IRAN, ECHOES OF RED ROSE SPLENDOR
Immersing myself in the permanent university of traveling
Pulled in myriad ways, curious and intrigued
To the roads less traveled
Red rose is the national flower
Flower of love
Rearrange the words
It is Eros, the God of Love
My loose jogging shoes slapped against the stone roads of Persia
If you like people, you will like Iran
Iranians are endlessly welcoming
They have the human touch
Hooked on anything Western
They opened their hearts to us
They spoke candidly about everything
Internet, Facebook, Iran’s relations with the West
Where are you from?
Where do you live?
Why did you come to Iran?
Frustrated by politics
A land and people wanting to change
We weaved a tale through pilgrimages to ancient sites
We walked in sun speckled cloud shapes
To Tehran’s Reza Shah Pahlavi’s White and Green Palace
The lavish Golestan Palace
Mirrored glass that turned into a prismatic fire
Flashed and glowed in a kaleidoscope of colors
We scaled the slopes of the Alborz Mountains to Velenjak Park
Lined with tall leafy plane trees
People strolled and hiked, some played ball
Others enjoyed the evening’s music
Pop Tehrangeles songs
Danced to it
The colossal slightly snow covered Damavand was up ahead
Water from melting snow flowed and lapped the foot of the trees
Paused for Mexican pizza with Al, Jazz, Puran and Shirin
At Ferdowsi Avenue there were men with calculators at the ready
Exchanged money, dollars to toumans, rials
Drank Parsi cola, ate yogurt sabzi (soft greens) and soft white cheese
Dizi, lamb stew, highlight of Persian cuisine
Traditionally cooked in a small stone crock pot
Justified Soul food believed to sustain us through a long day
Shrines of medieval poets Hafez and eloquent Saadi in Shiraz
The Quran and a collection of the poems of Hafez, Iranian folk hero
Who transported us back to the magic of Ancient Persia
Amplified tones of muezzins called the faithful for prayer
We basked in the glories of an early civilization
The tomb of Cyrus the Great at the honey colored plains of Pasargad
Explored the sparkling turquoise-tiled domes and minarets of Esfahan
Intricately designed copper lamps
Beautiful boulevards with covered bridges of the Zayandeh Rud River
The life giving river that cuts across the city
The April breeze ballooned out my chador
With the generosity of Fereshte and Marti
We ate Ashreshte hearty soup
(Black lentils, kidney beans, garbanzo beans in pomegranate paste)
Old caravanserais
Abbassi Hotel in a lavish setting
Period paintings on the walls
Striking woman with a yellow scarf and red headband
Carrying a red rose in one hand
A massive clay jug on her shoulder
Big brown eyes, smiling red lips
Black hair jutting out from her printed scarf
Lush gardens, palaces, mosques, and minarets
Led to the Persian
Isfahan’s beauty is half of the world
The awesome power and beauty of Persopolis
Trees and my umbrella offered cool solace from the midday sun
The size of five football fields
A collection of fraying once luxurious yellow tent suites
With marbled bathrooms from the distance
Nowadays it is has some rocks with graffiti
I love Leonardo di Carpio
Tall columns, stunning example of Pre-Islamic architecture
Mythical Iranian kings and semi divine rulers
Invading armies with their swords
Guests of the King offering sacrifices
Monumental and majestic testament
Splendor of Achaemenian Persia
Attention to the detail
Left us breathless
The mud brick alleys and rooftops of Abyaneh
Zoroastrian women in flowery dresses
Sold dried apricots and mulberries
Young girls in satin and tulle with head veils brought out smiles
The wind swept lanes of Kashan
Flowing water canals and stone walkways
Apple and watermelon carts
Tree shaded shops
Street kids selling Chiclet chewing gum
The golden domes of the holy city of Qom
Politically speaking mustachioed Clerics in turbans
Motorcycles buzzed by
We sat on green benches
Low–spouting fountains kept us cool
We quenched our thirst with
Faludeh (a bowl of frozen sorbet with thin crispy starch noodles and rose water)
Lost in a maze of twisting bazaars
Exquisite carpets in ever green colors, squares with landscapes of animals
Weeping willows and sky blue background
Burgundy Oriental medallions, silk and lustrous weaves in detail
Developed meaningful relationships with new friends
Lingered over small cups of hot tea
Stirring with tiny teaspoons
Sharbat, carrot juice shake with vanilla ice cream and walnuts
If your travel decision is based on what people say
You will probably never make it to Iran
However you choose your journey
Iran will change the way you see this part of the world
Soul searching in mysticism
This journey freed me
Of every concept and image
My mind has ever known
- -
Reading the famous novel of Paul Coelho
Down by the River Piedra, I sat down and Wept
All love stories are the same
Maybe so
I write mine anyway
The first time I ever saw your face
I threw a pebble in the waters of the River Piedra
There you were, grinning
We were young then