ART
Paintings by Shirin Golestaneh
by
Nazy Kaviani >>>
MURDERS
To this day, the case of all the murdered victims remains unsolved
In a few days, 10 years will have passed since the brutal death of Dariush and Parvaneh Forouhar. Later Mohammad Mokthari, Ja’far Pouyandeh and Majid Sharif were abducted and strangled by rogue agents of the Ministry of Intelligence of the Islamic Republic. To this day, the case of all the murdered victims remains unsolved. No one has really been charged and no one has been imprisoned. Yet, the best and the brightest of our young journalists, women activists and even some of their lawyers have been incarcerated, and the saga continues. The lucky ones get to leave but they, too, have to struggle. The other day, Mr. Abbas Amir Entezam in an e-mail message said that he may have to go back to prison after a furlough. The date is set for the 30th of Aban
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Laughing Yoga is a very simple way to get rid of your Stress.
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BOOK
“Don’t worry Kaveh. You will always be the man who took Harvard to the US Supreme Court.”
In March 2006, the Harvard Gazette featured a story about a symposium on Iran and the future of non-proliferation regime at Harvard Law School, adorned by a color photo of three of the four speakers. They were, Matthew Bunn, the director of Kennedy School of Government’s program on “Managing the Atom,” an M.I.T. political science professor, Barry Posen, and Flynt Leverett, a former White House national security advisor. Somehow missing from the photo was the speaker identified by the event’s oversized poster as Director of NGO, Global Interfaith Peace, and former advisor to Iran’s nuclear negotiation team, Kaveh Afrasiabi, me. Any one else may have taken issue with the Harvard paper, perhaps wondering if this were a mere case of pure neglect, or photographer’s or editor’s unfriendly choice to exclude me, but by then I was rather used to such discrepant treatments at Harvard
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CNN Reports on President Bush - Where's the Love?
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Want to have fun? Do it Sarah Palin's style, go to a turkey farm and... !
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DRAMA
This vision of the Orient fortifies West’s image of itself as the White man who must forcefully rescue the decadent, dark East
Shahrazad entered and she had the whitest porcelain skin and the lightest blond hair. Dark-haired and dark-skinned actresses surrounded her, playing her sister and slaves but this future queen, the rescuer of Moslem virgins looked eastern European not Middle Eastern! And gone was her self-assertion, the will to decide her own destiny. In Mary Zimmerman’s
The Arabian Nights, King Shahryar explicitly asks the Wazir for her. When the father brings news of this fate, Shahrazad weeps and finally acquiesces, reminding herself and the audience that she might be able to save other lives. Her wedding night encounter with the king is screechy, almost whiny. The sexual act is barely implied; yet the gleaming dagger at Shahrazad’s throat is real. It dominates the first act as the unhinged king, ferocious in his desperate pain, keeps it there and presses it into her flesh in every bit of conversation between them
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Radio Farda interviews Former Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi of Iran in London after a meeting with British MP's on the invitation of Labour MP Gisela Stuart.
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I was talking to one of my customers today who is Jewish from Israel. I was talking about how he really felt about Arabs and Muslims in general and he said "there are many Muslims that beleive Israel belongs to Jews".
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Am I the only one distracted ?
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