Culturecide of the Islamic Republic of
Iran
June 30, 2008
The intolerant monolithic Islamists are on the march, lashing out with
fury at non-Islamic people and cultures. This cult of violence and death
spares neither the living nor the non-living heritage of humanity:
wherever and whenever it can it commits culturecide—wiping out other
people’s precious cultural treasures. Not long ago, the Islamists’
destruction of the Buddha statues in Afghanistan shocked the world and
exposed the savage nature of this cult of violence depravity. Yet, much
more destruction on a broad range is taking place in Iran under the
direction of the Islamist theocrats.
The Islamist zealots ruling Iran for the past 30 years have undertaken a
systematic campaign of endangering and destroying the cultural sites of
pre-Islamic Iran, ignoring the numerous
petitions and pleas of the Iranian people.
For one, blatantly rejecting the repeated appeals of individuals and
organizations such as the
International Committee to Save the Archeological Sites of Pasargad,
the Islamic Republic proceeded with the construction of the
Sivand Dam which went into
operation on April 2007
by the order of
the ruling
Islamists’ point man, President Ahmadinejad.
What many experts have warned and feared has already come to pass.
The inevitable elevation of humidity from the Sivand Dam has given rise
to massive invasion of Cyrus the Great Mausoleum by lichen and fungi.
Cracks have started to appear on the stonework of tomb of King
Cyrus, humanity’s first author of the charter of human rights.
The
building of the Sivand Dam by the Islamist government was launched under
the pretext that it would be a boon for the farmers. Impartial experts,
including expert geologists from the University of Shiraz, have
countered with evidence to the exact opposite outcome. Farmers in the
area had worked diligently for centuries and habilitated the originally
salty soil. Water from the new dam is bound to make it the farmers’ bane
by returning the soil to salinity once again, experts warned.
In
order to discredit those who protested against constructing the ruinous
dam, the Islamic Republic’s Vice President Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, who
ironically heads the state culture and heritage organization, has
claimed that groups "opposing the Islamic Republic" are behind the
protests.
Mr. Rahim-Mashai who
was appointed as the director of ICHTHO after Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was
"elected” as the regime's new president said in a press conference in
March 2006 that he had never heard of the Sivand Dam or the Bolaghi
Valley. The
Pasargad Heritage Foundation has filed a complaint against Mr.
Mashai for a hearing on his intentional systematic endeavor to destroy
ancient cultural treasures of the Iranian people.
The destructive effects
of the Dam is also impacted the air quality of the area.
According to Amir-Teimur Khosravi the Mayor of Pasargadae, "the
level of humidity near the mausoleum of Cyrus the Great is so high that
none of the Pasargadae's residents have ever experienced it before.
There is constant flow of damp and humidity smells in the
Pasargadae plains that are coming from Bolaghi Gorge. In the
Southwest section of the mausoleum, which is considered the entrance to
the archaeological site, the subterranean waters have surfaced and
caused cracks to appear on the stonework.”
Khosravi continued,
"Pasargadae has always been renowned for its clean and pleasant weather,
but now, as a result of high levels of humidity produced from [the
artificial lake behind] the Sivand dam, the area suffers from a sultry
condition.”
Referring to the gorge,
"it is far from here," said one of the government’s functionaries at the
dam site, which is slowly filling up. "There will be no damage." People
in the provincial capital Shiraz—renowned as being the capital of poets
and beautiful roses, as well as for its imperial Persian ruins—have a
different opinion. They say the project may
increase humidity in the arid area near the city of Shiraz, which
they believe could damage the limestone mausoleum of Cyrus the Great.
From its inception, the
Islamic Republic has waged a systematic campaign of wiping out any and
all cultural heritage and even joyous pre-Islamic festivals of the
Iranian people: replacing Iranian’s traditional happy celebratory events
such as
Nowruz ,
Yalda, and many more with endless death-centered Islamic mourning.
The Islamists aim to obliterate the Persian antiquities as well as any
vestiges of the pre-Islamic Iran. They have put in charge inept puppets
as archeology experts so that it would justify their terrorist action
against Persian antiquities.
The illegitimate
government of the Islamic Republic of Iran is a quisling foreign entity
that has betrayed Iranian people, its tradition, its glorious
pre-Islamic achievements, and is incessantly working against Iran’s
national interest. Iran, under the stranglehold and machinations of
these parasites, has been transformed, in less than three decades, to
the lead perpetrator of all that is abhorrent to humanity.
Although the Islamic
Republic’s record speaks dismally for itself, there are numerous reasons
for its relentless campaign of cultural genocide. The Islamic regime's
decision to slowly destroy Cyrus the Great tomb is in part motivated by
the realization that the people revere King Cyrus for the just laws he
instituted as well as his emancipation of the Jews some 2500 years ago.
Hence, this benevolent king is despised by the Islamists for symbolizing
what are truly Iranian and anathema to Islamic credo, as well as keeping
the love of non-Islamic nationalism alive in the heart of the populace.
Under the guise of
development, the Islamic Republic has launched a comprehensive program
of obliterating any physical traces of Iran’s rich archeological sites.
A partial list of these acts is listed below.
*
Sahand Dam in East Azerbaijan
which will submerge the 6000-year-old Kul Tepe site. Archaeologists agree
that over ten ancient sites in the region, some from the fifth
millennium B.C. will be buried under the water, according to an official
of the East Azerbaijan Province Cultural Heritage and Tourism
Department.
* Alborz Dam in
Mazandaran province, which caused irreversible damage to the cultural
heritage of the eastern part of Mazandaran province.
*
Karun Dam in Khuzestan province is submerging the ancient sites of the Izeh region.
*
Mulla Sadra Dam to Drown 7000 Years of History. "Mehr Ali Farsi is
one of the most important archeological sites of Fars province.
Archeological excavations in this historical site could reveal many
unknown facts about the pre-historic period of Fars province. "Despite
the fact that this historical site had been identified before the
inundation of Mulla Sadra Dam, the authorities of the dam have neglected
the necessity for carrying out excavations in this area and started the
flooding of the dam in a very short time,” according to Azizollah Rezayi,
head of archeology team in Mehr Ali Farsi historical site.
*
Salman-e Farsi
Dam was
inundated in 2007, without the CHTHO’s permission. It flooded a
350-hectare Sassanid city, which had been inhabited since the pre-Achaemenid
era.
*
Destruction of one of the biggest historical sites in the Chahar-Mahal
Bakhtiari
province by the Islamic Republic Ministry of Road and Transportation. A
local archaeologist who wished to remain anonymous for his safety said:
"Israel should not be worried about the [Islamic] regime's threat of
wiping it off from the map; it is we [Iranians] who should be worried,
as the regime is determined to wipe us off of the map."
He added "everyday
this anti-Iranian regime is coming up with a new plot to destroy our
heritage. One day our heritage is being threatened by dam projects, the
next it’s road constructions. They claim these are development projects,
but if this is the case why is our heritage being destroyed in the
darkness of night and in secret - and why don't they sit down with the
cultural authorities to find a solution to carry out their so-called
development projects, and at the same time safeguard our national
heritage?"
*
45,000 years old Paleolithic site of Kaftarkhun, located in Iran’s
Isfahan province, has been completely annihilated to build a horse racing course while the eastern parts of this ancient
site have seen irreversible damage due to quarry blasting.
*
1000-hectare area of a historical site belonging to Parthian
dynastic era (248 BCE-224CE) in Khuzestan province has also fallen
victim to developmental constructions of the Islamic regime’s Hamidieh
Azad University in Hamidieh city.
* Tomb
of Firuzan (Abu-Lu'lu'ah) in Kashan destroyed,
in part to placate the Sunni Arabs. This Persian hero killed the Islam’s
third Caliph,
Umar ibn
al-Khattāb, avenging the death on thousands of Iranian by Omar’s Islamic
aggressors.
The
inanimate historical sites of the world are indeed living schools where
invaluable lessons are held in their repositories. Preserving, exploring
and studying these sites tell a great deal about humanity’s past, its
triumphs and defeat. Destroying these sites, no matter where they are in
the world is tantamount to the burning of libraries. Only truly
barbarians such as the bigoted Islamists fail to appreciate these
treasures that belong to the entire human family. It is the Islamists’
belief that any and all information, ideals and practices that fall
outside of Islam are void and must be eliminated.
It is the
imperative duty of all enlightened people to steadfastly counter the
relentless monolithic Islamic culturcide taking place in Iran or
wherever in the world the scourge of Islamism invades.