Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Farsi notes

Farsi notes

I go  raftu
 I am going   Miravan
I want to go mikhaham (ke) bear am
I want to go be istgah otobus to the bus stop
                                             Gatar to the train station 
Sunshine. Aftab
Moonlight. Mahtab
Shadow. Sayeh
Teshne. Thirsty
Goshne. Hungry 
Mi khan am chili bokloram. I want to eat something
Mikhoram. I am eating
I want to drink something. Mi khan am chili benusham 
Nush! Prost!
Nushejan! Guten appetite
The. Food is very tasty.  Ghaza kheyli khoshmaze ast.
Taste. Mazeh
 The house is beautiful. Kane ghashang / Ziba ast
Traditional restaurant. Sofrekhane
Directions:st
Straight mustaghim 
Chap left
Right rast
Balance up
Payin down
Biya berin beravim.  let's go
How chegune 
What Che 
Shoji
Where Koja 
Wohin be Koja 
Who're az Koja 
Ich komme aus Deutschland  man az alman umadan 
I want to go to Yazd . Man khan am be Yazd beravam.
The sun gorshid
Moon mah 
Happiness shadi 
Farsi gerefti.-  Did you learn Farsi? 
Kam Farsi baladam. - I know a little Farsi 
Hamas cheez  khob ast.- Everything is alright.


  • Farsi notes 2

    now I write you farsi too=alan be farsi ham minevisam
  • yes I can help you=bale man mitavanam be shoma komak konam
  •  I checked this weblog=man in weblog ra check kardam
  • there are some miswritings =chand neveshteye eshtebah ham vojood darad
you know farsi alphabet? =shoma horoofe farsi ra mishnasid?
man horoofe arabi ra mishnasam= I know the Arabic alphabet.
 
bale,,horoof haman alefba hast: Yes, the script is the same like the Arabic alphabet?
 

·        alan= now

·         minevisam= I write
neveshtan = to write
 neveshtam = wrote

·        mitavanam=can?

·         komak konam= help?

 

·         man horoofe arabi ra mishnasam

horoofe= alphabet?

mishnasid= you know- how is that different from gerefti?


  • neveshtan=to write
  • Komak only)=help
  •  can do=mitavanam anjam daham
  •  kardam=did
  • chand=how much
  •  eshtebah=wrong
  • bale,,horoof haman alefba hast: Yes, the script is the same like the Arabic alphabet?

how is that=chetori hast?

do you take?=gerefti?


kheyli khubi hast ama man bishtor mikhaham = Very good but I want more



Man dar chayhaneh hastam= I am in a café

Dar=in

Man yokohama hastam= I am in Yokohama


Man daram, to dari, ou dare= I have, you have, he/she has

Fahmidam= I understand

 

Traveling to Iran again 2013 - Iran Air


From the moment I lined up at the Iran air counter I felt more comfortable. I immediately met people who readily smiled, who were polite, open and sensitive, so different from the Chinese who made me think of the drab culture of communist  states where the concept of "service" may be almost unheard of., and work is performed in an sullen way.almost all the Chinese that I observed emitted this distinct vibe of being down to earth, materialist, atheist and physical. A country of peasants? 
Iranians on the other hand make me think of the moon and the stars, poetry, intelligence, and some of the women I saw were dressed like sisters of Scheherazade . Their rich, wavy dark hair tied up on the back of their head and further enhanced by a thick band of ruffled fabric draped around it like a wreath, enlarging the volume of their bun considerably. Over this they draped their scarf, I had a chance to observe the whole process of how this was done as many of them only put on their headscarves when they got ready to board the Iran air plane. For some the scarf would hang from this pile of hair on the back of their head, exposing their entire head, most of their hair, the line of their checks and jawbones,the chiffony scarf loosely looping around their slender neck. Others draped their scarf over their hair piled almost on the top of their head, a silken veil enhancing their exotic faces and moreover they were dressed in colorful oriental clothes, a tunic with tight Indian style pants, they positively reminded me of Genie, the US series starring the young and beautiful Barbara Eden whose character, I now realised, must have been modeled exactly on these women. They had it all, but for the pink bolero and the semitransparent harem pants. These women sat gracefully in the airport lounge with a slightly sulking expression, like a slightly withdrawn passive beauty, and they had the typical nose jobs too that are so popular among young nubile women in Iran , one of them still had the bandage on her nose from a recent operation. In Iran girls proudly and unashamedly walk the streets with their bandaged newly shaped downsized and straightened nose, which seems to be done in preparation for marriage, and every time I look at them I wish they would leave it, as they often have beautifully curved noses, in a line a Western girl could never achieve, no matter what her genes are. But lo, they want to look like us!
The men were often friendly and helpful, one helping me check in and offering to give me his card so I can contact him if I have any questions while in Iran.
Another one giving me advice what to get my hosts as a present when I asked him. The most popular gift in Iran is  perfume, he told me, and the most popular perfume among Iranians is Chanel Blue. I did not quite buy Chanel, but buy perfume I did, hoping that the husband would be content with smelling the fragrance on his wife or daughter. 
Then another young Iranian man sat down near me, he smelled of beer, told me he lived in London and asked if I too was headed for Iran. I wondered if he thought if I was waiting at the wrong gate but he was just curious why I was going there. I answered :"Iran is the only country where everyone asks me why I go there, including the Iranians themselves. What on earth do you want in Iran?they ask me, it is sad, really" I told him, and he agreed. 
Before at the check-in the other man had told me that now, just four days ago, the president had changed. Ahmedinejad was out and Rouhani was in, and now hopefully everything would get better. His company used to do business with Mercedes Benz in Germany until four years ago , and he had been to my country many times, he told me, but the sanctions changed all that. I wished him well for the future and said, yes, I know the whole country seemed really happy when Rouhani won the elections. He said, it would be easier for me too now to travel in Iran.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

By nightbus across the country to Esfahan

After five happy days in Sanandaj, the last of which I spent taking several minibuses and finally a taxi for the last stretch to Suleiman-e-takht, a Zoroastrian temple that shows the elements of water and fire, I finally got on the bus to Esfahan. Edris and his friend took me to the bus stop by taxi and waved goodbye.
I was in for a very long haul. Something like...11 hours? I do not remember clearly. I had by now somehow learned to sleep sitting up, on the big soft reclining seats of these night buses which were meant to save me mainly time, since arriving at some ungodly hour in a new city did not necessarily prevent you from having to pay for the major part of the night behind you that you did not spend in that hotel...For saving time it worked, though.
All flights in Iran depart from Teheran, so to get from one city to another inside this vast country you always have to fly back to Tehran first and take a flight from there. I did not want to do that, a: because it was expensive (though not much, we are talking of 50 Euros here) and b: because I was determined to avoid Tehran. I wanted to travel cross country to the smaller beautiful cities of Iran.
   Next to me on the bus was a young woman. Not dressed in black this time, just a headscarf, blouse and jeans. I looked at her bronze-coloured skin, the narrow delicately curved nose, the long eyes, the slender body with the slightly angled lines- a Kurdish girl. When the bus stopped at a highway restaurant, I asked her to help me talk to the cashier for buying a meal ticket. She insisted on paying for my dinner. She looked like she was only 27, and she was a sports teacher, I asked her.
After that late dinner, we both curled up on our seats and went to sleep.
In the morning we arrived in Esfahan. It was not as early as in Sanandaj, more like 7.30 or 8.00am.
I had chosen to stay at the Dibai house. There are several traditonal Persian houses transformed into hotels in Esfahan, and this seemed the friendliest and the most reasonable. Still, incomparably more expensive than all the other places I stayed in in Iran, but also the most comfortable.
It was the first and the last time I had EVERYTHING, slippers, towels, soap, crisp clean sheets, a shelf for my clothes, beside lamps, a tissue box on my bedstead, a table , a chair, rugs on the floor, and even my own courtyard with a bench to sit on! And wifi. But more about this later.
I told the taxi driver to take me to the Dibai, and luckily, he knew the place. Because the Dibai is not that easy to find. It is far away from all the other hotels, in the other end of town, behind the bazaar , in one of those narrow alleyways with clay walls on both sides. The taxi driver dropped me off at a minaret. The hotel was nowhere to be seen. He pointed me in the right direction and unloaded my suitcase. Here I was. I think, I actually called the hotel from my mobile to ask where they were. She told me to make my way around a couple corners and through an archway and there would be a door....
Yes, there was a shiny wooden door inside the clay wall. I was let in and the doorway led into a different totally unexpected world , insivible from the outside:
there were courtyards and more courtyards, almost horizontal stairs winding up and down over the different levels of the floors, dfrom one courtyard into another, with large flower pots on the eway and little doors going off on the side leading into some cooler shady rooms half underground...



The mananger turned out to be a young Spanish woman and she spoke perfect English, yahoo!!
My room was beautiful. A haven of peace, with an old stone floor, coordinated shades of red and orange, some rattan furniture, a low, comfortable double bed. And a state of the art bathroom, spotlessly clean and new. I loved it.
I put my lemon yellow suitcase down under the lightly curtained window on the cool stone floor, took some orange juice and sat myself down on one of the two wooden benches on the small courtyard, found an ashtray at the end of the bench, lit a cigarette and relaxed. Ahhh.....wonderul, the feeling of tranquility and absolute safety inside these thick ancient walls that surrounded our lodging like bastion, making us completely invisible to the outside world.
After I recovered somewhat, I ventured outside.
I took a photo of the street sign so I would be able to remember it in case I got lost.


I needed to buy something (was it more cigarettes?) but I soon discovered that also in Esfahqn they seemed to have the same system like in Tabriz: all the shops in the dusty little street that the maze inside which my hotel was exited towards specialised in the same thing: shampoo. And diapers. Soap maybe. But cigarettes? Moreover, once again, nobody spoke any English. They did though somehow understand the word "cigarette", maybe I said "sigara", trying to apply my modestly workable Turkish, and I finally did find a shop who sold me some.
Then I looked at the map inside my Lonely planet guide and went on my way towards the bazaar. I ended up on Hafez Street. Every Iranian city seems to have three street names: Hafez, Ferdosi, and Imam Khomeini. The two great poets and the Ayatollah, the father of the Islamic revolution. the last ones had their names changed from something else that was in place before. Even the square and the biggest mosque in Esfahan have been given the name of the Imam though people still tenjd to acll them by their old, original names.
Hafez Street was only slightly wrong, and I managed to trace my way back to where I wanted to go: the bazaar and Imam square, the most important place in town.

Esfahan is a city where they have several things called by superlatives. "The biggest square of the world", "the most beautiful mosque in the world"...How big their world is and whether this is true,. nobody knows....Imam Square surely is a huge sprawling affair where you almost need a telescope to properly see from one end to the other.


 It is surrounded by the bazaar, which is located inside the arcades one walks through to circle the bazaar.
At one end was the waqy to my hotel, at the other end the Imam mosque, on one side a palace, and on the other side, a colourful sparkling world of shops that sold blue enameled vases and ceramics, blown glass in all colours, bronze and silver vessels, miniature paintings, waterpipes, and , of course, Persian carpets.



 






 




 

 

There were two fabulous dreamily tradional restaurants that served all the famous tradional Iranian dishes from quince stew to kebab.


And then there was the "most beautiful mosque in the world".. a smallish mosque covered in blue mozaique, with a curved entrance that led into the shady interior that had sunrays playing on the walls that shone through windows covered in geometric patterns, invisible from the outside. This mosque was what a great Sultan had built for his women, so that his wives could go and pray, undisturbed, vanish through the curved arcway into the peaceful quiet inside, unseen.


 




 

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Trip to stunningly beautiful Howraman- where even Iranians fear to go ..; )

A poem about Hawraman by the famous Kurdish poet Goran:
A Tour in Hawraman
"A mountain mass, wild and defiant,
 Has gathered blue heaven in its embrace;
The mantle of its peak is brilliant white snow,
 Dark with forest are its silent dales.
Waters imprisoned in their tunnels
Flow on, nor cease their windings round the hills;
The roar and hiss of foam, the shrill song of the brook:
Lullabies for grief in the solitude of night.
The narrow footpath, feeling its way from tunnel to tunnel,
Throws the wayfarer into anxiety without end;
On the track rocky stairways, on the side great boulders,
That heaven has not yet sent rolling down.
 Now up hill, now down hill,
 The bitter and sweet of the wayfarer’s world."

Howraman, I heard, is a legendary place, the heart of Kurdistan and holds endless fascination for the Kurd. This is where part of the Zoroastrian religion is, where people understand the true meaning of the Fravahar, "Fra wahr" in Gorani Kurdish, the winged human that is the emblem of the Zoroastrian religion and that is found on walls, on the roof of fire temples and on books about Kurds....This is where Kurdish women can leisurely walk the street in their traditional Kurdish dress, where men wear salwar trousers and headcovers and beards....where the music videos come from that show women dancing and men singing and musicians beating the def, the large banded Kurdish frame drum...

"
People who hail from the mountainous province of Kurdistan, the portion of a non-existent country that falls in Iran (and Iraq, Syria and Turkey)...Legend has it that king Solomon banished five hundred mischievious djinns from his kingdom, flung by his wrath into the zigzag terrain of the Zagros mountains, a land so remote that the powerful king could forget all about the trouble makers. The crafty djinns, finding themselves lonely in the mountains, flew across into Europe where they chose five hundred beautiful virgins, with skin pale as alabaster and hair like flax, and transported them back to their new home where their union begat the Kurds, a people famed for their ferocity, their pale eyes and their hospitality; a race given to dancing and loving and fighting, as strong and stubborn as their beloved mountains. Legends ad myths continue to cling to the slopes of the jagged peaks that form this land, and the Kurds wear their mythical status like a comfortable coat, always ready to slip on when the political climate demands." (from: Kamin Mohammadi, The Cypress Tree)

And this is where I wanted to go.
I took a bus out of Sanandaj to the bus terminal, then boarded a minibus towards Paweh and Mariwan.
Again, as before, also here the driver arranged for me to sit next to a woman all dressed in black. Not quite a tchador but a voluminous overcoat, long skirt and black headscarf over her raven black hair. She too knew some English, and soon began to ask me about my journey. When I told her I was on my way to Howraman vally, she asked me to come to her home and get off at Nigel. I opened my Lonely planet book and found that Nigel was located right at the entrance to Howraman. She urgeed me to come and said that one of the four existing original copies of the qr'an is kept inside a mosque there and that I must come and see it. I saw no reason why not to and happily agreed to get off with her.
We walked to her house, made of grey stone, behind a wall, with a small yard. Her children were expecting her, a little girl of about 6 and a fine young lad of 12. Just like my beloved friend Sia had told me, she went into her bedroom and immediately pulled off her cumbersome black clothes, folded them (I guess), she did not quite toss them as Sia said they all do the moment they get home, and changed into something much more colourful, a flowery suit of blouse and pants.
Then she went about her housework. I have never seen someone quite so efficient and industrious as her, her quick fingers moved deftly over her kitchen counter, she went out and got some vegetables from her yard and a room near the shower where she kept her cucumbers and tomatoes, she clambered with bpots and pans, water started boiling on the stove and every minute she did not have to attend to her cooking, she grabbed some other tool and went about dusting and tidying and swatting at stray insects, and talked to her children. The boy spoke quite workable English that he had learned in school, and was talking to me about my plans. The little girl , her name was Sara, took me by the hand and went into the yard with me, to a box. She carefully opened the lid and gently took out a chick and sat it on her hand. She told me with a proud happy smile that this chick was her own, her pet. I took a photo of her with her little chick on her outstretched hand.


After a while lunch was ready and we ate a stew of tomatoes, potatoes and meat.
Shanaz , the mother, suggested that I stay at her house and spend the night. I was getting concerned as it was getting later and later and told her that I really wanted to see Howraman vallay today. Concern and sadness spread on her face and she said, there was no bus now, what would I do? I asked if she could maybe get me a car to drive me through the valley? Her face brightened, she said of course and went to her telephone to call the local taxi driver.
While we were waiting for the taxi to come, her son took me to the local, small and modern looking mosque, which did, however, contain an enormous  handwritten holy book locked into a metal-protected glass case. One of the four copies of the qr'an that must be existing in Iran or maybe in the entire Middle East, I did not know.
I wondered how many people come here to see this qr'an?
Today, almost 2 years later, I asked an Iranian girl about this qr'an and she said:"We know they are there but we do not talk about it..." It must mean, that the qr'an has been changed.... another Persian friend told me some time ago that the Ottoman sultan collected all the copies of the qr'an, burned them and wrote a new version....Maybe we will never know unless one day a scholar ventures out to the small town of Nigel and compares this ancient copy with what we have now....

The children and I went back to Shanaz' house, and after a while the driver arrived. Shanaz had told me his price and I am sure, I probably paid less than most tourists ever manage, since this was a locally hired car, arranged by someone from the same village.
My driver wore the Kurdish salwar trousers and moustache. He looked strong, dependable, calm and he did not speak a word of English. How lucky I was that Shanaz could explain to him what I was trying to do: he should take me into Howraman valley, drive all the way through the mountains to Howraman e Takht, and then on to Marivan.
I got into the car with him, taking a seat in the back and he started driving. We were on a mountain road, gravelly but reasonably well paved, and there was almost nobody else to be seen. He kept driving and I kept thinking:"How lucky I am to have a driver who I can trust, and a friend who knows where I am and who will wait for the driver to return to the village."
The landscape became more and more dramatic, wild, rugged, wide and indominable, like the soul of the Kurd. And mine.....I loved to be here.

 
 

The landscape grew more and more beautiful and I wanted to start shooting more photos. I told the driver to stop, he did not understand. I pointed towards the camera in my hand and he motioned for me to roll down the window or something. But I wanted him to stop. I did not speak any Persian nor Sorani or Hewrami Kurdish to make him understand. He kept driving, I kept trying to shoot photos but the gorgeous landscape kept swishing by. After about the fifth try I somehow, using hands and facial expressions, I got him to understand what I wanted. He stopped the car, I praised him and expressed my delight. He said:"Ah, STOP!" 'Stop' was his first English word that he had understood and learned now, and he was enormously proud of himself. For the whole rest of the drive he would sometimes look at me, say :"Stop?" and if I nodded, he'd stop the car and let me get out to take pictures. 
The road wound through moutains, the rugged rock surfaces grew higher and higher, it was stuning, I had never seen anything like it in my whole life. Mountain walls shooting up on both sides of the road, our way disappearing out of sight between them, wild flowers, grasses, and views.....wow!



Finally the rock surfaces grew so steep, so unlike anything I had ever seen before that I wondered how they had ever managed to build this road into the mountains. They must have used dynamite just to break a way wide enough...and this remote place was where the Kurds lived. Though there was still noone to be seen far and wide, in fact, we had not seen anybody for the past 45 minutes, and before that one two, three cars, the whole way.
This landscape did something to me, it was breathtaking, my heart alternately contracted in awe of it and expanded at the sight of this enormous freedom. It was truly dramatic and I thought, this must be why the Kurds are so indominable, they grow up surrounded by these sights., this is their land....


We entered these wilder and wilder looking mountain paths, driving between two enormous rough rockfaces that made you wonder how they ever managed to build a road here, and how they moved around before they had that road? The landscape was so dramatic, it made my heart throb in my chest and almost took my breath away.
Finally we came out on top on a mountain pass, green slope dropping down on the side of the road, more mountains visible in the distance with the late afternoon sunrays shimmering on them.
I thought:"This must be Howramane takht..." The road turned and swerved gently into a valley, hidden deep between the mountain slopes, far away from any other Iranian civilisation, tucked away in a nook between rock surfaces that protected it. "So this is the heart of Kurdistan..." I thought, "I wonder how many people have made it into here..."
The car slowed and we were now at the beginning of a village street, overhung with vines. A single line of scattered houses on each side, and there were women walking on this street, in colourful dresses that I never saw before or after, anywhere in Iran.
They were walking leisurely along the road, sitting buy the side of the street, and chatting in the afternoon sun. .




We drove down the road and the thing I noticed most strongly was how the Kurds could live their own lifestyle here, unfettered by demands from the Mullahs to dress in black, wear tchadors....they were wearing anything they wanted, Kurdish dress in the brightest most vibrant colours, some of them in shining fabrics...an old man sitting by the road dressed in Kurdish costume of salwar and shirt and a waist band wrapped around the middle...little boys playing by the side of the road...the sun shining gently on their life in the late afternoon...
The car rolled through their village and then the road widened again. We drove over the mountain pass on a long widing road, the sunrays visible over the mountain range. I wondered if we would be caught in the dark here, with no light far and wide..but we were approaching Marivan.
Finally we left the mountainous nature reserve of Howraman and the car rolled onto a gravelly parking lot and stopped. It was 7.30pm and dusk cast it's the first shadows. The last bus was gone. But there were some cars and I was welcomed to join a "servis", a shared so called "service taxi" with two Iranian men that would take us all back to Sanandaj as we split the price between us.
We left and now went down the normal road, the shortest way back to Sanandaj.
Darkness fell and settled over the trees and hills surrounding us and the moon rose.
On the way the car stopped at a restaurant where all got off and had dinner.


The men were kind and polite, dressed in business clothes. They barely spoke any English but one sat with me outside on one of the "takht", platforms covered in red patterned kilim carpets, looking onto the greenery and trees lit by street lanterns and the lights from the small restaurant while the other one went inside and ordered food for us. They even invited me to dinner and would not let me pay for my food.
Then we got back into the car and went on the most romantic drive through the mountains rising on both sides of the road with the midnight blue night sky stretching over us like a silken veil out of 1001 nights, covered in thousands of sparkling stars and I could almost hear Scheherazade whispering her tales into the night of Persia which now looked like one of the most stunningly beautiful, romantic countries on earth.










 

Iranian Kordestan, such a friendly sunny place- Sanandaj Beyanit bash!

Here I am again, after a long break, trying to catch up to the present before I pay these beloved places a second visit.....:)

So- I asked the hotel to call me a taxi to the bus terminal, I managed that with the help of a translator I recruited from among the Iranian guests, I think....do not remember. The taxi took so long to come that I was just about ready to go out on the road and find one myself but he finally did arrive and took me to the large bus terminal of Tabriz. I bought a ticket for the bus to Sanandaj, down the road South into Kordestan, which was going to be an all night trip. Found another Iranian fast food store that sold kebab and some sort of shawarma and then it was already time to leave.
The conductor looked around the bus and found me an aisle seat next to a young lady in black. By the time we were half the way down to Saqiz it turned out that she, surprisingly, spoke a little English. She started asking me questions, simple questions, and after chatting for a while, she started treating me like a friend and invited me to her home. She told me, she would get off at Saqiz, and tried to persuade me to get off with her and spend the night at her house and continue my trip tomorrow. This i did not really want to do but I realy liked her kindness which I later came to know, is quite common in Kordestan.
At some point during the journey I lost the pin that held my headscarf together and got really worried how I would manage without it falling off (which is forbidden, basically, in Iran, though nobody ever says a word when this happens) . She grappled inside her black little handbag and sisterly handed me a broach of hers, silver with a few rhinestones, and said, I could keep it.
Then we stopped on the highway near Saqiz and she got off.
The bus started again and we drove through an area that had a wide quiet highway, lined with fruit and vegetable and fruit stores, and a strange creation of neon lights in the middle, a fantasy tree in red, with blooming flowers, all made of neon tubes. I wondered if this was considered "art" or "sculpture" in modern Iran, or whether it was simply a sentimental way to illuminate an intersection.
We pulled into a restaurant area where we could all buy tickets for Ottoman style food (kebab variations, of course) and softdrinks. By this time it was almost midnight.
Then we got back on the bus and drove towards Sanandaj. I was getting tired after this long journey sitting up, and after that exasperating hotel in Tabriz where almost noone spoke English but everybody talked to me in an incomprehensible dialect of what they said was "Turkish".
I had called the most expensive hotel in Sanandaj, Lonely planet said, this would cost a steep 20 $, because I felt reckless enough to splurge and just get some sleep and some comfort among people who spoke a language I could understand. We arrived at 5 in the morning. I unboarded, and found a taxi with a friendly looking old Kurd in it. He took me to said hotel but lo- all the staff was asleep on couches and chairs in the lobby, and when one of them did open the door he told me, the price was now 32$. (2.7 million rial instead of 2) I was upset, he ignored the fact that I had made a reservation, had been told a price, and when I did not give up, told me nonchalantly:"Anyway, you have to check out at 12noon and pay the whole night, so I think, too expensive for you." which is the Oriental way of pointing someone towards the door. i know this from Japan and Turkey already.
Now it was going on 6am and I was really tired. The friendly old Kurdish taxi driver gestured that this hotel was far too expensive anyway and he would find me something considerably cheaper now. We drove into town, a long way and he stopped on the main street, got out of the car, clambered up some stairs and pounded noisily on another hotel's door. I heard a heated exchange between him and the hotel keeper who was shouting through the closed door, then he came back, shrugged his shoulders apologetically and said, they were full. Then he told me, that the first hotel was astronomically expensive, this one was much more reasonable but now he would find me something even cheaper, so I should not fret and take heart, everything would be alright. I prayed in my mind that he was right.
He stopped at another place, the same scenario, door banging with his fist, a shouted exchange and I could almost understand from the tone what he was saying in Sorani Kurdish to the owner:"Oh come on, you gotta take her in, we have been to this other hotel and they did not give her a room, then we went dow the road and he rejected her too, come on, man, have a heart for this poor woman, she's been traveling all night!"
Finally the owner agreed, stated a hugely overinflated price with a glitter in his eye and handed me a key. A room, at last! The room was oddly shaped, sort of like a narrow trapeze, I noticed the qibla sign on the wall, for people who need to know the direction of Mecca for their prayers. there were two simple beds, straggly curtains and a shower. I pulled back the sheet on one bed- and found a pubic hair in the middle of it. Ugghhhhhh! They had not changed the sheets! And the person before me had obviously been a man sleeping in the nude who did not shave, where a good Muslim should...
I closed the sheet in disgust and tried the other bed. The sheets were wrinkled but at least no hair in it. Oh well. By now it was light outside and I went to close the old dark red curtains. Not without taking in a view for a moment- a street, across the street an ugly brick wall, and on that wall, two huge posters- one of Ayatollah Khomeini, and another of Khamenei (i think it was, before he fell out of grace). I sighed and firmly shut the curtains into their bearded faces and went to bed.
The same morning, after a few hours of sleep, I went through the scarf procedure again which went a little faster now than in Tabriz, had another odd breakfast with a small plastic knife and disposable fork and plate (these men must be too lazy to do any housework! I thought. No dishwashing, they don't even change the sheets always,they throw away the dishes after use,  they give you an old, musty towel washed too many times, and that only after asking...why don't they allow women to work in these hotels, they'd do a better job!)

So, out i went to look at the city. Sanandaj is quite green, spacious, a lit with bright sunlight. I liked it. I found a few shops along the street, also one that sold hijab broaches and hair bands (I needed one after I lost mine) and up the street, there even was a tea shop. I went inside. It had two long benches along the walls, with small tables in front of them. Here were many old men ordering breakfast and the waiter carried a number of tea glasses in his hands that he filled quickly and dished out to the tables like an assembly line, with quick practised movements. Most men were having a breakfast fry-up, consisting of eggs and tomatoes served inside a pan. I ordered tea, grateful to FINALLY get a proper glass of tea again and a place to sit down, saving me from having to wander the streets without rest, like it had been in Tabriz.
Suddenly I spotted a young man in jeans next to me who seemed to have appeared out of nowhere. I asked him if he, maybe, spoke English? He did! And offered to help me. This was Edris, who became my faithful companion for the next three days, who would pick me up in front of my hotel, and walk me home and show me around and help me buy bus tickets and check out flight schedules, and call me taxis, and show me where a restaurant was where I could have dinner (by myself). He was a huge help.
One day we went to Asef mansion together, a house of a rich Kurdish family, aristocrats, I reckoned, who had lived there and who had now, mysteriously, disappeared, and their house had been turned into a museum of Kurdish culture. We looked at all the figures of Kurds in traditional costumes, doing work, spinning wool, carrying shovels, wearing salwar and wide cloth  belts tied around their belly. We took pictures of the courtyard and of each other and of us together.
That evening he showed me that restaurant. And when i had finished my dinner, there appeared another young Kurd, in salwar, the traditional proudly worn Kurdish trousers, he was accompanied by friends and an Englishman, and asked me if i wanted to join them in their roaming around the city. We did, we walked down to the big square, they bought ice cream and mulberry juice, we sat on the rails and then they showed us a park which was barren and brightly lit with flood lights, and they told me, this had been their hangout before , the date spot of the city, where young couples would sit on benches and kiss and lie between the bushes. But the city council did not like this, so they had removed all the bushes and installed the great lamps to keep people from getting into mischief.
While we were sitting under the lamps a car stopped in the street, and a newlywed couple got out, she in her wedding dress and walked into the park. Taleb and his friends told me that this was where the couple had met, before the shrubs had been removed....
So I had another Kurdish friend and the next day Taleb met me up the street and invited me to visit his family. They lived in a nice house and their living room was covered in a beautiful thick Persian carpet, on which we sat and had lunch together. His sisters even removed their hijab and I did too, feeling shy about showing my hair, by now.  Taleb was an English teacher, and therefore, his English was almost perfect. And he had that impish Kurdish humour that I so love.
Both of them remained friends with me during my entire trip and would take turns inquiring about my health, give me advice about where to go and what to see via text messages, chat with me at night when I was alone in my hotel room and they both sent me a vpn file as a present so that I could use facebook to upload my photographs and keep in touch with friends, since this was the only way to access many of the usual websites like yahoo.com etc. . Vpn files were in common use in Iran and one could even buy them in some of the internet cafes.
I stayed in Sanandaj much longer than planned which delayed and altered my entire schedule by a couple days becauyse I liked it so much and people were so friendly. On the third day I went to the famous, as well as notorious and feared area of Howraman which is a fantastically high and steep mountainous area in the heart of Kordestan where Kurdish women still wear their original colourful dress and streets are overhung wirth vines. But more about this in the next blog entry.



Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Walking into Iran, for better or for worse...from the border to Tabriz

After an extra day in Dogubeyazit on which Mehmet the Kurd showed me all those amazing places like the remains of the stranded Noah's ark, and the crater where the meteor fell out of the sky one night in 1923 or so , and having picnic in front of an old, deserted police station for watching the PKK, I decided that it is now time to enter Iran.
As it turned out, there was no other transport from Dogubeyazit other than a taxi that was willing to take me as far as the border and drop me there, near no-man's-land. The last couple of kilometers of Turkey were green, just a lonely road among the meadows and the green, empty planes, with nothing clearly visible ahead of us. Then he stopped, and here I was- at the Iranian border crossing.
I did not speak a word of Farsi. This decision had been made at such short notice that I had had about one week to prepare, with the help of a volume of "Teach yourself Modern Persian" which was just enough to give me time to realise that Persian was related to both Arabic and Turkish which I knew to some extent, and that I could have learned it to some basic, somewhat passaable level, had I started maybe four months earlier. But not now. So all I knew was just "Khoda Hafez" and "Teshekur"which sounded like Turkish, and a few expressions ending in "mikonam", this was all I could master. So, my confidence of being able to cope in Iran was not very high and I felt somewhat faint at heart and braced myself for the experience of braving this country alone.
The trouble started at the border. As it turned out, it was the end of Bayram, and Bayram had given me, the lonely tourist, days of trouble already. No food, no open shops, no restaurants, people disappearing behind doors to celebrate with their invisible relatives, occasionally going for short walks on the few streets of Dogubeyazit, while I was aimlessly roaming around, in search of  something to eat, and someone to relate to. Here was the next stage of Bayram: the Iranian relatives returning to their country. Hundreds of them, maybe thousands, and all at the same time. The busloads came first. Huge stacks of passports were handed to the immigration officers, while the rest of us waited outside. The doors to the immigration hall were kept closed, the gates before that were also kept closed, and they would only allow small groups of people inside, close the doors and make the rest of us wait. And wait we did. It took hours. The kids became cranky, the mothers nervous. This went on to the point where one woman got so angry at her wimpering little son that she kicked his feet and made him cry, because he would not leave her alone. People seemed at the end of their wits, with this border. The second time this mother kicked and screamed at her son, my eyes met with the ones of the Turk standing near me, our foreheads wrinkled in a frown, our eyes sharing concern for the crying child whose fault it was not that we were made to wait for so long.
We moved closer towards each other and started talking. He was a carpet dealer, who lived in both countries, alternating between Istanbul and Teheran, and he spoke Farsi. And Turkish. Thank GOD, I thought, finally someone who will be able to translate for me!
The door opened again and this time we were let in, but only to discover that inside it was just as crowded as outside, people were now waiting in front of two counters. Not in two lines. no, just as a crowd in disarray. Names were being called, passports passed over people's heads until they reached their owners. It took another two hours before it was my turn, and then I was made until the very last because the man did not want to turn on his computer. At one point everybody lost their patience, and all the people in the hall started shouting at the immigration officers. I had never seen anything like it and could hardly believe what I was witnessing. A whole hall of screaming, angry people who were almost ready to storm the booth of the border police if they did not hurry up processing their passports.
At last I got close to the officer's booth, and my Turk took my passport from me and stood on his toes and handed it over the glasswall to the officer. The man rolled his eyes when he saw it and stuffed my passport under his keyboard, saving it for later. And made me wait while he copied everyone's data by hand onto paper, with a fountain pen. When they had finally all been processed, including my Turk, he opened my passport. It turned out, his computer did not work. He angrily called over tp the man in the other booth, my passport passed hands again, was handed over the glass wall, and registered at last. I was almost amazed to see that they actually stamped it after looking at the picture of me wrapped in a black hijab scarf that the embassy has forever glued into my passport next to the entry visa. So here I was at last, with a permission to enter Iran. I walked out of the booth, met up with the Turk, and saw that there were only two taxis for these hundreds of people.
This meant that we had to walk to the first bus terminal inside Iran which was about 3 kilomters away. The Turk carried his bag and I rolled and pushed my suitcase down the street. After about 20 minutes I managed to stop an empty taxi which took us to where the buses were.
We bought tickets and got on the bus to Tabriz which would drop me off along the way and take him to Teheran, his final destination. How I wished, this quiet, gentle , unobtrusive Turk would be my companion for the next few days, accompany me, protect me, translate for me and show me the way- but it was not to be. The best he could do wascall a hotel and make me a reservation. It had taken four hours at the border, and the road to Tabriz was long and winding through the hills, so when I handed him my Lonely planet guide, it was already 10pm. The first hotel where I had planned to stay was full. He finally managed to get me a room, after about 3 calls.
I arrived in Tabriz when it was close to midnight. The hotel was in a dilapidated street, with crumbling walls and construction sites nearby and I felt rather unsettled. But I did manage to check in, and hand over my passport again. Everybody except me seemed to be male. An old man at the reception , a slightly younger man who took my up to my room in a squeaking, groaning old elevator.
I tried to ask questions:"Where are the towels? Is there hot water? Do you have internet? " The man kept talking and talking but he spoke only Farsi, all I could make out was words with lots of "aww" sounds in them, and I did not understand a word he said. He did not really understand me either. My Turkish did not work, even though they claimed to speak some sort of "Turkish" here. It was no good. But he kept talking, and I felt exasperated and was close to despair. How would I survive in this country? Not being able to communicate?
At last he left, and I discovered the white towels in the bathroom, and found out that what he had offered as "internet" for my computer was nothing more than a normal electric socket. Oh , well.
I climbed into bed, rolled myself into a fetal position on the huge, sagging mattress, and slept, my first lonely night in Iran.
The next morning  I tackled the next, and just as vital problem of my journey: how to put on a headscarf. I stood in front of the mirror in my hotel room, knowing only too well that I was not allowed outside my room, without a scarf on my head. But what to do? Suddenly the wrapping method did not work anymore, it kept falling off, it could not be too tight or it would be unbearably hot, and it could not be too loose or it would fall. I was wrapping and rewrapping and collecting the fallen scarf and starting all over again, arranging the folds, stuffing strands of hair into it, taking it off, trying again. I started to wonder when I would ever get out of my room, and would there still be any breakfast? After a full 45 minutes, I finally managed to get the scarf pinned into place, in some acceptable form.
Breakfast turned out to be a depressing affair involving stale bread, a small can of carrot jam and a butter knife made of plastic, like inside an airplane. I would soon discover that in all of Iran, tehre were almost no knives available, like in the 9/11 days on international flights, all we ever got was spoons and forks, and the knives came in miniature plastic versions of the real thing. Oh well.
The next thing I had to do was go to a bank and buy rial. The bank manager told me that he was offering me "his own special rate" (much later I found out that he took some unregistered commission this way) and I was handed an enormous wad of banknotes, with many many zeroes on them.  Iran is suffering inflation, and they had not had time to redenominate their currency from rial into toman yet,. they juyst converted it inside their heads, which made the sums ever more confusing to the novice. One was expected to mentally remove  3 or 4 zeroes from the sum it said on the note, I do not remember clearly. So it was not 500.000rial but only 50 toman, or some such. I kept getting confused.
then I walked off, crossing from the Imam Khomeini street into the Ferdosi street (every city in Iran seemed to have one each of those) and trying to find a tea shop, but to no avail. As it turned out, all the same shops were gathered in one place. One street for sunglasses, one street for mobiel phones, one street for shoes and so on. I wondered how people shopped. It seemed to involve lots of walking. Someone sold me a pair of sunglasses, for a price fit for a movie star.
Then I was guided to an internet cafe, I had at last run into some people who spoke English. My next discovery was: the itnernet was censored. Instead of facebook, all I got was a message, in black script slinking across the screen, apparently saying that this website was blocked. I asked the manager of the internet cafe about this. All he said:"You want to use facebook? Just a moment!" and with a flourish, he made a few clicks, connected me to a proxy server, and voila, I was in. this was my first encounter with Iranian laws. The laws were there but people did not seem to take them all that seriously, and law enforcement seemed somewhat lax too, if internet cafes could just use vpn and proxy servers and bypass all the blockages in public?
I decided not to stay any longer in Tabriz, after it took me 3km of walking in oder to find the only cafe in the whole area, apparently, and eating my lunch out of transparent plastic baskets in a restaurant, that served food but no plates. And more plastic cutlery.
Good bye Tabriz, Roj bas, Kordestan!