Palestinians, most notably Hamas, have refused to do so and continue to see themselves in a state of war with Israel>>>

POINT

Blind trap

Taking IRI's anti-Israeli life support system away

07-Jan-2009 (44 comments)
The recent Israeli attack on Ghaza has shown the world that the Middle Eastern peace process is not on the right track. What’s important to note is that neither Israel nor Palestine is gaining from this conflict. Palestinians are losing lives, territory and security and Israelis are losing lives and security. So who’s winning? In whose interest is it for this conflict to continue? By looking at the events around and post the Iranian revolution in 1979, one can easily conclude that the biggest beneficiary of this conflict is the Islamic regime in Iran. The regime has made the conflict a vital survival tool, a life support system if you will. Without it, the IRI regime will be no longer>>>

GAZA

جنایت جنگی یا تروریسم از بالا

جنگ اسرائیل در نوار غزه

07-Jan-2009 (8 comments)
اقدامات لازم برای تعقیب بین المللی حمله اسرائیل به غزه از نخسیتن ساعات آن شروع شد. نامه اعتراض آمیز ریچارد فالک، استاد بازنشسته حقوق دانشگاه پرینستون و راپورتر ویژه حقوق بشر سازمان ملل در سرزمینهای اشغالی حمله اسرائیل به غزه را به سه دلیل جنایت جنگی میخواند. نخست اینکه این عملیات در واقع نوعی "تنبیه جمعی" محسوب میشوند به این معنی که دولت اسرائیل بنام مجازات عده قلیلی از چریکها همه مردم غیر نظامی منطقه ای را تحت فشار گذاشته تا دست از حمایت از حماس بر دارند. این همان سیاست محاصره اقتصادی غزه است که امروز با بمب و موشک دنبال میشود. ثانیاً با بمباران مناطقی که از پر جمعیت ترین نقاط جهان محسوب میشوند اسرائیل به بی مبالاتی در "کشتار مردم غیر نظامی" متهم است. و بلاخره ریچارد فالک (که خود کلیمی است) "تلافی بی تناسب " نظامی را دلیلی دیگر برای اتهام جنایت جنگی علیه اسرائیل میداند. >>>

ISRAEL-OBAMA

سكوت علامت «رضا»؟

سكوت معنادار اوباما در مورد حمله اسراییل

07-Jan-2009 (3 comments)
آقای اوباما از هنگام انتخاب (و حتا پیش از آن) در باره بسیاری از مسایل مربوط به سیاست‌های داخلی و خارجی آمریكا، به خصوص در مواردی كه با سیاست‌های حكومت فعلی متفاوت بوده، نظر داده و سیاست‌های آینده خود را تشریح كرده است. این اظهار نظرها و برنامه‌ریزی‌ها دخالت در سیاست‌های فعلی آمریكا تلقی نشده و مورد اعتراض قرار نگرفته است. در مورد حوادث اخیر در فلسطین نیز آقای اوباما می‌توانست نظر و موضع خود را ابراز كند. او نه تنها سیاست‌ خارجی خود در باره اسراییل و فلسطین را مطرح نكرده است و بلكه از دید انسان‌دوستی نیز تنها پس از چندین روز حاضر شده است در مورد تلفات غیر نظامیان اظهار تأسف كند و از طرفین مخاصمه بخواهد كه از حمله به غیر نظامی‌ها اجتناب كنند. به جز این، او ترجیح داده است در این مورد هیچ سخنی نگوید - و این سكوت در شرایطی‌ كه آمریكا صریحا طرف اسراییل را گرفته است علامتی جز «رضا» نمی‌تواند باشد.>>>

POETRY

  کـــرد  ويـــــران،  کـــرد  ويـــــران
07-Jan-2009 (4 comments)
می شنيدم
از لب شيرين پيران خردمند
مستمر  اين برترين و بهترين پند :
آه ای خوش باوران کم سوادِ پر افاده
اين چنين بی فکر و تدبير و درايه
مرز و بوم و مملکت، کردن اداره
آخر ای مستان قدرت ، اين روش  تا کی ادامه؟ >>>

SPECTACULAR

Darwin's Mecca

Darwin's Mecca

Photo essay: Renovated California Academy of Sciences

by salim
07-Jan-2009 (3 comments)

>>>

DENMARK

Happiest people in the world?

Happiest people in the world?

Photo essay: Sunday in Copenhagen

by Keyvan Tabari
07-Jan-2009 (8 comments)

>>>

TRAVELER

Sunday in Copenhagen

Contributions of a nation of five and a half million to global civilization

07-Jan-2009 (2 comments)
Copenhagen always had a special place in my imagination. It was the first city I saw in the Western world. My visit was brief; several hours between flights gave us an opportunity just to see Tivoli and the City Hall square. That was decades ago. Going there for the second time this summer, I found myself looking for more than what I remembered. My observations were framed by curiosity about several Danish phenomena. What accounts for the Danes’ reputation as the happiest people in the world? Why are they at the epicenter of the bunker mentality against immigration? What happens to a country when it is no longer an empire? What could a nation of five and a half million contribute to global civilization which is also shaped by others with vastly larger populations and resources?>>>

VIEW

Feeling superior

Incredible racism of (some) Iranians

06-Jan-2009 (145 comments)
Iranians can be extremely racist. I was first made aware that Iranians were perceived, by others in the region, as arrogant racists by a Pakistani professor of Islamic literature at Boston University. Professor Rahbar taught in the Religion department and most Iranians took his literature course for an easy grade. He also conducted the Farsi exams which, if passed, made the University wave the second-language requirement for Iranian students. The poor man, who was well-versed in Persian poetry and loved Saadi and Hafez, was routinely ridiculed by his Iranian students. This was mostly because of his Pakistani accent. Although his eccentric habit of cooking curry in his office, in the Theology building on Mass. Ave., did not help either. >>>

STORY

Pulse

Going to the gym is serious business

06-Jan-2009 (18 comments)
At the office Christmas party, my boss told me about a new gym that recently opened in the area. On the way back home one day I drove past the plaza and looked up to see a big neon sign announcing the arrival of ‘Pulse’ to my neighborhood. I fell in love with the name. So I punched a reminder in my Blackberry to take my personal pulse to the one down the road sometime soon. We had been out the night before and hadn’t got home till late – the last of the holiday parties eke out every ounce of joy and goodwill. So when the alarm goes off at 7 a.m. on the first Sunday of January, I am none too thrilled to remember my New Year resolution. His leg plops over mine – his code for “how about a little”. >>>

NUCLEAR

40-year-old dream

How Iran's nuclear program was born

06-Jan-2009 (7 comments)
The Iranian nuclear enrichment program and its potential to create weapon- grade uranium that could be used for making bombs is the hottest topic of discussion among the western powers and international community. In order to better understand Iran’s intention, one must look back to its origin and study the history behind its current activities. Iran’s ambitious plan to acquire nuclear power is nothing new and dates back to the late Shah of Iran. It was his government’s desire to acquire the nuclear technology of the present time. During the past several years, a number of misguided attempts have been made to uncover the truth behind Iran’s nuclear activities>>>

POETRY

Marked Treasure

In memory of Ezzat Tabaiyan

06-Jan-2009 (2 comments)
Eight paces from the gate,
Sixteen paces toward the wall.
Which scroll speaks of this treasure?
Oh, earth!
If only I could feel your pulse
Or make a jug out of your body.
Alas! I'm not a physician.
I'm not a potter.
I am only an heir, deprived >>>

POETRY

دلتنگی
06-Jan-2009 (2 comments)
تار های دلتنگی ام را
بر در غار دوستی می تنم

باور هایم چه عمیق
بااصحاب کهف به خواب رفته اند >>>

TRAVELER

Rising steam

Rising steam

Photo essay: The Roman Baths

by shahireh sharif
05-Jan-2009 (5 comments)

>>>

TRAVELER

Londonistan

Londonistan

Photo essay: The English capital during the holidays

by Orang Gholikhani
05-Jan-2009 (5 comments)

>>>

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