When visiting Iran, one of
the lasting impressions on you will be the enormous diversity of ethnic types.
These
are not to be found in one spot -the airport, for example- but will be seen
during your tour of Iran.
The
majority of Iranian ethnic types are descendants of the Aryan tribes whose
origins are lost in the
antiquity.
The Kurds, previously a fierce nomadic people, dwell in the western mountainous
regions of
Iran. Also inhabiting the western
mountainous regions are the semi nomadic Lurs, thought to be abori-
ginal
Iranians. Closely related and known as the Great Lurs until the 15th century,
are the Bakhtiari tribes
who
live in the Zagros mountains, west of Iran.
Ways
of life are changing. However, tribal dress, domestic tools, music, dances and
handicrafts, are
only
some of the points of interest of the nomadic way of life for the foreigner.
In
addition to ethnic diversity there is a variety of religions. The uninitiated
tourist may be astonished by the spirit of tolerance prevailing in this Islamic
country where more than 90% of the population are practically Shi'ah. The
non-Muslim visitor is
among the first to
benefit from this tolerant outlook:churches and temples belongingto the world's major religions
function freely. Mosques can usually be visited excepton Fridays and at certain hours of the
day devoted to
prayers.
Only cities of Qum,Mashad, and Ray are out of
bounds to non-Muslim visitors. The
latter
are never subjected to any kind
of ostracism.
In
the same officially- sponsored spirit of tolerance, minorities are completely
free to practice
their
religions: around Esther's tomb at Hamadan, a Jewish colony which settled in
Babylonian times steel lives there
in
full freedom. The Zoroastrians who
represent the astonishing survival of the early Aryans faith, still perpetuate
the
teachings
of Ahura Mazda and of great
philosopher Zoroaster. Several "Towers of Silence" are set on the
peaks of
mountains
between Yazd and Kerman, a region unfortunately remote and difficult to reach.
The
Armenians, with a different ethnic heritage, have maintained their
Indo-European linguistic identity. They are
concentrated
in Tehran, Isfahan and Azarbaijan, and are engaged primarily in commercial and
technical pursuits.
The
Armenian church and fortified monastery of St. Thaddeous in northern Azarbaijan
are not only excellent places
for
excursions but also a rallying-point for the thousands of Christian pilgrims
(in July). There are more than two hundred thousand Armenians in Iran. Their
biggest community is in the Jolfa district of Isfahan which has thirteen
parishes, a cathedral and an "AsianCatholicMuseum".
Sunday Mass at St. Savior Cathedral is an unexpected event in the heart of a
Muslim nation.
Nearly 25% of the nation
speaks Azari, a Turkish-sounding language. These are largest minority of the
country. Apart from Azaris, other ethnic groups are the Qashqais in the Shiraz area to the east of the Persian Gulf, Kurds to the
south of Azarbaijan in western Iran,
the Turkmans occupying much of the east of Mazandaran and Khorasan provinces in
the northeast, Lurs and Bakhtiaris in the west, and Baluchis in the southeastern
part of the country. Other ethnic groups such as Semites, including Jews,
Assyrians, and Arabs constitute only a small percentage of the population. The
Jews, like Armenians, have retained their ethnic, linguistic, and religious
identity and have clustered in the largest cities. The Assyrians are
concentrated in the northwest; and the Arabs live primarily in the Persian Gulf islands and Khuzestan.
You will also find that the
harsh, but often equally cheerful practicalities of daily life overlay the
fantasies and mysteries that the Western imagination has attached to the idea
of Iran.
On the whole, ethnic strife isn't too much of a problem in Iran, the
government being a lot more tolerant of minorities than many in the region.
Iran is a land of different nationalities,
peoples, tribes, and religions, with a multi millennial history. But there is
one Iran.
Here you won't come across two feuding brothers, rather, you will see a deep
relationship between brothers and sisters. That is why, after an eight-year
heroic resistance against Iraqi aggression of Iran
in 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, Iranians are doing their best to modernize their
country, and it is with this in mind that the foreign visitor boards a plane
for Tehran. The
fact is that when one looks at Iran's
7,000-year old history -or its modern newspapers- one will find that such
diversities have always acted as a unifying factor and created an attractive
national landscape as beautiful as the Iranian carpet designs.
Extraordinary changes are
being carried out at an increasingly fast rate. The least well-informed visitor
is able to notice this for himself. Increasingly
eloquent testimony of a new renaissance now supplement traditional tourist
values: antique vestiges, monuments representing the great periods of artistic
development and well-preserved crafts.
Tourism in Iran has always
centered on its towns. And the attraction of these towns is enhanced by the
interest provoked by the discovery of a nation in full progress, building its
own future.
Naturally it is in the cities
that the movement is most noticeable. It is reflected by a proliferation of new
buildings: factories, schools, universities, government offices, hospitals,
hotels, etc. . Open spaces are being cleared by municipalities and town
planners to improve the flow of modern traffic, to facilitate access to
monuments, mosques and palaces. Flower-beds and fountains appear at
cross-roads, gardens and parks are open to the public. at night, bridges,
squares, palaces and minarets are floodlit. Roads are being improved:
boulevards, avenues and diversion roads are being built; new street lighting is
being installed and existing lighting improved. As a sign of the times, paid
parking lots are now being made available in most towns.
Tehran, the capital since 1795 AD, takes the
lead, but all provincial towns are also participating in the movement towards
modernization. Although most buildings are utilitarian, this does not exclude
esthetic research.
There are about one
million nomads in modern Iran,
extending from the border of Turkistan to the warm waters of the Persian Gulf. Most of these tribes, the Kurds, the Lurs,
the Bakhtiaris, the Guilaks (on the Caspian Coast), the Baluchis, are the
original invaders who, in the first millennium BC, swept down from central Asia
and settled in various parts of the Iranian plateau. Most of the tribes of
central Iran are from pure Aryan stock, while other tribes such as the Arabs of
Khuzestan and Khorasan, the Turkish tribes of Quchan, the Qashqai tribes, the
Shahsavan and Afshar tribes of Azarbaijan and the Turkmans are remnants of
races that have passed through Iran at various periods of history.
Today there are over a hundred different tribes, each with its own dialect,
picturesque dress, dwelling-place and chief. The most important tribes are as
follows.
Afshars
and Shahsavans:They
have their summer quarters on the slopes of the Sabalan mountain at 4,821
meters and their winter quarters are in the hot plains of Moghan, near the
Caspian coast.
Baluchi Tribes:Their language is pure Persian and
they are scattered in a vast area from the Pakistan border to the Iranian
deserts. The Baluchis consist of many different smaller tribes, making their
living out of camel herding and agriculture.
Kurds: The Kurdish people of Iran occupy a
vast area from the northern most borderline of Azarbaijan to the hot plain of
Khuzestan. They speak an old Persian dialect and consist of many tribes of
which the chief branches are:
The northern Kurds of Maku and northwestern
Azarbaijan;
The Mahabad Kurds, dwelling in the area between LakeOrumieh and the mountains of
Kurdestan proper;
The Kurds of Sanandaj with subdivisions in Paveh,
Saqqez, and the Iraqi border;
The Kurds of Kermanshah, from the Zagross mountains
to the Khuzestan plain.
Bakhtiaris:They dwell in the high grounds of Zard
Kuh mountain extending to the south of Isfahan,
with winter quarters on the Khuzestan plain. Their clothing, with trousers
extraordinarily wide, round hat and short tunic, is reminiscent of the Arsasid
(Parhtian) period, 200 BC-280 AD.
Guilaks:These tribes are among the most original
tribes of Iran, speaking a
pure Persian dialect and dwelling in the maritime
provinces of Iran.
Their number is dwindling, but one can still see the remnants of these stoic
tribes in Talish.
Turkmans:They descend from the Mongols and are
powerfully built, with high cheek bones and slanting eyes. They dwell on the
vast flat lands of Turkmansahra, which is situated between the CaspianCoast and Khorasan mountains.
Qashqais:These Turkish-speaking tribesmen dwell
among the high mountains of Fars. Their dress
is almost the same as that of the Bakhtiaris, except for the hat which is a
form of tribord resembling Napoleonic headgear.
Arab Tribes:These tribes are scattered along the Persian Gulf coast and the hot plain of Khuzestan. Their
most important clans are Ka'ab, Tamim and Khamis. A small population of Arab
tribes, descendants of early emigrants, live in eastern Khorasan near Bojnurd
and in some places in Fars.
Lur Tribes:They are probably the most intact tribes
of Iran,
retaining their robustness, virility, and tall stature. They are mostly
cultivators and shepherds and occupy the high grounds of Lurestan. The Lurs are
thought to be a division of the ancient Kurds, both tribes being considered
true descendants of the Medes. The Mamasani Lurs dwelling in western mountains
of Fars are one of the most important clans.
Main Office: Sogol
Tehran Tour & Travel Co.Ltd.East
Wing No.5, 2nd Floor, No.251, North Sohreverdi
Ave.Tehran, Iran.Tel:
0098-21-88849083 to 85 // 0098-21-88513226 to 28Fax:
00980-21-88813367 E-mail:
info@sogol.comWeb:
http://www.sogol.comAbroad Offices:Toll
Free Number : 800-830-9212 C/O Mr. Afshin
SherkatCanada: sogolca@earthlink.net
or info@acevacation.ca .USA: usa@sogol.com C/O
Ms. Nooshin SherkatINDIA: India@sogol.comC/O Ms.Shirin Sherkat