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Finding Wine For My Wedding In Tehran

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  • Finding Wine For My Wedding In Tehran

    FINDING WINE FOR MY WEDDING IN TEHRAN
    By Azadeh Moaveni

    International Herald Tribune
    http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/01/30/opi nion/edmoaveni.php
    Jan 30 2009
    France

    As a young Californian I always assumed I would be married at a
    winery or on an island, places where wedding planning does not involve
    separate reception halls for men and women and pre-emptive security
    against a morality-police raid. But I met my future husband while
    living in Iran. We spent one of our first dates combing the fruit
    bazaars of Tehran for wine grapes. We crushed them by hand in the
    gentle summer heat and spent solicitous afternoons over our single
    barrel as a pretext for further courtship.

    All of this convinced me that the prohibition of alcohol in Iran,
    while inconvenient, was not altogether unromantic. Buying five cases
    of red wine at once is, however, virtually impossible, as I discovered
    before my Tehran wedding in 2005.

    Most Iranians don't serve drinks at weddings: Official banquet halls
    have laws, extra bribery is required in case of a raid and there's
    a belief that guests tend to brawl at wet receptions (macho culture
    and liquor do not mix well). Yet I desperately wanted drinks at my
    reception, as did my fiance, Arash. In fact, I wanted a proper bar,
    staffed by the city's best bartenders, two Afghan brothers from Herat
    who mixed a mean martini.

    My Iranian future in-laws frowned on the idea, which actually mattered
    quite a lot, since in Iran it is customary for the groom's family
    to plan and pay for the wedding. Having recently suffered the acute
    boredom of two dry weddings, I was determined to make alcohol my
    battle. Most Iranian brides seek a major concession over an extravagant
    wedding dress or a set of jewelry, but I cut back on nearly everything
    else to help leverage a bar.

    I won out in the end, but that turned out to be the easy part. The
    first dealer I called was an Armenian called Edo. The state permits
    Christians (less than 1 percent of the population) to make and consume
    alcohol, so bootleggers are usually Armenian Christians or Muslims
    using Armenian names. Edo was incredulous. "You want 60 bottles of
    wine? I'm sorry, but that sounds like a trap," he said, hanging
    up. I asked one of my cousins to introduce me to her bootlegger,
    Joseph. But we soon learned that he had been caught by the police with
    a trunkload of whiskey. (He resumed dealing after one of his clients,
    a well-placed judge, intervened.)

    Growing desperate, I went to an Armenian friend. Her best connection
    was named Edgar, she told me. He'd printed glossy catalogs of his
    stock; like that of most dealers, it was smuggled across the Iraqi
    border from the Kurdish city Sulaimaniya. But Edgar was preparing
    to emigrate to Glendale, California. She suggested I try a family
    friend whose name even I had heard. Before 1979, this friend ran one
    of Tehran's leading hair salons, but after the revolution banned males
    from tending female hair, he was forced into private house calls. Soon
    he began supplying his clients with homemade vodka and wine as well as
    blowouts. When I tracked him down, he said that to supply what I needed
    he would have to go to untested vintners (housewives who fermented
    in their garages) and wouldn't be able to guarantee the quality.

    In the end, I realized I had to delegate the task to my aunts,
    who after 30 years of Islamic prohibition had established their
    own trusted connections and means of giving a large party with
    drinks. On the day of our wedding, I was astonished by what they
    managed. At the conclusion of our ceremony, I thought I would not
    feel such joy for a long time to come - until someone handed me a
    glass of Champagne. Throughout the evening, guests mingled about the
    Persian gardens with their glasses glinting in the moonlight. Older
    women who rarely drank did that night, as word spread that the Afghan
    bartenders were serving anything you could want, from kir royales to
    pomegranate martinis.

    I didn't think acquiring alcohol in Iran could get any harder, but
    when I returned from London to spend three weeks in Tehran this past
    month, I found my friends busy hoarding liquor. The government usually
    tightens its controls in advance of Ramadan and Muharram, but the mood
    last month was especially stern. State television showed cautionary
    footage of bootleggers being arrested, their sinful beverages emptied
    into the gutter. Watching the scenes, I couldn't help thinking of
    the night that my husband and I were married. Everyone was awash
    in shiny-eyed nostalgia, embraced by memories of life before the
    revolution, when drinking was legal and drinks imparted to such
    evenings a soft, apolitical glow.
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