VPR Series and Stories
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Friday February 10, 2006
Iran Today
Part
One - Making Ends Meet
Poverty and unemployment are taking their toll on every from medical school graduates
to those with little education.
Part
Two - Beyond the Veil
Women's lives in Iran defy stereotypes. Women are caught between modernity and
tradition, and their rights under Iranian law reflect these paradoxes.
Part
Three - The Power of the Word
In Iran writers, especially poets, enjoy pop-star status. Despite the dangers
poet Simin Behbehani has used her
work to speak out for human rights in Iran.
Part
Four, The Morals Police
The para-military organization known as Basij has attracted an army of devout
young men dedicated to fundamentalist Islamic principals. Their job is to prevent "moral
corruption" and,
if need be, defend Iran from outside forces.
Part Five, Press Freedoms
Domestic problems are widely covered
in Iran's newspapers, but there are some "red lines" journalists
are warned not to cross. The red lines aren't lines, aren't always clear
and many journalists have been jailed or worse.
References on Iran
Online Resources:Tehran Times - English language daily newspaper
Payvand - Roundup of Iran news coverage in world wide media.
Iran Chamber Society - information on art, culture and history
Mage - Listing of links to Web sites with Persian content
Karim Khan Zand - Information from the Iran Chamber
Books on Iran:
- Sandra Mackey, The Iranians: Persia, Islam and the Soul of a Nation (Plume Books, 1998)
- Elaine Sciolino, Persian Mirrors: The Elusive Face of Iran (Free Press, 2000)
- Christiane Bird, Neither East Nor West: One Woman's Journey Through the Islamic Republic of Iran (Washington Square Press, 2002)
- John R. Perry, Karim Khan Zand: A History of Iran 1747-1779 (University of Chicago Press, 1979)

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