A UNESCO SPECIAL 1971 ISSUE - Part
II
"Iran, Cultural crossroads for 2,500
years"
By Peter Avery, Lecturer in Persian at the University of Cambridge.
Dean of King's College 1967-1968
The claity of the Iranian climate is in great part the key to this type of achievement in the visual arts, as later it will be seen to have been to the development of religious attitudes.
It is a special quality of Iranian conditions, by which all comers are captivated and mentally and spiritually enhanced. To it should be added the abrasive quality of rugged mountain topography and parched plains. dramatically relieved by the luxuriance of gardens and coppices in places where carefully husbanded, sparse water supplies meet cultivable soil.
Wine and genius may be said to be natural to Iran, whose middle position between eastern and western continents has always ensured that its genius had much to feed on, much to transmute into something vital and new.
From Herodotus onwards, Iranian adaptability and quickness to borrow from others have frequently been cornmented on. But rarely has this been done with enough emphasis on the original genius and absolute and unchanging characteristics distinctly Iranian, to make "borrowing" fresh, hitherto unthought-of development, mere imitation being out of the question.
The record can be corrected when it is recognized that the toughness of Iranian conditions, combined with the possibilities of achieving great refinement of living. art and intellect, have forged a human resilience and presence of mind to which others have invariably succumbed, never succeeding in erasing the influence and effects of Iranian talent, however calamitously they may have assaulted the Iranian land.
Thus, to a greater extent than a rival Greek might have seen fit to report, Iranians have received less than they have exported, or given to their not always invited guests. Invaders have been of inferior culture, attracted by Iran's superior civilization and quickly conquered by it. From Arabs out of the desert and nomads from the Asiatic steppes Iran could hope to receive little but an influx of fresh vitality and the arduous challenge of refining it into the Iranian way of life.
This is to speak as if Iran had always been, and that not successfully, on the defensive. On the offensive against the ancient Greeks, Iran came into Europe and in its turn provided the challenge which broadened the Hellenes' honzon and, for example, in Xenophon's Cyropaedia, gave the world a Greek philosophical tale, based qn the examples furnished by Iranian monarchy, and, interestingly enough, written in a strikingly Persian style of exemplary political polemic.
Iranians brought Europe lucerne, the fodder of their famous cavalry, and also the domestic fowl, the white dove, and the peacock. Darius had fruit trees from his eastern provinces transplanted to regions west of the Euphrates. The pistachio was taken to Syria, rice to Mesopotamia, sesame to Egypt, all within the confines of ancient Iranian empires. The Shahanshah's favourite wines, however, failed to flourish in Damascus.
Salted fish from the Persian Gulf was eaten in Asia Minor and part of Egypt's tribute to Iran was paid in revenue from the Mediterranean and Nile fisheries; the statecraft of the Achaemenid King of Kings accomplished and maintained in balance the first and one of the vastest of amalgams of human resources.
Iranian initiative has repeatedly revived this dream of the universal state. Alexander the Great himself, to win his subordinates' approval, after they had reproached him for having become too Iranian in outlook, destroyed the Achaemenid's cosmopolitan amalgamation in 331 B.C.
Long afterwards, when through Iranian intrepidity and that of Iranized Arabs the Moslem Caliphate of Baghdad rose in 750 A.D., the stage was set for another far-reaching amalgamation of human forces and global resources: the Perso-Moslem unity.
. Geography has endowed the occupants of the Iranian uplands with a very wide theatre in which to spread the operations and influence of their genius. They overlook the Oxus basin and plains of Asia in the north-east, the Tigris-Euphrates valley and Arabian Desert in the south-west, the Hindu Kush and Indian Sub-Continent in the east and south-east.
The Caucasus rises in the north and the Persian Gulf girdles the southern shores of what is a many-doored caravanseral, the middle realm bet-i' ween Europe and Asia, Africa and Siberia. Through Iran came the silkk and paper of China, the Indies' gold and spices, the horses and hides of Central Asia, to reach the Roman sea.
When an Iranian empire of old expanded, it followed the ancient world's primary arteries of trade between east and west. It supplemented its wealth by tolls on merchandise, upon whose raw materials it placed the stamp of Iranian craftsmanship. It touched the goods passing through its hands with the quickening luminosity of the Iranian mind; with that art which the early potters on the Persian plateau had practised.
Not only were designs and images passed on, so that patterns were spread on - cloth or woven into carpets- to speak the world over of how an iranian weaver sees flowers, the delicate poplar, the bird on the bough, the very colours of Iranian soil and Iranian contrasts of red, deep blue and green. Religious ideas were also exported, to lie deep in judaism, Christianity, and profoundly to shape the Islamic faith Iran took as its own.
Darius's vines transplanted to Damascene soil may not have taken there, but aspects of the ritual of Iran's ancient Zoroastrian religion have their place in the wine of the Christian Eucharist.
The heavenly galaxies nightly shine more brightly on a land most of which is over four thousand feet above sea-level, than they do on mistier, more low-lying regions. There is never a day without the light of the sun in the country whose mythical king Hushang discovered how to produce fire, his son Jamshid making the festival of Nauruz, the New Year, mark the vernal equinox.
Iran's brightness is reflected in the enamel-like brilliance both of its visus arts and the imagery of its exquisite poetry. The sense of Heaven being almost withtin reach has developed the Iranian spiritual genius to a degree which makes the Persian people naturally religious, so that their literature and art seem always unavoidably communicative of the Grace of God.
Their spirituality confers on therm both their innate and abiding yearning for a greater perfection than the world immediately offers. and their peculiar power to lend lustre to whatever they handle. It offers them the hope of grace, but also engender pessimism and scepticism about the mortal state. Nevertheless, in Iran spirituality and pragmatism are so balanced that to its poetry the world may turn for enlightenment and consolation when other sources of inspiration fail to assuage human despair.
Asia and Europe are fortunate to be bridged by a land whose brightness could supplant the Mongols' clouded superstition by vision, so that as an Iranian ruler, even a descendant of Chingiz Khan, Ghazan (l295-1304), became a polymath and, while dismissing the vanities of alchemy, kept its processes, aware of the scientific value of experiment.
It was the Iranian brightness which taught Mohammed the Prophet's successors that they were not only the keepers of Moslem law. Theirs also to keep was a revelation which answered man's most exalted spiritual aspirations. The Iranian Sufi mystics have kept clear for mankind the concept which the example of Mohammed, God's Chosen Apostle, conveyed: that men's hearts when purified may become the mirror of God's unblemished light
The bridging role has, however, brought vicissitudes. The Iranian spirit's strength and resilience have often been severely tried. It is well for the world that they have emerged from these trials as keen, flexible and unbreakable as well-tempered steel, for the world can still derive a great deal from Iran that is beneficial in the cultural and political spheres.
A crossroads is a vantage point from which to observe the ways of men in their different regions and contexts. It is also the place in which a people possessed, through a long and eventful history, of an almost unparallelled experience of human affairs can set up the signposts commonly to be found at crossroads.
At the Iranian junction of history, cultures and indigenous aptitude, Europe can be explained to Asia and Asia can teach Europe. Iran's windows are like the faces of janus. Iran is a sharp-eyed, keenly observant Janus.
Modern Iran now possesses resources and has regained the self-confidence lost in the thraldom and period of foreign domination and exploitation which began in 1 722 when the Safavid dynasty lost power.
Now Iran again commands international respect. It both can and does play a positive role in world affairs. As a member of the United Nations it sets the pace for other developing countries, and has become the obvious milieu for international conventions for the discussion of such topics as nutrition, agricultural development, illiteracy, the rights of women.
It is thus once more the centre where ideas and techniques may be pooled, to meet the problems of the less technologically advanced Orient with the experience and skills of the more technologically advanced Occident, Iran acting as the catalyst.
Seekers of solutions to the world's problems could have no more generous and perfect hosts than the Iranians, whose courtesy is rightly proverbial and has been almost since time began; but whose long experience as the guardians of civilization against the encroachment of desert sands, of rapacious enemies, of chaos and disorderliness makes them more than gracious hosts.
The slightest realization of what Iran has achieved in improving its own domestic well-being since 1960, and this measured against the former drain of its old resources, and its incapacity for over a century during modern times to act independently, will demonstrate that the potentiality alluded to here is not exaggerated.
A wider ranging study of Iran's history, and a proper understanding of its geographical position in a world in which the East is stirring into new life, will amply reinforce the argument that confidence in Iran's capacity for showing initiative and vitality, and willingness to accord it the respect it deserves, could procure for the world the contribution of a stabilizing force that a region which might easily become greatly disturbed urgently requires.
UNESCO COURRIER, October 1971
Place de Fontenoy, Paris 75007 - France.
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