hamedan,
an
eclectic mix of 2,500 years of history
22 October 2007
Hamedan is one of those cities where you can
stroll through 2,500 years of history in a single afternoon. Cuneiform
tablets of Darius I and Xerxes I proclaiming their kingship, Esther's tomb,
Avicenna's 11th Century mausoleum, and a European style street plan with
elegant squares designed in 1929 by German engineer Karl Frisch make up the Hamedan of today. And amidst this eclectic mix of history live a people
with a traditionally deep seated respect for knowledge and the sciences.
Education is very highly regarded in Iran and literacy is around 80
percent. More than 60 percent of university students are women.
The center of Hamedan is the huge Imam
Khomeini square from which the streets fan out in a cartwheel style. 19th
Century European buildings and Victorian posts line the the avenues.
Surprised? I was. Hamedan offers numerous interesting insights to the Iranian
story, revealing facets to this country not much known.
For instance, the Jewish connection.
Esther's tomb in Hamedan is the most important Jewish pilgrimage site in
Iran. Jews believe that the sarcophagus contains the body of Esther, the
Jewish wife of Xerxes I, who was responsible for organizing the first
Jewish emigration to Persia in the 5th Century BC. At one time Hamedan was
a melting pot for various faiths. Today there are less than 50 Jews in the
city, practicing their faith in the miniscule synagogue attached to the
site.
The mausoleum of BuAli Sina is Hamedan's
city icon. Better known to the west as Avicenna, BuAli Sina was a famous
philosopher and physician in 11th Century Iran, having practiced medicine virtually from
childhood. During his lifetime he produced around 250 books, including the
medical encyclopedia Canon Medicinae which was used in European
universities till the 17th Century.
The parks are crowded with chadored women
and young men in
Elvis Presley hairstyles holding hands and romancing
each other. Elderly gentlemen in western suits play traditional dice games
as they while away their hours whilst scores of hejab clad, bespectacled
young women race through the streets, on their way to the university, holding on to
their textbooks and notes and dreams for their future.
Hamedan honestly surprised me. Here was a
well-developed liberal city in a primarily remote province where a gentle,
educated and cultured people were going about their life peacefully,
following their own dreams quietly. It was hard to reconcile this vision
of Iran with the one that was being continually fed to the world by the
western media of an angry, war hungry, fundamentalist nation.
And my favourite memory of Hamedan is going
to be
that of my hotel room. After the red room in Zanjan and the nunnery in Takab, my
room is capitalistic, materialistic, decadent luxury with its double bed
and silk spread decorated with stars and moons. I plan to sleep like a
starfish tonight without fear of falling off the bed in case I turn over
in my sleep. Arms and legs and hair outstretched. Heaven indeed. Stars and
moon included.
 
The Tomb of Avicenna, Iran's
most celebrated philosopher and physician (11th Century AD) and the writer
of Canon Medicinae.


 
Hamedan's main Khomeini square and gardens.
 

Tomb of Esther, the Jewish
wife of Xerxes I. Hamedan was once a melting pot of different faiths
including a sizeable Jewish community. Today there are less than 50 Jews
remaining.

 

The two Achaemenid stone
tablets of Darius I and Xerxes I in cuneiform script, dating back 2,500 years
ago, are nestled on
the mountains a few kilometers away from Hamedan. The site is a popular
tourist spot.
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