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Christmas, Khatami, Ahmad, And I

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  • Christmas, Khatami, Ahmad, And I

    CHRISTMAS, KHATAMI, AHMAD, AND I
    by Nazy Kaviani

    Iranian
    http://nazykaviani.blogspot.com/
    http://www.iranian.com/main/node/51387
    Dec 25 2008
    California

    It feels like it was only yesterday when I wrote here about Christmases
    past in Tehran. Today I remembered another memory of my days in Tehran.

    I remember the first Christmas Mohammad Khatami had been elected
    President. Iran was a rainbow of joy and hope, and Tehran was hosting
    the Organization of Islamic Countries' Summit in December 1997. I
    left a meeting in downtown Tehran, hailed an orange taxi cab, and
    asked the cab driver whether he could spend an hour or two, taking
    me around Tehran to buy some things. He agreed. He was a middle-aged
    man who was dressed in what we would consider "laat-e-kolah-makhmali"
    attire. His coat was resting on his shoulders with his hands free
    from the sleeves. The back of his shoes had been pushed inside,
    and in his hands he sported a green rosary with which he was playing
    as he drove his Paykan. True to form, he also had a black felt hat
    on. He had kind eyes and a deep Tehrani accent, complete with lingo
    that was reminiscent of old Iranian movie characters.

    I told him I needed to pick up a Christmas tree first. He took me to
    the Armenian neighborhood of Tehran just below Takht-e-Tavoos Avenue
    and helped me carry the tree and secure it in the trunk. On our way to
    my next destination, he and I started talking about politics. I told
    him I had watched President Khatami receive his foreign counterparts
    at the airport that morning. I told him how impressed I had been
    with him. He looked at me in the mirror and asked me what about the
    President had impressed me. I told him I didn't really know. Maybe
    it was that he seemed to be speaking to the arriving leaders easily,
    in English? In German? In Arabic?, and that he was acting "stately,"
    something I hadn't seen before. I told him also that even in his
    clergy outfit he seemed lithe and somehow contemporary, belonging to
    today. Maybe it was because he wasn't wearing sandals, I guess.

    The cab driver kept moving his rosary in his hands and looking at me
    in the rearview mirror. He asked me gently: "Really? You are obviously
    a woman who has seen more than life in Tehran. Do you really think
    that a president who can chit-chat in a language other than Farsi
    is impressive? Or one who wears regular shoes? Does that make him a
    good president?" He said: "I feel so sorry for my country. Who would
    have thought there would come a day when knowing a second language at
    conversational levels or wearing shoes would be considered impressive?"

    I was so embarrassed. The "laat-e-kolah-makhmali" cab driver didn't
    look so laat anymore! I asked him his name and his background. He told
    me his name was Ahmad and that he had a master's degree in political
    science from Tehran University. He had been a teacher before he had
    been dismissed because of his political beliefs. We talked a lot more
    about a lot of other things before I bid him goodbye, tree and turkey
    and fruits in hand. I learned a few important lessons about myself,
    about life, and about Iranian politics from him that day. Those
    lessons have only become bolder and more important with time.

    Merry Christmas!

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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