Memory, Martyrdom, and Mourning in the
Land of the Noble
by Joobin Bekhrad, REORIENT
Looking out the window of a decrepit Peykan taxicab cruising through Tehran, inhaling a noxious medley of exhaust,
esfand, and
Bahman cigarette smoke as your sweat-soaked shirt melds with
disintegrating faux leather and the late summer sun singes your brow, a
truth dawns upon you:
the martyr lives. No, you think to
yourself, as you stare into a pair of youthful, forlorn eyes on a
decaying edifice, he is not dead. He did not willingly walk over an
Iraqi mine in vain. He did not give his childhood hopes and dreams to
the wind. Regarding him and his fallen brethren whose faded,
ever-present faces adorn almost every other wall and building, you
realise that in this moribund, ashen city, he is more alive than ever.
He is not dead, he doth not sleep. He hath awakened from the dream of life – or so Shelley once remarked.
Like the proverbial murals and posters of Ayatollah Khomeini and the current Supreme Leader, the
shahid (martyr)
occupies a central, unflinching position in the Tehran cityscape. His
solemn, almost omniscient gaze follows you everywhere. Virtually every
street, passage, and alleyway is named after him or one of his fallen
brothers in arms. The tulips sprouted from his blood are strewn
everywhere, it seems, embellishing the otherwise drab and industrial
complexes dotting the city with an aura that is as romantic as it is
banal. You can run, but you can’t hide. The martyr doesn’t want you to
forget him. His mother, who visits the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery every
week to wash the dust from his grave doesn’t want you to forget him. The
authorities don’t want you to forget him, and in your heart of hearts,
neither do you; although, with a presence like that, is there any way
you
could forget him?
The martyr in question made his sacrifice during the Iran-Iraq war
(1980 – 1988) – a scathing memory which ever remains burned in the
modern Iranian psyche, and a lasting reminder of Iran’s unlikely victory
against all odds. The ‘imposed war’, as it is still popularly referred
to, was yet another violent, bloody episode in Iranian history, which
occurred only a few decades ago. Having been invaded myriad times by
neighbouring nations and foes – Greeks, Arabs, Mongols, and Turks, to
name a few – and having had its fair share of tyrants recline on the
imperial throne, the martyr has always been a familiar face among the
Iranian people. Among its many resplendent sons, it is perhaps the
wronged heroes of a bygone age that have tenaciously endured in the
hearts and minds of Iranian everywhere. The legendary Sivayash, the
brazen patriots Babak-e Khorramdin and Mirza Kuchak Khan, the visionary
Amir Kabir, as well as the Shi’a Imams Ali, Hossein, and Reza are but a
few martyrs whose exploits are ever praised, and their tragic fates
lamented. Since time immemorial, the land of the noble has been a nation
of martyrs and mourners.