IRI, where bones really matter

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Paymaneh Amiri
by Paymaneh Amiri
24-Feb-2009
 

Rulers of the Islamic Republic of Iran have a real obsession with bones of dead people.  21 years after the Iran-Iraq war ended, IRI continues to bring home what is said to be remains of Iranian soldiers killed and buried on the Iraqi side.  This is a customary and honorable thing to do for dead soldiers of any country, and it is really important for families of those soldiers to actually have a respectful burial and a burial site to which they can go to honor and remember their young brothers and sons who gave their lives for Iran.

But who are these “nameless” soldiers whose purported bodies are now emphatically buried inside Tehran universities and parks?  Why can’t they be identified?  Why can’t they be buried in Behesht-e Zahra’s decent and suitable veterans memorial site where they, too, may be honored appropriately?  Why do they have to be pushed upon unwilling academic citizens of Tehran universities who protest turning their campuses into burial grounds?

The truth is that this policy of IRI’s rulers is not at all to honor the Iran-Iraq War veterans, but it is to claim religious and ideological ownership over Iranian universities, to ensconce requisite “guards” and “caretakers” for the sites who might come in “handy” if student protests break out, and thus to arrange pro-regime (basiji) presence where they have been resisted for three decades.

Not only are university students disenchanted with the newly-developed practice, most Iranians feel disgusted with the act, for Iranians treat their dead with utmost respect.  Having a gravesite where passersby are ordinarily careless about paying respect to the dead is not at all reverent to the dead according to most Iranians.

There is glaring contrast between what has been happening at Amir Kabir university today, turning the epicenter of dissent among Iranian universities into a victory ground for the regime’s hardliners over the most outspoken university students of Iran, and what has been happening to Khavaran Cemetery, also in Tehran.

A graveyard for thousands of Iranian political prisoners who were executed en masse and buried in mass graves in Khavaran in 1988, Khavaran is in danger of complete obliteration in an effort to deny that those cold-blooded executions and burials ever happened.  As long as that cemetery exists and families of the murdered prisoners show up to remember their loved ones, a constant reminder to one of the most heinous acts of the recent decades will sit there for all to see.  If the cemetery is razed and covered in cement and “a park,” as officials so brazenly have declared sits in its place, maybe nobody will ever attempt to conduct forensic research into the area to determine just how many people were laid there.

The bones of those at Khavaran must be razed and hidden, hoping that history will forget them, too.  The bones of the dead Iranian soldiers must be paraded through town and buried amidst protests in places of learning and thought to force ideological will in another attempt on the part of IRI to re-write history, twisted, macabre, and faithful to the very nature of IRI vis a vis the Iranian nation. 

Bones really do matter to IRI. 

See here:  //iranian.com/main/2009/feb/assault-amir-kabir-university

And read here:  //iranian.com/main/news/2009/02/24/arrests-after-protest-tehran

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Seventy students are

by Anonymous0op (not verified) on

Seventy students are reported to have been arrested after the protests by AKU students against propaganda burial of 'unknown martyrs'.

Seven are reported to be in critical condition in hospital after having been physically attacked by Ansar Hizbullah hired thugs and twenty five are hiding in the student dormitories while the Islamic regime's forces have surrounded the university but as yet have decided not to enter the university grounds and attack the dormitories, in case another 9th July student uprising takes place.

Journalists, academics and students of the world, where the HELL are you?

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfhXjgrlgWk


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It is not about the bones

by shaheedKireKhar (not verified) on

IRI regime would scarify Iran and Iranians for their brand of Islam in a heartbeat. Let alone a university. The only growth industry in Iran is martyrdom. The nation has been labeled as “Shaheed parvar”, the nation of “martyr cultivators”. The martyr families get all the perks and attention. Ahmadinejad travels to a different city in Iran every month and local authorities gather the families of local martyrs for him to express his and the IRI regime’s appreciation to them. 60% of the university entrance is allocated to them and the Basijies. IRI has given up on the 72 virgins in paradise; they are taking care of your family in their hell right here in Iran.


LalehGillani

IRI’s Preoccupation with Death

by LalehGillani on

The Muslim leaders must provide their followers with a “pill” in order to justify atrocities against humanity in the name of their God. That pill is death, the promises of a deranged religion that glorifies not only dying but also killing for Islam.

It actually is a very clever ploy because no one can verify their claim. What happens to humans after death is a mystery. Consequently, Islam is free to promise anything it wants.

Death is all Islam has to offer both to the believers and non-believers.

IRI fears the bones of our fallen precisely because of what Islam has taught us for centuries: The glory and power of martyrs is celestial.

Death has come back to hunt IRI…


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Really, why this fixation on

by binesh (not verified) on

Really, why this fixation on the dead??

Thank you for sharing your thoughts so eloquently per always.