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  • 'Journey from the Land of No'

    cbsnews.com

    Books

    'Journey from the Land of No'

    NEW YORK, March 10, 2005 (CBS) - The year 1979 was a pivotal one in
    the history of Iran and that country's relationship with the United
    States. The shah had abdicated and was replaced by the Ayatollah
    Khomeini.

    Angry demonstrators took control of the U.S. embassy and the whole
    world watched as 52 Americans were taken hostage.

    But as these events played out on the world stage, they also were
    part of the daily life of a young Jewish girl growing up in Tehran.

    "People are shocked to find out I'm a Jew, and I lived in Iran until
    a few years ago," Roya Hakakian tells The Early Show co-anchor
    Harry Smith. "Isn't it ironic that the Iranian Jewish community,
    its history in Iran, precedes that of the Muslims in Iran, and hardly
    anyone knows about it."

    Hakakian was a witness to the revolution and writes about it in
    her new book, "Journey from the Land of No: A Girlhood Caught in
    Revolutionary Iran." Click here to read an excerpt.

    In the book, she describes her wonderful family life and how it turned
    around after the revolution.

    She says, "I think of the Iranian revolution, even until today with
    all the criticisms we are making about it, it's the greatest event
    I have in my own personal life, something I would not switch with
    anything else in the world. It was because it took place for all the
    right reasons. The fact that it went wrong is a tragedy. But it took
    place because people demanded more civil liberties, more democracy,
    openness -- all the kinds of things that all the Middle East is really
    vying for these days."

    The burst of emotion that is going on in Lebanon now is very similar
    to the feelings Iranians felt at the time, Hakakian says.

    "I'm willing to argue that it all began in Iran," she explains. "Iran
    is really where the center of this earthquake was in '78, and the
    reverberations are still being felt, since '78."

    Back in the '70s, her family lived harmoniously in a very diverse
    society. She says, "We lived on an alley that I called, The Alley of
    the Distinguished, in the book. We had Armenian Christian neighbors,
    and Zoroastrians. And all kinds of people, along with my kind, Jewish,
    and we had a fabulous time."

    But it all changed for the worst. The revolution did not bring about
    the positive changes her family thought it would bring.

    She says, "Transformation from those moments of ecstasy and euphoria,
    and the complete conviction that things were going to be a lot better
    than they had been, to a dark history we experienced two or three years
    later are very important, not just for us as Iranians, but for the
    rest of the world. Because Iran in '78 and '79 was one of the most
    modern countries in the Middle East. And it became a fundamentalist
    nation. How? Why? Why was it that religion become so powerful? In a
    country that had that modern experience in a matter of two or three
    years. I think those lessons are important for all of us."

    She notes that today Iran is a hopeful place, "not because of what
    the headlines say, but because I think the general public recognizes
    the fact that religion and the affairs of the state need to be
    separated. And I think that is a huge leap forward."

    So who is to end the religious oppression?

    "That's the million dollar question," she says. "But the important
    thing is that as far as a cultural and sociological perspective is
    concerned, people have come to the conclusion that we don't want
    theocracy any more; we have to separate the two institutions."

    The book has been getting rave reviews. It was named "best non-fiction
    of the year" by Elle magazine.
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