Mercury,
January/February 2003 Table of Contents
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The
Moon rises over the ruins of Persepolis. Courtesy of Oshin
D. Zakarian. |
by
Mike Simmons
Astronomy
is alive and well in this ancient land of contrasts and contradictions.
High
atop the ancient royal Bahram Palace, a group of 50 people busily
prepare for the evening's activities as twilight fades. Most are
young women in dark, concealing Islamic attire. At the end of a
60-kilometer drive over unpaved roads through the surrounding desert,
Bahram Palace is in northern Iran's Kavir (Desert) National Park,
150 kilometers southeast of the capital city, Tehran. It is the
site's isolation that attracts this group, which has gathered on
a schedule dictated by the phases of the Moon. But while a lunar
calendar is used for religious purposes in the Islamic Republic
of Iran, it is the search for dark skies that brings this group
here on this New Moon weekend.
Star
parties and other astronomical activities take place in Iran just
as they do in Western countries, though with accommodations to cultural
differences and economic realities. A storied land of history and
natural diversity, Iran was known as Persia from the time of its
founding 2,500 years ago until the early 20th century,
when the first Pahlavi Shah renamed it for its geographical location
in order to better represent the many cultures that inhabit this
crossroads of civilizations. The Iranian Plateau -- a label derived
from the name of its first known settlers, the Aryans of central
Asia -- rises from the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf, through deserts
and mountains, to the 4,000-meter peaks of Iran's north, with rainforests
beyond abutting the Caspian Sea.
Repeatedly
settled, traversed, and invaded -- and expanding into other lands
when the Persian Empire was the world's greatest -- Iran is an amalgam
of Asian, European, and African peoples and cultures. A land of
contrasts and contradictions, the visitor to Iran is confronted
with a bewildering and enthralling mix of old and new, traditional
and modern, religious and secular. Iran is a place where Islam is
still referred to as the "new" religion -- brought to
Persia by invading Arab armies in the 7th century AD
to largely (but not completely) replace Zoroastrianism. Iranians
embrace modern, Western ideas while retaining proud traditions that
predate Western civilization. Iranian society's ability to incorporate
new ideas, cultures, and people may be the key to the country's
longevity. Whether Alexander's army or Genghis Khan's Golden Horde,
a new religion or new ideas, Persian society has always integrated
and adapted them to produce a new and unique society that not only
endures but thrives.
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