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A Personal View from Mr Behi

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Chris Vallance | 00:40 UK time, Saturday, 5 August 2006

We hope to have many guest writers from outside the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ offer personal views on this blog. Tehran based bloggerwas one of the first bloggers to be featured on the segment and so it seemed fitting, with conflict in Lebanon and nuclear politics looming large over that country, to hear from him first. This post (which I've edited for length, read the whole thing ) is a powerful argument against national stereotypes. It's one of his recurring themes to stress our common humanity. While he's fearful that Iran may become a target in an expanded conflict, he's also optimistic that the blogs can help unite divided people:

"With the cloud of war gradually casting it's shadow eastwards from where it showers Lebanon and Iraq, it is no longer possible to keep my head under the snow pretending the avalanche is not happening. Iran is now under the shadow of an approaching conflict while its people can do very little to stop it. Seems that the "Shiite Crescent" in dream of Iranian Mullas, is finally crossing the "Great Israel from Nile to Euphrates " idea of radical Jews of Jerusalem. The sad part of the story will begin when the tanks start rolling and bombs start falling and the first victims will be just decent human beings who were stereotyped but the opponent media as either "terrorist nation" or "Zionist occupier". We have been hearing such stereotypes over and over again. We are just like a company whose acronyms are so obvious to the employees but so strange to anyone from outside.....

In Iran, there is a generation that is grown up to adults and every day of life heard about Israel as an occupier, US as great Satan and the west as a godless land of lawless drunks where ethics are falling apart. It is sad for me to feel that the same thing is happening with people under the influence of another sort of illusive stereotypes: Terrorists, radical Islamists, fundamentalists, extremists and all those unbearable terms that I know well that my people are not. Either the world should stop calling us "terrorists" or we should stand up and shout that we are not. If we can not change the way Iran is introduced to the world by our president, we should change the way we introduce ourselves to the world. The true Iran should be blogged and it is the time to break the fake mask."

Of course Behi isn't the only blogger from Iran, that country has many thousands of bloggers. Good starting points for blog reading from Iran might be Farid Pouya's and Hoders

Interestingly there was a discussion of Iranian blogging at the School of Oriental and African studies in London on Friday. It gave me an opportunity to meet with who was on the show last Tuesday at a reception organised by the online journal. I'm sorry I missed the discussion, and a chance to better understand the great popularity of blogs in Iran (it's number or 4 or 5 of most blogging nations I believe)

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