By
Fatemeh Keshavarz
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Fatemeh Keshavarz |
Payvand.com - When a friend of mine and her
husband, who is a prominent scholar of Iran and Islam, arrived in Tehran at
midnight last summer, she was not sure what to expect. In the women's customs
inspection room, the female customs officer took a look at her passport and
asked: "Are you American?" Upon hearing my friend's positive response, the
officer started searching under her desk and finally took out a piece of paper.
Twenty minutes later, my friend
emerged from the inspection room smiling. "What were you doing?" asked her
worried husband and their Iranian host. "Oh, I was helping the young woman
customs officer with a paper she will present to her English class tomorrow.
There were a few words she was not sure how to pronounce!"
This happy little anecdote
invites a striking observation: it may be easier for an American to travel to
Tehran and teach English to an enthusiastic customs officer than to learn about
the realities of Iran while living in the United States.
The difficulty is, in part, a
result of the complexity of Iranian culture and politics, as complex as some of
the surprising findings in the recent National Intelligence Estimate. But the
truth is that we have come dangerously close to not seeing the forest for the
trees. The barrage of conflicting news on Iran and the messages they send
obscure rather than clarify matters. Images of the country float in cyberspace
divorced from their contexts. And the words uttered by Iranian politicians reach
us through a wide range of "creative" translations. Add the rumors, and
rationality is totally paralyzed. According to the last one I heard, Yahoo has
taken Iran off its list of countries! I decided I won't even try to check this
one out. Surely there are better ways to stop terrorists from e-mailing each
other than to disconnect from the world the Iranians that we hope would change
their country.
Now we have the shocking
finding of the NIE that Iran is not pursuing a nuclear weapons program. Public
access to this kind of intelligence is an opportunity that comes about only in
democratic countries. It must not be wasted just to embarrass politicians and to
score partisan points. Rather, it should be utilized as a tool for making
openings in the walls of our mutual misperceptions and overcoming the disconnect
between the two countries. Surely, the findings do not alter everything. But in
their light, it is easier to look beyond the inflated image of the Iranian
president and see the millions of Iranians who flock to their TV sets every week
to watch the love story of the Iranian man who saves his Jewish beloved and her
family from the clutches of the Nazis.
|

Jasmine and Stars: Reading
More than Lolita
in Tehran -
order from
amazon |
Much merits attention in Iran
beyond this TV serial. The average age of marriage is now 20 for women, who form
about 68 percent of university students and pursue equal opportunities
vigorously. The overall rate of literacy is 81.5 percent (86.5 in cities). The
infant mortality rate has dropped from 199 to 28 per 1,000 births since the
1970s. And yet the population growth rate has decreased from 3.2 percent to 1.2.
These are among the facts that surprised Marcia Inhorn, professor of public
health at the University of Michigan, during her 2006 visit to Iran. In her
eye-opening June 23 essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education, Inhorn pleaded
for "an open mind toward Iran." She has a point. For, even if we are uncertain
about the growing abilities of a rising nation, the way to deal with it is to
keep the channels of communication open.
There are other pressing
issues. In order to learn each other's language, the people of Iran and America
deserve opportunities better than midnight, and settings more suitable than a
Tehran airport. We have thought about the vocabulary for 30 years. It is time to
start the conversation drill.
About the author: Fatemeh Keshavarz is a poet, translator and chair of
the Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages and Literatures at Washington
University in St. Louis. She is the author of "Jasmine
and Stars: Reading More than Lolita in Tehran" (UNC Press, March 2007).
Note: The above article
was first published by People's Weekly World
Newspaper
... Payvand News - 01/14/08 ...
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