BAKU: EU-Azeri committee meetings ends in argument over doublestanda

EU-Azeri committee meetings ends in argument over double standards

ANS TV, Baku
19 Apr 05

[Presenter] Another scandal has occurred at a meeting of the
Azerbaijan-EU parliamentary cooperation committee. The statement
and proposals adopted by the EU-Armenia parliamentary cooperation
committee in Strasbourg have angered some MPs.

[Correspondent over video of meeting] The sixth meeting of the
Azerbaijan-EU parliamentary cooperation committee started with
a scandal. Sirus Tabrizli, Azerbaijani co-chair of the committee,
refused to attend the meeting and walked out, pointing to the statement
and proposals adopted by the EU-Armenia parliamentary cooperation
committee in Strasbourg on 13-14 April.

Clause 26 of the document says the EU wants the Karabakh problem to
be resolved in line with the norms of international law, specifically
in accordance with the right to self-determination and respect for
ethnic minorities.

Other interesting points in the document are related to
Armenian-Turkish relations. The document urges Turkey to try to open
its borders with Armenia and pay more attention to the issue of the
so-called Armenian genocide.

On seeing the unexpected development of events, Marie [Anne] Isler
Beguin, the other co-chair of the committee, tried to clarify the
issue.

[Beguin, speaking in French with Azeri voice-over] There is nothing
unusual here. These are only proposals, which may or may not be
accepted. Our position is that the conflict should be resolved with
the efforts of both sides.

[Correspondent] However, Ms Beguin’s speech did not ease the tension
at the meeting. Namiq Aliyev, head of the parliament’s international
relations department, accused the European parliamentarians of applying
double standards against Azerbaijan. He said the European MPs’ attitude
towards the conflict is against the norms of international law.

MP Gular Ahmadova said ethnic minorities were facing no problems
in Azerbaijan. She said official Baku supports the resolution of
the conflict only on the basis of the principle of Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity.

Then the second part of the meeting, which had to draft a statement
of the committee, started behind closed doors. There were some
disagreements in this part of the meeting, too. The sides could not
agree on the fact that Azerbaijan’s territories have been occupied
by Armenia.

[MP Gular Ahmadova] We said that the aggressor must be named and that
it must be made clear which territories have been occupied. If we call
for withdrawal from Azerbaijan’s occupied territories, we have to make
it clear who we urge to do so. We urge Armenia. We insisted on this,
but could not reach an agreement.

[Interrupted sentence omitted]

[Correspondent] Although the aggressor was not named in the end, the
document said the conflict should be resolved on the basis of the
principle of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, and confirmed the
resolution of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on
this issue.

New Pope does not approve of Turkey accession to EU

NEW POPE DOES NOT APPROVE OF TURKEY ACCESSION TO EU

Pan Armenian News
20.04.2005 05:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ New Pope Benedict XVI does not approve of the
accession of Turkey to the European Union. He stated he did not
consider Turkey a European country. «Turkey has always been another
mainland always contrasting Europe,» he said

–Boundary_(ID_Vf0ldfIdCYQF3NRh5jw0MA)–

Karabakh Conflict Must Be Settled Taking Into Account InternationalL

KARABAKH CONFLICT MUST BE SETTLED TAKING INTO ACCOUNT
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL NORMS

YEREVAN, APRIL 19. ARMINFO. The Karabakh conflict must be settled
only by means of strengthening of the status of Nagorny Karabakh and
ensuring of even guarantees of security of the people of Nagorny
Karabakh and bordering territories, as well as of refugees. It is
said in the statement of the Commission on parliamentary cooperation
Armenia-EU, made on April 14 in Strasbourg.

In the document the Commission stresses the necessity of the
participation of the people of Nagorny Karabakh in the negotiation
process. The Commission also confirms its readiness to provide
assistance in the peaceful settlement of the Karabakh conflict on the
basis of international legal norms, including the principle of rights
of peoples for self-determination. The Commission also stresses that
the uncertainty of the issue on the status of Nagorny Karabakh must
not hinder the international community to respect the main rights
and freedoms of the people of Nagorny Karabakh. The authors of the
statement also stress the necessity of the participation of the
international community in the process of peaceful settlement of
the Karabakh conflict. At the same time the commission thinks that
the final settlement of the conflict may be reached only between the
Armenian and Azerbaijani parties through the mediation of the OSCE
Minsk Group.

Taking into consideration the conclusion of the OSCE expert group
for study of the situation in the territories bordering to Nagorny
Karabakh, the commission welcomes the assistance of the authorities
of Armenia and Nagorny Karabakh to the activity of the group. The
commission calls on the conflicting parties to create conditions
for safe repatriation of the refugees. The commission calls on the
conflicting parties to abstain from allegations and actions, which may
result in additional tension in the region or resumption of military
operations. The commission considers inadmissible the settlement of
the Karabakh problem by force.

The commission calls on the conflicting parties for sooner settlement
of the problem, which is an obstacle on the way of establishment of
regional cooperation. The real pre-condition for reconciliation of the
Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples, ensuring stability in the region
of the South Caucasus is the establishment of Armenian-Azerbaijani
trade-economic cooperation. The commission calls on other countries
of the region not to create obstacles on the way of establishment
of cooperation between the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides and
not to put the issue of settlement of the Karabakh conflict as
a preliminary condition for these relations. The establishment of
regional cooperation between the countries of the South Caucasus is a
pre-condition for their sooner integration into European structures,
said in the document. The commission says that the growing involvement
of EU in regional processes supposes activation of its efforts in
settlement of conflicts in the South Caucasus and implementation of
regional reforms.

As Armenian Cochairman of the Commission, Head of parliamentary
commission for foreign relations of Armenia Armen Roustamian pointed
out during the news conference at National Assembly of Armenia
Tuesday that the making of this statement required much efforts
from the Armenian side, as European parliamentarians being members
of the commission at the same time are members of the commission on
cooperation Azerbaijan-EU. Armen Roustamian informed that the sitting
of this commission is held in Baku now, and a statement regarding
Azerbaijan will be made.

BAKU: Merzlyakov, Russian co-chair of OSCE,comments on meeting of co

YURI MERZLYAKOV, RUSSIAN CO-CHAIRMAN OF OSCE, COMMENTS MEETING OF
CO-CHAIRMEN WITH FA MINISTERS

Azerbaijan News Service
April 19 2005

2005-04-19 20:33 — Meeting of OSCE Minsk group co-reporters with FA
ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia was constructive and useful, said
Yuriy Merzlyakov, Russian co-chairman of Minsk group. We have very
intensive exchange of views. And I appreciate consultations in this
stage of talks. Proposals made in the course of talks will be reviewed
in the meeting of presidents. According to him Anjey Kasprshik,
besides special statement of co-chairmen on worsening of situation
in contact line, special representative of chairman in office of OSCE
raised question on three Azerbaijani soldiers’ being hold captive by
Armenians. The issue is under control and I hope as it has been brought
to each side’s attention, it will be solved soon. He said there is
need for the meeting of FA ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia. These
meetings are preparation to meeting of two presidents. So, we want
to hold broader talks with each side-Azerbaijan and Armenia on the
eve of that meeting. According to him, Vardan Oskanyan, FA minister
of Armenia will not participate in next meeting of FA ministers and
OSCE co-chairmen on April in Frankfurt.

Non-Corresponding Violations

NON-CORRESPONDING VIOLATIONS

A1plus

| 15:24:06 | 20-04-2005 | Social |

«After the end of the Genocide there have been counter-actions from
the Armenian military volunteers against the Turks», said today
Ashot Melqonyan, head of the History Institute, bringing as wittness
the book by the German scientists Mr. Nad Mrs. Gustner about the
Armenian Genocide.

He informed that in the Turlish archives a 12-page document has
been found in which it is written about the violations of the Turks
against the Armenian. But there is also a page in which it is written
about the cruelty of Aremenians towards the Turks. « «Many people
sya that we must exclude that page. But I am against it, as firstly,
that page is part of the history, and secodnly, if we do so, we will
reach down the level of the Turks», said Ashot Melqonyan.

–Boundary_(ID_QIxgFzjHcI97ytYanYmVdw)–

Lebanese Prime Minister Forms Cabinet

Lebanese Prime Minister Forms Cabinet
By Agence France Presse (AFP)

Agence France Presse
April 19 2005

Prime minister-designate Nagib Miqati announced the creation of a new
unity government to take Lebanon towards May elections, breaking over
six weeks of political deadlock.

He said the administration would contain people representing all
of multi-confessional Lebanon’s religious groups and comprised 14
mainly technocratic members, down from 30 ministers in the previous
government.

“I want to announce the formation of the government this morning,
after a meeting with President Emile Lahoud,” Miqati told reporters.

“This government groups all Lebanese factions,” he said.

“A new government has been formed, it is made up of 14 ministers,”
added presidential spokesman Rafiq Shalala.

Here is the line-up of the new 14-member Lebanese cabinet formed
Tuesday by prime minister-designate Nagib Miqati, which still has to
be approved by parliament.

– Prime Minister: Nagib Miqati (Sunni Muslim, new)

– Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defense: Elias Murr (Greek
Orthodox, new)

– Foreign Minister: Mahmud Hammud (Shiite, unchanged)

– Interior Minister: Hassan Sabaa (Sunni, new)

– Finance, economy and trade: Demianos Khattar (Maronite, new)

– Culture, Education Minister: Ghassan Salameh (Greek Catholic, new)

– Public Works, Transport and Refugees: Adel Hamiyeh (Druze, new)

– Health, Social Affairs Minister: Mohammad Khalifeh (Shiite,
unchanged)

– Telecommunication, sports and youth minister: Alain Taburian
(Armenian, state minister in previous government)

– Justice Minister: Khaled Qabbani (Sunni, new)

– Industry and Energy Minister: Bassam Yammin (Maronite, new)

– Information, Tourism Minister: Charles Rizk (Maronite, new)

– Environment, Administrative Development: Tareq Mitri (Greek
Orthodox, new)

– Labour, Agriculture Minister: Tarrad Hamadeh (Shiite, new) – AFP

Armenian genocide column inconsistent

Armenian genocide column inconsistent
By Cihan Baran
Monday, April 18, 2005

Stanford Daily
April 18 2005

In her op-ed, Ani Kardashian rightly speaks of the lack of awareness
of past atrocities in today’s community (“Armenian genocide must not
be forgotten,” April 15). Yet her deliberate attempts to distort the
past and represent on side of what has been going on as a historical
discussion is a terrible blow to intellectual integrity. The question
of the so-called “Armenian genocide” is an open one. People who are
unaware of this issue should bear in mind that there is no foregone
conclusion about this matter, as in the case of Holocaust.

Let’s view the issue in the framework that Kardashian has set up for
us. I claim that it is plausible to establish the inconsistencies
analytically in her message. She claims that the “Young Turk regime
emerged, consisting of radical young military officers who were
troubled by the . . . the numerous minority groups inhabiting the
empire . . . ” So it is said that the Young Turks were troubled by
more than one minority.

The point then becomes obvious. Any serious student of history knows
that the Ottoman Empire was a vast mosaic of ethnic diversity. The
Empire tolerated and treated with respect throughout its history
Arabs, Bulgarians, Greeks, Slavs, Armenians and peoples of many
other ethnicities. If these Young Turks were keen on their radical
nationalism, why did they try to only exterminate the Armenians of all
the different ethnicities? Why would they pick on a particular race
as opposed to all the others? Of course, Kardashian, while speaking
of many ethnicities in the Ottoman Empire, isn’t able to speak of
genocides that relate to other people.

But then, let’s raise our heads above Kardashian’s politicking and
biased ways and at least try to put things in a better perspective.
The end of 19th century was completely transforming for the Ottoman
Empire. With the advent of such ideas as democracy and nationalism,
many groups within the Ottoman Empire claimed their independence –
Balkan nations are such examples. Armenians, however, had not yet
formed such an independent state. As the Ottoman Empire weakened, the
Armenians saw World War I as an opportunity for independence. They have
allied with Russia, who was battling the Ottoman Empire, to back-stab
the Ottoman Nation from the inside. In their zeal against the Ottoman
Nation, many villages were burned, innocent Turks killed, tortured and
raped. As a result of these evil deeds, the Ottoman Government forcibly
deported them to other regions (such as south-eastern Anatolia).

Even more disgraceful statements follow from Kardishian. Identifying
taking position in a historical and open debate as “denial,” she
writes, “This denial has arguably contributed to future genocides,
including the Holocaust and more recent genocides in Rwanda and
Darfur.” I dare Kardashian to prove and show evidence for this
statement. Where can we find reference in Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” to
Ottoman Empire and what allegedly happened to the Armenians? How does
the right of a nation to defend itself spouse such huge atrocities
as Holocaust?

Even if this alleged “genocide” did happen, why is Turkey being held
responsible for what happened? There are sufficient differences for
us to think of as the Ottoman Empire and the modern Turkey as two
different entities. Ottoman Empire was a monarchy under the rule of a
dynasty. Turkey is a democracy. Ottoman Empire’s official religion was
Islam. Modern Turkey is secular. Those who ruled the Ottoman Empire
didn’t save Turkey from its enemies in the War of Independence at the
end of World War I – but at least proposed Turkey to be a mandate of a
“superior” nation such as the US or Britain. The founders of modern
Turkey and the great savior of the Turkish nation, Ataturk, fought
these enemies. I believe these differences are sufficient to hold the
Ottoman Empire and the modern Turkey as different entities. Maintaining
that they are the same, holding one responsible for the other, would
be to assert that two sculptures of different form but of same material
are identical.

If historical evidence is presented, I am willing to re-evaluate my
claims. But at least, the unaware reader should bear in mind that
this is an ongoing historical debate, without an established truth.

Cihan Behran is an undeclared freshman. E-mail him at
[email protected].

60.000 cierges sur l’internet pour le 90e anniversaire du Genocide

Agence France Presse
15 avril 2005 vendredi 3:12 PM GMT

60.000 cierges sur l’internet pour le 90e anniversaire du génocide
arménien

EREVAN 15 avr 2005

Plus de 60.000 internautes ont allumé un cierge virtuel à la mémoire
des victimes du génocide arménien perpétré par la Turquie en 1915,
sur un site internet réalisé par un jeune Arménien qui dénonce un
“crime turc” non reconnu par Ankara.

Le nombre de cierges allumés avait dépassé les 62.000 vendredi, une
semaine après l’ouverture du site candle.direct.am.

“Chaque jour, pas moins de 3.000 cierges sont créés sur notre site.
Ce qui montre que les gens ne sont pas indifférents aux malheurs de
notre peuple”, a déclaré à l’AFP le jeune informaticien à l’origine
du projet, Gaïk Assatrian.

Il espère réunir sur son site jusqu’à 200.000 cierges d’ici au 24
avril prochain, date de la commémoration du génocide.

Parmi les internautes ayant déposé un cierge virtuel, de nombreux
Arméniens, mais aussi des internautes des Etats-Unis, de pays de
l’Union européenne, d’Israël ou même de Turquie.

Comme celui d’Orhan Bal, qui a écrit sous l’un des multiples cierges
apparaissant sur le site: “En tant que Turc, j’ai honte de ce qui est
arrivé aux Arméniens en Turquie. Je m’excuse et je demande pardon à
tous les Arméniens”.

“Nous devons nous souvenir, pas seulement des juifs”, écrit Kristjan
Mand, alors que de nombreux visiteurs israéliens ont été enregistrés
sur le site.

“Un million et demi d’oubliés. Le crime turc du génocide arménien du
24 avril 1915”, indique la page d’accueil du site.

Les massacres et les déportations d’Arméniens entre 1915 et 1917 ont
fait entre 1,2 million et 1,3 million de morts, selon Erevan, et
jusqu’à 300.000 morts selon Ankara, qui ne reconnaît pas le génocide,
en dépit des appels répétés des autorités arméniennes et de plusieurs
pays européens.

La Turquie a récemment adressé une lettre à l’Arménie proposant la
création d’une commission conjointe afin d’enquêter sur les massacres
des Arméniens.

mkh-dt

In the original home of Zoroastrians

Frontline, India
Volume 22 – Issue 08, Mar. 12 – 25, 2005
India’s National Magazine

TRAVEL

In the original home of Zoroastrians

TEXT AND PHOTOGRAPHS:
SUDHA MAHALINGAM
recently in Yazd

Structures made of Adobe, bricks of sun-dried earth and straw, the
most widely used building material in Yazd.

DRIVING through the streets of Teheran, the Iranian capital, during
the evening peak hour is an excruciating experience, especially if
you have a train to catch. “Have oil, will drive,” seems to be the
motto of Teheranians. There is an endless stretch of Paykans before,
behind and beside my taxi – also a battered Paykan – inching their
way down the swanky Vali-Asr avenue. We move at a snail’s pace and
there is a good 30 kilometres to go. My nerves are on edge, but the
taxi driver seems unfazed as he weaves through the traffic lanes,
past flyovers and underpasses, and manages to deposit me at the
Teheran railway station just in the nick of time. Iranian trains are
very clean and the stations virtually deserted – almost a culture
shock for those of us from the subcontinent. I find myself in the
women’s coach where all my fellow travellers are fully veiled in
black chadors. Suddenly, I feel self-conscious in my token headscarf.

I am on my way to a fascinating destination – Yazd – located 690 km
south of Teheran, right in the heart of the vast Iranian desert.
Wedged between Dasht-e-Kavir and Dasht-e-Lut, Yazd is a town unlike
any other. The recorded history of Yazd province goes back to 30
B.C., when human settlements dotted the arid Persian countryside.
Yazd is also the capital of the province bearing the same name. Yazd
town is believed to be the second oldest, continuously inhabited town
in the world, after Jerusalem. It is home to the descendants of the
original Zoroastrians, who refused to convert to Islam when the Arabs
invaded Persia. When the Arab hordes descended on their town in the
8th century A.D., most Yazdis fled to safe havens such as India,
where today there is a distinguished and flourishing Parsi community.
But some stayed back, defying their aggressors and keeping alive
their faith, rituals and practices.

The next morning I take a taxi through the deserted streets of Yazd
to my hotel, which turns out to be a delightful old caravanserai in
the heart of the old town. From outside, the inn looks unpretentious,
and but for the English signpost scrawled in charcoal on the
mud-brick wall, one could not have located it. Winding steps lead you
into a central courtyard with a small pond in the middle, surrounded
by rooms on all sides. Colourful rugs set off the earthy hue of the
walls, roof and the floor. Hookahs and ornamental pitchers blend in
with the setting. I am to share a room with a Lebanese woman from
Chicago. She had given up her lucrative banker’s job to discover the
joys of travelling. She had traversed Asia through the land route
from Japan, stopping in every country along the way, including India.
When I met her in Yazd in March, she had been travelling continuously
for three years.

A view of the Jame Masjid.

The inn is a charming place just to lounge around and spend the
evenings under a brilliantly starlit sky, smoking a hookah or sipping
tea and exchanging notes with fellow guests, almost all of them
foreigners like me. But that will have to wait until evening.

The Mehrab, or prayerniche at the mosque.

I set out on a walking tour of the old town, savouring the leisurely
pace of life in this part of the world. Adobe, bricks of sun-dried
earth and straw, is the dominant building material and the houses
look as though they were built eons ago. Every once in a while the
monochrome of adobe is relieved by brilliant turquoise tiles
embellishing the domes of mosques and minarets. Many houses are
crumbling and look uninhabited, but Yazdis are very much there,
behind those formidable doors. Like many ancient houses in Yazd, the
front door sports two knockers – a slender one for women and a sturdy
one for men. From the sound of the knocker, the inmates would know
whether the visitor is a male or a female and accordingly decide who
should open the door. This practice certainly predates the Islamic
revolution. Now it is just a relic, with electric call bells
supplementing doorknockers. Behind that crumbling facade, most Yazdis
live in modern comfort – with wall-to-wall carpeting and electronic
gadgetry. Many even have computers with Internet connectivity.

A Yazdi woman

Apart from the minarets and domes, what strikes one about the Yazd
skyline are the badgirs – the cooling towers of a pre-electricity,
pre-air-conditioning era. Badgirs are rectangular structures that
rise above the skyline. Sometimes, they were built around a central
dome. The simplest towers contain two or four shelves. The trunk of
the tower contains shafts. The shelves at the top catch the hot air
and redirect it away from the dwelling below. The flaps effectively
redirect the cool air and circulate it. The air currents that enter
the house through these channels pass over a pool of cool water –
usually under the dome.

An alley in the town.

I use one of the female knockers and seek permission to stand under
the dome to judge the effectiveness of a badgir. It is incredibly
cool under the tower, though the outside temperature must have been
around 38° Celsius.

Schoolgirls in Yazd.

Another feature, typical of desert country, is the qanat or
underground water channel – an ingenious irrigation system of Persian
origin. The author Vikram Seth describes a similar channel in Turfan
in Xinjiang province of China in his book From Heaven Lake. There are
also qanats in Morocco and parts of Central Asia, but qanats were
originally conceived and designed by ancient Persians. Along the
length of a qanat, which can be several kilometres long, vertical
shafts are sunk at intervals of 20-30 metres to remove excavated
material and to provide ventilation and access for repairs. The main
qanat tunnel often slopes gently down to an outlet, usually near a
habitation, and from there canals would distribute water to the
fields for irrigation. It is no wonder Yazd is dotted with
pomegranate and almond plantations on apparently arid plains.

The Tower of Silence, where the Zoroastrians traditionally left their
dead to the vultures and the elements.

I spied several qanat outlets in Yazd. They are usually canopied,
with an ornamental circular skylight providing ventilation. At
Meybod, a small town near Yazd, there is an exquisitely decorated
qanat located in the middle of a caravanserai, and next to an amazing
ancient storehouse for ice. There is also a qanat inside Yazd’s Jame
Mosque, but it is barred and barricaded to prevent the feet of
tourists from defiling its pure waters. There are over 50,000 qanats
scattered all over Iran, and invariably the qanat builders came from
Yazd province. Mohammed Kharaji, a 10th century Persian scholar,
wrote a whole chapter on qanat construction, in a manuscript that was
recently discovered.

The Atashkadeh or Fire Temple is the congregation point for all
Zoroastrians in Yazd. The flame in this temple was brought from
Ardakan in A.D. 1474 and has been burning continuously since A.D. 470
in other locations.

Gradually, I wend my way to the Fire Temple – called Atashkadeh in
Farsi – the congregation point for all Zoroastrians in Yazd. The
flame in this temple was brought from Ardakan in A.D. 1474, and has
been burning continuously since A.D. 470 in other locations. It is a
Friday, and in a hall behind the temple, I find a heap of footwear.
After a moment’s hesitation, I enter the premises and make my way
across the row of women seated on the far side. A young priest is
delivering a fiery speech in Farsi, peppered with animated gesturing.
I do not understand a word of what he says, but am mesmerised by his
body language. Everyone listens in rapt attention, at times nodding
vigorously. There are framed paintings of Zoroaster and a huge bowl
of fire in an adjacent chamber. Unlike Muslim women, Zarthushti women
wear colourful headscarves and clothes. The men wear white skullcaps.
The priest’s speech is followed by an elaborate Zarathusti prayer,
with everyone standing and holding both palms outstretched towards
the sky. The men pull out a thread from around their waist – the belt
of humility – and chant more prayers. It seems like eternity when the
prayer finally ends.

The priest of the Fire Temple, a banker by profession.

I befriend the priest, a banker by profession. I was very curious to
know the content of his impassioned speech, but unfortunately he
could not speak English. But he gestures for me to follow him. We get
into his car and drive off to find an interpreter. We find a young
university student and all of us drive to another Fire Temple, where
I am schooled in the rudiments of the Zoroastrian religion, Farsi
traditions and history.

Worshippers in the temple.

Zoroastrianism or Zarthusht – as the Persian followers of Zoroaster
call themselves – was the official religion of the Achaemenids and
the Sassanids, the two great ancient dynasties of Persia. In fact,
during an earlier visit to Iran, I visited Persepolis – the great
capital of the ancient Persian Empire – which Darius built 2,600
years ago, where I saw several bas-reliefs of Zoroaster and the
ancient Zarthusht god, Ahura Mazda. Even though recorded history is
rather skimpy on the details of the religion, Herodotus’ description
of Zoroastrian rituals confirms that the religion as it is practised
today in Yazd is the same one dating back to 4,000 years. After the
sacking of Persepolis by Alexander the Great, Zoroastrianism probably
went underground during the Parthian era until the Sassanid dynasty
revived it in A.D. 228. It is widely believed that the three wise men
who bore gifts for Jesus of Nazareth were Zoroastrian Magi. During
the sixth century, Zoroastrianism spread to Armenia and through the
Silk Route, to as far as China.

A badgir, or cooling tower, built around a central dome.

But the Arab conquest of the Sassanids in the 7th century A.D. saw
Zoroastrians fleeing Persia in huge numbers, with many of them
seeking refuge in western India. Jaidev Rana, a Hindu king, gave them
refuge on the condition that they marry within their community and
desist from proselytising. The Parsi community in India now
outnumbers the Zarthusht in Iran, but because of endogamy, their
numbers are dwindling. In Yazd, the community is said to be
30,000-strong. The language spoken by the Zarthusht in Yazd is
different from the Farsi spoken by Muslim Iranians and Indian Parsis.

A typical doorway in Yazd, with separate knockers for men and women.

While there is no overt persecution of Zoroastrians in Iran, I got
the impression that they are just about tolerated in post-revolution
Iran. There is one member of the community represented in the Majlis.
There are a few special schools where Zarthusht children learn their
traditions and rituals. Zarthusht settlements are found in clusters
in and around Yazd town, although there are a few of them scattered
all over Iran. Inter-religious marriages are rare. There is a
Zarthusht Anjuman Society, where the members gather to discuss issues
of concern. Men and women enjoy equal status in Zarthusht society.
Zarthusht women do not wear chadors, but only a headscarf. After a
long chat with the priest and other members of the Zarthusht
community in Yazd, I felt they were weighed down by the
responsibility of having to keep their identity, traditions and faith
alive, even as their numbers are dwindling at an alarming rate.

A vertical shaft of a qanat, or underground water channel, an
ingenious irrigation system.

The next day, I made a detour to the Tower of Silence situated on the
outskirts of the town. There were two mounds – both were used a
hundred years ago, to leave the dead to vultures and the elements.
Today, the Zarthusht bury their dead in concrete crypts in a special
cemetery. The Tower of Silence seems a misnomer today. Young boys on
motorbikes race up and down the mounds, kicking up a huge cloud of
dust and making a racket. At the foot of the mounds are the ruins of
an old caravanserai. Further away is the new Zarthusht cemetery. I
stroll into the cemetery, where I bump into Fariborz, a Zoroastrian
living in Canada. At last, I can converse freely without the aid of
an interpreter. Fariborz had lived in Mumbai for 20 years before he
shifted to Canada. He visits Yazd every year. He maintains a website
on ancient Iran, and makes a serious effort to bring the Zarthusht
diaspora together through newsletters and magazines.

The ornamental dome of Alexander’s Prison.

I am irresistibly drawn back to the walled city with its ramparts,
towers and tunnel-like streets. It is easy to get lost in its
labyrinthine lanes, but always someone materialises magically to
escort you all the way back. There is a delicious aroma of baking
bread in the numerous little bakeries that dot the old city. I make
my way to the Jame Mosque, which towers over the old city with its
glittering twin minarets. Folklore has it that unmarried young women
used to ascend the minarets on Fridays. From the top of the minaret
they would throw down the key to a lock affixed on their headscarves.
The young man who found the key could claim the girl’s hand in
marriage.

The 14th century mosque was built under the loving gaze of Bibi
Fatema Khatun, the wife of the Governor of Yazd. Its Mehrab (prayer
niche) is intricately patterned in dazzling blue and dappled green,
but the stark interiors appeal to me more. I coax the caretaker to
open the winding stairwell to the top of the minaret, from where I
could get a bird’s eye view of the rooftops. He insists I give him a
written request and I promptly oblige. I am not sure he could read
English, but he seemed satisfied enough to open the door for me. I
wander around on the roof, taking pictures and admiring the view of
the town. But when I get back, I find the door locked from outside.
It took some banging and screaming before the caretaker came and
opened the door rather sheepishly.

Yazd has many traditional houses that are well preserved. One such is
Khan-e-Lari, the mansion of Lari, a rich merchant. It has exquisite
stained glass windows and carved alcoves, and many fruit trees in the
courtyard. Not very far from there is Alexander’s Prison, its
ornamental dome belying its sinister history. I also visit the 11th
century monument of the Seljuk period, called 12 Imams, although not
one is actually buried there.

I wander around Amir Chakmagh Square – the striking landmark named
after the Governor of Yazd. Amir Chakmagh is the most visible face of
Yazd, found in picture postcards and tourist brochures. The monument
is a study in Islamic architecture, an ode to symmetry and form. But
it is just an ornamental facade lacking depth, and seems to serve no
discernible purpose. With no one to explain its origin and purpose, I
saunter off to the nearby bazaar. I had expected Yazd bazaar to be as
glamorous and interesting as the Shiraz and Isfahan bazaars, but it
was a let-down. At the entrance is a vendor selling just-hatched
chickens dipped in lurid pink, green, red and blue colours. Inside
the covered market there are rows and rows of plastic goods, pots,
pans and electrical items. Not a single shop sold Yazd’s famed
brocade or carpets. I retrace my steps back to the Silk Route Hotel
for a well-earned cup of tea under the starry skies.

http://flonnet.com/fl2208/stories/20050422000106500.htm

Christian soldier beaten, imprisoned, Punished for sharing faith

WorldNetDaily, OR
April 16 2005

Christian soldier beaten, imprisoned
Punished for sharing faith, literature with colleagues

By Michael Ireland
© 2005 Assist News Service

Baptist conscript Gagik Mirzoyan — who is conducting unarmed service
in the army of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic — has been
beaten and punished with more than 10 days in detention since the
beginning of April for sharing his faith with other soldiers and
possessing several Christian calendars.

Felix Corley, writing for Forum 18 News Service, says Mirzoyan’s
relatives and friends told Forum 18 from Nagorno-Karabakh Thursday
that before being transferred to an unknown location, Mirzoyan was
threatened with a prison sentence of two years.

Nagorno-Karabakh is disputed terrority that lies between Armenia and
Azerbaijan in the former Soviet Union.

Forum 18 says it has been unable to reach V. Davidov, commanding
officer of Mirzoyan’s former unit in Nagorno-Karabakh’s south-eastern
Hadrut region, to find out why he ordered or allowed one of his
troops to be beaten and detained merely for expressing his faith and
possessing religious calendars.

“Forum 18 also tried to find out from the defense ministry why
Mirzoyan has been punished, but an official at the ministry told
Forum 18 from the capital Stepanakert yesterday that the minister,
General Seyran Ohanyan, was out of the office and that no-one else
was immediately available. Telephones also went unanswered at
Nagorno-Karabakh’s foreign ministry,” Corley writes in his report.

Corley said that on Monday, relatives and friends went to military
unit 42009 in Hadrut to see Mirzoyan after hearing that he had been
beaten and given 10 days of detention at the guardhouse.

“When we got there he had already been held under arrest for 12 days
but still had not been freed,” they told Forum 18.

They reported that when they were able to see Mirzoyan, the “results
of beatings” were visible on his face. Military personnel at the base
told the visitors Mirzoyan would be freed the following day, Tuesday,
and they would then be able to talk to him.

Corley writes: “Despite these promises, Mirzoyan continued to be
detained and during the day was threatened by the head of the unit’s
political department and by an official of the prosecutor’s office
that a case against him would be drawn up, handed to the prosecutor’s
office and he would be sentenced to two years’ imprisonment. Forum 18
has been unable to discover what charges are being or might be
levelled against Mirzoyan.”

Mirzoyan’s relatives and friends told Forum 18, “Through the grace of
God we were later able to have a 10-minute meeting with brother Gagik
and discovered that he is being persecuted for preaching the Gospel
and because they found several Christian calendars in his possession.
Now he has been taken away to an unknown destination and they are not
saying where he is and what has happened to him.”

Mirzoyan was called up in December, Corley said.

Corley writes: “After refusing to serve with weapons and swear the
military oath because of his faith Mirzoyan was beaten and pressured
by the commander of the unit to which he was transferred and Fr.
Petros Yezegyan, the unit’s Armenian Apostolic military chaplain.
Both the defence minister, General Ohanyan, and Fr. Yezegyan
emphatically denied to Forum 18 that Mirzoyan had been beaten.”

The army later agreed that Mirzoyan could serve in a non-combat role
and he was transferred to the unit in Hadrut region, Corley reported.

According to Corley: “Nagorno-Karabakh has no provision for
alternative service for those who have religious or other
conscientious objections to participating in the armed forces. On
Feb. 16 a court in Stepanakert handed down a four-year prison term to
Areg Hovhanesyan, a Jehovah’s Witness who had refused to serve
because of his faith but had expressed a willingness to perform an
alternative civilian service.