The canvas upon which history is painted; the mirror in which one reflects upon the past; the stones on which marks of civilisation are engraved; and the books in which truths are told; all speak of the glory of ancient Persia. The splendour of her past reflects the beauty and elegance with which she has adorned herself in rearing such seers, poets and literary giants as Sa’di, Hafez, Khayyam, Mawlana and more.
Surely a civilisation that prided itself with raising such poets and philosophers who touched the entire world with their insight, thoughts and literary prowess, would not have flourished without education. Education is the force behind advancement and the fuel to intellectual empowerment. It is the provision, which feeds the soul with understanding and knowledge and which polishes the intellect to shine with gem-like lustre.
Far in the corners of Persian history, as far back as the rule of the Achaemenian Dynasty, children were educated in the arts of reading, writing and drawing through the use of clay tablets. Children’s literature, and fables that taught our young, go back nearly 3000 years; an example of which is the “Assurik Tree”, a legendary debate between a goat and palm tree. The civilisation thrived on the power that such fables and literature exerted on our children by allowing them to dare to imagine and to sharpen their intellects.
The invasion of the country by Arabs, however, and the Muslim influence on the nation, turned a new page in elementary education. With the strong presence of Islam in Iran, young boys started to gather in what became known as “Maktab-Khaneh”. There, they learned to read and write by reciting the Holy Qur’an and received basic education in maths and literature.
Maktab-Khanehs in effect became the nation’s formal system of elementary education until well into the 19th Century, at which time Reza Shah, the inaugurator of the Pahlavi Regime, set in motion his plans for the country’s modernisation.
These Maktab-Khanehs were instrumental in promoting general knowledge amongst the population; but they also served to bring enough literary skills to the pupils who wished to pursue further education in Islamic studies, offered mainly in what was known as “Hawza” -- a seminary for traditional Shi’a Islamic Studies. The first of these seminaries was opened in Najaf, Iraq; but Qum, a city in Iran, established its own “Hawza” and became a prominent centre of religious learning -- especially during the Safavid Rule.
Against a background, in which education was primarily seen as a tool to raise religious men devoted to Islam, the education of girls was neglected in the extreme. Girls were instructed in such arts as cooking, sewing and housekeeping and were often married off at an early age, barely into their teen years. Few indeed were women who were privileged enough to grow up in such families as would make arraignments for their daughters to be privately educated behind closed chambers. Of course, there were also women who were so endowed with the potential to learn -- and so instinctively blessed with a poetic nature -- that they endeavoured on their own to learn to read and write and to partake of the nation’s literary treasures.
Nineteenth Century Persia, however, was to see a new era in formal education. Minority religious groups in Iran, who did not see themselves pursuing an education in Islamic studies, or were simply persecuted or ill-treated by the existing systems of education, endeavoured to set up schools of their own -- modeled after the modern systems of education in Europe and America.
Although most religious minorities such as Christians and Jews were instrumental in setting up modern elementary schools in Iran; what distinguishes the efforts of the Baha’i community in this path is that the Baha’is succeeded in setting up such schools in the face of fierce persecution and in the very early stages of the religion’s inception.
In fact so prolific are the express exhortations of the Baha’i Faith for the proper education of both girls and boys, that the first Baha’i school was established in the late 1870s -- during the life time of the Prophet-Founder of the religion -- in a small Northern town known as Mahfuruzak. Mulla ‘Ali, a former Shi’ah cleric who had converted to the Baha’i religion together with his wife ‘Alaviyyih Khanum, started a school for boys and one for girls in Mahfuruzak. Sadly, however, he was taken to Tehran in 1882 and put to death because of his conversion from Islam.
The Tarbiyat School for Boys, was first established by the Baha’i community in 1887 as a small private school in Tehran, but was fully recognised by the government two years later and became widely known for its quality of curriculum as well as its high standards for teaching conduct and virtues. In 1911, a Tarbiyat School for girls was established in response to the emphatic statements of ‘Abdu’l-Baha – the son of the Prophet-Founder of the Baha’i Faith – concerning the importance of educating women.
The Persian staff at this school was supported by a number of American Baha’is such as Miss Lillian Kappes, Dr. Susan Moody, Dr. Genevieve Coy and Miss Adelaide Sharp. The school began with 6 grades for children and special courses for women up the age of 20. By the year 1919, the school was accepting 400 students and a decade later it was offering 11 grades to over 700 young girls. About half of these girls were Baha’is, while the other half were made up of mostly Muslims and a few Jewish students.
What is of significant interest however is that after the establishment of this school for girls in Tehran, many other schools throughout the nation were successfully established by the Baha’i community. Not only did these schools grow in number, but each school grew in size as well over the years.
It was a sad moment, therefore, when one day in 1935, the Deputy Minister of Education under Reza Shah, issued an official order for the closure of the Tarbiyat school in Tehran with the charge that the school had been closed on Thursday 6 December 1934 commemorating a Baha’i Holy Day. This closure was followed by the closing of all other Baha’i schools in the country, the number for which was estimated to have been at least 47 by that time, with at least 8 of them offering secondary level classes as well.
It was indeed a brutal act of persecution when these schools were closed; schools which were mostly funded privately by Baha’i individuals or by the local Baha’i Institutions, inasmuch as the education they offered was given free of charge to the children of poor families -- while others were charged according to their means. But even more brutal an act of persecution is the fact that the Baha’i youth in Iran have been for almost 3 decades deprived of attaining higher education because of their religious beliefs.
A nation that had always shone with the splendour of its rich culture, exquisite art, lustrous literature and gleaming civilisation sadly has the world in thrall with the agony that “education” -- the very element that had cultivated the culture and nourished the arts and sciences in the land -- is now being barred from such a large segment of society.
Iran is sure to reclaim its glory one day! That day, we will come face to face with a nation that is free of prejudices and liberated from oppression and inequity.
Person | About | Day |
---|---|---|
نسرین ستوده: زندانی روز | Dec 04 | |
Saeed Malekpour: Prisoner of the day | Lawyer says death sentence suspended | Dec 03 |
Majid Tavakoli: Prisoner of the day | Iterview with mother | Dec 02 |
احسان نراقی: جامعه شناس و نویسنده ۱۳۰۵-۱۳۹۱ | Dec 02 | |
Nasrin Sotoudeh: Prisoner of the day | 46 days on hunger strike | Dec 01 |
Nasrin Sotoudeh: Graffiti | In Barcelona | Nov 30 |
گوهر عشقی: مادر ستار بهشتی | Nov 30 | |
Abdollah Momeni: Prisoner of the day | Activist denied leave and family visits for 1.5 years | Nov 30 |
محمد کلالی: یکی از حمله کنندگان به سفارت ایران در برلین | Nov 29 | |
Habibollah Golparipour: Prisoner of the day | Kurdish Activist on Death Row | Nov 28 |
talking about artificial insemination...
by delldaar on Thu Jun 18, 2009 03:20 PM PDThansson or what ever your name is, probably some sort of seyed bache akhound, if there was one big case of Artificial insemination,was Injection of the so called religion of Peace,"Islam", to our hmeland,by bunch of Rapist and hostage taker of our weman and children....and what you see in streets of Tehran, is the Birth of that insemination.
hansson
by baran (not verified) on Thu Jun 18, 2009 08:31 AM PDTAll religions are man-made illusions. If someone genuinely admits of getting messages from god, then they are classified as having delusions. It can be due to mental illness, being drug induced, or sometimes suggestive/ repetitive chants or motions, etc. However, someone psychologically healthy can fabricate such claims for manipulation also.
The question of being and it's meaning are very destabilizing, and in order to find some answers, certitude and relative safety from that infinite abyss, humans have a propensity to believe ideas that suggest other worldly connections, perhaps the easy way out.
As far as education, it is a very good idea, as long as Universal Education does not take away personal freedoms, initiatives and creativity.
your "artificial inseminated" statement.
by faryarm on Wed Jun 17, 2009 10:04 PM PDTOur Brothers and Sisters in Iran are protesting, risking lives precisely against the very people whose history of corruption, lies, deception and pathetic fabrications have poisoned the minds of easily persuaded people like you; who have absolutely no independant knowledge of anything , especially the Bahai Faith, its history or its progressive teachings.
Kindly be the first in history to provide us with even "rudimentary" evidence of this "russian" "invention".
The problem , you may find is ultimately, your sources of "information" that have "no deeper roots than a house hold weed. sorry."
Very interesting. I learned
by Mojtaba (not verified) on Wed Jun 17, 2009 09:00 PM PDTVery interesting. I learned something new today
Good article
by Ali Najafi on Tue Jun 16, 2009 09:04 PM PDTNice article. Along with many other great Iranians, Iranian Baha'is have definitely played their role in contributing to Iran's development. Whether or not the Baha'i teachings are embraced by individual Iranians, there is no doubt that the Baha'i religious philosophy has influenced the advancement of Iranian society and will continue to do so.
Regardless of whether or not one identifies with that Baha'i tenets, it should be a great source of pride for all Iranians that such a progressive world religion/philosophy found its birth in Iran (the Zoroastrian faith which led to Iran's historical greatness should equally be a source of our pride).
Just some reflections.
Wow!! I am intrigued... So
by Goli (not verified) on Tue Jun 16, 2009 06:49 PM PDTWow!! I am intrigued... So what is your point... Suppose I grant you being right in your statement... Now what??? Does a human not have his/her rights regardless of whether or not his/her faith is true or as you say "man-made"???
gee another Iranian government agent
by Ali Akbar (not verified) on Tue Jun 16, 2009 05:07 PM PDTwho is now learning the HARD WAY that the Iranian people are FED UP with your shenanigans...
now go away before the People of Teheran throw you in the garbage
artificial inseminated religion (sorry, a wedge)
by hansson (not verified) on Tue Jun 16, 2009 02:26 PM PDTplease give it a rest bahai once for all. a simple, rudimentary investigation into the history of bahaism reveals that it was a man-made, lab-created invention by russians to divide and concur iranians. It was a clever wedge... it was adopted with cash incentives. simple. so next time you look into your ancestry, you can pride yourself that this nobel thing was another political fabrication, an artificial insemination and has no deeper roots than a house hold weed. sorry.
the Iran that could be
by htb (not verified) on Tue Jun 16, 2009 04:29 AM PDTthis article makes me ache for the Iran that could be, should be . . .a place where Baha'is, women and children can live to their highest potential.
Can you imagine how different Iran would be ...
by Terry (not verified) on Mon Jun 15, 2009 01:12 PM PDT... if the Iranian government would just let us Bahais alone and allow us to raise families and run businesses with out the any interference??
I am saddened by the pictures that are being displayed by the western NEWS media concerning events of the past week...
The stark difference between the 2 images, one of a peacful Iran with everyone enjoying freedom there and the ensuing chaos that exists today are worth noting..
Thax for the article
by amigo19 on Mon Jun 15, 2009 10:59 AM PDTIt is indeed a shame that Bahai educational institutions were barred from educating Iranians and closed to the totality of Our countrymen. People who attended those schools were benefitted Greatly from that kind of education and they benefitted Iran,
Luckily there are manay many more Bahai schools that are opening their doors to other citizens of the world to make a better WORLD!
Thank you ...
by alborz on Mon Jun 15, 2009 09:11 AM PDT...for this historical and timely piece.
Such compelling accounts significantly contribute to better understanding and hopefully better choices as our society struggles in its evolution.
Best Wishes,
Alborz